Dortmund Rd2 – Kramnik and Ponomariov win

by ChessBase
7/22/2011 – It may not have been the cleanest win, but a point is a point. Kramnik spent much of his game against Meier either equal or a bit worse, but when the German's clock ran short, he managed to shake the tree with complications yielding him a 2.0/2 start. Ponomariov won a nice positional game against Giri, outplaying the young Dutchman to stay in contention. Round two report.

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From Thursday July 21 to Sunday July 31, 2010 the 39th edition annual Sparkassen Chess-Meeting is taking place in Dortmund, Germany. It is a six-player round robin, in which each player has to play two games against each of the others, one as White and one as Black. Draw offers are not allowed – a game can only be declared a draw, by the arbiter, if there is no possible win for one side, or if a position is repeated three times. The winner of the tournament will be determined after ten rounds.

Games start at 15:00h = 3 p.m. local time (CEST, = 17:00 Moscow, 14:00 p.m. London, 9:00 a.m. New York). All games will be broadcast by the official web site's "Live Games" page and on the Playchess.com server. As in the previous year the moves of the Sparkassen Chess-Meeting will be transmitted on the Internet with a delay of 15 minutes – which means that the moves stay in the playing hall for that period, before they are broadcast to the rest of the world. This is an important anti-cheating measure that has been proposed to FIDE since October 2005 and has the support of most of the top players. We commend the Dortmund organisers for taking the initiative.

Participants

Player
Title
Nat.
Born
Rating
Kramnik, Vladimir
GM
RUS
1975
2781
Nakamura, Hikaru
GM
USA
1987
2770
Ponomariov, Ruslan
GM
UKR
1983
2764
Le, Quang Liem
GM
VIE
1991
2715
Giri, Anish
GM
NED
1994
2715
Meier, Georg
GM
GER
1987
2656

Round two

Round 2: Friday, July 22, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem 
½-½
 Hikaru Nakamura
Ruslan Ponomariov 
1-0
 Anish Giri
Georg Meier 
0-1
 Vladimir Kramnik


Quang Liem Le facing Hikaru Nakamura

[Event "39th GM"] [Site "Dortmund GER"] [Date "2011.07.22"] [Round "2"] [White "Le, Quang Liem"] [Black "Nakamura, Hikaru"] [Result "1/2-1/2"] [ECO "E20"] [WhiteElo "2715"] [BlackElo "2770"] [PlyCount "44"] [EventDate "2011.07.21"] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. f3 c5 5. d5 O-O 6. e4 d6 7. Bd2 Re8 8. Nge2 a6 9. a4 exd5 10. cxd5 Nh5 11. g3 f5 12. Bg2 fxe4 13. Nxe4 Nf6 14. Bxb4 cxb4 15. Qd2 Nxe4 16. fxe4 a5 17. Nd4 Na6 18. O-O Nc5 19. Qf4 Nd3 20. Qd2 Nc5 21. Qf4 Nd3 22. Qd2 Nc5 1/2-1/2

Kramnik played a very brave game and fully deserves whatever he reaped. He played Meier as Black and spent much of the time either equal or slightly worse, yet when the German's clock began to grow short of time, he gambled on a complicated position and his opponent's lack of time in what could objectively have gone quite badly for him. However, the tactics were messy to say the least and Meier did indeed go astray and fail to make the most of it, allowing Kramnik to leap to a 2.0/2 lead.


Georg Meier against Vladimir Kramnik

[Event "39th GM"] [Site "Dortmund GER"] [Date "2011.07.22"] [Round "2"] [White "Meier, Georg"] [Black "Kramnik, Vladimir"] [Result "0-1"] [ECO "E15"] [WhiteElo "2656"] [BlackElo "2781"] [PlyCount "64"] [EventDate "2011.07.21"] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 b6 4. g3 Ba6 5. b3 Bb4+ 6. Bd2 Be7 7. Bg2 O-O 8. Nc3 d5 9. cxd5 exd5 10. O-O Re8 11. Rc1 Bb7 12. Ne5 Na6 13. Bf4 h6 14. Nb5 Bf8 15. Bh3 c5 16. a3 Ne4 17. Rc2 g6 18. Qc1 g5 19. Be3 Bg7 20. Nf3 Qe7 21. Rd1 Rad8 22. Nxa7 Nd6 23. a4 Nb4 24. dxc5 bxc5 25. Rxc5 Na2 26. Qc2 Nb4 27. Qc1 Nc4 $1 { It might seem strange to give this move a '!' considering that the engines clearly declare this a blunder, but there is more to it than that. The safe path was to simply repeat moves and accept the draw, but Kramnik decides to exploit Meier's time trouble and takes a serious gamble in order to try and win the game. The complications that ensue are bad enough under normal circumstances, but in time pressure...} 28. bxc4 d4 29. Bxg5 (29. Rxd4 {was the only move, but far from easy to find.} Rxd4 30. Nxd4 (30. Bxd4 Bxd4 31. Nxd4 Qxc5 32. Nab5 $14) 30... Qxc5 31. Nab5 $16) 29... Qxc5 30. Bxd8 d3 31. Ne1 $2 (31. Rd2 Qxa7 32. Ne1 Rxd8 33. Nxd3 Nxd3 34. Rxd3 Rxd3 35. exd3 Qxa4 $15) 31... Rxe2 32. Qf4 Rxf2 $1 0-1

Ponomariov commented after the game, "Chess is a strange game sometimes. Yesterday I was creative and lost, today I played rather weak, but my opponent made a few mistakes and I won." To his credit he played a fine positional game, and outplayed his opponent to win it. 


