Showing posts with label Alexander Morozevich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alexander Morozevich. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2011

Svidler wins Russian superfinal, Morozevich 2nd



Morozevich has been doing great since his long lay off. He defeated Svidler in the final round to finish 2nd in the Russian superfinal 2011.



Final round results



Morozevich, Alexander - Svidler, Peter 1-0
Galkin, Alexander - Kramnik, Vladimir 0-1
Nepomniachtchi, Ian - Karjakin, Sergey ½
Timofeev, Artyom - Grischuk, Alexander ½


Final standings



1. Svidler, Peter g 2739 5 2869
2. Morozevich, Alexander g 2694 2820
3. Karjakin, Sergey g 2788 4 2754
4. Grischuk, Alexander g 2746 4 2760
5. Kramnik, Vladimir g 2781 4 2755
6. Nepomniachtchi, Ian g 2711 3 2665
7. Galkin, Alexander g 2598 2 2574
8. Timofeev, Artyom g 2665 2492


Official website: http://www.russiachess.org

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Svidler and Morozevich lead Russian Superfinal



Round 4 results



Svidler, Peter - Galkin, Alexander 1-0
Kramnik, Vladimir - Nepomniachtchi, Ian 1-0
Karjakin, Sergey - Grischuk, Alexander 0-1
Morozevich, Alexander - Timofeev, Artyom 1-0


Standings after 4 rounds



1-2. Svidler, Peter g 2739 3
1-2. Morozevich, Alexander g 2694 3
3-5. Karjakin, Sergey g 2788 2
3-5. Grischuk, Alexander g 2746 2
3-5. Kramnik, Vladimir g 2781 2
6-7. Galkin, Alexander g 2598
6-7. Nepomniachtchi, Ian g 2711
8. Timofeev, Artyom g 2665 1


Official website: http://www.russiachess.org/

Friday, July 29, 2011

Carlsen wins Biel, Morozevich 2nd


Carlsen won Biel with relative ease. Morozevich won his final game to finish in 2nd place, clear ahead from the rest of the field. It is nice to see him back on track after a long layoff.

Final round results

Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime - Shirov, Alexei ½
Caruana, Fabiano - Carlsen, Magnus ½
Pelletier, Yannick - Morozevich, Alexander 0-1

Final standings

1. Carlsen, Magnus g NOR 2821 19 2835
2. Morozevich, Alexander g RUS 2694 17 2821
3-4. Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime g FRA 2722 12 2706
3-4. Shirov, Alexei g ESP 2714 12 2707
5. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2711 10 2636
6. Pelletier, Yannick g SUI 2590 5 2539

Official website: http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Carlsen wins Biel, Morozevich 2nd


Carlsen won Biel with relative ease. Morozevich won his final game to finish in 2nd place, clear ahead from the rest of the field. It is nice to see him back on track after a long layoff.

Final round results

Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime - Shirov, Alexei ½
Caruana, Fabiano - Carlsen, Magnus ½
Pelletier, Yannick - Morozevich, Alexander 0-1

Final standings

1. Carlsen, Magnus g NOR 2821 19 2835
2. Morozevich, Alexander g RUS 2694 17 2821
3-4. Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime g FRA 2722 12 2706
3-4. Shirov, Alexei g ESP 2714 12 2707
5. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2711 10 2636
6. Pelletier, Yannick g SUI 2590 5 2539

Official website: http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Carlsen maintains Biel lead after 7


July 27
th: 8th round (from 2 PM)

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave - Yannick Pelletier 1 - 0
Fabiano Caruana - Alexei Shirov 0 - 1
Magnus Carlsen - Alexander Morozevich ½ - ½

Standings after Round 7



Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2821 17
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 14
3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 10
Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 10
5. Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 6
6. Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 4

http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Carlsen maintains Biel lead after 7


July 27
th: 8th round (from 2 PM)

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave - Yannick Pelletier 1 - 0
Fabiano Caruana - Alexei Shirov 0 - 1
Magnus Carlsen - Alexander Morozevich ½ - ½

Standings after Round 7



Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2821 17
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 14
3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 10
Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 10
5. Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 6
6. Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 4

http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Carlsen and Morozevich win again


Round 7 results

Morozevich, Alexander - Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime 1-0
Shirov, Alexei - Carlsen, Magnus 0-1
Pelletier, Yannick - Caruana, Fabiano 0-1

