| 16/09/2025 Christopher
  C W Shephard 25/02/1951
  – 14/09/2025 
 Sheffield Nomads
  chess club has been informed that Chris Shephard died on Sunday the 14th of
  September.  The cause was reportedly some form of abdominal cancer which
  had been deemed untreatable.  He had been at the forefront of Sheffield
  chess from 1977 to the present, his last competitive game having been as
  recently as 07/07/2025 in the Summer League. Christopher C W
  Shephard was born in Birmingham on 25th of February 1951.  What the “C W”
  in the middle stood for is unclear.  (Geoff Frost says, “I am almost
  certain that C W stood for Charles Walter.  Chris hated being known as
  CCW!”.)  He has a brother, Andrew N R Shephard, who Chris mentioned to
  me once as being “Andrew” within the family, but “Andy” outside.  (The
  writer was never “Steve” until the chess world imposed that name on him.) Chris attended King
  Edwards, Birmingham, where he was the first person to select a certain A J
  Miles to play in a chess team, for an inter-house match.  This was, of
  course, Tony Miles, born 23 April 1955, destined to attend Sheffield
  University and to become the first England player to qualify as a
  Grandmaster.  (After Chris had left the school, King Edward VII school,
  Sheffield, played King Edward’s (VI), Birmingham in the Sunday Times
  competition, and I with White played on board 1 against the said A. J.
  Miles.  The opening was 1. d4 f5 2. g4.  Miles was clearly
  unprepared and chewed his fingernails continually, but he eventually won!) He’s recorded as
  joining KES Birmingham old Boys Association in 1969.  There seemed no
  evidence of him going to university, but Jon Nelson unearthed references to
  him playing for Sussex University.  Chris’s attendance at Sussex
  University is confirmed by reference to grading lists showing him in 1971 and
  1972 as of both South Birmingham and Sussex University chess clubs.
   Enigmatically, he is listed in neither the 1970 BCF Grading List nor
  the 1970 SCCU Grading List, rather suggesting he dutifully buckled down and
  concentrated on his studies and abstained from any significant amount of
  chess?! +-+-+-+-+-+-+ What follows starts
  with a random selection of snippets which illustrate Chris’s early prominence
  in Birmingham and Warwickshire chess, and then my personal remembrances of
  Chris in his earlier years in Sheffield while he was connected with Rotherham
  Chess Club in its heyday along with extracted details events he played
  in.  Others may wish to submit their own contributions. In particular, Martin
  Howard has submitted a well-written person piece which appears separately
  below.  (Click here to jump down to it.)  +-+-+-+-+-+-+ Chess before
  Sheffield In 1967 Chris played
  on board 10 for Birmingham league v Leamington league, beating J T Wood. In April 1968 he won
  the West Midlands and Warwickshire U-18 Boys’ Championship. He played in the
  British U-18 Championship of 1968, finishing 37th-44th= out of 54, on 4½ out
  of 11. The 1969 Warwickshire
  Championship was a 5-player all-play-all won Peter Griffiths (Solihull) on 3
  points out of 4, followed by 2nd-3rd= R. V. M Hall (Birmingham, later
  Bradford, becoming a high court judge) and C. C. W. Shephard (South
  Birmingham) on 2½.  There followed, J R Crampton (Birmingham) on 1½, and
  W Ritson Morry (Mutual) who as defending champion managed to score only ½. In 1969, KES
  Birmingham reached the two-day semi-finals and finals of the Sunday Times
  held in London.  In the final, Birmingham met Dundee High School and at
  the close of play the score was 3-2 in Birmingham’s favour.  Normally,
  adjudications are done there and then to give a final result on the day, but,
  as Jon Nelson dug up to his amusement, adjudicator C H O’D Alexander,
  declined to adjudicate since as a former pupil of KES Birmingham he would be
  biased.  So, the adjudication was afterwards sent to Harry Golombek, who
  awarded Tony Miles a loss, making the score 3-3 when Dundee won on
  tie-break.  What Jon doesn’t know is that I (Steve Mann) was actually
  there.  KES Sheffield lost in the semi-final to Dundee.  I drew my
  game on board one with black against Dundee’s Chris Jones (now of chess
  problem fame).  Later, as Steve Lorber and I were on our way to the
  evening meal, our lift got stuck, resulting in at irate American threatening
  to sue, and an elderly German lady believing she would die of asphyxiation despite
  being consoled by her daughter.  Later that evening, some KES Sheffield
  and Dundee players played bridge into the early hours.  The next day,
