
The 13th European Individual Championship is taking place in Plovdiv, Bulgaria,
from March 20th to 31st, 2012. The rate of play is 90 minutes for 40 moves,
plus 30 minutes for the rest of the game with an increment of 30 seconds per
move, starting from move one. The total prize fund is 100,000 Euros, with the
top three taking 14,000, 11,000 and 9,000 Euros respectively.
Round seven – Sergei Azarov in the sole lead
Sergei Azarov (2667, BLR), ranked 32 in the starting list, became the sole
leader with 6.0/7 points after beating Arkadij Naiditsch (2702, GER), who played
inaccurately in the middle game and his position was already lost on move 30.
Azarov chose a slower but secure continuation and won the game in 73 moves.
Sergei Azarov at the start of a very important game against Arkadij Naiditsch
The rest of the top board games were drawn. The struggles have become more
intense, which is evidenced by the fact that not a single game ended in less
than two hours, while most of the draws were made after more than four hours
of play. Second seed Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (2752, AZE) woke up from his “draw-sleep”
with a quick win after the rest day. He beat Bulgarian youngster GM Grigor Grigorov
(2489, BUL) in 32 moves and 2.5 hours of play. Also David Navara (2700, CZE)
scored a clean win against Romanian Vlad-Cristian Jianu (2497, ROU).
Fourth seed, 18-year-old Dutchman Anish Giri (2717, NED) is still having a
terrible time in this tournament. He suffered his third loss today, this time
with the white pieces against Hungarian Tamas Fodor (2482, HUN). His rating
performance is 2438 and he stands to lose 25 point on the FIDE list. The other
prodigy, 15-year-old Illya Nyzhnyk (2585, UKR), also lost his game, against
Ferenc Berkes (2682, HUN) and remained at 4.0/7 with a 2671. 13-year-old Bulgarian
youngster Yavor Todorov (2029) defeated Serbian hopeful, 18-year-old FM Novak
Cabarkapa (2314) in two hours.
Guest of the round was the Consul General of Turkey in Plovdiv, Ramis Shen,
who came to support the ten Turkish participants in the European Championship.
This visit was clearly inspiring for the young Turkish chess talents: European
U14 champion Cemil Can Ali Marandi (2315, TUR) won against Andreas Diermair
(2416, AUT), while another 14-year-old youngster, Vahap Sanal (2286, TUR) beat
defeated another Austrian, Martin Neubauer, rated 2413.
Round eight – Mamedyarov defaulted for ten second delay
They say that life imitates art and assuredly today’s round illustrated
this to the extreme as irony befitting a Shakespearian play unfolded. After
round six’s Theatre of the Absurd, one would have thought the discussion
on zero-tolerance to be over, but in fact it merely set the stage for what was
to follow.
Round seven saw the elite Azeri player Shakhriyar Mamedyarov chalk up a quick
and efficient win, and climb out of the hole he seemed to have fallen in. It
was such that the trainer of the Azeri national team, Vladimir Tukmakov, felt
this might be the start of Shakhriyar’s impending rise to the top, as
this would give him the boost of confidence he had needed. In a live interview
granted to Chess-News, he explained
“I hope that this victory – a quick victory – will serve
as a watershed between the first and second part of the tournament.”

Azeri trainer Vladimir Tukmaov during the interview, which you
can read and listen to (in Russian) on this Chess-News
page
Tukmakov also had strong words on the Georgian
fiasco, and the zero-tolerance rule per se, a rule that mandates player
to be seated at the board when the starting gong sounds – or forfeit the
game. “I think its stupid because from time to time and in many cases,
regardless of the participants, for some objective reasons, such incidents happen
here that happened in, say, in the sixth round, when the six players simultaneously
received zeros. Some of these six players held very high positions. And this
incident greatly affected the tournament. The argument that if an athlete is
absent at the start in other sports means disqualification does not work. Because
in other sports, the athletes are also not given an allotted time. In general,
it's silly to compare chess with other sports.” He further added: “When
a man (IM Shota Azaladze) is having possibly the tournament of his life, then
to end such a high note in this basest possible way, it is, I think, just wrong.”
Tukmakov made it clear that he supported a professional attitude in chess,
and was not dismissive of proper behavior. When asked about the dress code,
he was supportive to avoid excesses, but worried that trying to define it too
closely might allow a narrow-minded arbiter to find any reason to punish a player
not abiding to the rules. There should always be room for common sense.

Round eight showed how direly some room for common sense was needed, and it
could not have been more ironic. IM Shota Azaladze, who had drawn his round
seven game, continued with a 2800+ performance, and was paired against….
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (picture above). The result? 1-0 for the Georgian player.
As the Azeri wrote in his Twitter, he arrived about ten seconds late –
the tournament bulletin claims "more than a minute" – for a
four to eight hour game, and was promptly forfeited. Simply appalling.
Other games: tenth seed Malakhov Vladimir (2705, RUS) defeated Sergei Azarov
(2667, BLR) to go into pole position on the scoreboard. Maxim Matlakov (2632,
RUS) beat Viktor Bologan (2687, MDA) and Vladimir Akopyan (2684, ARM) defeated
Dennis Hismatulin (2656, RUS). All three wins were with the white pieces, and
all three winners are now leading with 6.5/8 points. GM Alejandro Ramirez has
annotated the Matlakov-Bologan game below.

