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Wesley So wins the London Chess Classic and Grand Chess Tour

1/3/2017

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19.12.16 - The 2016 edition of the London Chess Classic ended with both a bang and a whimper as Veselin Topalov scored his first win of the tournament in the 6th hour of play and Wesley So effortlessly steered his final game towards a draw.


Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames.  Earlier in the afternoon the man of the moment had won both the LCC and the GCT, to scoop the $100,000 tour bonus.
The second prize of $50,000 went to his compatriot Hikaru Nakamura as Caruana completed an all-American podium.

The Super Rapidplay meanwhile saw the triumph of Valentina Gunina, who left 44 fellow GMs behind her as she stormed to a stellar 9/10 score.

View the tournament highlights here.
See the tournament standings here.

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London Chess Classic: Round 1

1/3/2017

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Get the analysis of the highlights here.

https://en.lichess.org/blog/WEtavikAAKcFoTWa/london-chess-classic-round-1
It is a testament to the increasing popularity of lichess that, having covered the World Chess Championship 2016 (Carlsen vs Karjakin if you were living under a rock), lichess was equally invited to cover the London Chess Classic, the last leg of the Grand Chess Tour. I was fortunate enough to sit in an air conditioned VIP analysis room alongside journalists, older or less active grandmasters, the coaches, business men and those who run and organise national and international chess federations.
Featuring eight of the world’s top 10 players (barring only the aforementioned Carlsen and Karjakin), with the other two players being Veselin Topalov (a former FIDE World Chess Champion, #15 in the world) and wildcard Michael Adams. (the top British player, and a not too shabby #19 in the world) Not a single player came from beneath the top 20 players in the world. For such a strong pedigree, the chess was of a curiously mistake-ridden standard.

Hikaru Nakamura (USA 2779) vs Wesley So (USA 2794)

The best example of this came from Hikaru Nakamura (USA 2779) v Wesley So (USA 2794). Nakamura looked languid and relaxed in the auditorium, playing white in a Grünfeld Defence (7..Be3 8. Rc1) – without much consternation. On move 13, however, Nakamura, after some deliberation, played Ne2. Almost immediately, there was a ripple of consternation through the auditorium. Whilst materially, the move kept things equal, Nakamura sacrificed his castling rights, consigned his knight on e2 to an inactive square, and had a weak pawn chain starting on c4. By comparison, So had a strong bishop pair, a partially exposed but castled king, and easy to protect pawn chains. By move 15, Nakamura had realised the extent of his miscalculation, and disappeared for several minutes. When he returned, he looked ashen faced, but played on until resigning in a hopelessly lost position on move 29.


(All credit to https://twitter.com/OlimpiuUrcan)
Nakamura, well known for going on “tilt” (a poker term where a loss, or series of losses, impairs your objective thinking and/or makes you angry), did not attend the press conference afterward. Unlike Carlsen’s fantastic birthday earlier this year (when he won the World Chess Championship), this will be a birthday Nakamura might want to forget. For So, on the other hand, this win puts him tantalisingly close to becoming only the 16th player to break the 2800 mark, with his live FIDE rating now at 2798.8.


Vladimir Kramnik (RUS 2809) v Veselin Topalov (BUL 2760)

This particular matchup is always anticipated when it comes, with Kramnik and Topalov, with “toiletgate” back in the 2006 World Championship having created an unmistakable feud and rivalry between these two greats. Simply put, Topalov believed that Kramnik was using the toilet so regularly because he was getting outside assistance (essentially accusing him of cheating). Kramnik refused to share a bathroom with Topalov, and so forfeited round 5 of the 2006 World Championship. The match eventually went to tie-breaks (which Kramnik won) but the players have historically not been on speaking terms, with gentle giant Kramnik going so far as to refuse to even shake Topalov’s hand – one of the highest insults possible in the chess world.

