Candidates 2016, Moscow

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Re: Candidates 2016, Moacow

    Candidates 2016, Moscow

    March 15. 2016

    Round Four

    Alexandra and Evgeny are the commentators as usual. Egor Piskunov is fielding questions from the viewers.

    An hour or so into the broadcast, Daniil Dubov replaces Evgeny for a while. He is the 19-year-old Russian who got his grandmaster title at the age of 14 years, 11 months. He has the lugubrious look of a young Steve Buscemi.

    There is an electronic count-down clock, which is unofficial. One knows that there is zero-tolerance if a player is not at the board at the start but the Arbiter would make the final decision before forfeiting the late player.

    Egor shows some of the security features – notably a bank of lockerettes for people to put their cell phones in so they don’t take them into the playing hall. Each visitor is scanned with a portable electronic wand by the security guard.

    The wallpaper has white objects on a black background. The white things look ever so much like magnified images of diatoms, if you can cast your mind back to Biology 101.

    One viewer’s question was interesting:

    Which chess match has impressed you the most?

    My generation would instantly reply Fischer-Spassky, 1972. But that is old hat now.

    Alexandra replies that for her it was the games of Karpov-Kasparov, Moscow 1984. After 5 months and 48 games, the match was abandoned in controversial circumstances with Karpov leading five wins to three (with 40 draws), and replayed in the World Chess Championship 1985. She talked to Karpov about it, sympathizing with the pressure of world attention, the same opponent and playing month after month.

    For Evgeny, the match that impressed him was the playoff between Peter Svidler and Sergey Karjakin in the Baku World Cup of October, 2015. There was a total of ten games – four regular, four rapid and two blitz – all wins or losses and no draws, with Sergey finally winning by 6-4.

    Egor gives a question as to whether Karjakin is playing “street chess” in this tournament?

    The commentators are at a loss. Is “street chess” the rough and tumble coffee house chess or down and dirty chess where no rules apply? Sorry, no answer here.

    There is a filmed interview with Kramnik where he wholly supports the rights of the organizers to do what they want with their broadcast and coverage. He adds that has all been legally approved. I will say nothing critical about this here because I fear that letter from Shekhovtsov & Partners.

    The two quiz question to ponder over (with answers given at the end of this post) are:

    1) All the participants in this tournament are grandmasters. When was the GM title first awarded by FIDE and how many of them were there at that time?

    2) In the Karpov-Kasparov matches how many games were played in total and what was their final score against each other?

    Alexandra is asked if she will try for the world title again. She became Women’s World Chess Champion in 2008 by beating Hou Yifan in the final. Alexandra says that she needs the motivation for that goal and at the moment she is not so ambitious.

    The first game to finish is Nakamura – Giri. It was a Semi-Slav which they both had analyzed very deeply and although Giri’s king was flushed out into the open, there was no way to make progress and Nakamura forced a perpetual.

    Svidler-Aronian was a slightly odd English opening which produced a small edge for Svidler but Levon Aronian found the moves to escape any long-term problems, though he was temporarily down a pawn. In the end, the players agreed to a draw in a rook-and-pawn endgame where no one could make any progress.

    The description of the one win this round on the Official Site: A strange opening by Karjakin, who had White against Anand. While Anand struggled to find a concrete plan, Karjakin was able to saddle Anand with hanging pawns on the c and d files. Anand eventually advanced one of them, which was traded off, but that left the other one very weak and with Anand having to play passive defense. Such a position is ideal for Karjakin, whose technical skills are second to none and he slowly ground Anand down. Anand resigned as Karjakin was about to win a pawn and be able to force a trade of all remaining pieces, leaving with an easily won king-and-pawn ending.

    And Sagar Shah on Caruana-Topalov:

    It was a refreshing change in the opening as Caruana, instead of going for the Ruy Lopez, played the Guioco Piano as White. Both the players handled the opening phase of the game quite well and the position was relatively balanced. In the middle game Caruana shut the centre with the move d4-d5 and the game became quite sharp. Fabiano’s play was attached with queenside play while Veselin tried to create inroads in the kingside with f5 break. In mutual time trouble Topalov went completely wrong and simply blundered. It was such a winning position for the American that a full point for him was a foregone conclusion. However, Caruana blundered, and surprisingly it was the 41st move! The win was no longer apparent and in the rook endgame the game was simply drawn. A heartbreaking result for Fabiano and quite a favourable break for Topalov.

    Candidates 2016
    Moscow, Russia
    Round 4, March 15, 2016
    Svidler, Peter – Aronian, Levon
    A29 English, Bremen 3…Bb4

    1.c4 Nf6 2.Nc3 e5 3.g3 Bb4 4.Bg2 O-O 5.e4 Bxc3 6.bxc3 c6 7.Nf3 Nxe4 8.O-O d6 9.Nxe5 Nc5 10.Ng4 f5 11.Ne3 f4 12.d4 fxe3 13.dxc5 exf2+ 14.Rxf2 Rxf2 15.Kxf2 Qf8+ 16.Qf3 Qxf3+ 17.Bxf3 dxc5 18.Bf4 Nd7 19.Bd6 Nb6 20.Re1 Bd7 21.Bxc5 Re8 22.Rb1 Be6 23.Bxb6 axb6 24.Rxb6 Bc8 25.Rb4 Re5 26.Ra4 Kf7 27.Ra8 Bf5 28.Be2 Re7 29.c5 Kf6 30.a4 Re5 31.Rf8+ Kg6 32.Rb8 Rxc5 33.Rxb7 Rxc3 34.a5 Bd3 35.Bxd3+ Rxd3 36.a6 c5 37.a7 Ra3 38.Ke2 c4 39.Kd2 h5 40.Kc2 c3 41.h4 1/2-1/2

    Round 4, March 15, 2016
    Caruana, Fabiano – Topalov, Veselin
    C50 Giuoco Piano

    1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.O-O Nf6 5.d3 d6 6.c3 h6 7.a4 a5 8.Re1 O-O 9.Na3 Re8 10.Nc2 Ba7 11.Be3 Be6 12.Bb5 Bd7 13.Bxa7 Nxa7 14.Bc4 Nc8 15.Ne3 Nb6 16.Bb3 c6 17.h3 Be6 18.Bc2 Qc7 19.d4 Nc4 20.Nxc4 Bxc4 21.Qd2 Rad8 22.Rad1 Be6 23.Qe3 b6 24.Nd2 c5 25.Bd3 Re7 26.d5 Bd7 27.Ra1 Nh5 28.b4 Nf4 29.bxa5 bxa5 30.Reb1 Rf8 31.Bb5 Bc8 32.Bf1 f5 33.c4 Ref7 34.Ra3 fxe4 35.Nxe4 Bf5 36.Rab3 Bg6 37.Rb6 Qe7 38.Nxd6 Nxh3+ 39.Qxh3 Rf6 40.Nc8 Qd8 41.R1b5 Rxf2 42.Rxg6 Rxf1+ 43.Kh2 Qxc8 44.Qxc8 Rxc8 45.Rc6 Re8 46.Rcxc5 e4 47.d6 Rd8 48.Rc6 Rd1 49.c5 e3 50.Rb2 Rd2 51.Rb1 e2 52.Re1 Rf8 1/2-1/2

    Round 4, March 15, 2016
    Karjakin, Sergey – Anand, Viswanathan
    A06 Reti Opening

