Press Release
THE SECOND GAME OF THE FIDE WORLD CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP IS DRAWN
The second game of the FIDE World Chess Championship Match was played on 12 May in the Engineering Building of the State Tretyakov Gallery.
Today the rivals did not bring any big surprises to each other, having played a relatively new, but a very solid variation of the Slav Defence. After Black’s 14th move Boris Gelfand thought for a long time and finally chose a line which led to an endgame with a slight edge for White.
According to Gelfand, a seemingly sharper continuation 15. Bg5 would actually have resulted in an equal position. At the end of the game a few precise moves helped Viswanathan Anand to get sufficient counterplay. On the 25th move the challenger offered a draw, which the champion accepted. The match score is equal – 1:1. Tomorrow is the rest day. The next game will be played on 14 May.
The FIDE World Chess Championship Match between World Champion, Viswanathan Anand (India), and challenger, Boris Gelfand (Israel), is taking place from 10 till 31 May 2012 in the Engineering Building of the State Tretyakov Gallery. The organisers of the match are FIDE (the World Chess Federation) and the RCF (the Russian Chess Federation). The initiator and sponsor of the match in Moscow is the Russian entrepreneur Andrey Filatov (co-owner of N-Trans Group). Other sponsors of the competition are businessman Guennadi Timtchenko, as well as the Ladoga charity foundation, NVision Group the company Novatek and Academician A.A. Raspletin Almaz-Antei OJSC SHDB.
Further information can be found on the match’s official website http://moscow2012.fide.com/en
12 May 2012
Contact information for members of the press:
Press Officer for the Russian Chess Federation at the World Championship Match
Mark Glukhovsky
What a borefest. This was a game so lacking in interest that organizers and attendees debated boycotting the event. Chess has suffered another setback. Even the most enthusiastic chess lovers were left at a loss for words to describe the lack of effort on the part of the players.
Caissa wept.
This was a game so lacking in interest that organizers and attendees must have debated boycotting the event. Chess has suffered another setback. Even the most enthusiastic chess lovers were left at a loss for words to describe the lack of effort on the part of the players.
Caissa wept.
Did anyone actually expect anything else? I certainly hope this match does not live up to its billing…Anand wins a game or two and the rest is a draw…how freaking sad.