Group A
van Wely, L. – Caruana, F. 1-0
Aronian, L. – Giri, A. ½-½
Carlsen, M. – Nakamura, H. 1-0
Harikrishna, P. – Wang, H. ½-½
Anand, V. – L’Ami, E. 1-0
Sokolov, I. – Hou, Y. 0-1
Leko, P. – Karjakin, S. ½-½
Group B
van Kampen, R. – Nikolic, P. 0-1
Rapport, R. – Timman, J. 1-0
Edouard, R. – Naiditsch, A.
Ernst, S. – Ipatov, A. ½-½
Movsesian, S. – Grandelius, N. ½-½
Tiviakov, S. – Smeets, J.
Turov, M. – Dubov, D. 1-0
Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
Carlsen wins again!
Caruana, he continues to lose!
Carlsen*
And he already won the tournament with an Aronian draw
Carlsen is lucky to beat Nakamura.
‘Caruana wins again.Leads by 1.5 with one to go!!!’ Did anybody tell Carlsen this?
On another note, after the Borislav Ivanov incident at the Zadar tournament, what steps are being taken at the top level of chess to prevent cheating? One rogue player is more than sufficient to spoil the whole party.
Pretty silly to mistake Carsen and Caruana in the article title.
A player who seems repeatedly lucky to win is almost surely just flat out better.
Chessbase gives Caruana lost without playing, here it is different!?