Standings after 7 rounds


Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2821 16
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 13
3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 7

Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 7
5. Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 6
6. Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 4

http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Carlsen and Morozevich win again


Round 7 results

Morozevich, Alexander - Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime 1-0
Shirov, Alexei - Carlsen, Magnus 0-1
Pelletier, Yannick - Caruana, Fabiano 0-1

Standings after 7 rounds


Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2821 16
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 13
3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 7

Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 7
5. Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 6
6. Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 4

http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Biel Chess Festival 2011 - Round 3 Analysis


By
Chess Coach William Stewart. Original article with interactive PGN's available on William's site.

Magnus Carlsen Maintains Top Position

Carlsen has 2.5/3 points after today's fighting draw the ever-dangerous Alexander Morozevich. Carlsen attempted to play a Grunfeld, however had to switch gears after Moro's 4. Bg5. Carlsen emerged from the opening with a space advantage and pawn storming attack against white's king. While Morozevich is reknown for his attacking prowess, he is also an experienced and cool-headed defender. He reduced black's pressure by sacrificing a pawn with 33. d6!? and exchanged pieces while winning back the pawn on c4 (39. Rxc4). It seemed that a draw was likely as the players reached the time control at move 40, however Morozevich attempted to push forward due to his good knight vs Carlsen's bad dark-squared bishop. Carlsen defended accurately and Morozevich forced a perpetual check, ending the game in 52 moves.

Carlsen Regroups to Attack - Position after 22. ...Bf8

Shirov Explodes Caruana from Bishop’s Opening

Alexei Shirov is one of my all-time favorite players, continuing Mikhail Tal's tradition of playing creative, exciting, and above all - attacking chess. His "take no prisoners" style has backfired lately, as he has been in a slump with poor results. During this game, I was amused by Hikaru Nakamura's online commentary about Morozevich and Shirov:

"Moro is brilliant and knows how to set a fire on the board without pouring endless gasoline on his own position. Shirov on the other hand... He pours endless gasoline and eventually it all explodes". - Nakamura

Shirov, as white, opened calmly with the Bishop's Opening against Caruana - aiming for a positional middlegame instead of a sharp opening struggle. Caruana aimed to attack with 11. ...Ng5 12. ...Bg4 and 13. ...Qc8 - and Shirov welcomed the complications 16. d5 and 17. f4!? Many pieces were exchanged and the resulting position was roughly equal until Caruana jettisoned his protected past d-pawn with 31. ...d3?! Shirov quickly surrounded and won the pawn - resulting in a Q+B Vs Q+N endgame where white had an extra pawn but a scattered pawn structure. It seemed that Caruana could hold the position, however he played inaccurately and inattentively - allowing Shirov to first consolidate his position and relocate his king to the healthy queenside, then launch a decisive attack against black's kingside. Shirov finished the game with a simple tactical shot on move 63 to dispatch the young Caruana.
Shirov Vs Carlsen - Final Position After 63. Bg6+

Original article with interactive PGN's on the Biel Chess Festival available on William's site.
Photos and Game PGNS used from the Official Site

Biel Chess Festival 2011 - Round 3 Analysis


By
Chess Coach William Stewart. Original article with interactive PGN's available on William's site.

Magnus Carlsen Maintains Top Position

Carlsen has 2.5/3 points after today's fighting draw the ever-dangerous Alexander Morozevich. Carlsen attempted to play a Grunfeld, however had to switch gears after Moro's 4. Bg5. Carlsen emerged from the opening with a space advantage and pawn storming attack against white's king. While Morozevich is reknown for his attacking prowess, he is also an experienced and cool-headed defender. He reduced black's pressure by sacrificing a pawn with 33. d6!? and exchanged pieces while winning back the pawn on c4 (39. Rxc4). It seemed that a draw was likely as the players reached the time control at move 40, however Morozevich attempted to push forward due to his good knight vs Carlsen's bad dark-squared bishop. Carlsen defended accurately and Morozevich forced a perpetual check, ending the game in 52 moves.

