
From March 14 to April 1, 2013, FIDE and AGON – the World Chess Federation’s
commercial partner – are staging the 2013 Candidates Tournament for the
World Chess Championship 2013. It will be the strongest tournament of its kind
in history. The venue is The IET,
2 Savoy Place, London. The Prize Fund to be shared by the players totals €510,000.
The winner of the Candidates will become the Challenger to Viswanathan Anand
who has reigned as World Champion since 2007. The main sponsor for the Candidates
is State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic SOCAR,
which has sponsored elite events chess in the past.
Round nine report
By GM Alejandro Ramirez
Round 9 March 25 at 14:00 |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
½-½
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Peter Svidler
|
½-½
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
1-0
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Boris Gelfand
|
1-0
|
Levon Aronian |
Playchess commentary: GM Maurice Ashley
|
Kramnik-Carlsen ½-½

Carlsen is currently in a quantum state between being the most tenacious defender
in the tournament and also the luckiest player I’ve seen. He yet again
finds himself in deep trouble as Kramnik employs a home cooked variation of
the Catalan that immediately puts him against the ropes. However, Carlsen finds
resource after resource, avoids all the traps… manages to punish Kramnik
for his one inaccuracy and the game is drawn.

Our guest commentator today is an old buddy, GM Ioan-Cristian Chirila from
Romania.

[Event "World Chess London Candidates"] [Site "?"] [Date "2013.03.25"] [Round
"9"] [White "Kramnik, Vladimir"] [Black "Carlsen, Magnus"] [Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "E05"] [WhiteElo "2810"] [BlackElo "2872"] [Annotator "Ioan-Cristian
Chirila"] [PlyCount "82"] [EventDate "2013.??.??"] {I have to admit I was
eagerly awaiting this encounter. Kramnik had high expectations and a huge
moral boost after yesterday's thrashing of Svidler, while Magnus has shown
that he is human after all in his last games. I had my money on Kramnik!}
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. g3 d5 4. Bg2 Be7 5. Nf3 O-O {Kramnik decides to use
the Catalan, White is usually expecting a small but long lasting plus, while
Black is confident that he can maintain the balance.} 6. O-O dxc4 7. Ne5 {The
main line is} (7. Qc2 a6 8. Qxc4 b5 9. Qc2 Bb7 {with balanced play. Aronian
convincingly proved equality against Carlsen in the previous round.}) 7...
Nc6 (7... c5 8. dxc5 Bxc5 9. Nc3 $14 {The position favors white, he will regain
his pawn and his pieces will have an easier task finding optimum squares.
Kramnik is known for his deadly squeez in these type of positions.}) 8. Bxc6
bxc6 9. Nxc6 Qe8 10. Nxe7+ Qxe7 11. Qc2 {Kramnik is extremely well prepared
and plays a rare continuation, which I am sure he analyzed deeply at home.The
main line was:} (11. Qa4 e5 12. dxe5 Qxe5 13. Qxc4 Be6 $44 {White is a pawn
up but he is still struggling to finish his development. Black has enough
compensation due to advance in development and the possibility of creating
dangerous play on the light squares.}) 11... e5 12. Rd1 Rb8 13. Nc3 h6 14.
dxe5 Qxe5 15. Bf4 Qe7 16. Rd4 Be6 17. Rad1 Rb6 18. Qd2 { Kramnik got what
he wanted, and at this point I think that he would have converted against
any other opponent...but not against Carlsen, arguably the most tenacious
defender of all times!} Kh7 19. f3 {This move is double edged, on one hand
it restricts blacks pieces and prepares a further pawn expansion by means
of e2-e4, on the other hand it weakens the king.} Rfb8 20. Qe3 $6 {an interesting
plan would have been} (20. Na4 Rb4 21. Qc2+ Kg8 22. Bc1 Nd7 23. Nc3 $14 {with
the idea of playing Kg2 and continuing the pawn expansion in the center. The
problem for black is that he lacks an active plan.}) 20... Rxb2 { Computers
suggest} (20... Ng8 $5 {but like I said in the introduction, Carlsen is human
as well and such moves are just too passive for the world's number one.})
21. Rxc4 R2b7 {the computer's evaluation suddently jumps after this move,
but I am sure Carlsen evaluated his chances better.} (21... R8b7 22. Ra4 R2b6
23. Ra5 {Black has a very passive position and finds it hard to defend against
the maneouvre Na4-c5.}) 22. Ra4 Re8 23. Rxa7 Rxa7 24. Qxa7 Qb4 25. Be5 Nd5
26. Nxd5 Bxd5 27. Qxc7 Qc4 {Carlsen's intentions become clear, he wants to
enter an endgame with a pawn down, but with high chances of a successful defense
due to the opposite color bishops and their drawish tendency.} 28. a3 $6 (28.
Kf2 Qxc7 29. Bxc7 Bxa2 30. g4 $14 {Would have been Kramnik's best chance.})
28... f6 29. Qxc4 Bxc4 30. Bc3 Rxe2 31. Rd4 Bb5 32. Bb4 Re3 33. Kf2 Re2+ 34.
Kg1 Re3 35. f4 Re2 36. Rd6 Rc2 37. g4 Bc6 38. Bd2 Bf3 39. h3 Ra2 40. Bb4 Rg2+
41. Kf1 Rh2 {Kramnik must be quite frustrated after his game. He got a very
pleasant position out of the opening and rushed the execution with 20.Qe3?!
instead of adopting a more stable plan and letting Carlsen struggle to find
any counterplay. Kudos to Carlsen for finding active play and pushing his
opponent into a theoretical drawn endgame.} 1/2-1/2
Svidler-Grischuk ½-½

