Re: Beijing Grand Prix
Round Ten
Monday, July 15, 2013
Pairings and Results
Karjakin(.5)-Wang Yue(.5) 53 m Petroff’s Defence
Giri(1)-Topalov(0) 23 m Caro Kann
Morozevich(1)-Mamedyarov(0) 41 m Grunfeld
Gelfand(1)-Grischuk(0) 62 m King’s Indian
Leko(.5)-Wang Hao(.5) 29 m Slav
Kamsky(1)-Ivanchuk(0) 34 m Queen’s Pawn
Standings after Round Ten
Mamedyarov 6.5
Grischuk 6
Morozevich 5.5
Leko 5.5
Karjakin 5
Giri 5
Topalov 5
Wang Yue 5
Ivanchuk 4.5
Gelfand 4.5
Wang Hao 4
Kamsky 3.5
+++++++
Last Round Pairings (Tomorrow)
Ivanchuk-Karjakin
Wang Hao-Kamsky
Grischuk-Leko
Mamedyraov-Gelfand
Topalov-Morozevich
Wang Yue-Giri
Round Ten Summary
(ChessVibes) Tournament leader Shakhriyar Mamedyarov lost but so did runner-up Alexander Grischuk and so the top of the standings didn't change. Mamedyarov was slowly outplayed in an ending by Alexander Morozevich, who is now shared third with Peter Leko, half a point behind Grischuk who was ground down by Boris Gelfand. Veselin Topalov also lost, and very quickly, to Anish Giri. Gata Kamsky won his first game in the tournament at the expense of Vassily Ivanchuk.
Giri-Topalov The first game to finish was a shocker. Topalov was playing coffee-house chess. On move 17 he could take a pawn on f5 but thought to move his K off the open g file to h8. Giri pushed his pawn to f6 and there we were.
The chessbomb kibitzers:
- a piece for nothing!
- He should resign now, but it would look stupid to sac a piece and after several forced moves just to resign
- I don’t understand this at all, why all giri games have such weird blunders?
- It’s like yesterday’s game with shark, black is down a lot of material quickly for no reason
- Maybe Topa went to the wrong toilet before he played Kh8
- Wow, 23 moves
A miniature. Yesterday, I likened Mamedyarov-Giri to a contest between a shark and a goldfish. Today, the goldfish ate the shark!
I am afraid I have been influenced by the kibitzers and by a television program this past week. The science fiction channels in both the States and Canada have aired a disaster film called Sharknado. In it, a waterspout deposits thousands of man-eating sharks in the flooded streets of Los Angeles. Everyone was tweeting about it evidently. Hopefully, today is the last day I will write about sharks.
++++++++++
Kamsky-Ivanchuk was the second game to finish. Vassily came out of the opening with a slightly better game. On move 30 he doubled his rooks on the fifth rank seemingly ignoring what white is about to do with his rooks. Black’s rook is hemmed in with 32….Rbf5 and the game all but lost
- another big blunder by black
- I’m really starting to feel the players are getting tired from FIDEs tight schedule this year. I’ve seen so many terrible blunders by top GMs over the last couple of months.
- Poor chucky
- Tragedy at move 32
+++++++++
Leko-Wang Hao is solid, boring and ends in a draw.
- with a draw here Leko could even afford a decisive game in the last round and still secure the Leko prize for the most draws
- is there any chance that Leko can win this?
- No
- Why?
- Because he has already won a game in this tourney.
- Why does Leko play chess?
- He’s currently the 16th strongest player in the world
++++++++++++
Karjakin-Wang Yue starts from a Petroff and goes solidly to a perpetual.
- Karjakin isn’t really fighting for a top place in this tourney now
- But if he doesn’t score a bit higher here, he will have no chance to qualify in Paris
- He should get at least 100 points here (something like third place) or he might as well skip Paris
- Karjakin needs a stabilizing draw
+++++++++++
Morozevich-Mamedyarov has white coming out of the opening looking strong. Moro slowly increases the pressure, gets two connected rooks and then sticks his knight in the heart of black’s position with 35.Nc5
- Ouch! 35.Nc5! that’s nasty
- Wonderful Moro!!