Carlsen Regroups to Attack - Position after 22. ...Bf8

Shirov Explodes Caruana from Bishop’s Opening

Alexei Shirov is one of my all-time favorite players, continuing Mikhail Tal's tradition of playing creative, exciting, and above all - attacking chess. His "take no prisoners" style has backfired lately, as he has been in a slump with poor results. During this game, I was amused by Hikaru Nakamura's online commentary about Morozevich and Shirov:

"Moro is brilliant and knows how to set a fire on the board without pouring endless gasoline on his own position. Shirov on the other hand... He pours endless gasoline and eventually it all explodes". - Nakamura

Shirov, as white, opened calmly with the Bishop's Opening against Caruana - aiming for a positional middlegame instead of a sharp opening struggle. Caruana aimed to attack with 11. ...Ng5 12. ...Bg4 and 13. ...Qc8 - and Shirov welcomed the complications 16. d5 and 17. f4!? Many pieces were exchanged and the resulting position was roughly equal until Caruana jettisoned his protected past d-pawn with 31. ...d3?! Shirov quickly surrounded and won the pawn - resulting in a Q+B Vs Q+N endgame where white had an extra pawn but a scattered pawn structure. It seemed that Caruana could hold the position, however he played inaccurately and inattentively - allowing Shirov to first consolidate his position and relocate his king to the healthy queenside, then launch a decisive attack against black's kingside. Shirov finished the game with a simple tactical shot on move 63 to dispatch the young Caruana.
Shirov Vs Carlsen - Final Position After 63. Bg6+

Original article with interactive PGN's on the Biel Chess Festival available on William's site.
Photos and Game PGNS used from the Official Site

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Carlsen maintains a 2 point lead after 3


3
rd round - ACCENTUS Grandmaster Tournament

Yannick Pelletier - Maxime Vachier-Lagrave ½
Alexei Shirov - Fabiano Caruana 1 - 0
Alexander Morozevich - Magnus Carlsen ½

Standings after 3 rounds


Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2815 7
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 5
3. Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 4
4. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 2

Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 2

Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 2

http://bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Carlsen maintains a 2 point lead after 3


3
rd round - ACCENTUS Grandmaster Tournament

Yannick Pelletier - Maxime Vachier-Lagrave ½
Alexei Shirov - Fabiano Caruana 1 - 0
Alexander Morozevich - Magnus Carlsen ½

Standings after 3 rounds


Name
ELO Points
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2815 7
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 5
3. Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 4
4. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 2

Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 2

Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 2

http://bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Biel Chess Festival 2011 – Rounds 1 and 2

By Chess Coach William Stewart.

Original article on the Chess Festival in Biel available on William's website.

The 44th Biel International Chess Festival is taking July 18-29 in Biel, Switzerland. This 10 round, Double Round Robin super-tournament features many of the world's best players - boasting an average FIDE Rating of 2708. The highest rated player in world - Magnus Carlsen - is dominating with 2/2, while the experienced Morozevich chases with 1.5/2. The organizers have chosen to use a different scoring system to entice more combative chess, so a Win = 3 Points, a Draw = 1 Point, a Loss = 0.


Carlsen Lives Up To The Hype... Again

Magnus Carlsen began with a quality 88 move grind over local Swiss favorite Yannick Pelletier. Pelletier allowed Carlsen to snatch a pawn with 11. ...Bxc3!? - with the intention of gaining time and development to attack black in the center. Carlsen's thorough preparation allowed him to play the opening rapidly and emerge into a Q+R endgame with an extra pawn by move 30. Carlsen patiently nursed this pawn to victory over the next 58 moves and won his first round game in convincing fashion.

Pelletier Vs Carlsen - Final Position After 88. Qd2
Round 2: Carlsen + Time-Trouble Take Out Shirov

Carlsen played d4 and Shirov's response came as no surprise as he played the active Meran Defense. Carlsen's early 13. Nd4!? provoked a slower response from Shirov, beginning his time-trouble issues with 16 minutes spent on 13. ...e5. Carlsen's strange and rapid play began to immediately affect Shirov, as he spent a costly 43 minutes on 16. ...Bc5. Carlsen played extremely quickly and strove to create maximum tension and complications to take advantage of Shirov's lack of time. By move 27, the dust was settling: white had an extra protected past pawn and definite attacking possibilities against black's king that was stuck in the center. Shirov attempted to defend, however his lack of time combined with Carlsen's rapid and resourceful attack led to black's resignation after a tactical oversight.

