First
FIDE Grand Prix in Baku
The first FIDE Grand Prix tournament is taking place in Baku, Azerbaijan, from
April 20th to May 6th, 2008. There are thirteen rounds and two rest days (April
26 and May 1st). The event, organised by Global Chess, is part of a
series of six tournaments to be held over two years (2008-2009). 21 top world
players are selected to compete in these tournaments, with each player contracting
to participate in exactly four of these tournaments. The winner of the Grand
Prix series at the end of 2009 will play the winner of the World Cup held in
2009 in an eight game match to become the challenger to the World Champion in
a match to be held in the third quarter of 2010.
Round seven report
Round 7: Monday, April 28th |
Vugar Gashimov |
1-0 |
Gata Kamsky |
Teimour Radjabov |
0-1 |
Magnus Carlsen |
Ivan Cheparinov |
1-0 |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Sergey Karjakin |
1-0 |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
David Navara |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
Alex. Grischuk |
½-½ |
Wang Yue |
Michael Adams |
½-½ |
Etienne Bacrot |
|
Please note that the games are being annotated
in the Chess Media System by GM Zurab Azmaiparashvili, who is also a Vice President
of FIDE. Instructions on how to view these files is given at the bottom
of this page.
Impressions of round seven in Baku
Gashimov-Kamsky gave Gata Kamsky his first loss and put an
end to his lead in this tournament. On the other hand it gave the local boy
Vugar Gashimov, playing his first top tournament, a taste of being on the top
of the table. Gashimov simply outplayed the US grandmaster.
Gashimov,V (2679) - Kamsky,G (2726) [C88]
FIDE GP Baku AZE (7), 28.04.2008
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0-0 Be7 6.Re1 b5 7.Bb3 0-0 8.h3
Bb7 9.d3 d6 10.a3 Qd7 11.Nbd2 Rfe8 12.Nf1 Nd8 13.Ng3 Ne6 14.Ba2 c5 15.Bd2 Bf8
16.b4 h6 17.c4 Nf4 18.Re3 bxc4 19.dxc4 Ne6 20.Bb1 g6 21.Re1 Qc7 22.Bd3 Bg7 23.Rb1
Nd7 24.Ne2 Nd4 25.Nc3 Rec8 26.Rc1 Qd8 27.Nd5 Bc6 28.Bf1 Nf8 29.Nxd4 exd4 30.f4
Nd7 31.Qf3 Rcb8 32.Qg3 cxb4 33.axb4 a5 34.b5 Bxd5 35.cxd5 Nc5 36.e5 a4 37.Bb4
Black is under tremendous pressure, but he can still hope to survive, until
he blows it all with 37...a3? 38.Bxa3 d3 39.Bxc5 d2 40.Bxd6 Rb7 41.Red1
dxc1Q 42.Rxc1. Black has won an exchange but White has three pawns
for it. Now there is no longer hope in the position. 42...Rba7 43.Qb3
Ra1 44.Bc7 Qh4 45.Rxa1 Rxa1 46.Qf3 Qe1 47.b6 Qb4 48.d6 Qd4+ 49.Kh2 Rb1 50.b7
Rxb7 51.Qxb7 Qxf4+ 52.g3 1-0. [Click
to replay]
Press conference with Kamsky andd Gashimov
Radjabov-Carlsen thrilled the public in Baku and on the Internet
all over the world by following one of the sharpest possible lines of the Sicilian
Dragon. It was a surprising choice by Carlsen – "apparently the fire-spitting
animal isn’t as calm and gentle as GM Sergey Shipov described yesterday,"
we are informed by the tournament bulletin. The Norwegian was clearly out to
win and took a number of risks to achieve this end. But just when he was about
to reap the rewards for his bravery he ran into trouble.