Kramnik played a King’s Indian Attack which transposed into a Grünfeld line. Pushing aggressively, by move 7 Kramnik had placed a pawn on c5. By move 16, it was ready to be pushed to c6 with Kramnik having a lead in development and initiative. Topalov, almost meekly, played Nb6, and Kramnik ambitiously pushed his pawn to c7. A series of beautiful pins followed, until Topalov made an unusual blunder and allowed Kramnik to enter a variation which, at its conclusion, would leave Kramnik a rook and a bishop up, with an aggressively advanced pawn on b5. Topalov, accordingly, resigned on move 28.
In the press conference, Kramnik was modest and downplayed his game, saying “I don’t know if I always played the best move, but I made sure I played a good enough move.” He then clarified that he now sees Topalov as “just another opponent”. Pointedly, however, neither was in the interview room at the same time as the other (unlike every other set of players interviewed). Topalov claimed he had “forgotten his opening preparation” but maintained he was “ambitious and had the advantage” although conceded that 16… Nb6 was a “miscalculation”.


Fabiano Caruana (USA 2823) vs Viswanathan Anand (IND 2779)

It is impossible to not be charmed by the iconic “Vishy” Anand. Almost oblivious to the chaos around them as first Nakamura and then Topalov blundered their games away, both Anand and Caruana sipped from spotless white porcelain teacups, reviewing each-other's moves as if two old friends casually kibitzing. Their calm demeanours belied the curious and extraordinary openings both had chosen. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Anish Giri, briefly taking over analysing duties from Daniel King and Lawrence Trent, excitedly pointed out that “black is playing something like a reverse Spanish game, and white a reverse Chigorin…This is really rare!” (By move 4, the lichess masters’ game database only gives 4 other games with that opening. By move 7, just one game, and by move 8, we were on novelties).
Such an unconventional opening arguably should have worked in Caruana’s favour, who was a significant number of tempi up, had a strong pawn centre, and had a queenside space advantage. Caruana found these advantages difficult to convert – or more accurately, Anand masterfully gave himself enough breathing space to prevent Caruana from converting. By move 38 Caruana had only one minute left on the clock with Anand having 9 minutes. Although receiving bonus time on move 40, both players seemingly had had enough of the game, with both players agreeing to a draw on move 44. It is possible that the position could have been played out a little longer; Anand had a potential passed pawn on b6 – but it would have been difficult to keep hold of it, and perhaps it is wiser for both players to conserve their energy for the upcoming 8 games.

In the press conference Caruana defended his performance claiming he had to “settle into the tournament”, although he did appear openly disappointed. Anand, by contrast, never really thought he was losing, and that he maintained a strong position throughout. Anand, the veteran of these tournaments that he is, stated he felt “no nerves”. Regardless, Lawrence Trent called over to him – “Vishy, didn’t they use to call you the Tiger of Madras?” Anand confirmed that they did. “Why don’t they call you that anymore?” Daniel King replied “Because it’s not called Madras anymore. Madras doesn’t exist anymore. It’s Chennai.”


Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA 2804) vs Anish Giri (NED 2771)

In the World Chess Championship Candidates Tournament, a visibly frustrated Giri – who had drawn every single one of his games – said he’d look at his playing style and change things to make sure he converted to wins in the future. To be fair to him, whilst this 24 move game against Vachier-Lagrave ended in a draw, he really did bring the heat.
Interestingly, Giri chose to play the Sicilian Najdorf against an opponent widely considered to be an expert and one of the best living masters of the Sicilian systems - in particular the Najdorf (rumour has it MVL coached Carlsen in it for the WCC). The Najdorf is one of the sharpest and most respected lines of the Sicilian, with a huge amount of theory behind it. A single slip from either of these players could easily convert a position balanced on a knife’s edge to a loss. Both played perfectly with the first novelty only coming on move 16 (the hardly revolutionary 16. a4). By move 20, there was no obvious way to progress for either player without their position becoming unstuck, and so they agreed to a draw four moves later.
As they finished the soonest, they gave a strong account of the other players – they stated that, in their opinion, Nakamura had “confused his opening preparation”, something they both admitted they had done before. They stated that Kramnik was playing “characteristically aggressively” and Topalov “unusually passively”. Both predicted Kramnik would win, although they found a different winning line to the one Kramnik found (which relied on a blunder from Topalov).


