WCh G10: quiet Grünfeld, quiet draw
Schedule
April 24 – 17.00 EEST (16:00 CET) - Game 1 April 25 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 2 April 26 – Rest Day April 27 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 3 April 28 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 4 April 29 – Rest Day April 30 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 5 May 1 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 6 May 2 – Rest Day May 3 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 7 | May 4 – 15.00 EEST (12.00 UTC) - Game 8 May 5 – Rest Day May 6 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 9 May 7 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 10 May 8 – Rest Day May 9 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 11 May 10 – Rest Day May 11 – 15:00 EEST (14:00 CET) - Game 12 May 12 – Rest Day May 13 – Tie breaks |
Score
Anand, V |
2787
| 0
| 1
| ½
| 1
| ½
| ½
| ½
| 0
| ½
| ½
| 5 |
||
Topalov,V |
2805
| 1
| 0
| ½
| 0
| ½
| ½
| ½
| 1
| ½
| ½
| 5
|
Videos
If you can't see all videos in the player above: this is a cache problem of the browser. We've contacted blip.tv about the problem. Please remove your cache files and try again. Below is the game 10 video separately:Game 10
After yesterday's thriller things were much more quiet in today's 10th match game. Anand left the Slav ending to return to the Grünfeld Defence which he played in game 1. Instead of 10...Na5. he went for the rare line 10...b6 which was popular in the early eighties.The main point of the move seems to be to change the move order in such a way that White cannot reach the most favourable positions from the theoretical lines. And indeed, Topalov failed to get an advantage out of the opening. On move 23 Black had clearly reached equality, and a draw was expected.Topalov and Anand getting ready for another very important game
Approaching it's end, the media attention of the match is growing by the day
The handycam taking care of the live stream on the official website - unfortunately the organizers don't put it closer to the players, inside the curtain, to avoid the dark image
Back to the Grünfeld and a reasonably easy draw for the World Champ
Zeit: At this World Championship Anand copied particularly your openings. With White, he has played four times the Catalan. A surprise for you?Kramnik: It is a logical choice. Topalov hasn't had good result against Catalan so far. At least statistically, this opening is his weak point. It's like in tennis. If the opponent is weak at the net, one tries to lure him there. This strategy was actually not difficult to predict, but for Anand it worked. With the Catalan he got his two victories.
Links (we keep updating this!)
- Official website
- Games in PGN via TWIC
- Rules & regulations (PDF)
- The Week in Chess with analysis by IM Malcolm Pein and reports by Mark Crowther
- Anish Giri annotating for Chessbase
- Europe-Echecs, also reporting from Sofia
- GM Ian Rogers blogging for the USCF
- Rogers' articles for Crikey (all together)
- GM Kevin Spragget blogging
- GM Susan Polgar with live commentary
- Chessdom (also live commentary)
- Crestbook (GM Sergey Shipov, live commentary in Russian)
- GM Dejan Bojkov analysing the games
- Die Zeit's coverage
- Kramnik interview in Die Zeit
- Schwatt und Weiss (Georgios Souleidis blogging for Der Westen)
- Entwicklungsvorsprung (Georgios Souleidis' blog)
- Schach Welt (live audio commentary & chat with GM Jörg Hickl and IM Ilja Schneider)