
Round eleven report
Round 11: Tuesday, March 7th |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
½-½ |
Peter Leko |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Veselin Topalov |
Levon Aronian |
1-0 |
Francisco Vallejo |
Etienne Bacrot |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
|
The only decisive game of this relatively peaceful round was Aronian-Vallejo.
Black made only one, far from obvious but fatal mistake in a slightly unusual
position. Radjabov played very solidly with White against Topalov, which led
to a relatively short draw. In Bacrot-Svidler Black carried out a spectacular
queen sacrifice, but the position remained equilibrated. Leko missed one more
chance of consolidating his leadership. After having outplayed Ivanchuk with
the black pieces, he started to openly play for a draw, faling to notice a
tactical trick that would have won a pawn for him and gradually giving up all
his positional advantage.
Standings


Radjabov,T (2700) - Topalov,V (2801) [C65]
XXIII SuperGM Morelia/Linares MEX/ESP (11), 07.03.2006
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 Topalov seems to have not been put off by
the defeat in the first round of the Morelia half and manifests his intention
to play the Berlin variation again. 4.d3 But Radjabov does not seem
to be prepared for a theoretical dispute. 4...Bc5. Topalov has played
this already against Anand in San Luis. Another common reaction is 4...d6.
5.Bxc6!? Radjabov chooses a quiet plan. After this exchange, White will
be left with the more flexible pawn structure, without any danger of losing.
Could he have hoped that Topalov will be overdoing it in the attempt of complicating
the fight, just as he did in the first game of their mini-match? 5...dxc6
6.Qe2 Bg4 7.Nbd2 Nd7 8.h3 Bxf3 9.Nxf3 Qe7 10.c3 0-0 11.0-0 Rfe8 12.Re1 Rad8
13.Bd2 Nf8 14.Rad1 Bb6 15.Be3.

15...c5 A slightly paradoxical but entirely adequate decision. Black
prevents the thematic oepning of the centre by means of d4, which would leave
White with an extra-pawn on the king side. 16.a3 Rd7 17.b4 f6 18.Qc2 Ne6
Consolidating the control of the d4-square. 19.Qb3 Qf7 20.Qc4 Red8 21.Rd2
cxb4 22.axb4 h6 23.Kf1 c6 24.Red1 Bxe3 25.fxe3 Re8 26.Kg1. White's only
constructive plan would be to play d4, but this would seriously weaken the
e4-pawn. Therefore, the decision whether to offer a draw does not really seem
premature. 1/2-1/2. [Click
to replay]
Aronian,L (2752) - Vallejo Pons,F (2650) [D31]
XXIII SuperGM Morelia/Linares MEX/ESP (11), 07.03.2006
1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c6 The Slav Triangle (or symply "The system"
as Botwinnik used to call it) can lead to a great variety of independent openings.
4.e4 Aronian chooses the most restrictive continuation. Black can forget
now about the Moscow variation or the Meran System. 4...dxe4 5.Nxe4 Bb4+
6.Bd2 Qxd4 7.Bxb4 Qxe4+.

We have reached the definitory position of the system named rather unimaginatively
"The Slav Gambit". White's strong pair of bishops and his possibilities
of more rapid development compensate for the sacrificed pawn. Practice has
shown that Black has chances to beat off the attack only if he maintains the
half-closed character of the position. Entering early complications would only
allow White display the dynamism of his minor pieces, as a consequence of the
vulnerability of the black Royal couple: the king without a safe shelter yet,
the queen prematurely emerged in the centre of the board. 8.Be2 Na6. The
most logical continuation: Black develops with tempo. True, it might later
appear that the knight is not optimally placed on the edge of the board, but
for the moment the highest emergency is to just get castled. 9.Bd6.
This move started becoming popular after being sucessfully employed by Tal
in 1978. Although the presence of the bishop on this weak square does not threaten
much by itself, it certainly restricts the a6-knight and, in some cases, the
rook's action along the d-file. In the only game where Vallejo had played this
variation before, White chose the c3-square for his bishop with 9.Bc3 but failed
to obtain an advantage, Gurevich-Vallejo, Dos Hermanas 2001. 9...e5!?