    1.Nf3 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.c4 e6 4.b3 Be7 5.Bb2 O-O 6.Nc3 c5 7.cxd5 Nxd5 8.Qc2 Nc6 9.h4 b6 10.a3 f5 11.Bb5 Bb7 12.Nxd5 exd5 13.d4 Rc8 14.dxc5 bxc5 15.O-O Bf6 16.Rfd1 Ne7 17.Bxf6 Rxf6 18.g3 Ba6 19.Bxa6 Rxa6 20.Qc3 Rb6 21.Rac1 Qd6 22.Ne5 Rb7 23.Nd3 c4 24.bxc4 Rxc4 25.Qe5 Qxe5 26.Nxe5 Rxc1 27.Rxc1 g6 28.Rc5 Kg7 29.Ra5 Kf6 30.Nd3 Rc7 31.Ra6+ Kg7 32.Nf4 Rd7 33.Kf1 Ng8 34.Ne6+ Kf7 35.Nd4 Ne7 36.Nb5 Nc8 37.a4 Rb7 38.Rc6 Ne7 39.Ra6 Nc8 40.Rc6 Ne7 41.Rd6 Rb6 42.Rd7 a6 43.Nc3 1-0

    Round 4, March 15, 2016
    Nakamura, Hikaru – Giri, Anish
    D46 QGD, Semi-Slav

    1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 e6 5.Nf3 Nbd7 6.Qc2 Bd6 7.Be2 O-O 8.O-O dxc4 9.Bxc4 b5 10.Be2 Bb7 11.e4 e5 12.dxe5 Nxe5 13.Nd4 Neg4 14.g3 Re8 15.Nf5 Bc5 16.Bf4 Qb6 17.Kg2 g6 18.h3 Ne5 19.Nh6+ Kg7 20.Bg5 Bd4 21.Bxf6+ Kxf6 22.f4 Nc4 23.Bxc4 bxc4 24.f5 c5 25.fxg6+ Kxg6 26.Nxf7 Rf8 27.Nd5 Qxb2 28.Ne7+ Kg7 29.Nf5+ Kg6 30.Ne7+ Kg7 31.Nf5+ Kg6 32.Ne7+ 1/2-1/2

    (Mark Crowther) - I think the last time Anand lost a game in a tournament of this format (Candidates/World Championship) was vs Morozevich San Luis 2005 in R7

    Thus, Sergey Karjakin is leading the tournament.

    Scores: Karjakin 3, Aronian 2.5, Anand 2, Giri 2, Svidler 2, Caruana 2, Nakamura 1.5 and Topalov 1.

    Next Round: Giri-Svidler, Anand-Nakamura, Topalov-Karjakin and Aronian-Caruana.

    Answers to the Quiz Questions

    It is my belief that these are the correct answers but I couldn’t double check them because the transmission on the Official Site ceased.

    I would give a strong opinion about this but the legal firm of Shekhovtsov & Partners is looking over my shoulder. (Readers of The Pickwick Papers will remember the unscrupulous Messrs Dodson and Fogg)

    1) FIDE first awarded the Grandmaster title in 1950 to 27 players.

    The number of grandmasters presently is 1512.

    2) ‪ After 5 matches (1984-1990), they had played a total of 144 games, Kasparov won 21, Karpov won 19 and there were 104 draws.

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

      Karjakin is making a believer out of me. His win today over the great former champion, Anand, was a classic. Meanwhile, the favourite, Caruana, failed yet again to close the deal. Many rounds to go.

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

        Candidates 2016, Moscow

        March 15, 2016

        There is a beautiful photograph of Hal Bond (suitable for framing) on the FIDE site:

        http://www.fide.com/component/conten...6-round-4.html

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

          Candidates 2016, Moscow

          March 15, 2016

          Jonathan Speelman writing on the ChessBase site says that if Topalov had played 20…Bxf2 in Round One against Anand, he would have destroyed White’s position. But neither Anand nor Topalov saw it.

          http://en.chessbase.com/post/jon-spe...didates-so-far

          Candidates 2016, Moscow
          Round 1, March 11, 2016
          Anand, Vishy – Topalov, Veselin
          C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence

          1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.d3 Bc5 5.O-O d6 6.c3 O-O 7.Nbd2 Ne7 8.d4 exd4 9.cxd4 Bb6 10.Re1 Bg4 11.h3 Bh5 12.a4 a6 13.Bf1 Re8 14.a5 Ba7 15.Qb3 Nc6 16.d5 Nd4 17.Nxd4 Bxd4 18.Qxb7 Nd7 19.Nc4 Nc5 20.Qc6 Nb3 (20...Bxf2+ 21.Kxf2 Qh4+ 22.g3 Nxe4+ 23.Rxe4 Qxe4 24.g4 Qe1+ 25.Kg2 Bg6 26.Nd2 Re2+ 27.Bxe2 Qxe2+ 28.Kg1 Rf8 29.Ra3 Bd3 30.Rxd3 Qxd3 31.Qc3 Qxd5 32.Nf1 c5 33.Ng3 Re8 34.Kf2) 21.Rb1 Nxc1 22.Rbxc1 Rb8 23.Qxa6 Qh4 24.Rc2 Rxe4 25.Ne3 Qd8 26.Qc4 Bg6 27.Bd3 Rf4 28.Bxg6 hxg6 29.g3 Re4 30.a6 Qe8 31.Rce2 Bb6 32.Qd3 Ra8 33.Kg2 Qa4 34.b3 Rd4 35.bxa4 Rxd3 36.Nc4 Rxa6 37.a5 Bd4 38.Re8+ Kh7 39.R1e7 Rc3 40.Nd2 Rc2 41.Ne4 f6 42.h4 Rxa5 43.Rf7 g5 44.h5 Rxf2+ 45.Nxf2 Ra2 46.Rff8 Rxf2+ 47.Kh3 g4+ 48.Kxg4 f5+ 49.Rxf5 1-0

          Sagar Shah says in his CB Rd 1 annotations, after 23….Qxe4:

          And even though White has two pieces for a rook his position is pretty bad as his king is exposed. It's not so easy to come up with a good move for White here.

          Comment


          • #35
            4 draws in 5th round

            Three draws by repetition and one by agreement. Anand and Nakamura finished first. Aronian sacked a house of pawns for dangerous activity, of which Caruana wanted no part. Then Giri/Svidler repeated. I was caught off guard when Karjakin agreed to split the point with Topalov.

            It was a restless round. The last player shuffled onto the stage with 30 seconds to spare. Horns were blaring on the street below, sometimes for 5 seconds at a time. The players were up walking around more than usual. The Chief Arbiter was called away a couple times for this or that. All told it was nice to be finished after 4 hours.

            I know it's early, but Karjakin's plus 2 is looking pretty good!

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: 4 draws in 5th round

              Candidates 2016, Moscow

              March 16, 2016

              Round Five

              Evgeny and Alexandra commentate as usual. Ms. Kosteniuk is very assured and speaks well. It is not surprising that she has also modeled and acted in a film.

              She was joined by a tall blonde fellow – also well-spoken – Pavel Tregubov. I know it’s not PC but I thought they made a lovely couple.

              In checking names and spellings I found that Alexandra and Pavel are married (2015). Pavel has lived for many years in France.

              There are two quiz questions posed by Evgeny today:

              1) I have given a simultaneous with 50 opponents. What is the record for the largest simultaneous against a master, what year and how many boards?

              2) Which famous ruler died while playing chess and in what year?

