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Chess Classic Mainz 2009
The 2009 Chess Classic will take place from July 27 to August 2 in the
Rheingoldhalle of the Congress Centre, Hilton Hotel in Mainz, Germany.
The event includes tournaments and Opens in traditional and Random Chess,
with stars like the current World Champion Vishy Anand, Levon Aronian
of Armenia, strong Russian junior GM Ian Nepomniachtchi and top German
GM Arkadij Naiditsch. Schedule below. |
Nakamura wins three in a row to become new World Champion
By Johannes Fischer
When Levon Aronian and Nakamura sat down to play the final of the Chess960
World Rapid Chess Championship it was difficult to name a clear favorite. In
the preliminaries Aronian had dominated the first day, Nakamura the second.
Both are known as extremely strong blitz and rapid players, and both had shown
their Chess960 skills on more than one occasion.
Taking this into account, the match was surprisingly one-sided. Nakamura simply
won the first three games to become new World Champion – in a very convincing
manner.

US American GM Hikaru Nakamura
In the first game Aronian opted with Black for an elastic, dynamic set-up.
But when White managed to create weaknesses in Black’s camp, which he
soon occupied with his pieces, Black seemed to be in trouble. In a bid for counterplay
Aronian decided to give material but Nakamura defended coolly and sent his king
from the queenside to the kingside, where it finally was safe. With his last
swindling chances gone Aronian resigned.

Nakamura - Aronian
Chess960 Rapid World Championship Chess Classic Mainz 2009 (7.1), 30.07.2009

Starting position
1.f4 f5 2.Bd4 d6 3.Qg1 c5 4.Bc3 Nc7 5.g4 e6 6.d3 Bf7 7.e4 Ne7 8.Ne2
Qg8 9.Nb3 b6 10.0-0-0 g6 11.Nd2 0-0-0 12.Bh3 fxe4 13.Nxe4 Ned5 14.Bf6 Rd7 15.c4
Nb4 16.a3 Nc6 17.Bc3 Be7 18.g5 d5 19.Nf6 Bxf6 20.Bxf6 Qf8 21.Nc3 Qd6 22.Qf2
Kb7 23.Kb1 Rf8 24.cxd5 Nxd5 25.Nxd5 Qxd5 26.d4
The game continued 26...e5 27.Bxd7 Nxd4 28.Rxd4 cxd4 29.Rxe5 Qa2+ 30.Kc1
Qa1+ 31.Kc2 d3+ 32.Kxd3 Qd1+ 33.Qd2 Bc4+ 34.Ke3 Qg1+ 35.Kf3 h5 36.Re1 Qc5 37.Be7
Bd5+ 38.Kg3 h4+ 39.Kh3 1-0.
The first game in the fight for third place between Bologan and Movsesian took
a different course. Here it was Bologan who pressed with White and advanced
his pawns early on. However, this gave Black good counterchances. He forced
an exchange of queens and attacked the weak white pawns afterwards. Bologan
found no good way to defend them and soon had a lost position, which Movsesian
converted into a full point.

Inspired by this win Movsesian played a little brilliancy in the second game.
Sacrificing an exchange, he pushed on the kingside, in the center and finally
on the queenside, where he mated Black’s king.
Movsesian - Bologan
Chess960 Rapid World Championship Chess Classic Mainz 2009 (8.2)

Starting position
1.g4 g5 2.Qh3 Ne6 3.e3 Nd6 4.d4 h5 5.d5 Ng7 6.gxh5 Ngf5 7.Nd3 0-0-0
8.e4 Nd4 9.Ne3 f5 10.e5 f4 11.Ng4 Nc4 12.0-0-0 Ne2+ 13.Kb1 Nxg1 14.Rxg1 b5 15.Rd1
Qf5 16.b3 Nb6 17.Nc5 e6 18.Be4 Qf8 19.d6 f3 20.Bxa8 Nxa8
21.Nf6 g4 22.Qf1 c6 23.Qe1 1-0.
While Movsesian was brimming with confidence Aronian appeared shaken after
his loss in the first game. At any rate, it hard to find another explanation
for the blunder he committed in the second game against Nakamura: After to a
relatively simple oversight Aronian lost knight and game. “Probably I
had a bad day”, he commented wryly in the press conference.

Hikaru Nakamura in full concentration
Aronian - Nakamura
Chess960 Rapid World Championship Chess Classic Mainz 2009 (8.2)

Starting position
1.b3 b5 2.f3 f6 3.d4 f5 4.Nd3 g6 5.Qf2 Bf6 6.g3 Qh6 7.e3 Ne6 8.Qe2
Nb6 9.Nc3 a6 10.Nc5 Nxc5 11.dxc5 Qg7 12.Qd3 b4 13.cxb6 cxb6 14.Nd5 Bxa1 15.Nc7+
Kf7 16.0-0 Bc3 17.f4 Bxh1 18.Kxh1 Qf6 19.Rbd1
19...Qc6+ 20.Qd5+ Qxd5+ 21.Rxd5 Rb7 22.Nxa6 Ra8 23.Nxb4 Bxb4 24.a4
Bc5 25.Re1 e6 26.Rd3 d5 0-1.
With Nakamura and Movsesian both leading 2-0 the final seemed to come to a
swift end. The match Aronian vs. Nakamura in fact ended quickly. To get back
into the match Aronian used lots of time in the third game – time which
he later lacked. He got lost in the middlegame complications and fell victim
to a surprising attack by White.

