7/18/2009 – Two top seeds and internationally well-known players, Alexei Shirov and Michael Adams, are accompanied by two players below 2600 on the rating scale: GM Mark Bluvshtein and IM Edward Porper at the top of the table after seven rounds of this event. We bring you extensive annotations of the last three rounds by GM Alexander Shabalov, together with pictorial and video impressions by MonRoi.
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2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship, Edmonton
The Canadian Open is underway in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. This open Swiss
tournament with a Classical time control has attracted a few very strong GMs
such as Alexei Shirov, Ni Hua and Michael Adams. Top Canadian players like GM
Mark Bluvshtein are playing, as well as many other professional and amateur
players. 203 players are competing, all in one section. The playing venue is
a ballroom within a large shopping mall in downtown Edmonton, with restaurants,
a movie theatre and shopping all just minutes away. And with just one game every
day, unlike most Opens in North America, there is plenty of time for entertainment
and tourism.
Standings after seven rounds
Four players are in the lead with 6.0/7 points. Two are top internationals
and seeded one and three in this event; the other two are players below 2600
on the Elo scale – one is just an IM. They are clearly destined for higher
rankings.
#
Name
Rtng
Pts.
1
GM Mark Bluvshtein
2598
6.0
2
GM Alexei Shirov
2748
6.0
3
IM Edward Porper
2510
6.0
4
GM Michael Adams
2699
6.0
5
GM Surya Ganguly
2637
5.5
6
GM Hua Ni
2701
5.5
7
GM Eugene Perelshteyn
2588
5.5
8
GM Anton Kovalyov
2586
5.5
9
IM Dmitry Zilberstein
2437
5.5
10
IM Zhe Quan
2465
5.5
11
FM Theo Hommeles
2412
5.5
12
IM Artiom Samsonkin
2612
5.5
13
FM Jonathan Tayar
2392
5.5
14
IM Irina Krush
2481
5.5
15
GM Victor Mikhalevski
2631
5.0
16
FM Raja Panjwani
2418
5.0
17
GM Xue Zhao
2544
5.0
18
FM Michael Langer
2313
5.0
19
IM Leonid Gerzhoy
2530
5.0
20
IM Joseph Bradford
2459
5.0
21
Nicholas Moloney
2230
5.0
22
Zhichao Li
2264
5.0
23
WIM Alisa Melekhina
2315
5.0
24
FM John C Yoos
2442
5.0
25
Victor Plotkin
2310
5.0
26
FM Ian Mackay
2328
5.0
27
FM Eric Hansen
2472
5.0
28
FM Vladimir Pechenkin
2366
4.5
29
Nicolas Haynes
2290
4.5
30
FM Michael Barron
2357
4.5
31
Keith MacKinnon
2241
4.5
32
Robert J Gardner
2272
4.5
33
Kevin Me
2124
4.5
34
Aman Hambleton
2206
4.5
35
FM Kevin Gentes
2270
4.5
36
Liam Henry
2280
4.5
37
FM Dale Haessel
2276
4.5
38
Paolo Araullo
2047
4.5
39
Alexander Martchenko
2314
4.5
40
Avinaash Sundar
2210
4.5
41
Roy Yearwood
2079
4.5
42
Benedict Daswani
2115
4.5
43
Noam Davies
2214
4.5
44
Edward Tang
2053
4.5
45
Alex Yam
2060
4.5
46
Tanraj S Sohal
2072
4.5
47
Aaron Sequillion
2108
4.5
48
Nandor Tot
1975
4.5
49
Aron Kaptsan
2159
4.5
50
IM Leon Piasetski
2406
4.5
51
Lucas Davies
2244
4.5
52
Jeff Reeve
2314
4.5
53
Sean Rachar
1897
4.5
54
Vitaly Motuz
1905
4.5
55
Dezheng Kong
1890
4.5
56
Omaray Shah
1921
4.5
57
Peter Kalisvaart
2255
4.5
Commentary by GM Alexander Shabalov (highlights)
Alexander
Shabalov (born September 12, 1967) is an American chess grandmaster
of Latvian origin, and like his fellow Latvians Alexei Shirov and Mikhail Tal
he is known for courting complications even at the cost of objective soundness.
He is a four-times winner of the US Championship and currently rated 2580 on
the FIDE ratings list.
Until recently Shabalov regularly lectured chess players of all ages at the
House of Chess, a store that he ran at the Ross Park Mall in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
until it closed in mid-2007. He has been known to play against anyone who shows
up, and to be similarly obliging to autograph-seekers.
In the following we bring you a selection of Shabalov's excellent daily commentary
of the Canadian Open. By clicking the link at the end of each game you can view
the full commentary (including additional games we have given here). Remember
that on our JavaScript replay board you can click on the notation to follow
the moves on the graphic chessboard.
Ni,Hua (2701) - Gerzhoy,Leonid (2530) [B19]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton (4), 14.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
41...c5?? Clear case of suicide. Now black simply gets mated or loses
the rook or lets the pawns run. White is still better, but not by much.
