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Fusilli
Member since Aug-09-04 · Last seen Oct-16-25
Mariano Sana, Argentinian by birth, in the US since 1995. Naturalized US citizen. I hold a PhD in Demography from the University of Pennsylvania, and I am an associate professor of Sociology at Vanderbilt University: https://as.vanderbilt.edu/sociology.... Previously, I was at Louisiana State University (2003-2009).

My published academic work can be seen here: https://vanderbilt.academia.edu/Mar.... My review of Gary Alan Fine's "Players and Pawns" is here: https://www.academia.edu/69647923/P....

My avatar comes from a cartoon of mine drawn by a friend. My username, besides the pasta, is my late cat's name (he died in March 2021, age 19), inspired by this cartoon: https://condenaststore.com/featured....

My first tournament was at age 12 in 1979. I finished 8th in the Argentine junior championship in 1985. So, I was good enough, but not great. (That same evaluation might still be apt today, on a good day.) Unfortunately, no game scores survived from those years. I started to play again after grad school. I play between 0 and 4 tournaments per year.

I won the Louisiana State Championship in 2007. I lost the first game and then won six in a row. This was my last round win, where I got lucky after playing the opening pretty terribly: J Rousselle vs M Sana, 2007.

I also won the under 2200 section of the US Open in 2014. Again, Swiss gambit. Lost the first one, then won five in a row, lost game 7 (M Sana vs J Sheng, 2014, a rather atypical game), and won games 8 and 9. My last round win was featured as a Tuesday puzzle: K Gulamali vs M Sana, 2014. (Try it! Black to play at move 29. But you can also do black to play at move 22 as a principled-move puzzle.)

I'd say that I am essentially a good but inconsistent player. My playing style is a mix of strategic and tactical. I'm usually very willing to sac a pawn or allow positional weaknesses in exchange for active piece play. For years I hovered around 2200, down to mid 2100s a few years ago after a disaster and a 50-point loss at the 2019 World Open. (Aging and MS fatigue had much to do with that.) On good days, I have had nice wins: T Bartell vs M Sana, 2009, R Burnett vs M Sana, 2012, M Sana vs C Blocker, 2014, M Sana vs R Burnett, 2015. But on a bad day, I can play horribly and lose against whoever is sitting in front of me.

I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in 2011, but it didn't cause me trouble until 2018/9. I have a weak right leg (I often use a cane now) and I fatigue easily. Medication, well-timed naps, and exercise help.

I play blitz games on chess.com under the username RealFusilli.

My participation on this website goes through ebbs and flows, and the majority of my posts are about chess. I often post on my own forum just to keep records for myself. Everyone is welcome to visit and share! (But please don't post about politics here.)

>> Click here to see Fusilli's game collections.

Chessgames.com Full Member

   Fusilli has kibitzed 6255 times to chessgames   [more...]
   Oct-07-25 Hikaru Nakamura (replies)
 
Fusilli: Back in the day, I would sometimes resign by picking up my king and placing it in front of my opponent. And one day I read that a GM (I think Sosonko) did the same thing, while saying, "here's, it's yours." So, sure, one for the crowd, why not.
 
   Sep-15-25 L Mendonca vs M Yilmaz, 2024 (replies)
 
Fusilli: <perfidious> <There have been POTDs presented by <cg> which have featured positions which were analogous to practical games rather than guess the move> Not sure I follow. To me, Guess-the-Move games do reflect practical play, since you have to make every move, ...
 
   Sep-12-25 Leon Mendonca
 
Fusilli: Mendonca, no doubt originally spelled with a c-cedilla instead of a c, is a Portuguese surname, a reminder that Portugal colonized parts of India since as early as the 16th century.
 
   Sep-12-25 A Mittal vs Y K Erdogmus, 2025 (replies)
 
Fusilli: <FSR: Insane! The kid is a genius! I say he's a future world champion.> I share your enthusiasm but not your evaluation. The combination is absolutely beautiful but not hard to see for a strong player. It's a straight set of forced moves. I think it would be a Friday puzzle ...
 
   Sep-10-25 Fusilli chessforum (replies)
 
Fusilli: <OCF> I'm kind of proud of myself I got it. The word puzzle was apt! Where did you source it from?
 
   Sep-07-25 Karpov vs K Rogoff, 1971
 
Fusilli: Vintage Karpov gives a lesson on superior positional play. Every piece going to the right square at the right time. Or pretty close to that.
 