A bizarre Saemisch was the firework-filled attraction of the day. Svidler created
a typical Saemisch bind in the center, but Grischuk would have none of it. By
move 14 Black had already sacrificed a piece to open up the center and exploit
White’s lack of development. Svidler wouldn’t play to Grischuk’s
demands, and he himself sacrificed a queen for two pieces – leaving the
material balance at a queen for Grischuk and three minor pieces for Svidler.
The White player had most of the activity, and definitely he would be the only
one to win in case of a decisive result, but Black’s counterplay against
the exposed king was sufficient for this wild game to end peacefully.

Ivanchuk-Radjabov 1-0

This sedate game saw White keep a positional pressure for almost the entire
game. Even in the double rook endgame, it was always Black that had to defend
carefully so that his position would not collapse quickly. A slight slip was
all it took for Ivanchuk to decisively penetrate with the rooks and collect
the full point.
Gelfand-Aronian 1-0

Gelfand was unable to prove any advantage in Aronian’s favorite handling
of the QGD. However, an unexpected blunder by the Armenian allowed Gelfand to
pounce on Black’s position and emerge material up. This was all it took
for the Israeli to get a decisive advantage, relegating Aronian to second place.

[Event "World Chess London Candidates"] [Site "?"] [Date "2013.03.25"] [Round
"9"] [White "Gelfand, Boris"] [Black "Aronian, Levon"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO
"D37"] [WhiteElo "2740"] [BlackElo "2809"] [Annotator "Ioan-Cristian Chirila"]
[PlyCount "119"] [EventDate "2013.??.??"] {Another very interesting clash
was between former crown contender, Gelfand, and the player who in my oppinion
showed the best chess so far in the tournament, Aronian. Gelfand is trying
to make a comeback after a shacky start, and beating one of the leaders would
definitely make the last rounds more interesting.} 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3
d5 4. Nc3 Be7 5. Bf4 {Another QGD game, I was extremely curious to see what
Gelfand has prepared since this is one of black's most solid opening against
1.d4.} (5. Bg5 h6 6. Bh4 O-O 7. e3 Ne4 {The Lasker has been experiencing some
kind of resurection in last years, but black always seems to be finding equality
against white's new attempts.} (7... b6 { is considered to be very solid as
well})) 5... O-O 6. e3 Nbd7 {The most solid defense} (6... c5 {was considered
the main line but white have found a way to fight for opening advantage after}
7. dxc5 Bxc5 8. a3 Nc6 9. Qc2 Qa5 10. Rd1 Be7 11. Be2 {White got a nice advantage
in Jakovenko, D- Onischuk, A 1-0 2012}) 7. Be2 (7. c5 {is the main line but
I don't think black has any real problems.} ) 7... c6 8. O-O Nh5 9. Be5 f6
10. Bg3 f5 11. Be5 Nhf6 12. h3 Nxe5 13. Nxe5 Nd7 14. f4 Nxe5 15. fxe5 {We
reached a balanced position in which both sides have chances. White is trying
