09.05.2011 – The surprises took place almost at the same time. Aronian was tied Grischuk, but lost the fourth game. Kramnik tied Radjabov in all four rapids, and then lost the first blitz (of two). With a dead drawn position and 15 seconds left each, the clock died! When they resumed, thirteen minutes later, Radjabov quickly lost, after which Kramnik took the second blitz match. Report with GM commentary.
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Scoreboard
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Round one – Tiebreaks
The tiebreaks reserved a few more surprises for us, and not all were the usual kind. After some hard-fought games in the tournament control games of their match, but no decisive result, it all changed in the rapid tiebreak. Aronian was considered a big favorite considering his superb record in rapid games overall, and his multiple wins at Monaco among others, but Grischuk struck first blood with an impressive win in game one. Aronian equalized in the next game, and they drew the third. The fourth game was a Queen’s Gambit Declined, and was quite equal, when the Armenian missed a shot (18.b5!), and suddenly was worse. The Russian played superbly at this point, and won a queen for rook and knight. Despite his material advantage, it was not clear he would be able to convert, and top grandmasters on Playchess thought a draw likely. Grischuk saw it differently and applied maximum pressure to break through to the king with a decisive attack, and with it the match.Lev Aronian, press officer Boris Kutin and Alexander Grischuk at the press conference
While this last game was taking place, Kramnik and Radjabov were already into their blitz tiebreaks. The reason is that they started their rapid games one game before Aronian and Grischuk. In other words, Aronian and Grischuk started their first game at the same time Kramnik and Radjabov started their second. Unfortunately, the significant dullness of the first four classic games, continued into the rapids, and a further lot of draws were presented to the spectators. The blitz games were another story though.
The structure of the blitz games was a mini-match of two games played at five minutes with a three second increment per move. Each match is potentially decisive, and up to five such matches could be played to decide a winner. In the first game, Kramnik went down in flames badly, and resigned one move before being mated. This essentially meant that he had an absolute must-win situation if he wanted to stay in the match. Things didn’t seem to be going his way as the position seemed headed for a draw. The pieces went off, no weaknesses appeared, and it went down to a rook and opposite-colored bishop ending where all considered the match a done deal. Kramnik understandably meant to play to the very end, and with fifteen seconds left each (remember they received a three second increment per move though), this is what happened:
We are at move 60, Kramnik plays 60.Rd7+ and presses the clock
Radjabov replies almpst instantaneously with 60...Kf6 – after which...
... suddenly the clock resets itself to zero (as though to start a new game)!
Both players are shocked and perplexed, and receive instructions from the arbiter
They discuss the situation, while arbiter Alex McFarlane admonishes them to keep it down
The clock has to be restarted with the remaining times for each player
It took a good thirteen minutes for the game to resume, during which the players strolled about waiting – with ample time to study the position (one would think). When the game continued, Radjabov quickly collapsed with a series of decisive mistakes and lost. This meant a second blitz mini-match, and this time Kramnik won the first, while in the second, Radjabov let his flag fall after being caught in a perpetual, which would effectively have ended the match anyhow.
