6/17/2013 – Nakamura played a convincing game against Caruana. A novel idea in the Najdorf was unsuccessfully dealt with by the Italian, and now Hikaru jumps to clear first place after losing his first game. Mamedyarov survived Karjakin's extra material and retains second, along with Gelfand who solidly held Anand. GM Analysis, pictures and standings.
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The Eighth International Tal Memorial Chess Tournament is being held from
June, 13 to 24, 2013, with a rest days on June 16 and June 20. The rounds generally start
at 15:00h (=3 p.m.) Moscow time, with the first round starting at 6 p.m.
and the final round at 1 p.m. Accommodation is in the Ritz-Carlton, Moscow,
Tverskaya str. 3, while the event takes place in the in New Technologies
Center Digital October, in Moscow. The tournament
has ten invited players and is a round robin with time controls of one hour
and 40 minutes for the first 40 moves, followed by 50 minutes for next 20
moves and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of
30 seconds for each move starting from move one. Full information on special
rules, regulation, prize money, etc. can be found in our
initial report.
Round four report
Round 04 – June 17 2013, 15:00h
Alexander Morozevich
2760
½-½
Vladimir Kramnik
2803
Sergey Karjakin
2782
½-½
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
2753
Fabiano Caruana
2774
0-1
Hikaru Nakamura
2784
Dmitry Andreikin
2713
½-½
Magnus Carlsen
2864
Vishy Anand
2786
½-½
Boris Gelfand
2755
Legendary grandmaster Evgeny Bareev was a guest of honor today.
What does one do when the monsters play on stage? Well, play the Dutch in blitz!
It's all fun and games until your king is stuck in the center...
Andreikin, Dmitry - Carlsen, Magnus ½-½
Andreikin's reverse Sicilian set-up was unorthodox to say the least. However thanks to an early trick threatening checkmate he obtained a slight but nagging edge by virtue of some pressure against his opponent's queenside. Andreikin's follow-up was certainly not the most ambitious as he allowed Carlsen to trade some pieces and even forced him to lock up the kingside which sealed a completely drawn game.
Andreikin tried something unusual, but couldn't break Carlsen's position.
Carlsen was given no chances to complicate the game and push for a win.
Anand, Vishy - Gelfand, Boris ½-½
Just like in the World Championship match, Gelfand relies on his Sveshnikov Sicilian to defend against 1. e4. Anand was able to obtain a small edge with a Rossolimmo set-up, but Black's position remained very solid and after a couple of inexact moves by the World Champion, Gelfand was able simplify into an easily defensible rook endgame and the draw was pact soon afterwards.
Gelfand continues to be extremely solid with the black pieces, and had very few problems holding today against Anand.
I think we have done this before... Gelfand and Anand have played 19 times within the last year in rapid or slower time controls.
Caruana, Fabiano - Nakamura, Hikaru 0-1
The American's handling of the Najdorf was unique and powerful. In the h5 variation of the English attack, Nakamura decided to take the invading knight on d5 with his own knight as opposed to his e6 bishop, an unusual choice. He continued with what seemed like a strange check on h4 which forced Caruana to slightly weaken his kingside. The Italian's queenside response did not yield as much as he wanted, and Nakamura's kingside pressure slowly became uncomfortable for White. Eventually, White's king was impossible to defend and he had to shed material, which at the end still did not safe his king.
Nakamura came well prepared to the game, had original and fresh ideas and takes the lead in the event.
GM Daniel King provides video analysis of Caruana vs Nakamura
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. f3 e5 7. Nb3 Be6 8. Be3
h5 9. Qd2 Nbd7 10. Nd5 Nxd5 (10... Bxd5 11. exd5 g6 12. Be2 Qc7 $5 13. c4 a5 $5
{Had already cost a full point for Caruana earlier this year, against
Dominguez in the Thessaloniki Grand Prix, but the Italian did have a good
position out of the opening in that game.}) 11. exd5 Bf5 12. Be2 Rc8 (12... Be7
13. O-O h4 14. Na5 Qc7 15. c4 {was a complex game that Leko eventually won in
Leko-Gelfand 2009}) 13. Rc1 Qh4+ $5 {Hikaru's idea is quite interesting. g3 is
going to prove an attackable weakness which somehow justifies h5 in the set-up,
a move that usually is just a weakening on the kingside once White has castled
on that flank.} 14. g3 (14. Bf2 Qf6 15. O-O {has it's own drawbacks as the
bishop would like to have control over g5.}) 14... Qf6 15. O-O Be7 16. Na5{This is a common move, but usually it forces Black's queen to defend the b7
pawn. With the rook on c7 it feels that Black's position is comfortable enough.
} 16...Rc7
17. Bd3 O-O 18. c4 Bxd3 19. Qxd3 Re8 20. b4 Bf8 21. Rce1 g6 22. Qd2 Qf5 23.
a4 Nf6 24. Bb6 (24. c5 h4 (24... dxc5 25. d6 Rd7 26. bxc5 b6 27. cxb6 Bxd6 {is
unacceptable for Black.}) 25. gxh4 $5 {would have been very messy. It's
unclear why Caruana kept refraining from pushing his pawn to c5.}) 24... Rcc8
25. f4 e4 26. Bd4 Rc7 27. h3 $6 {White starts to weaken his kingside
unnecessarily.} Bg7 28. Qg2 b5 $1 {Powerful and opportunistic. White has
refrained from advancing on the queenside for so long, and has dedicated so
many resources to preventing the e4 pawn from advancing and defending the
kingside, that now his structure is collapsing with a simple pawn break.} 29.
axb5 axb5 30. Bxf6 Bxf6 31. g4 (31. cxb5 Qxd5 {is hopeless for White as
everything that could go wrong in the position has gone wrong. Black has the
better structure, the better minor piece, the better rook activity, the safer
king, the better endgames and White can pretty much resign.}) 31... hxg4 32.
hxg4 Bd4+ 33. Kh2 Qf6 34. Nc6 Bb6 35. g5 Qf5 {Interestingly enough all of
Hikaru's moves are easy to find and natural. This is due that when you obtain
a strong position, the flow of the game comes easily to the player with the
positional advantage.} 36. c5 (36. Qh3 bxc4 37. Qxf5 gxf5 38. Rc1 Kg7 39. Rxc4
f6 {is a terrible position for White, especially because of the exposed
position of his king, but it was the least bad option.}) 36... dxc5 37. Ne5
cxb4 38. d6 Rc3 39. Rxe4 Kg7 {White's getting checkmated. A convincing showing
by Nakamura.} 0-1
Karjakin, Sergey - Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar ½-½
Mamedyarov sacrificed two pawns almost immediately out of the opening, and despite his activity any claims for full compensation were highly debatable. Karjakin returned one of the pawns to consolidate his position, but unfortunately for him he was unable to play precise moves after that. He retained the pawn into a difficult to win rook endgame which Mamedyarov was able to hold.
Karjakin had good winning chances today, but alas could not convert.
Mamedyarov survived and quietly moves into a tie for 2nd-3rd.
Morozevich, Alexander - Kramnik, Vladimir ½-½
Kramnik's handling of the Scotch allowed him to obtain a perfectly acceptable position straight out of the opening. Morozevich used plenty of his creativity to try to muddy the position. He eventually obtained a superior pawn structure but Black's passed e-pawn was able to create enough counterplay and forced White to give a perpetual.
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