21st International Chess Tournament
Linares Feb. 19 – March 5, 2004
|
Linares Round 12
Round 12 (Wednesday, March
3, 2004) |
Francisco Vallejo |
0-1
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Veselin Topalov |
½-½
|
Peter Leko |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½
|
Garry Kasparov |
|
|
Round 13
(Thursday, March 4, 2004) |
Garry Kasparov |
|
Veselin Topalov |
Peter Leko |
|
Francisco Vallejo |
Teimour Radjabov |
|
Alexei Shirov |
Games
– Report |
|
Standings: Kramnik +2, Kasparov and Leko +1, Topalov =, Shirov and Radjabov
-1, Vallejo -2 (Kramnik will be off in round 13, Radjabov in round 14.)
Join Mig and the Radio ChessBase crew and fans for live commentary, Q&A
and analysis during the Linares games. The round 13 broadcast starts at 10am
EST, 1500 GMT, 1600 CET. We'll have a trivia contest during the final
two rounds with winners gaining fame, glory, and a chance to win ChessBase
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(if it's your first time you can open a free trial account), go to the Broadcasts
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LIVE LINARES AUDIO game to join the fun.
![](/portals/all/_for_legal_reasons.jpg)
Radjabov's fast hands scored their first win in Linares 2004, beating Vallejo.
The only change in the seating arrangements today took place over at the kid's
table. Teimour Radjabov, a week shy of his 17th birthday, defeated 21-year-old
Paco Vallejo. In the day of the prepubescent Grandmaster these two can hardly
be considered youngsters anymore. Former fetal champion Peter Leko is also in
Linares, now a wizened veteran at 24.
He played like an old man today, and had for compatriots in enfeeblement the
rest of the big guns in action on Wednesday. Kramnik and Kasparov swapped queens,
spent some time trying to remember their analysis, and then drew on move 17.
Kramnik leads the tournament and wasn't going to risk anything; Kasparov wasn't
about to tempt the fates by trying to force something against Big Vlad with
black.
Topalov and Leko did a little better. They played another of the stodgy closed
anti-Sveshnikov Sicilians with Bc4 we've seen so many of lately. This is the
fourth in Linares, and it's no surprise that three have come against Sveshnikov
maestro Leko. It's more of a surprise that two have come with Kasparov on the
white side. He's usually not one to back down from a theoretical fight. His
playing these tepid lines we take as a tacit endorsement of the Sveshnikov,
much as how Kasparov's avoiding the Marshall Gambit in the Ruy Lopez is seen
by many to mean it must be okay.
Topalov-Leko
livened up briefly when the Hungarian introduced a new move in a well-known
position. 11...h6 led to exchanges and a draw on move 21.
Topalov-Leko after 11...h6
12.Nf3 [12.Nxf7? Rxf7 13.Bxf7+ Kxf7 14.h3 Bh5 15.Nd5 Kg8 –+]
12...Nxf3+ 13.gxf3 Be6 14.Rae1 Kh7 15.Kh1 Nh5 16.Bg3 Bh4 17.Rg1 Nxg3+ 18.hxg3
Bf6 19.Kg2 Qa5 20.Re2 Bxc3 21.Qxc3 Qxc3 ½-½
These two short draws left Kramnik in clear first place with two wins and no
draws, although he has played one game more than his pursuers, Leko and Kasparov.
They will both have white while Kramnik has the bye.
When every sporting consideration points toward a short draw it is perfectly
clear that some legislative solution is required to stop the players from destroying
the game with short draws. The ability to draw like this needs to be taken out
of their hands. "I had black and my position was worse and when he offered
a draw on move 12, of course I accepted." True, but take the excuses away!
They complain about a lack of serious sponsorship, but who would want to pay
to see something like this? Without interested spectators, where will sponsors
come from?
Most online chess fans wouldn't mind paying a quarter-dollar a day for quality
live transmission (webcams, audio analysis, no web server problems, etc.) or
the equivalent of that amount by way of their annual membership to the various
online playing sites like Playchess.com.
Put some advertising into the mix and you've got a very nice pot of money to
organize events, especially if combined with local sponsors. But you'd better
believe fans and advertisers won't put up good money to watch short draws. Next
time a GM complains about the lack of good events, look up how many draws of
under 30 moves he has in the MegaBase and tell him to get to work!
Speaking
of the Sveshnikov, Topalov and Leko didn't mind playing it against Radjabov
in Linares. Today marked the third time in ten days he's had the position
after move 17 on the board!
Vallejo-Radjabov after 17..Rb8
Vallejo went with the "Topalov rook" and played
18.Rfd1 like the Bulgarian did in round four instead of playing
the usual 18.Rad1 like Leko did in round eight.
