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Links
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Results of round five, game two
1 |
Topalov, Veselin (BUL) |
Kharlov, Andrei (RUS) |
1-0 |
1-0 |
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2 |
Dominguez, Lenier (CUB) |
Radjabov, Teimour (AZE) |
1-0 |
0-1 |
1/2 1/2 1/2 1/2 1/2 |
3 |
Adams, Michael (ENG) |
Akopian, Vladimir (ARM) |
1-0 |
1/2 |
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4 |
Kasimdzhanov, Rustam (UZB) |
Grischuk, Alexander (RUS) |
1-0 |
0-1 |
1-0 1-0 |
Four-game semifinal matches begin July 1. Kasimdzhanov-Topalov
and Radjabov-Adams
The
lucky star that has been hovering over Azerbaijani GM Teimour Radjabov
shone brightly today. He didn't need any luck in the first of six games he played
against Lenier Dominguez of Cuba. In a must-win situation Radjabov sprung
a nice opening novelty in the Sicilian and quickly demolished his opponent to
force tiebreaks.
This was the fourth consecutive round in which Radjabov has played rapid and
blitz tiebreaks. Only in the first round against the Polish IM Bartel (who was
watching today's games at Playchess.com!) did he skip overtime. Dominguez was
no easy mark in the faster games and had substantial advantages in several.
The drew both rapid games, including one in 13 moves that continued Radjabov's
tournament strategy of playing short draws and moving to faster time controls
whenever possible. After they drew two wild blitz games it was time for the
sudden death, or armageddon, game.
Radjabov, who showed up today with a new Blues Brothers look and actually played
with the sunglasses on, a la Benko vs Tal, had black, five minutes, and draw
odds. Dominguez had six minutes and the white pieces and it was win or go
home. After four consecutive draws, black was the safe bet and so it was. Radjabov
survived his second sudden death game in Tripoli to reach a semifinal match
against Mickey Adams.

Adams only needed a draw against Vladimir Akopian to reach the semis. The Armenian,
shown above with his trademark glare (Adams didn't employ the sunglasses defense),
played an excellent game to gain real winning chances against Adams' weak pawns.
We happened to be on the phone with the World's Strongest Kibitzer, Garry Kasparov,
during the games, and he was surprised to see that the redoubtable Adams had
gotten into danger in a simplified position. But the moment the solid defensive
move 41...Rf6! appeared on the board Kasparov pronounced "Mickey
is through [to the semifinals]." Seven moves later the draw was agreed and he was. Adams has
played Radjabov five times, winning two and losing none. Four of those were
rapid games at the 2002 Eurotel.

The other match to need tiebreaks was between Rustam Kasimdzhanov and Alexander
Grischuk. The Russian started the day needing a win to tie the match and he
had the white pieces to do it. He surprised by playing the normally quiet Queen's
Gambit exchange variation. That was just a ruse, however, as suddenly Grischuk
launched his h-pawn down the board, castled queenside, and went for a direct
attack. "Someone should tell him that this isn't a Sicilian!" was
Kasparov's comment.
Whatever
it was, it worked. Much as he did in the first game, which he was winning before
blundering horribly, Grischuk gained two bishops versus two knights. He used
them to deadly effect to send the game into tiebreaks. Grischuk had the momentum,
but Kasimdzhanov was not impressed and he ground out an endgame win in the first
rapid game.
With his back to the wall Grischuk was unable to strike back in the second
game despite gaining a large advantage. He could have finished things off in
the diagrammed position with 40.Nxg6! Qxg3+ 41.Nxg3 fxg6 42.Rxc5.
Instead he picked another square for the knight with 40.Nh5 Qxg3+ 41.Nhxg3.
Although White kept an extra pawn he couldn't convert and played on until a
blunder forced him to resign. Kasimdzhanov's wins haven't been too impressive,
but he has survived. Like Radjabov against Adams, he'll be a heavy underdog
in his semifinal match against Veselin Topalov.

