Candidates Tournament 2014

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  • #76
    Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

    Anand continues his unbeaten streak. The miracle might just happen. I, for one, would welcome a rematch.
    I am not sure who Hal Bond is quoting when he says the pundits believe that would be unfortunate. I can see how the establishment would, as always, root for Kramnik, especially with the added flavour of East-West rivalry in a post Crimea environment. But Anand has arguably brought more people into chess than anyone since Fischer. A rematch could provide both high drama and mass interest, imho.

    Comment


    • #77
      Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

      Candidates 2014

      Khanty-Mansiysk
      Round Twelve
      Thursday, March 27, 2014

      Twelfth Round Results

      Anand, Viswanathan – Andreikin, Dmitry 0.5-0.5
      Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar – Karjakin, Sergey 0.5-0.5
      Topalov, Veselin – Svidler, Peter 1-0
      Aronian, Levon – Kramnik, Vladimir 0.5-0.5

      Candidates 2014
      Round Twelve
      March 27, 2014
      Aronian, Levon – Kramnik, Vladimir
      D36 QGD, Exchange, Positional Line (6.Qc2)

      1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 exd5 5. Bg5 c6 6. Qc2 Be7 7. e3 Nbd7 8. h3 Nh5 9. Bxe7 Qxe7 10. Nf3 Nb6 11. O-O-O Nf6 12. Bd3 Be6 13. Kb1 O-O-O 14. Ka1 Kb8 15. Rc1 Ne8 16. Na4 Nd6 17. Nc5 g6 18. h4 Bc8 19. h5 g5 20. Bxh7 g4 21. Nh4 Qf6 22. g3 Nbc4 23. Bd3 Rxh5 24. Rhe1 Re8 25. Re2 Reh8 26. Qb3 Qd8 27. e4 b6 28. Na4 Ba6 29. Nc5 Bc8 30. Na4 Ba6 31. Nc5 Bc8 0.5-0.5

      Candidates 2014
      Round Twelve
      March 27, 2014
      Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar – Karjakin, Sergey
      E20 Nimzo-Indian, Kmoch Variation

      1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. f3 c5 5. d5 b5 6. e4 O-O 7. e5 Ne8 8. f4 exd5 9. cxd5 d6 10. Nf3 c4 11. a4 Nd7 12. Be2 Qb6 13. axb5 Nc7 14. Qd4 Bb7 15. Bd2 Bxc3 16. bxc3 dxe5 17. fxe5 Bxd5 18. Be3 Qxb5 19. O-O Ne6 20. Qh4 Ndc5 21. Rab1 Nb3 22. Bd1 Qa5 23. Bc2 g6 24. Ng5 Nxg5 25. Bxg5 Qxc3 26. Rf2 Nd4 27. Bh6 Nc6 28. Rd1 Qxe5 29. Rf5 Qe7 30. Bg5 f6 31. Rfxd5 fxg5 32. Qxc4 Qe6 33. Bb3 Kh8 34. Qc5 Rae8 35. h4 Qe3 36. Qxe3 Rxe3 37. Ba4 Ne7 38. Rxg5 Nf5 39. h5 Kg7 40. hxg6 hxg6 41. Bc2 Kh6 42. Rg4 Re5 43. Bxf5 Rexf5 44. Ra4 a5 45. Rd6 Rg5 46. Ra6 Rff5 47. Rh4 Kg7 48. Ra7 Rf7 49. Ra6 Rb7 50. Ra4 Rbb5 51. Ra3 Rb1 52. Kh2 Rh5 53. Kg3 Rbb5 54. Kf2 Kh6 55. Kg1 Rb1 56. Kf2 Rb2 57. Kg1 Rg5 58. Rh3 Kg7 59. Ra7 Kf6 60. Ra6 Ke5 0.5-0.5

      Close to the time control Karjakin had 14 seconds to make 6 moves. Mamedyarov let his clock go below 5 minutes so that he wouldn’t have to record moves. There was a flurry of moves and Karjakin made the time.

