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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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The tournament, a nine round Swiss contest, is the third of four Grand Prix in 2017 and follows the Sharjah Grand Prix in February and the Moscow Grand Prix in May.
The Geneva Grand Prix is sponsored by Kaspersky Lab and EG Capital Advisors.
Each round starts at 2PM (GMT +3).
The Prize Fund is 130,000 euro
The Players
Alexander Grischuk
Alexander Riazantsev
Anish Giri
Boris Gelfand
Dmitry Jakovenko
Ernesto Inarkiev
Hou Yifan
Ian Nepomniachtchi
Levon Aronian
Li Chao
Michael Adams
Pavel Eljanov
Pentala Harikrishna
Peter Svidler
Richard Rapport
Salem A.R. Saleh
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
Timor Radjabov
Levon Aronian – Li Chao
Boris Gelfand – Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
Ernesto Inarkiev – Alexander Grischuk
Peter Svidler – Dmitry Jakovenko
Richard Rapport – Ian Nepomniachtchi
Pavel Eljanov – Hou Yifan
Alexander Riazantsev – Pentala Harikrishna
Michael Adams – Salem A.R. Saleh
14:00 Geneva time is 8:00 a.m. Toronto/Montreal time
From the official website: The tournament is being held in Hotel Le Richemond, set on the banks of Lake Geneva, by the famous Jet d’Eau. The Grand Prix will use its finest contemporary spaces - Paul Klee Salon & Galerie Rachmaninof, a private walkway beneath a dramatic glass ceiling.
In the first round Teimour Rajabov of Azerbaijan rejected a draw offer and proceeded to defeat Anish Giri with black pieces. Rajabov’s optimism was based on the fact that Giri spent a lot of time in the opening, and was in time trouble. Rajabov tried to make the game more complicated.
The strategy worked as white made several errors and Azeri Grandmaster was able to launch a strong attack through the open e-file.
In a replay of the first round of Sharjah Grand Prix, Michael Adams was able to defeat Salem A.R. Saleh. White was enjoying a slight advantage until black strayed with his rook and then erred badly with 28…d5. Adams duly converted the material into full point.
Pavel Eljanov played the Italian opening for the first time, but the only woman in the Grand Prix series, Hou Yifan from China, held the ground with black pieces.
In the later stage of the game, however, she made a very bad decision by playing 35…f3. White simply besieged the pawn and then collected it after the time control. The resulting ending was an easy win for white.
In the longest game of the day, Pentala Harikrishna won against Alexander Riazantsev with black pieces. After the long maneuvering in the middlegame, black appeared to be slightly better, but white established some kind of fortress.
With one hasty pawn-break, white ruined the status-quo and black obtained a strong attack. The Indian Grandmaster converted the advantage in the minor-pieces endgame.
The lone commentator is Alexander Morozevich. Agon should realize that with two commentators you don’t have to have an endurance contest. Also, with two, there is back-and-forth play and it is more interesting.
Alexander has a slight stutter like Sergei Karjakin but almost loses it when he is discussing the technical part of the game. He is a very pleasant personality and it is good to see him in this role. Two other pleasant players are here too – Teimour Radjabov and Peter Svidler.
Peter was asked about the result at the World Teams in Khanty-Mansiysk. He said that the Chinese team was very slightly better and they got the gold.
He was also asked about the progress of his second, Maxim Matlakov (b. 1991). Peter thought that the question should be directed at Maxim but he thought that soon Maxim would be the principal and Peter, the coach.
Teimour was very kind to Anish Giri, whom he had just beaten. He cited the heavy game schedule that Anish had had, whereas Teimour was fresh. He said that Anish is not the drawing master in spite of the 14-game drawing run he had. Teimour had had one of eleven games recently. It might have been the Gashimov Memorial and the Moscow Grand Prix. Giri had his 14 consecutive draws in the 2016 Moscow Candidates, of course.
The Harikrishna – Riazantsev game went on forever. Alexander commented that there was a game in 1995, Khalifman-Salov that seemed to go on forever too. There would be 49 piece moves and then a pawn would move and so on for another 49 moves sort of making fun of the 50-move rule. It was in the last round of Amsterdam 1995. Since the game is only 75 moves long, Alexander is exaggerating. You can play over this game at:
Morozevich was asked about cities he liked to visit while playing classical chess and he replied that he recently is playing go tournaments. About Kasparov’s chances in August in St. Louis, he answered that he expected a decent result.