              Before you think of this too deeply, I should tell you that there was not time to give the answer – that will be given tomorrow but I do have possible choices given at the end of this post.
              _______

              Egor interviewed Mr. Zurab Azmaiparashvili and with his man-in-the-street approach put Zurab in an awkward situation – a FIDE official cannot say who he thinks would win the tournament or who he would like to see playing Magnus in November!

              But one thing came out of the interview. At the player’s meeting before the tournament started, the organizers were very anxious to have the games broadcast in real time (no delay). The players were worried about security but after 20 minutes, when they heard about all the measures being taken to prevent cheating, they agreed to live games!

              This bodes well for the World Championship being transmitted live.
              _______

              Another interview was with Sagar Shah. I have found his stuff on ChessBase to be very good, very informative and interesting. He is in Moscow covering the Candidates, will be there the whole month and then go back to his home base of Mumbai. The next stop will be the Baku Olympiad the first two weeks in September.

              It is not a bad job being a reporter/analyst for ChessBase and getting to cover tournaments all over the world. He has started ChessBase India. He acknowledges Vishy Anand’s role in the popularity of Indian chess saying that Anand was the first Indian GM and now there are 43.

              His bio says: Sagar Shah is an International Master from India with two GM norms. He is also a chartered accountant and would like to become the first CA+GM of India. He loves to cover chess tournaments, as that helps him understand and improve at the game he loves so much.

              There is an interesting interview with him on how to improve your chess at:

              http://www.thechessworld.com/learn-c...prove-at-chess
              _______

              Anand-Nakamura was the first game to finish. The opening was a Berlin Defence, with no advantage for White. There were a series of exchanges and then Anand forced the perpetual. Hikaru looked relaxed during the post mortem – things seem more casual now that they are roughly a third into the tournament.

              Giri-Svidler also ended in a perpetual. With Peter being a world expert in the Grunfeld, which he has played for 30 years, one wonders why Anish maneuvered him into it? The analysis at the postmortem was so quick and spirited that I find it hard to believe that anyone who was not very proficient in English could follow it.

              The broadcast was crystal clear. Best images in a tournament ever. Kudos to the organizers for that.

              Evidently two minutes into his game, Giri got up, looked at the demonstration boards and smiled. This was because he saw that Caruana was playing the Benoni and Giri’s thought was that Fabiano’s second, Rustam Kasimdzhanov, must be going crazy at the sight of it. Nobody plays the Benoni any more.

              (ChessBase) In Aronian-Caruana, Fabiano employed the Benoni Defense in the opening, which is not often seen in elite tournaments. Aronian soon obtained a nice position with more space in the centre. But rather than improve his position slowly, he sacrificed a pawn in the centre to start an attack. He son gave up two other pawns to switch his bishop to the kingside to attack Caruana. Caruana evidently calculated that he could not allow Aronian to play Nf6, so he attacked Aronian’s undefended rook on e1, leading to a perpetual.

              Topalov-Karjakin was the longest game of the day. Veselin thought he had a good opening but Sergey was in good form and found an answer to everything. 11.Rb1 was an innovation. White wants to play b4 but Black’s c5 scotched that.

              Veselin’s birthday was yesterday but he couldn’t celebrate it because of the long game but Fabiano’s mistake was his birthday present! (b. March 15, 1975)

              Caruana: "I've been trying to play the Benoni for a while, but nobody lets me!"
              ____

              Candidates 2016 Moscow
              Round 5, March 16, 2016
              Giri, Anish – Svidler, Peter
              D73 Neo-Grunfeld

              1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 g6 3.Bg2 Bg7 4.d4 Nf6 5.c4 c6 6.Qb3 O-O 7.O-O a5 8.cxd5 a4 9.Qd1 cxd5 10.Nc3 Ne4 11.Nd2 Nxc3 12.bxc3 Qa5 13.Qc2 Bf5 14.e4 dxe4 15.Nxe4 Nd7 16.Rb1 Qc7 17.Qe2 Rfe8 18.Be3 Rab8 19.Rb4 e5 20.Rc4 Qb6 21.Rb4 Qc7 22.dxe5 Nxe5 23.Bf4 Bd7 24.Rd1 Bc6 25.Rbd4 Re6 26.Ng5 Ree8 27.Ne4 Re6 28.Ng5 Ree8 29.Ne4 Re6 30.Ng5 Ree8 1/2-1/2

              Round 5, March 16, 2016
              Anand, Viswanathan – Nakamura, Hikaru
              C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence

              1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.d3 Bc5 5.O-O Nd4 6.Nxd4 Bxd4 7.Nd2 a6 8.Ba4 b5 9.Bb3 d6 10.a4 Bb6 11.axb5 Bg4 12.Nf3 axb5 13.Rxa8 Qxa8 14.h3 Be6 15.Bxe6 fxe6 16.Nh2 O-O 17.Ng4 Qe8 18.Be3 Bxe3 19.Nxe3 Qc6 20.Qd2 d5 21.f3 d4 22.Ng4 Nxg4 23.hxg4 h6 24.g5 hxg5 25.Qxg5 Qxc2 26.Qxe5 Qxd3 27.Qxe6+ Kh7 28.Qh3+ Kg8 29.Qe6+ Kh7 30.Qh3+ Kg8 1/2-1/2

              Round 5, March 16, 2016
              Topalov, Veselin – Karjakin, Sergey
              E15 Queen’s Indian, Nimzowitsch Variation

              1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6 4.g3 Ba6 5.b3 Bb4+ 6.Bd2 Be7 7.Nc3 d5 8.cxd5 exd5 9.Bg2 O-O 10.O-O Re8 11.Rb1 c5 12.dxc5 bxc5 13.Ne5 Bb7 14.Bf4 Bf8 15.Rb2 Bd6 16.Nd3 Na6 17.Bxd6 Qxd6 18.Nf4 Qe5 19.Rc2 Rad8 20.Na4 c4 21.Qd2 g5 22.Nh3 h6 23.f4 gxf4 24.Qxf4 cxb3 25.axb3 Kg7 26.Qxe5 Rxe5 27.Nf4 Re7 28.Nd3 Ng4 29.Rf4 Ne3 30.Rd2 d4 31.Bh3 Be4 32.Nac5 Nxc5 33.Nxc5 f5 34.g4 fxg4 35.Bxg4 Nxg4 36.Rxg4+ Bg6 37.Kf2 Re5 38.Nd3 Rf5+ 39.Ke1 h5 40.Rg1 a5 41.Rc2 1/2-1/2

              Round 5, March 16, 2016
              Aronian, Levon – Caruana, Fabiano
              A77 Benoni, Classical

              1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 c5 4.d5 d6 5.Nc3 exd5 6.cxd5 g6 7.e4 Bg7 8.Be2 O-O 9.O-O Re8 10.Nd2 Nbd7 11.Qc2 Ne5 12.b3 Bg4 13.Bxg4 Nfxg4 14.Bb2 a6 15.h3 Nf6 16.f4 Ned7 17.Nc4 Nb6 18.Rae1 Nxc4 19.bxc4 Nd7 20.e5 dxe5 21.f5 b5 22.Ne4 Nb6 23.Bc1 Nxc4 24.d6 gxf5 25.Rxf5 Nxd6 26.Bg5 Qa5 27.Bd2 Qd8 28.Bg5 Qa5 29.Bd2 Qd8 30.Bg5 1/2-1/2

              Standing After Round Five

              Karjakin 3.5, Aronian 3, Anand 2.5, Caruana 2.5, Giri 2.5, Svidler 2.5, Nakamura 2 and Topalov 1.5

              Next Round: Anand-Svidler, Topalov-Giri, Aronian-Nakamura and Caruana-Karjakin

              Quiz Answers

              These are possible answers given online. I am not sure if either the simul ones are correct:

              1) Susan Polgar 326 opponents simultaneously at a shopping mall in Palm Beach Gardens, Floirda in July, 2005

              Ehsan Ghaem-Maghami, who played 604 games. Won 580, drew 16 and lost 8 on 08-09-2011

              2) Czar Ivan IV is thought to have died while playing a match in 1584

              Ivan the Terrible died from a stroke while playing chess with Bogdan Belsky on 28 March [O.S. 18 March] 1584.
              ______

              Note: There a player Ghaem-Maghami.

