
The 18th annual Sigeman & Co Chess Tournament, organised by the Limhamn
Chess Club, took place in the classical Hipp Theater in central Malmo. As in
the previous year, six players faced each other in a round-robin tournament.
Round four results
Hammer, Jon Ludvig |
2610 |
Hillarp Persson, Tiger |
2542 |
1-0 |
Cramling, Pia |
2536 |
Grandelius, Nils |
2476 |
½-½ |
Hector, Jonny |
2609 |
Giri, Anish |
2642 |
½-½ |

Swedish GM Pia Cramling with her first draw in this event
In round four Pia Cramling made her first draw in this tournament, with a repetition
after 28 moves. Anish Giri, who was leading with 3.0/3 points, took an 18-move
Four Knighs draw against GM Jonny Hector.
Meanwhile Giri's main rival, 19-year-old Jon Ludvig Hammer, outplayed GM Tiger
Hillarp Persson on the white side of a Sicilian Kan to catch the 15-year-old
Dutch Champion on the scoretable. At the end of the day both the youngsters
lay a full point in front of the field, with 3.5/4 points each. Showdown in
the final round.
Round five results
Grandelius, Nils |
2476 |
Hector, Jonny |
2609 |
1-0 |
Hillarp Persson, Tiger |
2542 |
Cramling, Pia |
2536 |
1-0 |
Giri, Anish |
2642 |
Hammer, Jon Ludvig |
2610 |
1-0 |
Nils Grandelius, second-youngest player in this event, profited from some inaccuracies
by Jonny Hector – especially the tactical oversight 42...g5? – to
finish a full piece up in the endgame. But it took the 16-year-old Swedish IM
over 50 moves to grind down his GM opponent.

The above diagrams give you a general idea of how much maneuvering Grandelius
had to do in order to chalk up his first win in this tournament.

Nils Grandelius with a 119-move victory in round five
GM Tiger Hillarp Persson, who had shared the table's end with his compatriot
GM Pia Cramling – both had 0.5/4 points – won his first game and
relegated the only female player in the tournament to last place.

Jon Ludvig Hammer fighting for first place in round five
The game of the day and the tournament was, of course, Anish Giri vs Jon Ludvig
Hammer battling it out for first place. The younger player decided the issue
with a convincing victory. Immediately after the game he chatted with us by
phone – his remarks are given in the following game notation.

Anish Giri analysing his final round win over Jon Ludvig Hammer
Giri,A (2642) - Hammer,J (2610) [E06]
18th Sigeman & Co Malmo SWE (5), 30.05.2010
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 d5 4.g3 Be7 5.Bg2 0-0 6.0-0 dxc4 7.Qc2 a6 8.Qxc4
b5 9.Qc2 Bb7 10.Bd2 Bd6 11.Re1 Be4 12.Qc1 Bb7 13.Qc2 Be4 14.Qc1 Bb7 15.Bg5 Nbd7
16.Nbd2 h6 17.Bxf6 Nxf6 18.Nb3 Rc8 19.Rd1 Bd5 20.Ne1
Anish Giri: "I think I was better prepared than my opponent with this
move." 20...Qe7 21.Nd3 Bxb3 22.axb3 c5. Giri: "Not
a bad choice by Jon Ludvig." 23.dxc5 Bxc5 24.Nxc5
24...Qxc5? Anish: "He definitely should have taken with
the rook." 25.Bb7! "Perhaps he missed this move."
25...Qxc1 26.Rdxc1 Rxc1+ 27.Rxc1 Rb8
28.Bxa6! "I had to make sure my bishop would not be trapped.
I thought for a long time about it, and decided that with Rc8+! and Ra8 I would
be able to get it out." 28...Rb6 29.Rc8+ Kh7 30.Ra8 Ne4 31.Bc8
g6 32.Ra7 Kg7 33.Rc7 Kf8 34.Bd7 h5 35.b4 g5 36.f3 Nd6 37.Kf2 Ra6
38.Rc5. "I was counting on 38.Rc6 thinking that the bishop-knight
ending was won. However then I realized it wasn't winning, or at least not easily,
so I had to play Rc5." 38...Ra2 "Now I was winning.
If he had played 38...Ra4 39.Bxb5 Rxb4 40.Bd3 f5! I would be a pawn up and thought
I had a winning plan of Ke1-d2 etc. But he has e5! and e4 quickly, so he should
hold." 39.Bxb5 h4 40.b3 hxg3+ 41.hxg3 g4 42.Ba4 gxf3 43.Kxf3 Rd2
44.Rc7 Nf5 45.b5 Rd6 46.g4 Ne7 47.Rc2 Rb6 48.Ke4 Ke8 49.Kd4 Rb8 50.Ke5 Nd5 51.e4
Ne7 52.Rc7 Rb6 53.Kd4 Kd8 54.Rxe7 Kxe7 55.Kc5 Rb8 56.b6 Kd8 57.e5 Rc8+ 58.Bc6
Rb8 59.b4 Kc8 60.b5 1-0. [Click
to replay]
Final standings

Anish Giri, second-youngest grandmaster in the world (the youngest, we are
reminded by our readers, is currently Richárd
Rapport) finished the event a full point ahead of his nearest rival and
with a startling 2936 performance. That should give him a bunch of extra points
on the next FIDE ratings list. Congratulations on this plucky young lad who
is fast becoming a new star on the chess firmament.
Final player portrait

GM Tiger Hillarp Persson, Sweden (2542)
Malmo-based Tiger Hillarp Persson is a frequent participant in the Sigeman
Chess Tournament. After his convincing victory in 2008, the home audience had
high expectations on him in last year's tournament, but he had a bad run and
finished second to last. But Tiger is a fighter with lots of energy, which he
combines with a knack for finding original ideas at the board. He also has an
interesting opening repertoire. This interest in opening strategies has also
led him to write about them. His book "Tiger's Modern", where he investigates
his pet opening the Modern Defense, is widely seen as the reference work for
this opening system. Tiger makee his ninth start in the Sigeman Chess Tournament.
Photos by Calle Erlandsson
Links
The games were broadcast live on the official web site and with the kind
cooperation of the organisers 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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