The picture quality of the broadcast in outstanding but the organizers still fail to identify interviewers and, as I said, one commentator is insufficient for a seven-hour stretch.
The decisive games of Round One:
Geneva Grand Prix 2017
Round 1, July 6, 2017
Giri, Anish – Radjabov, Teimour
D37 QGD, Hastings variation
Following live commentary in official site (Round 2). Interesting to see live analyzes / commentary by Alexander Morozevich. Had never heard or expected him to do something like this but it's quite instructive.
It happens that the broadcasting of this tournament is more interesting than the play today. Let me back up that statement with a couple of quotes.
First, from Peter Doggers at chess.com:
Unfortunately, it seems the further we go into this Grand Prix Series, the worse it gets. Before we look at yesterday's games, larger GP issues need to be discussed first.
Agon, the company that owns the right to organise events in the world championship cycle, managed to find three sponsors for their events. Nonetheless, as reported earlier, they couldn't pay an amount of $500,000 in time to FIDE, which was due for late 2016. And, at least until a week ago, FIDE was still waiting for its share of the Moscow Grand Prix prize money (€26,000 / $29,700).
Because of that, the World Chess Federation couldn't pay the prize money to the players. This week, most (but not all) Moscow participants have finally received their money, 1.5 months after the tournament.
Many would argue that Agon is not only treating the world's best players with less respect than they deserve. The chess fans are also suffering.
The user experience for following the Candidates', the world championship match and now these Grand Prix tournaments is simply worse that at other major tournaments. An important reason is Agon's position towards the live transmission of games.
By trying (and, thus far, failing) to limit the live transmission to the WorldChess website, Agon has alienated a number of well-established chess websites. One of the major Russian sites, ChessPro, hasn't covered Agon's events since the Candidates' Tournament last year. Chess24, who have been involved in lawsuits with Agon, decided to boycott the Moscow Grand Prix altogether and also did not cover yesterday's first round of the Geneva GP.
Starting from the Candidates' Tournament in 2016, chess fans have had to pay to see games in the world championship cycle on a website that is simply below today's standards. The issues range from diagrams that aren't working properly, basic functionalities that aren't there, and bugs that are still present up to this day.
Whether it's because of financial trouble or not, Agon seems to have lowered its budget for these GP tournaments. The first, in February in Sharjah, saw three commentators. The one in Moscow, in May, only had one. The Geneva GP also has only one commentator, and he's not even on site.
Speaking from a studio in Moscow, GM Alexander Morozevich was commenting on round one. (After round five GM Evgeny Miroshnichenko will take over.) It's a big name, but the live show still had just roughly 150 simultaneous viewers throughout the day—who only had access to one webcam with an overview shot of the playing hall, all day long.
All in all, it seems regardless of their statements, things are tough for Agon right now, but even harder on those interested in follow these tournaments.
I have become somewhat of a tournament junkie. My “to see” list has 18 major events on it. I have bought a $25 membership with World Chess for the convenience and because I am curious as to whether everything will work out for a company who wants to sell a “first class” tournament experience.
I like Alexander Morozevich and Evgeny Miroshnichenko; let us call them Moro and Miro. It takes a lot of endurance to commentate for six or seven hours. There are better formats and I have some quotes from the online chat room to show what other viewers think.
Comments
- Agon’s contract runs through the year 2020..so buckle up!
- So, Agon agonizes and oozes conflict... nomen est omen.
Let us hope that this negative turn of events is a symptom of its demise.
- Two commentators are better than one. No exceptions. Three or more become a crowd if done poorly.
- Who would you bring in as a second – someone rated between 2600 and 2720?
- You have the tactician, bring in positional players, like Tomashevsky, Leko, and so on.
- Good job Moro!
- Nigel Short I enjoy as a commentator. He breaks down positions very well.
- I hope they get Moro’s cold sorted out!
- I suppose Agon doesn’t have a budget for two commentators. According to the report of round 1 on chess.com, they still haven’t paid the players all the prize money they owe for Moscow.
- I am sure that chess24 doesn’t pay Svidler and Jan peanuts for their commentating roles.
