Re: Start Time (Toronto EST)? : Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2014
Tata Steel 2014
January 23, 2014
Round Nine (concluded)
The game Nakamura-Caruana did not continue on for almost ever – it was drawn with a perpetual on move 61.
Tata Steel 2014 Masters
Round Nine
January 23, 2014
Hikaru Nakamura-Fabiano Caruana
E60 King’s Indian, King’s Knight Variation
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nf3 Bg7 4. g3 O-O 5. Bg2 c5 6. Nc3 cxd4 7. Nxd4 Qc7 8. b3 d5 9. Ndb5 Qa5 10. Bd2 dxc4 11. bxc4 Qd8 12. O-O a6 13. Na3 Nc6 14. Nc2 Be6 15. Rb1 Rc8 16. Ne3 Na5 17. Bxb7 Nxb7 18. Rxb7 Bh3 19. Re1 e6 20. Qc2 Qd4 21. Reb1 Rfd8 22. Be1 Ng4 23. Nxg4 Bxg4 24. Qa4 Bh3 25. Rd1 Qg4 26. f3 Rxd1 27. Nxd1 Qd4+ 28. Nf2 Bf8 29. Qd7 Qxd7 30. Rxd7 Bc5 31. Bb4 Bxb4 32. Nxh3 h6 33. Nf2 Bc5 34. Rd3 Bxf2+ 35. Kxf2 Rxc4 36. Ra3 Rc6 37. Ke3 Kf8 38. h4 h5 39. Kd4 Ke7 40. e4 Kd7 41. e5 Rb6 42. Ra5 Rc6 43. Ra4 Rb6 44. Ke4 Ke7 45. Kf4 Kf8 46. Ke4 Ke7 47. g4 hxg4 48. fxg4 Kf8 49. Ra5 Rb4+ 50. Kf3 Rb6 51. Kf4 Kg7 52. Ra4 Rc6 53. Ke4 Rb6 54. a3 Rb1 55. Rxa6 Rh1 56. a4 Rxh4 57. Kf4 Rh1 58. g5 Rf1+ 59. Kg4 Rg1+ 60. Kf4 Rf1+ 61. Kg4 Rg1+ 0.5-0.5
Then presumably the guys hailed a taxi and split the fare back to Amsterdam, the way they just split the point.
Standings
Aronian 7/9
Giri 5.5/9
Caruana 5.5/9
Dominguez 5.5/9
Karjakin 5.5/9
Harikrishna 5/9
So 5/9
Van Wely 4/9
Rapport 3.5/9
Nakamura 3.5/9
Gelfand 2.5/9
Naiditsch 1.5/9
The odds are that Aronian will win the tournament. He has done this thrice before – 2012, 2008 as the Corus and 2007 as Wijk.
Tomorrow is another rest day. This must be the most rested tournament ever. One would think that would favour the older competitors but looking at the standings above I suppose there is no direct correlation.
Today was supposed to showcase the Eindhoven High Tech Campus but, unless I missed something, we were not given a tour of the campus and the playing rooms could have been anywhere. What an immense amount of trouble to take the players there, to no effect.
Games resume on Saturday and finish on Sunday.
++++++++
Viewers’ comments from on-line forums
- A second outing at Wijk for the apparently unnamed opening 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nc3 d5 3. Bf4 . It's called "A45 Indian Defence" by the Wijk website, otherwise it gets called a "Queen Pawn" Opening.
In the same round, Rapport against Giri started 1. d4 Nf6 2. Bf4, also termed "A45 Indian Defence", although that's now regarded by authors as an alternative London System move order. The game continuation 2. .. c5 3. dxc5 Na6 is rather more characteristic of a reversed Reti.
Still it's instructive to see top GMs venturing into obscure areas of the openings spectrum.
Its even more instructive to see how a top GM deals with this obscure stuff, which some of us see all the time in league chess
- Aronian is looking more like a world champion, except of course that Carlsen is a massive obstacle to try to get past.
Before today's game, Aronian was half a point ahead of Karjakin, with others being further behind. And the two leaders were about to play each other, with Aronian as White.
He made absolutely sure that he was never going to lose the game, and he played ultra-solidly, happy to play out even the slightest edge for a win, but also fully satisfied with a steady draw, if the opponent plays accurately.
Over the last few years, Carlsen has shown many times that even super-grandmaster opponents will sometimes slip up under small but continuous pressure. Aronian has of course studied in depth Carlsen's play, and leant from Carlsen's psychology. Karjakin suddenly missed a tactic,and lost a pawn!
- Poor old Naiditsch. Must be a candidate for the worst ever game by a player rated 2700+.
- Levon is back in the saddle again
- Very excited to see how Aronian does against Anand, Kramnik, and Carlsen in a week.
- "Jobava is turning into a modern-day Mikhail Tal, winning with amazing sacrifices that computers don't like. But, as Boris Gelfand said earlier in the tournament, who cares about computers?"
