Winning starts with what you know
The new version 18 offers completely new possibilities for chess training and analysis: playing style analysis, search for strategic themes, access to 6 billion Lichess games, player preparation by matching Lichess games, download Chess.com games with built-in API, built-in cloud engine and much more.
The 7th International Open of Corsica took place from October 29 to November 3, 2003, in Bastia, with 350 players from 40 countries competing. The Masters section consisted of stars like Anand, Topalov, Shirov, Gelfand, Karpov and Radjabov. Top Bulgarian GM Veselin Topalov progressed to the final by beating Motylev, Gurevich and Shirov; Anand did it by overcoming Cebalo, Lautier and Grischuk.
In the final between Anand and Topalov the two rapid games, and then the two accellerated tiebreak games 10 minutes + 5 seconds) were all drawn, so it was down to blitz. Anand took both the 5 minute + 5 second games to clinch the title.
This is the fourth year in succession that Anand has won Corsica, making him a candidate for the second-most famous son of the French island. Well, sort of. Maybe we are just inspired by the picture some Photoshop freak made to celebrate Anand's victory. Vishy Anand stood to win €20,000 for his first place, Topalov €12,000 for coming second. Places 3 and 4 got €7,000 each, 5 thru 8 €2,500 each, and 9 thru 16 €1,500 each. That comes to a cool €70,000 prize fund. Here are all the winners of the International Open of Corsica: 1997 Pavel Tregubov (Russia) |
Levon Aronian (Armenia) and Teimour Radjabov (Azerbaijan) enjoying some blitz
after being knocked out in the first round of the tournament.
Radjabov taking a stroll along the harbour front of Bastia
A "match with personnalities" was played between two comic artists
from Corsica, Pido and Tzek, assisted by Mikhail Gurevitch and Vladislav Tkatchiev
Anatoly Karpov (right) with an old friend: Michel Noir, the former Mayor of
Lyon, who organised the Wold Championship match Kasparov-Karpov in 1990
Alexei Shirov and Vladislav Tkachiev battled it out for six nerve-racking games.
In the last one Tkachiev needed a win to stay in the race. In fact he reached
a winning position (see our previous
report)
Then the shock: Shirov, who had two seconds on his clock, gives a desperate
check with his knight. Instead of moving his king out of check, Tkachiev moves
his rook, which is illegal. In the picture arbiters Eric Mouret and
Stephane Escaffre discuss the matter with the horrified Tkachiev, who then gracefully
accepts the loss and congratulates his opponent.
In the semifinal Shirov went down in a blaze to Veselin Topalov
In the other semifinal Alex Grischuk was outplayed by Vishy Anand
The two finalists at the start of a game
Let the game begin – but the first four all ended in hard-fought draws
There were 800 children from the Schools of Bastia in the hall during the final.
The only adult in the picture is Silvio Danailov, the manager of Veselin Topalov
and Ruslan Ponomariov. In case you didn't know: Crosica has 4000 registered
chess players in a population of of 250,000. In every school in Corsica the
students receive a chess lesson each week, at least one hour.
© For all photographs: Jean-Michel Péchiné, Europe Echecs.