Showing posts with label Vassily Ivanchuk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vassily Ivanchuk. Show all posts
Monday, April 1, 2013
Carlsen and Kramnik lose, tie for first, Carlsen advances
This Candidates tourney has been a real doozy. If you haven't been following it, here's a little recap. After seven rounds, the halfway point in the double round robin tournament, Carlsen and Aronian were dominating the field, each with three wins and four draws. Former World Champion Kramnik had drawn all seven games and trailed both leaders by 1.5 points. Then Kramnik went on an incredible tear, scoring 4.5 points in the next five games, to vault into the lead! He beat Aronian in the last of those games after Aronian blundered away an easy draw. That was Aronian's second consecutive loss, leaving him 1.5 points behind Kramnik. Meanwhile, Carlsen was unrecognizable as White against Ivanchuk, who had an incredibly erratic tournament. Carlsen played badly throughout the game and lost after missing a possible draw in the rook ending. So after 12 rounds, the standings were Kramnik 8/12, Carlsen 7.5/12, Aronian 6.5/12, with just two rounds to go. Then in round 13 Carlsen eked out an endgame win as Black against Radjabov, while Kramnik was unable to convert his advantage against Gelfand. Aronian drew against Grischuk, falling out of contention.
This set the stage for an incredibly dramatic last round. Carlsen and Kramnik led with 8.5 points. Carlsen had White against Svidler, while Kramnik was Black against Ivanchuk. Ivanchuk, as mentioned, had been extremely erratic, losing five games on time before move 40. (By comparison, Fischer lost twice on time in his entire career.) Carlsen was leading on tiebreaks, since the first tiebreak was number of wins and he had won five games to Kramnik's four. So Kramnik had to hope Carlsen did not win in the final round, and if so had to outscore him: if Carlsen drew, Kramnik had to win, while if Carlsen lost, Kramnik would have to win or draw. Kramnik must have figured that Carlsen would at least draw as White, so he (Kramnik) would have to win. Carlsen, on his part, must have feared that Ivanchuk would get in his usual time pressure and flag, in which case he (Carlsen) would have to win.
The upshot was that both of the leaders played badly. Carlsen got nothing out of the opening, got extremely low on time (he had something like two minutes for his last 12 moves in a complicated position), and barely made the time control, only to find himself in a hopeless ending. Kramnik, meanwhile, played the opening dubiously, trying to keep the game complicated and hope that Chukky would flag as usual. Chukky was having none of it. He handled the complications deftly and made time control with a minute to spare, with a completely winning position. Both Carlsen and Kramnik lost, leaving them tied for first with 8.5 points. So Carlsen, despite losing as White for the second time in three games, backed into a tie for first and a win on tiebreak. He will face Anand for the World Championship in November. An unbelievable finish.
Aronian meanwhile won nicely against Radjabov. He and Svidler tied for third with 8 points. Gelfand (Anand's challenger last time) and Grischuk tied for fifth with 6.5, Ivanchuk was seventh with 6 points, and Radjabov was last with 4.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Carlsen wins Bilboa in blitz playoff
...and Hikaru Nakamura, bizarre round nine loss notwithstanding, takes third on tiebreaks. A deserved win for Carlsen (who beat the red-hot Ivanchuk twice in regulation play) and a bittersweet step forward for Nakamura.
Coverage in the usual places....
WhyChess (all games available via drop-down box)
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Round 6, Bilbao Masters: Ivanchuk 1 - Nakamura 0
Ivanchuk's opening lends credence to the credible rumors that he has been working with David Franklin.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Breakfast tomorrow: World Cup round 4
Peter Svidler leads Alexander Grisckuk 2-1 for the World Cup title. Svidler has White and the two Russians are friends: a quick draw is not out of the realm of possibility. Both players have already secured a slot as one of the eight candidates for the next world championship.
Vassily Ivanchuk leads Ruslan Ponomariov 2-1 in the match for third place. To me, the Ukranian matchup is more fascinating: Ivanchuk has not been a Candidate in the classical cycle for twenty (!!) years, and in 2002, he lost a match to the teenaged Ponomariov for the pre-unification "FIDE World Championship" title. The winner automatically qualifies for the 2013 Candidates, while the loser is very unlikely to earn an invitation. Ponomariov managed to apply some pressure in today's game, but never came close to converting a pawn-up endgame.
Catch up on previous rounds at The Week in Chess, and follow the pre-dawn action at the official site!
Vassily Ivanchuk leads Ruslan Ponomariov 2-1 in the match for third place. To me, the Ukranian matchup is more fascinating: Ivanchuk has not been a Candidate in the classical cycle for twenty (!!) years, and in 2002, he lost a match to the teenaged Ponomariov for the pre-unification "FIDE World Championship" title. The winner automatically qualifies for the 2013 Candidates, while the loser is very unlikely to earn an invitation. Ponomariov managed to apply some pressure in today's game, but never came close to converting a pawn-up endgame.
