Report of round 12

Armenian GM Levon Aronian is certain of netting at least a fair share of the 10,000-euro first prize in Grandmaster Group A at the 74th annual Tata Chess Tournament. A victory with black over World Title Challenger Boris Gelfand of Israel in 12th-round action put him one point ahead of his nearest rivals in the field of fourteen Saturday. Only a loss in Sunday’s final round would prevent him from taking all of the prize money all for himself.

Aronian’s win came on the heels of a smarting defeat at the hands of Czech GM David Navara in the previous round and, he told reporters, “after a good night’s sleep, I decided I’d be happy with a draw by way of a recovery,” when he entered the tournament arena at the start of Saturday’s action. But “after having been under pressure for a while, I was able to take the initiative when Boris declined my double pawn sacrifice 19…b5? He should have gone 20.Qxc6 but played 20.Nc5 instead. From that moment on, I wasn’t in danger of losing any longer and began to enjoy the game.” He refused the peace offer his opponent came up with and increased the pressure in the time trouble stage of the encounter. Gelfand didn’t flinch and made it to the time control only to cave in a few moves later with 46.Kxg2?, where 46.Nxg2 might have saved the day.

Aronian’s main rivals, Norway’s Magnus Carlsen and Azerbaijan’s Teymour Radjabov, got no further than a draw each, although they both had the advantage of playing with the white pieces. Radjabov picked up his half point the easy way, agreeing to a draw after only 20 moves in a Volga Gambit against Vassili Ivanchuk of the Ukraine. “I tried to go for a win,” Radjabov excused himself afterwards, “but it was a very tricky position and I didn’t like it one bit for white.”

Carlsen, the world’s highest rated grandmaster with 2835 Elo points to his name, went about it in the true and tried Carlsen way, i.e. the most aggressive and most risky way. He declined the Marshall Gambit that his opponent, U.S. Champion Gata Kamsky, chose for an opening and then made a mistake playing 16.c4?, where 16.f4 would have been a better way to handle the position.

“No, it wasn’t a very good game,” admitted Carlsen afterwards. “But, fortunately, I defended well enough after I messed up the opening, or the middle game, whatever. True, my opponent had the advantage but it was never clear, nothing was ever clear.” Kamsky agreed, telling reporters that “black was better throughout most of the game but white found all the decisive moves. I couldn’t find a way to make my advantage count. In the end, I didn’t wasn’t to take any risks. So it was a draw.”

Bulgaria’s Veselin Topalov took the 500-euro ‘Piet Zwart Prize’ for his victory with white against Dutch champion Anish Giri. Topalov deserved the prize – put up by the municipalities of Velsen and Beverwijk – said GM Ivan Sokolov in awarding it, “because he had pressure straight from the opening and gradually ground his young opponent down.” For ‘Toppy’, who performed below par, it was his first win this year and it came as a relieve. “May be I didn’t play the best moves, but at least I didn’t let my advantage slip away this time,” he said. Having produced a disappointing series of eight draws and three losses in the previous rounds, he complained that “finally winning a game” could not make up for the fact that “I failed to profit from the advantage I held in at least seven games.”

In the third win of Saturday’s last but final round, Hikaru Nakamura of the U.S. played white against Holland’s Loek van Wely’s Shveshnikov Defense to obtain a position “which optically looked better for me … but objectively was probably finely balanced,” as “Naka” put it. “Somehow, in the middle game, however, Loek tried to outwait me, in stead of coming up with an active plan. That enabled me to regroup my rooks on the d-file and position my knight optimally with 35.Ng5. After that it was very difficult for him, especially when he came under time pressure as well.” So difficult, in fact, that Van Wely made the decisive mistake with 35…Bxg5 36.hxg5 Qxg5 37.Bh3 Rc7 38.Rxd6 Kg7?. He fought back, made it to the time control but was forced to surrender 17 moves later. When asked after the game whether he had chosen the wrong plan, Van Wely replied: “Plan? Which plan? I misplaced a few pieces in time trouble and he got some kind of attack going. After that, it was clear I could only escape by a miracle. Well, I didn’t.”

The two remaining games of the round were both drawn. Navara had an advantage with white in a Ruy Lopez against Italy’s Fabiano Caruana but wasted itb in time trouble and had to fight until his 64th to salvage a half point. Russia’s Sergei Karjakin and Azerbaijan’s Vugar Gashimov played a Queen’s Indian that was over before it had really begun, with the twosome splitting the point after only 27 moves.

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Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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