GM Levon Aronian consolidated his position while GM Wesley So defeated GM Leinier Dominguez in a crucial game, as both opened a full point lead on 3/4 in Group C and Group D respectively at the end of the fourth round of the 2022 FIDE Grand Prix at Berlin.
GM Hikaru Nakamura maintained his half-point lead in Group A with 2.5/4 after a sharp and short draw against GM Etienne Bacrot. The race for the top place really heated up in Group B when GM Vladimir Fedoseev defeated GM Grigoriy Oparin with the black pieces to join GM Radoslaw Wojtaszek in the lead on 2.5/4.
Group A
The fourth round started in an electrifying way when Bacrot employed the French Defense as Black, an opening which he had employed in the previous game and also other times recently. But in comparison with the previous round, he came to the board with a sharp, prepared line ready for Nakamura, an invention of the World Championship Challenger GM Ian Nepomniachtchi. When queried about his opening choice in subsequent games during the post-game interview, Bacrot termed 10…g5 as “a little dubious,” but quipped, “I sometimes play the French because I am French!”
For someone who has claimed that playing classical chess seems boring because he hasn’t played the format for so long, Nakamura was forced to settle down to play a good long game. At one point, he even looked as if under pressure, spending more time than Bacrot, and had to decide on repeating a position thrice to accept a draw by the 25th move:
I sometimes play the French becuase I am French!
— GM Etienne Bacrot
Even though GM Alexander Grischuk seemed to enjoy a slight edge in his game against GM Andrey Esipenko, White could never make any serious progress. The game ended in a draw just after the first time control.
Nevertheless, the obligatory Grischuk quip did come in the press conference:
Alexander Grischuk: “I got completely confused. After 22.Qd3 Andrey played Qc6, and I started calculating some lines, but I will not say which ones. Because if I say, tomorrow I will have not only a PCR test but also a psychiatric test.” #FIDEGrandPrix pic.twitter.com/uUdaGK3prp
— International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) February 7, 2022
Group B
Fedoseev scored a surprisingly facile victory when his opponent, Oparin, suffered a rare case of “blackout” on the board, as he admitted later that he did not see Fedoseev’s 19…Qg4 until it was played on the board.
This allowed Fedoseev to reach 2.5/4, tying for the lead with GM Radoslaw Wojtaszek, who put up a long and hard defense to draw against GM Richard Rapport.
Group C
“It is pretty much an opening win,” opined Dubov after the game.
GM Vidit Gujrathi’s game against Aronian ended in a draw much earlier. Aronian was quite happy with an important moment of the game:
An illuminating detail came out in the post-game interview when Aronian admitted: “I could not recall all my [opening] analysis. I told myself, let me think and find moves like the old style,” and we do assume that this was not one of those moments of his famously dry sense of humor. Except for those at the very top of the chess Olympus, this should be a revealing point: Thinking on the board and finding moves is “old style”! Sure…
Group D
So had a surprisingly facile win over GM Leinier Dominguez Perez when the latter made an uncharacteristic blunder:
In the longest game of the day, GM Pentala Harikrishna pressed a slight advantage against GM Alexei Shirov for a long time, who put up a dogged defense to hold the draw.
Results
FIDE Grand Prix Berlin is the first of three legs of the event. The Berlin tournament takes place February 4-17. Tune in at 6 a.m. Pacific/ 15:00 CET each day for our broadcast.
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