12/6/2012 – It was a black day for the Brits as they all lost. Anand was the first to score, with a win over Jones, while Carlsen took advantage of a single mistake by Adams to bring his live rating to 2860.5. Nakamura ground down Polgar in a long endgame, but Kramnik’s win over McShane game was the highlight of the round, with a lovely exchange sacrifice and a king chase from h6 to a7. Round five report.
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The 2012 London Chess Classic is taking place in the Olympia
Conference Centre from Saturday, December 1st until Monday, December 10th.
Games start each day in general at 14:00h London time, except for round four
(16:00h) and the final round (12:00h). Time controls are classical forty moves
in two hours, then twenty moves in one hour and thirty minutes for the rest
of the game. A win is counted as three points, a draw as one, and a loss zero.
Tiebreaks: 1) number of wins, 2) number of wins with black, 3) result of the
individual game between the tied players. In the unlikely event that there is
still a tie then: 4) 2 x 15'+2" games, and if necessary 5) Armageddon game:
6'+2" vs 5'+2" with draw odds for black. If there is a tie involving
more than two players then the Rapid games will be conducted as a double round
all play all.
Round five
By Alejandro Ramirez
Round 5:
Thursday, Dec. 6th, 2012, 14:00h
Vladimir Kramnik
1-0
Luke McShane
Gawain Jones
0-1
Vishy Anand
Michael Adams
0-1
Magnus Carlsen
Judit Polgar
0-1
Hikaru Nakamura
Levon Aronian (bye) – assisting
commentary
You cannot ask for any more from a super tournament than what we have seen
in London! What a round! The players came back from their rest day with the
desire to kill! It was a dark day for the English who were absolutely mauled
by the visiting super stars. On top of that we had the matchup Polgar-Nakamura,
two of the most aggressive players to ever be considered Super-GMs. A decisive
result was a guarantee; the only question is who the point would go to.
Polgar-Nakamura 0-1
Hikaru Nakamura’s Archangel Spanish left him with the disadvantage of
facing the two bishops as his quickly developed but somewhat vulnerable dark
square bishop was traded for a knight. However, with some clever knight rerouting
he forced the trade of one of his knights for the light squared bishop, and
a curious opposite colored bishop struggle arose. Some unusually passive play
by Judit Polgar handed the initiative to Hikaru, who never let go. He won a
pawn and held the advantage, but never let go of the attack. After further misplay
from Polgar, Black was able to organize a surprising mating attack and the game
was over.
Kramnik-McShane 1-0
To me the most memorable game of last year was Luke McShane’s demolition
of Aronian in an a6 slav. Vladimir Kramnik chooses a more sedate approach, one
that has been annoying for Black lately. A brilliant exchange sacrifice in the
middle game netted him a powerful position and an array of weaknesses to attack.
Luke McShane tried to hold on, but after another (!) exchange sacrifice his
position was on the verge of collapsing. Kramnik shows his usual technique and
mops up a brilliant point.
Jones-Anand 0-1
This game was rather unfortunate for the young Englishman. An f3 Gruenfeld lands
the players in a murky position, and every move that White plays makes his position
worse and worse, until at move 20 he is simply down a piece. Some liquidation
tactics and White resigned.
Adams-Carlsen 0-1
The tournament’s wrecking ball came close to being stopped today! Michael
Adams held a nice advantage in the middlegame, but he shied from complications
and allowed Magnus Carlsen to equalize. Perhaps hoping to save the half point
as easily as possible, Adams allowed a seemingly harmless endgame. But the combined
powers of Carlsen’s bishop and queen proved to be too much for the stranded
white king. White shed a pawn, and then blundered into a lost K+P endgame. Carlsen
didn’t forgive and continues his destruction of London.
