Luis Engel Hanna Marie Klek win German Masters 2021

Luis Engel and Hanna Marie Klek came as winners of the German Masters 2021. The chess forum in Magdeburg brought together hundreds of local players competing in various tournaments from July 23 to July 31: German Championships, German Women’s championships, German Senior championships (+ 50 / + 65), German Blitz Championships, German Women’s Blitz Championships, German Senior Blitz Championships (+ 50 / + 65), German Senior Rapid Championships, German Cup Championships and the most prestigious German Masters (open and women). Photo: Official website The ninth-rated resident of Hamburg, Luis Engel caused a minor sensation convincingly winning the 10-player round-robin German Masters with a round to spare. Rasmus Svane, Georg Meier and Andreas Heimann (the only unbeaten participant who, nevertheless, did not make it to the podium due to inferior tiebreaks) finished 1.5 points behind the winner and tied for second place. Final standings 1 GM Engel Luis 6½ 2 GM Svane Rasmus 5 3 GM Meier Georg 5 4 GM Heimann Andreas 5 5 GM Kollars Dmitrij 4½ 6 GM Fridman Daniel 4½ 7 GM Blübaum Matthias 4½ 8 GM Graf Alexander 3½ 9 IM Parvanyan Ashot 3½ 10 GM Braun Arik 3 Photo: Arne Jachmann In the Women’s Masters, Hanna Marie Klek (pictured above) was coming to the final round a full point lead over Carmen Voicu-Jagodzinsky and sealed the deal finishing 1.5 points ahead of her main competitor who settled for silver. Five players tied for second place with Melanie Lubbe taking bronze thanks for better tiebreaks. Final standings: 1 WGM Klek Hanna Marie 7 2 WGM Voicu-Jagodzinsky Carmen 5½ 3 WGM Lubbe Melanie 5 4 WIM Mütsch Annmarie 5 5 WFM Ziegenfuß Antonia 5 6 WIM Sieber Fiona 5 7 IM Kachiani-Gersinska Ketino 4 8 WGM Michna Marta 3½ 9 FM Schneider Jana 3 10 FM Schulze Lara 2 Meanwhile, Jonas Rosner (pictured below) came out on top in the German championship and earned his spot in German Masters 2022. Photo: Frank Hoppe Check out the full results on the official website.

Jan-Krzysztof Duda defeats WC Magnus Carlsen

He will face local hero Sergey Karjakin in the World Cup final Tuesday, August 3rd, 2021 – The tie-break between GM Magnus Carlsen (2847) and GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda (2738) began at 3 pm sharp with the first move ceremony, played by Alexander Vlasov, the Vice-Governor of the Krasnodar Region. Almost 8000 students in 35 municipalities of the region are involved in chess training and the World Cup is a huge boost to this program. Duda won the toss and opened the first 25/10 game with 1.e4. Carlsen replied with 1…e5, as in all of his games here, but went for the Berlin Wall variation with 3…Nf6 for the first time in the World Cup. Play developed slowly, following a 2007 game between Hou Yifan and Krisnan Saskiran. Carlsen deviated with 13…c5 and after a few exchanges equalised the position completely. According to the engine, 19.c4 instead of 19.Qb1 might be an improvement but it still doesn’t seem very much. The position remained balanced, although Magnus did have a small advantage on the clock. However, further exchanges left both players with no chance of fighting for a win and the draw seemed to be the most likely result. However, Carlsen is a tricky player and he tried 27…Qc2 followed by 28…Qb3, sacrificing the c5 pawn for some fun tactics, just when both players were approaching the 5-minute barrier on the clock. But Duda found the solid solution (30.Re3!) and a draw was agreed by three-fold move repetition immediately afterwards. In the second 25/10 game, Carlsen opted for the 3.Bb5+ side-line against Duda’s Sicilian defence. The opening soon transposed into a French-type pawn structure in which Black is generally fine, having exchanged light-squared bishops. Duda tried out the relatively new 12…Bb4 novelty instead of the usual 12…Be7, but it’s not a big deal as long as White doesn’t exchange minor pieces. Both players began to manoeuvre on the queenside until Duda proposed the exchange of queen’s with 21…Qb5! which Carlsen declined.  Meanwhile, Carlsen had started to expand on the kingside but it did seem a bit slow. Finally, Duda went for light-square domination, starting with 27…Na7! and gradually out-played the World Champion by forcing the correct exchanges. With both of the players very low on time, the bishop ending was madness: the engine’s evaluation was going up and down on every move but it was always Duda who was pressing, due to Carlsen’s bad bishop combined with his pawn structure. With hardly any time left, Carlsen made the final mistake by playing 62.Bc1? allowing Duda to force the zugzwang position. When the a-pawn was lost it was clear that Carlsen was in the ropes. A few moves later he resigned and an ecstatic Duda advanced to the final, in addition to securing a spot in the 2022 Candidates tournament. He was kind enough to come along to the press center and give his thoughts on the match. After two draws in the classical games, the tiebreak match for third and fourth place in the women’s group was also held today. Ukraine GM Anna Muzychuk (2527) won the toss and played with White in the first game. Her opponent, Chinese GM Tan Zhongyi (2511) defended with the Petroff, her pet defence in this event. Muzychuk went for the fashionable 5.Nc3 option, leading to a position with opposite-side castled kings. By means of 12.h4-h5 she launched a vicious attack on Tan’s king, sacrificing a pawn for the attack. But Zhongyi Tan kept her calm, drove back the attack and gradually finished her development. The turning point was White’s 23.Qh2? (instead, 23.Bg5 was better, with a probable ¡draw by move repetition), and from there on it looked like Black’s attack on the queenside was stronger. Muzychuk had already spent most of her time and was under serious pressure, both on the board and on the clock – at some point, Tan had seventeen minutes left against Muzychuk’s thirty seconds. After stabilizing the position and netting a second pawn, the Chinese GM started pushing her h-pawn passer. By a strange twist of fate, it was game over.  In a must-win situation, Muzychuk went for the double-edged Albin Counter Gambit in the second game. Her third move 3…Ne7 (instead of the regular 3…d4) is a blitz idea played by GM Aleksandr Shimanov – one of the World Cup commentators. However, 9….b5? was definitely a blunder and after a few moves, Muzychuk was already in trouble. On move twelve, with 12.Qxa7! she was already clearly winning, as Black loses too much material if the queen is captured. Zhongyi Tan could have gone for the brilliancy prize if she had found 15.Ne5!! but her move repetition in a winning position was more than enough to seal the deal and win the third prize trophy in addition to direct qualification to the 2022 Women’s Candidates tournament. The prize-giving for the Women’s World Cup took place after the end the round, with the presence of FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich, the Deputy Head of the City of Sochi, Vladimir Morozov, the Executive Director of the Russian Chess Federation, Mark Glukhovsky and the main arbiter of the tournament Laurent Freyd. Alexandra Kosteniuk, Aleksandra Goryachkina and Tan Zhongyi (winner, runner-up and third place finisher) received their awards along with some other delightful presents from the tournament sponsors. The full tournament tree, 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