              Ehsan Ghaem-Maghami - born January 11, 1983) is an Iranian chess grandmaster (2000). On the September 2011 FIDE list, he had an Elo rating of 2583. He holds a Bachelor of Laws and is currently studying sports management at the University of Tehran.
              In 2009, he won a 20-game combined match (four classical, four rapid and twelve blitz games) against Anatoly Karpov, played with the proviso that each game be played to mate or dead draw. The overall score was eight wins to Ghaem-Maghami, seven wins to Karpov, and five draws.

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: 4 draws in 5th round

                Some great live feed shots of Hal doing his best secret service impression on the sidelines of Aronian-Nakamura. Wonder what Hal was talking to Levon about after Nakamura resigned.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Candidates 2016, Moscow

                  Candidates 2016

                  March 17, 2016

                  Round Six

                  Evgeny, Alexandra and Egor are in the chairs as usual. Egor fields the questions from the public and gives the most interesting to the other two.

                  Two that caught my ear, so to speak:

                  1) What is Alexandra Kosteniuk’s telephone number?
                  Answer: Nice try!

                  2) Why doesn’t a player promote a pawn to a King so that his opponent has to checkmate him twice?
                  Answer: It is against the rules.

                  But marvelous strategy if you could!

                  Evgeny answers the two questions from yesterday:

                  The ruler who died during a chess game was Ivan the Terrible and the largest (by number of boards) simultaneous was conducted by the Iranian master, Ghaem-Maghami on 604 boards during 24 hours of play in 2011.

                  A general question: If the players in the Candidates weren’t following chess as their profession, what career would they choose?

                  Evidently this was answered in the Russian GQ (Gentleman’s Quarterly). Surprising Anand and Caruana picked astronomy, Svidler translation and another one, unnamed, a real-estate lawyer.

                  If anyone can find the article and give the translation, it would be very illuminating.
                  ______

                  The first long discussion is about the game Topalov-Giri, which Evgeny is calling a Benko Gambit and quoting Korobov-Jumabayev in the recent Aeroflot Open, distinguished by its early h4.

                  Aeroflot Open 2016 Moscow
                  Round 7, March 7, 2016
                  Korobov, Anton – Jumabayev, Rinat
                  E60 King’s Indian Defence

                  1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.h4 c5 4.d5 b5 5.cxb5 a6 6.bxa6 Bg7 7.Nc3 O-O 8.e4 e6 9.dxe6 fxe6 10.Bg5 Qa5 11.Qd2 Nc6 12.Nf3 Rb8 13.Rc1 Bxa6 14.Bxf6 Rxf6 15.Rh3 Nd4 16.Bxa6 Qxa6 17.Nxd4 cxd4 18.Nd1 d5 19.Rb3 Rbf8 20.Ra3 Qd6 21.exd5 Qh2 22.Rf3 Rxf3 23.gxf3 0-1

                  Korobov told Evgeny h4 is used in computer chess to avoid a draw. Even though he lost this game he had a very good position by move 10.

                  Evgeny thinks that Rh3 has great promise!

                  The game ends in a draw.
                  _______

                  Karjakin-Caruana finishes in a draw too. The position they discuss was very similar to Sergey’s one in the game from a couple of rounds earlier. He always sees to play the Queen’s Indian as Black and so it is easy to prepare for. It looked like Fabiano was winning after 18…Bxb4 but 30.g5 made it a dead draw and Fabiano says that it was very easy to lose in the endgame.
                  ______

                  There is a question to Egor about performance-enhancing drugs in chess. Egor mentions Adderall, an amphetamine, which is on the list of banned drugs.

                  It is known to mask fatigue and pain and increases alertness, aggressiveness, attention, concentration and reaction time.
                  Alexandra says that unannounced drug testing is always possible and the players have agreed to give samples if required.

                  The games:

                  Candidates 2016, Moscow
                  Round 6, March 17, 2016
                  Anand, Vishy – Svidler, Peter
                  C88 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Anti-Marshall

                  1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.O-O Be7 6.Re1 b5 7.Bb3 O-O 8.a4 Bb7 9.d3 Re8 10.Nbd2 Bf8 11.c3 Na5 12.Bc2 c5 13.d4 exd4 14.cxd4 d5 15.e5 Ne4 16.axb5 axb5 17.Nxe4 dxe4 18.Rxe4 Nb3 19.Rxa8 Bxa8 20.Ng5 Nxc1 21.Qh5 h6 22.Qxf7+ Kh8 23.Rg4 Qa5 24.h4 1-0

                  - That was one hell of a victory by Vishy; he simply overran Svidler!

                  Round 6, March 17, 2016
                  Topalov, Veselin – Giri, Anish
                  E60 King’s Indian Defence

                  1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.h4 c5 4.d5 b5 5.cxb5 a6 6.bxa6 Bg7 7.Nc3 O-O 8.e4 d6 9.Nf3 Qa5 10.Bd2 Bxa6 11.Qc2 Nbd7 12.Ne2 Qb6 13.Bc3 h5 14.Ng3 Ng4 15.Bxg7 Kxg7 16.Bxa6 Qxa6 17.Ne2 Nge5 18.Nxe5 Nxe5 19.O-O Qd3 20.Qxd3 Nxd3 21.b3 Rfb8 22.Rfd1 Ne5 23.f3 Ra3 24.Kh2 Rba8 25.Nc1 f5 26.exf5 gxf5 27.Rb1 Rb8 28.Rb2 Rb4 29.Kh3 c4 30.Re2 cxb3 31.Nxb3 Ng6 32.Kg3 Raa4 33.Red2 Kf6 34.Kf2 Rb5 35.Rh1 Rxh4 36.Rxh4 Nxh4 37.f4 Ng6 38.g3 h4 39.Rd3 hxg3+ 40.Kxg3 Nf8 41.Kf3 Nd7 42.a4 Rb4 43.a5 Nf8 44.Nd4 Ng6 45.a6 Ra4 46.Ne2 Rxa6 47.Nd4 Nf8 48.Nc2 Nd7 49.Ne3 Ra2 50.Rd1 Rh2 51.Rg1 Rh3+ 52.Rg3 Rxg3+ 53.Kxg3 Nc5 54.Kf3 e6 55.dxe6 Kxe6 56.Nc2 Kd5 57.Ne3+ Ke6 58.Nc2 Nb3 59.Ne3 Nd4+ 60.Kf2 Nc6 61.Ke2 Nb4 62.Kd2 Nd5 63.Ng2 Ne7 64.Kd3 Nc6 65.Nh4 Nb4+ 66.Kd4 Nc6+ 67.Kc4 Nb8 68.Nxf5 1/2-1/2

                  The chessbomb kibitzers think Giri draws every game he plays and they dream up book titles for him to author: The Art of the Half-Point, How I Drew My Way to Success (and You Can To) and My 60 Memorable Lames.

