Moro's back! And clearly with a vengeance! His win today against Emil Sutovsky gives Morozevich 3.5/4 at the Karpov 2014 in Nefteyugansk, Russia and a share of 1st with Croatia's best, Ivan Saric. They're both a full point ahead of Dmitry Jakovenko and a point and a half ahead of Alexei Shirov (4 draws!), Etienne Bacrot, and Ian Nepomniachtchi. I'll also note that ChessBase (in their R2 report) referred to Moro as "the much admired maverick" (:
Moro's back!
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Re: Moro's back!
Originally posted by Hans Jung View PostThats always exciting! (and I mean that)
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Re: Moro's back!
Yes Jack and not surprising - we will be hearing a lot more from GM Saric soon - he is getting stronger rapidly and is the next "super GM" from Croatia. Someone recently was lamenting the lack of super strong GM's from the countries of the former Yugoslavia. Well GM Saric is the start of a new generation of greats.
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Re: Moro's back!
I like Morozevic's approach to the game -fightnng chess. That game was "dog vs dog". A rook for a Knight plus Pawn imbalanced pawn structure guaranteed fireworks. White was not able to hold on the the advantage when his Queen went one square too long on the queenside.
This game is recommended to players looking for a win.
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Re: Moro's back!
Moro'sl R6 game at Dubai today against Judit Polgar is worth checking out. Polgar, the renown expert in the Sicilian, is up a Pawn after 14 moves but down 4.32 Pawns according to Stockfish and it's all over in just 26 moves.
Then again, Moro is absolute Kryptonite to Polgar. Their score at chessgames.com now stands 11 -0 =5 in Moro's favour.
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Re: Moro's back!
Moro had the same score as Caruana, 7.5/8 (with the draw in R7, not R8), at the just completed Russian Rapid Grand-Prix 2014, before drawing out in his final 3 games for a 9/11 clear 1st win. Of course, beating the likes of Moiseenko, Rublevsky, and Shirov is not nearly the same as all the top ten opponents Caruana is running roughshod over. And I'm sure he won a whole lot less than the $20,000 Nakamura will get for finishing last in St. Louis.
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Re: Moro's back!
Moro is having quite the month in Russia! He won the Moscow Blitz Championship by a full 2.5 points with a score of 15.5/19! He also picked up 60.6 FIDE points to reach 2800 status at 2810.6. Conversely, Grischuk lost 52.6 FIDE points in Moscow to fall to 2724.4. Karjakin also shed 31 points to barely retain 2700 status at 2701.
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Re: Moro's back!
The Svidler - Morozevich game today in R3 of the Russian Superfinal 2014 has opened 1.Nf3 Nf6 2.g3 b5 (:
Moro has a nice edge against Svidler over the years with 16 wins versus 10 losses and 16 draws. 'Twould appear Svidler fares better against the more positional player. For instance, he's plus 6, minus 2, with 22 draws against Peter Leko.
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.................................Last edited by Olivier Tessier; Monday, 22nd October, 2018, 10:43 AM.
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Re: Moro's back!
Originally posted by Olivier Tessier View PostI got crushed a couple of years ago trying this against Lawrence Day...
After 3.c3! it becomes very difficult to play for black...
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/explo...124903.2492623
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Re: Moro's back!
Originally posted by Jack Maguire View PostThere's a very limited database at chessgames.com, Olivier, but 3.c3 is the absolute worst scoring move there. It would appear that the only move that scores well for White is 3.Na3!
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/explo...124903.2492623Shameless self-promotion on display here
http://www.youtube.com/user/Barkyducky?feature=mhee
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Re: Moro's back!
Originally posted by Olivier Tessier View PostI got crushed a couple of years ago trying this against Lawrence Day...
After 3.c3! it becomes very difficult to play for black...
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Re: Moro's back!
Originally posted by Bindi Cheng View PostI would think twice before referencing 16 games and 14 games as best and worst moves without even looking at who played those games and how the games continued. It's just sloppy research
I can access the larger 393 game database however and do find many of the names therein of interest.
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess.pl?node=2492623
It would appear that Spassky may have 'legitimized' the 2. ...b5!? move when he played it against Petrosian in their World Championship Match in 1966 (during the same event he answered Petrosian's 1.d4 with 1. ...b5!?). Tal had a couple of wins with Black the very next year and I also see that Canada's own Lawrence Day scored 2 wins with Black in 1969 and 1971 (:
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