Albert Silver
Commentary by Alejandro Ramirez
Aronian,Levon (2808) - Grischuk,Alexander (2747) [A37]Candidates 2011 Kazan, Russia (1.5), 09.05.2011 [Ramirez,Alejandro]
1.Nf3 c5 2.c4 Nc6 3.Nc3 e5 4.g3 g6 5.Bg2 Bg7 6.0-0 Nge7 7.Ne1 d6 8.Nc2 Be6 9.Ne3 0-0 10.d3 Qd7. This solid approach against the Symmetrical English is, in my opinion, an underestimated system. Black has a glaring weakness on d5, but on the other hand that is his only palpable weakness in the position. He will be able to advance pawns on the kingside and he can, with correct play, prevent most advances on the queenside. 11.Ned5 Bh3 12.Rb1. 12.Bh6?! is a strategically flawed cheapo. Black wants to exchange the light squared bishops as the g2 bishop can be quite powerful in a queenside attack, but the g7 bishop is currently serving no purpose as it is stuck behind the pawns. 12...Bxg2 13.Kxg2 Rac8 14.e4 Nxd5 15.Nxd5 Ne7 16.Nc3. White's only claim to anything here is that he can control d4 with his bishop while Black can only defend it with his own knight. Therefore the exchange of knights would instantly result in a dead position. 16...Nc6 17.Be3 f5
28...Nd8 29.b3 Ne6 30.Kf1 b5 31.Kg2 a5 32.Rhh1 Rf8 33.Rhc1 Rb8 34.Rh1 b4 35.Rh2 a4
Grischuk,Alexander (2747) - Aronian,Levon (2808) [D37]
Candidates 2011 Kazan, Russia (1.5), 09.05.2011 [Ramirez,Alejandro]
1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.c4 e6 4.Nc3 Be7 5.Bf4 0-0 6.e3 Nbd7 7.c5 c6 8.h3 b6 9.b4 a5 10.a3 Ba6 11.Bxa6 Rxa6 12.0-0. 12.b5 cxb5 13.c6 Qc8 14.c7 b4 is a very thoroughly analyzed variation. Grischuk decides to deviate from this mess and plays a more natural move. 12...Qa8 13.Rb1 axb4 14.axb4 Qb7 15.Qc2 Rfa8. Black has control over the only open file, but things are not so simple. White does have an advantage in space and his bishop is far more active than it's counterpart. 16.Ne1!? An interesting redeployment, trying to quickly bolster c5 to allow a possible b5 break. 16...Bd8 17.Nd3
Schedule
All games start at 15:00h local time – 13:00h Berlin/Paris, 07:00 New York (check your local time here)| Tuesday | May 03 | Arrival | Audio/video commentary on Playchess | |
| Wednesday | May 04 | Opening Ceremony | ||
| Thursday | May 05 | Round 1 Game 1 | Jan Gustafsson | wrap-up |
| Friday | May 06 | Round 1 Game 2 | Sam Collins | wrap-up |
| Saturday | May 07 | Round 1 Game 3 | Daniel King | live |
| Sunday | May 08 | Round 1 Game 4 | Daniel King | live |
| Monday | May 09 | Round 1 Tiebreaks | ||
| Tuesday | May 10 | Free day | ||
| Wednesday | May 11 | Free day | ||
| Thursday | May 12 | Round 2 Game 1 | Sam Collins | wrap-up |
| Friday | May 13 | Round 2 Game 2 | Dejan Bojkov | wrap-up |
| Saturday | May 14 | Round 2 Game 3 | Sam Collins | live |
| Sunday | May 15 | Round 2 Game 4 | Daniel King | live |
| Monday | May 16 | Tiebreaks | ||
| Tuesday | May 17 | Free day | ||
| Wednesday | May 18 | Free day | ||
| Thursday | May 19 | Round 3 Game 1 | van Wely/Gustafsson | live |
| Friday | May 20 | Round 3 Game 2 | Dejan Bojkov | live |
| Saturday | May 21 | Round 3 Game 3 | Sam Collins | live |
| Sunday | May 22 | Free day | ||
| Monday | May 23 | Round 3 Game 4 | Loek van Wely | live |
| Tuesday | May 24 | Round 3 Game 5 | Daniel King | live |
| Wednesday | May 25 | Round 3 Game 6 | Daniel King | live |
| Thursday | May 26 | Tiebreaks, closing | ||
| Friday | May 27 | Departure | ||
Live broadcast
The games are being broadcast live on the FIDE web site and on the chess server Playchess.com. If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase Light, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!In addition you can watch the games live on a regular browser on our live broadcast site.
There is automated computer analysis running on a powerful machine (12 cores running
at 4.25 GHz and 48 GB of RAM) loaned by Team Hiarcs using a special version of Hiarcs.
The Russian Chess Federation is providing excellent hi-res live video coverage from
the playing hall in Kazan, with live commentary (in Russian).
Watching the games on the Playchess server
Typical chat screen during the games
LinksThe games are being broadcast live on the official web site and on the server Playchess.com. If you are not a Playchess member you can download ChessBase Light, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program to read, replay and analyse PGN games. | |
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