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Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Anand on World Chess Championship 2013: I should have pressed Carlsen a bit more

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

Here is an interesting interview given by former World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand to SportStar. “I never really adapted to Magnus Carlsen’s style well. Clearly, he has refined his style a lot recently. He has become stronger and more effective with it,” says the former World Chess champion. Excerpts from the interview

Question: Anand, how have the days after the World title match been?
Answer: Actually, it was quite nice. I came back home (after the match), back to Akhil and had some wonderful experiences with him, playing, running around the house, Akhil calling me “Papa… Papa…” Then we went to a school dance of his. It has been wonderful in the sense that though it’s been only a few days, it feels like it’s months since the match passed. Then meeting up with friends, I also had dinner with some school friends. Generally, life goes on, what can you do? Honestly, in the last few days, I didn’t want to think about chess. I wanted to play with Akhil.


Do you ever remember spending time away from chess?Yes. That’s actually something I do reasonably often, especially if you come home for a short break sometime and so on. You don’t really try to combine it with chess. That’s the experience I’ve had.

Have you been able to experience the power of the young one at home, as a lovable stress-buster?The defeat hurts… Viswanathan Anand with his wife after receiving the runner-up trophy at the Hyatt Regency.

Really a lot. I mean, kids have a way of making you feel special. Well, you really can’t explain that; one has to experience it. You feel very, very special playing with them. When he gets up and laughs, then you feel wonderful. It cures you of every worry. It takes away your thoughts so fast because you are forced to focus on them. I think, that probably is the reason why it helps (to have a kid at home).

Coming to the match, even after months of preparations from both players, how much of opening preparations were actually seen in the match? No serious debates over the existing opening theories?
I would agree. I would just say with those early games with black (pieces), they had some theoretical value, but only to specialists and not obvious to every one. Specialists in those openings would notice some enthusiasm here and there. But I agree, for the broader public, they have gone unnoticed. It is a general fact of life these days that the role of the openings is diminishing in chess. And my opponent (Carlsen) simply exemplifies that trend.

Talking of the match, in the first four drawn games, you had plenty of positives to look at. After the third game, you said, your upside was not adequate enough to force a win. After detailed analysis do you still have the same view?I definitely feel it was a mistake that I underestimated my possibilities in that game. It was a mistake. He (Carlsen) mentioned it as well that he thought I had let him off the hook so easily. Well, that I more or less concede. I agree. I should have pressed him a bit more. Thereafter, I atoned by escaping, in Game Four, the way I did. It was a nice defence. The problem was that after Game Four I thought we were really into the match. We were warmed up and it was going to get exciting. But we know what happened next.

Where did you lose the thread in Game Five?Actually, it was throughout the game, I mean, there were small mistakes, here and there. I didn’t lose the game in one move. I lost it over several and it’s exactly what I had hoped not to do but it was exactly what I did. So, Game Five was one of those losses which hurt because you do it bit by bit. Not one blunder, but you do it bit by bit and it slips away from you.

Going by your body language during this game, is it a fair conclusion to draw that you were getting increasingly annoyed with yourself due to the choices you were making? You appeared to make some random moves, as well…Yes. It is quite perceptive. I think it is clear that I could feel that I was making small mistakes and that was getting annoying. But you have to still get a grip on yourself because there is no use crying over split milk and all that. You have to get your thoughts back to the game but there was residue to annoyance. At every moment, I knew that had I been more precise earlier, it could have gone better or have been easier.

During the fifth and sixth games, did you regret not doing something right even as you entered the rook-and-pawn endgames, considered your forte?As I said, in Game Five, there were mistakes leading up to it. But in rook-and-pawn ending, my principal mistake came after the time control (when a player is expected to complete 40 moves in the stipulated two hours of thinking time, followed by 20 moves in the next hour). In Game Six, I would say, again, the game had been slipping away for awhile. But I lost it in the rook-ending. In both games, I could have saved it in the rook-ending… To be honest, the last thing I want to do now is to keep looking back at the games. So I can’t tell you very much.

Would you say your vast experience failed you when it mattered in Games Five and Six?
Yes. I think so. Your strength comes into play when you are able to stop your opponent playing to his strengths. But I never really succeeded in doing that or only did that briefly. In the end, he was just stronger and he was able to impose his style of play.

