Re: Gashimov Memorial
Gashimov Memorial
Shamkir 2014
Round Six
Saturday, April 26, 2014
The commentators on Chess24 are Lawrence Trent and Jan Gustafsson.
Jan says that Mamedyarov is a pawn down after five moves and has posed no problems to black. Black is seriously better later on. The chess engines evaluate the position as at least equal.
(Carlsen) “I was basically out of book on move 5. Any preparation I did was for nothing. That's fine. It's more interesting when we play chess and not everything is decided by preparation,” said Carlsen. He felt he was doing well from the opening, but later he wasn't sure who was better. “It worked out very nicely for me when I got in e5 and Nf8 and coordinated my pieces.”
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar-Carlsen, Magnus
E32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical Variation
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. Nf3 dxc4 6. Bg5 b5 7. a4 c6 8. g3 Bb7 9. Bg2 Nbd7 10. O-O Qb6 11. e4 a6 12. Rfd1 h6 13. Be3 O-O 14. d5 c5 15. a5 Qd8 16. dxe6 fxe6 17. Nh4 Bxc3 18. bxc3 Qe8 19. f4 Rd8 20. h3 Rf7 21. Rd6 e5 22. f5 Nf8 23. Bxc5 Rxd6 24. Bxd6 Rd7 25. Bxf8 Qxf8 26. Rd1 Qc5 27. Kh2 Bxe4 0-1
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Caruana, Fabiano-Nakamura, Hikaru
C80 Ruy Lopez, Open, Bernstein Variation
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Nxe4 6. d4 b5 7. Bb3 d5 8. dxe5 Be6 9. Nbd2 Nc5 10. c3 Be7 11. Bc2 d4 12. Nb3 d3 13. Bb1 Nxb3 14. axb3 Bf5 15. Re1 O-O 16. b4 Qd7 17. h3 Bg6 18. Bg5 Bxg5 19. Nxg5 a5 20. e6 fxe6 21. Nxe6 Rfe8 22. Nc5 Qd6 23. Bxd3 Rxe1 24. Qxe1 Re8 25. Qd1 axb4 26. cxb4 Bxd3 27. Qxd3 Qxd3 28. Nxd3 Rd8 29. Ra3 Rd4 30. Rb3 Ne7 31. Nc5 c6 32. Re3 Nd5 33. Re6 Nxb4 34. Re7 Rd6 35. Ne6 Nd5 36. Rxg7 Kh8 37. Nc7 Rd8 38. Rf7 Kg8 39. Rg7 Kh8 40. Rf7 Kg8 41. Rg7 Kh8 0.5-0.5
(ChessVibes) Caruana-Nakamura was a correct but nonetheless interesting draw. Black played the Open Ruy Lopez, like he had done three times last summer, and a long, theoretical line came on the board.
Caruana played it as Black against Shirov four years back, and he remembered that the move 18.Bg5!? was worth a try.
Nakamura swapped bishops and then the critical position was reached. With 20.e6 Caruana entered a long and forcing variation that led to a drawn ending with some fun tactics at the end.
Curious about what the computer would think of the game, Nakamura said: “The question is if White has something better than what Fabiano played. If not, then it was a logical draw.”
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Radjabov, Teimour-Karjakin, Sergey
C53 Guioco Piano
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. c3 Nf6 5. d3 O-O 6. Nbd2 d6 7. Bb3 Re8 8. O-O a6 9. Re1 h6 10. Nf1 Ba7 11. Ng3 Be6 12. Bxe6 Rxe6 13. d4 d5 14. Nxe5 Nxe5 15. dxe5 Nxe4 16. Nxe4 dxe4 17. Bf4 Qd3 18. Qa4 Qb5 19. Qxb5 axb5 20. h4 e3 21. Bxe3 Rxe5 22. Bxa7 Rxe1 23. Rxe1 Rxa7 24. Re8 Kh7 25. a3 c5 26. Re7 Kg6 27. g3 Kf6 28. Rc7 b4 29. cxb4 cxb4 30. axb4 Ra2 31. Rxb7 Rxb2 32. Kg2 g5 33. Rb6 Kg7 34. h5 g4 35. Kf1 Kg8 36. b5 Kg7 37. Rb8 Kf6 38. b6 Kg5 39. Ke1 Kxh5 40. b7 f5 41. Kd1 Rb1 42. Ke2 Rb2 43. Kd3 Rb3 44. Kd4 Rb4 45. Kd5 Rb2 46. Ke6 Rb6 47. Kxf5 Rxb7 48. Rxb7 0.5-0.5
(ChessBase) The Italian Game. After very quick exchanges Radjabov got a miniscule advantage in the form of rook activity in the endgame. Karjakin confidently sacrificed a pawn to reach a theoretically drawn endgame, and although his stalemate trick at the end was cute it was certainly not the only way to secure the draw.