  Chris Shephard lost to Chris Jones in the final; so, that’s one up to
  me.  At some stage, presumably the morning of the first day, all four
  teams were treated to a cinema showing of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, though
  there was a feeling we were all a bit old for such a film.  By a strange
  quirk of fate, one of the Dundee team, Andrew Baruch, was years later captain
  of a Warwickshire team playing against Yorkshire at the Abbey were B&J
  played (now Ecclesall’s venue); he now plays for Kenilworth,. The British
  Universities Chess Association (BUCA) championships were held 6th to 11th
  April 1970 at Manchester University, the latter entering three teams in the
  team event.  The preliminary stage put Sussex from Preliminary section D
  into Final section 2 where they came second, making them 10th-11th= overall
  (with Warwick as it happens).  In the Final phase, Chris won with black
  against J Sanz of Southampton in a Sokolsky, but the game is absent from the
  official bulletin.  One of Chris’s games has been exhumed, against a
  player from Manchester III in the preliminary phase.  Click on the
  following link to play through the game on screen: S H
  Foster 0-1 Chris Shepherd In 1971 Chris played
  in the Paignton Congress. On 12/05/1973, he was
  board 7 for Warwickshire against Lancashire in the English Counties ¼-finals
  (presumably 1972-73 season).  Chris beat a T Ludgate.  Warks.
  captain W Ritson Morry reckoned this was probably the strongest Warwickshire
  team he’d ever fielded, but Warks. lost 5½-14½ to a much stronger Lancashire
  line-up. Shortly after, on
  19/05/1973, Warwickshire met Leicestershire in the final of the Midland
  Counties Championship.  The final score was 8-8, and Warks. won on board
  count.  Chris was on board 4 and drew with Kevin Wicker. In 1973, Chris played
  in the Midland Open Championship, part of the Birmingham International
  Congress, finishing 2nd on 8½ out of 11, behind the winner, Louis de Veauce
  who scored 9 points.  Chris’s game with Michael J Pitt is mentioned
  later. The relative timings of
  ECF final and MCCU final suggests the ECF competition was in those days based
  of the previous season’s Union results, or the two were then wholly separate. On about 23rd of
  March 1974, Chris was playing on board 2 for Warwickshire against
  Leicestershire in the Midland Counties semi-final, drawing with L A Edwards. On 09/04/1974 played
  board 1 for Birmingham in the annual Birmingham v Coventry League match –
  losing to R. S. McFarland. On about 14/09/1974,
  Chris played board 5 for Warwickshire against Nottinghamshire beating T. Guy. On 03/07/1975, Chris
  play on board 4 for Warwickshire against a much stronger Lancashire team in
  the English Counties Championship, losing to Martyn Corden, At the Birmingham
  Easter Congress of 10th-25th April 1976, in the Midland Open Championship,
  Chris finished 3rd-4th= out of with Chris W Baker on 7½ out of 11, behind
  Glenn  Lambert 1st on 10 and Stephen Berry 2nd on 9½. October 1976 saw the
  first Warwickshire Open Championship.  Chris entered and shared 1st and
  2nd places with Nigel Povah (formerly of Leeds University). Over-the-Board Chess
  while in Sheffield By the time of the
  1977 British Chess Championship held in Brighton from 8th to 19th August,
  Chris was resident in Sheffield, meaning the move to Sheffield was at some
  time from October 1976 to August 1977. In the 1977 British
  Championship, Chris finished 25th-30th= out of 40, with 5 points out of
  11.  A notable result was a draw with 8th-11th-placed Jonathan
  Penrose.  His best win was perhaps that against Glenn Flear (then East
  Midlands Under 18 Champion), which featured Chris’s favoured Czech Benoni
  set-up, with Black’s king’s bishop being deployed either via e7 or being
  fianchettoed.  Click on the following link to play through the game on
  screen. Glenn Flear 0-1 Chris Shephard Chris had taken up a
  computer programming post at Midland Bank in Sheffield, and the bank played
  in the Sheffield Works Chess League. After a game on board
  1 in a Sheffield Works League match between Midland Bank and the Civil
  Service team (whose name varied a bit), Chris, having once again drawn with
  the writer, this time with the Czech Benoni, said I seemed to save my best
  chess to play against him!  In reality, you knew Chris’s next move
  before he did, he was so predictable. That somewhat stodgy,
  safe style was not always his style.  Going back to the 1973, Midland
  Open Championship, with White against the then-or-soon-to-be Warwickshire