Radjabov,T (2751) - Carlsen,M (2765) [B77]
FIDE GP Baku AZE (7), 28.04.2008
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 g6 6.Be3 Bg7 7.f3 Nc6 8.Qd2
0-0 9.Bc4 Bd7 10.Bb3 Rc8 11.h4 h5 12.0-0-0 Ne5 13.Bg5 Rc5 14.Kb1 Re8 15.g4 hxg4
16.h5 Nxh5 17.Rxh5 gxh5 18.Qh2 Ng6 19.Qxh5 Qa5 20.f4 Rxg5 21.fxg5 e6 22.Nf5
exf5 23.Qxg6 Be6 24.Qh5 fxe4 25.Rf1 Qe5 26.Rxf7 Bxb3 27.axb3 g3 28.Ka2 Rf8 29.Rxf8+
Kxf8 30.Qg4 e3 31.g6

Black is a pawn up well on the way to victory. But in time touble he blunders:
31... e2?? Carlsen only calculated lines with 32.Qc8+, overlooking
the white defence 32.Qd7! That simply forces a draw: 32...Qe7 33.Qc8+ Qe8 34.Qf5+
Kg8 35.Qd5+ Kh8 36.Qh1+ Kg8 37.Qd5+ etc. However his opponent was also in time
trouble and overlooked this resource. 32.Qf3+?? After this
the younger of the two former child prodigies made no mistakes, got himself
a second queen and took a second full point in this tournament. 32...Ke8
33.Qf7+ Kd8 34.Qg8+ Kd7 35.Qf7+ Qe7 36.Qf5+ Kd8 37.Qa5+ b6 38.Qd5 e1Q 39.Qa8+
Kd7 40.Qb7+ Ke8 0-1. [Click to replay]
Press conference with Magnus Carlsen and Teimour Radjabov
Cheparinov-Mamedyarov saw the remarkable comeback of the Bulgarian
grandmaster continue. We recall: Cheparinov lost the first four games of this
event, drew number five and has now won six and seven. If he wins eight and
nine what will happen in game ten? You can speculate to your heart's content
– modern science has no clear answer to this question.

Cheparinov,I (2696) - Mamedyarov,S (2752) [D43]
FIDE GP Baku AZE (7), 28.04.2008
1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 e6 5.Bg5 Be7 6.e3 0-0 7.Qc2 Nbd7 8.a3
h6 9.Bh4 a6 10.Rd1 b6 11.Bd3 Bb7 12.0-0 Rc8 13.Bg3 dxc4 14.Bxc4 b5 15.Ba2 c5
16.d5 exd5 17.Nxd5 Nxd5 18.Bxd5 Bxd5 19.Rxd5 Qe8 20.Bd6 c4 21.Rfd1 Bxd6 22.Rxd6
Nc5 23.Nd4 g6 24.h4 h5 25.Nf3 Qe7 26.Ng5 Rcd8
Let the fun begin: 27.Nxf7 Rxd6 28.Nxd6. In the press conference
Cheparinov said he though that White was winning. 28...Kh7.
Mamedyarov thought that 28...Qe6 or 28...Rf6 were more sound. 29.Rd4
Nd3? This is a mistake – 29...Rd8 would probably still have held
the draw. 30.Ne4 Kh6 31.Qd2? Qxh4 32.f4 Rd8 33.Rxd8 Qxd8 34.Qc3.
Once again Black has fought his way back into the drawing margin, but now,
five moves before the time control, he makes the final mistake: 34...Qe7??
Abandoning the critical h8-square. 34...Qf8 was the move to play. 35.Qh8+
Qh7 36.Qd8 Qa7 37.Kh2 h4 38.Qxh4+ Kg7 39.Qf6+ Kh6 40.Nd6 Kh7 1-0. [Click
to replay]
Press conference with Ivan Cheparinov and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
Karjakin-Inarkiev proved that the 18-year-old Ukrainian is
made of fairly stern stuff. After two losses he bounced back to win a game and
balance his score at 50%. Ernesto Inarkiev has now taken over the bottom of
the table (from Cheparinov), with four losses, two draws and one victory.

