Round 04 Game 02: Wojtaszek forces tiebreak with Carlsen
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Fedoseev, Shankland, Vachier-Lagrave and Vidit advance. Friday, July 23nd, 2021 – This afternoon’s round promised to be lively and it definitely wasn’t disappointing. After yesterday’s results, several players had to win on-demand to equalise their matches and force the tiebreak, while many others had an aggressive game and a win in mind precisely to avoid the tie and get an extra free day to regroup. Also, some players may obtain the right to play in the next Grand Prix series, as long as they reach the quarter-finals. With regard to the Women’s Cup, an added benefit for reaching semifinals is the direct qualification to the future Women Grand Prix Series, the final dates of which will be decided very soon. The first player to finish his game in the open section was Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. After a solid draw yesterday with Black, he faced a very risky albeit fashionable variation of the Sicilian which his opponent, Praggnanandhaa, had prepared for today. The key idea of the game was the Frenchman’s positional queen sacrifice (planned on move 24.Kb2), which Maxime thought about for nearly 10 minutes. It worked out well and now he will face the winner of the tiebreak between Artemiev and Karjakin. After the game, Maxime popped into the studio for a brief interview. Meanwhile, in the playing hall, the World Champion Magnus Carlsen was having the time of his life, attacking his opponent’s kingside with great energy. At some point it seemed that he was crushing Radoslaw Wojtaszek, however, his own kingside was also battered up by now, so it was touch-and-go. Radoslaw Wojtaszek – Magnus Carlsen The key moment of the game was move twenty-five when Carlsen chose 25.Bc2 instead of 25.Rxh7 which is +10 according to the computer engine. As always, it’s hard to speculate what the World Champion might have missed, and today he wasn’t available for an interview. Our best guess is that he didn’t see the crushing 30.Bc2+ followed by 31.Rh8! idea in the following long variation: 25. Rxh7 fxg6 26. Qxg6 Rf1+ 27. Rxf1 Qxd5+ 28. Kg1 Qd4+ 29. Rf2 d5 30. Bc2 Bc5 31.Rh8+ Kxh8 32. Qh7# but of course it could be any of the other complicated lines that might have occurred. Magnus discussed some variations with his opponent after the game. He seems to be pointing to the h7 square in this fantastic photo by Eric Rosen, one of the event’s two official top-notch photographers. Obviously, tomorrow’s tiebreak between these two players will be very exciting. Kacper Piorun is one of the lesser-known players that are slowly but surely making a name for themselves in Sochi. Today he qualified for the fifth round – his best performance to date – by eliminating one of the pleasant surprises of the tournament, Javokhir Sindarov. The Polish grandmaster was kind enough to pop in to the press centre for a small interview in which we also discovered that he is a 5-time World Champion…. In solving! Uzbekistan’s pride, Nodirbek Abdusattorov, who eliminated Giri in the previous round, was on the verge of being eliminated himself when he lost yesterday with White against Vasif Durarbayli. However, needing to win today with Black on-demand, he took advantage of his opponent’s slightly passive opening play to achieve a very good middlegame, that transitioned into a clearly better endgame. His opponent defended tenaciously and only after five tough hours of play Nodirbek was able to take the point home and force what will definitely be one of the most interesting tiebreaks tomorrow. Even though he was quite tired he found time to come to the press centre for a quick interview. After quite a peaceful round, things heated up today in the Women’s group, as several players had to win on demand to stay in contention for the top prize. None less than six of the eight games had a winner, a high percentage indeed. Number one seed Aleksandra Goryachkina lost painfully yesterday to Antoaneta Stefanova but today she made a comeback with a nice win to force the tiebreak. This evenly-matched encounter will definitely be closely followed tomorrow afternoon. Also winning on-demand was Nana Dzagnidze, forcing the tiebreak against her opponent Polina Shuvalova. Nana Dzagnidze – Polina Shuvalova After 17.Bxh6! she was already winning, as the main idea behind the piece sacrifice is that 17…gxh6 18.Rad1 attacks the queen and after 18…Qxc4 19.Qh5! followed by Re4 gives White an unstoppable attack. Nana went into details of this exciting game in the press center. Finally, four match-ups that finished in a draw yesterday had a decisive score today. Valentina Gunina, Anna Muzychuk and former World Champion Zhongyi Tan all won their games with good endgame technique, while Alexandra Kosteniuk created a fantastic double exchange sacrifice that wiped her opponent off the board. All these players advance to the next round. Alexandra gave us her thoughts in the post-game interview. Pairings of the fourth round tiebreaks, live games and PGN files can be found on the World Cup website alongside a great amount of other interesting information such as daily videos, a complete photo collection and other useful data. Text: Michael Rahal, FIDE Press Officer press@fide.com Photo: Eric Rosen and Anastasiia Korolkova About the tournament: Scheduled to take place from July 12th (Round 1) to August 6th (finals), the 2021 FIDE World Cup will gather together in Sochi (Russia) 309 of the world’s best chess players, with 206 of them playing in the Open World Cup (and 103 participants in the first-ever Women’s World Cup. The top two finishers in the tournament, aside from World Champion Magnus Carlsen who is also participating, will qualify for the 2022 Candidates Tournament, in addition to winning the 110.000 USD first prize (80.000 USD for the runner-up). Organisers: International Chess Federation (FIDE), Chess Federation of Russia, Russian Ministry of Sports, and Government of Krasnodar Krai. Partners: Gazprom – general partner Nornickel – general partner PhosAgro – general partner Chessable – event’s partner Aeroflot – CFR’s partner Educational centre “Sirius”
