D RAWS M AINTAIN T ENSION I NTO L AST R OUND BY B RIAN J ERAULD Issue 5 Saturday, September 14, 2013 CURRENT STANDINGS: 1 GM Magnus Carlsen 3½ 2 GM Hikaru Nakamura 3 3 GM Levon Aronian 2½ 4 GM Gata Kamsky 1 INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Aronian-Kamsky (GM Ian Rogers) 2 Nakamura-Carlsen (GM Ben Finegold) 3 Crosstable 4 There’s just one round left in the strongest tournament ever held on American soil - one game to play for the Sinquefield Cup. After draws on both boards on Saturday, including a pivotal match between frontrunner Mag- nus Carlsen (3.5/5) and Hikaru Nakamura (3.0/5), the tournament standings remain the same. Levon Aronian (2.5/5) stays within strik- ing distance of both leaders, and the result of his impending Sunday morning duel with Carlsen could play out to several storylines. The two played to a draw in their first meeting on Tuesday. Nakamu- ra seeks his second win against Gata Kamsky (1.0/5), who looks to play spoiler with the white piec- es. It is no secret that Kamsky is having a rough stay in Saint Louis. So if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. The reigning U.S. champ united with the newly popular theory that Aronian’s 1.d4 needed some work against the Dutch Defense, a secret that Carlsen had revealed with great effect in round 2. Last Tues- day, Aronian had quickly lost white’s edge against Carlsen’s Dutch, falling into a middlegame that offered him no initiative and a grueling path to a draw. It was a decent enough idea for Kamsky, who is seasoned in the Dutch and was yearning for a bal- anced game of chess in the Sinque- field Cup. He looked to lean on an advantage where Carlsen could not. “I’ve played the Dutch for a number of years now; it’s an inter- esting opening. If white screws up, he can possibly get in a worse posi- tion,” Kamsky said. “I’m curious why [Aronian] defensed this Bf4 set up. After the game, of course, it was justified, but I don’t think white has such a serious advantage by playing this line.” Indeed, 5.Bf4 was a questionable move against Kamsky, just as it had been against Carlsen. The improvement on Saturday after- noon, however, came at 8.Bg3, a move that did avoid the tactical mess that Carlsen had introduced, but still did little to prevent black equality. Kamsky earned himself the bishop pair with 10…Nxg3. By the middlegame, the Ameri- can was pushing with initiative, ultimately introducing the clever 27…Qf6. The interesting double attack threatened Aronian both in material, via a queen-rook skewer, as well as position, setting up for the h4 break. It baffled Aronian, who went into a deep think on his response, at a time when his clock wasn’t forgiving. It fell below ten minutes before he decided on 28.Nxh5. “I couldn’t really see a good way for me to play,” Aronian said. “I’m not sure [28. Nxh5] was the best move, but I felt that at least there is some simplification, and I thought, ‘I’m not getting ‘mated, so I shall play that one.’” It worked, though not without drama. The pawn grab did little more than open up the h-file and a direct lane to the white monarch, an exploit that Kamsky pressed immediately. A rook-and-queen battery briefly brought the leading lady too close for comfort, though ultimately into a futile position. The queens and eventually rooks were traded, leaving the curse of the opposite-squared bishops. The game drew on the 44th move. Though the Sinquefield Cup has already featured five wins through ten games, Saturday’s Nakamura- Carlsen tilt was what most might expect from a super tournament: Two of the world’s elite, refusing to give an inch. The draw-by- repetition served as the quickest match of the tournament, only 32 moves, and featured a delicate balance of the smallest advantages. Perhaps the only prize Nakamu- ra could grab from Carlsen’s Berlin Defense was the bishop pair, mov- ing his queen’s knight six times to achieve 15.Nxc8. Nakamura brought the game into new territo- ry with 16.g3, though it was Carl- sen who pressed the issue with 22…f4. “I thought that I might be a little bit better, but I think it’s a question of whether this whole idea of f4 works or doesn’t,” Nakamura said. “Unfortunately, at the end, he was able to bail out.” Clearly, f4 did not work to any- one's favor. Though it looked pre- carious, the attack found no future, and Nakamura simply chased Carlsen’s queen into repetition. “I’m usually not too unhappy with a draw with black against such strong players,” Carlsen said. “I was kind of hoping he would over-press, and at the end I decided not to play out of a draw ... be- cause I was hoping he would play on and play for a loss. But obvious- ly he’s much too good of a player to screw it up.” ROUND 5 RESULTS: GM Levon Aronian ½ GM Gata Kamsky ½ GM Hikaru Nakamura ½ GM Magnus Carlsen ½ ROUND 6 PAIRINGS: GM Magnus Carlsen GM Levon Aronian GM Gata Kamsky GM Hikaru Nakamura
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RAWS AINTAIN ENSION NTO OUND B J - Chess … · DRAWS MAINTAIN TENSION INTO LAST ROUND BY BRIAN JERAULD Saturday, September 14, 2013 Issue 5 CURRENT STANDINGS: 1 GM Magnus Carlsen
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DRAWS MAINTAIN TENSION INTO LAST ROUND BY BRIAN JERAULD
Issue 5 Saturday, September 14, 2013
CURRENT STANDINGS:
1 GM Magnus Carlsen 3½
2 GM Hikaru Nakamura 3
3 GM Levon Aronian 2½
4 GM Gata Kamsky 1
INSIDE THIS ISSUE:
Aronian-Kamsky (GM Ian Rogers)
2
Nakamura-Carlsen (GM Ben Finegold)
3
Crosstable 4
There’s just one round left in the strongest tournament ever held on American soil - one game to play for the Sinquefield Cup.
