FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss: 4 Players Lead; Carlsen Escapes
Fabiano Caruana and Wang Hao drew their game in round four of the FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss and were joined in first place by Parham Maghsoodloo and Luke McShane. Magnus Carlsen was lost but miraculously escaped vs. Vladislav Kovalev.
You can follow the games here as part of our live portal Chess.com/events. There's daily coverage by GM Daniel King and IM Anna Rudolf, joined by WIM Fiona Steil-Antoni for interviews, on Twitch.tv/chess.
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It was about to become quite a big story... and then it didn't.
Carlsen had entered the tournament with a streak of 90 undefeated games and had added three more in the Isle of Man. The Norwegian last lost a game 438 days ago.
The 25-year-old Belarusian grandmaster Kovalev got incredibly close to changing that streak.
In what was a Moscow variation of the Sicilian (where White checks with the bishop on move three), Carlsen chose a somewhat odd setup with his king's bishop on d8. It was playable, but after a few inaccuracies he allowed his opponent to gain a serious advantage.
White had a stellar knight on e4, a protected passed pawn on d6 and a central queen on d5—what more can you wish for? Few had expected the game to take this turn, especially taking into account that Kovalev, the winner of the 2019 Tata Steel Challengers, had played a game of 152 moves the day before!
At some point the engines were giving the Belarusian player an advantage of the equivalent of a full queen, but in practice it wasn't that easy. For starters, Kovalev was in time trouble—he had to make 14 moves in fewer than two minutes plus a 30-second increment. Secondly, he had to avoid a three-fold move repetition in the process. And thirdly, Carlsen was defending extremely well.
In the end it proved too difficult to convert for Kovalev. What was almost a big sensation became a (very) narrow escape for the world champion.
"OMG! How did I not win that?" The disappointment is written all over Vladislav Kovalev's face as he knows he's let @MagnusCarlsen off the hook #iomchess FIDE https://t.co/ifdcbKehD8 Grand Swiss round 4 pic.twitter.com/QsMHh45x2G
— iomchess (@iomchess) October 13, 2019
World Champion @MagnusCarlsen and GM Vladislav Kovalev (🇧🇾 2661) go through their game in which the former saved a dead lost position!
— iomchess (@iomchess) October 13, 2019
Magnus maintains his unbeaten streak!
and is now undefeated in 94 games, one less than what Mikhail Tal managed in the early 1970s.#iomches pic.twitter.com/90prj8UmNY
Remarkably, Caruana had never managed to beat Wang in eight classical games. He again failed to do so in today's top clash on board one.
From a Petroff defense the players went straight into a theoretically known endgame where the Chinese GM continued to play very solidly.
There is still some play in the final position, but Caruana didn't feel comfortable to continue and reflected: "I felt like I was much better, even a few moves before but I couldn’t find anything. In the final position I wasn’t sure if I was still better or not, but my king was under attack. I didn’t really see an advantage."
Caruana was interviewed in the live broadcast.
Caruana's opponent tomorrow will be McShane, who has now won three truly excellent games in a row. On Sunday the English grandmaster defeated Baskaran Adhiban convincingly in a game where it was hard to pinpoint where Black went wrong.
About facing McShane, Caruana said: "Playing Luke is always fun. I’ve played him very rarely, but on the few occasions that we have played, they have been fun games."
The other co-leader is reigning World Junior Champion Maghsoodloo, who defeated Vidit Gujrathi of India. Besides playing a good game (which he finished off with excellent technique), the 19-year-old Iranian player also showcased a fine sense of humor in the interview after the game.
When commentator Daniel King asked why he wasn't wearing his "lucky jacket," Maghsoodloo replied: "This dress code of FIDE made me very upset. On the first day an arbiter told me: 'Never wear this again!'"
And then, when King referred to an interview when the Iranian had expressed his ambition to become world champion, Maghsoodloo said: "Yeah, and then I can put [in] some rule that I can wear the jacket!"
Maghsoodloo did wear his favorite jacket when King met him outside the hotel later in the day. Photo: Aran Graham/Chess.com.
Maghsoodloo showed his game in the live broadcast.
For a while it seemed that Nikita Vitiugov had good chances to join the leaders as well, but first he failed to win in the attack, and then he let Ivan Cheparinov escape in an endgame with opposite-colored bishops. After his dramatic elimination in the quarterfinals of the World Cup, the Russian GM was yet again reminded how hard it is to finish a won position successfully.
Below the four leaders are 16 players on three points. One of them is Armenian number-one Levon Aronian, who defeated Sam Sevian, a player with an American passport but with Armenian parents.