      Candidates 2014
      Round Twelve
      March 27, 2014
      Topalov, Veselin – Svidler, Peter
      B49 Sicilian, Taimanov Variation

      1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nc6 5. Nc3 Qc7 6. Be3 a6 7. Be2 b5 8. Nxc6 dxc6 9. a4 b4 10. Nb1 Nf6 11. Nd2 c5 12. f3 Bb7 13. Nc4 Nd7 14. Qc1 Be7 15. O-O O-O 16. Bf4 e5 17. Bg3 h6 18. c3 a5 19. Qc2 Ba6 20. Rfd1 Rfd8 21. b3 Bg5 22. Bf2 Nf8 23. cxb4 cxb4 24. Bb6 Rxd1 25. Rxd1 Qb8 26. Bf2 Qc7 27. Rd5 Rc8 28. h4 Be7 29. Qd2 Rd8 30. Bb6 Rxd5 31. Qxd5 Qb8 32. Qxa5 Bxc4 33. Bxc4 Qd6 34. Bf2 Qd1 35. Kh2 1-0

      Candidates 2014
      Round Twelve
      March 27, 2014
      Anand, Viswanathan – Andreikin, Dmitry
      B19 Caro-Kann, classical (7..Nd7)

      1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Bf5 5. Ng3 Bg6 6. h4 h6 7. Nf3 e6 8. Ne5 Bh7 9. Bd3 Bxd3 10. Qxd3 Nd7 11. f4 Bb4 12. c3 Be7 13. Bd2 Ngf6 14. O-O-O O-O 15. Qf3 Qc7 16. c4 a5 17. Kb1 Rad8 18. Bc1 a4 19. Rhe1 a3 20. b3 Bb4 21. Re3 c5 22. d5 exd5 23. cxd5 Nb6 24. Red3 Qc8 25. d6 Rfe8 26. Nh5 Re6 27. Nxf6 Rxf6 28. d7 Qc7 29. Qg4 c4 30. Rg3 g6 31. h5 cxb3 32. Rxb3 Na4 33. hxg6 fxg6 34. Rxb4 Nc3 35. Kc2 b5 36. Kb3 Na4 37. Qf3 Nc5 38. Kc2 Na4 39. Kb3 Nc5 40. Kc2 Na4 41. Kb3 0.5-0.5

      Standing after Round Twelve

      Anand 7.5
      Aronian 6.5
      Karjakin 6.0
      Mamedyarov 6.0
      Kramnik 5.5
      Svidler 5.5
      Topalov 5.5
      Andreikin 5.5
      ____________

      The commentators, as usual, are Viktorija Cmilyte and Peter-Heine Nielsen. Today, they broke away from two press conferences because games still being played were getting exciting. Surely there must be a way of recording the whole conference and then showing the rest of it later. I can’t remember the last time I have had just a couple of sentences from Peter Svidler!

      Topalov beat Svidler, and he did so quite easily. In a Taimanov Sicilian White got a nice positional plus, which grew into a serious advantage when Svidler “started missing stuff”. He concluded: “I can’t explain why I kept missing stuff. The result is perfectly deserved.” Topalov didn’t look as tense as usual – perhaps because he won and because Peter didn’t try to win the press conference.
      ________

      The game Aronian-Kramnik wasn’t to decide the tournament because Kramnik was already out of contention and Aronian was a full point behind Anand. Aronian played the risky 24. e4 but Kramnik didn’t try to make something of it and repeated moves. He said that his only goal was first place and then his mind was a suitcase – I took that to mean he just wants to go home now.

      Actually, instead of Ba6 in the end, Kramnik had an interesting maneuver in 28…Nb5 29.exd5 Na5! which might have given him something. Aronian was stunned when the FIDE Press Officer showed him this line.
      ___________

      (Official Site) - Andreikin wanted to try a Caro-Kann against Anand, exactly the line that Carlsen played in game 2 of Chennai WCC match.