Standing
Carlsen 3.5
Radjabov 3.5
Caruana 3
Nakamura 3
Karjakin 3
Mamedyarov 2
Round Seven Pairings
Radjabov-Mamedyarov
Karjakin-Caruana
Nakamura-Carlsen
Viewers’ Comments
- Rae1 and Shak is definitely at least equal (according to the machine) instead of the f4-f5 blunder. Magnus really did get lucky with the sloppy play but Shak will cough up points to other players anyway so it really doesn't matter. I was more impressed with the Caruana-Nakamura Open Ruy and the Radjabov-Karjakin cheeky stalemate finish. It was nice to have a shorter round today but the critical rounds begin now. Carlsen will be looking to beat Nakamura with black but with his strange form, even after today (Mamed missed a forced draw earlier as well) I am not convinced Carlsen is back in any sort of form. Radjabov is playing very well.
- Hail the king! You can think about Carlsen whatever you want, but he is a fierce competitor. When Kramnik says Magnus is better due to factors that are unrelated to chess skill, he is right; It is the determined spirit of a champion which makes Carlsen stronger.
He will win this tournament, mark my words. Whether you love him or hate him, all eyes on Magnus!
- Shak's no moron at all. He played a real pawn sacrifice with perhaps less than complete compensation objectively, but getting quite a well playable and active position later after white's f4.
I liked Carlsen's ...e5 a lot (in a position with valid alternatives, so nobody should come up with "what else"), and Shak went wrong in upcoming time trouble with f5, which helps only black, as Carlsen pointed out in the press conference.
- Magnus asked if he followed the press and media after his two losses. His answer, smiling: "No".
Gashimov Memorial
Shamkir 2014
Round Six
Saturday, April 26, 2014
The commentators on Chess24 are Lawrence Trent and Jan Gustafsson.
Jan says that Mamedyarov is a pawn down after five moves and has posed no problems to black. Black is seriously better later on. The chess engines evaluate the position as at least equal.
(Carlsen) “I was basically out of book on move 5. Any preparation I did was for nothing. That's fine. It's more interesting when we play chess and not everything is decided by preparation,” said Carlsen. He felt he was doing well from the opening, but later he wasn't sure who was better. “It worked out very nicely for me when I got in e5 and Nf8 and coordinated my pieces.”
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar-Carlsen, Magnus
E32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical Variation
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. Nf3 dxc4 6. Bg5 b5 7. a4 c6 8. g3 Bb7 9. Bg2 Nbd7 10. O-O Qb6 11. e4 a6 12. Rfd1 h6 13. Be3 O-O 14. d5 c5 15. a5 Qd8 16. dxe6 fxe6 17. Nh4 Bxc3 18. bxc3 Qe8 19. f4 Rd8 20. h3 Rf7 21. Rd6 e5 22. f5 Nf8 23. Bxc5 Rxd6 24. Bxd6 Rd7 25. Bxf8 Qxf8 26. Rd1 Qc5 27. Kh2 Bxe4 0-1
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Caruana, Fabiano-Nakamura, Hikaru
C80 Ruy Lopez, Open, Bernstein Variation
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Nxe4 6. d4 b5 7. Bb3 d5 8. dxe5 Be6 9. Nbd2 Nc5 10. c3 Be7 11. Bc2 d4 12. Nb3 d3 13. Bb1 Nxb3 14. axb3 Bf5 15. Re1 O-O 16. b4 Qd7 17. h3 Bg6 18. Bg5 Bxg5 19. Nxg5 a5 20. e6 fxe6 21. Nxe6 Rfe8 22. Nc5 Qd6 23. Bxd3 Rxe1 24. Qxe1 Re8 25. Qd1 axb4 26. cxb4 Bxd3 27. Qxd3 Qxd3 28. Nxd3 Rd8 29. Ra3 Rd4 30. Rb3 Ne7 31. Nc5 c6 32. Re3 Nd5 33. Re6 Nxb4 34. Re7 Rd6 35. Ne6 Nd5 36. Rxg7 Kh8 37. Nc7 Rd8 38. Rf7 Kg8 39. Rg7 Kh8 40. Rf7 Kg8 41. Rg7 Kh8 0.5-0.5
(ChessVibes) Caruana-Nakamura was a correct but nonetheless interesting draw. Black played the Open Ruy Lopez, like he had done three times last summer, and a long, theoretical line came on the board.
