
The FIDE World Cup is a knockout, starting with 128 players, with two games (90 min for 40 moves + 30 min for the rest, with 30 seconds increment) between pairs of players. The tiebreaks consist of two rapid games (25 min + 10 sec), then two accelerated games (10 min + 10 sec), and finally an Armageddon. The winner and the runner-up of the World Cup 2013 will qualify for the Candidates Tournament of the next World Championship cycle. The venue is the city of Tromsø, which lies in the northern-most region of Norway, almost 400 km inside the Arctic Circle. You can find all details and links to many ChessBase articles on Tromsø here. The World Cup starts on Sunday, August 11th and lasts until September 3rd (tiebreaks, closing ceremony). Each round lasts three days, while the final will consist of four classical games. Thursday August 29 is a free day. A detailed schedule can be found here.
Preparing for round three, with the tables, seats for spectators and board transmissions
Levon Aronian, playing white, found himself
in an unsatisfactory position against the Dutch Defence
of Evgeny Tomashevsky, who ouplayed the top seed and won the full point
in 58 moves.
Le Quang Liem (above) beat Alexander Grischuk in a K+6 pawns ending and took the full point.
Hikaru Nakamura, playing black, did not give
21-year-old Indian GM B. Adhiban any
chances in an Exchange Ruy Lopez, chalking up the full point after 42 moves
The game between last year's World Championship challenger Boris Gelfand and Ukrainian GM Alexander Moiseenko, 65 points below him on the rating scale, was decided in an instructive endgame which our ChessBase Magazine columnist Karsten has annotated for us.
Gata Kamsky (right), playing black, chose the
Dutch Defence (Leningrad System)
to snatch the full point from local boy Jon Ludvig Hammer in 40 moves
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov had to concede a 23-move
draw to 14-year-old Chinese GM Wei Yi
in a Classical Nimzo Indian when his novelty (on move 14) failed to convince
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave punished Leinier Dominguez' Sicilian Najdorf with a 50-move victory
Peter Svidler (above) easily beat Teimour Radjabov
(left, fetching a refreshment) –
Teimour played the King's Indian and lost in 32 moves
Julio Granda Zuniga (right) botched a probably
winning position against
Anish Giri on move 54 and had to instantly resign
Equally traumatic was the game
It was a horribly frustrating start of round three for Alexander Morozevich: against Nikita Vitiugov he played the Rubinstein Variation of the Nimzo-Indian and by move 59 seemed just a few steps away from victory. But he allowed the opponent to put up a plausible defence and then blew it on move 73. In spite of continued efforts the game ended on move 96 in a stalemate draw.
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Aronian, Levon | 2813 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Tomashevsky, E. | 2706 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Malakhov, Vladimir | 2707 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Caruana, Fabiano | 2796 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Kramnik, Vladimir | 2784 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Areshchenko, Alex. | 2709 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Le, Quang Liem | 2702 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Grischuk, Alexander | 2785 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Karjakin, Sergey | 2772 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Eljanov, Pavel | 2702 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Adhiban, B. | 2567 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Nakamura, Hikaru | 2772 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Gelfand, Boris | 2764 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Moiseenko, Alex. | 2699 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Hammer, Jon Ludvig | 2605 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Kamsky, Gata | 2741 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Mamedyarov, S. | 2775 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Wei, Yi | 2551 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Vachier-Lagrave, M | 2719 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Dominguez Perez, L. | 2757 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Dubov, Daniil | 2624 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Korobov, Anton | 2720 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Andreikin, Dmitry | 2716 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Dreev, Aleksey | 2668 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Svidler, Peter | 2746 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Radjabov, Teimour | 2733 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Ivanchuk, Vassily | 2731 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Kryvoruchko, Y. | 2678 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Granda, Julio | 2664 |
0
|
0.0 | ||||||||
Giri, Anish | 2737 |
1
|
1.0 | ||||||||
Player | Rtg | G1 | G2 | G3 | G4 | G5 | G6 | G7 | G8 | G9 | Pts |
Vitiugov, Nikita | 2719 |
½
|
0.5 | ||||||||
Morozevich, Alex. | 2739 |
½
|
0.5 |
Pictures provided by Paul Truong in Tromsø
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