- I think the chess24 situation is unique. Jan is definitely a part owner of chess24, so he has a financial stake in it. I would be surprised if Svidler hadn’t a stake too.
- I really hope Kasparov wins the GCT Rapid and Blitz event in St. Louis. If he does, he might come out of retirement properly. Carlsen vs Kasparov WCH match would be my dream. If it doesn’t happen, I think the chess world will have been robbed of a classic match. Same as Fischer-Karpov 1974.
- Garry is too old to compete against Carlsen.
- The commentator is a top GM with a bad cold
- Moro is an excellent commentator and a very brilliant player
- Moro is commentating on 9 games on his own and keeping us well informed
- He’s dull and disappointing
- Just imagine Ivanchuk doing the talking. Every one would jump out of the window.
- Still I prefer to listen to Grischuk than Nakamura! Sasha is always very funny. It’s the personality that matters more than the way they speak English.
- Anyway, this commentary has no soul for sure..and please, someone give Moro a handkerchief.
- We have to admit that the quality of Moro’s comments is excellent, but a TV show needs much more, like attractiveness. That is more cams, so we can see the players at different angles.
- We are paying – they should give us some service
- If I lived in NYC, I would drive to the Marshall Chess Club just to listen to GMs analyze. Having a world-class player analyze games in real time is very valuable.
- I like Moro, but he needs more support. Too much dead time and useless camera angles
- Moro looks knackered
________
So that is the broadcast situation. I shall give the standings and games in my next post.
There are big beautiful boards on the official web page. But, as I write, there are three games finished (as per Moro and chessbomb) but the boards don’t tell the result. Harikrishna is winning against Mamedyarov but the “thermometer” on the left-hand side of each board shows 50% for each player in each contest.
Later: I found that by clicking on the boards I got the correct thermometer evaluation and the 10 last moves. That is rather cool.
Alex Yermolinsky writing at chessbase has this to say today:
“The chess internet is abuzz with anti-AGON sentiment, and, I suppose, the readers expect me to weigh in on this. Sorry to disappoint you, but no further hint of criticism directed at AGON will come from the author of these words. You are free to think AGON has paid me a million dollars to keep mum.”
Mickey Adams and Alexander Grischuk have an interview with Goran Urosevic. Grischuk says that yesterday he had the longest game and today, the shortest, so that is OK. He was asked about the World Team result for Russia at Khanty-Mansiysk and says it was close and they almost won the gold ahead of China. 4-0 against the U.S.A. was an excellent result even though they didn’t have So, Nakamura or Caruana on the team. With Shankland, Onischuk, Robson, Akobian and Xiong, they weren’t chopped liver either!
Asked how the youngsters on the team did. Sasha gave the nod to Fedoseev and Matlakov, saying that Matlakov is 26, not quite young and up and coming.
Peter Svidler and Boris Gelfand also interviewed with Goran. Peter said his prep gave him a good game until about move 15 and when he had to start thinking on his own, he made a weaker move and his prep was all gone. Boris said that he had four seconds/analysts working around the clock on his preparation for six months for his world championship match against Anand in 2012. He is still using some of the lines they found.
He is working on another book but he is playing so much chess this year that he is putting off the publication by a year. Peter is playing a lot of chess too and he prefers making videos to writing a book. He heartily recommends Boris’s books, which he is reading at the moment.
Moro says that he does teaching on Sundays in chess and in Go. 3 hours for chess, 2 for elementary Go. When he first started, the first numbers were nobody for chess and seven people for Go!
One of his suggestions for changing chess is to have blindfold tournaments. How many ChessTalk members would like to play in one, I wonder?
He is not working on a book of his best games yet. He doesn’t know what the market for one would be. As for other people’s books, he likes Gelfand’s books and the series by Kasparov.
The last game to finish is Rapport vs Jakovenko. It was R+B vs R+N+p and in his opponent’s time pressure Jakovenko found a way to win it.
Three games:
The Geneva Grand Prix 2017
Round 3, July 8, 2017
Harikrishna, P. – Mamedyarov, S.
C53 Giuoco Piano
Position after 79…Nxg2. 80. Re7 draws for white and 80.Rf1+, which white played in time pressure, loses
Later: On the EC Forum, readers fastened on to this ending too:
Nicholas Faulks: Rapport found a way to lose a drawn R v R+N. Quite extraordinary
to which Leonard Barden replied:
Not so very extraordinary in practice. Inter alia, this ending has been won by Kasparov against Polgar at Dos Hermanos 1996, with Polgar's WK trapped at h8 and Black playing Ne8!, the same idea as just quoted by Ian Thompson.