Veselin Topalov has scored an unbelievable 9.5/10 in Tripoli.
Is the world ready for two Bulgarian world champions?
Never let it be said that Topalov does anything easy. After his win yesterday,
Topalov needed a draw with the black pieces against Andrei Kharlov to move into
the semis. What we got was the most spectacular game of the tournament so far.
(Kozul-Rublevsky is another candidate.)
When we took a glance at the game in progress with Kasparov we observed that
Topalov had sacrificed the exchange for a few pawns and a powerful light-squared
bishop. "What do you mean, exchange," he replied, "Topalov is
down a full rook!" Oh yes, that. When Topalov gave up the exchange he
had already sacrificed an entire piece!
Position
after 38...Bb8
For the rook Topalov had three pawns, a serious positional
advantage, and Kharlov's knight was cut off from the game on b5. "The
knight is the problem," Kasparov observed around move 40, "there's
no way to get it back into the game. Topalov has clear compensation, plus
a big time advantage. He might even win this game."
We hope that doesn't spoil the surprise. Kharlov crumbled
under Topalov's incredibly imaginative play. Giving back an exchange didn't
help and Black moved in on the white king. Not content with how much he
had sacrificed so far, Topalov gave up another exchange (!) to move in
with his queen.
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Here
Topalov played 46...Rf4!, which seems to guarantee at least a draw
against best defense. But after so many heavy blows and with his clock
ticking, Kharlov had no chance to find the best defense.
White went down in flames after 47.Bxf4 Qxf4 48.Rg2?
(Qe1) 48...h4! Now Black is winning. 49.Qe1 e3 50.Rh2 Qxg5+
51.Kf1 h3! 52.Qb1 (Rxh3 Qg2#) 52...Be4 53.Qb2 Bd3+ 0-1
Fantastic. |

And so we bid a fond farewell to Kharlov, Akopian, Dominguez, and Grischuk.
The loss of the last two, pictured above, rules out the "Long-haired Hunks"
dream final some female chess fans had hoped for. Sorry, ladies!
General information
The FIDE site, which is being hosted by Libya
Telecom And Technology, looks well equipped to handle live coverage of
the event. The schedule, list of players, results tree and games are all in
place, there are reports and picture galleries. The start page is http://wcc2004.fide.com
and http://wcclibya2004.com.
Live coverage
The live game transmission from Tripoli, apparently of all games, requires
you to have Java Virtual Machine installed on your PC. This program is distributed
free of charge by Sun Microsystems (and is useful for many other applications).
Visit the Java
check page to see if you have everything required for the live coverage
and install Java if you don't. To follow the games click on "Live coverage"
in the link list above. There is a "View" button behind each pairing of players.
Many of the key games will also be covered and discussed on the Playchess.com
server.
Schedule
Note that local time in Tripoli is the same as in Central Europe. The
start of the games is generally at 14:30h, which is GMT + 2 and translates
to 13:30 London, 8:30 a.m. New York, 16:30 Moscow, 18:00 New Delhi, 20:30 Hong
Kong, 21:30 Tokyo, 22:30 Melbourne, and 03:00 a.m. (on the next day) in the
French Polynesia-Marquesas Islands of Taiohae.
World Chess Championship
2003-2004 18 June - 13 July 2004 – Schedule |
Date |
Day |
Events |
Games |
Time |
18 June |
Friday |
Opening Ceremony
Players' Meeting |
|
18.00
22.30 |
19 June |
Saturday |
Round 1 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
20 June |
Sunday |
Round 1 |
Game 2* |
14.30 |
21 June |
Monday |
Round 2 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
22 June |
Tuesday |
Round 2 |
Game 2* |
14.30 |
23 June |
Wednesday |
Round 3 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
24 June |
Thursday |
Round 3 |
Game 2* |
14.30 |
25 June |
Friday |
Rest Day |
|
|
26 June |
Saturday |
Round 4 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
27 June |
Sunday |
Round 4 |
Game 2* |
14.30 |
28 June |
Monday |
Round 5 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
29 June |
Tuesday |
Round 5 |
Game 2* |
14.30 |
30 June |
Wednesday |
Rest day |
|
|
1 July |
Thursday |
Round 6 |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
2 July |
Friday |
Round 6 |
Game 2 |
14.30 |
3 July |
Saturday |
Round 6 |
Game 3 |
14.30 |
4 July |
Sunday |
Round 6 |
Game 4 |
14.30 |
5 July |
Monday |
Round 6 |
Tie-Breaks |
14.30 |
6 July |
Tuesday |
Final Match |
Game 1 |
14.30 |
7 July |
Wednesday |
Final Match |
Game 2 |
14.30 |
8 July |
Thursday |
Final Match |
Game 3 |
14.30 |
9 July |
Friday |
Rest Day |
|
|
10 July |
Saturday |
Final Match |
Game 4 |
14.30 |
11 July |
Sunday |
Final Match |
Game 5 |
14.30 |
12 July |
Monday |
Final Match |
Game 6 |
14.30 |
13 July |
Tuesday |
Final Match |
Tie-breaks |
12.30 |
13 July |
Tuesday |
Closing Ceremony |
|
18.00 |
* Tie-breaks at 20:30h |