Carlsen Vs Shirov - Final Position After 33. Rxd8+!
Morozevich With Good Defensive Win

At 34 years old Alexander Morozevich has been one of the best chess players in the world for over a decade. His results have seen him in a slump as he dropped under 2700 recently, however his calm defensive win against Vachier-Lagrave today proved that he can certainly still play with the best in the world. I found it very interesting that the Russian chose to play the Grunfeld, as Lagrave has scored a number of impressive wins lately with that opening as black. Morozevich was unafraid of the young frenchman's preparation, and chose a topical line involving a potential pawn sac on c5 to gain the initiative with activity for the black pieces. Lagrave did not take the pawn, but chose instead to attack the black king. Morozevich played too indecisively with 15. Qd7 and 16. Qe6?! - allowing Lagrave to attack with tempo on 17. f5! and 19. d5. Morozevich stayed calm as Lagrave desperately sacrificed a knight with 28. Ng5+, white's attack fizzled out and Lagrave was forced to resign after 41 moves.

Lagrave Desperately Sacrifices With 28. Ng5+

Biel Chess Festival 2011 – Rounds 1 and 2

By Chess Coach William Stewart.

Original article on the Chess Festival in Biel available on William's website.

The 44th Biel International Chess Festival is taking July 18-29 in Biel, Switzerland. This 10 round, Double Round Robin super-tournament features many of the world's best players - boasting an average FIDE Rating of 2708. The highest rated player in world - Magnus Carlsen - is dominating with 2/2, while the experienced Morozevich chases with 1.5/2. The organizers have chosen to use a different scoring system to entice more combative chess, so a Win = 3 Points, a Draw = 1 Point, a Loss = 0.


Carlsen Lives Up To The Hype... Again

Magnus Carlsen began with a quality 88 move grind over local Swiss favorite Yannick Pelletier. Pelletier allowed Carlsen to snatch a pawn with 11. ...Bxc3!? - with the intention of gaining time and development to attack black in the center. Carlsen's thorough preparation allowed him to play the opening rapidly and emerge into a Q+R endgame with an extra pawn by move 30. Carlsen patiently nursed this pawn to victory over the next 58 moves and won his first round game in convincing fashion.

Pelletier Vs Carlsen - Final Position After 88. Qd2
Round 2: Carlsen + Time-Trouble Take Out Shirov

Carlsen played d4 and Shirov's response came as no surprise as he played the active Meran Defense. Carlsen's early 13. Nd4!? provoked a slower response from Shirov, beginning his time-trouble issues with 16 minutes spent on 13. ...e5. Carlsen's strange and rapid play began to immediately affect Shirov, as he spent a costly 43 minutes on 16. ...Bc5. Carlsen played extremely quickly and strove to create maximum tension and complications to take advantage of Shirov's lack of time. By move 27, the dust was settling: white had an extra protected past pawn and definite attacking possibilities against black's king that was stuck in the center. Shirov attempted to defend, however his lack of time combined with Carlsen's rapid and resourceful attack led to black's resignation after a tactical oversight.

Carlsen Vs Shirov - Final Position After 33. Rxd8+!
Morozevich With Good Defensive Win

At 34 years old Alexander Morozevich has been one of the best chess players in the world for over a decade. His results have seen him in a slump as he dropped under 2700 recently, however his calm defensive win against Vachier-Lagrave today proved that he can certainly still play with the best in the world. I found it very interesting that the Russian chose to play the Grunfeld, as Lagrave has scored a number of impressive wins lately with that opening as black. Morozevich was unafraid of the young frenchman's preparation, and chose a topical line involving a potential pawn sac on c5 to gain the initiative with activity for the black pieces. Lagrave did not take the pawn, but chose instead to attack the black king. Morozevich played too indecisively with 15. Qd7 and 16. Qe6?! - allowing Lagrave to attack with tempo on 17. f5! and 19. d5. Morozevich stayed calm as Lagrave desperately sacrificed a knight with 28. Ng5+, white's attack fizzled out and Lagrave was forced to resign after 41 moves.

