BUDAPEST – The Philippines’ Julio Catalino Sadorra, busy with work and responsibilities back home, knew his time with the national team was ticking.
That is one reason the 38-year-old United States-based Filipino Grandmaster is making every game in the 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad here count as if it’s his last wearing the national colors.
It showed in Sadorra’s spectacular 53-move shocker over super GM Vladimir Fedoseev that sealed their 2.5-1.5 upset of the mighty Slovenians and sent the Filipinos leapfrogging from obscurity to a share of seventh place after five rounds on this cold, rainy Sunday night at the BOK Sports Hall in the Hungarian capital.
Sadorra’s magnificence reverberated back home, being one of the biggest, if not the biggest, victory of his life and one of the most fantastic triumphs in recent times for Philippine chess.
It reflected a quality that Filipinos are known for – resilience – as Sadorra battled back from what appeared like a hopeless losing position and into a winning one when he pounced on the series of blunders from Fedoseev, a Russian émigré.
When he got the chance, he unloaded a flurry, sacrificing almost everything at his disposal like a typhoon leaving a trail of devastation behind him.
The attack was so fierce he left Fedoseev’s scampering king widowed.
Newly minted GM Danuel Quizon, who will be rewarded P100,000 by National Chess Federation of the Philippines head Butch Pichay for his GM feat on top of the P1 million bonus from Dasmariñas, Cavite, and International Masters Pau Bersamina and Jem Garcia drew their matches in the lower boards to complete one of the most sensational wins of the round.