                  Round 6, March 17, 2016
                  Caruana, Fabiano – Karjakin, Sergey
                  E15 Queen’s Indian, Nimzowitsch Variation

                  1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6 4.g3 Ba6 5.b3 Bb4+ 6.Bd2 Be7 7.Nc3 d5 8.cxd5 exd5 9.Bg2 O-O 10.O-O Re8 11.a3 c5 12.dxc5 bxc5 13.Ne5 Bb7 14.Bf4 Nbd7 15.Nc4 Nb6 16.Na5 Ba6 17.b4 cxb4 18.axb4 Bxb4 19.Nc6 Bxc3 20.Nxd8 Bxe2 21.Qb3 Bxa1 22.Rxa1 Raxd8 23.Rxa7 Nc4 24.h3 Bh5 25.Bg5 Bg6 26.Bxf6 gxf6 27.g4 Kg7 28.Qc3 d4 29.Qxc4 d3 30.g5 d2 31.gxf6+ Kh8 32.Bf3 Be4 33.Kh2 Bd5 34.Qg4 Rg8 35.Bd1 Rxg4 36.hxg4 h6 1/2-1/2

                  Round 6, March 17, 2016
                  Aronian, Levon – Nakamura, Hikaru
                  E15 Queen’s Indian, Nimzowitsch Variation

                  1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6 4.g3 Ba6 5.Qc2 c5 6.d5 exd5 7.cxd5 Bb7 8.Bg2 Nxd5 9.O-O Nc6 10.Rd1 Be7 11.Qa4 Nf6 12.Nh4 O-O 13.Nc3 g6 14.Bg5 Rb8 15.Bf4 Rc8 16.Bh6 Re8 17.Qf4 Na5 18.Nf5 Bxg2 19.Nxe7+ Qxe7 20.Kxg2 Qe5 21.e3 d5 22.Bg5 Ne4 23.Rxd5 Qxf4 24.gxf4 Nxc3 25.bxc3 Kg7 26.Rd7 h6 27.Be7 Nc4 28.Rad1 a5 29.R1d5 Rc6 30.Ra7 Re6 31.Rdd7 Kg8 32.h4 Kg7 33.Bd8 Kg8 34.Be7 Kg7 35.Rab7 Kg8 36.Rbc7 Na3 37.Bd8 Nc4 38.Be7 Na3 39.Rb7 Nc4 40.Kf3 a4 41.Rbc7 Nd2+ 42.Rxd2 R6xe7 43.Rc6 Re6 44.Rxe6 Rxe6 45.c4 Kg7 46.e4 Re8 47.e5 Rb8 48.Rd7 Kf8 49.f5 gxf5 50.Kf4 b5 51.cxb5 Rxb5 52.Kxf5 a3 53.f4 Rb4 54.Ra7 c4 55.Rxa3 Rb2 56.Ra6 Kg7 57.a4 c3 58.Ra7 c2 59.Rc7 Rb4 60.a5 Ra4 61.Rxc2 Rxa5 62.Rc4 Ra1 63.Rc7 Kf8 64.Rd7 Ra4 65.Rd3 Rc4 66.Re3 Ke7 67.Re4 Rc1 68.Rb4 Kf8 69.Rb6 Kg7 70.Rb7 Kf8 71.Rb8+ Kg7 72.Rb4 Ra1 73.Rd4 Ra2 74.Rd7 Kf8 75.Kf6 Ra6+ 76.Rd6 Ra8 77.h5 Kg8 78.f5 Rb8 79.Rd7 Rb6+ 80.Ke7 Rb5 81.Rd8+ Kh7 82.Kf6 Rb6+ 83.Rd6 Rb7 1-0

                  In the endgame, Nakamura was probably lost. He appeared to be under great pressure and reached out and touched his king and then left it at the square it was on. He may or may not have said “J’Adoube” after releasing it.

                  The Chief Arbiter was there. Aronian said something and then got up from the board. Nakamura moved his king, 74….Kf8. The endgame was hopeless. A few minutes later, Nakamura resigned and left the hall. Aronian alone went on to the press conference.
                  _______

                  Winding everything up at the end, the answers to the two quiz questions of the day were given:

                  a) What was the longest chess game ever?
                  Answer: The longest tournament chess game (in terms of moves) ever to be played was Nikolić–Arsović, Belgrade 1989, which lasted for 269 moves and took 20 hours and 15 minutes to complete a drawn game.

                  b) When was the first Soviet Union-USA Match after the War and what was the result?
                  Answer: The Radio Match of Sept 1-4,1945, The USSR team won the match 15½–4½.
                  _______

                  Egor interrupts to bring a bouquet of flowers for Alexandra who will be finished commentating after today’s game but will keep in touch by Twitter.

                  Standings After Round Six

                  Karjakin 4, Aronian 4, Anand 3.5, Caruana 3, Giri 3, Svidler 2.5, Nakamura 2 and Topalov 2

                  Next Round – Saturday, March 19

                  Svidler-Caruana, Karjakin-Aronian, Nakamura-Topalov and Giri-Anand.
                  Last edited by Wayne Komer; Thursday, 17th March, 2016, 04:49 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

                    Candidates 2016, Moscow

                    March 17, 2016

                    On-line Comments About Round Six

                    - Vishy played another beautiful game...nice prep.

                    - Svidler has just gone down in a most awful heap. Free point for Anand.

                    - Kosteniuk: "he touched the king, uy uy uy"

                    - Contrary to Aronian's opinion, f5 is not "winning on the spot", and f5+f6 doesn't just win. Other than that, it was an OK analysis.

                    - Actually the commentators did not believe him immediately and proposed another line (Rb4), then Aronian hesitated a little bit but found the move Re4. The idea was to make f4-f5 at any cost.

                    You can just re-watch the final couple of minutes and check it with chess engine, may be all this GM-s were wrong and the engine can find a draw at that point, but over the board it is really difficult.

                    - Touch move: classic; I see this at my local club Tuesdays, Thursdays, Sundays.

                    - Difficult to get away with that with an Arbiter next to you and a video camera broadcasting it. Naka definitely tried to make out it was 'adjusting' the king (to f8 it seems!). Pointless getting mad at Aronian and not even shaking hands.

                    - My computer really doesn't agree with Aronian that he was winning the ending. No doubt there'll be lots of analysis on the internet by morning.

                    - egads!!!... what a freakin' day of glorious chess!

                    (Lars Bo Hansen) - Experience clearly matters in the Candidates. First timers Caruana, Nakamura & Giri have yet to win a game. No ordinary Super Tournament.

                    (Dylan Loeb McClain at worldchess.com) - If Sergey Karjakin wins the Candidates, this will be one game that everyone’s look back on as crucial — not because he won it, but because he did not lose it. Facing Fabiano Caruana with the Black pieces, Karjakin walked into a well-prepared line by Caruana. In trouble just after the opening, he went into a long think and then decided that his best chance lay in sacrificing his queen, albeit for a rook, a knight and a passed pawn. While the position was far from clear, it seemed that Caruana should be able to find a way to break through. But Karjakin’s defense held and then he found an amazing idea, sacrificing a knight to get his pawn rolling and then catching Caruana’s king in an awkward position in the corner. The upshot was that Caruana had to return the queen to achieve a position that he was actually probably a bit worse in at the end. But the players agreed to a draw. No doubt, Karjakin was thrilled with the result, while for Caruana, it had to be a big disappointment.
                    Last edited by Wayne Komer; Friday, 18th March, 2016, 12:12 AM.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: 4 draws in 5th round

                      Originally posted by John Nguyen View Post
                      Some great live feed shots of Hal doing his best secret service impression on the sidelines of Aronian-Nakamura. Wonder what Hal was talking to Levon about after Nakamura resigned.
                      LOL John! Aronian and I go back to 2005 where he won the World Cup. He is a total gent. But in keeping with 007 protocols, if I let it slip that Levon had to once quash a similar j'adoube stunt by a certain reigning World Champion I'd have to... ruin your credit rating or something.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: 4 draws in 5th round

                        At the 1/2 way juncture, Aronian at 79/50 and Karjakin at 7/4, are the strong betting favourites to emerge victorious.