      Anand definitely had an improvement ready, as he deviated on move 15 with Qd3-f3. In this development he kept more pieces on the board.
      Black was trying for a usual queenside counterplay, while white centralised his pieces waiting to answer black’s c6-c5 break with d4-d5.
      Black immediately went astray by allowing the pawn to advance further, all the way to d7. In addition, white launched an attack against the enemy king.

      However, Andreikin didn’t roll over, and he sacrificed a bishop to lead the white king out in the open field.
      His efforts paid off when Anand conceded a draw by “taking a practical decision” to repeat the moves.

      Anand commented later – “I looked at Kd2, but there are two rooks, queen, knight jumping around, and I couldn’t see it through. ” He added that 36. Bd2 might have been a better try.

      Anand got up from his table and went over to see what was going on between Mamedyarov-Karjakin at once point. It looked to me like they had just passed the time control and were trying to bring their score sheets up to date but to others it might have looked like a draw.
      __________

      Mamedyarov-Karjakin was a back- and forth-contest. Karjakin thought that Anand would win his game, so he wanted to play for a win and probably overpressed. He spent a lot of time on 27..Nc6. Mamedyarov took over the initiative and a position was reached where Karjakin had 14 seconds left for six moves. He played six good moves, reached the time control and then “tortured me for 30 minutes more” (Mamedyarov).

      At the press conference, perhaps realizing he was becoming the closest threat to Anand, Karjakin was irritated about what happened. “First I'd like to mention that this is a stupid time control. Why do I pay my money to the Association of Chess Professionals if they don't protect the players? Besides, I agree with Vladimir Kramnik who spoke about the tiebreak here. The mistakes of London are just repeated and I don't understand why.” Even though all the players have signed their contracts, and knew the rules in advance, it does seem to be a legitimate question.

      Karjakin would like a uniform time control rule, favoring the 30-second increment they had in the World Cup.

      Mamedyarov then told an anecdote that was so long and convoluted that the interpreter gave up and said, “Things were said.” to end the press conference.
      ________

      Emil Sutovsky of the ACP answered Karjakin’s rant on his Facebook page:

      "Karjakin's statement was surprising. "Why do we play the tournament with such a stupid time control? What do I pay ACP for? Why isn't it protecting chess players' right?"

      First of all, Karjakin (as everyone else) didn't pay ACP a cent in 2012-2013, he confirmed his membership for 2014 only three weeks ago and also paid the membership fees. While we worked regardless the contributions.

      Second, and this is even more important: the decision to have time controls only with the increment in all formats (classical/rapid/blitz) starting from the next cycle was made by the World Championship and Olympiad Commission last year exactly on my initiative.

      Moreover, I announced this decision publicly.

      As long as the Grand Prix Series 2012-2013 was played with the time control with no increment, it was decided to play the Candidates' with the same time control and there's some logic in that.

      Anyways, one could ask for clarifications after the Regulations of the tournament was published - I guess, dozens of players can confirm that their inquiries on any subject, which is at least indirectly connected to ACP's work, NEVER stay unanswered."
      ________

      (ChessVibes) - Anand is still very likely to win the event and qualify for the World Championship, but the situation could have been even more comfortable for him. If he had converted his game today, he would have needed only a draw out of his last two games. Now, for instance if he loses to Karjakin on Saturday and draws his last game, Karjakin can overtake him by winning his last game because the tiebreak would be in his favor.

      First we'll have another rest day, and then let's see what Saturday will bring, with the games Karjakin-Anand, Kramnik-Topalov, Svidler-Mamedyarov and Andreikin-Aronian.
      ______

      I think it is a foregone conclusion that Kramnik and Topalov will not shake hands before their game!
      Last edited by Wayne Komer; Thursday, 27th March, 2014, 04:13 PM.

      Comment


      • #78
        Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

        Another day of fighting chess. The game between Anand and Andreikin was particularly exciting. At the end, although Vishy had the advantage the complexities were very dangerous. Rather than risk it, he took the draw. A win would have pretty well put him out of reach. Instead, the tournament is still not over.

