ChessBase Magazine 149
El Campeón del Mundo Vishy Anand defendió con éxito
su título por tercera vez, pero contra Boris Gelfand la lucha estuvo
más reñida que nunca. El duelo de Moscú por el título mundial (con, por
ejemplo, análisis del aspirante) es el tema principal de este número.
El segundo de Anand, Rustam Kasimdzhanov informa sobre el duelo en una
amplia entrevista en vídeo y aporta información sobre todas las
partidas. El segundo torneo de élite de esta edición también tuvo lugar
en Moscú. En el Memorial Tal, Magnus Carlsen terminó como líder una vez
más tras un torneo en el que la cabeza de la tabla cambiaba
continuamente. En el DVD Gelfand, Caruana, Radjabov y Andreikin (entre
otros) comentan sus mejores partidas. Además, con sus 13 artículos
sobre aperturas, el DVD ofrece todo un abanico de sugerencias y
descubrimientos: autores como Mihail Marin, Michal Krasenkow y Evgeny
Postny han contribuido con artículos que abarcan todo tipo de
aperturas, desde la Inglesa hasta la Defensa Grünfeld. Precio: 19,95 €
Más información...
consiguelo aqui
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In his video introduction grandmaster Karten Müller
describes all that is there for you on the DVD. Of course he
starts off with the world championship. In particular he
mentions a few endings between Anand and Gelfand which are
well worth looking at - who could hold that against our
endgame guru? There is also a titbit for you from the Tal
Memorial: Carlsen's brilliant win over Radjabov - in the endgame of
course. The grandmaster from Hamburg also gives you a few
insights into the openings articles on the DVD and there is a
short reference to the opening trap by Rainer Knaak.
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Tournament highlights
The most spectacular moments and the most important games are presented to you by Dorian Rogozenco
in his highlights video. The Romanian grandmaster shares
with you his very personal view of the Anand-Gelfand world
championship. He shows the complete 8th game and gives you
insights into the 9th and 12th games. The second main topic
of his video is the Tal Memorial in Moscow. Here he was
impressed above all by the creative performance of Alexander
Morozevich and you will get a glimpse into bits of the games
against Aronian and Carlsen.
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11.05.-30.05.2012
Vishy Anand
defends the title
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World Championship Moscow 2012
The WCh match
between world champion Anand and challenger Gelfand was not
able to meet all expectations. But the tension which was
palpable in so many of the games remained in the duel right
till the very last game of the tiebreak. There victory
finally went in the decisive second game not necessarily to the better
but to the quicker player. In an ending in which Gelfand would
certainly have held the draw at normal thinking time, Anand
forced his opponent into the decisive error on account of the
latter's shortage of time.
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Gelfand,B - Anand,V (7)
Position before 23.Qc2
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In
the whole match the challenger could only manage a single
victory over the world champion. In game 7 and in his fourth
tussle with Anand's Semi-Slav, Gelfand turned for the first
time to the flexible 7.Qc2 and emerged from the opening with a
long-term positional advantage. The main problem in the
black position became clearer and clearer as the game went on: it was
the black bishop on c8. In the position on the board the world
champion reacted to 23.Qc2 with 23...g5, but this
pseudo-active thrust did not turn out to be helpful. After
24.Qc7 Qxc7 25.Rxc7 White is already strategically winning.
Gelfand himself annotates in detail on the DVD this brilliant
game and his exemplary winning technique. Click on the link
under the diagram and have a look at the game with Gelfand's
analysis. On the DVD you will find all the WCh games
annotated for you by various CB Magazine authors. |
All WCh games in video analysis - Anand's second reports!
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Rustam Kasimdzhanov's WCh retrospectives
For four years the previous FIDE World Champion Rustam Kasimdzhanov
has been working as a second for Vishy Anand. The WCh in
Moscow was after Bonn (2008 against Kramnik) and Sofia (2010
against Topalov) the third match in which the Usbek
grandmaster stood by the side of the world champion. On the DVD
in an almost one and a half hour long interview with
André Schulz, Kasimdzhanov looks back over the events and
manages to find something new, surprising and enlightening
about each of the 16 match games. Only in English!
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08.06-18.06.2012
Magnus Carlsen
So, he does it again
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Moscow Tal Memorial 2012
Only a few days
after the finish of the WCh the other members of the world
elite also came to Moscow for a test of strength. The Tal
Memorial was not only an absolutely top class, but also a
fiercely contested tournament with a lot of movement on the
leader board. After 5 rounds Morozevich was in front with four
points, but after that the public's favourite did not manage to
achieve much more. And after the eighth round it was suddenly
Caruana who forced his way to the top with a win over Kramnik
- "shock", as Caruana writes with a wink in his analysis
below. But finally it was once more Carlsen, with his
tenacious and sometimes risky play, who was rewarded with
another tournament victory.