Theory holds 9...b6 as the main line. For the sake of rapid development, Vallejo's
choice looks more appropriated, although it will most likely cause him lose
his extra-pawn back. 10.Nf3 Bg4 11.0-0. The immediate 11.Nxe5 is not
likely to offer White any advantage. Allowing such an early exchange of queens
would mean to give up the possibility of winning time by attacking Her black
Majesty with the minor pieces. 11...0-0-0.
Black has managed to get castled, but his king's position is not entirely
safe. Besides, he still needs one tempo to complete his development. His main
hope is connected with the fact that two of the enemy minor pieces are pinned,
which somewhat restricts White's active possibilities. 12.Bd3 We can
see that the whole system of pins is flexible and relative at the same time.
White has just unpinned his e2-bishop by castling and uses it to unpin his
colleague from d6. On the other hand, the pin of the knight becomes stronger
now. 12...Qf4. The exposed position of the black king is illustrated
by the variation 12...Bxf3? 13.Bxe4 Bxd1 14.Bf5+ winning material, but, fortunately
for Black, his queen has just one square at her disposal. 13.Bxe5 Winning
the pawn back and continuing to harrass Her Majesty. 13...Qxe5. Generally
speaking, it is not advisable for Black to embark forced tactical operations
with his development incomplete. However, in this concrete position there are
a couple of details that partly justify such a decision. The elimination of
the dark-squared bishop and the exchange of queens brings a sudden relief to
the black king. Besides, if Black will manage to give endgame contours to the
position (rather than queen-less middlegame) his king will be by far more active
than White's, which might easily turn tables around. 14.Nxe5 Bxd1 15.Bf5+.
This intermediate check removes the bishop from its exposed position in
order to prepare the following tactical sequence. In case of 15.Raxd1 Nh6 White
would have little chance to prove the superiority of the bishop over the knight
in an open position because of the weakness of the d4-square. 15...Kc7.
16.Nxf7!? We are still following the path from Tal's old game. Instead
of looking for a microscopical advantage in a symmetrical position, White unbalances
the material situation in a radical way in order to maintain the initiative.
Sacrificing two minor pieces for a rook was one of the main specialties of
the wizard from Riga; the depth and correctness of his concept in this concrete
position is demonstrated by the fact that almost three decades later the variation
is still submitted to practical testing in top class events. I shall discuss
a little bit later about the circumstances that allow a rook to be stronger
than two minor pieces. 16...Bh5. With several pieces under attack,
it is not easy to chose the best continuation. Vallejo's move is a novelty;
previously, Black has preferred to develop his knight. 16...Ne7 17.Bxh7! Bg4
18.Nxh8 Rxh8 19.Rfe1 was better for White in Tal-Dorfman, Tbilisi 1978. White
maintained the control of the central files, while the gradual advance of his
king side majority was impossible to prevent.; 16...Nh6 seems to put more pressure
on White, because it attacks both his minor pieces. After 17.Nxh6 Bh5 18.Bg4
Bxg4 19.Nxg4 Rd2 Black's activity was sufficient for a draw in Bacrot-Tregubov,
Corsica 2005. 17.Nxd8! Aronian finds the best way of maintaining the
initiative. By capturing the already developed rook, he forces the king to
occupy an exposed square, allowing him to win time for the activation of forces.
I suppose that it was not easy to refrain from 17.Nxh8 Nh6 18.Bxh7 which bears
certain similarity with Tal's game. The main difference is that after 18...Rxh8
followed by ...Rd8 Black would manage to activate his rook along the second
rank. 17...Kxd8.
Time has come to evaluate the consequences of White's exchange operation initiated
with his 16th move. It would hardly be appropriate to call it "a sacrifice",
since the material balance is more or less even now. On the other hand, we
cannot consider the position to be just equal. According to concrete circumstances,
the evaluation can easily vary within a wide range, between "+-"
to "-+". Apart from the fact that he is still incompletely developed,
Black has problems coordinating his minor pieces. The physical distance between
his a6-knight and the rest of the pieces is the biggest allowed by chess geometry.
The optimal situation for Black would be to have the minor pieces grouped in
the centre, eventually supported by the king, but for the moment this sounds
like pure utopia. Quite predictably, the white rooks will occupy the central
files and invade the seventh rank. This will not only win some pawns, but also
put the uncoordinated black army in danger. From the point of view of rapid
development, Aronian's next move is easy to understand: White just needs the
d1-square. 18.g4 Nh6. Relatively best. Instead of retreating with the
bishop, Black develops his last minor piece. However, the position becomes
now even more suggestive for the lack of coordination reigning in Black's camp:
all his pieces are spread along the marginal files, without any possibility
of comunication between wings. 19.Rad1+ Kc7 20.Rd7+ Kb6 21.Rxg7 Nxf5 22.gxf5.