With 18...Qd7 Radjabov kept his queen back for
defense instead of launching the wild counterattack he tried against Topalov.
Vallejo got interesting attacking chances in exchange for losing his d-pawn,
but Raja held on and battled back.
|
Vallejo-Radjabov
after 46.b4
The Spanish hope has just blundered with the plausible
b-pawn push. This allowed the alert Azerbaijani to pounce with 46...f5!
This creates a protected passer because the pawn can't be captured. If
47.exf5? Bd5 pins and wins the exchange.
Vallejo went down surprisingly quickly after that, a
victim as much of collapse after his blunder as his position.
47.Rh3 [ 47.Rxf5 Bxf5; 47.exf5 Bd5] 47...f4
48.Rh7+ Bf7 49.Be2 Rd2 50.Kf1 Kf6 51.h4 Bg6 52.Ra7 Bxe4 53.Bg4? [53.Rxa6+
Kf5 54.Bxb5-+] 53...f3 54.Rxa6+ Kg7 55.Ra7+ Kf8 56.Rd7 Bd3+! 57.Ke1
[57.Rxd3 Rxd3 58.Kf2-+] 57...f2+ 58.Kxd2 f1Q 59.Rd8+ Ke7 60.Rd7+ Ke8
61.Rxd3 Qf4+ 62.Re3 Qd4+ 0-1 [63.Ke2 Qxg4+ 64.Kd3 Qd4+ 65.Ke2 Ke7-+]
We should note that Black played on with little more
than the weak h2 pawn to play against and was rewarded with a win. Kudos
to TIMMAAY! for fighting! |
All results
Round 1 (Thursday, February
19, 2004) |
Francisco Vallejo |
½-½ |
Vladimir Kramnik |
Alexei Shirov |
½-½ |
Garry Kasparov |
Teimour Radjabov |
0-1 |
Peter Leko |
|
|
Round 2 (Friday, February 20, 2004) |
Kasparov, Garry |
½-½ |
Teimour Radjabov |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½ |
Alexei Shirov |
Veselin Topalov |
½-½ |
Francisco Vallejo |
|
|
Round 3 (Saturday, February
21, 2004) |
Alexei Shirov |
½-½
|
Veselin Topalov |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Peter Leko |
½-½ |
Garry Kasparov |
|
|
Round 4 (Sunday, February
22, 2004) |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½
|
Peter Leko |
Veselin Topalov |
½-½ |
Teimour Radjabov |
Francisco Vallejo |
½-½
|
Alexei Shirov |
|
|
Round 5 (Monday, February
23, 2004) |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½
|
Francisco Vallejo |
Peter Leko |
½-½
|
Veselin Topalov |
Garry Kasparov |
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
|
|
Round 6 (Wednesday, February
25, 2004) |
Veselin Topalov |
½-½ |
Garry Kasparov |
Francisco Vallejo |
½-½ |
Peter Leko |
Alexei Shirov |
1-0 |
Teimour Radjabov |
|
|
Round 7 (Thursday, February
26, 2004) |
Peter Leko |
1-0
|
Alexei Shirov |
Garry Kasparov |
1-0 |
Francisco Vallejo |
Vladimir Kramnik |
1-0 |
Veselin Topalov |
|
|
Round 8 (Friday, February
27, 2004) |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½ |
Francisco Vallejo |
Garry Kasparov |
½-½ |
Alexei Shirov |
Peter Leko |
½-½ |
Teimour Radjabov |
|
|
Round 9 (Saturday, February
28, 2004) |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½
|
Garry Kasparov |
Alexei Shirov |
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Francisco Vallejo |
½-½
|
Veselin Topalov |
|
|
Round 10 (Sunday, February
29, 2004) |
Veselin Topalov |
1-0
|
Alexei Shirov |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Garry Kasparov |
½-½
|
Peter Leko |
|
|
Round 11 (Tuesday, March
2, 2004) |
Peter Leko |
0-1
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½
|
Veselin Topalov |
Alexei Shirov |
½-½
|
Francisco Vallejo |
|
|
Round 12 (Wednesday, March
3, 2004) |
Francisco Vallejo |
0-1 |
Teimour Radjabov |
Veselin Topalov |
½-½ |
Peter Leko |
Vladimir Kramnik |
½-½ |
Garry Kasparov |
|
|
Round
13 (Thursday, March 4, 2004) |
Garry Kasparov
|
|
Veselin Topalov |
Peter Leko
|
|
Francisco Vallejo |
Teimour Radjabov
|
|
Alexei Shirov |
Games
– Report |
|
Round
14 (Friday, March 5, 2004) |
Alexei Shirov
|
|
Peter Leko |
Francisco Vallejo
|
|
Garry Kasparov |
Veselin Topalov
|
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Games
– Report |
|