Round 04 Game 01: Wojtaszek holds Carlsen to a draw
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Hard-fought games in the Galaxy Centre. Thursday, July 22nd, 2021 – A total of 301 players competed in the first round of the World Cup ten days ago, but only 48 of them returned this afternoon for the fourth round, among them the world champion Magnus Carlsen, still in full contention. There are still 32 players left in the open group and 16 in the women’s group. The ceiling & wall panels of the playing venue allowed the organisation to resize the game area to create a superior game-space ratio for the players, avoiding uncomfortable situations that had occurred on previous editions of this same event. At this stage of the World Cup, all the players are world-class candidates, many of them the best players of their countries: it’s impossible to find an “easy” game in this round. As usual, all eyes were focused on the board one game between Poland’s number two player Radoslaw Wojtaszek and Magnus Carlsen. Radoslaw Wojtaszek – Magnus Carlsen The key moment of the game was move 27 for Black, when 27…Ndxe5! initiates a long variation in which Black sacrifices a lot of material for a direct attack on White’s king. One can never know with world-class players but maybe Carlsen couldn’t see a direct win and preferred the game line, which is also strong but allows White’s defensive queen sacrifice idea, which kept the game more or less balanced. After a few moves, a draw was agreed although the final position is still quite complex. Wojtaszek went through these variations for us in a brief post-game interview. In another tremendously exciting game, French top grandmaster Etienne Bacrot was able to pull ahead in the mini-match by defeating his opponent, the tough Russian 2630 player Pavel Ponkratov. Etienne Bacrot – Pavel Ponkratov The key position occurred after 25.Ne5! Rxb2 with total chaos on the board. White was nearly always winning but it was quite tricky. After the fireworks faded, Bacrot took home the point and came to the press-centre to give us his thoughts on the game. Afterwards, he popped into the studio with FIDE World Cup commentator GM Almira Skripchenko to go over the variations in a must-see video clip. Another very strong player that hasn’t been mentioned yet in these reports is Iranian number three, M.Amin Tabatabei who took down India’s number two Pentala Harikrishna – who out-rates him by more than 100 points – in a very nice positional game which ended in a well-played knight ending. However, in his post-game interview, Amin was very cautious about the rest of the match as he knew that tomorrow would be a very tough game. The last game to finish produced an unexpected result. After a tricky move order from his opponent in the opening, USA grandmaster Sam Shankland came out on the worse end and was even close to losing. However, he eventually equalised and the game was heading for a draw. But suddenly his opponent, Rinat Jumabayev – who defeated Caruana in the previous round – played too ambitiously and fell into a difficult position. Shankland’s well-known endgame technique did the rest. Even though he was visibly exhausted he was kind enough to find time to give us his impressions in a brief interview. In general, this afternoon’s round was very exciting, with hard-fought games. Although many of them ended in a draw pending tomorrow’s rematch – quite a few high-rated players had Black today – some other players were able to chalk up their first win and will return to the board tomorrow with a big advantage to qualify for the next round. Together with Bacrot, Shankland and Tabatabei the following players scored the full point: Vasif Durarbayli, Vladimir Fedoseev, Haik Martirosyan, Kacper Piorun and Vidit Gujrathi. The fourth round in the women’s section was quite peaceful although most of the games were hard-fought. Without a doubt, the surprise of the round was top-seed Aleksandra Goryachkina losing to former female World Champion Antoaneta Stefanova. Although the rematch has yet to be played tomorrow, the Bulgarian grandmaster has a good opportunity to go through to the quarter-finals, at the same time eliminating the number one player of the section. Antoaneta Stefanova – Aleksandra Goryachkina The key moment of the game was the tactical mistake made by Goryachkina on move 26…Qxc5?? (26…Re5 was probably equal). After 27.Rc1 the knight on c4 is pinned and will be lost. Again, one can only speculate on what the top Russian grandmaster missed: maybe that after 27…Re-d3 (played quickly) the knight can’t be captured because of 28…Rd1 winning, but both 28.Kh1 and also 28.b4! are winning for White. Chess is such a difficult game! Stefanova happily went through the game for us in a brief interview. The only other decisive outcome in the women’s group was Polina Shuvalova defeating Nana Dzagnidze. All the rest of the eight games ended in draws and will be decided between tomorrow and the tie-breaks on Saturday. Pairings of the second game of the fourth round, live games and PGN files can be found on the World Cup website alongside a great amount of other interesting information such as daily videos, a complete photo collection and other useful data. Text: Michael Rahal, FIDE Press Officer press@fide.com Photo: Eric Rosen and Anastasiia Korolkova About the tournament: Scheduled to take place from July 12th (Round 1) to August 6th (finals), the 2021 FIDE World Cup will gather together in Sochi (Russia) 309 of the world’s best chess players, with 206 of them playing in the Open World Cup (and 103 participants in the first-ever Women’s World Cup. The top two finishers in the tournament, aside from World Champion Magnus Carlsen who is also participating, will qualify for the 2022 Candidates Tournament, in addition to winning the 110.000 USD first prize (80.000 USD for the runner-up). Organisers: International Chess Federation (FIDE), Chess Federation of Russia, Russian Ministry of Sports, and Government of Krasnodar Krai. Partners: Gazprom – general partner Nornickel – general partner PhosAgro – general partner Chessable – event’s partner Aeroflot – CFR’s partner Educational centre “Sirius”