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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
General Guidelines
---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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Round 1 Match 01
Carlsen Magnus (NOR) 1 1 2
Balogun Oluwafemi (NGR) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 02
Ruiz Castillo Joshua Dani (COL) 0 ½ 0.5
So Wesley (USA) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 03
Caruana Fabiano (USA) 1 1 2
Solomon Kenny (RSA) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 04
Kramnik Vladimir (RUS) ½ 1 1.5
Dai Changren (CHN) ½ 0 0.5
Round 1 Match 05
Cawdery Daniel (RSA) 0 0 0
Aronian Levon (ARM) 1 1 2
Round 1 Match 06
Mamedyarov Shakhriyar (AZE) ½ 1 1.5
Liu Guanchu (CHN) ½ 0 0.5
Round 1 Match 07
Nakamura Hikaru (USA) 1 1 2
Mollah Abdullah Al Rakib (BAN) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 08
Vachier-Lagrave Maxime (FRA) 1 ½ 1.5
Khusenkhojaev Muhammad (TJK) 0 ½ 0.5
Round 1 Match 09
Grischuk Alexander (RUS) 1 1 2
El Gindy Essam (EGY) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 10
Anand Viswanathan (IND) ½ 1 1.5
Yeoh Li Tian (MAS) ½ 0 0.5
Round 1 Match 11
Haddouche Mohamed (ALG) ½ 0 0.5
Ding Liren (CHN) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 12
Karjakin Sergey (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Smirnov Anton (AUS) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 13
Giri Anish (NED) 1 ½ 1.5
Dzagnidze Nana (GEO) 0 ½ 0.5
Round 1 Match 14
Wei Yi (CHN) 1 0 1
Sambuev Bator (CAN) 0 1 1
Round 1 Match 15
Palac Mladen (CRO) ½ ½ 1
Nepomniachtchi Ian (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 16
Vakhidov Jakhongir (UZB) 0 0 0
Svidler Peter (RUS) 1 1 2
Round 1 Match 17
El Debs Felipe de Cresce (BRA) ½ 0 0.5
Wojtaszek Radoslaw (POL) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 18
Yu Yangyi (CHN) ½ ½ 1
Pourramezanali Amirreza (IRI) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 19
Li Chao b (CHN) ½ 1 1.5
Krysa Leandro (ARG) ½ 0 0.5
Round 1 Match 20
Gonzalez Vidal Yuri (CUB) 1 0 1
Harikrishna P. (IND) 0 1 1
Round 1 Match 21
Ziska Helgi Dam (FAI) 0 ½ 0.5
Radjabov Teimour (AZE) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 22
Kunin Vitaly (GER) ½ 0 0.5
Le Quang Liem (VIE) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 23
Batchuluun Tsegmed (MGL) ½ ½ 1
Adams Michael (ENG) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 24
Navara David (CZE) 1 1 2
Hjartarson Johann (ISL) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 25
Eljanov Pavel (UKR) 0 0 0
Lenderman Aleksandr (USA) 1 1 2
Round 1 Match 26
Fedoseev Vladimir (RUS) 1 0 1
Bacallao Alonso Yusnel (CUB) 0 1 1
Round 1 Match 27
Stupak Kirill (BLR) ½ 0 0.5
Gelfand Boris (ISR) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 28
Sadorra Julio Catalino (PHI) 0 ½ 0.5
Matlakov Maxim (RUS) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 29
Ivanchuk Vassily (UKR) ½ ½ 1
Kazhgaleyev Murtas (KAZ) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 30
Kulaots Kaido (EST) ½ 0 0.5
Vitiugov Nikita (RUS) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 31
Karthikeyan Murali (IND) 1 0 1
Vallejo Pons Francisco (ESP) 0 1 1
Round 1 Match 32
Bacrot Etienne (FRA) ½ ½ 1
Fier Alexandr (BRA) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 33
Bu Xiangzhi (CHN) 1 1 2
Flores Diego (ARG) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 34
Tomashevsky Evgeny (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Antipov Mikhail Al. (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 35
Aleksandrov Aleksej (BLR) ½ 0 0.5
Najer Evgeniy (RUS) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 36
Pantsulaia Levan (GEO) 0 0 0
Duda Jan-Krzysztof (POL) 1 1 2
Round 1 Match 37
Goganov Aleksey (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Andreikin Dmitry (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 38
Sengupta Deep (IND) ½ 0 0.5
Wang Hao (CHN) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 39
Mchedlishvili Mikheil (GEO) ½ 0 0.5
Inarkiev Ernesto (RUS) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 40
Howell David W L (ENG) ½ ½ 1
Tari Aryan (NOR) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 41
Mastrovasilis Dimitrios (GRE) ½ 0 0.5
Cheparinov Ivan (BUL) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 42
Hovhannisyan Robert (ARM) ½ ½ 1
Rodshtein Maxim (ISR) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 43
Delgado Ramirez Neuris (PAR) 0 ½ 0.5
Vidit Santosh Gujrathi (IND) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 44
Bok Benjamin (NED) 0 0 0
Artemiev Vladislav (RUS) 1 1 2
Round 1 Match 45
Sethuraman S.P. (IND) 1 ½ 1.5
Ponomariov Ruslan (UKR) 0 ½ 0.5
Round 1 Match 46
Nisipeanu Liviu-Dieter (GER) ½ ½ 1
Sevian Samuel (USA) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 47
Salgado Lopez Ivan (ESP) ½ ½ 1
Jobava Baadur (GEO) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 48
Onischuk Alexander (USA) 1 1 2
Zherebukh Yaroslav (USA) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 49
Erdos Viktor (HUN) ½ ½ 1
Amin Bassem (EGY) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 50
Adhiban B. (IND) ½ ½ 1
Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son (VIE) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 51
Rapport Richard (HUN) 1 1 2
Cordova Emilio (PER) 0 0 0
Round 1 Match 52
Xiong Jeffery (USA) ½ 0 0.5
Motylev Alexander (RUS) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 53
Dubov Daniil (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Fridman Daniel (GER) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 54