White has obtained a minimal material advantage, but his pawn structure
is not too compact, which strongly requires the maintainance of the initiative.
22...Rf8. Obviously forced. If the f-pawn were allowed to advance to
the seventh rank, Black would be in serious trouble. 23.Re1.
White's obvious intention to invade the seventh rank is not easy to meet.
23...Nc5? The fact that such a natural move is the decisive mistake
speaks about the difficult character of the position. Black's desire to get
his minor pieces coordinated as soon as possible is quite understandable, but
the geometric approach of the knight and bishop will paradoxically result in
just exposing them to the combined attack of the white rooks. It was essential
to eliminate the f5-pawn at once with 23...Rxf5 in order to ensure stability
to the bishop on g6 after 24.Ree7 (worse would be 24.Rxh7?! Rg5+
25.Kf1 Bg6 26.Rh3 Nb4 with initiative.) 24...Bg6 . Play could become
very sharp after 25.Rxb7+ Kc5 26.b3 Nb4 27.Rxa7 Kd4. At the cost of considerable
material losses, Black would finally get all his pieces together, which would
put the enemy king in a slightly uncomfortable situation. At the same time,
White's activity along the seventh rank would become sterile already, while
the pawns would be not threatening yet. Instead of 27...Kd4, winning back one
pawn with 27... 27...Rg5+ 28.Kf1 Bd3+ 29.Ke1 Rxg7 30.Rxg7 Nxa2 31.Kd2 seems
less adequate. White would still retain a minimal material advantage, while
after the exchange of one pair of rooks his king would be out of any danger.
24.b4! Nd3 25.Ree7 Nxb4. This move is forced, in order to eliminate
the danger of mate, but quite unexpectedly, the knight stands very badly on
b4. 26.Rxb7+ Kc5.
27.Rg5!! Vallejo must have overlooked (or just underestimated) this
simple move. All of a sudden, Black's pieces spread all over the board are
helpless against the combined action of the white rooks and f-pawn. 27...Bf3.
The bishp has to control the g4- and d5-squares at the same time. In case
of 27...Be2 28.f6+ Kxc4 29.f7 the pawn would be unstoppable in view of the
threat Rg8, which could only be parried by the placement of the bishop along
the a2-g8 diagonal.; 27...Bf7 would just lose the knight to 28.f6+ Kxc4 29.Rg4+.
28.f6+ Kxc4 29.Rf5! Not allowing Black to consolidate and winning a
whole piece. The fight is basically over. 29...Bd5. 29...Rg8+ would
be strongly met by 30.Rg7. 30.Rf4+ Kc3 31.Rbxb4 Bxa2 32.Ra4 Bf7 33.Rxa7
c5 The counterplay based on the advance of this pawn is too slow to change
anything. The white rooks continue to dominate the position. 34.f3 c4 35.Kf2
Kb3 36.Rb7+. 36.Rb7+ In order to avoid Rxf7 followed by Rxc4 with a winning
rook ending, Black has to return with his king to c3 when after 36...Kc3 37.Ke3
followed by Re4-e7 white would win easily. 1-0. [Click
to replay]
Bacrot,E (2717) - Svidler,P (2765) [D11]
XXIII SuperGM Morelia/Linares MEX/ESP (11), 07.03.2006
1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 a6. The 4...a6-Slav seems to be a common
refuge for players whose expectations in the Grünfeld were betrayed by the
results, or who simply got fed with it. Kasparov's change of repertoire during
his last years of active play is the most notable example and now we see Svidler
do the same, at least for this game. The wounds received in the Grünfeld need
some time to heal... 5.Nc3 After his loss against Topalov, Bacrot seems
to have come to the conclusion that this is the best square for the knight
after all. 5...Bf5!? [For years, the main line was supposed to be 5...b5
6.b3 Bg4 but recently Black has been under some pressure after 6.c5 (instead
of 6.b3).] 6.Bd3 [In the absence of the moves ...a6 and Nf3, the early
development of the bishop to f5 is strongly met by the exchange on d5 followed
by Qb3. The flexibility of the system based on .4..a6 is revealed by the fact
that 6.cxd5 cxd5 7.Qb3 can be adequately met now by 7...Ra7 . The continuation
chosen by Bacrot aims to open play in the centre as soon as possible, taking
advantage of the fact that the advance of the a-pawn will be more or less useless
in case of such a course of events.] 6...Bxd3 7.Qxd3 e6 8.0-0 Be7 9.e4 0-0
10.Be3 dxe4 11.Nxe4 Nxe4 12.Qxe4 Nd7 13.Rad1.

