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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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What a superb showing by GM Krasenkow at this age, eliminating Alekseenko , a 2700 GM, and then taking Pragg to the tiebreak, before finally losing it.
Wow! Tomashevsky, Grandelius, Giri, Mamedyarov, Krasenkow and Gelfand all go down to defeat.
Shankland tweets: Through to round 4 after a wild match with Areshchenko. Honestly he played better than me and I had one foot out the door both in regulation and the playoff, but I was resourceful when it counted and you can't have a good tournament without some luck. Jumabayev next!
Selected Games
(Games 1 and 2 25+10, Games 3 and 4 10+10, Games 5 and 6 5+3)
Game 1, July 20 Matlakov, Maxim – Wojtaszek, Radoslaw E10 Queen’s Pawn game
Yes GM Krasenkov's result is note worthy. On the other end of the scale the youthful combatants Abdusattorov, Pragg, and Sindarov are showing they can play with the best and succeed.
Yes GM Krasenkov's result is note worthy. On the other end of the scale the youthful combatants Abdusattorov, Pragg, and Sindarov are showing they can play with the best and succeed.
I'm used to seeing the top players online in the Magnus Carlsen (or Grand) Chess Tour but I tend to not realize how close the players above 2600 are. There are 38 players above 2700, and 202 players in the 2600s nipping at their toes. There are too many GMs to keep track of.
The 48 players above 2600 in the first round tended to mash the 'patzers' below 2400, 2-0. Of course, once you lose your first game, match is over. There were only two upsets in the first round:
Ravi Haria 2440 3-1 Vadim Zvjaginsev 2608
Abdelrah Hesham 2397 2.5-1.5 Ahmed Adly 2625
Five playoffs with players above 2450, and two below.
I'm used to seeing the top players online in the Magnus Carlsen (or Grand) Chess Tour but I tend to not realize how close the players above 2600 are. There are 38 players above 2700, and 202 players in the 2600s nipping at their toes. There are too many GMs to keep track of.
The 48 players above 2600 in the first round tended to mash the 'patzers' below 2400, 2-0. Of course, once you lose your first game, match is over. There were only two upsets in the first round:
Ravi Haria 2440 3-1 Vadim Zvjaginsev 2608
Abdelrah Hesham 2397 2.5-1.5 Ahmed Adly 2625
Five playoffs with players above 2450, and two below.
I look at it as a warm up for the good players but there is also plenty of excitement due to upset possibilities and also watching nice finishes (and taking risks).
Rd 4 Jumbalayev is practicing space grabbing but Sam Shankland is refusing to be buffaloed and the computer agrees.
I am keeping an eye on Xiong - Vidit.
The wild game is Bacrot Ponkratov.
The three youngsters Pragg, Abdu, and Sindarov have all made mistakes (according to the computer) costing them the initiative (or thwarting their initiative plans) but there is still a long way to go in their games.
Jeffery Xiong fished for checkmate and didnt look for defence, classic HOPE chess. Not like Jeffery.
Sam Shankland fought hard. Good for Sam. I dont know what his opponent was doing. He exchanged his good pieces and couldnt make headway and lacked a plan. And how many times can you capitalize on the same pin? Apparently endlessly. Have a look. https://www.chessbomb.com/arena/2021...-Shankland_Sam
A tough day for the Uzbek prodigies, as 15-year-old Javokhir Sindarov also loses, to Kacper Piorun, who knocked Ragger & Van Foreest out in the previous rounds!
Game 1, July 22 Xiong, Jeffery – Vidit, Santosh Gujrathi D02 Queen’s Bishop game
Sam Shankland goes forward. Last time it was a joy to see Jeffery Xiong go so far (this round he bowed out) and now Sam Shankland has made it to the final 16 and its a pleasure to see him perform.
Abdusattarov a big comeback and a tenacious and marvelous checkmating attack in the middle of the board in the endgame!
Magnus was completely winning with 25.Rxh7!, but 25.Bc2 means it's still game on — is Wojtaszek's plan of going for complications against the World Champion working again?
It's turned round completely, with Wojtaszek rejecting a draw and playing on with Magnus down to under 2 minutes! If either player wins, the other is out:
Magnus Carlsen missed a great win, but Jan thinks he also "dodged a bullet" by surviving low on time in a tricky position against Radek Wojtaszek at the end! They play tiebreaks tomorrow
Game 2, July 23 Ponkratov, Pavel – Bacrot, Etienne B68 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack
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