
FIDE World Chess Championship Anand-Carlsen 2013
The FIDE World Chess Championship match between defending champion Viswanathan Anand and his challenger world number one Magnus Carlsen is taking place from November 9 to 28 2013 in the the Hyatt Regency, Chennai, India. The match is over twelve games, with time controls of 120 minutes for the first 40 moves, 60 minutes for the next 20 moves and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of 30 seconds per move starting from move 61. The games start at 3:00 p.m. Indian Time, which is 4:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (New York), 10:30h Central European Time (Paris), 1:30 p.m. Moscow Standard Time. Find your local time here.
Round six report

Though they shook hands, there is a distinct lack of eye-contact
The opening was a solid, if uninspiring Spanish, that seemed to hold no magic. Ideas and plans were considered by grandmaster commentators to develop an advantage for White, or counterchances for Black, but as the number of pieces dropped, so did the enthusiasm, and a draw seemed in order.

Top players are all following and commenting the games

The opening did not seem to hold much, but that is just the way Carlsen likes it
When Magnus Carlsen avoided the queen exchange with 24…Qe7 as opposed to the standard 24…Qe6, GM Daniel King laughed, saying he was crazy, not because there was something inherently wrong with the move, but because it could only indicate he still hoped to try to win. This seemed borderline Never Never Land, since at move 35, when asked what Black could do to promote his ambitions, both GM Daniel King and GM Alejandro Ramirez admitted they had no clue, and if the world number one had a way, it was outside their ability to even conceive it.
Just when Black seemed out of ways to improve or increase the pressure, the world champion stunned the fans and pundits alike with 38.Qg3, effectively dropping a pawn, though forcing a rook endgame. As the surprise subsided, it became clear that the adage “all rook endgames are drawn” still applied here, though a new contest arose: what new ways would the challenger find to keep the game alive? It has become clear he has a fantastic talent for finding means to conjure up trouble for his opponents in even the driest and most innocuous positions.
Anand chose to sacrifice his h-pawn to shatter Black’s structure and neutralize any rolling pawn front he might have feared. In return, Carlsen gave back his b-pawn to activate his rook and king, playing for his last trap. When he played 59…f4, it was a bit of a shock for Vishy, as he admitted in the press conference, believing his position to be lost. It is perhaps this lapse in judgment, coupled by frayed nerves that has failed him these last two games.

The Norwegian box, instants before Magnus scored his second win (@lladini)
In game five, despite being with his back against the wall, he still held a theoretical draw in his hands up until move 51, and had he played 51…Re2! the entire match situation might have been different. Instead he rushed 51…Ke6? with very little thought, either believing he was already lost and nothing could change it, or wishing to end the nervous tension that had reached torturous proportions.
One gets the impression a similar thing happened today, since 59…f4 is not winning yet, though it does force White to come up with an only move: 60.b4! which still holds the draw. Instead, Vishy Anand spent an unusually short amount of time, rushing out 60.Ra4? and costing him the game.
Replay and check the LiveBook here |
Please, wait...
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.d3 Bc5 5.c3 0-0 6.0-0 Re8 7.Re1 a6 8.Ba4 b5 9.Bb3 d6 10.Bg5 Be6 11.Nbd2 h6 12.Bh4 Bxb3 13.axb3 Nb8 14.h3 Nbd7 15.Nh2 Qe7 16.Ndf1 Bb6 17.Ne3 Qe6 18.b4 a5 19.bxa5 Bxa5 20.Nhg4 Bb6 21.Bxf6 Nxf6 22.Nxf6+ Qxf6 23.Qg4 Bxe3 24.fxe3 Qe7 25.Rf1 c5 26.Kh2 c4 27.d4 Rxa1 28.Rxa1 Qb7 29.Rd1 Qc6 30.Qf5 exd4 31.Rxd4 Re5 32.Qf3 Qc7 33.Kh1 Qe7 34.Qg4 Kh7 35.Qf4 g6 36.Kh2 Kg7 37.Qf3 Re6 38.Qg3 Rxe4 39.Qxd6 Rxe3 40.Qxe7 Rxe7 41.Rd5 Rb7 42.Rd6 f6 43.h4 Kf7 44.h5 gxh5 45.Rd5 Kg6 46.Kg3 Rb6 47.Rc5 f5 48.Kh4 Re6 49.Rxb5 Re4+ 50.Kh3 Kg5 51.Rb8 h4 52.Rg8+ Kh5 53.Rf8 Rf4 54.Rc8 Rg4 55.Rf8 Rg3+ 56.Kh2 Kg5 57.Rg8+ Kf4 58.Rc8 Ke3 59.Rxc4 f4 60.Ra4? 60.b4! h3 61.gxh3 Rg5 61...Rg6 62.Rc7 f3 63.Re7+ Kd2 64.b5 Rf6 65.Kg1 Kxc3 66.Kf2= 62.Rc6 f3 63.Re6+ Kf2 64.Rxh6 Rg2+ 65.Kh1 Rg1+ 66.Kh2 Re1 67.b5! Re2 68.b6 60...h3 61.gxh3 Rg6 62.c4 f3 63.Ra3+ Ke2 64.b4 f2 65.Ra2+ Kf3 66.Ra3+ Kf4 67.Ra8 Rg1 0–1
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Anand,V | 2775 | Carlsen,M | 2870 | 0–1 | 2013 | C65 | FWCM 2013 | 6 |
Please, wait...