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Radjabov,T - Carlsen,M
Position after 29...Ke7-d7
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At the finish Magnus Carlsen
remained the only undefeated player, which was remarkable in
view of his opening two games - after which he could easily
have been left on 0 out of 2. So one somehow felt that it was
not an outstanding tournament for the Norwegian, though he
had just decided in his favour the strongest tournament of
the year! But there is one game which is beyond all doubting
and which will be remembered: his victory as Black over
Teimour Radjabov. Starting from a completely level position
Carlsen gradually outplayed his opponent. And there is even a classic
predecessor: Capablanca won with an almost identical pawn
structure in 1936. In the diagram Carlsen had just started a
king march in the direction of b6, so as to be able to play
c6-c5. In the end, just like Capablanca, it was his central
pawns which decided the day. |
Caruana,F - Kramnik,V
Position after 39.Ne4
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What
should an 1.e4-player do when he has to meet Kramnik and
does not fancy the Berlin Defence? That was exactly the
situation in which Fabiano Caruana found
himself in the penultimate of the Moscow tournament and with
his Scotch he came up with a small surprise for the ex world
champion. It was a good choice because Kramnik was unable to
come out of the opening with equality, and also he did not
get full compensation for his pawn sacrifice (18...Nd5). The decision
arrived soon and in scurrilous circumstances. As Caruana
remarks in his analysis, he had just given away his advantage
when in the position on the board Kramnik gave away material
with 39...Ne3? when in time trouble. Instead, 39...Rxa3+!!
and then 40...Kc4 would have offered Black good drawing
chances. |
Teimour Radjabov
Two early victories finally sufficed for third place
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In
his game analyses Teimour Radjabov looks back over "perhaps
the most fantastic tournament in his life". And the
super-grandmaster from Azerbaijan made his own contribution
to it, right at the start. On the DVD Radjabov has analyses
for you his two wins over Tomashevsky and McShane at the very
beginning of the tournament. In Radjabov,T - Tomashevsky,E
he demonstrates how as White one can get an interesting
position with good play in the Scotch in the variation with
4...Bc5 5.Nb3 Bb6 6.Nc3 d6 7.Qe2. In McShane,L - Radjabov,T
the English player tried the same setup against the Sicilian
with which Anand had been successful only a few days
previously in the 2nd tiebreak game of the WCh match - so with 3.Bb5,
an exchange on c6 and a later b3. However, the attempt went
completely wrong here and was punished by an attack on the
king by Radjabov which is worth seeing. |
Openings survey
by Mihail Marin
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What
are the new trends in opening theory? What traces did the
WCh match leave on the participants in the Tal Memorial? GM Mihail Marin
has analysed the games of the elite tournament and in his
openings survey he shows you which of Anand's ideas were
taken up and what the important innovations and trends are in
your favourite variations. |
08.06.-18.06.2012
Dmitry Andreikin
in August he will be playing in his first super-finals
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Andreikin gains qualification for the "Super-finals"
Qualification
for the Russian Super Championship is earned through what is
certainly one of the strongest qualifying tournaments in the
world and from time to time new talent suddenly pops up.
This year 16 year old Daniil Dubov was for a long time at the
top of the table. However, victory finally went to Dmitry
Andreikin with 7.5 out of 11. This performance gives him -
and also Dubov, Vitiugov, Potkin and Sjugirov - the right to
test their skills against the best in the country in the first half of
August. Andreikin annotates two of his best games in the
tournament for you on the DVD.
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Timofeev,A - Andreikin,D
Position after 20.c4-c5
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A
typical King's Indian in which White has his chances on the
queenside and Black on the other side of the board. Andreikin
met 20.c5! with 20...Raf8! and he writes, "Black burnt his
bridges". Despite that, the position is still completely
level here, but White under-estimated the danger of Black's
kingside attack and went forward with his queen to c7
(21.cxd6 cxd6 22.Qc7?); after 22...Bc8 rueful retreat would have
been the only chance - the queen is needed in defence and the
correct defence to 23...Qh5! would be 24.Qd1. After 23.Rxa7?
Andreikin won in good style. |
Adamek,J - Sochorova,P
White to move. A win or a loss? (Solution in the tactics column)
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From the opening trap to the endgame study
Training in ChessBase Magazine begins with the very first
moves and deals with all the phases of a game of chess. The
13 up-to-date openings articles with ideas and suggestions
for your repertoire can be found above in the links. This
time Rainer Knaak’s Opening
Trap (including its Fritztrainer video) contains a trap in
the Sicilian (B80). You will also find in video format
openings articles by Adrian Mikhalchishin (Slav with 4...a6),
Leonid Kritz (Ruy Lopez Main Line with the unusual 10...d5!?)
and Robert Ris (King’s Gambit with 2...Bc5). You will find these
videos in the column Opening videos. Daniel King's long-running
Move by Move deals with a game in the Exchange Variation of
the Orthodox Queen's Gambit. And in the Tactics (theme: the
knight as lifeguard and angel of death) and Endgame (theme:
passed pawns must be pushed) columns Oliver Reeh and Karsten
Müller have once more brought together for you the best from
recent tournament practice.