Historic win for Mishra as Wesley So smashes score record

A dramatic end to the Chessable Masters prelim stage saw boy wonder Abhimanyu Mishra score a historic win and US star Wesley So break the event’s score record. Twelve-year-old Mishra, the world’s youngest Grandmaster, shocked the field by toppling Pentala Harikrishna. It was Mishra’s first win over a Super GM and first win of the event.  The youngster and Harikrishna are separated by 595 places in the world rankings, 23 years in age and an ocean of experience. In a frantic endgame in Round 14, Mishra needed to hold his nerve with just seconds left on his clock to seal the win. When it was finally over, Mishra, who is ranked 616 in the world, rocked back on his chair in relief. Harikrishna looked stunned. “It was a dream come true to play in this event, against these players,” Mishra said afterwards. “It was amazing, it was full of ups and downs and at the end I was able to win.” Meanwhile, Mishra’s fellow American So continued his incredible dominance of this event by extending his unbeaten streak to 15 games.  In the process, he broke the $1.6 million Meltwater Champions Chess Tour prelim stage score record with a stunning 11/15. So said he was “inspired” by the absence of World Champion Magnus Carlsen who he is chasing in the overall Tour table. “I figured I should try and score as many points when he is not here,” he added. So took a draw with the Dutchman Jorden Van Foreest in the final round as both went through to the knockouts. For Van Foreest, it was a big achievement. He made the cut for the first time along with Vietnam’s Liem Quang Le. While So was dominant, close behind were a pack of three led by the other young hotshot in the field, Alireza Firouzja. The Iranian-born teenager beat Misha in the final round to finish joint-second on 10.5/15 and clearly justify the hype around him. Level with Firouzja were the two heavyweights, speed demon Hikaru Nakamura and Armenia’s Levon Aronian. Making up the top eight were Goldmoney Asian Rapid finalist Vladislav Artemiev and Shakrhiyar Mamedyarov. However, in the scramble for places in the top eight the bottom eight players were eliminated. The exciting Indian Adhiban Baskaran came the closest, just missing out. The knockouts start tomorrow. The kick-off is at 17:00 CEST. All matches in the Chessable Masters are hosted in chess24.com’s playzone and available to watch on the platform’s Twitch and YouTube channels for free. The Chessable Masters is the penultimate leg of the Meltwater Champions Chess Tour before the Finals event in San Francisco, where the ultimate winner will be crowned the world’s best online chess player. For further information, please contact: Leon Watson, PR for Play Magnus Groupleon@chessable.com+44 7786 078 770