Qatar Masters Round 6: Carlsen Catches Nakamura

[ad_1]

World number-one Magnus Carlsen exploited a blunder by IM Samant Aditya S to win a third game in four rounds and catch GM Hikaru Nakamura, who was held to a draw by GM David Paravyan. With three rounds to go the favorites are half a point behind a four-player leading pack, after GM Narayanan Sunilduth Lyna drew and was caught by GMs Arjun Erigaisi, Javokhir Sindarov, and Nodirbek Yakubboev. 

Round seven starts on October 18 at 8:15 a.m. ET/14:15 CEST/5:45 p.m. IST.

Time is running out in Qatar, and with just three rounds to go after round six the pressure was on the top players who had suffered setbacks to win on demand and stay in contention for the top places. Many of them managed.

We saw bounce-back wins, with GM Gukesh Dommaraju inflicting a first loss of the event on his Indian countrywoman IM Vaishali Rameshbabu, who put up a great fight but missed some chances in time trouble. Number-three seed GM Anish Giri also hit back from a first loss to defeat Algerian GM Bilel Bellahcene in a game that felt like a total refutation of White’s sacrifice of a piece for three pawns—an idea first seen in 1957, but computer-disapproved. The final position was memorable.

Fedoseev is back in business after winning his last four games. Photo: Valeria Kaidanov/Qatar Masters.

GM Vladimir Fedoseev has now won four games in a row after his shocking 0/2 start, but the most noteworthy player who’s been playing catch-up in Qatar is the top seed, Carlsen. After a defeat and a great escape in his last two games with the black pieces he returned to the ever-reliable Ruy Lopez, and outfoxed his young opponent. Aditya was tempted to swap off queens and grab the a-pawn.  

Soon, however, there was no way to defend White’s a-pawn, and Carlsen emerged with a clear advantage on the board and on the clock. The pressure told, since on move 38 White tried to play an intermezzo instead of simply taking a rook, which cost both the game and some excoriating words from Nakamura: “A horrible, horrible blunder and frankly just unbelievable. To not take the rook here is something no one above 1800 should ever miss.”

Nakamura again recapped that game, before looking at his own draw against Paravyan. The U.S. star explained that the fact he very nearly blundered with 28.Ne5? (when 28…f5! would have left him in trouble) threw him off balance: “As soon as you miss a one-move tactic already in your mind you’re a little bit shaky.” Nakamura then missed a chance for an advantage and had to settle for forcing a draw by perpetual check.


That meant that Carlsen had caught Nakamura on 4.5/6, but both players are well-placed for the tournament finale since they’re just half a point off the lead.

Narayanan, the sole leader after round five, sparked concern when he failed to show up at the start of his game against GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov. After 15 minutes he would have forfeited, but instead he appeared after seven minutes and shrugged that off to make a comfortable draw—he had one chance to press for more, but going for wild complications while leading the event was hard to justify.

17-year-old Sindarov is among the leaders. Photo: Keti Tsatsalashvili/Qatar Masters.

That meant Narayanan could be caught, and he was—by three players. Sindarov won the battle of the 17-year-olds against GM Aditya Mittal; 21-year-old Yakubboev won another spectacular clash, this time against GM Rinat Jumabayev; and the highest-rated player to lead is 20-year-old Arjun, whose opponent’s approach to the opening looked almost like a joke.



As GM Dejan Bojkov explains in his Game of the Day, however, there was method to the madness, and a fascinating struggle ensued.

Chess.com Game of the Day Dejan Bojkov

Afterward Arjun explained that his sacrifice of a piece for three pawns wasn’t preparation, but was an idea he knew about in such positions.

In Wednesday’s round seven the leaders will clash in Yakubboev-Arjun and Narayanan-Sindarov, while the top two seeds will face players who made a thrilling draw against each other in round six. Carlsen has White against two-time Indian Champion GM Karthikeyan Murali, while Nakamura is Black against GM Parham Maghsoodloo in what’s set to be the first all-2700 clash of the tournament.

The standings look as follows with three rounds to go.

Qatar Masters | Standings After Round 6 (Top 40)












































Rk. Seed No.