Kovalenko Igor (LAT) 0 ½ 0.5
Kravtsiv Martyn (UKR) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 55
Akobian Varuzhan (USA) 0 ½ 0.5
Kovalyov Anton (CAN) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 56
Cori Jorge (PER) 1 ½ 1.5
Jones Gawain C B (ENG) 0 ½ 0.5
Round 1 Match 57
Melkumyan Hrant (ARM) ½ ½ 1
Grachev Boris (RUS) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 58
Anton Guijarro David (ESP) ½ 0 0.5
Bruzon Batista Lazaro (CUB) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 59
Zhigalko Sergei (BLR) 0 ½ 0.5
Kuzubov Yuriy (UKR) 1 ½ 1.5
Round 1 Match 60
Piorun Kacper (POL) ½ 0 0.5
Hou Yifan (CHN) ½ 1 1.5
Round 1 Match 61
Areshchenko Alexander (UKR) 1 0 1
Demchenko Anton (RUS) 0 1 1
Round 1 Match 62
Lenic Luka (SLO) ½ ½ 1
Fressinet Laurent (FRA) ½ ½ 1
Round 1 Match 63
Bluebaum Matthias (GER) 1 ½ 1.5
Mareco Sandro (ARG) 0 ½ 0.5
Round 1 Match 64
Bachmann Axel (PAR) 0 0 0
Dreev Aleksey (RUS) 1 1 2
Wei Yi - Rapport. Too bad it's not Sambuev - Rapport, we would have seen a game with 6 knights and 4 queens on the board.
Instead I take Gelfand - Wang Hao match.
Peter Doggers writes vividly about the tie-break playoffs today:
Bassem Amin, David Howell, Laurent Fressinet and Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu are the biggest names that were eliminated on day three of the FIDE World Cup in Tibilisi. In the longest tiebreak match of the day, local hero Baadur Jobava managed to qualify at the expense of Ivan Salgado.
It was a rare but wonderful display of sportsmanship and friendship to see Jobava and Salgado, who just finished a thrilling tiebreak, hanging out together in the press room, drinking wine and sharing stories with each other and with journalists. As it turned out, the two have been friends since they were 16, and there was even a tiny bit of sadness in Jobava's eyes as he had been forced to knock out his Spanish amigo.
Besides the natural disappointment and fatigue, Salgado was mostly happy to have played "an interesting match." (Back in 2011 in Khanty-Mansiysk he had lost his first-round match without a serious fight in his first World Cup.)
The first two rapid games ended in draws, then Jobava won the first 10+10 game and then Salgado managed to win as well.
Jobava then played one of his pet systems, the reversed Philidor. Salgado said that he had even looked at this during his preparation, but somehow it went wrong anyway. A powerful performance by the winner, who showed no mercy after just one mistake from his opponent.
This was the longest tiebreak match of the day. These last two games were played in an empty playing hall, although many volunteers, arbiters and journalists were allowed to watch (and film!) from closeby. (The organizers and arbiters deserve credits for working together professionally with the media.)
Eight matches were decided in the 10+10 rapid games, the most dramatic being Viktor Erdos vs Bassem Amin. After drawing their 25+10 games, Erdos won the first 10+10 convincingly. In the second game he "got excited" (as he said himself) and used two hands to promote to a queen.
Amin claimed a win, which is understandable since per 1 July 2017 using two hands for a move equals an illegal move, which loses the game in rapid and blitz if the opponent claims or the arbiter steps in. However, at World Cups the same rules are in effect for all time controls, to avoid confusion for the players. Therefore, also in tiebreaks, at the first occurrence an illegal move will lead to a warning and the opponent receives two minutes extra on the clock.
I was impressed with how Anton Smirnov handled himself against Sergey Karjakin and the play of Aryan Tari, the Norwegian heir-apparent to Magnus.
_______
Ian Rogers has written about the U.S. players who survived Round One:
It contains this tidbit of news about the awarding of the games to Tbilisi:
Georgia has in recent years been keen to promote itself as a desirable tourist destination. Add to that a chess tradition which includes producing some of the top women players of the previous century and Tbilisi could be viewed as an ideal place to host a major tournament.
So when billionaire Prime Minster Bidzina Ivanishvili was presented with a proposal back in 2012 to try to bring the Chess Olympiad to Georgia in 2018, he happily allocated the needed government funds, both to promote chess and to help advertise Georgia to 150+ countries around the world.
FIDE also requires the bidding country to host the World Cup in the year before the Olympiad, so at the start of September the Georgian capital Tbilisi found itself hosting the ever-entertaining – but expensive – 128 player knock-out event with a first prize of $96,000. Players qualify for the World Cup from zones around the world, supplemented by players selected on rating or gaining their places through the Women’s World Championship, the World Junior Championship plus various wild cards.
The 2017 World Cup is being held in Tbilisi’s best hotel, the Preference Hualing, part of a massive commercial development and (massive) residential project by the Chinese company Hualing on the outskirts of Tbilisi. Players are required to stay at the hotel for the duration of their survival in the tournament – those who initially chose to book an Airbnb apartment discovered that they would be slugged the $247 per day hotel rate by the tournament organizers anyway! (With 128 players staying from four days to almost a month, that totals more than the tournament’s first prize, a significant savings even allowing that some of that money must go to the hotel.)
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