        Comment


        • #79
          Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

          Hey Hal, what was Topalov getting so worked up about? See photo evidence in http://candidates2014.fide.com/the-d...sed-victories/

          Comment


          • #80
            Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

            The tournament is incredible tight - and Anand needs to work hard even if he has a strong lead. I was expecting more segregated rankings, but Mamedyarov and Andreikin exceeded expectations. Funny thing - Anand can lose both games and still qualify if the right combination of results happens.

            Comment


            • #81
              Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

              Topalov was annoyed that Peter Svidler was sitting with his second in the back of the hall prior to the round. Technically he was right - the security check was already done and now his second can pass him a secret device. I let him vent. After the game he came back and apologized, noting that the room was well lit and nothing could really happen.

              It was also interesting to note Karjakin's rant about the "stupid" time controls - no arguments from me!

              Comment


              • #82
                Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

                It sounds like frustration is starting to show up as a long and important event continues. That and disappointment with a players own performance.

                Losing sucks.
                Gary Ruben
                CC - IA and SIM

                Comment


                • #83
                  Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

                  It looks very much as if Anand has now won the Candidates'. His closest competitor, Aronian, went down in flames while Anand at this moment (move 55) appears to have secured the draw against Karjakin. That would give Anand an insurmountable lead with one round to go.
                  Congratulations, Vishy Anand.

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Anand the Challenger!

                    It's all over but the cheering. Vishy Anand has cinched first place in the Candidates' Tournament and will play a rematch against Magnus Carlsen for the World Chess Championship this fall, time and place TBD. Not bad for a guy who was discounted as down and out. :D

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Candidates 2014

                      Candidates 2014

                      Khanty-Mansiysk
                      Round Thirteen
                      Saturday, March 29, 2014

                      Thirteenth Round Results

                      Andreikin, Dmitry – Aronian, Levon 1-0
                      Karjakin, Sergey – Anand, Viswanathan 0.5-0.5
                      Svidler, Peter – Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar 0.5-0.5
                      Kramnik, Vladimir – Topalov, Veselin 1-0

                      Candidates 2014
                      Round Thirteen
                      March 29, 2014
                      Svidler, Peter – Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar
                      B90 Sicilian, Najdorf, Byrne

                      1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. Be3 Ng4 7. Bg5 h6 8. Bh4 g5 9. Bg3 Bg7 10. Be2 h5 11. h4 Nc6 12. Nb3 gxh4 13. Bxh4 Be6 14. Qd2 Qb6 15. Nd5 Bxd5 16. exd5 Nd4 17. Nxd4 Qxd4 18. Qxd4 Bxd4 19. c3 Bf6 20. O-O-O Kd7 21. Bxg4 hxg4 22. Bxf6 exf6 23. Rxh8 Rxh8 24. Rd4 Rh5 25. Rxg4 Rxd5 26. Rf4 Ke6 27. Kc2 Rg5 28. g3 Re5 29. Kd3 Rd5 30. Rd4 Rf5 31. Re4 Kd7 32. Ke3 Re5 33. Kd4 Rh5 34. a4 b6 35. b3 Rh1 36. Kd3 Rd1 37. Kc2 Rf1 38. Rf4 Ke6 39. Kd3 f5 40. Ke2 Rc1 41. Kd2 Rf1 42. Ke2 Ke5 0.5-0.5

                      Candidates 2014
                      Round Thirteen
                      March 29, 2014
                      Andrekin, Dmitry – Aronian, Levon
                      A45 Trompovsky Attack