  Under 18 Champion Michael Pitt, Chris opened with the Grob Attack, 1. g4, in
  a manner reminiscent of the writer’s treatment of Tony Miles mentioned
  above.  Click on the following link to play through the game on screen. Chris
  Shephard 1-0 Michal Pitt Once in Sheffield,
  Chris joined Rotherham Chess Club which in those days was a major contender
  for Sheffield League Division 1 (Davy Trophy), and Yorkshire League Division
  1 (Woodhouse Cup). Prior to 1977, Colin
  Evans had won the Sheffield Championship more times that anyone else, having
  notched up 8 wins (but not in the year the writer as a schoolboy knocked him
  out!).  The most any other person had won it was 4 times, 4-time winners
  being Charlie Gurhill, Norman Littlewood and Brian Jones, In 1977, Chris won
  the Sheffield Championship, and up to 2019 inclusive Chris had won it 29½
  times, the “½” being in 1994 when he shared it with Alan Potts.  The
  second-best total during that period was 3, scored by Paul Blackman. Rotherham used to enter
  the British Team Lightning Championship, winning it in 1975, though that was
  before Chris arrived in Sheffield.  I remember in a later year
  travelling with Chris in his car down to the British Team Lightning at
  Woolwich Arsenal, with me navigating.  Bizarrely, I didn’t bring any
  maps but merely aimed for the Thames between the Blackwall Tunnel and the
  bridge further to the west, aiming to use whichever presented itself to cross
  the river, then navigate from memory of the general layout.  At one
  stage, while going southwards through London, I told Chris he needed to be
  more over to the right.  Why? – because the apparel of the gentlemen in
  the street made it clear we were going through Golders Green, too far to the
  east.  We got there easily enough. On one occasion,
  returning from a match, four Rotherham players including Paul Blackman and
  myself, stopped at a pub and decided to have a doubles game of pool. 
  Paul was the strongest pool player of the four while I had never played
  before!  So, I was paired with Paul.  The other two as far as I
  remember were Chris and Geoff Frost.  Nobody else would be daft
  enough.  Anyway, it got to the point where there was one ball left to be
  potted, and it was my turn.  The snag was that the ball to be potted was
  near a middle pocket but the cue ball was in the opposite half of the
  table.  For a professional, it was an easy case of sending the cue ball
  down to the far cushion so that is bounced back and kicked the other ball so
  that it went into the pocket.  Being academically a physicist, I could
  work out the angle to make the cue ball hit the other ball in the right place
  to pot it, and, a little surprisingly, putting theory into practiced actually
  worked.  The ball went down the pocket, and Paul and I had won. 
  That was the only time I actually beat Chris at anything! Chris served as an
  adjudicator in the days of adjudication of unfinished games, and I used to be
  able to walk from my own home in the Nether Edge area, up the Brincliffe Edge
  and down the other side to get to Chris’s bachelor pad on Bannerdale Road to
  deliver adjudications.  That house had a garage with an up-and-over
  garage door, and on one occasion he dislocated a shoulder opening that door,
  just before he was about to go on a skiing holiday, which of course got
  cancelled. When Brian Jones
  drove me to Woodhouse Cup matches and the like, he’d give a time for me to be
  at Sheffield Midland Station knowing I’d be on time.  If Chris was
  travelling with us, Brian would give Chris a time 10 minutes earlier, as he
  knew Chris was invariably late! In time, Rotherham
  lost its former strength as a foremost club in the Sheffield area. 
  Brian Jones moved back to Manchester around 1982 (then emigrated to
  Australia).  I helped form Darnall & Handsworth around 1984. 
  The Works League eventually folded, and so on.  Chris ended up joining
  Sheffield Nomads.  So, in the last 20-ish years Chris and chess paths
  have not crossed. He played in the
  Doncaster Congress of 2006, the Sheffield Congress of 2012 (4th-6th=), and
  the Scarborough Congress of 2012.   Once he became old
  enough, Chris competed, initially regularly, in the British Over 65
  Championship, doing so in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2024.  He tended to hold
  those who finished above him to a draw, but was inadequately ruthless in
  maximising the point extracted from those finishing below him, so, despite
  sometimes starting as the highest rated player, he never won the event. 
