After 9 of 10 matches, China’s lead is now 3 points. Unless there is a miracle in the last round, China will defeat Russia in this match.
Chinese Men
1 Wang Hao g CHN 2624 5.0 2714
2 Wang Yue g CHN 2696 4.5 2681
3 Bu Xiangzhi g CHN 2685 4.0 2637
4 Ni Hua g CHN 2681 4.0 2634
5 Zhang Pengxiang g CHN 2649 4.0 2636
21.5
Chinese Women
1 Ruan Lufei CHN 2433 6.0 2583
2 Zhao Xue wg CHN 2500 5.0 2505
3 Shen Yang wg CHN 2439 5.0 2500
4 Huang Qian wm CHN 2410 4.5 2455
5 Wang Yu A wg CHN 2384 4.5 2452
25.0
Total combine scores: 46.5
Russian Men
1 Alekseev, Evgeny g RUS 2689 6.5 2831
2 Inarkiev, Ernesto g RUS 2663 5.5 2749
3 Jakovenko, Dmitry g RUS 2735 4.5 2671
4 Timofeev, Artyom g RUS 2650 3.5 2583
5 Tomashevsky, Evgeny g RUS 2654 3.5 2585
23.5
Russian Women
1 Kovalevskaya, Ekaterina m RUS 2454 5.0 2475
2 Kosintseva, Nadezhda m RUS 2475 4.5 2435
3 Kosintseva, Tatiana m RUS 2502 4.5 2438
4 Korbut, Ekaterina wg RUS 2445 4.0 2390
5 Tairova, Elena wg RUS 2410 2.0 2205
20.0
Total combine scores: 43.5
Official website: http://russiachess.org/
The Russians will win by 4 points tomorrow to win the match.
Susan, I’m rather disappointed with your coverage on Russia-China match. It’s already over yesterday, but you only presented the previous round result. Given that you have a high speed internet access, you should’ve been able to glance into the open documents the organizers share:
http://docs.google.com/View?docid=df2bphbq_20d9mt2t
http://docs.google.com/View?docid=df2bphbq_22f8q2rb
to see that China has won by 5 points.
Why would you think that I have high speed internet? If you follow my blog, you would know that I am in Scotland for a chess conference and I get internet access here and there and not in my room at my hotel. In addition, I am here as a keynote speaker. That means that I have to leave my hotel at 8 AM and not get back until midnight.
Best wishes,
Susan Polgar
Susan, forget about the troll. They think you have no life and just post 24/7.