The Giants Awaken, Kramnik and Anand Take the Lead
01.03.2003
– After six rounds the heavyweights have taken their rightful places at the head of the crosstable. Vishy Anand defeated Peter Leko and Vlady Kramnik demolished Radjabov to claim his share of first place. Vallejo-Kasparov was a draw with a few twists. The stage is set for two big clashes tomorrow: Kasparov-Anand and Leko-Kramnik. Come watch live at Playchess.com! More..
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Nigel Davies:
A busy persons opening system
Players with interests and commitments away from the chess board often find it difficult to compete against those with more study time. Their opponents come to the board armed with the latest theory and can bash out moves well into the middle game. On this DVD Nigel Davies addresses this issue by demonstrating a simple and easy to learn opening system designed for the busy person.
More information...
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Linares Super GM 2003 Round 6
|
XX International Chess Tournament
Cuidad de Linares 2003 (Cat. XX) |
| Round 6 (Friday, February 28, 2003) |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
1-0 |
Leko, Peter |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
1-0 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| |
The
giants have awoken! Long-time rivals Vishy Anand and Vladimir Kramnik moved
into the lead in Linares today. The 2000 FIDE world champion Anand swapped places
in the standings with Peter Leko by defeating him in a wonderful game. Classical
champion Vladimir Kramnik sent Teimour Radjabov to bed without dessert with
a crushing kingside attack. Kasparov swapped queens early against Vallejo and
seemed content with the draw.
Leko
came into the round in clear first place and left it in clear third. Anand had
done some homework and he played an extraordinary gambito grande in the same
3.Bb5 Sicilian he used against Kramnik in the fourth round. It was about time
somebody got something other than a losing position from these anti-Sveshnikov
lines. After disasters like Ponomariov-Kramnik and Ponomariov-Leko, you begin
to wonder just how much better for black the Sveshnikov could be.
Accepting the pawn sacrifices left Leko scrambling to develop his pieces. In
the diagram Anand played 15.d6! to open diagonals for his bishop and
queen.
15...Qxd6 16.Rfe1 a5 17.Qxc2 Bg7 18.Bxa5 and Leko had given back both
pawns but still had a very difficult position. 10 moves later and White's advantage
had crystalized into a winning endgame with a two vs one pawn majority on the
queenside.
To beat Leko you need to put a stake through his heart (not a steak, he's a
vegetarian), chop his head off, burn the body, and dump the ashes into a deep
pit. (That's a metaphor. No real Peter Lekos were harmed in the writing of that
sentence.) Although he has sharpened his play in the past year his tremendous
preparation and formidable technique make him very hard to beat.
He
was putting up stiff resistance until Anand brought out the garlic and holy
water with 44.Rxd8!, winning two pawns for the exchange and creating
two deadly connected passers on the kingside. Somehow you just knew Leko would
end up in another marathon endgame!
44...Rxd8 45.Rc7+ Ke6 46.Rxb7 Red5 47.Rxh7 Rb5 48.Bc5 and it was only
a matter of time. Did someone say time? Anand was his usual speedy self and,
also thanks to the opening minefield Leko had to step though, was soon an hour
ahead on the clock. But more time probably wouldn't have helped Leko, and Anand
moved into first place in Linares.
Shared first place, that is. Long before Leko resigned Vladimir Kramnik had
taken his slice of first place. He crushed Teimour Radjabov in the youth's seemingly
inevitable French Defense with a steamroller of a kingside attack that came
right out of the opening. Radjabov's dependence on the French hasn't really
hurt him, but he's had several dubious positions and today's game was a disaster
for his preparation.
 Kramnik
came out with a strong knight versus the usual miserable French bishop and then
smashed through on the kingside with both pawns and heavy pieces. Radjabov inexplicably
sidelined his queen with 19...Qc4 and Kramnik used that time to mobilize
his pieces.
In the diagram, Kramnik played a classic breakthrough with 22.f5! and
Black was quickly blown away. 22...Qb6? (22...Qf7 survived longer) 23.Rh3!
fxe5 24.Rxh6 Rf6 25.Qe8+ Rf8 26.Rh8+ and only Kramnik's time trouble gave
Radjabov any reason to play on. Your copy of Fritz or Junior might argue about
which checkmate is the fastest, but Kramnik wasn't going to worry about such
things and he closed the door efficiently. It was like Kramnik was telling Kasparov,
"Garry, don't try to finesse these kids, pick them up and give them a good
hard shake!"
Kasparov decided not to try and test Vallejo and played a queen exchange that
didn't leave many hopes for winning chances for either side. It should be noted
that the game turned into an interesting one nonetheless, and even the opposite-colored
bishops endgame was surprisingly lively and sharp.
Yet another big day of showdowns tomorrow as Kasparov takes the white pieces
into action against Anand. A win for Kasparov would break the tournament
wide open. Of equal interest is the world championship preview pairing Leko-Kramnik.
More Bb5, anyone?
Mig Greengard
Standings after round six
| Round 1 (Saturday,
February 22, 2003) |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
1-0 |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
0-1 |
Leko, Peter |
| |
|
| Round 2 (Sunday, February 23,
2003) |
| Kasparov, Garry |
0-1 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
0-1 |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| |
|
| Round 3 (Monday, February 24,
2003) |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| Leko, Peter |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
| |
|
| Round 4 (Tuesday, February 25,
2003) |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
½-½ |
Leko, Peter |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
½-½ |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| |
|
| Round 5 (Thursday, February 27,
2003) |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| Leko, Peter |
1-0 |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Kasparov, Garry |
1-0 |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| |
|
| Round 6 (Friday, February 28,
2003) |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
1-0 |
Leko, Peter |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
1-0 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| |
|
| Round 7 (Saturday, March 1, 2003) |
| Leko, Peter |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 8 (Sunday, March 2, 2003) |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| Leko, Peter |
- |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 9 (Monday, March 3, 2003) |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
- |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
- |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 10 (Wednesday, March 5,
2003) |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Leko, Peter |
| Games Report
|
|
| Round 11 (Thursday, March 6, 2003) |
| Leko, Peter |
- |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 12 (Friday, March 7, 2003) |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
- |
Radjabov, Teimour |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Leko, Peter |
| Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 13 (Saturday, March 8, 2003) |
| Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
| Leko, Peter |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
| Radjabov, Teimour |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
| Games Report |
|
| Round 14 (Sunday, March 9, 2003) |
| Kramnik, Vladimir |
- |
Leko, Peter |
| Anand, Viswanathan |
- |
Kasparov, Garry |
| Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
| Games Report |
|
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