   Sep-07-25 S Marangunic vs K Rogoff, 1971 (replies)
 
Fusilli: <FTB> OK, here we go. I thought 16.Bxf6 was dubious. Why give up the bishop pair in a fairly open position? 16.Ne3 looks better to me. I was wondering what could be wrong with 23.Nb5. It turns out that after 23...Bf8 24.Rxd7 Rxd7 25.Nxa7 meets ...Bc5 followed by ...Rd2, which ...
 
   Sep-07-25 Fridrik Olafsson (replies)
 
Fusilli: <perf> oh, right, I see
 
   Sep-06-25 Peter Enders (replies)
 
Fusilli: <He died on his birthday :( > Very sad. It reminded me of this demographic research article I saw decades ago: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/143... Abstract: <This study of deaths from natural causes examined adult mortality around the birthday for two samples, ...
 
   Sep-03-25 So vs D Gukesh, 2025
 
Fusilli: <beatgiant> Because I didn't see it? Or I like complicating things, especially my life? Who knows!
 
(replies) indicates a reply to the comment.

My Facerook Wall

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 9 OF 112 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-06-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <WinKing> Oh, yeah, I think Naroditsky was world champion under 12 a few years ago.

Speaking of ages, these were the ages of my opponents at the N.A. Open (which one can see by looking at the FIDE entry for each player)

GM Sundararajan: 27
Marc Jimenez: 34
Alexander Velikanov: 12
Jennifer Acon: 39
Kyle Shin: 12
Evan Sandberg: 16
David Plotkin: 20

Average: 22.85!
My age: 42
Enough said!

Jan-07-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: Please vote <hms123> for Most Constructive Kibbutzer!!

Committee to re-elect president Nixon

The voting is in this forum-
WannaBe chessforum

Jan-07-10  hms123: <Mariano> Check out this comment: Nimzowitsch vs Rubinstein, 1926. It is related to our conversation yesterday about Kaidanov's advice.
Jan-07-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <Howard> Right on!
<Jess> Right on!
Jan-08-10  hms123: <Mariano> thanks for turning out to vote--hms
Jan-15-10  WinKing: Mariano I like the new look - almost didn't recognize you! Hope all is well with you & the ones closest to you. :)
Jan-15-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: Be sure to check out my forum for the Corus Moves Prediction Contest starting tomorrow. Click on Elvis for details.
Jan-15-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: I played the Tennessee Winter Open, a five-round Swiss. I did pretty badly, +2 -3 =0. These were my results:

Round 1. Mariano Sana (2187) v. Justin Arnold (1946), 1-0

Round 2. David Justice (2143) v. Mariano Sana (2187), 0-1

Round 3. IM Ronald Burnett (2402) v. Mariano Sana (2187), 1-0

Round 4. Mariano Sana (2187) v. Donny Gray (2129), 0-1

Round 5. Mariano Sana (2187) v. Will Stevenson (2167), 0-1

So, I keep losing rating points. Down to 2177 now.

Jan-15-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: TN Winter Open, 2010
David Justice (2143) v. Mariano Sana (2187)

Position after 14.Rxe3:


click for larger view

White has clear advantage and is threatening 15.e5, which looks strong.

Question: if Black plays 14...e5, and White plays 15.Qxb7, can Black then play 15... Rab8 16.Qa6 Rxb2? What can Black do?

Jan-15-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: TN Winter Open, 2010

Mariano Sana (2187) v. Donny Gray (2129)

Position after 48...Rh7. White to play and blunder horribly:


click for larger view

I should have played 49.Bg2 and if 49...Rh2 50.Re2 and White is better. Instead I played:

49. Rc5?? (thinking that I could respond to 49...Rh2 with 50.Bc2) Rh5+ 0-1. Ouch!!

Jan-16-10  hms123: <Mariano> The semester is off to a good start for me. The students seem lively and ready to engage the fascinating world of statistics. It was also nice to see some of the students from last semester--they actually seemed glad to see me as well. I think you will enjoy the VU students.

Please do email me the Burnett game when you get a chance. I would like to go over it. Perhaps afterwards, we can get together and see what's what.

Jan-16-10  hms123: <M> I haven't gotten my bill yet but I am not looking forward to it.
Jan-16-10  hms123: <M> French Defense: I have Watson's book--very good. I have some others as well. The real gem is Rolf Schwarz's book (in German)--an oldie but a goodie.