White has obtained a stable advantage of space. It will be quite difficult
for Black to break the centre, but on the other hand the fact that he has managed
to exchange two pairs of minor pieces makes his position entirely viable. 13...Qa5
14.a3 Rad8 15.Rfe1 Rfe8 16.h3 Nf8 17.Qc2 Ng6 18.Bd2 Qh5. This might look
like a double edged decision. The queen certainly puts some pressure on the
white king side, but it could get into some danger, too. However, the ulteriour
course of the game proves that Svidler's evaluation of the situation was correct.
19.Bc3 Rd7 20.Qe4 Red8 21.Rd3 Bf6.
After having activated his position to the maximum, Black threatens to open
the position with ...c5 already. This invites White to concrete action. 22.g4
Qh6 23.Bd2 Qxh3. Black's strong concentration of forces ensures the relative
invulnerability of the queen. White has no simple way of getting an advantage.
24.Ng5. After 24.g5?! Bxd4 25.Nxd4 Qh5 followed by ...c5, Black recuperates
the sacrificed material with a splendid position.; Even worse would be 24.Ne5?
because of 24...Qxd3 followed by ...Rxd4, with more than sufficient compensation
for the queen.; White's most consistent way to maintain the tension consists
of 24.Ree3 , obtaining the complete coordination of forces and renweing the
threats against the enemy queen. 24...Qxd3!? Remarkably, Svidler avoids
the repetition of moves, which would have been inevitable after 24...Qh4 .
In case of 25.Rh3? Black would have a choice between 25...Qxh3 followed by
Rxd4 and the immediate 25...Rxd4 with advantage in both cases. I do not know
whether his decision was dictated by his fear that after repeating the moves
once, White would switch to Ree3 or simply wanted to play on a reatively unbalanced
position. 25.Qxd3 Rxd4 26.Qh3 Rxd2 27.Qxh7+ Kf8 28.Nxe6+ fxe6 29.Qxg6 Bd4.
Black's activity ensures him reasonable compensation for the queen, but he can
hardly claim an advantage.
30.Rf1 Ke7 31.Qg5+ Bf6 32.Qc5+ Kf7 33.g5 Bxb2 34.Rb1
R8d3 35.Qb6 Bd4 36.Qxb7+ Kg6 37.Rf1 Rg3+ 38.Kh2 Rxg5 39.Qxc6 Kf6 40.Kh3 Rh5+
41.Kg4 Rg5+ 42.Kh3 Rh5+ 1/2-1/2. [Click
to replay]

Ivanchuk,V (2729) - Leko,P (2740) [E15]
XXIII SuperGM Morelia/Linares MEX/ESP (11), 07.03.2006
1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.c4 b6 4.g3 Ba6 5.Nbd2. Against such an opening expert
like Leko, Ivanchuk prefers to play a quiet variation, where the main confrontation
of forces usually starts in the middlegame. 5...d5 After the development
of the knight to d2, the position with hanging pawns usually offers Black comfortable
play, because of the lack of pressure aginst the d5-square. The fact that Black
will have to lose a tempo with his queen's bishop is of lesser relevance (a
situation we are accostumed already with from the game Bacrot-Topalov). 6.cxd5
exd5 7.Ne5 Be7 8.Qa4+ c6 9.Bg2 Bb7 10.0-0 0-0 11.Rd1 Re8 12.Ndf3 h6 13.Bf4
Bf8 14.Rac1 c5 15.h4. A double edged decision. White intends to increase
his influence over the king side, but if his activity will fail to bring in
concrete results, the king side will remain iremediably weak. 15...Na6 16.Bh3
Bd6 17.e3.