In the interview with Magnus, he said he had planned to make you play slow, long games and force the errors. Was his energy level in the fifth- and sixth-hour of play crucial because he still managed to find moves of optimum strength?Yes. I mean, clearly, I never really adapted to his style well. Clearly, he has refined his style a lot recently. He has become stronger and more effective with it. So, I also had this feeling that if I had managed to pull it off, it would have been a different story. But I didn’t manage to get a grip on his style.

After two losses, breaking his winning momentum in the seventh game was essential. But were you in a hurry to pull one back?I felt, it was okay to take these two games (five and six) off in seven and eight. If you are going to succeed in your comeback, it doesn’t matter how late you start. If you are not going to succeed in your comeback, it doesn’t matter how early you start. I understood that I was giving up two games. I said, “Two draws and now we’ll make a big effort. Time is running out.” But it did not work out.

Talking about your focus on starting with the king-pawn, did you work a lot on the Berlin Defence employed by Carlsen against Ruy Lopez.Clearly not enough. We had ideas but somehow at the last minute, something or the other would go wrong. And the other problem was that we had to cover other ground in e4 (pushing the king-pawn to the fourth rank) as well so we could not dedicate all our lives to this one.

Having brought Carlsen under pressure from the beginning of Game Nine, mainly due to your decision to start the game with d4 (pushing the queen-pawn to the fourth rank), do you regret not doing so in the earlier games with white pieces?Yes. But I made a big strategic decision to focus on e4. With hindsight, that was the worst move of the match. Again (smiles) with hindsight, many things are clear. For this match, for some reason, I just felt it was simpler to play e4 and there were grounds for it. Based on my tournament results and all, I felt it was better to concentrate on e4. And it turned out to be a bad mistake.

In Game Nine, when you took 45 minutes after move No. 22, the impression all around was that you had calculated it all till a forced mate. When did you realise you had reached a point of no return?I understood the position had become critical — either I give him mate or he queens his pawn. I kept thinking I could not see anything more than a draw. At the end, I had spent so much of energy, with 11 minutes (on the clock), I should have been able to calm down and say that I’ll just take this draw because that’s best there is. At the last minute, I suddenly saw this line (involving a knight-move) and had some hope. But I forgot to check what happens after the knight-move. That’s when I lost. To be honest, I wouldn’t say that leaves me with a lot of regrets. Even if I had drawn this game, the match-situation would not have improved for me. In the big picture, this was not the blunder that decided anything. It finished the match a game early.

Garry Kasparov said the other day that after losing to Vladimir Kramnik in 2000, his unused preparations helped him do well in the events that followed. Similarly, Boris Gelfand has shown improved results after 2012. Do you agree with this observation?I would definitely hope so. It’ll be nice if I could use some of those preparations. But times have changed and they’ve changed quite a lot. I think the percentage of your World Championship preparations you still get to use is much, much lower. And, not to keep rehashing the points, the difference is the development of computers. Other people are able to catch up much faster. But hopefully, I’ll still get some benefits.

You will be playing the strong event in Zurich (in January-February)?Zurich is one of the best events. It is superbly organised. I enjoyed it immensely last year. So that’s a positive. I hope to do well there. I will have time before that to rest and recoup.

When will you take a call on playing the Candidates in March?Hopefully, after London, I’ll have some time to think about it.


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Friday, December 6, 2013

World Chess Championship Match-Experience is bit Over-Rated as Factor: Magnus Carlsen

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen was cornered for a series of interviews right after beating Viswanathan Anand in Chennai this November. Here are the questions asked to the new World Chess Champion in an article from The Sports Star (We skipped the portrait and went straight to the questions in the interview. Some questions have already been asked and answered several times before by Magnus Carlsen, but a nice evening reading.):

Excerpts from interview with World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen

Question: In the days following the World Championship, usually, the winner spends time talking about the triumphs. Why did you stay away from the media?

Answer: A little bit tired, a little bit exhausted from all the events of the last few days. If you found me uncooperative, that’s probably the reason.




Coming to your triumph, was it easier than you expected?