Karjakin,Sergey (2732) - Inarkiev,E (2684) [C99]
FIDE GP Baku AZE (7), 28.04.2008
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0-0 Be7 6.Re1 b5 7.Bb3 d6 8.c3
0-0 9.h3 Na5 10.Bc2 c5 11.d4 Qc7 12.Nbd2 cxd4 13.cxd4 Nc6 14.Nb3 a5 15.Be3 a4
16.Nbd2 Bd7 17.Rc1 Qb7 18.Nf1 Rfe8 19.Ng3 Bd8 20.Qe2 h6 21.Bd3 Rb8 22.dxe5 Nxe5
23.Nxe5 dxe5 24.b4 axb3 25.axb3 Bb6 26.b4 Rec8 27.Kh2 Be6 28.Rxc8+ Qxc8 29.Rc1
Qd8 30.Bxb6 Rxb6 31.Qe3 Qb8 32.Qc5 Bd7 33.Ra1 Rc6 34.Qe3 Rd6 35.Ne2 Bc6 36.f3
Nd7 37.Ra5 Rd4 38.Qd2 Rd6 39.Ng3 Nf8 40.Qc3
Here the time trouble king of the tournament falters, on the last move before
the time control: 40...Qb6? Tournament analyst Sergey Shipov
gives 40…g5! 41.Qxe5 Nd7 42.Qc3 h5! as the better line. 41.Nf5
Rd7 42.Bxb5 Rd1 43.Ne3 1-0. Shipov writes: "The problem lies in
Ernesto’s psychological state of mind. He has to forget whom and where
he is playing! He has to play the way he can, and his fans know that he can
do much better." [Click
to replay]
Navara-Svidler, Grischuk-Wang Yue and Adams-Bacrot
were all ½-½. There are summaries of these games on the round
seven report page of the official tournament site.

Chinese GM Wang Yue leads (with Gashimov and Grischuk) after seven rounds

A mysterious substance that Wang Yue applies under his eyes before each
round
Insiders will recognize it as Tiger Balm, a heat rub invented by herbalist
Aw Chu Kin in the 1870s and manufactured by his sons Aw Boon Haw and Aw Boon
Par, who became so so wealthy from this single product that they built the unbelievable
Tiger Balm Gardens
in Hong Kong and Singapore. Wang Yue is using Tiger Balm White, which
is for headaches, nasal congestion, stuffy nose, insect bites and itchiness
– and not for enhancing your ability to calculate chess combinations.
All video press conferences are available as videos on the
official
tournament page.
All pictures and videos by courtesy of FIDE.com.
Standings after seven rounds