Levon Aronian (ARM 2785) vs Michael Adams (ENG 2748)

Michael Adams rapidly built up a commanding position over Aronian, the wildcard entrant really testing the world’s number 7, in a Giuoco Piano set up. (Full disclosure, I am a British citizen and so may not be fully objective). By move 15, Stockfish gave Adams’ position as -0.5, an entire half pawn positional and space advantage. Adams ultimately perhaps became a bit too ambitious, overextended his pieces and created 3 clusters of pawn islands, making a position which – in the long term – would be tricky to defend without perfect piece coordination.
Coming into severe time pressure, that piece coordination began to fail, and Aronian began to snipe at the fragile pawn structure, exchanging a bishop for a knight (28. Bxe5) which further split up Adams’ pawn structure into four islands. The position wasn’t lost for Adams, however, who had strong counter play, but time pressure led to a very misfortunate blunder and a position which was almost certainly drawn crumbled into a lost position.


A disappointing day for Michael Adams, Hikaru Nakamura and Veselin Topalov, all with a lot of catching up to do over the next 8 rounds.

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Chess notes

1/3/2017

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https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2016/12/10/chess-notes/QeR741HV4oFmaaczbhNVcN/story.html

By Chris Chase   December 10, 2016

A pair of world records were set recently. The first went to the self-titled “Blindfold King,” Timur Gareyev, who has long stated his goal of setting a new blindfold simultaneous record. On Dec. 3 at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, he played 48 games at the same time, winning 35, drawing seven, and losing six. Though the tally is not yet officially recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records, the consensus is that it’s just a matter of time, as the event was well witnessed and met all the relevant requirements — including winning percentage (80.2 percent) and strength of opposition (roughly 1700). The prior record was held by German master Marc Lang, who played 46 in 2011 (25 wins, 19 draws, two losses).
The second record was for two-player, multiboard simul. On Dec. 2, grandmasters David Navarra, the Czech Republic’s best player, and Sergei Movsesian, Armenian Olympiad team member, played a 12-board, clocked, simul against each other. The 12-board simul was held at a Prague shopping center, and Navara won easily, 8.5 to 3.5. The organizers claimed that the prior record was a eight-board simul played between Mikhail Tal and David Bronstein in 1986.
On a sadder note, Russian grandmaster and concert pianist Mark Taimanov has died at the age of 90 in his hometown of St. Petersburg. A unique talent who combined both world class chess and music, he is perhaps best known as Bobby Fischer’s first “victim” on Fischer’s way to winning the 1972 world championship. Their match was played in 1971, with Fischer winning by the amazing score of 6-0. It was a shocking result at the time and one that brought Taimanov nothing but grief on his return to Russia. His book, “How I became Fischer’s victim,” detailed the extent of his government-imposed misery.
Winners: Pillsbury Open, Open: 1st-2nd: Denys Shmelov, Nithin Kavi, 3.5-.5, U1950: 1st-2nd, Bharath Heggadahalli, Evan Maclure, 3.5-.5; U1610, 1st: Anjali Toly, 4-0, U1310: 1st: Kavita Bhatia, 4-0; Boylston Scholastic, 1st–2nd: Rishi Gujjar, Advaith Rajesh, 3.5-.5

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London Chess Classic 1: Nothing personal

1/2/2017

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Wesley So said he didn’t realise it was Hikaru Nakamura’s birthday after ruthlessly exploiting his opponent’s blunder on move 13 to almost seal victory in the overall Grand Chess Tour. Vladimir Kramnik said it’s “never personal” for him to win a chess game, but few were buying that after he crushed his arch-rival Veselin Topalov in 28 moves. It was a round that ended abruptly, and nowhere more so than when an apologetic Levon Aronian beat Mickey Adams after a one-move blunder in a position heading nowhere. MVL-Giri and Caruana-Anand were drawn, but not without some adventures.
The quality of the chess we saw recently in New York was perhaps emphasised by a dramatic but blunder-strewn day in London as the 2016 edition of the London Chess Classic got underway.

Levon Aronian would later call the first round the “most dangerous round”, and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Anish Giri perhaps wisely chose to get it over with quickly, playing a sharp Sicilian Najdorf that ended in a repetition on move 24. The surprise, perhaps, was that it was Giri who played the Najdorf against the leading modern proponent of the opening.