It has also been won by Carlsen against Erwin L'Ami at Tata Steel 2011. The latter example was sneaky as the loser's king was not in the corner.
I gave it once as an Evening Standard puzzle: WK e5, WR g1, WN f5; BK g4, BR a2. The black king is in check; what is the only move to lose?
The commentators are Alexander Volzhin and Evgeny Miroschnichenko.
Alexander was born in 1971, learned to play chess at the age of 5 years and got his GM title in 1997.
Wikipedia: In addition to being an active player, Volzhin has been a coach of a number of outstanding players, including Evgeny Bareev, Almira Skripchenko, Ekaterina Kovalevskaya, and Iweta Rajlich. Also, Volzhin has been a coach of Russian national women team during Chess Olympiads in Elista in 1998 (under the Head Coach Naum Rashkovsky, silver medal) and in Istanbul in 2000 (under the Head Coach Yuri Yakovich, bronze medal).
Alexander Volzhin has been an outspoken fighter for integrity of professional chess. His article in the 64 Chess Magazine was one of the first on the issue of computer cheating when a player gets illegal help from computer engines. He also exposed a number of players involved in game fixing and pumping up their ratings.
After retirement from international chess in early 2000s, Volzhin pursued career in business. Since 2007, he has worked for Barclays in London rising through the ranks to the position of a vice-president at Barclays Capital, the securities division of Barclays plc. (public limited company).
_________
Alexander comments for about four hours and then Evgenyi is left on his own. Miro explains what happened:
“If I look sleepy and miss some lines, it is because I had to fly in this morning and was a couple of hours late. That also explains my outfit”
At least he is not still in his pajamas, which would be a chess broadcasting first!
The chat room seems to be more interested in the commentators than the games at the moment. Caroline Robson says: It’s a bit difficult to compete with Svidler and Jan. Grischuk was brilliant when he popped into the commentary room at the end of the London Classic one year. I relented and paid to watch the Grand Prix yesterday. I don’t really want to support Agon. But having paid I thought that Morozevich was great! Guess Evgenij isn’t too bad either!
Alexander Grischuk and Levon Aronian have a brief interview. Alexander describes the game as being “perfect”. It ended in a draw. Levon said that they have played a similar perfect game, at Mexico City in 2007 – a Ruy Lopez ending in a draw.
I could not recall this tournament – probably because it was in the era when the title was in confusion. The World Chess Championship 2007 was held in Mexico City, from 12 September 2007 to 30 September 2007 to decide the world championship. It was an eight-player, double round robin tournament.
Viswanathan Anand won the tournament and the title of World Chess Champion. His winning score was 9 points out of 14, with a total of four wins and 10 draws, and Anand was the only undefeated player in the tournament.
The participants were Kramnik, Anand, Svidler, Morozevich, Leko, Gelfand, Aronian and Grischuk.
After this, decided by a tourney, the Championship was always by means of a match.
_______
Three brief interviews. I had to laugh at Salem’s predicament this morning. He finished lunch late, and then it started to rain. He had to decide whether to walk or take a cab but he couldn’t find a cab that was unoccupied and arrived just in time but still won his first game. There will be celebrating in Sharjah tonight.
Peter Svidler won, because he said, Michael Adams made a couple of unfortunate decisions during their game. Both he and Nepo seemed to say that they tricked their opponents sometime during the game. Tongue-in-cheek and understatement and you don’t know what you can believe. Must look at Nepo-Hou Yifan and Svidler-Adams more closely.
I looked in at the English Chess Forum and Tim Harding is posting on the tournament with this:
“Riazantsev has an extra outside passed pawn against Inarkiev at move 41, with, maybe some winning chances. Two rooks and a knight each.
Apropos of nothing, Moeen Ali has just taken his tenth wicket in the Test Match and could make it 11 in the match. (Now he cannot: Dawson took the last wicket.)”
Peter Svidler, Lawrence Trent and Simon Williams all seem to be interested in concurrent cricket during their chess commentary. I never could understand the game myself. See also Chess and Cricket:
Miro simply cannot see why Riazantsev and Inarkiev play on in a drawn position. Will it end with bare kings on the board? Miro sounds like a man who has not had his breakfast or lunch.