Schedule and results
Round 1: Monday, April 21st |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
0-1 |
Gata Kamsky |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
Magnus Carlsen |
½-½ |
Wang Yue |
Vugar Gashimov |
½-½ |
Etienne Bacrot |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Michael Adams |
Ivan Cheparinov |
0-1 |
Alex. Grischuk |
Sergey Karjakin |
½-½ |
David Navara |
|
|
Round 2: Tuesday, April 22nd |
Gata Kamsky |
½-½ |
David Navara |
Alex. Grischuk |
½-½ |
Sergey Karjakin |
Michael Adams |
1-0 |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Etienne Bacrot |
0-1 |
Teimour Radjabov |
Wang Yue |
½-½ |
Vugar Gashimov |
Peter Svidler |
½-½ |
Magnus Carlsen |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
1-0 |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
|
|
Round 3: Wednesday, April 23rd |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
½-½ |
Gata Kamsky |
Magnus Carlsen |
1-0 |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
Vugar Gashimov |
1-0 |
Peter Svidler |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Wang Yue |
Ivan Cheparinov |
0-1 |
Etienne Bacrot |
Sergey Karjakin |
1-0 |
Michael Adams |
David Navara |
0-1 |
Alex. Grischuk |
|
|
Round 4: Thursday, April 24 |
Gata Kamsky |
½-½ |
Alex. Grischuk |
Michael Adams |
1-0 |
David Navara |
Etienne Bacrot |
½-½ |
Sergey Karjakin |
Wang Yue |
1-0 |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Peter Svidler |
½-½ |
Teimour Radjabov |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
½-½ |
Vugar Gashimov |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
1-0 |
Magnus Carlsen |
|
|
Round 5: Friday, April 25th |
Magnus Carlsen |
½-½ |
Gata Kamsky |
Vugar Gashimov |
½-½ |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Teimour Radjabov |
½-½ |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
Ivan Cheparinov |
½-½ |
Peter Svidler |
Sergey Karjakin |
0-1 |
Wang Yue |
David Navara |
½-½ |
Etienne Bacrot |
Alex. Grischuk |
½-½ |
Michael Adams |
|
|
Round 6: Sunday, April 27th |
Gata Kamsky |
1-0 |
Michael Adams |
Etienne Bacrot |
½-½ |
Alex. Grischuk |
Wang Yue |
½-½ |
David Navara |
Peter Svidler |
1-0 |
Sergey Karjakin |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
0-1 |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
½-½ |
Teimour Radjabov |
Magnus Carlsen |
½-½ |
Vugar Gashimov |
|
|
Round 7: Monday, April 28th |
Vugar Gashimov |
- |
Gata Kamsky |
Teimour Radjabov |
- |
Magnus Carlsen |
Ivan Cheparinov |
- |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Sergey Karjakin |
- |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
David Navara |
- |
Peter Svidler |
Alex. Grischuk |
- |
Wang Yue |
Michael Adams |
- |
Etienne Bacrot |
Games – Report |
|
Round 8: Tuesday, April 29th |
Etienne Bacrot |
- |
Gata Kamsky |
Wang Yue |
- |
Michael Adams |
Peter Svidler |
- |
Alex. Grischuk |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
- |
David Navara |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
- |
Sergey Karjakin |
Magnus Carlsen |
- |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Vugar Gashimov |
- |
Teimour Radjabov |
Games – Report |
|
Round 9: Wednesday, April 30th |
Teimour Radjabov |
- |
Gata Kamsky |
Ivan Cheparinov |
- |
Vugar Gashimov |
Sergey Karjakin |
- |
Magnus Carlsen |
David Navara |
- |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Alex. Grischuk |
- |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
Michael Adams |
- |
Peter Svidler |
Etienne Bacrot |
- |
Wang Yue |
Games – Report |
|
Round 10: Friday, May 2nd |
Gata Kamsky |
- |
Wang Yue |
Peter Svidler |
- |
Etienne Bacrot |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
- |
Michael Adams |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
- |
Alex. Grischuk |
Magnus Carlsen |
- |
David Navara |
Vugar Gashimov |
- |
Sergey Karjakin |
Teimour Radjabov |
- |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Games – Report |
|
Round 11: Saturday, May 3rd |
Ivan Cheparinov |
- |
Gata Kamsky |
Sergey Karjakin |
- |
Teimour Radjabov |
David Navara |
- |
Vugar Gashimov |
Alex. Grischuk |
- |
Magnus Carlsen |
Michael Adams |
- |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Etienne Bacrot |
- |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
Wang Yue |
- |
Peter Svidler |
Games – Report |
|
Round 12: Sunday, May 4th |
Gata Kamsky |
- |
Peter Svidler |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
- |
Wang Yue |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
- |
Etienne Bacrot |
Magnus Carlsen |
- |
Michael Adams |
Vugar Gashimov |
- |
Alex. Grischuk |
Teimour Radjabov |
- |
David Navara |
Ivan Cheparinov |
- |
Sergey Karjakin |
Games – Report |
|
Round 13: Monday, May 5th |
Sergey Karjakin |
- |
Gata Kamsky |
David Navara |
- |
Ivan Cheparinov |
Alex. Grischuk |
- |
Teimour Radjabov |
Michael Adams |
- |
Vugar Gashimov |
Etienne Bacrot |
- |
Magnus Carlsen |
Wang Yue |
- |
Shak. Mamedyarov |
Peter Svidler |
- |
Ernesto Inarkiev |
Games – Report |
|
Tuesday, May 6th
Departure |
|
Links
The games are being broadcast live on the official web site and on the
chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download ChessBase Light, which gives
you immediate access. You can also use it to read, replay and analyse
the PGN games.
|
|
Multimedia Commentary on Playchess
Currently FIDE and Global Chess are producing live wrap-up commentary of the
games of the Grand Prix in Baku. This is done using the Chess Media System developed
by ChessBase, which allows the annotator to move the pieces, draw coloured arrows
or highlight squares while he or she is speaking. In Baku grandmaster (and FIDE
Vice President) Zurab Azmaiparashvili is commenting on the games.
To watch the audio-video chess commentary you should log into the Playchess
server. You can do this with many ChessBase products: Fritz, Shredder, Hiarcs,
ChessBase 9.0, etc. If you have none of these you can download ChessBase Light
using the link given above. Even if you do not have an account on Playchess
you can use this program to log in as a "Guest".

On Playchess you should go into the area reserved for Audio/Video Training
on Demand, where there is a special room for FIDE and the Grand Prix tournaments.
Click on this to enter the room.

The FIDE Grand Prix room displays the Grand Prix web site when you enter the
room.

Click on the tab "Games" on the top left to get a list of the files
available for viewing.

Double-click an entry, sit back and enjoy the game commentary by GM Azmaiparashivili.
There is no charge for this service – you can watch as many game commentaries
as you like.