The two had played each other only once before, which was a year ago in Isle of Man. Back then Aronian opened with 1.e4, and the game was drawn in 31 moves. This time the favorite chose 1.d4 and won in 47 moves:
Chess.com's Daily Question in the live broadcast today was: "Would you try the 'Swiss Gambit' (losing or drawing in early rounds to avoid the strongest opposition)?" It has become clear that in this tournament such a strategy makes little sense because you might face a world champion anyway.
Vishy Anand is on 50 percent after four rounds. The same can be said for several others, such as Wesley So, Le Quang Liem and Francisco Vallejo, who have drawn all their games so far.
Another former world champion, Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine, won a nice game against Georgia's Baadur Jobava. Ponomariov, who had celebrated his 36th birthday two days ago (during round two), was clearly better prepared in an important line of the Caro-Kann's old main line and crushed his opponent right out of the opening:
The final note is about a game from one of the lower boards, played in the second playing hall. IM Antenaina Rakotomaharo Fy from Madagascar, a FIDE wildcard in this tournament, won a good game against the experienced GM Sergei Movsesian of Armenia:
FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss | Round 4 Standings (Top 20)
Rk. | SNo | Name | Rtg | Pts. | TB1 | rtg+/- |
1 | 15 | Wang Hao | 2726 | 3,5 | 2726 | 13,6 |
2 | 2 | Caruana Fabiano | 2812 | 3,5 | 2681 | 7,4 |
3 | 34 | McShane Luke J | 2682 | 3,5 | 2626 | 11,5 |
4 | 48 | Maghsoodloo Parham | 2664 | 3,5 | 2610 | 10,7 |
5 | 70 | Bluebaum Matthias | 2643 | 3,0 | 2711 | 9,6 |
6 | 41 | Cheparinov Ivan | 2670 | 3,0 | 2662 | 7,8 |
7 | 38 | Alekseenko Kirill | 2674 | 3,0 | 2658 | 7,8 |
8 | 13 | Vitiugov Nikita | 2732 | 3,0 | 2657 | 5,5 |
9 | 7 | Grischuk Alexander | 2759 | 3,0 | 2653 | 3,9 |
10 | 47 | Fedoseev Vladimir | 2664 | 3,0 | 2644 | 6,9 |
11 | 10 | Wojtaszek Radoslaw | 2748 | 3,0 | 2640 | 4,0 |
12 | 6 | Karjakin Sergey | 2760 | 3,0 | 2639 | 1,7 |
13-14 | 8 | Aronian Levon | 2758 | 3,0 | 2639 | 3,4 |
13-14 | 28 | Sargissian Gabriel | 2690 | 3,0 | 2639 | 6,7 |
15 | 49 | Shirov Alexei | 2664 | 3,0 | 2637 | 6,0 |
16 | 39 | Anton Guijarro David | 2674 | 3,0 | 2636 | 6,7 |
17 | 30 | Gelfand Boris | 2686 | 3,0 | 2628 | 6,5 |
18 | 51 | Dreev Aleksey | 2662 | 3,0 | 2566 | 3,2 |
19 | 44 | Kryvoruchko Yuriy | 2669 | 3,0 | 2549 | 3,0 |
20 | 64 | Lenderman Aleksandr | 2648 | 3,0 | 2531 | 2,7 |
(Full standings here.)
FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss | Round 5 Top Pairings
Bo. | No. | Name | Pts. | Result | Pts. | Name | No. |
1 | 34 | McShane Luke J | 3½ | - | 3½ | Caruana Fabiano | 2 |
2 | 15 | Wang Hao | 3½ | - | 3½ | Maghsoodloo Parham | 48 |
3 | 39 | Anton Guijarro David | 3 | - | 3 | Karjakin Sergey | 6 |
4 | 7 | Grischuk Alexander | 3 | - | 3 | Cheparinov Ivan | 41 |
5 | 44 | Kryvoruchko Yuriy | 3 | - | 3 | Aronian Levon | 8 |
6 | 47 | Fedoseev Vladimir | 3 | - | 3 | Wojtaszek Radoslaw | 10 |
7 | 13 | Vitiugov Nikita | 3 | - | 3 | Lenderman Aleksandr | 64 |
8 | 49 | Shirov Alexei | 3 | - | 3 | Sargissian Gabriel | 28 |
9 | 51 | Dreev Aleksey | 3 | - | 3 | Gelfand Boris | 30 |
10 | 70 | Bluebaum Matthias | 3 | - | 3 | Alekseenko Kirill | 38 |
11 | 1 | Carlsen Magnus | 2½ | - | 2½ | Ganguly Surya Shekhar | 54 |
(Full pairings here.)
Find the top games of round four for replay here:
Rakesh Kulkarni contributed to this report.
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