Paris Attack is right about the McCutcheon. It is vastly under-rated. I used to play it all the time. I have been studying up the Ft. Knox and the Burn as well.

You might not like the French, though--you have to be good with the knights rather than the bishops. For some that's a big change.

Jan-16-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: Well... I want to give the French a try because I want something else to play besides 1...e5 against 1.e4. Of course I could pick a Sicilian, but I like the clarity of positional plans in the French. On the other hand, the queen's bishop tends to be ugly and the kingside may get in trouble, especially on the dark squares. I figure that if we get together you might help me like it better.

I played plenty of Sicilians when I was younger. Mostly Scheveningens, but some Najdorfs too. But I wouldn't play the Najdorf now, with theory stretching to no end and kids knowing it all. Or maybe I should dust off the Scheveningen.

I'm a bit intrigued by the comment about knights and bishops. Are you implying I'm a bishop guy?

Jan-17-10  hms123: <Fusilli> I didn't mean that you wouldn't like the French, nor that you were a bishop guy--just that if you were a bishop guy then the French might not be for you.

The French can be fun. And easy. You just play c5 and f6 as soon as you can. Then you grind out the endgame. Oh yes...You have to be comfortable with your King in the center somewhere.

Let's get together and I can give you the mini-lecture over a chessboard.

Here's an odd position from the French in a line that I would play occasionally:


click for larger view

Opening Explorer

Watson devotes some time to it in his book as well. I am not recommending this line but just using it as an illustration of how different the French can be.

Here's my new favorite against the Tarrasch (Fort Knox variation):


click for larger view

Opening Explorer

Jan-20-10  hms123: <M> Here's the Kaidanov game from Watson's book: Khalifman vs Kaidanov, 1987
Jan-20-10  hms123: <M> The Kaidanov game is the notes to a Corres. game between Morosi and Luppi. That game wasn't in the database so I entered it into Fritz with Watson's exclamation marks etc. along with some of his lines (not all).

[Event "Watson: DW's in the French"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "2010.01.20"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Morosi, D.."]
[Black "Luppi, D.."]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "C02"]
[Annotator "Watson"]
[PlyCount "70"]
[EventDate "2002.??.??"]
[EventType "corr"]
[TimeControl "1/604800:0"]

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. c3 Nc6 5. Nf3
Nh6 6. dxc5 Bxc5 7. b4 Bb6 8. b5 Ne7 9. Bxh6 gxh6 10. Bd3 Ng6 11. O-O Qc7 $1 12. Re1 O-O 13. a4 f5 $5 (more typical is 13... f6 14. Bxg6 hxg6 15. Qd3 Kg7 16. exf6+ Rxf6) 14. Ra2 $5 Qg7 $1 15. Qc1 $6 Bd7 16. c4 Ba5 $1 17. Ree2 dxc4 18. Bxc4 Kh8 19. Rac2 Rac8 20. Na3 Bc7 21. Qe3 Bb6 22. Qc1 Rg8 $1 23. g3 f4 24. Kh1 fxg3 25. fxg3 Rgf8 26. Rc3 Rf5 27. Re4 Nxe5 (27... Rcf8 $1) 28. Nxe5 Rxe5 29. Rf4 Rf5 30. Rcf3 Rxf4 31. Qxf4 e5 32. Qe4 Bg4 $1 33. Rf1 Bh3 34. Rf3 Bd4 0-1 35. Qd5 Qg5 $1 0-1

Jan-23-10  hms123: <Mariano> I got my heating bill (natural gas) and it was slightly more than double the previous month's bill. I am glad it's warmed up.
Jan-27-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: The January 2010 issue of Chess Life has a more than recommendable article by GM Ian Rogers titled "The Lazy Person's Guide to Endgames". This position is from that article:


click for larger view

Black to play and win. Any takers?

Jan-27-10  hms123: <M> <g1=Q> then <Kg2>
Jan-27-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <hms123> Yes, sir. Cute, isn't it?
Jan-27-10  hms123: <M> And a good trick to know.
Jan-29-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <We all do. It's already hard enough to keep the students awake>

heh....

Jan-29-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: On Kidambi Sundararajan page, <Ragh> posted the following link to a Chessbase.com article that explains Indian names: http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... (scroll down to "What's in a name?") I found it very enlightening.
Jan-30-10  hms123: <M> Snowed in for the duration--but with plenty of supplies.
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