XVI TRADEWISE GIBRALTAR Henderson ilusiona mucho

31 enero 2018 | Por Redacción | Categoria: Ajedrez, Otros Deportes
Lance Henderson

Lance Henderson

El español, de 14 años, roza la norma de gran maestro en un ambiente de gran emoción

No es frecuente que un jugador logre una norma de Gran Maestro menos de dos meses después de completar el título de Maestro Internacional. El español Lance Henderson lo conseguirá hoy, a los 14 años, si no pierde ante el indio Narayanán en la penúltima ronda. Trece jugadores aspiran a ganar un torneo presidido por una enorme combatividad, que también afecta a la lucha por el primer premio femenino.

Henderson ganó ayer con negras una partida muy dura, de tremendas complicaciones, al israelí Alexánder Huzman, entrenador de Borís Guélfand. Esa victoria requirió calcular y evaluar posiciones muy complejas en poco tiempo, como reconoció su rival poco después: “Tiene mucho talento. Con independencia de los errores que hemos cometido ambos, él ha jugado muy bien desde el punto de vista posicional”. El adolescente marbellí es el mejor clasificado de habla hispana junto al argentino Federico Pérez Ponsa, con 5,5 puntos.

El primer premio será para alguno de los cuatro empatados a 6,5 (Nakamura, Vachier-Lagrave, Rapport y Dúbov) o de los nueve que tienen 6 (Howell, Gupta, Wang Hao, Grandelius, Oparin, Vitiugov, Aronián, Guélfand y Sethuraman). En caso de empate a puntos tras la décima ronda (jueves, desde las 11.00) se jugará un desempate rápido con un máximo de cuatro participantes (los demás empatados, si los hubiere, serán eliminados por los métodos habituales”.

También hay una gran emoción en la disputa del primer premio femenino porque la georgiana Nino Batsiashvili, con 5,5, es perseguida por nueve jugadoras a medio punto. Y quien mejor desempate tiene por ahora de esas nueve es la sueca Pía Cramling, de 54 años, invicta tras ocho rondas.

 

ivanchuk

ivanchuk

Entre los frustrados, hay uno tan ilustre como deprimido: Vasili Ivanchuk. El genial ucranio dijo que se iba a retirar del ajedrez unos minutos después de su espectacular derrota ante el indio Gupta. Pero por la noche se le vio sonriente en el bar tras unas cuántas partidas rápidas, lo que hizo renacer la esperanza de su legión de admiradores.

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Round 8 Report:  Tuesday 30 January 2018 – by John Saunders (@JohnChess)

 

FOUR GO TOP OF THE ROCK

 

A third successive draw for one of the co-leaders, Hikaru Nakamura, and a loss for the other, David Howell, contributed to a four-way traffic jam on 6½/8 after the eighth round of the Tradewise Gibraltar Masters at the Caleta Hotel on Tuesday. With two rounds remaining the leaders are Hikaru Nakamura (USA), Richard Rapport (Hungary), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France) and Daniil Dubov (Russia). The leader in the race for the top women’s prize is now Nino Batsiashvili (Georgia) with 5½, having leapfrogged over Ju Wenjun (China) and Kateryna Lagno (Russia) who both lost.

 

Wang Hao-Nakamura produced another muted performance from the four-times titleholder. Wang Hao had enjoyed a half-point bye in the seventh round and might have been expected to push harder. The Berlin defence from Nakamura may have been something of a surprise: unless I missed something on my database search he’s only played into this line in a handful of blitz and rapid games. The game left book on move 11 and then the players steered for a repetition, ending on move 19. Perhaps Nakamura is keeping something in reserve for the big push in the final two rounds, plus a possible tie-break.

 

In Rapport-Howell White built steadily on his opening initiative and Black was first pushed back and eventually overwhelmed by an advance of the f and e-pawns. Rather a depressing game for the English player but fine technique from the young Hungarian player who thus joined the leaders.

 

Oparin-Aronian was a draw not unlike that Wang Hao-Nakamura though with a brief tactical flourish which briefly promised greater things before the inevitable repetition. Nigel Short commented later at the Question and Answer session that Aronian tends to be solid with Black, which is less suited to the milieu of open events than it is to elite competitions, since in Swiss events players need to push hard for decisive results with both colours. But he’s only half a point off the speed and well within range still.

 

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave was paired with a French colleague and friend Jules Moussard but there were no old pals’ acts on offer today as MVL needed the point. The queens came off early but the number two seed nursed a small edge and then won a pawn. It was still not easy but he nursed his advantage to its conclusion on move 65.

 

Daniil Dubov completes the quartet of players on 6½/8. He beat his fellow countryman Mikhail Antipov who had proved so resilient up to this point. Black’s 11…b6 was the first new move. Dubov soon exercised a strong positional grip on the game, strong-pointing c5 on the queenside and advancing his pawns on the kingside. Antipov countered effectively but then overlooked a positional trick starting with a queen exchange and then 35.e4, enabling Dubov to reach an endgame where his bishop outgunned Black’s knight and, more importantly, the black king was hemmed in on g8 with little hope of escape. Dubov won a pawn and almost immediately after the game when he found a way to force a king and pawn endgame.

 

There isn’t time or space to cover all the best games of the round – there were many excellent games – but I recommend readers play through the games Vitiugov-Gledura and Ju Wenjun-Gelfand which are well worth studying.

 

As we know Vassily Ivanchuk is a very mercurial player. I saw him an hour or so before this round standing alone and gazing out to sea a few hundred metres along the coast road. Although yesterday’s storm has largely abated, the sea is still a magnificent stormy sight, with large waves breaking over the rocks. As I passed Vassily I made some trite comment about the view («beautiful, isn’t it?») but he seemed to be in a trance and didn’t reply. Back at the board, he still seemed in a dream-like state and played a poor game against Abhijeet Gupta. Credit to the winner for playing an aggressive game but sadly Chucky was away with the fairies this afternoon, taking no more than a few seconds for each of his moves from move 20 to the game’s calamitous conclusion.

