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CHESS: Aronian-Carlsen Was Liveliest Of the Candidates Matches

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  • CHESS: Aronian-Carlsen Was Liveliest Of the Candidates Matches

    The New York Times
    June 17, 2007 Sunday
    Late Edition - Final


    Aronian-Carlsen Was Liveliest Of the Candidates Matches

    By Dylan Loeb McClain



    There were no real surprises at the candidates matches, held May 27
    to June 13 in Elista, Kalmykia, a Russian republic, to select four
    qualifiers for the World Championship Tournament in Mexico City in
    September and October.

    The four winners were Levon Aronian of Armenia, Peter Leko of
    Hungary, Boris Gelfand of Israel and Alexander Grischuk of Russia.

    Going into the matches, Aronian and Leko were the two highest-ranked
    players; Gelfand was No. 4, and Grischuk was tied for No. 6.

    The most competitive and entertaining contest was the Round 1 matchup
    between Aronian and Magnus Carlsen of Norway, the 16-year-old who has
    electrified the chess world. The match was the only one that required
    six tiebreak games. In the fifth, Aronian pulled away by outplaying
    Carlsen in the middle game to win a pawn.

    Through 11 0-0, the game followed two that Carlsen had played before,
    both times as White. In those games, Carlsen had tried 12 Qd2 and 12
    Nb5. Aronian's 12 Bd6 was a more direct approach to try to take
    advantage of the hole at d6. Carlsen should not have sought to
    simplify with 12 Na5; it left his queenside pawns badly compromised.
    Instead, 12 Ne8 would have made more sense.

    Although Carlsen was able to exchange his lead a-pawn through a
    tactical finesse, he was unable to defend the second pawn on the
    file.

    Aronian's greatest strength is his accuracy in maneuvering his
    pieces, and that was on display once he got the advantage. His 33 Nf5
    slowed the approach of Carlsen's king toward the center. Then with 38
    h5, he locked down Carlsen's kingside pawns, preventing simplifying
    exchanges.

    The rest was a clinic, and Carlsen resigned in a hopeless position.

    The lineup for Mexico City looks as if it will be even stronger than
    that of the championship tournament in San Luis, Argentina, in 2005.
    The roster includes Vladimir Kramnik of Russia, the world champion;
    Viswanathan Anand of India, No. 1 in the world; Alexander Morozevich
    of Russia, No. 4; and Peter Svidler of Russia, No. 9.

    The most notable omission, as of now, will be Veselin Topalov of
    Bulgaria, tied for No. 2 with Kramnik. Topalov is excluded under the
    terms of the championship match he played against Kramnik last year.

    The Bulgarian Chess Federation has petitioned the World Chess
    Federation to consider including Topalov, and even Kramnik, Topalov's
    bitter rival, has called it strange that Topalov is not playing.
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