to create a pawn avalanche on the queen's side, while black will try to activate
his white square bishop and maybe open the position on the king's side.} Bg5
16. Qd2 Bd7 17. Rac1 Rc8 18. a3 Kh8 $6 {Too slow} ( 18... dxc4 19. Bxc4 c5
$1 {Black's bishop is revived and soon his bishop pair should be providing
him with an advantage}) 19. b4 Be8 20. Bd3 $5 Rc7 (20... c5 21. bxc5 dxc4
22. Bxc4 Rxc5 23. Ne4 Rxc4 24. Rxc4 Bb5 $13) 21. Ne2 {White is redirecting
the knight to a more active square} Bh5 22. Nf4 Bxf4 23. exf4 Rd7 24. Qe3
dxc4 25. Bxc4 Rxd4 $6 (25... Re8 26. d5 exd5 27. Bd3 d4 28. Qf2 $13) 26. Bxe6
Bf7 $2 {Levon blunders in an unpleasant position, better was} (26... a6 27.
Rc3 Re4 28. Qc5 Qd4+ 29. Rf2 $14 {White keeps the better chances due to his
defended passed pawn}) 27. Bxf5 Bc4 28. e6 $1 {I think this is what Aronian
missed} Qd6 29. Rfe1 Re8 30. e7 Bf7 31. Rc5 g6 32. Bg4 h5 33. f5 Kg7 34. fxg6
Bxg6 35. Bxh5 Rd3 {Gelfand played extremely precise so far and could have
ended the game much faster with} 36. Qe5+ (36. Qg5 Qd4+ 37. Kh1 Qf6 38. Bxg6
Qxg6 39. Qh4 $18) 36... Qxe5 37. Rcxe5 Bxh5 38. Rxh5 Rxa3 {Gelfand has to
be very careful, rook endgames have a high drawing tendency and the smallest
innacuracy can lead to a draw in no time.} 39. Rf5 Rd3 40. Re4 Rd7 41. Rg4+
Kh6 42. Rf6+ Kh7 43. Rf7+ Kh6 44. Rgg7 Rd1+ 45. Kh2 (45. Kf2 {would have been
more precise in order to avoid the exchange of one pair of rooks and bring
the king closer to the center.} Rd4 46. Kf3 Rxb4 47. g4 $18) 45... Rf1 46.
Rh7+ Kg6 47. Rhg7+ Kh6 48. Rh7+ Kg6 {Repeating the moves in a winning position
is a technique very often employed by strong players to show the opponent
who "the boss" is.} 49. Rfg7+ Kf6 50. h4 Ke6 51. Rg4 Kf5 52. Kg3 Re1 53. Rf4+
Ke6 54. h5 Rxe7 55. Rxe7+ Kxe7 56. Kh4 {The position is winning, black pawn's
can't be pushed, while white will soon promote his pawns and end the game.}
b6 57. h6 Rh1+ 58. Kg5 Ke6 59. Kg6 Ke5 60. Rf5+ {Aronian resigned due to the
imminent promotion of white's "h" pawn.} 1-0
GM Ioan-Cristian Chirila
Ioan-Cristian Chirila was born on January 6, 1991 in Bucharest. In 2001
he won the title of Junior Champion of Romania for under ten years, and
the following year he repeated this achievement in the category of under
twelve. In 2006 he won the U16 and in 2009 the U20 championships. He repeatedly
represented Romania at the World and European Junior Championships in
various age categories, achieving the greatest success in 2007 in Kemer,
where he won the title of U16 World Champion.
In 2006 and 2008, the Romanian team participated in the European Junior
Championships U18 years, winning two medals for individual performance:
gold in 2008, on board one, and silver in 2006, on the second board. In
2009 he won the individual European Championships in Budwie, and earned
his GM title. His highest rating (on 1 March 2012) was 2,539.
|
|
Current standings