                        https://www.marathonbet.com/en/betting/Chess/

                        Some of the odds on tomorrow's games are intriguing. It's hard to figure why Caruana would be the biggest favourite at 143/50 given he's only beaten Nakamura once in 26 classical encounters, +1, -5, =20.

                        Those are lower odds than Aronian against Giri. The former is the 71/20 favourite which almost seems attractive given the +4, -0, =10 empirical results. Add in the quicker time controls, +7, -1, -4 and it's clear Aronian has absolutely owned Giri. Is this a Tennyson "not to reason why" moment?

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Candidates 2016, Moscow

                          Candidates 2016

                          March 19, 2016

                          Round Seven

                          Nepo and Miro are the commentators.

                          They acknowledge that the best commentator of all is Peter Svidler. One wonders if his influence will breed a Svidler School of Commentating marked by understatement, cricket analogies and self-deprecation.

                          The two quiz questions to consider are these:

                          1) What country is credited with the invention of chess and in which century?

                          2) What is the oldest Russian chess magazine extant and when was it first published?
                          _______

                          This statement on worldchess.com website:

                          Hikaru Nakamura has been fined 10% of his winnings for his failure to attend the press conference after Round 6. To explain, all players sign contracts spelling out their responsibilities and the fines if they do not come to the press conferences. The idea is to make sure the players appear so that they can explain their thinking to fans. While Nakamura was clearly upset after his loss in Round 6, he still had a duty to appear, at least according to the contract.
                          ________

                          (ChessBase) - An interesting game between the co-leaders, Sergey Karjakin of Russia and Levon Aronian of Armenia, ended in a draw. Karjakin chose a King’s Indian Attack and Aronian responded with a strange idea 6. … a5 and 7. … a4. Karjakin went for an attack with Ng5 and Qh5, but Aronian repulsed it rather easily and then counterattacked. It seemed for a moment that Karjakin might be in trouble, but Aronian’s counterattack was premature and Karjakin found enough counterplay to hold the balance. The players agreed to a draw after only 31 moves, but it was a sharp battle.

                          Candidates 2016, Moscow
                          Round 7, March 19, 2016
                          Karjakin, Sergey – Aronian, Levon
                          A07 Reti, King’s Indian Attack

                          1.Nf3 Nf6 2.g3 d5 3.Bg2 e6 4.O-O Be7 5.d3 O-O 6.Nbd2 a5 7.e4 a4 8.a3 c5 9.Re1 Nc6 10.h4 dxe4 11.Nxe4 Nxe4 12.Rxe4 b5 13.Ng5 Ra6 14.Qh5 h6 15.Nf3 f5 16.Re1 Bd7 17.Ne5 Nxe5 18.Rxe5 Bd6 19.Re1 Qf6 20.Rb1 f4 21.Bxf4 Bxf4 22.gxf4 Qxf4 23.Qxc5 Rf5 24.Qe3 Qxh4 25.Qg3 Qh5 26.Qc7 Qf7 27.Qb7 Rd6 28.Qb8+ Qf8 29.Qxf8+ Kxf8 30.Re3 Bc6 31.Rbe1 1/2-1/2

                          (Mark Crowther) - Anish Giri looked sheepish after his short draw against Viswanathan Anand. Giri was move ordered into an unfamiliar position and rather than go into a position that was likely computer analysed by Anand decided discretion was the better part of valour playing toothless 12.Bxf6 after which the game slowly drifted to a draw.

                          Round 7, March 19, 2016
                          Giri, Anish – Anand, Vishy
                          E10 Queen’s Pawn Game

                          1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 d5 4.Nc3 Nbd7 5.Qc2 Bb4 6.a3 Bxc3+ 7.Qxc3 O-O 8.Bg5 h6 9.Bh4 c5 10.e3 cxd4 11.Qxd4 Re8 12.Bxf6 Nxf6 13.cxd5 Nxd5 14.Be2 Nf6 15.Qxd8 Rxd8 16.O-O Bd7 17.Rfc1 Rac8 18.Kf1 Kf8 19.Ke1 Ke7 20.Ne5 Rxc1+ 21.Rxc1 Rc8 22.Rxc8 Bxc8 23.f4 Nd7 24.Nxd7 Bxd7 25.Kd2 Kd6 26.Kc3 e5 27.g3 b6 28.Bc4 f6 29.b4 g5 30.h4 gxh4 31.gxh4 1/2-1/2

                          (Mark Crowther) - Peter Svidler put on a brave face after another great opening wasn't converted into a full point. Svidler was almost certainly winning against Fabiano Caruana but his opponent found a whole series of only moves to stay in the game after allowing a lethal looking attack down the h-file. Svidler had a vastly superior endgame but it was very difficult to calculate, eventually after mutual inaccuracies the game was drawn

                          Round 7, March 19, 2016
                          Svidler, Peter – Caruana, Fabiano
                          A35 English, Symmetrical, Four Knights System

                          1.c4 c5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Nc3 Nc6 4.g3 d5 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Bg2 g6 7.Ng5 e6 8.d3 Bg7 9.Nge4 O-O 10.h4 b6 11.h5 Bb7 12.hxg6 hxg6 13.Bh6 Nxc3 14.bxc3 f5 15.Qc1 fxe4 16.Bxg7 Kxg7 17.Qh6+ Kf6 18.dxe4 Rh8 19.e5+ Kf7 20.Qf4+ Kg7 21.Rxh8 Qxh8 22.O-O-O Kg8 23.Rd7 Rf8 24.Qg4 Qh6+ 25.f4 Re8 26.Rxb7 Nxe5 27.Qh3 Qxh3 28.Bxh3 Nc4 29.Rxa7 e5 30.Bg2 Ne3 31.Bc6 Re6 32.Bb5 exf4 33.gxf4 Rf6 34.Kd2 Nf1+ 35.Kd3 Rxf4 36.e4 Ng3 37.e5 Rf3+ 38.Kc4 Ne4 39.Bc6 Rxc3+ 40.Kb5 Re3 41.Kxb6 c4 42.Bd5+ Kh8 43.e6 c3 44.Rc7 g5 45.Bxe4 1/2-1/2

                          (chess.com) - Despite the game being less relevant to the overall standings, a clash between Nakamura and Topalov, arguably two of the most aggressive players in the field, rarely disappoints, and was indeed quite entertaining today. Faced with Nakamura's early queenside expansion in a 4.e3 Slav, Topalov embarked on a kingside attack and sacrificed his bishop in order to create very serious mating threats against Nakamura. After some mutual errors, Hikaru eventually came out on top, finishing the game with that extra bishop.