Caruana played it as Black against Shirov four years back, and he remembered that the move 18.Bg5!? was worth a try.
Nakamura swapped bishops and then the critical position was reached. With 20.e6 Caruana entered a long and forcing variation that led to a drawn ending with some fun tactics at the end.
Curious about what the computer would think of the game, Nakamura said: “The question is if White has something better than what Fabiano played. If not, then it was a logical draw.”
Gashimov Memorial
Round Six
April 26, 2014
Radjabov, Teimour-Karjakin, Sergey
C53 Guioco Piano
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. c3 Nf6 5. d3 O-O 6. Nbd2 d6 7. Bb3 Re8 8. O-O a6 9. Re1 h6 10. Nf1 Ba7 11. Ng3 Be6 12. Bxe6 Rxe6 13. d4 d5 14. Nxe5 Nxe5 15. dxe5 Nxe4 16. Nxe4 dxe4 17. Bf4 Qd3 18. Qa4 Qb5 19. Qxb5 axb5 20. h4 e3 21. Bxe3 Rxe5 22. Bxa7 Rxe1 23. Rxe1 Rxa7 24. Re8 Kh7 25. a3 c5 26. Re7 Kg6 27. g3 Kf6 28. Rc7 b4 29. cxb4 cxb4 30. axb4 Ra2 31. Rxb7 Rxb2 32. Kg2 g5 33. Rb6 Kg7 34. h5 g4 35. Kf1 Kg8 36. b5 Kg7 37. Rb8 Kf6 38. b6 Kg5 39. Ke1 Kxh5 40. b7 f5 41. Kd1 Rb1 42. Ke2 Rb2 43. Kd3 Rb3 44. Kd4 Rb4 45. Kd5 Rb2 46. Ke6 Rb6 47. Kxf5 Rxb7 48. Rxb7 0.5-0.5
(ChessBase) The Italian Game. After very quick exchanges Radjabov got a miniscule advantage in the form of rook activity in the endgame. Karjakin confidently sacrificed a pawn to reach a theoretically drawn endgame, and although his stalemate trick at the end was cute it was certainly not the only way to secure the draw.
Standing
Carlsen 3.5
Radjabov 3.5
Caruana 3
Nakamura 3
Karjakin 3
Mamedyarov 2
Round Seven Pairings
Radjabov-Mamedyarov
Karjakin-Caruana
Nakamura-Carlsen
Viewers’ Comments
- Rae1 and Shak is definitely at least equal (according to the machine) instead of the f4-f5 blunder. Magnus really did get lucky with the sloppy play but Shak will cough up points to other players anyway so it really doesn't matter. I was more impressed with the Caruana-Nakamura Open Ruy and the Radjabov-Karjakin cheeky stalemate finish. It was nice to have a shorter round today but the critical rounds begin now. Carlsen will be looking to beat Nakamura with black but with his strange form, even after today (Mamed missed a forced draw earlier as well) I am not convinced Carlsen is back in any sort of form. Radjabov is playing very well.
- Hail the king! You can think about Carlsen whatever you want, but he is a fierce competitor. When Kramnik says Magnus is better due to factors that are unrelated to chess skill, he is right; It is the determined spirit of a champion which makes Carlsen stronger.
He will win this tournament, mark my words. Whether you love him or hate him, all eyes on Magnus!
- Shak's no moron at all. He played a real pawn sacrifice with perhaps less than complete compensation objectively, but getting quite a well playable and active position later after white's f4.
I liked Carlsen's ...e5 a lot (in a position with valid alternatives, so nobody should come up with "what else"), and Shak went wrong in upcoming time trouble with f5, which helps only black, as Carlsen pointed out in the press conference.
- Magnus asked if he followed the press and media after his two losses. His answer, smiling: "No".
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