“Probably I had a bad day” – Levon Aronian
A convincing victory, which made Nakamura new Chess960 Rapid World Champion.The
fourth game between Aronian and Nakamura was just a formal affair, and maybe
it was the lack of tension which made Aronian spoil an advantageous position
into a draw which led to a final result of 3.5:0.5 for Nakamura.

A youthful fan hamming with adult clothing
Things went less smoothly for Movsesian. In the third round he was not able
to cope with Bologan’s aggressive play and lost, which made the fourth
game crucial. But Movsesian quickly recovered from the loss and played the fourth
game in a very professional manner. Despite Bologan’s efforts to stir
up trouble Movsesian managed to keep everything under control and steered the
game into a completely drawn rook ending. After a couple of moves Bologan accepted
the inevitable and agreed to a draw. Movsesian thus won the match 2.5:1.5 and
became third in the Chess960 Rapid World Championship.
With only 2 draws from 20 games it was an altogether exciting World Championship,
which may help to give Chess960 the popularity it deserves. As Levon Aronian
remarked at the press conference: “Chess960 is healthy and good for your
chess. If you get into it and not just move the pieces to achieve known positions
it really improves your chess vision.”
Tomorrow, in the GRENKE LEASING Rapid World Championship, where he will meet
Vishy Anand, Arkadij Naiditsch and Ian Nepomniachtchi Aronian has a chance to
show how Chess960 improved his classical chess vision.
Pictures by Christian Bossert and Frederic Friedel
Video report by GM Robert Fontaine for Europe
Echecs
Schedule of remaining events
GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship – July
31 to August 2nd, 2009
Rapid Chess, 20min/game + 5s/move. Course of events: Fri, 31 July: first
rounds 1, 2 and 3; Sat, 1 Aug.: second rounds 4, 5 and 6, possible tiebreak;
Sun, 2 Aug: four-game matches, big and small final, possible tiebreak,
award ceremony. Start time of rounds: 18:30h, 19:30h, 20:30h, final additionally:
21:30h. Participants:
| Player |
Nation |
Title |
Rating |
WRnk |
| Viswanathan Anand |
India |
GM |
2783 |
2 |
| Levon Aronian |
Armenia |
GM |
2754 |
6 |
| Arkadij Naiditsch |
Germany |
GM |
2710 |
26 |
| Ian Nepomniachtchi |
Russia |
GM |
2628 |
113 |
Full
details
|
16th ORDIX Open – August 1-2, 2009
Eleven rounds Rapid Chess Open, 20min/game + 5s/move. Registration until
Sat 1 Aug, 11:30h. Sat 1 August: rounds 1-5; Sun 2 August: rounds 6-11.
Start of rounds: Sat 12:00h, Sun 10:00h. Award ceremony Sun 17:30h. Details. |
FiNet Chess960 Open – July 30-31, 2009
Eleven rounds Chess960 Rapid Chess, 20min/game + 5s/move. Thu 30 July:
rounds 1-5; Fri 31 July: rounds 6-11. Start of rounds: Thu 12:00h and
Fri 10:00h. Award Ceremony Fri 17:30h. Details. |
3rd Mini-ORDIX (28th July) and the 3rd Mini-FiNet (29th July)
3rd Mini-ORDIX Open: Rapid Chess Open for Children and
Talents U14, 20min/game + 5s/move. Registration
until Tue, July 28, 10:30h. Seven rounds: 11:00h, 12:00h, 13:00h, 14:00h,
15:00h, 16:00h, 17:00h. Award ceremony: 18:00h. Details.
3rd Mini-FiNet Open: Rapid Chess960 Open for Children
and Talents U14, 20min/game + 5s/move. Registration
until Wed, July 29, 10:30h. Seven rounds: 11:00h, 12:00h, 13:00h, 14:00h,
15:00h, 16:00h, 17:00h. Award ceremony: 18:00h. Details. |
5th Livingston Chess960 Computer World Championship– 29-31 July
2009
Rapid Chess, 20min/game + 5s/move. Course of events: Wed 30 July: first
set of three rounds; Thurs 31 July: second set of three rounds; Fri 1
Aug.: four-game matches, big and small final possle tiebreak (5min/game
+ 5s/move). Start time of rounds: 11:00h, 12:30h, 14:00h, final additionally:
15:30 h, tiebreak: 17:00h. Participants: Rybka, Deep Shredder, plus two
qualifiers. Details. |