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Opening Surveys
Postny: English Mikenas System A18
1.c4 Nf6 2.Nc3 e6 3.e4 d5 4.e5 d4 5.exf6 dxc3 6.bxc3 Qf6 7.d4 e5 8.Nf3 exd4 9.Bg5 Qe6+ 10.Be2
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After the developments of recent years the position in
the diagram has crystallised into the critical one for
the evaluation of the whole line. As Evgeny Postny shows,
Black probably has nothing to fear here.
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Marin: King’s Indian Torre Attack A48
1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 g6 3.Bg5 Bg7 4.Nbd2 0-0 5.c3 d6 6.e4 Nc6
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In the third and concluding part of this series on the King’s Indian Torres Attack 6...Nc6
is examined. It may put pressure on d4 but it has its
disadvantages too. In particular, White can play 7.Bb5 and then things are not easy for Black.
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Schipkov: Dutch A88
1.d4 f5 2.c4 Nf6 3.Nf3 g6 4.g3 Bg7 5.Bg2 0-0 6.0-0 d6 7.Nc3 c6 8.b3
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With 8.b3 (instead of 8.d5 as in the previous issue)
White probably cannot achieve an advantage either. Boris
Schipkov shows several lines in which Black gets
satisfactory play, but the best is probably 8... Qa5.
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Kritz: Sicilian B35
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 g6 5.Nc3 Nd7 6.Nf3 a6 Bg7 6.Be3 Nf6 7.Bc4 0-0 8.Bb3 Qa5 9.0-0 d6
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With the queen move Black forces short castling and the
result of this is quiet positions. White should develop
slowly and avoid any exchange of queens. Black is close
to equality, but he still has a few problems to overcome.
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Karolyi: Sicilian B90
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Qf3
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The
unusual queen move conceals a few ideas, which means
that an unprepared opponent can easily get into
difficulties. Tibor Karolyi analyses literally every
known continuation.
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Ftacnik: Sicilian B99
1.e4
c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Nbd7
8.Qf3 Qc7 9.0-0-0 Be7 10.g4 b5 11. Bxf6 Nxf6 12.g5 Nd7 13.f5
0-0
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Recently there has been a clear trend towards 13...0-0 (instead of 13...Bxg5+ or 13...Nc5). In the critical lines after 14.Rg1 Black seems to be able to prove his point, but that will not be easy in practical play.
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Langrock: French C01
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.exd5 exd5 5.Bd3 Nc6 6.a3 Bxc3+ 7.bxc3
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White will not be able to force an opening advantage with
this form of the Exchange French, but Black has to play
accurately. However, most players are now well acquainted
with the ins and outs and White has an excellent score.
In the first part 5...Nc6 is examined; the alternatives will follow.
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Kritz: French C10
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Nc6
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Although 3...Nc6
gets in the way of the natural French move ...c5, it is
not at all so simple for White to achieve an advantage.
Kritz does not think much of the main move 4.Nf3 and suggests 4.e5!. His analyses show that White can achieve his aim with it.
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Breutigam: Ruy Lopez C96
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0-0 Be7 6.Re1 b5 7.Bb3 d6 8.h3 0-0 9.c3 Na5 10.Bc2 c5 11.d4 Nd7
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This time Martin Breutigam examines the alternatives to the main move 12.Nbd2,
but above all 12.d5 and 12.dxc5. Black also has to fight
for equality, but his problems in doing so should not be
too great.
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Grivas: Queen’s Gambit D15
1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 dxc4 5.e3
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If
no advantage can be achieved in the main lines of the
Slav, one might as well try 5.e3. The results of
Efstratios Grivas’ analysis are encouraging since White
at least always has a little pressure.
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Krasenkow: Semi-Slav/Catalan D30/E04
1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 c6 4.g3 dxc4 5.Bg2 b5
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There are many ways for White to play this gambit
variation, according to whether he plays with or without
a4, Ne5, Nc3,
b3 or e4. For every plan for White Michal Krasenkow has
the appropriate reply, even in the main line 6.Nc3 Nf6 7.Ne5 a6 8.a4 Bb7 9.0-0.
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Kuzmin: Queen’s Gambit D43
1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Nf3 e6 5.Bg5 h6 6.Bh4 dxc4 7.e4 g5 8.Bg3 b5 9.Be2 Bb7 10.Qc2
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The setup with 10.Qc2 (and 10...Nbd7 11.Rd1)
does set Black a few problems, but so far it has not
been played a lot. So there is not too much theory and
according to Alexey Kuzmin White is promised the
initiative in the most important variations.
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Stohl: Grünfeld Defence D70
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.f3 d5 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.e4 Nb6 6.Nc3 Bg7 7.Be3
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World Champion Anand played 3.f3 against the Grünfeld
Defence and brought Gelfand to the edge of defeat. As is
proved by the analyses of Igor Stohl, however, Black
should be able to hold the posit
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