Top

R10: Aronian wins indeed, already

26 March 2008 21:18 PM | Last modified: 23:38

Thanks to two quick draws against Kramnik, Aronian today secured clear first place at the Amber Tournament with a round to spare, because main competitors Carlsen and Leko also drew twice.

“Satisfaction” was what Levon Aronian said when I asked him for a first reaction, after saw on the television screen that Leko-Carlsen had ended in a draw. He had drawn both of his games against Kramnik quite fast, which was all “according to plan”. The winner Leko-Carlsen could theoretically have caught Aronian to finish shared first, but but since they split the point, Aronian is safe with a 2.5 point lead.

Today’s round had begun with a very nice blindfold game by Mamedyarov, who was in big trouble after the opening but profited from a careless Chucky and then found the cunning 30…Bf8! which decided the game immediately. It was only Shakh’s second victory, after his Black win against Kramnik.

Van Wely had held Topalov to a draw after Veselin had tried to enter 40…Ke6 three times but couldn’t, because the computer kept saying “illegal move”. This story is quite similar to what happened to Gelfand earlier in the tournament and so the Amber software, which has been working fine for years, might need some double checking now. Topalov thought he was winning, but declined the offer to replay the game.

Anand had beated Gelfand convincingly by then, after the surprising little move 20…Ba1. One move later it was already lost for White, according to the kibitzing GM’s over here. Carlsen again defended a difficult ending to a draw against Leko and Karjakin’s escape against Morozevich was a huge surprise.

Despite its 34 moves, the rapid game Mamedyarov-Ivanchuk was over after about ten minutes; the players blitzed until a dead drawn position. Van Wely played too risky against Topalov and had to learn the hard way.

Anand changed his tune and went for 1.c4, but didn’t do very well with it. Black is more than fine already after 14…e5 and Gelfand kept on playing very strongly. Morozevich too played a good game this time against Karjakin, winning a pawn and then the resulting rook ending.

And so all depended on Leko-Carsen, which looked very tense but was probably about equal throughout the game. 27.f6 “needs to be analysed”, to use a popular phrase amongst 2700 GMs, and 39…Rb8 40.Qa4 Qxf6 41.Rgd1 is nothing for Black since the passed pawns will be exchanged. Also noteworthy: 33…Qxb1 is answered by the spectacular 34.Qxf8!.

So Aronian wins. As Jeroen Piket put it yesterday: “he makes chess look simple, which is usually a good sign.” Traditionally, the last round starts earlier tomorrow. Besides, chief arbiter Gijssen changed the schedule a bit:

12.30 CET Blindfold:
Kramnik-Karjakin
Anand-Van Wely
Mamedyarov-Gelfand
14.00 CET Blindfold:
Leko-Aronian
Morozevich-Carlsen
Topalov-Ivanchuk
15.45 CET Rapid:
Karjakin-Kramnik
Van Wely-Anand
Gelfand-Mamedyarov
17.15 CET Rapid:
Aronian-Leko
Carlsen-Morozevich
Ivanchuk-Topalov

Blindfold games: Rapid games:





Links:

Comments

14 Responses to “R10: Aronian wins indeed, already”

  1. Lajos Arpad on 26 March 2008 22:27 PM

    Congratulations to Aronian, he played nice chess in Nice :)

  2. Vahag on 26 March 2008 22:39 PM

    Levon is the Champion among of Champions (former and present) and Challengers , Good Job!

  3. Vahag on 26 March 2008 22:40 PM

    among Champions i mean, without of .. heh

  4. Lajos Arpad on 26 March 2008 23:53 PM

    He is a nice guy, but not that good as you described, Vahag :)

  5. VaHug on 27 March 2008 1:29 AM

    Lajos, you can find my answer in the comment section of Round 9, but i guess we don’t understand each other. I’m talking about his being a very good chess player, and you tell me that he is a nice guy, but not that good. In this tournament he is enough good to be the Champion of Champions and Challengers, like Kramnik, Anand, Topalov and you can hardly deny it.
    The rest is a question of taste, whether he is good enough or not that good, so it would be better to stop our discussion here.

