Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Chess: Elista R01: Aronian, Grischuk draw first blood

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chess: Elista R01: Aronian, Grischuk draw first blood

    Chessbase News, Germany
    May 27 2007

    Elista R01: Aronian, Grischuk draw first blood


    27.05.2007 - A great start for Armenian star Levon Aronian and top
    seed Levon Aronian, who was able to take a full point from Norway's
    wonderkind Magnus Carlsen with the black pieces. Alexander Grischuk
    won the other decided game, against compatriot Vladimir Malakhov.
    Judit Polgar was close to a traumatic first-round loss with white
    against Evgeny Bareev, but managed to save the day. Report.

    The Candidates Matches for the 2007 World Chess Championship
    Tournament will be held in Elista, Russia, from May 26 to June 14,
    2007. A total of 16 candidates play two rounds of six-game matches to
    fill four places in the 2007 World Championship in Mexico City. The
    prize fund is US $40,000 per match, most of the money ($320,000)
    coming from a personal fund of FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov,
    FIDE ($160,000) and the general sponsor, Rosenergomash.


    Round one report
    Results
    Round 4: Wednesday, February 21st

    Magnus Carlsen 0-1 Levon Aronian
    Peter Leko ½-½ Mikhail Gurevich
    Boris Gelfand ½-½ Rustam Kasimdzhanov
    Ruslan Ponomariov ½-½ Sergei Rublevsky
    Gata Kamsky ½-½ Etienne Bacrot
    Alexander Grischuk 1-0 Vladimir Malakhov
    Judith Polgar ½-½ Evgeny Bareev
    Michael Adams ½-½ Alexei Shirov

    Aronian beats Carlsen with Black, and Grischuk beats Malakhov in the
    day's other decisive game, whilst the other six games are drawn after
    hard battles. Playchess was there to broadcast the action, on what
    Nigel Short might be tempted to describe as a day of peripatetic
    potentates.

    Polgar-Bareev was a near disaster for the First Lady. She provoked an
    exchange sacrifice, which yielded Black two pawns, and a rock-solid
    position. A third pawn dropped off soon after, and by move 30, Black
    was also no less than an hour and ten minutes ahead on the clock.
    Strenuous resistance in the ending eventually saved her the game, and
    the Russian was most likely quite frustrated by the missed point he
    would have loved to score against one of his principal angstgegners.

    http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail .asp?newsid=3887

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X