- Lev Aronian looking to break his all-time peak live rating mark of 2829.7 with an amazing performance
Tata Steel 2014
January 23, 2014
Round Nine (concluded)
The game Nakamura-Caruana did not continue on for almost ever – it was drawn with a perpetual on move 61.
Tata Steel 2014 Masters
Round Nine
January 23, 2014
Hikaru Nakamura-Fabiano Caruana
E60 King’s Indian, King’s Knight Variation
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nf3 Bg7 4. g3 O-O 5. Bg2 c5 6. Nc3 cxd4 7. Nxd4 Qc7 8. b3 d5 9. Ndb5 Qa5 10. Bd2 dxc4 11. bxc4 Qd8 12. O-O a6 13. Na3 Nc6 14. Nc2 Be6 15. Rb1 Rc8 16. Ne3 Na5 17. Bxb7 Nxb7 18. Rxb7 Bh3 19. Re1 e6 20. Qc2 Qd4 21. Reb1 Rfd8 22. Be1 Ng4 23. Nxg4 Bxg4 24. Qa4 Bh3 25. Rd1 Qg4 26. f3 Rxd1 27. Nxd1 Qd4+ 28. Nf2 Bf8 29. Qd7 Qxd7 30. Rxd7 Bc5 31. Bb4 Bxb4 32. Nxh3 h6 33. Nf2 Bc5 34. Rd3 Bxf2+ 35. Kxf2 Rxc4 36. Ra3 Rc6 37. Ke3 Kf8 38. h4 h5 39. Kd4 Ke7 40. e4 Kd7 41. e5 Rb6 42. Ra5 Rc6 43. Ra4 Rb6 44. Ke4 Ke7 45. Kf4 Kf8 46. Ke4 Ke7 47. g4 hxg4 48. fxg4 Kf8 49. Ra5 Rb4+ 50. Kf3 Rb6 51. Kf4 Kg7 52. Ra4 Rc6 53. Ke4 Rb6 54. a3 Rb1 55. Rxa6 Rh1 56. a4 Rxh4 57. Kf4 Rh1 58. g5 Rf1+ 59. Kg4 Rg1+ 60. Kf4 Rf1+ 61. Kg4 Rg1+ 0.5-0.5
Then presumably the guys hailed a taxi and split the fare back to Amsterdam, the way they just split the point.
Standings
Aronian 7/9
Giri 5.5/9
Caruana 5.5/9
Dominguez 5.5/9
Karjakin 5.5/9
Harikrishna 5/9
So 5/9
Van Wely 4/9
Rapport 3.5/9
Nakamura 3.5/9
Gelfand 2.5/9
Naiditsch 1.5/9
The odds are that Aronian will win the tournament. He has done this thrice before – 2012, 2008 as the Corus and 2007 as Wijk.
Tomorrow is another rest day. This must be the most rested tournament ever. One would think that would favour the older competitors but looking at the standings above I suppose there is no direct correlation.
Today was supposed to showcase the Eindhoven High Tech Campus but, unless I missed something, we were not given a tour of the campus and the playing rooms could have been anywhere. What an immense amount of trouble to take the players there, to no effect.
Games resume on Saturday and finish on Sunday.
++++++++
Viewers’ comments from on-line forums
- A second outing at Wijk for the apparently unnamed opening 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nc3 d5 3. Bf4 . It's called "A45 Indian Defence" by the Wijk website, otherwise it gets called a "Queen Pawn" Opening.
In the same round, Rapport against Giri started 1. d4 Nf6 2. Bf4, also termed "A45 Indian Defence", although that's now regarded by authors as an alternative London System move order. The game continuation 2. .. c5 3. dxc5 Na6 is rather more characteristic of a reversed Reti.
Still it's instructive to see top GMs venturing into obscure areas of the openings spectrum.
Its even more instructive to see how a top GM deals with this obscure stuff, which some of us see all the time in league chess
- Aronian is looking more like a world champion, except of course that Carlsen is a massive obstacle to try to get past.
Before today's game, Aronian was half a point ahead of Karjakin, with others being further behind. And the two leaders were about to play each other, with Aronian as White.
He made absolutely sure that he was never going to lose the game, and he played ultra-solidly, happy to play out even the slightest edge for a win, but also fully satisfied with a steady draw, if the opponent plays accurately.
Over the last few years, Carlsen has shown many times that even super-grandmaster opponents will sometimes slip up under small but continuous pressure. Aronian has of course studied in depth Carlsen's play, and leant from Carlsen's psychology. Karjakin suddenly missed a tactic,and lost a pawn!
- Poor old Naiditsch. Must be a candidate for the worst ever game by a player rated 2700+.
- Levon is back in the saddle again
- Very excited to see how Aronian does against Anand, Kramnik, and Carlsen in a week.
- "Jobava is turning into a modern-day Mikhail Tal, winning with amazing sacrifices that computers don't like. But, as Boris Gelfand said earlier in the tournament, who cares about computers?"
- Lev Aronian looking to break his all-time peak live rating mark of 2829.7 with an amazing performance
Comment