He was asked if he’d gotten any sleep as a new father:
I did... I can’t say the same about my wife! I still got some time to check the Najdorf, fortunately. Maxime is the big Najdorf guy, so I thought let’s try and steal that title from him! Unfortunately I didn’t win, so I think he’s still got the title, but I’m growing…
Maxime told Maurice Ashley, “it’s never so easy to play against your pet opening”, and then revealed he’d only realised what he was in for on the morning of the game:
Today I expected Anish to go for e4 e5, then I suddenly looked and realised his last ten games with Black were Najdorfs, so that was a surprise.
No lasting damage was done, but it was Maxime who missed something and had to take a repetition while he still could.

Giri rubbed salt in Hikaru Nakamura’s wounds when he referred to Magnus Carlsen winning the World Championship on his birthday and concluded:
Having a birthday is not an excuse to play badly. That excuse is gone. Hikaru will have to come up with another one!
Everything that could go wrong for Hikaru on his 29th birthday did, and it was an eerily familiar situation. In Round 1 of the Sinquefield Cup Hikaru blitzed out 16 moves of theory against Wesley So, forgot a move of his preparation and got ground into dust. He repeated that feat in London, but this time it took only 13 moves to cross the point of no return with 13.Ne2?
Picture
That move took 55 seconds, before he had 16 minutes to contemplate his life choices while Wesley So confirmed that 13…Nxe4! was indeed simply winning. Hikaru was able to win back the pawn, but at the expense of accepting a horribly crippled position.
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January 02nd, 2017

1/2/2017

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http://www.news18.com/news/sports/london-chess-classic-viswanathan-anand-draws-with-fabiano-caruana-1321521.html

Press Trust Of India


First published: December 10, 2016, 6:10 PM IST | Updated: December 10, 2016

(Photo Credit: Getty Images)
London: Five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand got off to a good start with an easy draw against World No.2 United States' Fabiano Caruana in the first round of the London Chess Classic, the final leg of the Grand Chess tour.
It turned out to be an easy day in office for Anand according to machines even as the pundits thought the Indian ace was not up to the mark against the younger American.


The heat was turned on early in the tournament as Wesley So of United States accounted for compatriot Hikaru Nakamura while Russian Vladimir Kramnik had it easy against arch-rival Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria.Levon Aronian of Armenia also got off to a winning start at the expense of Michael Adams of England while Anish Giri of Holland had little difficulty in holding his fort against Maxime Vachier-Lagrave of France.
Aronian, Wesley and Kramnik thus emerged as the early leaders in the 10-player round-robin tournament and they are followed by Anand, Giri, Vachier-Lagrave and Caruana a half point behind.
Topalov, Adams and Nakamura share the eighth spot with eight rounds still to come.


Anand solved his opening problems, showing deep insight in an English opening game. Caruana exerted pressure on the queen side by pushing his pawns forward but the Indian was able to keep white pieces in check with a timely counter-attack.

Once the centre was opened by Caruana, pieces changed hands in quick time and although Anand had two knights against two bishops in the ensuing endgame, the position was always within the boundary of a draw.
Wesley So was in no mood to give any birthday present to Nakamura who turned 29. Playing the black side of a Grunfeld defense, Wesley sprang an early surprise in the opening and was duly rewarded as Nakamura went berserk with his planning.
The end result was a two pawns down endgame for the birthday boy and he called it quits soon.
Kramnik and Topalov do not shake hands since 2006 when Topalov was crushed by Kramnik in the world championship match marred by controversies. The rivalry between the two often brings out high-octane games and first round was no exception.
Kramnik was meticulous and remorseless at the same time as he went about choking black in the middle game arising out of another Grunfeld. The Russian did not relent till Topalov threw the towel in.
Aronian won a nice game by putting consistent pressure on local star Michael Adams while Giri and Vachier-Lagrave drew quickly out of a Sicilian Najdorf defense game where the former played black.
Results round 1: Fabiano Caruana (Usa) drew with V Anand (Ind); Levon Aronian (Arm) beat Michael Adams (Eng); Hikaru Nakamura (Usa) lost to Wesley So (Usa); Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Fra) drew with Anish Giri (Ned); Vladimir Kramnik (Rus) beat Veselin Topalov (Bul)

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