Catch up on previous rounds at The Week in Chess, and follow the pre-dawn action at the official site!
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
The bishop also moves backwards
I don't know whether it's fair to call a blunder in a blitz game one of the biggest in chess history, but this game (played just a couple hours ago) led to Vassily Ivanchuk's elimination from the World Cup.
Alexander Grischuk and Peter Svidler, both of Russia, will play for the World Cup title. Ivanchuk and Ruslan Ponomariov, both of Ukraine, will play for third place and automatic qualification to the next World Championship cycle. Follow the action here, beginning well before dawn on Friday.
A heartbreaking loss for Ivanchuk!
Alexander Grischuk and Peter Svidler, both of Russia, will play for the World Cup title. Ivanchuk and Ruslan Ponomariov, both of Ukraine, will play for third place and automatic qualification to the next World Championship cycle. Follow the action here, beginning well before dawn on Friday.
A heartbreaking loss for Ivanchuk!
Sunday, September 11, 2011
World Cup catchup
Lubomir Kavalek explains this act of sportsmanship.
The World Cup's knockout format can lead to some rather random results, which would have been particularly unfortunate given that this event is being used to qualify three players for the World Championship. But the four quarterfinalists are all among the world's elite: Grischuk faces Ivanchuk, and Svidler faces Ponomariov. The winners automatically qualify for the 2014 World Championship cycle; the losers play a match, the winner of which also qualifies.
Someone had to lose the match between fan favorites Gata Kamsky and Peter Svidler. Kamsky had the honor of losing to the most beautiful move of the World Cup:
Svidler's point after 26...Re2!! was that 27.Qxe2 loses to 27...Qg3! (The immediate 26...Qg3 is met by 27.Nc6, stopping the mate threat.) Someone (I don't remember who) described the combination as worthy of Frank Marshall. Edit a few days later—aha, it was Mig.
Early risers are urged to check out Game 1 of the semifinals tomorrow morning at the excellent tournament website! If you hear Russian, don't panic: there is an English-language simulcast.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Mild disappointment for Nakamura in Bazna
I can't pretend to care about tiebreaks in a round-robin: Magnus Carlsen and Sergey Karjakin tied for first in Bazna with impressive 6½-3½ scores. Hikaru Nakamura lost to Vassily Ivanchuk in the last round, and dropped into a third-place tie with Teimour Radjabov, each with 4½-5½.
Story and games at The Week in Chess. Check out Ivanchuk's postmortem interview on ChessVibes:
Story and games at The Week in Chess. Check out Ivanchuk's postmortem interview on ChessVibes:
Monday, November 1, 2010
Ivanchuk beats Nakamura in Cap d'Agde finals
Two King's Gambits! Although Ivanchuk tricked Nakamura into a good-vs.-bad-bishop ending in the first game, Nakamura's anti-King's Gambit system is utterly respectable and fun!
1.e4 e5 2.f4 Nc6 3.Nf3 f5!?
Coverage at The Week in Chess (games are in drop-down box above the board) and Europe-Echecs.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
The people's champion
That's the title New in Chess bestowed upon Ukraine's #1 player, Vassily Ivanchuk. I have absolutely no idea what's going on in the following game: enjoy!
Coffeehouse tactics question: why didn't Ivanchuk take the "free" queen offered by Baadur Jobava (who's having an amazing tournament despite this loss) with 31...Qc1? What's wrong with 32.Nxc1??
Coffeehouse tactics question: why didn't Ivanchuk take the "free" queen offered by Baadur Jobava (who's having an amazing tournament despite this loss) with 31...Qc1? What's wrong with 32.Nxc1??
Thursday, March 18, 2010
The People's Champion
Vasily Ivanchuk (happy 41st birthday!) retakes sole first place at the Amber Tournament. See the official website for today's report.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Amber round 1 is finishing right now
Ivanchuk-Carlsen will be one of the three games. (Ivanchuk won the blindfold game earlier today.)
You can follow the action here.
You can follow the action here.
Friday, November 20, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Ivanchuk at the Tal Memorial
Hilarious, and you don't need to speak a word of Russian. The players as they appear on stage: Levon Aronian of Armenia, Peter Leko of Hungary, Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine, Magnus Carlsen of Norway (the laughing person seated in the preview above), Peter Svidler of Russia (joined by Aronian), Vishy Anand of India (seated), and our hero, Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine.
H/T to mishanp in the comments at the Daily Dirt. OK, no more Carlsen photos for awhile.
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