Reports | February 02, 2012 19:05

Nigel Short beats Hou Yifan in blitz playoff, wins in Gibraltar

Nigel Short beats Hou Yifan in blitz playoff, wins in Gibraltar

English grandmaster Nigel Short won the 10th Tradewise Chess Festival in Gibraltar on Thursday after beating Hou Yifan of China in a blitz playoff. Both players had finished on 8/10.

Event Tradewise Chess Festival | PGN via TWIC
Dates January 24th-February 2nd, 2012
Location Gibraltar, UK
System 10-round Swiss, different groups
Players Top players in the Masters include Peter Svidler, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Michael Adams, Zoltan Almasi, Le Quang Liem, Judit Polgar and Alexei Shirov
Rate of play 100 minutes for 40 moves followed by 15 minutes for the remaining moves with 30 seconds increment for each move starting from the first move.

17-year-old Hou Yifan was already assured of the top Woman’s Award of £10,000, irrespective of what would happen in the last round. She was lone leader on 7.5/9, and assured of some sort of open prize as well as the U18 prize! On the last day, all eyes were on Gibraltar to see if Hou Yifan could also claim the first prize of £20,000.

Round 10

In the final round Hou Yifan drew with White against Shakhiyar Mamedyarov in a rather nice game.

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Mickey Adams, who had been leading the tournament until the 8th round, had to play with Black in the last two rounds. He drew both games, on Thursday against Viorel Bologan, who seemed to have a technically winning ending.

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The other two players who were trailing by half a point were Krishnan Sasikiran and Nigel Short. The Englishman didn't hold back and played the Benoni. He won a good game where he showed better tactical vision than his opponent.

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Emil Sutovsky won a queen ending that was theoretically drawn, but very difficult to hold over the board.

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Another nice last-round pairing was Judit Polgar vs. Viktor Korchnoi!

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A truly fantastic game was played by Emanuel Berg - the Swedish grandmaster beat Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in a mere 29 moves with a queen sacrifice:

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The ever-creative Emanuel Berg sac'ed a queen against Vachier-Lagrave. Game of the tournament?

Playoff

This meant that Hou Yifan and Nigel Short had finished on shared first place, with 8/10 (see below). Traditionally, in such cases the Gibraltar tournament is decided in a playoff. Hou Yifan and Short played two games with 10 minutes on the clock, and 5 seconds increment per move.

In the first game Hou Yifan missed an excellent chance, after Short blundered in the middlegame. Both players missed an intermediate moves, and Short then won convincingly. In the second game the Chinese had to go all or nothing, and it became nothing. Well, the half point was worth as much as nothing.

Here are the two games, and the video commentary with GM Simon Williams and GM Mickey Adams:

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Tradewise Chess Festival | Masters | Round 10 (final) standings (top 40)

Rk.   Name FED Rtg Pts. TB1
1 GM Hou Yifan CHN 2605 8.0 2872.0
2 GM Short Nigel D ENG 2677 8.0 2838.0
3 GM Adams Michael ENG 2724 7.5 2807.0
4 GM Mamedyarov Shakhriyar AZE 2747 7.5 2783.0
5 GM Bologan Viktor MDA 2680 7.5 2734.0
6 GM Sutovsky Emil ISR 2703 7.5 2669.0
7 GM Le Quang Liem VIE 2714 7.0 2733.0
8 GM Almasi Zoltan HUN 2717 7.0 2730.0
9 GM Howell David W L ENG 2603 7.0 2725.0
10 GM Sasikiran Krishnan IND 2700 7.0 2717.0
11 GM Movsesian Sergei ARM 2700 7.0 2711.0
12 GM Svidler Peter RUS 2749 7.0 2700.0
13 GM Negi Parimarjan IND 2641 7.0 2694.0
14 GM Polgar Judit HUN 2710 7.0 2693.0
15 GM Laznicka Viktor CZE 2704 7.0 2681.0
16 GM Fridman Daniel GER 2660 7.0 2632.0
17 GM Gustafsson Jan GER 2643 7.0 2628.0
18 GM Jussupow Artur GER 2569 7.0 2625.0
19 GM Salem A R Saleh UAE 2505 7.0 2621.0
20 GM Berg Emanuel SWE 2550 7.0 2603.0
21 GM Sargissian Gabriel ARM 2683 7.0 2594.0
22 GM Kanep Meelis EST 2509 7.0 2556.0
23 GM Cabrera Alexis ESP 2504 7.0 2544.0
24 GM Gopal G N IND 2566 6.5 2647.0
25 GM Shirov Alexei LAT 2710 6.5 2629.0
26 GM Brunello Sabino ITA 2581 6.5 2617.0
27 GM Kulaots Kaido EST 2581 6.5 2604.0
28 GM Erdos Viktor HUN 2634 6.5 2601.0
29 GM Zhu Chen QAT 2472 6.5 2598.0
30 GM Cramling Pia SWE 2491 6.5 2591.0
31 IM Muzychuk Anna SLO 2580 6.5 2586.0
32 GM El Debs Felipe De Cresce BRA 2497 6.5 2582.0
33 GM Nabaty Tamir ISR 2563 6.5 2575.0
34 GM Stefanova Antoaneta BUL 2523 6.5 2571.0
35 IM Dvirnyy Daniyyl ITA 2492 6.5 2530.0
36 GM Del Rio De Angelis Salvador G ESP 2531 6.5 2528.0
37-38 GM Gupta Abhijeet IND 2652 6.5 2525.0
37-38 IM Muzychuk Mariya UKR 2483 6.5 2525.0
39 GM Iturrizaga Edoardo VEN 2649 6.5 2510.0
40 IM Zatonskih Anna USA 2506 6.5 2502.0

 

Peter Doggers's picture
Author: Peter Doggers

Founder and editor-in-chief of ChessVibes.com, Peter is responsible for most of the chess news and tournament reports. Often visiting top events, he also provides photos and videos for the site. He's a 1.e4 player himself, likes Thai food and the Stones.

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Comments

brigadoon's picture

The Najdorf ending in the Berg game is easily won after ...Qxe2 30. Rh3+ Rh4 31. Rxh4+ Kxh4 32. Rf4+ Kh5 (...Qg4 33. g3+ Kh5 34. Nf6+) 33. Ng3+ Kg5 34. Nxe2

pontoon's picture

I am really happy to see some excitement in the chess world, we have a rivalry shaping up in Carlsen and Aronian and now Yifan is actually looking very promising.
Chess is getting exciting again and hopefully it will get more coverage which equals more money for these talented players.

jan van der marel 's picture

'Chess is getting exciting again.' What nonsense. As if it has ever NOT been exciting. Come on, seriously.

shane bonetti's picture

thanks Peter, beautiful chess coverage as always

usm's picture

Hou let's the dog out, Hou Hou Hou Hou...

harami's picture

The funny brit won the contest without the 'Big Indian' being around :), that too without outside help .. WOW !!

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