Pictures by Ray
Morris-Hill
Replay all games of the round
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Schedule and results
Round 1 March 15 at 14:00 |
Levon Aronian
|
½-½
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Boris Gelfand
|
½-½
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
½-½
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Peter Svidler
|
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Playchess commentary: GM Daniel
King
|
|
Round 2 March 16 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Alexander Grischuk
|
½-½
|
Peter Svidler |
Teimour Radjabov
|
1-0
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Levon Aronian
|
1-0
|
Boris Gelfand |
Playchess commentary: GM Chris
Ward
|
|
Round 3 March 17 at 14:00 |
Boris Gelfand
|
0-1
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
0-1
|
Levon Aronian |
Peter Svidler
|
1-0
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
½-½
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Playchess commentary: GM Yasser
Seirawan
|
|
Round 4 March 19 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
1-0
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Teimour Radjabov
|
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Levon Aronian
|
½-½
|
Peter Svidler |
Boris Gelfand
|
½-½
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Playchess commentary: GM Daniel
King
|
|
Round 5 March 20 at 14:00 |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
½-½
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Peter Svidler
|
½-½
|
Boris Gelfand |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
½-½
|
Levon Aronian |
Alexander Grischuk
|
½-½
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Playchess commentary: GM Yasser
Seirawan
|
|
Round 6 March 21 at 14:00 |
Peter Svidler
|
0-1
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
½-½
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Alexander Grischuk
|
½-½
|
Boris Gelfand |
Teimour Radjabov
|
0-1
|
Levon Aronian |
Playchess commentary: GM Chris
Ward
|
|
Round 7 March 23 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
½-½
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Levon Aronian
|
½-½
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Boris Gelfand
|
½-½
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
½-½
|
Peter Svidler |
Playchess commentary: GM Alejandro
Ramirez
|
|
Round 8 March 24 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
½-½
|
Levon Aronian |
Teimour Radjabov
|
0-1
|
Boris Gelfand |
Alexander Grischuk
|
1-0
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
1-0
|
Peter Svidler |
Playchess commentary: GM Alejandro
Ramirez
|
|
Round 9 March 25 at 14:00 |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
½-½
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Peter Svidler
|
½-½
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
1-0
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Boris Gelfand
|
1-0
|
Levon Aronian |
Playchess commentary: GM Maurice
Ashley
|
|
Round 10 March 27 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
-
|
Boris Gelfand |
Levon Aronian
|
-
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Teimour Radjabov
|
-
|
Peter Svidler |
Alexander Grischuk
|
-
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Playchess commentary: GM Yasser
Seirawan
|
|
Round 11 March 28 at 14:00 |
Alexander Grischuk
|
-
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
-
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Peter Svidler
|
-
|
Levon Aronian |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
-
|
Boris Gelfand |
Playchess commentary: GM Chris
Ward
|
|
Round 12 March 29 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
-
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Boris Gelfand
|
-
|
Peter Svidler |
Levon Aronian
|
-
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Teimour Radjabov
|
-
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Playchess commentary: GM Daniel
King
|
|
Round 13 March 31 at 14:00 |
Teimour Radjabov
|
-
|
Magnus Carlsen |
Alexander Grischuk
|
-
|
Levon Aronian |
Vladimir Kramnik
|
-
|
Boris Gelfand |
Peter Svidler
|
-
|
Vassily Ivanchuk |
Playchess commentary: GM Daniel
King
|
|
Round 14 April 1 at 14:00 |
Magnus Carlsen
|
-
|
Peter Svidler |
Vassily Ivanchuk
|
-
|
Vladimir Kramnik |
Boris Gelfand
|
-
|
Alexander Grischuk |
Levon Aronian
|
-
|
Teimour Radjabov |
Playchess commentary: GM Maurice
Ashley
|
|
The games start at 14:00h = 2 p.m. London time = 15:00h European time,
17:00h Moscow, 8 a.m. New York. You can find your regional starting time here.
Note that Britain and Europe switch
to Summer time on March 31, so that the last two rounds will start an hour
earlier for places that do not swich or have already done so (e.g. USA). The
commentary on Playchess begins one hour after the start of the games
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