- It must suck to play Black in this position
- It was rather Moro playing well than Mamedya playing bad
- Great game by Moro
- Flip the board to get a better feel of how truly awful Black’s position is
- Good game by Moro. Beating the tournament leader must feel nice
- Moro’s last 15 moves were all Houdini’s top choice
- I guess he’s learned from Ivanov
+++++++++++
Gelfand-Grischuk is a long game with Gelfand playing strongly from the first. His break-through move is 31.b4
- b4!!!! 1-0
- “Multiple exclamation marks are a sign of a deranged mind” – Terry Pratchett
- Gelfy looks angry since he missed his chance in the last game
- Wow. Grischuk should have resigned before playing 60…e3
- He should have resigned before playing any of those last 30 moves
- The game was positionally lost after b4!
- Good game by Gelfand
- Boris Houdini
- Near a perfect game
- One day I hope to play b4!!! and win a game
++++++
So, four white wins. Some sparkling games and everything over tomorrow. The round starts so early in China that you can check the first hour before you go to bed here.
Mark Crowther on the This Week in Chess website has been following the Ashes cricket Test at the same time as the chess. Life has to go on outside of the Beijing Grand Prix.
++++++++
Notes:
In the category of chess blunders in the last post, I was able to find Fabio Bellini vs Vugar Gashimov, Bled Olympiad, 2002. But I could find no player called either Aronkov or Biovosvky. It is hard to believe, but I think the author of that blunder record just made it up. Lying on the Internet? I am devastated.
There is a Valentin Arbakov, who would have been too young to play in 1963. He is the classic case of squandered potential.
Arbakov is as well known for his for his proclivity for alcohol as for his dominance at blitz, or speed chess, in which each player has five minutes for the entire game.
Arbakov is in Fred Waitzkin's book "Searching for Bobby Fischer." Waitzkin describes how he and his prodigy son, Josh, meet Arbakov in the Sokolniki Park chess club in northeast Moscow in 1984.
"Many grandmasters came to Sokolniki Park to test themselves [in blitz] against Arbakov," writes Waitzkin, "and though he was rarely sober, he almost never lost."
If you have a few moments and want to read about the search for Arbakov and chess in Sokolniki Park go to:
http://carlschreck.com/displayArticle.php?article_id=90
Round Ten
Monday, July 15, 2013
Pairings and Results
Karjakin(.5)-Wang Yue(.5) 53 m Petroff’s Defence
Giri(1)-Topalov(0) 23 m Caro Kann
Morozevich(1)-Mamedyarov(0) 41 m Grunfeld
Gelfand(1)-Grischuk(0) 62 m King’s Indian
Leko(.5)-Wang Hao(.5) 29 m Slav
Kamsky(1)-Ivanchuk(0) 34 m Queen’s Pawn
Standings after Round Ten
Mamedyarov 6.5
Grischuk 6
Morozevich 5.5
Leko 5.5
Karjakin 5
Giri 5
Topalov 5
Wang Yue 5
Ivanchuk 4.5
Gelfand 4.5
Wang Hao 4
Kamsky 3.5
+++++++
Last Round Pairings (Tomorrow)
Ivanchuk-Karjakin
Wang Hao-Kamsky
Grischuk-Leko
Mamedyraov-Gelfand
Topalov-Morozevich
Wang Yue-Giri
Round Ten Summary
(ChessVibes) Tournament leader Shakhriyar Mamedyarov lost but so did runner-up Alexander Grischuk and so the top of the standings didn't change. Mamedyarov was slowly outplayed in an ending by Alexander Morozevich, who is now shared third with Peter Leko, half a point behind Grischuk who was ground down by Boris Gelfand. Veselin Topalov also lost, and very quickly, to Anish Giri. Gata Kamsky won his first game in the tournament at the expense of Vassily Ivanchuk.
Giri-Topalov The first game to finish was a shocker. Topalov was playing coffee-house chess. On move 17 he could take a pawn on f5 but thought to move his K off the open g file to h8. Giri pushed his pawn to f6 and there we were.
The chessbomb kibitzers:
- a piece for nothing!
- He should resign now, but it would look stupid to sac a piece and after several forced moves just to resign
- I don’t understand this at all, why all giri games have such weird blunders?
