Gelfand and Grischuk winners in 4th round London Grand Prix

Boris Gelfand is the sole leader again at the FIDE Grand Prix in London. In Monday's fourth round the Israeli grandmaster defeated Wang Hao, who blundered mate in a drawn rook ending. After three draws Alexander Grischuk won his first game, against Shakhriyar Mamedyarov. Tomorrow the game between Gelfand and Mamedyarov is scheduled to start one hour earlier to respect Yom Kippur.
Wang Hao blunders against Boris Gelfand | Image from video feed
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The sunshine was short lived in London since Monday was rainy again. This weather, more typical for the UK capital of course, is quite suitable for a game of chess and that's exactly what Vassily Ivanchuk said before the start of the round! Therefore it was all the more surprising that the Ukrainian didn't play on in the final position against Anish Giri.
Macauley Peterson, who is producing the live video and video interviews in London, chased down Ivanchuk at Covent Garden market.
After demolishing Anish Giri in the previous round, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov was less lucky the next day. Right after the opening his h7-h5 looks suspicious and Alexander Grischuk could choose between different winning plans.
Veselin Topalov was never in trouble against Hikaru Nakamura's Alapin Sicilian. In fact the position looked better for Black at the end of the game, but "White was always very solid" (Topalov).
Rustam Kasimdzhanov surprised Leinier Dominguez with 1.e4, when the Cuban decided to deviate from his usual repertoire by going for the Berlin. The most interesting part of the game was the bishop ending; even afterwards the players weren't sure if it was winning for White or not.
In what they called the "New Anti-Marshall" Peter Leko and Mickey Adams drew after 47 moves. Just when the Hungarian felt he was better, his opponent made a strong move and everything was suddenly unclear.
The longest game of the round ended dramatically. Thanks to strong preparation Gelfand won a pawn, but Wang Hao defended very well to reach a drawn rook ending. However, after a mistake by the Chinese White was winning but Gelfand missed it. Then a big blunder by Wang Hao more or less forced Gelfand to see the winning idea!
(Jump to 04:40:50 to see the final phase of the game.)
Schedule & pairings
| Round 1 | 15:00 CET | 21.09.12 | Round 2 | 15:00 CET | 22.09.12 | |
| Kasimdzhanov | ½-½ | Leko | Leko | 1-0 | Ivanchuk | |
| Nakamura | 0-1 | Gelfand | Adams | ½-½ | Mamedyarov | |
| Topalov | ½-½ | Grischuk | Giri | ½-½ | Wang Hao | |
| Dominguez | ½-½ | Giri | Grischuk | ½-½ | Dominguez | |
| Wang Hao | ½-½ | Adams | Gelfand | ½-½ | Topalov | |
| Mamedyarov | ½-½ | Ivanchuk | Kasimdzhanov | 0-1 | Nakamura | |
| Round 3 | 15:00 CET | 23.09.12 | Round 4 | 15:00 CET | 24.09.12 | |
| Nakamura | ½-½ | Leko | Leko | ½-½ | Adams | |
| Topalov | ½-½ | Kasimdzhanov | Giri | ½-½ | Ivanchuk | |
| Dominguez | ½-½ | Gelfand | Grischuk | 1-0 | Mamedyarov | |
| Wang Hao | ½-½ | Grischuk | Gelfand | 1-0 | Wang Hao | |
| Mamedyarov | 1-0 | Giri | Kasimdzhanov | ½-½ | Dominguez | |
| Ivanchuk | ½-½ | Adams | Nakamura | ½-½ | Topalov | |
| Round 5 | 15:00 CET | 25.09.12 | Round 6 | 15:00 CET | 27.09.12 | |
| Topalov | - | Leko | Leko | - | Giri | |
| Dominguez | - | Nakamura | Grischuk | - | Adams | |
| Wang Hao | - | Kasimdzhanov | Gelfand | - | Ivanchuk | |
| Mamedyarov | - | Gelfand | Kasimdzhanov | - | Mamedyarov | |
| Ivanchuk | - | Grischuk | Nakamura | - | Wang Hao | |
| Adams | - | Giri | Topalov | - | Dominguez | |
| Round 7 | 15:00 CET | 28.09.12 | Round 8 | 15:00 CET | 29.09.12 | |
| Dominguez | - | Leko | Leko | - | Grischuk | |
| Wang Hao | - | Topalov | Gelfand | - | Giri | |
| Mamedyarov | - | Nakamura | Kasimdzhanov | - | Adams | |
| Ivanchuk | - | Kasimdzhanov | Nakamura | - | Ivanchuk | |
| Adams | - | Gelfand | Topalov | - | Mamedyarov | |
| Giri | - | Grischuk | Dominguez | - | Wang Hao | |
| Round 9 | 15:00 CET | 01.10.12 | Round 10 | 15:00 CET | 02.10.12 | |
| Wang Hao | - | Leko | Leko | - | Gelfand | |
| Mamedyarov | - | Dominguez | Kasimdzhanov | - | Grischuk | |
| Ivanchuk | - | Topalov | Nakamura | - | Giri | |
| Adams | - | Nakamura | Topalov | - | Adams | |
| Giri | - | Kasimdzhanov | Dominguez | - | Ivanchuk | |
| Grischuk | - | Gelfand | Wang Hao | - | Mamedyarov | |
| Round 11 | 12:00 CET | 03.10.12 | ||||
| Mamedyarov | - | Leko | ||||
| Ivanchuk | - | Wang Hao | ||||
| Adams | - | Dominguez | ||||
| Giri | - | Topalov | ||||
| Grischuk | - | Nakamura | ||||
| Gelfand | - | Kasimdzhanov |
London GP 2012 | Round 4 standings
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Comments
Perell
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
go Gelfand...