Lagrave Desperately Sacrifices With 28. Ng5+

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Carlsen leads Biel by 2 points


Standings after Round 2


Name
ELOPoints
1. Magnus Carlsen NOR 2815 6
2. Alexander Morozevich RUS 2694 4
3. Fabiano Caruana ITA 2711 2
4. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave FRA 2722 1
Alexei Shirov ESP 2714 1
Yannick Pelletier SUI 2590 1

http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Magnus strikes again 2/2 in Biel


Magnus Carlsen is making it 2/2 with his exciting win over Fire on Board Alexei Shirov. Morozevich after a long layoff, is back with a vengeance. He recently won the Russian Higher League and in this round took down the French #1 player, Vachier-Lagrave, with Black.

Round 2 results

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 0-1 Alexander Morozevich

Magnus Carlsen 1-0 Alexei Shirov

Fabiano Caruana 1/2
Yannick Pelletier

Official website: http://www.bielchessfestival.ch/en/home/

Biel LIVE with Carlsen, Vachier-Lagrave, Shirov, Morozevich, Caruana


Live chess broadcast powered by ChessBomb and Chessdom



Biel chess 2011 LIVE!
Live games with computer analysis

The 44th Biel Chess Festival will take place from 18th to 29th July in Biel, Switzerland. The main event is the Accentus Grandmaster Tournament which will be a six-player double round robin. Magnus Carlsen (NOR), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA), Alexei Shirov (ESP), Fabiano Caruana (ITA), Alexander Morozevich (RUS) and Yannick Pelletier (SUI) will participate. Games will be live daily at 14:00 CET.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Biel LIVE with Carlsen, Vachier-Lagrave, Shirov, Morozevich, Caruana


Live chess broadcast powered by ChessBomb and Chessdom



Biel chess 2011 LIVE!
Live games with computer analysis

The 44th Biel Chess Festival will take place from 18th to 29th July in Biel, Switzerland. The main event is the Accentus Grandmaster Tournament which will be a six-player double round robin. Magnus Carlsen (NOR), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA), Alexei Shirov (ESP), Fabiano Caruana (ITA), Alexander Morozevich (RUS) and Yannick Pelletier (SUI) will participate. Games will be live daily at 14:00 CET.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Biel 2011 with world's superstars


Official Site

Biel Main Event

1 Carlsen, Magnus GM NOR 2821
2 Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime GM FRA 2722
3 Shirov, Alexei GM ESP 2714
4 Caruana, Fabiano GM ITA 2711
5 Morozevich, Alexander GM RUS 2694
6 Pelletier, Yannick GM SUI 2590

Biel Masters: Registered Players

(as of July 11, 2011)

Title Prename Name
Elo
GM Boris Grachev RUS
2680
GM Bu Xiangzhi CHN
2675
GM Tigran Gharamian FRA
2670
GM Ivan Cheparinov BUL
2669
GM Ni Hua CHN
2662
GM Christian Bauer FRA
2637
GM Maxim Rodhstein ISR
2637
GM Vladimir Baklan UKR
2620
GM Hrvoje Stevic CRO
2619
GM Anton Filippov UZB
2606
GM Ante Brkic CRO
2598
GM Evgeny Gleizerov RUS
2590
GM Ilya Nyzhnyk UKR
2589
GM Romain Edouard FRA
2587
GM Sébastien Mazé FRA
2578
GM Mykhaylo Oleksienko UKR
2564
GM Magesh C. Panchanathan IND
2556
GM Alexander Kovchan UKR
2554
IM Samuel Shankland USA
2539
GM Mikhail Ulibin RUS
2538
GM Sebastian Bogner GER
2528
GM Normunds Miezis LAT
2520
GM Ilya Khmelniker ISR
2510
GM Anthony Wirig FRA
2510
IM Gerlef Meins GER
2505

The full list of registered players

Friday, July 8, 2011

Super Russian Championship


The Russian Chess Championships in August will be one of the highlights of the year. The field will be Vladimir Kramnik, Peter Svidler, Sergey Karjakin, Ian Nepomniachtchi, Alexander Grischuk, Alexander Morozevich, Alexander Galkin and Artyom Timofeev. The event has taken place in December in recent years but in order to secure the participation of the best players it had to move to avoid clashes with the London Chess Classic and an event in China. This news came as part of an article with an interview with Alexander Morozevich where he reveals that he considered himself retired since January 2010 but now is on the point of resuming his career.

Source: http://www.chess.co.uk/twic