  The relevant fact here is perhaps that Chris was not a regular
  congress-player.  A summary of his British Under-65 exploits is as follows: 
  
   
    | Year | Placed | Out of | Pts | 1st
    (=) |   |   | won | drawn | lost |  
    | 2017 | 3  to | 7 = | 53 | 5/7 | Stephen H Berry, | Roger Emerson |   | 3 | 4 | 0 |  
    | 2018 | 4  to | 8 = | 54 | 5/7 | Geoffrey H James, | Oliver A Jackson, | Kevin Bowmer | 3 | 4 | 0 |  
    | 2019 | 5  to | 13 = | 50 | 4½/7 | David Friedgood, | Mark E Page, | Brian WR Hewson | 4 | 1 | 2 |  
    | 2024 | 8  to | 13 = | 58 | 4½/7 | Andrew P Smith |   |   | 3 | 3* | 1 |  
    |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | * inc 1 HPB |  In 2017, Chris drew
  with Roger Emerson in round 5, and in the final round drew with Stephen
  Berry, thereby denying the latter a won game to secure clear first place. In 2018, Chris drew
  with two of three joint winners in games of little interest in themselves,
  but also drew with two lower-placed players, so denying himself first place. In 2019, Chris seems
  to have decided to fight rather acquiesce to draws.  Thus, he lost to
  the only one of the 1st-placed players (Page, a lower-rated player), but on
  the other hand scored 4 wins whereas hitherto he’d managed only 3.  He
  lost to local player Jim Burnett. Covid precluded the
  OTB British Championship 2020, and Caplin British Online Chess Championships
  2020/2021 plugged the gap.  Chris didn’t feature in the rather weak
  16-player Over-65 event, but dived into the local online events run by
  Rotherham’s Oliver Brennan. Chris didn’t enter
  the 2021, 2022 or 2023 British Over 65s, but sallied forth again in 2014. In 2024, Chris took a
  half-point bye in round 1.  In round 2 he continued the “make it up as
  you go along” approach to openings seen back in 2017, beating a much weaker
  player.  The same unorthodox approach netted him only a draw against
  another weaker opponent in round 3.  For round four, Chris played a
  “proper” opening as White – and thereby managed to lose to a weaker opponent!
   In round 4, he beat a significantly weaker player in an initially
  symmetrical English in which Chris would feel very much at home.  (After
  1. c4 e5, an early f5 by Black worked for me against Chris.)  In round
  5, he redeemed himself with a win against 2019 joint winner Brian
  Hewson.  Round 6 saw a 24-move draw with joint 2018 winner Geoffrey
  James.  Chris lost abysmally his round-7 game against a player rated a
  mere 9 points more (nothing). All games from the
  above events are freely available in PGN format.  Here follow a few
  which take my fancy, to be played here on screen by clicking on the link:   Then there’s the
  English (as opposed to British) Over 65 Championship . . . .   This
  was first held in 2019, held in April rather than July/August.  Chris
  participated in the 2019, 2022 and 2023 editions, summarised as follows:   
  
   
    | Year | Placed | of | Pts | 1st
    (=) |   |   | won | drawn | lost |  
    | 2019 | 2nd | 40 | 5/6 | Kevin Bowmer |   |   | 4 | 2 | 0 |  
    | 2022 | 4  to | 5 = | 32 | 5/7 | Cliff Chandler, | Ian Snape, | Paul Littlewood | 4 | 2 | 1 |  
    | 2023 | 11 to | 15 = | 50 | 4/7 | C W Baker |   |   | 2 | 4 | 1 |    Here are two games
  from 2019.  In the first, Chris holds the ultimate winner to a
  draw.  In the second, Chris meet a fellow silly-opening exponent.   Chris played for
  Yorkshire in 7 county matches (but only in the ECF Final stage) over the
  period 09/06/2018 to 08/06/2024.   