Judit Polgar, who has lost a third game (out of four) in this event
Pictures by Frederic Friedel and Pascal Simon
Daniel King: Highlights of round five
Andrew Martin: Game of the Day (Kramnik vs McShane)
Replay all the games of the round
Standings (London scoring)
Standings (traditional scoring)
Pictures by Pascal Simon for ChessBase
Live video coverage and commentary
The on-demand video coverage with commentary can be seen here
GMs Levon Aronian, Danny King and Nigel Short commenting live on the tournament
web site and on Playchess (free for premium members)
Pairings and results
Round
1: Saturday, Dec. 1st, 2012, 14:00h
Luke McShane
0-1
Magnus Carlsen
Levon Aronian
0-1
Hikaru Nakamura
Vladimir Kramnik
1-0
Judit Polgar
Gawain Jones
0-1
Michael Adams
Vishy Anand (bye) – assisting
commentary
Round
2: Sunday, Dec. 2nd, 2012, 14:00h
Judit Polgar
½-½
Gawain Jones
Hikaru Nakamura
0-1
Vladimir Kramnik
Magnus Carlsen
1-0
Levon Aronian
Vishy Anand
½-½
Luke McShane
Michael Adams (bye) –
assisting commentary
Round
3: Monday, Dec. 3rd, 2012, 14:00h
Levon Aronian
½-½
Vishy Anand
Vladimir Kramnik
½-½
Magnus Carlsen
Gawain Jones
½-½
Hikaru Nakamura
Michael Adams
1-0
Judit Polgar
Luke McShane (bye) – assisting
commentary
Round
4: Tuesday, Dec. 4th, 2012, 16:00h
Hikaru Nakamura
½-½
Michael Adams
Magnus Carlsen
1-0
Gawain Jones
Vishy Anand
½-½
Vladimir Kramnik
Luke McShane
0-1
Levon Aronian
Judit Polgar (bye) – assisting
commentary
Wednesday,
Dec. 5th, 2012Rest day
Round
5: Thursday, Dec. 6th, 2012, 14:00h
Vladimir Kramnik
1-0
Luke McShane
Gawain Jones
0-1
Vishy Anand
Michael Adams
0-1
Magnus Carlsen
Judit Polgar
0-1
Hikaru Nakamura
Levon Aronian (bye) –
assisting commentary
Round
6: Friday, Dec. 7th, 2012, 14:00h
Magnus Carlsen
Judit Polgar
Vishy Anand
Michael Adams
Luke McShane
Gawain Jones
Levon Aronian
Vladimir Kramnik
Hikaru Nakamura (bye) –
assisting commentary
Round
7: Saturday, Dec. 8th, 2012, 14:00h
Gawain Jones
Levon Aronian
Michael Adams
Luke McShane
Judit Polgar
Vishy Anand
Hikaru Nakamura
Magnus Carlsen
Vladimir Kramnik (bye) –
assisting commentary
Round
8: Sunday, Dec. 9th, 2012, 14:00h
Vishy Anand
Hikaru Nakamura
Luke McShane
Judit Polgar
Levon Aronian
Michael Adams
Vladimir Kramnik
Gawain Jones
Magnus Carlsen (bye) –
assisting commentary
Round
9: Monday, Dec. 10th, 2012, 13:00h
Michael Adams
Vladimir Kramnik
Judit Polgar
Levon Aronian
Hikaru Nakamura
Luke McShane
Magnus Carlsen
Vishy Anand
Gawain Jones (bye) – assisting
commentary
The games – except for rounds four and nine – start at 2 p.m.
or 14:00h British time = 15:00h CET, 17:00h Moscow, 7:30 p.m. Chennai, 22:00h
Beijing, 01:00 a.m. Melbourne, 03:00 a.m. Auckland, 6 a.m. San José,
9 a.m. New York. You can check your location here.
Naturally the games will be covered live on the official web site (below) and
on Playchess. The games of round four begin two hours later, those of the final
round two hours earlier.
The games will be broadcast live on the official
web site and on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download a free Playchess client and get
immediate access. Or you can get our latest Fritz
13 program, which includes six months free premium membership to Playchess.
You will learn how Black's dynamic piece activity and structural counterplay more than compensate for White's extra tempo in the colour-reversed setups.
In this course, you’ll learn how to take the initiative against the London and prevent White from comfortably playing their usual system by playing 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 Nh5.
London System Powerbase 2026 is a database and contains in all 11 285 games from Mega 2026 and the Correspondence Database 2026, of which 282 are annotated.
The London System Powerbook 2026 is based on more than 410 000 games or game fragments from different opening moves and ECO codes; what they all have in common is that White plays d4 and Bf4 but does not play c4.
In this course, Grandmaster Elisabeth Pähtz presents the London System, a structured and ambitious approach based on the immediate Bf4, leading to rich and dynamic positions.
Opening videos: Open Spanish (Sipke Ernst) and Classical Sicilian (Nico Zwirs). Endgame Special by Igor Stohl: ‘Short or long side’ – where should the defending king be placed in rook endgames? ‘Lucky bag’ with 35 master analyses.
YOUR EASY ACCESS TO OPENING THEORY: Whether you want to build up a reliable and powerful opening repertoire or find new opening ideas for your existing repertoire, the Opening Encyclopaedia covers the entire opening theory on one product.
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