1/19/2013 – Recently Vishy Anand announced that 2013 would be a come-back year, and in his first tournament of the year he is fulfilling his promise. With a third victory in this tournament the reigning World Champion climbed to the top of the score table, after Magnus Carlsen and Sergey Karjakin drew their games. Nakamura beat Wang Hao with black and is now in third place. Full round seven 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 seven report
By GM Alejandro Ramirez
The games cooled off somewhat as a more sedate style dominated the seventh
round of Tata Steel group A. We did have two decisive results, and Carlsen is
no longer in solo lead, so there were some important changes in the standings.
Group A: Round 7 - Saturday January 19
Vishy Anand - Loek van Wely
1-0
Ivan Sokolov - Pentala Harikrishna
½-½
Peter Leko - Magnus Carlsen
½-½
Sergey Karjakin - Levon Aronian
½-½
Hou Yifan - Fabiano Caruana
½-½
Erwin L'Ami - Anish Giri
½-½
Wang Hao - Hikaru Nakamura
0-1
Erwin L’Ami faced off against Giri in a battle of the young Dutch generation.
The game featured a quiet Slav structure and it is hard to say that either side
ever had chances for complications. A peace treaty was signed at move 30. Sokolov
might have had the slightest of opportunities against Harikrishna, but it is
unlikely that even perfect play would have penetrated Hari’s solid position.
The Nimzo-Indian proves itself as a solid defense yet again.
Leko-Carlsen followed a Ruy Lopez variation that is becoming increasingly popular,
though it is unclear why. White has not had any particularly good results in
this variation of the anti-Berlin and this game just proved again that Black’s
position is solid even if White gets a space advantage. The game led into a
very drawn out bishop endgame in which Black had a worse structure but it was
not possible to exploit the weaknesses.
In the video clips given below you can hear Hou Yifan speak her native Chinese!
Fresh of a win yesterday, Hou Yifan tried to put early pressure on the world's
number five Fabiano Caruana, with a queen sortie that has given White good results
in the past in the Kan. It is unclear if White ever had anything decisive in
the position, but it was certainly the Chinese player that had the more comfortable
situation. Caruana stubbornly defended and after the queen simplification there
was nothing to push for, a draw was agreed soon afterwards.
The biggest miss of the day was certainly by Levon Aronian (above). With very
powerful play, he sacrificed a pawn temporarily to obtain the pair of bishops
and a certain initiative. This was crowned with the superb move 30... Bxh3!
after which White’s position becomes very difficult, the bishop being
poisoned due to a tactic on the e-file. In time pressure, Aronian was unable
to correctly choose one of many winning continuations on move 38, but certainly
retained the initiative nonetheless. His last chance to win was on move 41 with
Be6! after which Karjakin would have had to simplify into a hopeless endgame.
Instead, the weak move Qa5? allowed the Russian back in the game, and through
a series of unforced errors it was even White who was pushing at the end for
a win. Aronian managed to defend and a draw was agreed, but the Armenian super
star cannot be happy with this result.
Loek van Wely (above right) bravely employed the Scandinavian Defense against
Anand, and obtained quite a successful opening position against the World Champion.
He was close to equal until his move 18… f5? weakened his position too
much. This allowed Anand to swoop a central pawn by simply applying pressure
on it, and through some nice technique he kept improving his position. Van Wely
blundered in a very difficult position on move 35 and the game was over.
In chess, it is common for players to have what is called a ‘nemesis’
or as Anand put it a ‘nightmare opponent’. These are players that
score particularly well against another, sometimes due to style, sometimes just
due to luck. Anand commented that Aronian was his nightmare opponent (or "angstgegner"),
and he was able to win a fantastic game with black against him earlier this
tournament.
Arguably, Wang Hao has been traditionally a nightmare for Nakamura, and again
in Tata Steel we see the hunted become the hunter! A Semi-Slav structure was
very poorly handled by Hao and just out of the opening it was obvious that Black’s
piece activity and his pair of bishops gave him the advantage. The flourish
with 22… f5! put Hao in a very difficult position, so he decided to sacrifice
the exchange. Hikaru was aided in his efforts by Hao’s atrocious 28. Ra5??
which just sped up his defeat. Nakamura jumps to +2 and third place, putting
strong pressure on Anand and Carlsen. The American wants to claim first place
at Wijk Aan Zee one more time!
Replay all the games of the round on our JavaScript player
If we look at the (unofficial) Live Chess
Ratings after seven rounds of the Tata Steel tournament we see that Anand
and Nakamura have both moved two places up in the rankings, while Fabiano Caruana
has decended three places. Magnus Carlsen has picked up another three points
– nothing seems to slow down this incredible Norwegian.
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 14:30h 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
12 or any of our Fritz
compatible chess programs.
2nd Move Anti-Sicilian Powerbase 2025 is a database and contains a total of 12090 games from Mega 2025 or the Correspondence Database 2024, of which 874 are annotated.
Ruy Lopez Powerbase 2025 is a database and contains a total of 12092 games from Mega 2025 and the Correspondence Database 2024, of which 1276 are annotated.
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