                          Round 7, March 19, 2016
                          Nakamura, Hikaru – Topalov, Veselin
                          D12 QGD Slav

                          1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 Bf5 5.Nc3 e6 6.Nh4 Bg6 7.Nxg6 hxg6 8.Rb1 Nbd7 9.c5 a5 10.a3 Be7 11.g3 e5 12.Bg2 e4 13.b4 axb4 14.axb4 Nf8 15.b5 Ne6 16.Bd2 O-O 17.Na4 Ng5 18.h4 Nf3+ 19.Bxf3 exf3 20.bxc6 bxc6 21.Nc3 Bxc5 22.dxc5 d4 23.exd4 Qxd4 24.O-O Qg4 25.Re1 Rfd8 26.Rb2 Rd4 27.Re7 Rad8 28.Qb3 Rf8 29.Qd1 Rfd8 30.Qb3 Rf8 31.Nd1 Nd5 32.Re5 Kh7 33.Kh2 Nf6 34.Be3 Rb8 35.Qxb8 Rxd1 36.Rb1 Qd7 37.Rg5 Ne4 38.Rxd1 Qxd1 39.Qf4 1-0

                          Standing After Round Seven

                          Karjakin 4.5, Aronian 4.5, Anand 4, Giri 3.5, Caruana 3.5, Nakamura 3, Svidler 3 and Topalov 2

                          Round Eight marks the start of the second half of the tournament. Next round pairings are:

                          Svidler-Karjakin, Caruana-Nakamura, Aronian-Giri and Topalov-Anand

                          Answers to the Quiz

                          1) In India in the 6th century AD

                          It was called Chaturanga

                          2) “64” first published in 1924.

                          Another viewer says the oldest Russian chess magazine, Shakmatny Listok, first published in 1859.

                          But it is not still being published today, whereas 64 is.
                          ________

                          Online Comments

                          "What a bizarre idea! That Agon (and FIDE) suddenly find the "rules" when they get 10% of the proceeds. Why don't you look in the mirror?

                          "Rules are rules," well let's look at what they say!

                          2 No proposed sponsor shall be in conflict with the regulations of the International Olympic Committee.

                          So how do you get a vodka sponsor (Beluga)? Don't you know that the IOC doesn't allow this? And yes Agon, this restriction is already in your contract with FIDE, it says the same thing right there.

                          But I guess when there's money involved (especially VIPs), you can "pick and choose" whether to follow it, leaving the rules for little people like the players. Totally unimpressive.

                          Direct from the IOC Marketing Fact File (2016, page 33)

                          "The IOC does not accept commercial associations with tobacco products, alcoholic beverages (other than beer and wine) ... "

                          - For someone on -3 who must be hating life, Topalov was quite proper in the press conference today (the frowns on all three faces at its beginning was a bit drab though).

                          - Nakamura did wrong, lost the game, was fined and got up off the mat to win his next game. I am tired of sanctimony. Everyone has their moments and everyone has their failings. There is not point in trying to browbeat him into some fake mea culpa where he begs for the public forgiveness. He can only be focused on making good moves right now. Anything else and his event is totally gone

                          Giri: "I can tell you that in this tournament absolutely nobody is intending to play dull games; I mean, if anybody it's me, but I'm not intending, so nobody is intending to play dull games"

                          Anand (half-mockingly patting him on the back): "You're too hard on yourself"

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

                            Candidates 2016

                            March 20, 2016

                            Round Eight

                            Evgeny Miroshnichenko and Ian Nepomniachtchi are the commentators. Nepo has said that he will be there until the end of the tournament.

                            The daily quiz is interesting but it seems to bore Evgeny who keeps forgetting what his questions were when he gives the answers at the end.

                            In any case, the two questions for today:

                            1) Who was the first Russian to play a World Championship Match (and who was his opponent)?

                            2) Which Candidates Match was decided by a spin of the roulette wheel? Who were the players and in what year did this take place?
                            ______

                            This is a derby day. Opponents from the same country have to meet in an early round and since the last half of the tournament is just the pairings of the first half with colours reversed, we have the two Russians paired as well as the two Americans.

                            There is a taped interview with Kirsan Ilyumzhinov. He tells why Moscow was chosen as the site of the Match even though it was the Armenian Chess Federation, which won the bid. During this he says, ”Moscow is famous because it is the place where Tigran Petrosian became World Chess Champion by beating Boris Spassky.”

                            A sharp viewer on chessbomb, however, points out that this is not true. Tigran Petrosian won from Mikhail Botvinnik in 1963 to become World Champion. Petrosian then lost to Boris Spassky in 1966 and again in 1969, both in Moscow.
                            ______

                            Caruana-Nakamura started out as anti-Berlin Defense. But the players castled on opposite wings and then launched attacks against the kings. Caruana’s attack proved to be more potent and Nakamura also made some missteps in time pressure. For Nakamura, it was his third loss and, for the moment, dropped him into a tie for last with Veselin Topalov. Caruana is now at +1 and only trails the leaders by half a point.

                            The broadcast on the official site stopped just when the Caruana postmortem began. I hope to transcribe parts of the first two when it is again available.

                            Candidates 2016, Moscow
                            Round Eight, March 20, 2016
                            Caruana, Fabiano – Nakamura, Hikaru
                            C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence

                            1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. d3 Bc5 5. Bxc6 dxc6 6. Nbd2 O-O 7. Qe2 Re8 8. Nc4 Nd7 9. Bd2 Bd6 10. O-O-O b5 11. Ne3 a5 12. Nf5 a4 13. Bg5 f6 14. Be3 Nc5 15. g4 Be6 16. Kb1 b4 17. g5 b3 18. Rhg1 bxa2+ 19. Ka1 Bxf5 20. exf5 a3 21. b3 Na6 22. c3 Bf8 23. Nd2 fxg5 24. Rxg5 Nc5 25. Rg3 e4 26. Bxc5 Bxc5 27. Nxe4 Bd6 28. Rh3 Be5 29. d4 Bf6 30. Rg1 Rb8 31. Kxa2 Bh4 32. Rg4 Qd5 33. c4 1-0

                            Round Eight, March 20, 2016
                            Aronian, Levon – Giri, Anish
                            D43 QGD, Semi-Slav, Hastings Variation

                            1. Nf3 d5 2. d4 Nf6 3. c4 c6 4. Nc3 e6 5. Bg5 h6 6. Bxf6 Qxf6 7. Qb3 dxc4 8. Qxc4 Nd7 9. e3 g6 10. Ne4 Qe7 11. Ne5 Qb4+ 12. Qxb4 Bxb4+ 13. Ke2 Be7 14. f3 Rg8 15. Rc1 f5 16. Nxd7 Kxd7 17. Nd2 b6 18. Kf2 Bb7 19. h4 Rac8 20. f4 Bf6 21. b4 Rg7 22. Be2 g5 23. hxg5 hxg5 24. fxg5 Bxg5 25. Bf3 Ba6 26. Nc4 Bxc4 27. Rxc4 f4 28. e4 Be7 29. a3 e5 30. dxe5 Ke6 31. Ke2 Kxe5 32. Rh5+ Bg5 33. Bg4 Rd8 34. Rxc6 Kxe4 35. Re6+ Kd4 36. Rh3 Kc4 37. Re5 Kd4 38. Re6 Kc4 39. Bf5 Re7 40. Rxe7 Bxe7 41. Rh7 Bd6 42. Rxa7 Re8+ ½-½

                            The opening was a Semi-Slav Defense and Aronian chose the Moscow variation, in which White gives up the bishop pair in return for rapid development. The players soon traded queens and entered an endgame in which White had more space, but Black had the bishop pair. Though White was able to eventually win a pawn, the endgame with opposite-colored bishops was an easy draw and so the players split the point.