Is there bad blood between the players so that neither wants to propose a draw?
Is Black afraid of White’s connected passed pawns?
It is quite fascinating to watch the Miro’s agony, hungry?, tired? trying to analyze...
A lady in the chat room writes:
He’s so beautifully puzzled as to why they’re still playing. This is so amusing.
______
The lights are out in most of the tournament hall and, as I write, the game has been going on for almost six hours and has reached 60 moves. Miro is taking a quick break, hoping the game will be over when he returns and then, of course, he won’t have to return because the transmission will be over.
After two interviews with Anna Burtasova, Miro is back with, “Welcome back to this everlasting game”
But finally it ends. Miro apologizes for the windbreaker and T-shirt and says tune in tomorrow for Round Five.
______
The games:
Round 4, July 9, 2017
Grischuk, Alexander – Aronian, Levon
C84 Ruy Lopez, Closed
To me this will always be Miro’s everlasting-ending game.
I am sorry to have discussed commentators, cricket, perfect games, Mexico City and cabs in the rain. I am sure you would all rather hear my thoughts on Donald Trump. Oh, I wish there was a Trump forum on this forum for that!
Results, Standings and Round Five Pairings given in next post.
Last edited by Wayne Komer; Sunday, 9th July, 2017, 06:07 PM.
Anna Burtasova conducted the last two interviews of the day. Anna, born in 1987, is a Russian lawyer, chess journalist and a Women’s Grandmaster since 2009.
Erwin L’Ami, Netherlands b. 1985, accompanies Anish Giri to tournaments. He has had that job for two years. He works on opening prep but, of course, cannot use the ideas himself when he plays. And his play is down drastically since his alliance with Anish.
Markus Ragger, the Austrian GM, b. 1988, has been a second to Pentala Harikrishna for about one and a half years. They communicate well. He is a nice guy. Even with his work, Markus still plays 80 to 100 games a year.
On a typical day, working with Pentala, he prepares until 3 or 4 in the morning and then grabs a few hours sleep, has breakfast, then preps Pentala for the game coming up. There is nothing he can do when the game starts and so he tries to sleep although he is very tense.
Last edited by Wayne Komer; Saturday, 15th July, 2017, 03:48 PM.
A good interview of Grischuk by Anna Burtasova. Did he play a reverse Dragon?
Eljanov and Jakovenko are going swimming in the lake tomorrow (free day) – will Sasha go too?
Alexander – I can swim but it reminds me of one year at Wijk aan Zee. The water is always very cold there. I was walking towards the ocean and Vishy Anand came out and said, “Sasha, you too?” What he meant was Ponomariov had gone in and he thought I was going to as well.
Anna explains that January 19 is the day when the faithful Christians in Russia celebrate Epiphany. This spiritual festival is dedicated to the great biblical event, the Baptism of Jesus Christ in the waters of the Jordan River. These days in Russia are famous for a wonderful tradition - Epiphany bathing. According to the Bible any water on this day is considered to be healing and miraculous. The best way to get healthier in body and spirit is to bathe in the baptismal rite font immediately after the festive worship service. It must be mentioned that Epiphany bathing today is very popular among Russians, despite the icy water in the freezing cold!
Sasha is asked what he thinks about Kasparov becoming an active player again. He says that he will watch the contest with interest but he will be sad too because he tells many young players today that they won’t truly know the game because they never played Kasparov but soon they will get a chance to and he can’t say that any more.
I just checked and Grischuk played Kasparov 11 times and the score was Kasparov 8.5 Grischuk 2.5
Last edited by Wayne Komer; Wednesday, 12th July, 2017, 11:21 PM.
Interview with the joint leaders – Radjabov and Grischuk by Anna Burtasova.
AB – Now you are sharing first place with three rounds to go – Harikrishna won too. Do you feel you need to play solidly in the remaining games or will you have to score one more win?
AG – You just have to fight. Chess is quite a senseless activity in itself. You have to justify what you do by giving it all you can and by fighting to the end and then there is some sense in what you are doing.
AB – Does the sense come from the joy you give the spectators?
AG – It comes from the feelings of self; that you are trying to achieve the most you can and fighting to the end. No, not for the spectators.
