Friday, April 24, 2009

-Nalchik R8: Black is hot

Gelfand's great novelty blew Kasimdzhanov awayThe Grand Prix in Nalchik keeps on producing exciting chess. In the eighth round Black was in perfect shape by winning two games, while the remaining games ended in draw. Beyond dispute, man of the day was Boris Gelfand, who came up already on move nine with an surprising novelty and outplayed Rustam Kasimdzhanov in only 28 moves!

By IM Robert Ris

The day started peacefully with a quick draw in the game between Mamedyarov and Ivanchuk. The Ukrainian genius, who seems to be completely out of form, came up with the novelty 11…Na5 in a line where Black can’t do much wrong anyway. From a position where White possessed the bishop pair in return for the isolani, the game soon ended in a draw after a mass of exchanges. A rather disappointing game from both sides of view. Let’s hope that they can entertain the audience a bit more in the upcoming rounds!

In the game Leko-Bacrot the point was also split quite fast, after the opening hadn’t promised White anything. Curiously, Bacrot repeated 13…a6 in a Queen’s Indian which he played already in the 4th round against Gelfand. After that game the Frenchman declared that 13..a6 was a bad move, allowing White to play the annoying ending with three pawns against the knight. The fact that Leko wasn’t eager to repeat Gelfand’s innovation probably means that both seconds Gustafsson and Pelletier repaired the line for Black. Instead, Leko went for the classical approach with 14.Ng5 but failed to achieve anything after Bacrot’s strong novelty 15…e5!. The Hungarian decided to call it a day by a threefold repetition of moves. Although the game lasted a mere 23 moves, from a theoretical point of view it was an important contribution to the theory of this line.

The leader after seven rounds, Levon Aronian, tried to tackle Peter Svidler in a Chebanenko Slav again, since the Russian GM narrowly escaped in the first round against Alekseev in the same line. The modest 7.Bd2 has casued Black some practical problems recently and therefore Svidler’s new 11…exd4 was really needed to keep the line playable. White’s advantage was only optical and after Aronian played the slightly inaccurate 23.Nd3 the players could shake hands already.

[by: chess vibes]

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