1/26/2013 – Today Magnus Carlsen outplayed the US grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura to score his seventh win in the Tata Steel tournament, having reached a total of 9.5/12 points with one round to go. His closest rivals, Anand and Aronian, have 8.0/12. Anand caught up with Aronian after a fine win over Erwin L'Ami, while the Chinese GM Hou Yifan beat Ivan Sokolov with black. Postgame and GM analysis.
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75. Tata Steel Chess Tournament
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
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 twelve report
By GM Alejandro Ramirez
Group A: Round 12 - Saturday January 26
Loek van Wely - Fabiano Caruana
1-0
Levon Aronian - Anish Giri
½-½
Magnus Carlsen - Hikaru Nakamura
1-0
Pentala Harikrishna - Wang Hao
½-½
Vishy Anand - Erwin L'Ami
1-0
Ivan Sokolov - Hou Yifan
0-1
Peter Leko - Sergey Karjakin
½-½
There are some matches that are almost always guaranteed to create sparks.
Very creative players usually also tend to be very aggressive, and their somewhat
unorthodox chess often works magic for them, while sometimes it makes them suffer
painful defeats. Hikaru Nakamura is most certainly one of the most talented
and unusual players in the top ten, and his brilliancies are easy to remember
– for example who can forget his famous Qxf2+ sacrifice against Krasenkow?
However, today, he was playing someone who people are starting to wonder if
he really is human. The unstoppable Magnus Carlsen is not a player who will
get confused in complications, or take any wrong turns... or make any bad moves!
Today’s game started out with the unusual Kalashnikov variation of the
Sicilian, Magnus’ treatment of g3 has been seen many times before to which
Nakamura chose the hyper-aggressive 12...h4!? According to the kibitzing Garry
Kasparov, after the awkward 18... Nh4?! 18.0-0 Hikaru was strategically lost.
He had to play 17... Qh4+ 18. Kf1 Ne7, "after which Black might still be
lost, but at least he would go down kicking." After Carlsen established
that bind on the center Black's pieces were too disconnected, and White's attack
rolled forward powerfully. Carlsen wiped the American off the board and won
Tata Steel with a round to spare!
Erwin L'Ami (above) wonderfully handled the Najdorf against Vishy Anand, and
it seemed that the World Champion was against the ropes. 22... Nd4! might have
given White too many problems, but slowly L'Ami let go of his initiative.
After a series of bad moves by Black the World Champion was able to get an
extra pawn in the endgame, and he was not going to waste such an advantage two
games in a row.
Aronian-Giri was a solid English in which not much happened, a draw was agreed
after many exchanges and it seems that second place will go to whoever does
better tomorrow between Aronian and Anand, as they both have eight points.
Almost as solid as this game was the game Harikrishna-Wang Hao who traded off
into an equal rook endgame.
The Catalan is a nightmare opening for many players. It is very solid, gives
Black nearly no winning chances, and if they slip White can quickly pounce positionally
on the slightest mistake.
However Sergey Karjakin is not the type of player to slip at any time, and
he didn’t against Peter Leko and was able to achieve a draw.
Another opening system that is annoying for Black is when in the Slav structures
White quickly attacks the light squared bishop to obtain the classic pair of
bishops edge. Van Wely did precisely this against Caruana and obtained a very
comfortable position. The tactical melee at the end was well calculated by the
Dutchman, who after obtaining king safety was unstoppably mating the Italian.
Last but certainly not least Hou Yifan shows that, apparently, her best results
come with the black pieces. She has won three times in Wijk Aan Zee and they
have all been with black. A slightly unusual Ragozin/Vienna opening gave both
sides an equal game, and it remained so until the almost inexplicable 23.Ne5?
move by Sokolov. Maybe he was banking on the fact that after Yifan took the
knight on e5 his pawns would become rather powerful.
Ivan Sokolov in an interview after the game (see video links below)
But in this case the threat was far stronger than the execution... Nimzowitsch
style! The knight on e5 was never taken, but since it was constantly en prise
it kept White's pieces tied down. Eventually when the knight retreated the f4
pawn was up for grabs, and the Chinese player powerfully pressed on her advantage
for a very clean victory.
Yifan's mother Wang Qian with the thirteen times Dutch women's champion
Peng Zhaoqin
All photos (except the video grab of Sokolov) were provided
by Frans Peeters
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