- It’s like yesterday’s game with shark, black is down a lot of material quickly for no reason
- Maybe Topa went to the wrong toilet before he played Kh8
- Wow, 23 moves
A miniature. Yesterday, I likened Mamedyarov-Giri to a contest between a shark and a goldfish. Today, the goldfish ate the shark!
I am afraid I have been influenced by the kibitzers and by a television program this past week. The science fiction channels in both the States and Canada have aired a disaster film called Sharknado. In it, a waterspout deposits thousands of man-eating sharks in the flooded streets of Los Angeles. Everyone was tweeting about it evidently. Hopefully, today is the last day I will write about sharks.
++++++++++
Kamsky-Ivanchuk was the second game to finish. Vassily came out of the opening with a slightly better game. On move 30 he doubled his rooks on the fifth rank seemingly ignoring what white is about to do with his rooks. Black’s rook is hemmed in with 32….Rbf5 and the game all but lost
- another big blunder by black
- I’m really starting to feel the players are getting tired from FIDEs tight schedule this year. I’ve seen so many terrible blunders by top GMs over the last couple of months.
- Poor chucky
- Tragedy at move 32
+++++++++
Leko-Wang Hao is solid, boring and ends in a draw.
- with a draw here Leko could even afford a decisive game in the last round and still secure the Leko prize for the most draws
- is there any chance that Leko can win this?
- No
- Why?
- Because he has already won a game in this tourney.
- Why does Leko play chess?
- He’s currently the 16th strongest player in the world
++++++++++++
Karjakin-Wang Yue starts from a Petroff and goes solidly to a perpetual.
- Karjakin isn’t really fighting for a top place in this tourney now
- But if he doesn’t score a bit higher here, he will have no chance to qualify in Paris
- He should get at least 100 points here (something like third place) or he might as well skip Paris
- Karjakin needs a stabilizing draw
+++++++++++
Morozevich-Mamedyarov has white coming out of the opening looking strong. Moro slowly increases the pressure, gets two connected rooks and then sticks his knight in the heart of black’s position with 35.Nc5
- Ouch! 35.Nc5! that’s nasty
- Wonderful Moro!!
- It must suck to play Black in this position
- It was rather Moro playing well than Mamedya playing bad
- Great game by Moro
- Flip the board to get a better feel of how truly awful Black’s position is
- Good game by Moro. Beating the tournament leader must feel nice
- Moro’s last 15 moves were all Houdini’s top choice
- I guess he’s learned from Ivanov
+++++++++++
Gelfand-Grischuk is a long game with Gelfand playing strongly from the first. His break-through move is 31.b4
- b4!!!! 1-0
- “Multiple exclamation marks are a sign of a deranged mind” – Terry Pratchett
- Gelfy looks angry since he missed his chance in the last game
- Wow. Grischuk should have resigned before playing 60…e3
- He should have resigned before playing any of those last 30 moves
- The game was positionally lost after b4!
- Good game by Gelfand
- Boris Houdini
- Near a perfect game
- One day I hope to play b4!!! and win a game
++++++
So, four white wins. Some sparkling games and everything over tomorrow. The round starts so early in China that you can check the first hour before you go to bed here.
Mark Crowther on the This Week in Chess website has been following the Ashes cricket Test at the same time as the chess. Life has to go on outside of the Beijing Grand Prix.
++++++++
Notes:
In the category of chess blunders in the last post, I was able to find Fabio Bellini vs Vugar Gashimov, Bled Olympiad, 2002. But I could find no player called either Aronkov or Biovosvky. It is hard to believe, but I think the author of that blunder record just made it up. Lying on the Internet? I am devastated.
There is a Valentin Arbakov, who would have been too young to play in 1963. He is the classic case of squandered potential.
Arbakov is as well known for his for his proclivity for alcohol as for his dominance at blitz, or speed chess, in which each player has five minutes for the entire game.
Arbakov is in Fred Waitzkin's book "Searching for Bobby Fischer." Waitzkin describes how he and his prodigy son, Josh, meet Arbakov in the Sokolniki Park chess club in northeast Moscow in 1984.
"Many grandmasters came to Sokolniki Park to test themselves [in blitz] against Arbakov," writes Waitzkin, "and though he was rarely sober, he almost never lost."
If you have a few moments and want to read about the search for Arbakov and chess in Sokolniki Park go to:
http://carlschreck.com/displayArticle.php?article_id=90
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