1/25/2020 – The Gibraltar Chess Festival is one of the strongest open tournaments in the world but only after three rounds did we see the GMs begin to separate from the pack, five of whom maintained a perfect score. After four rounds the five dropped to one: Ivan Cheparinov. The festival also has an interesting program of side events. Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, currently number eight in the world, gave a masterclass (pictured) after round two, which you can relive at your leisure. | Photo: Niki Riga
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Chess Festival Prague 2025 with analyses by Aravindh, Giri, Gurel, Navara and others. ‘Special’: 27 highly entertaining miniatures. Opening videos by Werle, King and Ris. 10 opening articles with new repertoire ideas and much more. ChessBase Magazine offers first-class training material for club players and professionals! World-class players analyse their brilliant games and explain the ideas behind the moves. Opening specialists present the latest trends in opening theory and exciting ideas for your repertoire. Master trainers in tactics, strategy and endgames show you the tricks and techniques you need to be a successful tournament player! Available as a direct download (incl. booklet as pdf file) or booklet with download key by post. Included in delivery: ChessBase Magazine #225 as “ChessBase Book” for iPad, tablet, Mac etc.!
Your personal chess trainer. Your toughest opponent. Your strongest ally. FRITZ 20 is more than just a chess engine – it is a training revolution for ambitious players and professionals. Whether you are taking your first steps into the world of serious chess training, or already playing at tournament level, FRITZ 20 will help you train more efficiently, intelligently and individually than ever before.
Among the five leaders after three rounds, none was an Elo favourite! The top-rated scored with 3/3 was 2686-rated Bulgarian GM Ivan Cheparinov (who now plays for Georgia), and playing on board 1 in the fourth round, he was the only player to win a fourth consecutive game. That resulted in an interesting round five pairing: black against Veselin Topalov, for whom Cheparinov served as a second for many years.
Topalov heads a group of 13 players a half point behind which includes fellow-2700er Wang Hao, and also young up-and-comers Andrey Esipenko and Parham Maghsoodloo. The latter faces veteran American Grandmaster Gregory Kaidanov, who is an active trainer of young talents himself but seldom plays competitively.
Cheparinov vs Chigaev | Photo: John Saunders
As is typically the case for large open tournaments, most of the favourites prevailed in the early rounds, achieving crushing victories that are rarely possible against their world-class colleagues. For instance, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave outplayed Indonesian IM Irine Sukandar with a slew of powerful pawn pushes in the opening round.
After 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 g6! leads to the so-called "Accelerated Dragon Defense". On this DVD the Russian grandmaster and top women player Nadezhda Kosintseva reveals the secrets of her favourite opening.
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave speaking with Tania Sachdev | Photo: John Saunders
One notable upset came from the large Indian contingent: WIM Nandhidhaa defeated her fellow countryman Praggnanandhaa, considered one of the greatest talents in the world, in a tactical slug fest.
This DVD offers Black a complete repertoire against all weapons White may employ on move six. The recommended repertoire is not as risky as other Sicilians but still offers Black plenty of counter-play.
Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu | Photo: John Saunders
Masterclass with Mamedyarov
Moderator Tania Sachdev hosted the Azerbaijani number one Shakhriyar Mamedyarov in the first of the traditional "masterclass" series of lectures in Gibraltar after round two. He showed two interesting games that he won against Loek Van Wely with black and spoke frankly about his career, tournaments and his attitude towards chess.
Both games discussed for replay
The veterans: Vassily and Veselin
Vassily Ivanchuk is a regular in Gibraltar and although the Ukrainian is considered a player who can beat anyone on good days, he is also vulnerable on bad days. He started the tournament in Gibraltar with two wins but stumbled in round four against Mikhail Antipov
White's knight on c6 is a monster, so Ivanchuk eliminated it out of desperation: 35...♜xc6 but after 36.bxc6 ♛xc6+ 37.♕f3 ♛c7 38.♕e4 he resigned as Black is nearly in zugzwang, e.g. 38...b5 39.♜a8 and now there's nothing much for black to do against the white rooks, one of which will soon take over the seventh ranks. E.g. 38...♛c3 (trading queens is also hopeless 39...♛c4 40.♕xc4 bxc4 41.♖c8) 40.♖1a7, etc.
Vassily Ivanchuk is back in 57th place with 2½/4 | Photos: Niki Riga
Topalov is of the same generation as Ivanchuk and while he's not getting invitations to many elite events, he's still dangerous, especially when given the opportunity to unleash a signature exchange sacrifice — as in round three against French GM Fabian Libiszewski, amid a power outage caused by a mishap at the new power facility being constructed in Gibraltar which interrupted play.
This DVD gives you the key to start out with the French Defence. GM Yannick Pelletier is a specialist of this opening, and believes that the most efficient way to understand its ideas, plans, and typical structures is to study classical lines.
Topalov with Tania Sachdev after his third round win
The following round, Topalov gave a veritable master class of his own at the board against Spanish GM Jaime Santos, who prevented the Bulgarian from sacrificing an exchange by taking the opportunity himself in the hopes of holding a worse endgame. But Topalov demonstrated how the rook dominates the knight in this ending.
What is the best way to use your pieces to their full potential in the endgame? GM Karsten Mueller demonstrates "knight geometry", and teaches you how to employ the "knight check shadow" in your own games!
Macauley PetersonMacauley served as the Editor in Chief of ChessBase News from July 2017 to March 2020. He is the producer of The Full English Breakfast chess podcast, and was an Associate Producer of the 2016 feature documentary, Magnus.
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.
The Queen’s Gambit Declined Exchange Variation with 5.Bf4 has a great balance between positional play and sharp pawn pushes; and will be a surprise for your opponents while being easy to learn for you, as the key patterns are familiar.
€9.90
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