  
   
    | 09/06/2018 | W | Dimitar
    Mogilarov | Middx | 0-1 | Chris CW Shephard | Yorks | B |  
    | 30/06/2018 | W | Martin
    Mitchell | Lancs | 1-0 | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | B |  
    | 08/06/2019 | W | Nevil Chan | Middx | ½-½ | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | B |  
    | 30/06/2019 | B | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | 1-0 | Clive A
    Frostick | Surrey | W |  
    | 14/05/2022 | W | Steven
    F Coles | Middx | ½-½ | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | B |  
    | 11/06/2022 | W | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | 1-0 | Tim
    Hilton | GrM/c | B |  
    | 08/06/2024 | W | Pete G
    Large | Surrey | ½-½ | Chris
    CW Shephard | Yorks | B |  Prior to that his
  previous 2 appearances in county matches were much earlier and were
  representing Warwickshire, as follows:   
  
   
    | 09/05/2004 | W | Mike A
    Walker | Yorks | 1-0 | Chris
    CW Shephard | Warks | B |  
    | 13/10/2007 | W | Alan J
    Walton | GrM/c | 1-0 | Chris CW Shephard | Warks | B |  Despite living in
  Sheffield, Chris maintained connections with his friends in Birmingham.
   Not that long after him coming to Sheffield, Chris arranged for a
  Rotherham team to go down to Birmingham to play a friendly match against his
  old club, South Birmingham.  He continued to play, albeit occasionally,
  for Warwickshire in county matches (as above).  As late as 1997, he
  played for Warwickshire in the now‑discontinued Counties Rapidplay
  Championships.  He played in the 4NCL for Warwickshire Select as recently
  as 2023-24 season.  In the following game from the season 2014-25,
  Chris’s higher rated opponent sacrifices the exchange for a pawn and gets
  reasonable compensation, but Black perhaps over‑presses and Chris
  manages to turn the tables, and once Black realises his position is hopeless,
  seems intentionally to set up a sort of self-make rather than simply resign.
    Click on the following link to play through the game on screen. Chris
  Shephard 1-0 Clement Sreeves. Correspondence Chess
  while in Sheffield A less visible yet
  major side of Chris’s devotion to chess was his engagement with
  correspondence chess.  In the old days, it was of course carried out by
  “snail mail” but is now played online.  Things also changed over with
  the advent of chess-analysing computer software with meant players with
  modest over-the-board ability could be strong correspondence players. Chris started young,
  winning the 1972 British Junior Correspondence Chess Championship.  He
  went on to win the British Correspondence Chess Championship proper in 1978
  and then again in 1979 jointly with S D Cunliffe and A M Stewart.  He
  became an International Correspondence Chess Master in 1984, He was board six of
  the 6-board Great Britain team in the 9th ICCF Olympiad which ran from 1977
  to 1982, with the second-best board 6 total of 5½ out of 8.  (GB boards:
  1 Jonathan Penrose, 2 Adrian Swayne Hollis, 3 Simon Webb, 4 John Kenneth Footner
  [the only one unfamiliar to me], 5 John Toothill, 6 Chris C W Shephard.) The North Atlantic
  Team Tournament is a correspondence tournament between 8-board teams from
  countries on the western fringe of Europe and in North & Central America
  & the Caribbean.  The 1st was played in 1984-85 and Chris was
  selected to play for Great Britain on board 8.  Great Britain won the
  event.  The players selected in later events seemed to be to give
  different people a go, and Chris seems not to have played in this event
  again.  Click on the following link to play through Chris’s game on
  screen: F Perez Conde 0-1 Chris Shephard He was board six of
  the 6-board Great Britain team in the 9th ICCF Olympiad which ran from 1982
  to 1987, with the second/third-best board 6 total of 6½ out of 8.  (GB
  boards as in 1982.)  Here are two of Chris’s games.  Annotators to
  Chris’s game against Brglez were unsure as to whether Brglez made a clerical
  error with 4. e4 or was trying it out as a gambit!  Russian
  correspondence GM Omelschenko comes up with something of an opening
  innovation in the Najdorf Sicilian.  Chris seems to be getting the worst
  of it but defends well and manages to draw.  Great Britain came 1st,
  West Germany 2nd, and USSR (who’d been 1st in the previous three events)
  3rd.  Click on the following links to play through two of Chris’s games
  on screen: F Brglez 0-1 Chris Shephard L E Omeltschenko ½-½ C
  Shephard As an individual, he
  played in the Julius
  Nielson Memorial which ran from 26/09/1985 to about 09/10/1990, finishing
  5th-8th = (7th on Sonneborn-Berger tie-break) on 7 out of 14, Jonathan
  Penrose being 1st.  Nielsen was a Danish correspondence player who died
