Tuesday, May 7, 2013
The tournament started with a blitz event – time control 4 minutes plus two-second increments. The final standings of the blitz tournament determined the pairing numbers of the players in the major tourney.
The players are the usual suspects – Carlsen, Aronian, Svidler (who replaces Kramnik), Anand, Radjabov and with them, Karjakin, Topalov, Nakamura, Wang Hao and Jon Ludvig Hammer.
Karjakin won the blitz tournament and picked pairing number 5 and so starts and finishes the major with the white pieces. Carlsen was second and Topalov sat in the basement. Carlsen faces Topalov tomorrow and Anand on Thursday in the regular tournament and has white in both games.
Nakamura plays Aronian in Round 2 and Carlsen in Round 3.
You can view the blitz games at:
http://www.aftenbladet.no/sjakk/
Hammer said that his game against Anand (in Round 7) was quite brilliant. I rather liked Hammer-Carlsen in the 4th Round, where Magnus sacrificed a queen and then raked the king’s position with knight and rook.
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The tournament takes place in the Stavanger region, which is the oil capital of Norway. There are nine rounds. In case of shared first place - blitz tiebreak match: 1) If 2 players share first - 2 blitz games 4+2; if this match ends in a tie - they will play Armageddon 5+2/4+2, black with draw odds.
I didn’t know what the Koja/Koya tie-break system was in Alekhine St. Petersburg and I have no idea what Armageddon is here! (As a guess, I would say, from the figures, that white gets 5 minutes with 2 second increments and black only 4 minutes + 2, but wins if the result is a draw. Could this possibly be?)
The games start tomorrow at 15:00 CET, which is 9 a.m. Toronto/Montreal EDT time, if my calculations are correct.
The tournament started with a blitz event – time control 4 minutes plus two-second increments. The final standings of the blitz tournament determined the pairing numbers of the players in the major tourney.
The players are the usual suspects – Carlsen, Aronian, Svidler (who replaces Kramnik), Anand, Radjabov and with them, Karjakin, Topalov, Nakamura, Wang Hao and Jon Ludvig Hammer.
Karjakin won the blitz tournament and picked pairing number 5 and so starts and finishes the major with the white pieces. Carlsen was second and Topalov sat in the basement. Carlsen faces Topalov tomorrow and Anand on Thursday in the regular tournament and has white in both games.
Nakamura plays Aronian in Round 2 and Carlsen in Round 3.
You can view the blitz games at:
http://www.aftenbladet.no/sjakk/
Hammer said that his game against Anand (in Round 7) was quite brilliant. I rather liked Hammer-Carlsen in the 4th Round, where Magnus sacrificed a queen and then raked the king’s position with knight and rook.
+++++++++++
The tournament takes place in the Stavanger region, which is the oil capital of Norway. There are nine rounds. In case of shared first place - blitz tiebreak match: 1) If 2 players share first - 2 blitz games 4+2; if this match ends in a tie - they will play Armageddon 5+2/4+2, black with draw odds.
I didn’t know what the Koja/Koya tie-break system was in Alekhine St. Petersburg and I have no idea what Armageddon is here! (As a guess, I would say, from the figures, that white gets 5 minutes with 2 second increments and black only 4 minutes + 2, but wins if the result is a draw. Could this possibly be?)
The games start tomorrow at 15:00 CET, which is 9 a.m. Toronto/Montreal EDT time, if my calculations are correct.
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