                      1. d4 Nf6 2. Bg5 g6 3. Bxf6 exf6 4. c4 Bb4 5. Nd2 c5 6. a3 Bxd2 7. Qxd2 cxd4 8. Nf3 Nc6 9. Nxd4 Nxd4 10. Qxd4 Qa5 11. b4 Qe5 12. O-O-O a5 13. b5 d6 14. Qxe5 dxe5 15. g3 Be6 16. Bg2 Bxc4 17. Bxb7 Rb8 18. Bc6 Kf8 19. a4 Bb3 20. Kb2 Bxa4 21. Rd5 Ke7 22. Ka3 Bc2 23. Rd7 Kf8 24. e4 a4 25. Rc1 Bb3 26. Bd5 Bxd5 27. Rxd5 Kg7 28. Rc7 Rb6 29. Rc6 Rb7 30. Kxa4 Ra8 31. Ra6 Rc8 32. b6 Rc2 33. Kb5 Rxf2 34. Kc6 Re7 35. Raa5 Re6 36. Rd6 Re7 37. Rdd5 Re6 38. Kc7 Re7 39. Kc8 Re8 40. Kd7 Kf8 41. b7 Re7 42. Kc6 Re6 43. Kc7 Re7 44. Kb6 1-0

                      Candidates 2014
                      Round Thirteen
                      March 29, 2014
                      Karjakin, Sergey – Viswanathan, Anand
                      D30 Queen’s Gambit Declined

                      . d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. e3 Be7 5. b3 O-O 6. Bb2 c5 7. cxd5 Nxd5 8. dxc5 Nd7 9. c6 bxc6 10. Nbd2 a5 11. e4 N5f6 12. Qc2 a4 13. Qxc6 Qa5 14. Qxa4 Qxa4 15. bxa4 Nc5 16. Bb5 Nxa4 17. Bd4 Bd7 18. Bxd7 Nxd7 19. Ke2 Nac5 20. Rhc1 Ra4 21. Rc2 Rfa8 22. Rac1 Rxa2 23. Rxc5 Bxc5 24. Bxc5 Rc8 25. Ba3 Rxc1 26. Bxc1 Nc5 27. Ke3 f6 28. Nd4 e5 29. Ne2 h5 30. h3 Kf7 31. Nc3 Rc2 32. Ne2 Ra2 33. h4 g6 34. g3 Ke6 35. f3 Kf7 36. Nc3 Rc2 37. Ne2 Ra2 38. Nb1 Nb3 39. Nbc3 Ra1 40. Bb2 Rf1 41. Nd5 Na5 42. Nb6 Rb1 43. Bc3 Rxb6 44. Bxa5 Rb3 45. Bc3 g5 46. hxg5 fxg5 47. Kf2 Rb5 48. g4 h4 49. Ng1 Rc5 50. Bd2 Rc2 51. Ke2 Ra2 52. Nh3 Kg6 53. Kd3 Rb2 54. Ke3 Rb3 55. Ke2 Rb2 56. Kd1 Rb3 57. Ke2 Rb2 58. Kd3 Ra2 59. Nf2 Ra3 60. Bc3 Ra2 61. Ke3 Ra3 62. Kd2 Ra2 63. Ke1 Kf6 64. Kf1 Ra3 65. Nd1 Ke6 66. Kg2 Rb3 67. Ba5 Ra3 68. Bb6 Ra2 69. Nf2 Kf6 70. Kh3 Ra3 71. Kg2 Ra2 72. Bd8 Kg6 73. Be7 Rb2 74. Bc5 Rc2 75. Bd6 Kf6 76. Kf1 Rc1 77. Kg2 Rc2 78. Bb4 Rb2 79. Ba5 Ra2 80. Bd8 Kg6 81. Be7 Rb2 82. Bc5 Kf6 83. Kg1 Rb1 84. Kh2 Rb3 85. Kg2 Rb2 86. Ba3 Ra2 87. Bb4 Rb2 88. Be1 h3 89. Kf1 h2 90. Nh1 Rb1 91. Ke2 0.5-0.5

                      Anand has won the tournament with one round to go.