  in 1981.  His game against R(o)umanian Mihai Breazu has been published,
  though it’s nothing special.  Click on the following link to play
  through Breazu v Shephard on screen: Mihai Breazu 0-1 Chris Shephard The ICCF server
  reveals he played for Warwickshire in the Counties & District
  Correspondence Chess Championship Division 1 aka the Ward-Higgs in the
  seasons 2005-06 to 2018-19, seemingly except 2008-09.  Warwickshire
  dropped out of the event after 2018-19. Once when I took a
  position for adjudication round to Chris at 187 Bannerdale Road, he had the
  latest position in one of his postal games set up, and asked me for ideas as
  to what he should do.  That might sound daft as I was of course weaker
  than he, but as with cryptic crosswords, the brain can get stuck in ruts when
  analysing, so I may have kindled some worthwhile idea he’d not thought of
  (yet).  The humour of him asking for my comments became apparent when he
  mentioned he was in that game playing a Russian Correspondence Grandmaster,
  who of course I routinely ate for breakfast (or not). There are, of course,
  more important things than chess. Family There was a lady
  Sheffield chess-player who originally married a Sheffield University
  chess-player, the two staying on in Sheffield after university.  Sadly,
  she decided to leave the marriage, and set her aim on Chris!  That
  didn’t get her anywhere.  She’s long gone down south and aimed her
  sights even higher in terms of chess-playing strength, remarrying.  No
  names appropriate here. It was customary,
  after a Saturday Woodhouse Cup match, for a significant proportion of the
  Rotherham team to go and have a meal in an Indian restaurant, and on one such
  occasion Chris produced and introduced a lady friend called Mavis. 
  Obviously, matrimony or something similar was possibly on the cards, and I
  remember taking the liberty of telling Chris later that Mavis seemed an ideal
  partner for him, and so it turned out! For one reason or another,
  Chris Shepherd and Mavis King did not get married, but three children mean
  more than matrimonial bureaucracy in my book.  So it was that Amy Elizabeth King
  was born in January 1986 (or maybe slightly before), Clara Jane King was
  born in the latter part of 1988, and James William King
  was born in the earlier part of 1992, all taking Mavis’s
  surname. Apparently, Chris and
  Mavis did in fact get married recently, maybe as recently as 2024. Once, I and my own
  “other half” (and no, we aren’t married either) with members of the extended
  family, spent a day visiting Hardwick Hall.  While we were in a café
  there, quite by chance, Chris and Mavis entered.  They had a daughter
  with them back in the car so didn’t stay long. Whilst words cannot
  do much, I’m sure all in the Sheffield & District Chess Association, and
  beyond, who new Chris would wish to express their sorrow and sympathy for
  Chris’s family. Steve Mann +-+-+-+-+-+-+ Martin Howard’s appreciation of
  Chris. +-+-+-+-+-+-+ The number of
  comments about Chris speaks volumes about how highly he was regarded by all
  who knew him. I was privileged to know him for many years. I played him a
  number of times over the board. He usually outplayed me although I did manage
  a couple of draws. My one win was as a result of adjudication. Chris thought
  the adjudicators should have decided it was drawn and he was probably right ! David Adams knew
  Chris even longer than I did. They had played in school matches in the
  Birmingham area. I think Jon is correct when he is doubtful that Chris went
  to Warwick. I do have a recollection that it may have been Sussex. Also Geoff
  is right that Chris and Mavis married quite recently. Chris was incredibly
  modest. He was a phenomenally strong correspondence player, as you can see
  from the information on English Chess Forum : twice British Correspondence
  Chess Champion (1977 and 1978). He was also strong over the board. I doubt
  anyone will ever beat his score of 29 wins in the Sheffield Individual
  Championship. I know Chris was very
  proud of having been a founder member of Sheffield Nomads. He will be a huge
  loss to the club. For my part I was
  fortunate to play golf with Chris for several years. David Adams and I used
  to play golf with Chris usually at Birley Golf Course in Sheffield but
  occasionally at Beauchief or Dore & Totley. I was amused to see the
  comments about Chris’ s timekeeping. Others have mentioned that he was
  usually late for chess matches. It was no different with golf. Sometimes he
  did not arrive until after our tee off time. Nevertheless we all had a great
  time. After golf we would retire to the pub next door where we would often
  play through our recent chess games. I will very much miss those times. A gentle soul indeed
  and a huge loss to us all. Martin |