We need to mention the black piece win of 255th seed, 15-year-old FM Kirill
Alekseenko of Russia (picture above), rated 2367, against fellow countryman
GM Boris Savchenko, rated 2580. Alekseenko has been playing at a 2692 performance
level and stands to gain 49 points from it for the next FIDE rating list.
Here's an interesting game from round eight, annotated by GM Alejandro
Ramirez.

[Event "European Individual Championship"]
[Site "Internet Chess Club"]
[Date "2012.03.28"]
[Round "8"]
[White "Matlakov, Maksim"]
[Black "Bologan, Viktor"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D31"]
[WhiteElo "2632"]
[BlackElo "2687"]
[Annotator "Ramirez,Alejandro"]
[PlyCount "87"]
[EventDate "2012.??.??"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Nf3 dxc4 5. a4 e6 6. e4 (6. e3 c5 7. Bxc4 Nc6
8. O-O {is the way Kasimdzhanov recommends to play in his 'Beat the Slav' DVD
that came out recently. The text move is also very interesting.}) 6... Bb4 7.
e5 Nd5 8. Bd2 b5 9. axb5 Bxc3 10. bxc3 cxb5 {Although this position
specifically hasn't been reached all that many times, it does have a very
common structure. Black is up a pawn, but he has less space in the center and
kingside. However his position is solid and he has a strong N on d5. Unlike
many of these setups, though, he has already lost the dark squared bishop,
which will cause him much pain later.} 11. Ng5 h6 12. Qh5 (12. Ne4 O-O 13. Nd6
{is the computer recommendation but it seems premature to me. Black could
even consider striking back at the center with f6!?}) 12... O-O 13. Ne4 Nc6 14.
h4 $5 {It's always nice to have a game start out like this. You just know
fireworks are in store!} f5 15. Nd6 Bd7 16. Rh3 {A logical move. I will not
delve into the complications and many of the variations that could've arrived
in this game - simply because I need more time to do them. You will be able
to find the game fully annotated later on CBM, however.} (16. Bxh6 $5 {was
already wild.}) 16... Be8 17. Qd1 Qe7 18. g4 Rd8 {Preparing the sacrifice on
d6? I'm guessing that was the reason for this move, but f4 directly seemed
better, sealing off the kingside for now.} 19. g5 f4 (19... h5 $2 20. Nxb5 Nxe5
21. dxe5 Bxb5 22. Qxh5 $16 {is an important detail}) 20. gxh6 gxh6 21. Nxb5
Nxe5 22. Rxa7 Qf6 23. Na3 Nd3+ 24. Rxd3 $5 {Sacrificing the exchange to obtain
a nagging pressure agains many squares around the king. It's hard to say if
this is entirely sound.} cxd3 25. Bxd3 Qxh4 26. Qf3 Rf7 27. Rxf7 Bxf7 28. c4 {
Black has managed to trade off some pieces, but dangers remain. His king is
exposed and his activity seems to not be the best just yet, however he holds
the upper hand as his material should eventually show.} Ne3 $5 {Cool, but not
best.} (28... Bh5 $1 {Wins, but I'm not going to get into it.}) 29. Qe4 Nf5 30.
Nc2 Rb8 31. Bxf4 Rb1+ 32. Kd2 Qxf2+ 33. Kc3 {With both kings exposed and the
clocks ticking, this game can still go either way. Material count is not as
important as material activity anymore, since the only important factor is who
is going to checkmate who first.} Kh7 34. Be5 Rd1 35. Be2 Rc1 36. Bd3 h5 $4 {
The losing move.} (36... Rd1 {keeps things interesting.} 37. Qe3 $1 $13 {I
don't think anyone would play this with their flags hanging.} (37. Qa8 $2 Qd2+
38. Kb2 Qxd3 $17 {and Qh8+ is not quite mate.})) 37. Qa8 {Black is
surprisingly helpless against this geometrical maneouver.} Kh6 (37... Bg8 38.
Qf8 $1 {White is threatening to take on f5 and then mate on g7, and Qe1+ leads
nowhere. Amazing!} Qe1+ 39. Kb3 Rb1+ 40. Ka2 $18 {And Black doesn't even have
a perpetual.}) 38. Qf8+ Kg5 39. Qxf7 {The material is now in Whtie's favor,
but more than that - his attack is lethal.} Qe1+ 40. Kb3 Rb1+ 41. Ka2 Qc1 42.
d5 Rb6 43. Qg8+ Kh6 44. Qf8+ {Not the most precise game ever played, but
intriguing and heart stopping. Look forward to this game being fully
annotated in ChessBase Magazine!} 1-0
Top rankings after round eight
Remaining schedule + Playchess commentary
After every round there will be special wrap-up commentary on Playchess.
This starts at 20:00h Server time (= CET, = , 22:00h Moscow, 19:00h London,
3 p.m. New York, 12:00 noon California, 03:00h Beijing, 00:30h New Delhi –
you can find the time in your location here).
Commentary is in English.
Day |
Date |
Time |
Program |
Playchess commentary |
Thursday |
March 29 |
15:00 |
Round 9 |
Robert Ris |
Friday |
March 30 |
15:00 |
Round 10 |
Robert Ris |
Saturday |
March 31 |
13:00 |
Round 11 |
Valeri Lilov |
Saturday |
March 31 |
20:00 |
Closing |
|
Sunday |
April 01 |
Departure |
|
Links
Some of the games are being broadcast live on the official web site and
some on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download a free Playchess client there
and get immediate access. You can also use ChessBase
11 or any of our Fritz
compatible chess programs. |
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