After draws on both boards on Saturday, including a pivotal match between frontrunner Mag-nus Carlsen (3.5/5) and Hikaru Nakamura (3.0/5), the tournament standings remain the same. Levon Aronian (2.5/5) stays within strik-ing distance of both leaders, and the result of his impending Sunday morning duel with Carlsen could play out to several storylines.
The two played to a draw in their first meeting on Tuesday. Nakamu-ra seeks his second win against Gata Kamsky (1.0/5), who looks to play spoiler with the white piec-es.
It is no secret that Kamsky is having a rough stay in Saint Louis. So if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.
The reigning U.S. champ united with the newly popular theory that Aronian’s 1.d4 needed some work against the Dutch Defense, a secret that Carlsen had revealed with great effect in round 2. Last Tues-day, Aronian had quickly lost white’s edge against Carlsen’s Dutch, falling into a middlegame that offered him no initiative and a grueling path to a draw.
It was a decent enough idea for Kamsky, who is seasoned in the Dutch and was yearning for a bal-anced game of chess in the Sinque-field Cup. He looked to lean on an advantage where Carlsen could not.
“I’ve played the Dutch for a number of years now; it’s an inter-esting opening. If white screws up, he can possibly get in a worse posi-
tion,” Kamsky said. “I’m curious why [Aronian] defensed this Bf4 set up. After the game, of course, it was justified, but I don’t think white has such a serious advantage by playing this line.”
Indeed, 5.Bf4 was a questionable move against Kamsky, just as it had been against Carlsen. The improvement on Saturday after-noon, however, came at 8.Bg3, a move that did avoid the tactical mess that Carlsen had introduced, but still did little to prevent black equality. Kamsky earned himself the bishop pair with 10…Nxg3.
By the middlegame, the Ameri-can was pushing with initiative, ultimately introducing the clever 27…Qf6. The interesting double attack threatened Aronian both in material, via a queen-rook skewer, as well as position, setting up for the h4 break. It baffled Aronian, who went into a deep think on his response, at a time when his clock wasn’t forgiving. It fell below ten minutes before he decided on 28.Nxh5.
“I couldn’t really see a good way for me to play,” Aronian said. “I’m not sure [28. Nxh5] was the best move, but I felt that at least there is some simplification, and I thought, ‘I’m not getting ‘mated, so I shall play that one.’”
It worked, though not without drama. The pawn grab did little more than open up the h-file and a direct lane to the white monarch, an exploit that Kamsky pressed immediately. A rook-and-queen battery briefly brought the leading lady too close for comfort, though ultimately into a futile position. The queens and eventually rooks
were traded, leaving the curse of the opposite-squared bishops. The game drew on the 44th move.
Though the Sinquefield Cup has already featured five wins through ten games, Saturday’s Nakamura-Carlsen tilt was what most might expect from a super tournament: Two of the world’s elite, refusing to give an inch. The draw-by-repetition served as the quickest match of the tournament, only 32 moves, and featured a delicate balance of the smallest advantages.
Perhaps the only prize Nakamu-ra could grab from Carlsen’s Berlin Defense was the bishop pair, mov-ing his queen’s knight six times to achieve 15.Nxc8. Nakamura brought the game into new territo-ry with 16.g3, though it was Carl-sen who pressed the issue with 22…f4.
“I thought that I might be a little bit better, but I think it’s a question of whether this whole idea of f4 works or doesn’t,” Nakamura said. “Unfortunately, at the end, he was able to bail out.”
Clearly, f4 did not work to any-one's favor. Though it looked pre-carious, the attack found no future, and Nakamura simply chased Carlsen’s queen into repetition.
“I’m usually not too unhappy with a draw with black against such strong players,” Carlsen said. “I was kind of hoping he would over-press, and at the end I decided not to play out of a draw ... be-cause I was hoping he would play on and play for a loss. But obvious-ly he’s much too good of a player to screw it up.”
ROUND 5 RESULTS:
GM Levon Aronian ½ GM Gata Kamsky ½ GM Hikaru Nakamura ½ GM Magnus Carlsen ½