White's concentration of minor pieces on the king side looks impressive, but
has a rather sterile character in view of his impossibility of opening files
for the rooks. 17...Qe7 18.Ng4 Ne4 19.Bxd6 Qxd6. After the exchange
of the bishops Black gets almost perfect stability on dark squares. White's
knights start feeling a bit uncomfortable. 20.Bg2 Nc7 21.Nge5 Qf6 22.Qc2
Ne6.
Having been carried way by his king side operations, White slightly neglected
the situation on the other wing. Concretely, his queen has no comfortable square
at its disposal. With his next move, Ivanchuk tries to solve this problem.
23.b3? Rac8? Leko missed a unexpected tactical resource, based on the
lack of stability of the white knights: 23...cxd4 24.exd4 Nxd4!! 25.Rxd4 Rac8
26.Qb2 Rxc1+ 27.Qxc1 Rxe5 winning a pawn because of the vulnerability of the
f2-square. He might have decided already to simplify the position in order
to reach a draw, which is proven by his next move, too and is partly justified
by his favourable tournament situation. 24.Qb2 cxd4?! There was no
need to release the tension in the centre. Black could have consolidated his
advantage of space with 24...a5. 25.exd4 Rxc1 26.Rxc1 Rc8 27.Rxc8+ Bxc8
28.Ng4 Qe7 29.Ne3.
As a consequence of the simplifications prematurely provoked by Black, the
knigth has obtained this excelent square. White's position is more pleasant
already and Leko had to struggle for 35 more moves, although he never got into
concrete danger of losing. 29...Bb7 30.Bh3 Nc7 31.Nf5 Qd8 32.Ne5 Nb5 33.a4
Nbd6 34.Qc2 a5 35.Ne3 Nf6 36.f3 Nde8 37.Kf2 Qc7 38.Bf5 Qxc2+ 39.Bxc2 Nd6 40.g4
g5 41.Nf5 Nxf5 42.Bxf5 gxh4 43.Nd3 Ba6 44.Nf4 b5 45.axb5 Bxb5 46.Ng2 a4 47.bxa4
Bxa4 48.Nxh4 Ne8 49.Ke3 Kf8 50.Kf4 Ke7 51.Bd3 Ng7 52.Ke5 Bc6 53.Bh7 f6+ 54.Kf4
h5 55.Nf5+ Nxf5 56.gxf5 Be8 57.Bg8 Bf7 58.Bxf7 Kxf7 59.Kg3 Kg7 60.Kh4 Kh6 61.f4
Kh7 62.Kxh5 Kg7 63.Kh4 Kh6 64.Kg4 Kg7 1/2-1/2. [Click
to replay]
Commentary by GM Mihail Marin
Pictures by Jesús J. Boyero
Schedule and results
Round 8: Friday, March 3rd |
Peter Leko |
½-½ |
Francisco Vallejo |
Veselin Topalov |
1-0 |
Peter Svidler |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
0-1 |
Etienne Bacrot |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Levon Aronian |
|
|
Round 9: Saturday, March 4th |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Peter Leko |
Levon Aronian |
½-½ |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Etienne Bacrot |
0-1 |
Veselin Topalov |
Peter Svidler |
½-½ |
Francisco Vallejo |
|
|
Round 10: Sunday, March 5th |
Peter Leko |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
Francisco Vallejo |
0-1 |
Etienne Bacrot |
Veselin Topalov |
1-0 |
Levon Aronian |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
0-1 |
Teimour Radjabov |
|
|
Free day: Monday, March 6th |
|
Round 11: Tuesday, March 7th |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
½-½ |
Peter Leko |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Veselin Topalov |
Levon Aronian |
1-0 |
Francisco Vallejo |
Etienne Bacrot |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
|
|
Round 12: Wednesday, March 8th |
Peter Leko |
|
Etienne Bacrot |
Peter Svidler |
|
Levon Aronian |
Francisco Vallejo |
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Veselin Topalov |
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Games – Report |
|
Free day: Thursday, March 9th |
|
Round 13: Friday, March 10th |
Veselin Topalov |
|
Peter Leko |
Vassily Ivanchuk |
|
Francisco Vallejo |
Teimour Radjabov |
|
Peter Svidler |
Levon Aronian |
|
Etienne Bacrot |
Games – Report |
|
Round 14: Saturday, March 11th |
Peter Leko |
|
Levon Aronian |
Etienne Bacrot |
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Peter Svidler |
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Francisco Vallejo |
|
Veselin Topalov |
Games – Report |
|
|
Links