                      Candidates 2014
                      Round Thirteen
                      March 29, 2014
                      Kramnik, Vladimir – Topalov, Veselin
                      D43 QGD, Semi-Slav (5. Bg5 h6)

                      1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 c6 5. Bg5 h6 6. Bxf6 Qxf6 7. e3 g6 8. Bd3 Bg7 9. O-O O-O 10. Ne5 c5 11. cxd5 cxd4 12. exd4 exd5 13. Re1 Be6 14. Bb5 Rd8 15. Rc1 a6 16. Ba4 Rd6 17. Qb3 b6 18. Ne2 b5 19. Qa3 Bf8 20. Bc2 Nc6 21. Qg3 Rc8 22. h4 Ne7 23. h5 g5 24. f4 Qg7 25. Rf1 f6 26. Ng4 Rdc6 27. Ne3 f5 28. fxg5 Qxg5 29. Qxg5 hxg5 30. Bxf5 Nxf5 31. Rxc6 Rxc6 32. Nxf5 Rc2 33. Neg3 Rxb2 34. Re1 Bd7 35. Ne7 Kf7 36. Nxd5 Bc6 37. Rf1 Ke6 38. Ne3 Bg7 39. Ngf5 Bh8 40. h6 Be4 41. d5 Kd7 42. Ng3 Bd3 43. Rf7 Ke8 44. Rf3 Rxa2 45. Nef5 Rd2 46. Ng7 Ke7 47. d6 Kxd6 48. Rf8 b4 49. Rxh8 b3 50. N7f5 Bxf5 51. Nxf5 Kc7 52. h7 b2 53. Rc8 Kxc8 54. h8=Q Kd7 55. Qh7 1-0

                      Kramnik had his press conference and ten minutes or so later, Topalov had his press conference.

                      Standing after Round Thirteen

                      Anand 8.0
                      Aronian 6.5
                      Mamedyarov 6.5
                      Andreikin 6.5
                      Kramnik 6.5*
                      Karjakin 6.5
                      Svidler 6
                      Topalov 5.5
                      _______
                      *omitted in the first draft - sorry.

                      Comments

                      (Anand) - "I really hesitated before making the decision to participate here”, Anand told at the press conference. "Honestly, I made a mistake when I announced that I would take time to think about it. I had to say directly "I am participating" and then in case of changing mind just put the invitation down. I set aside the decision, because I wanted to make it consciously. I needed some time to recover.

                      The story of what happened at the London Chess Classics Rapid comes to my mind. Kramnik lost a silly game against Nakamura and despite the fact that the day before Vladimir defeated me, I decided to cheer him up and invited him for the dinner. At the dinner it turned the way around, rather he was comforting me. He was asking why I hesitated playing at Candidates' and his support really helped me to make this decision."

                      (Stewart Reuben) – I looked up the regulations if either Carlsen or Anand doesn't play.

                      3.6.2 If a player refuses to participate in the World Championship Match, he will be replaced as follows: The runner up finalist of FWCM 2013, GM Viswanathan Anand, replaces the World champion Magnus Carlsen and the runner up of the Candidates Tournament 2014 replaces the challenger. In case any or both players refuse to participate when invited, or for any further replacements needed, the FIDE rating list of January 2014 will be used to determine their replacements.

                      - Actually tomorrow's round will impact prize money distribution !

                      - Actually, if it's all draws tomorrow, and Anand declines another match with Carlsen, someone on 50% and some random tiebreaker will get a match with Carlsen!!
Of course, this is the sort of absurd situation that can arise when we have a qualification system for the Candidates that so narrows down and randomises the qualification prospects of strong players that it is almost inevitable that 2 or 3 of the strongest miss out.

                      - EVERY strong player had at least TWO chances to qualify for the Candidates (Grand Prix, World Cup). So if they didn't, they weren't good enough (Naka, Caruana, Gelfand, Grischuk). No excuses.

                      - Very convincing victory by Anand. Winning with a round to spare, the only player on a plus score ... I don't think any expected this, or the insane blunders by so many of the other players. I am very much looking forward to a Carlsen - Anand rematch.
                      I am also pleasantly surprised by Andreikin. People were saying that both he and Anand had no business in this event, and they have both shown otherwise.