After 41...Rg2 42.Ka4 Rb7 43.Re8 (43.Rc8 Rg6). 42.Ka4 cxb4 43.c5
Rb7 44.c6!+–. Pretty, but 44.Re8 Rc7 45.Rab8 Rc6 46.axb4 was
just as effective. 44...Rf7 45.axb4 Ra2+ 46.Kb3 Ra1 47.b5+ Ka5 48.Rb7 Rb1+
49.Kc3 Rc1+ 50.Kb3 Rb1+ 51.Kc3 Rc1+ 52.Kd4 Rf5 53.Rbxa7+ Kb4 54.Ra4+ Kb3 55.Ra3+
Kb2 56.Ra2+ Kb3 57.R8a3+ Kb4 58.Ra4+ Kb3 59.R2a3+ Kb2 60.Rc4 Rd1+ 61.Kxe4 Rg5
62.Raa4 Rd8 63.c7 Re8+ 64.Kd4 Kb3 65.b6 Rb5 66.Rcb4+ Rxb4+ 67.Rxb4+ Kxb4 68.b7
1-0. [Click to replay the full
analysis]
Davies,Noam (2214) - Adams,Michael (2699) [C95]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton (4), 14.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
30...Nd4! Nice shot, which has more psychological than objective value.
30...cxb3 31.Naxb3 Na4 32.c4 Nc3 33.Rb2 bxc4-/+. 31.b4? White
gets overwhelmed by the amount of threats. 31.Rc1-/+ was still holding
material even. 31...Nxc2 32.Bxc5 Rxc5 33.Qxc5 Qxc5+ 34.bxc5 Nxa1 35.Rxa1
Rxd2 36.c6 Rd8 37.Nb7 Re8 38.Ra7 Bf8 39.c7 Rc8 0-1. [Click
to replay the full analysis]
Hansen,Eric (2472) - Mikhalevski,Victor (2631) [C90]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton (4), 14.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
49.Nh4? The endgame must be winning for black, but not in seven moves.
[49.h3] 49...Ne5+ 50.Kc3 b4+ 51.Kb3 Kd4 52.Kxb4 Kxe4 53.g3 g5 54.Ng2
Nd3+ 55.Kc3 Kf3 56.Kxd3 Kxg2 0-1. [Click
to replay the full analysis]
Mulyar,Michael (2440) - Bluvshtein,Mark (2598) [B66]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton (4), 14.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
24.Rf3? It takes White two blunders in a row to throw the game away
when he was one step away from the victory. [24.Bh5 Qh4 25.Rf5!! exf5
26.Qxe8+ Kc7 27.Nd5+ Kb7 28.Qxe7+ Qxe7 29.Nxe7+-] 24...e4 25.Bh5? 25.Bxe6
Qc5 26.Rf1 Rc7 worst is over for Black, but no more than that. 25...Kc7!
This particular move order must have been missed by White. His queen gets
overloaded and he suffers heavy material losses. 26.Qxh7 Kb6! 0-1. [Click
to replay the full analysis]
Shirov,Alexei (2748) - Panjwani,Raja (2418) [C67]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton (5), 15.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
44.Kh4. Stepping right into the checkmate, but 44.Kg2 Kxb6
45.h4 Bg4 is completely lost as well. 44...f3+ 45.Kh5 Be8+ 46.g6 Be7 47.Kh6
Bf6 and 48.Kh7 Rh4+ 49.Kg8 Rh8 mate. 0-1. [Click
to replay the full analysis]
Ganguly,Surya (2637) - Hommeles,Theo (2412) [B67]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton Canada (6), 16.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
30...Bxd6? A blunder. After 30...Kd7 31.Ba5 Rxc3 32.Bxb4 Re3
33.c4 White retains the initiative,but position is still very unclear. 31.Rxd6
Rxc3 32.Ba5 Rxc2 33.Rd8+ 1-0. [Click
to replay the full analysis]
Zhao,Xue (2544) - MacKinnon,Keith (2241) [A58]
2009 Canadian Open Chess Championship Edmonton Canada (6), 16.07.2009 [Alexander
Shabalov]
19.Ne3. Marin gives +/- here in his comments to a Van Wely-Carlsen
game and also suggests more energetic way: 19.a5 Nd7 (19...Qxa5?
20.Ra1+-) 20.b4!? cxb4 21.Nxb4 Qxa5 22.Nc6 Bxc6 (22...Qa6 23.Bf1+-)
23.dxc6 Bxc3 24.Bxc3 Qxc3 25.Rc1 Qe5 26.cxd7 with attack. 19...exd5 20.Ncxd5
Ncxd5 21.exd5 Qd3 22.Rc1 Rfe8. 22...Nxd5 won't help because of 23.Nc4+–.
23.Bc3! After these exchanges White's position is simply winning. 23...Qxd1
24.Rexd1 Bxc3 25.Rxc3 Ra5 26.Bf1 Ba6 27.Bxa6 Rxa6 28.f3 Rb8 29.Ra1 Kf8 30.Kf2
Ke7 31.g4 h6 32.h4 Kd7 33.f4 c4 34.a5 cxb3 35.Rxb3 Rba8 36.Re1! Nc8 37.Rb7+
1-0. [Click to replay the full
analysis]
Pictures and videos
Top seed and one of the four leaders in the Canadian Open: Alexei Shirov
Sharing the 6.0/7 lead with Shirov: British GM Michael Adams
Adams giving a simultaneous exhibition in Canada
An important game from round five (draw in 38 moves)
Game analysis with audience paticipation: Lecture with Leon Piasetski
Photos Tracy Kolenchuk and Zeljka Malobabic of MonRoi
Video impressions of the Canadian Open by Zeljka Malobabic
The games are being broadcast live on the official web site and a selection
on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download
the free PGN reader ChessBase Light, which gives you immediate access.
You can also use the program to read, replay and analyse the PGN games.
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