A disappointed Anand, sighs deeply just before the press conference
With a 4-2 lead after six games, Magnus Carlsen has a commanding lead, which will be very hard to surmount.
Score
Game:
|
Rtg |
01
|
02
|
03
|
04
|
05
|
06
|
07
|
08
|
09
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
Score
|
Perf.
|
V. Anand |
2775 |
½
|
½
|
½
|
½
|
0
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2.0
|
2750 |
M. Carlsen |
2870 |
½
|
½
|
½
|
½
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.0
|
2895 |
Tournament details
Schedule: the match will be played over a maximum of twelve games, and the winner of the match will be the first player to score 6.5 points or more. If the winner scores 6.5 points in less than 12 games then the closing ceremony will take place on the day after the World Championship has been decided or one day thereafter.
07 November 2013 – Opening Ceremony
09 November 2013 – Game 1
10 November 2013 – Game 2
11 November 2013 – Rest Day
12 November 2013 – Game 3
13 November 2013 – Game 4
14 November 2013 – Rest Day
15 November 2013 – Game 5
16 November 2013 – Game 6
17 November 2013 – Rest Day
18 November 2013 – Game 7 |
19 November 2013 – Game 8
20 November 2013 – Rest Day
21 November 2013 – Game 9
22 November 2013 – Game 10
23 November 2013 – Rest Day
24 November 2013 – Game 11
25 November 2013 – Rest Day
26 November 2013 – Game 12
27 November 2013 – Rest Day
28 November 2013 – Tiebreak games
29 November 2013 – Closing Ceremony |


Live commentary on Playchess in English
Day |
Round
|
Live Playchess commentary in English |
Nov. 18 |
7
|
GM Yasser Seirawan + GM Alejandro Ramirez |
Nov. 19 |
8
|
GM Daniel King + GM Chris Ward |
Nov. 21 |
9
|
GM Daniel King + GM Simon Williams |
Nov. 22 |
10
|
GM Daniel King + GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave |
Nov. 24 |
11
|
GM Daniel King + GM Maurice Ashley |
Nov. 26 |
12
|
GM Chris Ward + GM Simon Williams |
Nov. 28 |
Tiebreak
|
GM Daniel King + GM Chris Ward |
Live commentary in other languages
Day |
Round
|
French |
German |
Spanish |
Nov. 18 |
7
|
GM Christian Bauer |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 19 |
8
|
GM Yannick Pelletier |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 21 |
9
|
GM M. Vachier-Lagrave |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 22 |
10
|
GM Sebastien Mazé |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 24 |
11
|
GM Sebastien Mazé |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 26 |
12
|
GM Yannick Pelletier |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
Nov. 28 |
TB
|
GM Sebastien Mazé |
GM Klaus Bischoff |
Leontxo García |
The commentary will commence around 30 minutes after the start of the games. The schedule and commentators may be changed before the start of the Championship on November 9th, with long and short castlings possible.