                      - Both Andreikin and Karjakin played without any fear in this tournament. Stress got better of Aronian and Kramnik.

                      - What a fight Anand gave in an adverse situation! Karjakin could not break into his defense. Anand has taken risk of sacrificing a piece or pawn time and again. This shows that he has in-depth grip of positional chess. Even technician like Karjakin gave up, which otherwise he would have won with any other player in the tournament. Hats off to Anand! You roared back! You displayed judicious mixture of risk and retracing and kept your cool under tense condition. You are worthy candidate to challenge Carlsen. All the best for a showdown.

                      - I agree. When I saw the type of endgame Anand has went into, I thought "Big mistake, not against Karjakin!" But Anand has shown that he was up to the task. We have a clear winner and worthy candidate. Congratulations. I'm looking forward to the match.

                      - What the hell happened??? The Boss had promised us a Russian.

                      - If there's one thing that compensates for what will be a very boring rematch with a foregone conclusion, it is that Ilyumzhinov didn't get what he wanted. Yay!!

                      It would seem that Ilyumzhinov needs to find a different god to pray to. Or perhaps he should contact his alien friends next time.

                      - Both Naka and Caruana had multiple chances to qualify for the Candidates and didn't -- Naka being owned by Gelfand in the Grand Prix and then by Korobov at the World cup; Caruana being inferior to Mamedyarov at the Grand Prix and losing to MVL at World Cup. The best players made it to the Candidates.

                      - Nothing silly at all about the qualifications. Mamedyarov and Andreikin were superior to Naka and Caruana when it mattered most...and both have acquitted themselves well at the Candidates tournament.

                      It's very clear what one has to do to make the Candidates (other than Carlsen/Anand): 
1. Finish 1st or 2nd in the Grand Prix (requires multiple good results, not just one great result and 2 horrible ones)
 2. Reach the final of the World Cup 
3. Remain consistently in the top 5 in the world from July 2014 thru June 2015. 
4. Convince a sponsor from your country to host the Candidates so you can be chosen as a wild card

                      That's several ways to qualify...if you can't do that, you don't belong in the Candidates. Period.

                      - At the press conference, Anand said that it was Kramnik who persuaded him to play in the Candidates. It is really wonderful to see two best players of the modern era being such good friends off the board. You are a good man, Vladimir!
                      Last edited by Wayne Komer; Sunday, 30th March, 2014, 01:28 AM. Reason: added comments

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

                        I expect Anand to be much more competitive in the upcoming WC match. His play looks very solid.

                        Aronian must be disappointed. I wonder if it will ever happen for him. Possibly he had to press too hard to try to catch up.
                        Gary Ruben
                        CC - IA and SIM

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Re: Candidates Tournament 2014

                          Another world championship match for Anand! Amazing!!

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Re: Anand the Challenger!

                            Originally posted by Wayne Komer View Post
                            Standing after Round Thirteen

                            Anand 8.0
                            Aronian 6.5
                            Mamedyarov 6.5
                            Andreikin 6.5
                            Karjakin 6.5
                            Svidler 6
                            Topalov 5.5

                            (to be continued)
                            What did Kramnik do to be kick out of standings? LOL

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Re: Anand the Challenger!

                              After round 13, it is officially confirmed that Vishy Anand will meet Magnus Carlsen again!!!

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Re: Anand the Challenger!

                                Originally posted by Caesar Posylek View Post
                                After round 13, it is officially confirmed that Vishy Anand will meet Magnus Carlsen again!!!
                                I am personally very happy with this outcome.

                                Perhaps Magnus will be more willing to attack and takes risks now that he has secured the World Title, and hopefully Anand will have somewhat less pressure and play better than last time, as he won't have anything to lose this time.

                                My bet is that Carlsen will keep his title for quite a while, but as long we got interesting and exciting chess I'll be happy with that.

                                Simon

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