Name Age Sex Gr FED Rating Points TB1 TB2
1 13

GM Narayanan.S.L,

2651 5 0 2870
2 12

GM Sindarov, Javokhir U20

2658 5 0 2835
3 6

GM Erigaisi, Arjun U20

2712 5 0 2816
4 19

GM Yakubboev, Nodirbek

2616 5 0 2776
5 2

GM Nakamura, Hikaru

2780 4.5 0 2743
6 23

GM Paravyan, David

2599 4.5 0 2710
7 7

GM Maghsoodloo, Parham

2707 4.5 0 2708
8 5

GM Abdusattorov, Nodirbek U20

2716 4.5 0 2695
9 20

GM Karthikeyan, Murali

2611 4.5 0 2689
10 1

GM Carlsen, Magnus

2839 4.5 0 2684
11 4

GM Gukesh, D U20

2758 4.5 0 2667
12 27

GM Pranav, V U20

2579 4.5 0 2596
13 75

IM Vaishali, Rameshbabu

W

2448 4 0 2695
14 25

GM Jumabayev, Rinat

2585 4 0 2671
15 79

IM Srihari, L R U20

2438 4 0 2670
16 55

IM Ahmadzada, Ahmad U20

2494 4 0 2661
17 28

GM Vokhidov, Shamsiddin

2578 4 0 2659
18 30

GM Aditya, Mittal U20

2572 4 0 2657
19 43

GM Kevlishvili, Robby

2521 4 0 2656
20 16

GM Salem, A.R. Saleh

Ar. 2632 4 0 2651
21 3

GM Giri, Anish

2760 4 0 2650
22 46

GM Pranesh, M U20

2515 4 0 2638
23 8

GM Van Foreest, Jorden

2707 4 0 2616
24 37

IM Makarian, Rudik U20

2548 4 0 2615
25 22

GM Vakhidov, Jakhongir

2607 4 0 2606
26 50

IM Prraneeth, Vuppala U20

2510 4 0 2602
27 31

GM Shimanov, Aleksandr

2566 4 0 2600
28 24

GM Sethuraman, S.P.

2598 4 0 2583
29 15

GM Aryan, Chopra

2634 4 0 2579
30 32

GM Karthik, Venkataraman

2563 4 0 2575
31 35

GM Kaidanov, Gregory

2554 4 0 2568
32 18

GM Puranik, Abhimanyu

2618 4 0 2562
33 11

GM Oparin, Grigoriy

2681 4 0 2561
34 26

GM Kuybokarov, Temur

2584 4 0 2557
35 40

GM Fawzy, Adham

Ar. 2535 4 0 2556
36 45

GM Sankalp, Gupta U20

2518 4 0 2551
37 39

GM Visakh, N R

2547 4 0 2540
38 10

GM Fedoseev, Vladimir

2691 4 0 2526
39 36

GM Adhiban, B.

2551 4 0 2522
40 88

IM Zou, Chen

2418 3.5 0 2660

Full standings

Qatar Masters | All Games Round 6


The 2023 Qatar Masters is a nine-round open tournament for players rated 2300+. It takes place in Lusail, Qatar, on October 11-20 and boasts a $108,250 prize fund with $25,000 for first place, as well as a $5,000 prize for the top female player.


Previous Coverage:



[ad_2]

Source link

  • Related Posts

    Stephane Bressac Wins Unique 1st Blind Chess Challenge, Open To Everyone

    [ad_1] IM Stephane Bressac won the first edition of the Blindfold Chess Challenge, a tournament with a unique format held July 9-11 in Valencia, Spain, where visually-impaired players faced off…

    Bullet Brawl July 13, 2024: Naroditsky Wins 21st Brawl, Closes In On Nakamura’s All-Time Record

    [ad_1] GM Daniel Naroditsky has moved one step closer to seizing the top spot on the all-time Bullet Brawl leaderboard after winning the latest edition ahead of GMs Arjun Erigaisi, Hikaru…

    You Missed

    Hơn 2.300 VĐV dự giải cờ vua nhanh Hà Nội mở rộng

    Hơn 2.300 VĐV dự giải cờ vua nhanh Hà Nội mở rộng

    Đại kiện tướng 17 tuổi đánh người ở giải vô địch Mỹ

    Đại kiện tướng 17 tuổi đánh người ở giải vô địch Mỹ

    Đại kiện tướng 22 tuổi dùng điện thoại gian lận khi thi đấu

    Đại kiện tướng 22 tuổi dùng điện thoại gian lận khi thi đấu

    Marcel Duchamp – danh họa mê cờ đến bỏ vợ

    Marcel Duchamp – danh họa mê cờ đến bỏ vợ

    Đội của Firouzja vô địch Global Chess League 2024

    Đội của Firouzja vô địch Global Chess League 2024

    Đội của Carlsen hụt suất chung kết Global Chess League

    Đội của Carlsen hụt suất chung kết Global Chess League