TR – It is part of the qualification cycle – that is the reward. In the Amber tournaments you could sacrifice five pieces in a game because there was no consequence, but not here.
AG – Here there are no spectators and I cannot think about things that don’t exist.
AB - But there are spectators on-line and people play over your games afterwards and learn things from them.
Decisive Games (in the main!)
Round 6, July 12, 2017
Grischuk, Alexander – Radjabov, Teimour
B31 Sicilian, Nimzowitsch-Rossolimo Attack
You can be sure that the last game to end will have Alexander Riazantsev as one of the players.
Who is he?
Peter Doggers in an article on the Russian Superfinal, Oct. 2016 wrote:
GMs Alexander Riazantsev and Alexandra Kosteniuk are the winners of this year's Russian Championship Superfinal. Kosteniuk claimed the women's title with a round to spare; Riazantsev decided matters today. Both won a Renault Kaptur.
Riazantsev scored the best performance of his career with his final-round victory in Novosibirsk. The 31-year-old grandmaster won the World U12 Championship back in 1997 and the Moscow Championship in 2006. As a player in the SHSM-64 team from Moscow, he won the Russian Team Championship twice.
He is one of the national coaches in Russia, and as a result, he finds little time to play serious chess himself.
Riazantsev is one of the pupils of the late and great Mark Dvoretsky. Here's his first interview after winning the championship, taken by Sport-Express.
How do you feel now?
I'll be honest: I wanted a good performance, but I didn't expect to win the tournament. Of course I'm glad: it's the greatest success of my career.
You've been playing very little lately, even though you used to be 2726 - that's a supergrandmaster rating.
In 2010, I was asked to help the Russia-2 women's team at the Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad. That's how my coaching career began. I like this job. I've worked with many famous players. For instance, at the last Tal Memorial, I was Vladimir Kramnik's second.
When was your last round-robin tournament?
Can't remember. Probably Poikovsky, six years ago.
Sounds scary.
Yes. I decided to play in the Higher League, qualified for the Superfinal, and now I've won gold. You wouldn't believe, but I've been playing only rapid and blitz for a year before that.
One of the Superfinal's prizes is a Renault car from the Russian Chess Federation's sponsor, Renault Russia. Do you already know what are you going to do with this prize?
On Friday, in the Central Chess Club on Gogolevsky blvd. 14 in Moscow, I'll get the keys. After that, I'll decide what I'm going to do. And now, please let me go to the award presentation.
_________
Teimour Radjabov beat Peter Svidler in a game in which he always had the upper hand. He is now the sole leader.
He analyzed his games, trying to improve his time management. This was at the World Rapid and Blitz in Qatar (December 2016). He started to notice improvement in the last half of Shamkir (Gashimov Memorial). He had a good showing in the Moscow Grand Prix and now he is leading at Geneva. He said, “In chess you don’t get rewarded for good moves, you get rewarded for winning”.
Today’s game ends with a nice rook move, which wins.
Games from Round Seven
The Geneva Grand Prix 2017
Round 7, July 13, 2017
Radjabov, Teimour – Svidler, Peter
A34 English, symmetrical, Three Knights System
Daniil Dubov joins Miro as commentator today. As a fresh voice, he adds to the quality of the commentating.
Nepo won against Levon Aronian. Levon was clearly playing for a win with black to keep his standing in the Grand Prix series. It was Nepo’s birthday and he was in a peaceful mood but Aronian pressed.
On move 24 Levon should have taken the bishop on g2 but went for the rook on f1 and soon Nepo harvested the point.
He said that he always seems to be playing chess on his birthday. He has gone from the World Teams to Leuven to Geneva – a month of continuous chess, so he will go back to Moscow after tomorrow and celebrate his birthday there and then. He just turned 27.
Mickey Adams had a game with Richard Rapport where he was said to play like Rapport. If Richard was playing like Mickey Adams and Adams won, then we appear to be in the middle of a logical fallacy.
Anish Giri always had the better game against Hou Yifan and against stubborn resistance he finally got the point.
Salem had an advantage over Svidler, a piece for three pawns, but could not win.
Today’s games:
Geneva Grand Prix 2017
Round Eight, July 14, 2017
Grischuk, Alexander – Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar
C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer, Borisenko variation
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