[Event "39th GM"] [Site "Dortmund GER"] [Date "2011.07.22"] [Round "2"] [White "Ponomariov, Ruslan"] [Black "Giri, Anish"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "D46"] [WhiteElo "2764"] [BlackElo "2701"] [PlyCount "67"] [EventDate "2011.07.21"] 1. Nf3 d5 2. c4 c6 3. e3 Nf6 4. Nc3 e6 5. d4 Nbd7 6. Qc2 Bd6 7. Bd3 O-O 8. O-O dxc4 9. Bxc4 b5 10. Bd3 Bb7 11. Rd1 b4 12. Na4 c5 13. dxc5 Rc8 14. Qe2 (14. Ng5 Bxh2+ 15. Kf1 Bc6 16. Bxh7+ Kh8 17. Rd4 Bxa4 18. Qxa4 Rxc5 19. Nf3 Kxh7 20. Nxh2 Qc7 21. Rh4+ Kg8 22. Bd2 a5 23. Nf3 g5 24. Rh6 Kg7 25. Rh1 g4 {0-1 (48) Hribersek,J (2365)-Marti Pericot,J (2402)/ICCF corr 2008/Corr 2011 (48)}) 14... Nxc5 15. Nxc5 Rxc5 16. Bd2 a5 17. e4 Qb8 18. h3 Bf4 19. a3 Bxd2 20. Nxd2 Ba8 21. Qe3 Rc7 22. a4 $1 {Ponomariov: "I decided to focus on attacking a5, figuring that the fact he only had 30 minutes left might be decisive..."} Bc6 23. Nb3 Qa7 24. Qxa7 Rxa7 25. f3 Rd8 26. Bb5 Rxd1+ (26... Bd7 {was the only move to try and resist.}) 27. Rxd1 Bxb5 28. axb5 Kf8 29. Nc5 Ra8 (29... Rc7 30. b6 Rxc5 31. b7 Rb5 32. Rd8+ Ke7 33. b8=Q Rxb8 34. Rxb8) 30. b6 Ke7 31. b7 Rb8 32. e5 Nd5 33. Ra1 Kd8 34. Rxa5 1-0

Schedule and results

Round 1: Thursday, July 21, 15:00h
Georg Meier 
½-½
 Le Quang Liem
Vladimir Kramnik 
1-0
 Ruslan Ponomariov
Anish Giri 
½-½
 Hikaru Nakamura 
Round 2: Friday, July 22, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem 
½-½
 Hikaru Nakamura
Ruslan Ponomariov 
1-0
 Anish Giri
Georg Meier 
0-1
 Vladimir Kramnik
Round 3: Saturday, July 23, 15:00h
Vladimir Kramnik 
   Le Quang Liem
Anish Giri 
   Georg Meier
Hikaru Nakamura 
   Ruslan Ponomariov 
Round 4: Sunday, July 24, 15:00h
Anish Giri 
   Le Quang Liem
Hikaru Nakamura 
   Vladimir Kramnik
Ruslan Ponomariov 
   Georg Meier
Round 5: Monday, July 25, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem 
   Ruslan Ponomariov 
Georg Meier 
   Hikaru Nakamura
Vladimir Kramnik 
   Anish Giri
Round 6: Wednesday, July 27, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem 
   Georg Meier
Ruslan Ponomariov 
   Vladimir Kramnik
Hikaru Nakamura 
   Anish Giri
Round 7: Thursday, July 28, 15:00h
Hikaru Nakamura 
   Le Quang Liem
Anish Giri 
   Ruslan Ponomariov 
Vladimir Kramnik 
   Georg Meier
Round 8: Friday, July 29, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem  
   Vladimir Kramnik
Georg Meier 
   Anish Giri
Ruslan Ponomariov 
   Hikaru Nakamura
Round 9: Saturday, July 30, 15:00h
Ruslan Ponomariov 
   Le Quang Liem
Hikaru Nakamura 
   Georg Meier
Anish Giri 
   Vladimir Kramnik
Round 10: Sunday, July 31, 15:00h
Le Quang Liem 
   Anish Giri
Vladimir Kramnik 
   Hikaru Nakamura
Georg Meier 
   Ruslan Ponomariov 

Links

The games are being broadcast live on the official web site and on the chess server Playchess.com. If you are not a member you can download a free Playchess client there and get immediate access. You can also use ChessBase 11 or any of our Fritz compatible chess programs.

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