                            Round Eight, March 20, 2016
                            Topalov, Veselin – Anand, Vishy
                            E10 Queen’s Pawn Game

                            1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Nbd7 5. Qc2 Bb4 6. cxd5 exd5 7. a3 Bxc3+ 8. Qxc3 Ne4 9. Qc2 O-O 10. e3 Re8 11. b3 c6 12. Bd3 Nf8 13. Bb2 Bf5 14. O-O Qf6 15. Ne5 Nd6 16. Rae1 Bxd3 17. Nxd3 Qg6 18. f3 f6 19. a4 Ne6 20. Qd2 h5 21. Ba3 Nf5 22. Nf4 Nxf4 23. exf4 Rxe1 24. Rxe1 Re8 25. Rxe8+ Qxe8 26. Kf2 Nh6 27. Qd3 b6 28. Bb4 Qe6 29. Qc2 Kf7 30. Ba3 Qd7 31. Bb4 Nf5 32. Qd3 g6 33. g3 Ng7 34. Qe3 Kg8 35. Qd3 Kh7 36. Kg2 Qf5 37. Qc3 Qe6 38. Qd3 a5 39. Bd2 Qf5 40. Qc3 Qe6 41. Qd3 Qf5 42. Qc3 h4 43. g4 Qb1 44. Be3 Qd1 45. Bf2 Qe2 46. Qe3 Qxe3 47. Bxe3 Ne6 48. Kh3 g5 49. f5 Nf4+ 50. Bxf4 gxf4 51. Kg2 ½-½

                            The final position has 7 pawns each on the board and no pieces – a draw. Anand and Topalov have a friendly post mortem. Vishy said that he did not want to play 37..Qb1, which is very committal just before the time control.

                            Round Eight, March 20, 2016
                            Svidler, Peter – Karjakin, Sergey
                            A29 English, Bremen, Smyslov System

                            1. c4 Nf6 2. Nc3 e5 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. g3 Bb4 5. Bg2 O-O 6. O-O e4 7. Ng5 Bxc3 8. bxc3 Re8 9. f3 e3 10. d3 d5 11. Qa4 h6 12. cxd5 Nxd5 13. Ne4 f5 14. Nc5 f4 15. Bb2 Rb8 16. c4 Nde7 17. g4 b6 18. Ne4 Be6 19. g5 h5 20. Rfd1 Nd4 21. Bxd4 Qxd4 22. Qxa7 Qd7 23. Qa3 h4 24. Qc3 Bf5 25. h3 Bxh3 26. Qe5 Ng6 27. Qd5+ Be6 28. Qxd7 Bxd7 29. Kh2 Ra8 30. Bh3 Bxh3 31. Kxh3 Ra3 32. Rdc1 Rea8 33. Rc2 Kf7 34. d4 Rd8 35. d5 Ne5 36. Rb1 Kg6 37. d6 cxd6 38. Rxb6 Kh5 39. Nxd6 Rda8 40. Rb5 Nc6 41. g6+ Kxg6 42. Rc1 Kh7 43. Rg1 R3a7 44. Rg4 Kg8 45. Rh5 Ne7 46. Rgxh4 Ng6 47. Rg4 Nf8 48. Rxf4 Rxa2 49. Rfh4 g6 50. Re5 ½-½

                            The usual Svidler press conference where he says that he was objectively lost or almost winning by force at various points. One position is too painful to look at. It will be a good game to see analyzed in detail. I would like to know more about Black’s 25…Bxh3 and the positions immediately after.

                            The commentators say that Karjakin was almost winning and then Svidler went on top and Karjakin defended well and got the draw. Svidler was not able to win a promising position.

                            Standing After Round Eight

                            Aronian 5, Karjakin 5, Caruana 4.5, Anand 4.5, Giri 4, Svidler 3.5, Nakamura 3 and Topalov 2.5

                            Pairings for Round Nine tomorrow

                            Topalov-Svidler, Anand-Aronian, Giri-Caruana, Nakamura-Karjakin

                            Answers to the Quiz Questions

                            1) Mikhail Chigorin who played Wilhelm Steinitz for the World Championship in Cuba in 1889 and again in 1892.

                            2) Smyslov-Huebner, Candidates 1984, with the draw decided by the spin of a roulette wheel.

                            Robert Byrne gives this description in the NYT:

                            A roulette ball dropping into a red slot of the wheel gave Vasily Smyslov of the Soviet Union his victory in his quarterfinal world championship candidates match with Robert Hubner of West Germany. To have such a contest decided by chance is undesirable, but so far FIDE (the International Chess Federation) has no better solution.

                            Smyslov and Hubner had played to a 5-5 tie in their regulation series and were deadlocked at 7-7 after their four tie-break games were drawn. That's when the handy roulette wheel - this match took place in the casino at Velden, Austria - was pressed into service.

                            The ball rebelled by registering zero at the first spin but at the second turn dropped into the color Smyslov had called. Thus, Hubner was out and Smyslov advanced to the semifinal round.
                            ______

                            Evgeny did ask a third question: Which player had the highest rating performance TPR of all time in a tournament and in what tournament?
                            When he was saying who won in the end, he, characteristically forgot the question and the answer! I thought he was referring to a player in this tournament and the answer would be Caruana at the Sinquefield Cup, St. Louis, 2014.

                            But online we got these answers:

                            2899 by Karpov at Linares 1994
                            Magnus Carlsen 3108, Pear Spring Tournament, Nanjing
                            Fischer’s 6-0 win over Larsen in the Candidates semi-final 1971, 3060 ELO

                            One writer online gave this: Karpov won 6 straight games in the Linares Tournament in 1994. He finished the tournament with 11 points over 13 games. So far this has been considered the best performance ever in a chess tournament.

                            Karpov's rating performance then was 2899. Caruana's performance in the Sinquefield Cup is well over 3600 at this point, and apparently it can't be properly measured until he loses or draws a game.

                            The rating average of the players in that Linares Tournament was 2685. The rating average for the Sinquefield Cup 2014 is 2802! Even counting the rating inflation, this is an even stronger tournament.

                            Even if Caruana only draws one of his last 3 games, his rating performance will be over 3000!
                            _____

                            Any help here from chess history buffs?

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

                              Originally posted by Wayne Komer View Post
                              2) What is the oldest Russian chess magazine extant and when was it first published?
                              _______

                              Answers to the Quiz
                              2) “64” first published in 1924.

                              Another viewer says the oldest Russian chess magazine, Shakmatny Listok, first published in 1859.

                              But it is not still being published today, whereas 64 is.
                              You still can buy Shakmatny Listok :)
                              «Шахматный листок» №№1-6 за 2016 год - http://shop.chessok.ru/index.php?uke...productID=1448

                              It's far from the 18xx magazine, but 64 also passed through many transformations, only the main name (actually a number) stated the same :)

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Candidates 2016, Moscow

                                Candidates 2016, Moscow

                                March 20, 2016

                                Egidijus, I don’t think Miro researches these questions and their answers very thoroughly. They are often badly worded.

                                I have my doubts about some of them but they are all part of the Agon broadcast package of commentary, post mortems and interviews.

                                Thank you for the Shakmatny Listok link. I am trying to prevent myself from subscribing to it. Lord knows I have enough chess magazines!


                                And yet, that red cover is so darned attractive…
                                Last edited by Wayne Komer; Sunday, 20th March, 2016, 10:25 PM.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X