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First three videos from Linares

29 February 2008 17:51 PM | Last modified: 18:45

Because of some technical problems it took a while, but finally the first three videos from Linares are up. Besides interviews with Leko and Aronian, you can see Ivanchuk’s terrible timetrouble and the comments after the game of his opponent (and winner of the game) Carlsen.



IVANCHUK vs CARLSEN



INTERVIEW PETER LEKO



INTERVIEW LEVON ARONIAN

Comments

17 Responses to “First three videos from Linares”

  1. Louis de funes on 29 February 2008 18:21 PM

    raar dat de arbiter aankondigt dat chucky op tijd verloren heeft.
    ik dacht dat de arbiter moet zwijgen en de tegenstander moet claimen

  2. manyoso on 29 February 2008 18:39 PM

    Magnus did not seem at all happy with how that turned out. Either that or he was just not happy to be interviewed after.

  3. peter on 29 February 2008 18:49 PM

    Of course he was happy - who wouldn’t be, after a win with Black? And Magnus actually seldomly refuses an interview. But you have to realize that it was only a few minutes after the game, so he was both tired and still trembling a little perhaps.

  4. manyoso on 29 February 2008 18:53 PM

    Ahh, thanks for the context. Still, it almost seems to me like Magnus gets embarrassed from winning when he hasn’t played that well or when his opponent has blundered/lost on time.

  5. gogomil on 29 February 2008 19:32 PM

    Thx Peter for the nice videos! These players are so nice, looks like Seneka’s words -nullum magnum ingenium sine mixtura demetiae fuit -cant be applied here. All look a bit tired !

  6. Andy on 29 February 2008 19:35 PM

    Moet je claimen dat je tegenstander de tijdscontrole niet haalt? Dat dacht ik niet. Het is de taak van de arbiter om te controleren of de tijdscontroles gehaald worden.

  7. Wolf Gray on 29 February 2008 20:30 PM

    Dear Peter,
    thanks a lot for your work. As for the guys who were supposed to provide “live games” from Linares, I propose to organize a webmaster school for them in Khanty-Mansiysk.

  8. Wolf Gray on 29 February 2008 20:45 PM

    One more detail: it should be a winter school.

  9. Amos Sky on 29 February 2008 20:56 PM

    Cool videos!!!

  10. Wolf Gray on 29 February 2008 21:18 PM

    Hey, “live games support” guys! Are you sure there was 54….Ke5 in the Topalov-Rajabov game?

  11. peter on 29 February 2008 21:28 PM

    No, it wasn’t. It always the same: the arbiter starts putting the two kings on e4 and e5 to tell the DGT software it’s a draw, but instead of doing that at the same time, he does it one by one.

  12. Wolf Gray on 29 February 2008 21:35 PM

    Thank you, Peter
    for the explanation. Anyway, the web support from Linares (I’m speaking about local guys, not about chessvibes!) is below the belt. Sorry.

  13. Wolf Gray on 29 February 2008 22:16 PM

    Short postmortem overview: Aronian went wrong with 25.Qe2, a move he can hardly explain, I think, and finished up with a dead drawn position. Topalov, maybe, had a chance after Rajabov’s 28….Qd2, but after 37.Qd5 he had only “practical chances”, no more. I’m glad to see Ivanchuk in his very solid form again… nothing more to say. Carlsen-Shirov is still going, but… young guy will find a way, I think.

  14. manyoso on 29 February 2008 22:59 PM

    I think Carlsen made an error with 44. Rd7 …

    44. Rc8 Rxc3 45. b5 … is clearly winning I believe.

    White can then march the b pawn and Black has no good counter as Black’s rook can’t leave the c file lest he leave his bishop unprotected. If Black capture’s White’s b pawn with the bishop he loses his rook… no?

  15. manyoso on 29 February 2008 23:17 PM

    Man, that was a great game. Very entertaining. I really thought Shirov was going to get out of it with a draw.

  16. lordnelson on 29 February 2008 23:40 PM

    who won the carlsen vs shirov game

  17. manyoso on 29 February 2008 23:44 PM

    Carlsen won. Shirov blundered horribly on last move. I think he was under time pressure. See frontpage.

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