    Bye Bye

  6. Amos Sky on 27 March 2008 2:56 AM

    Just remember an old saying boys “You’re only as good as your last game.”

    And if you make sure you win the last game before you die you’ll go down as a champion.

  7. greybeard on 27 March 2008 9:38 AM

    Well, you can’t deny one thing:
    The young generation is pressing harder and harder the old boys :)

  8. Partidas de ajedrez comentadas on 27 March 2008 11:08 AM

    Bravo Aronian! Felicidades.
    ¡Que grande! desde luego se merecería participar en la disputa del campeonato del mundo de este año.

  9. Ron on 27 March 2008 14:20 PM

    It surprises me that Aronian wins the Amber. Only the very greatest are able to win it and maybe Levon has entered their ranks!

  10. Amos Sky on 27 March 2008 17:53 PM

    Great video, Peter! Loved the way you implemented the Stone’s song. Very cool!! Love reading your comment’s about the games and following along. It’s a patzer’s paradise as is this website in general.

  11. peter on 27 March 2008 18:03 PM

    Thx. But of course it’s Stones. Rolling ones. ;-)

  12. VaHug on 27 March 2008 18:41 PM

    Videos/ Reports/Comment section of the Amber was the best. My congratulations to Peter.

  13. JohnA on 27 March 2008 22:51 PM

    I loved the videos as well, I think that it helps fans like us get to know the personality of the world’s top players. Also, the production quality of the videos was excellent!

  14. Lajos Arpad on 28 March 2008 3:26 AM

    VaHug:
    “I’m talking about his being a very good chess player, and you tell me that he is a nice guy, but not that good.”
    No, you told me he is the best of the best.
    “In this tournament he is enough good to be the Champion of Champions and Challengers, like Kramnik, Anand, Topalov and you can hardly deny it.”
    Why should i? I congratulate him for his victory.
    “The rest is a question of taste”
    I think it is more a question about future victories. In a few years we will see his games against the other super GM’s, and with time passing we will be able to see his talent.


Got something to say?





Latest 30 posts:


Svidler in sole lead in Moscow 6/10, 20:39
Rybka clinches 2nd Computer World Championship title 6/10, 11:08
A scientific standard for chess writing? 5/10, 19:08
Russian Superfinal: Svidler beats Morozevich, leads with Lastin 5/10, 11:34
Anand interview in Der Spiegel 4/10, 13:30
Weekly Endgame Study (91) 4/10, 10:00
Super start Superfinal 3/10, 22:21
World Mind Sports Games kick off today 3/10, 13:30
Schachbundesliga starts, all games live 2/10, 12:50
“The United States needed a high level chess league” 1/10, 18:00
Austronaut vs school children: 1.d4 Nf6 1/10, 10:00
Topalov tops new FIDE ratings, now officially 30/9, 10:38
Russia takes revenge with rapid and… football 29/9, 12:22
Four-way tie for first at SPICE Cup 29/9, 10:36
Chess is art is chess 28/9, 10:39
Weekly Endgame Study (90) 27/9, 10:00
Bulgarian Chess Federation: “Mr Ilymzhinov, please inform us” (UPDATE) 26/9, 22:27
Attacking à la Tarrasch 26/9, 14:17
Torre’s comeback? 25/9, 14:34
Almasi wins Hungarian Championship 25/9, 9:35
China beats Russia in classical part 24/9, 12:09
Anand-Kramnik: half of the tickets sold 23/9, 17:52
Kritz & Mikhalevski lead SPICE Cup 23/9, 11:11
Milov beats a truncated Rybka 22/9, 12:41
China-Russia tied after three rounds 21/9, 15:18
Alexandra and I 20/9, 10:24
Weekly Endgame Study (89) 20/9, 10:00
Jan Werle wins European Union Championship 19/9, 10:14
Alexandra Kosteniuk new Women World Champion 18/9, 10:15
Beauty in chess II 17/9, 12:24

» check the latest coverstories

Bottom