Morley
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
Gelfand is in great form. Very nice technical victory today.
Spectator
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
Gelfand played well, but the win can basically be attributed to a huge blunder by Wang Hao at the end
Morley
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
True, but Gelfand did keep pressure up with excellent moves, after winning a pawn in the middle game. Wang Hao's error was the fruit of Gelfand's labor.
bronkenstein
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
I would attribute it to superior preparation and loads of pressure that Gelfy was applying for a very long time - including , maybe, a missed victory (35.Nd2!?!). OFC it´s possible to reduce his effort to Wang´s blunder, and many did exactly that.
valg321
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
Gelfand himself said it was a dead draw until that very blunder
bronkenstein
8 months 3 weeks ago
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And he was perfectly right about that.
sulutas
8 months 3 weeks ago
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If you guys can see it in replay, definitely watch the last moments between Gelfand-Hao, specifically when Hao reaches his hand to his king to move to h7, and pay attention to the mimics and gestures of Gelfand, who stared directly at Hao's face as if asking "are you serious fella?", and then Hao realized his blunder and made this suicide gesture, shooting at his own head with a smile on his face. I hope he immediately recovers from this loss, as he always looks to play interesting games.
RG13
8 months 3 weeks ago
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Gelfand has demonstrated repeatedly in his career that he can bring a very high level to select events.
Bartleby
8 months 3 weeks ago
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That's true. And Wang Hao brings a sense of humor. Who would be able to laugh off a blunder like this?
RG13
8 months 3 weeks ago
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Besides Wang Hao I've seen Topalov and Karpov laugh off tough losses. However Kasparov always took losses very badly.
MW
8 months 3 weeks ago
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If I recall correctly Kasparov once said "show me a good loser and I'll show you a loser". :-)
Joe Fiasco
8 months 3 weeks ago
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Great performance, Boris!
With such great results so far, what is he going to atone for on Yom Kippur? ;)
Chessguy
8 months 3 weeks ago
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Actually, Gelfand missed a not so complicated win with 52. Rc8+ Kh7, 53. Kf7 with similar mating motives as in the game. Black has to give up his pawns to avoid the mate. Comp evaluation is something like +5, btw. So dead draw is maybe the wrong assessment, at least after move 49.
cip
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
you look at it and can think it is not so complicated... but consider first of all that Gelfand was probably not even looking for a win - I'm sure he was surprised at home analysis - I bet that in such a position his instinct told him the endgame is not winning...
cip
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
you look at it and can think it is not so complicated... but consider first of all that Gelfand was probably not even looking for a win - I'm sure he was surprised at home analysis - I bet that in such a position his instinct told him the endgame is not winning...
Chessguy
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
I beg to differ. If Ke5-f6 was not a winning attempt, then what else? A player of Gelfands strength always looks for a win and even if it would be not so easy to see for you and me OTB, Gelfand is quite capable to do these calculations in his dreams.
Spectator
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
"Gelfand missed a not so complicated win with 52. Rc8+"
52. Rc8+ does not seem to win after .. Ra3 or .. Rb3 as the black rook can give checks along the seventh or eighth rank.
Chessguy
8 months 3 weeks ago
Permalink
But this simply loses the two pawns. I didn't check the TBs if the two passers on d and f win against King and rook, but there would be at least excellent practical winning chances. Better than in the actual game continuation.
Harish Srinivasan
8 months 3 weeks ago
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The official website with its per board camera and post HD video reports have been great. Kudos to Paulson for a great start to the wch cycle.
Ken H.
8 months 3 weeks ago
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PD: I just want to say that this Web site will always be important because it is ahead of all the major sites for breaking news. I come here first for everything. If I want to know who won each round same day, this is where it's at. Everything else is gravy, and generous helpings of that are appreciated!
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