 

Tradewise Gibraltar Masters, Round 8, 30.01.2018

A.Gupta (2610) – V.Ivanchuk

1.d4 e6 2.c4 Nf6 3.Nf3 b6 4.a3 Bb7 5.Nc3 d5 6.cxd5 Nxd5 7.Qc2 Nxc3 8.bxc3 Be7 9.e4 0‑0 10.Bd3 c5 11.0‑0 Qc8 12.Qe2 Ba6 13.Rd1 Bxd3 14.Rxd3 Nd7 15.e5 cxd4 16.cxd4 Re8 16…Qc4 has also been played frequently. 17.h4!? Commentator Simon Williams’s liking for this kingside thrust seems to have cast a spell over the players here. 17.Bg5 is a more usual move but Abhijeet was feeling frisky and bent on playing for mate. 17…Qb7 Gupta thought 17…Qc4 was better here. The text is a little passive, though it has been played before. White’s pieces are nicely poised for an kingside assault. 18.Bg5 18.h5 h6 19.Nh2 Kh8 20.Ng4 was played in the game Krasenkow-Henderson de la Fuente, Rilton Cup, this past December, and White won in 32 moves. 18…Bf8 19.Nd2 f6?! Engines advocate something like 19…Qd5 but you can’t help feeling White is going to get a big attack while Black doesn’t have much active counterplay. The text move, however, significantly weakens the kingside. 20.exf6 Nxf6 21.Bxf6 gxf6 22.Ne4 Qf7? It was already clear that Ivanchuk was having one of his off-days and this makes it so much worse. Had he played 22…Qe7 he would at least not be vulnerable to a tempo-winning knight move in the coming sequence. 23.Rf3 f5 23…Be7 24.Ng5 is all over. 24.Rg3+ Kh8 25.Ng5 Qd7 26.Qh5 Re7 27.Re1 Qe8 Black is clinging on by his fingernails. 28.Qf3 Engines prefer 28.Qe2, planning simply to pick off the e6-pawn next move. 28…Rd8 29.d5 Rxd5 30.Nxe6 (diagram)

1 30…Rxe6? White’s combination looks great but Black could have played 30…Qc6! here, which would give White something to think about. After the text, White has a crushing reply. 31.Rg8+!! Reminiscent of the Rg1+ move by Cheparinov against Pichot in round five. 31…Kxg8 32.Qxd5 Qb5 If Black defends with 32…Kf7 then 33.Qxf5+ wins easily, e.g. 33…Rf6 34.Qxh7+ Bg7 35.Rxe8, etc. 33.Qxe6+ Kg7 34.Rd1 1‑0

To finish, here’s a little gem from the Challengers event. At first sight White has a vast material advantage – rook and knight and pawns versus only pawns – but look closer and you’ll see a tricky cluster of passed pawns looming into view on the queenside rather like the iceberg that collided with the Titanic. Playing with little more than the ten-second increment, it was next to impossible for White to find a way to win, especially after his faulty 51st move, and he soon sank with all hands. But we must be grateful to White because in the process he unwittingly created a gorgeous ‘White to play and win’ endgame study which I tested on a couple of GMs (Stuart Conquest and Mickey Adams) before writing this report. They both found it quite challenging and needed a few minutes to figure it out.

 

F.De Vega Fernandez (1784) – O.Adebajo

2(Diagram left) Three pawns are rarely a match for rook and knight (unless they are all lined up one move from promotion) but a player in the Challengers with not much time on his clock found them too hot to handle in the following tragi-comedy. 51.Nc2? 51.Na6+ and 51.Nd3 are both better 3choices to secure the win. The text wins but only if White follows up with a beautiful study-like move that few (if any) humans would have been capable of finding in the time available. I tested the position (diagram right) on two GMs (Stuart Conquest and Mickey Adams) and they both needed minutes rather than seconds to hit on the right plan. 51…bxc2 (Diagram right) Now stop reading ahead and see if you can find the white win. It’s very difficult so don’t worry if you cannot do it. 52.Ke2? The only winning move now is 52.h4!! and the point is seen after the following sequence: 52…Kb4 53.Kd4 Kb3 54.Rh1! or any other similar pass move. Now 54…Kb2 55.Kxc4 c1Q 56.Rxc1 Kxc1 57.Kxc3 when the white king sprints to f6 and wins: 57…Kd1 58.Kd4 Ke2 59.Ke5 Kf3 60.Kf6 Kg4 61.Kxf7, etc. 52…Kb4 53.Rc1? This loses. The difference between the situation and the line after 52.h4 is shown after 53.Ke3 (the right move but only good enough to draw) 53…Kb3 54.Kd4 Kb2 55.Kxc4 c1Q 56.Rxc1 Kxc1 57.Kxc3 Kd1 58.Kd4?? Ke2 59.Ke5 Kf3 60.Kf6 Kg4 61.h3+ Kh4 and the white king has to surrender the defence of the g5–pawn. Instead White would have to play 58.Kd3! to hold the draw. So the key to finding the right move is to defend the g5–pawn: something that is far from obvious as you survey the problems on the queenside in the initial position. 53…Kb3 Now White is dead lost. His white king cannot get near enough to help the rook to blockade the pawns. 54.Rf1 Kb2 0‑1

 

If you plan to watch the last round (10) on Thursday, this is advance warning that play starts at 11am (CET) that day. Play in round 9 starts at the usual time of 3pm (CET).

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  Informe de la Ronda 8, Festival de Ajedrez Tradewise Gibraltar

 

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