1/17/2013 – The trio – Carlsen, Anand and Karjakin, all drew their games and stayed on top of the cross table. The decisive games came from Harikrishna, Aronian, Leko, Nakamura and Wang Hao, who defeated van Wely, Sokolov, Caruana (!), Hou Yifan and L'Ami respectively. Especially impressive was Harikrishna-Van Wely. Here are games, statements by the players and analysis in our round five report.
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75. Tata Steel Chess Tournament
January 2013
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This event is taking place from January 12-27. The venue is as usual the traditional
De Moriaan Center in the Dutch sea resort of Wijk aan Zee,. The tournament has
taken place since 1938 and was known as the Corus Chess Tournament. The Indian
company Tata Steel bought Corus (for US $7.6 billion) in 2006 and the chess
event way renamed accordingly. The tournament has three Grandmaster Groups,
which have 14 players and are held as full round robins (each competitor plays
against every other). The rate of play for all three groups is 100 minutes for
40 moves, then 50 minutes for 20 moves and finally 15 minutes for the rest of
the game, with a 30 seconds/move increment starting with the first move of the
game.
Round five report
By GM Alejandro Ramirez
Wijk Aan Zee may be below freezing, but the players are making sure that the
temperature in the playing hall remains super high! Fighting chess continued
today with multiple wins, most of them by Black!
Group A: Round 5 - Thursday January 17
Pentala Harikrishna - Loek van Wely
1-0
Vishy Anand - Magnus Carlsen
½-½
Ivan Sokolov - Levon Aronian
0-1
Peter Leko - Fabiano Caruana
1-0
Sergey Karjakin - Anish Giri
½-½
Hou Yifan - Hikaru Nakamura
0-1
Erwin L'Ami - Wang Hao
0-1
Of course the tournament has been so far full of surprises. This round stabilized
things a little as a lot of the favorites won their encounters. First of all
Aronian showed his class and won a very simple game against Sokolov. The Dutch
GM was probably a little too trigger happy with 16.Bg5?! and dxe6?! and after
losing too much material he simply had to resign.
Aronian: "Of course I am very pleased that I managed to actually score
a win, although I have to say
that it only happened because of my opponent's big mistake 15.h3, which is of
course untimely.
In another game where White was too trigger happy and Black simply munched
on all the material being thrown his way, Nakamura easily defeated Hou Yifan.
In a weird dragon the Chinese GM followed the old maxim that you simply sacrificed
pawns in the kingside to take them back later. Except she never was able to
do so and in the end was just down pawns.
Leko outplayed Caruana in a very nice, model Spanish. He really showed why
having that c4 square is particularly powerful. After obtaining a locked down
queenside, he proceeded to launch an attack on the kingside that could not be
countered. The computers did not agree with his plan, but I really liked it.
Caruana saw no defense and collapsed quickly.
Karjakin-Giri wasn’t too exciting, as a bunch of pieces came off the
board and it was just a draw. But sadly that was a thrill fest compared to Anand-Carlsen,
which was really super boring and nothing happened. But it is very worthwhile
listening to Vishy describing the course of the game:
I will finish the wrap up with two spectacular games. The first was Harikrishna-Van
Wely. In the Scheveningen structure it has always been unclear to me exactly
how White develops an initiative on the kingside after doubling on the h-file,
as it always seemed to me that Black could hold the kingside with a timely h5
or Nf8. Hari shows us the way, and finishes it off with a couple of moves that
you are for sure going to see in the tactics manuals that will be published
in the next coming years.
Harikrishna comments on his game in the postgame analysis in the press centre
in Wijk aan Zee
Even cooler was the finish to the game L’Ami-Wang Hao. After a very weak
opening by White, the Chinese player had all the trumps in the position. A huge
majority on the queenside looked threatening, but he converted it into a queen
much more rapidly than I could imagine! His first piece sacrifice with 30…
b3! is great, but his final flourish with Rd1+ is simply spectacular. A must
watch!
We can only hope that the games will continue to be as interesting as they
have been. Tata Steel A has been a fantastic start to the year.
Replay all the games of the round on our JavaScript player
There is full broadcast of all games on the official site and on the Playchess
server, which will provide live audio commentary of the most interesting
games (free for Premium members) starting at 15:00h for each round, 14:00h for
the final round. Commentary begins at approx. 3 p.m. and lasts 2 to 2½
hours, with breaks in between. A round-up show is provided at 8 PM server time.
Commentary is available, by the following experts:
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 a free Playchess client there
and get immediate access. You can also use ChessBase
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