It was certainly easier than what I had expected at the start. I thought, if I manage to play at my highest level, Anand would not manage to win a game. And I thought that usually I should be able to press him in a number of games and in one or two of them, he should crack. And he did.

How did you take it when many thought that Anand’s experience could negate your energy in the match?

I think, perhaps, at the start, it could have mattered since the first two-three games, I was nervous. Perhaps, not ready for the big occasion. And I think, after three games, I had already matured (laughs). I had the ‘feel’ for the championship. I think, match-experience is also a bit over-rated as a factor, because every match has a life of its own. Anand might have played many matches like this before. It doesn’t mean it’s going to be anything similar to this one.

Did you plan to target Anand in any specific area of his game?

Nothing special apart from playing 40 to 50 good moves in every game. That was my main goal. I had to keep playing because I think you’ve worked so hard before the match. You’ve worked so hard to get there. So, I think you need to work very hard on the board. If the position is not a draw, you should not agree for a draw. You should play it out. If you want to win a World Championship match, you need to play well not only for one or two hours, but four or five or six…

Do you first play with the computer and then check the position over the board or the other way round?

Ideally, during training sessions, that is what I do. I look at the board before I can solve the computer.

Talking of your pre-match preparations, it was said that you used a super computer. Is it true?

Well, it’s not only about me who has been working on a super computer. It’s been my ‘seconds’. As for me, it’s been more important to check the lines, to guide them, to sometimes play on the board what they have been doing.

Is your approach any different from Anand’s?

I think my approach is a little bit different from Anand’s. I think, as for now, I’m the better player. So he needs to find an advantage with the help of the computer while I just need to equalise his advantage there and not fall too far behind.

How much time did you spend ahead of each game during the championship?

I would spend anything from two hours to 10-15 minutes before any game each day. Looking through some lines and just double-checking the stuff. Apart from that, I would spend time in the evening sometime if it was unclear what I was going to play the next day. Basically, I did not do too much during the match apart from playing the games.

What was the thought behind not revealing the identity of your ‘seconds’ even after the match? Was it your decision or a collective one?

It’s mainly my decision. That’s the way I’ve understood it. It’s nice that I am going to play another World Championship match (in 2014). It doesn’t mean that I’m not very grateful for their hard work. They have done a wonderful job. I think it is nice for the future matches not to reveal too much.

You once said the format that allows a champion to play only against the challenger was not a fair one. What would you say now?

I thought about it. I’ll need some time to enjoy the title and then think what I am going to do next.

Garry Kasparov stayed at the top for over a decade and a half, showing motivation in abundance despite marriage and other family responsibilities. What do you think can keep you going?

I don’t know what will happen. I think, as long as I stay motivated, I will continue to do very well. I don’t know what it will take for me to stay motivated — whether I will have to forego other things. Leading up to the World Championship, I haven’t done much else than chess. So, I am looking forward to relaxing now and having a more balanced life.

Considering your style of play, which is very different from your great predecessors, do you see yourself as a ‘revolutionary’ in this era?

Yes, may be a little bit. But I think, it’s also been the trend in recent times that people are trying to gain some playable positions from the opening (phase) rather than (looking for) too much of an advantage. Obviously, I play the middle-game and the endgame better than most people, so I can afford to take such an approach.

Knowing the respect and admiration you share with Anand, what would you be telling him, if asked, in this hour of disappointment?

I don’t know what I would be telling him. Difficult to give people advice. My only advice to Anand will be to have some rest. Take some time to figure things out and then decide what he wants. If he decides to come back, it’s wonderful. If he doesn’t, he has every reason to be very happy with what he’s got.

Do you realise that the world crown comes with certain responsibilities, like promoting the sport as its best-known ambassador?

Yes. Already for sometime now, I’m involved with chess in schools. I think, it’s wonderful to develop children as good chess players but most of all, for all the benefits that chess has in school and in life for kids. I think it is a wonderful game.


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Sunday, December 1, 2013

68,000-full Stadium Applause for World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen at Real Madrid - Valladolid Kick-Off

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen received an ovation from a 68,000-full stadium on his 23rd birthday, on Saturday, for the ceremonial kick at the La Liga match Real Madrid versus Valladolid. This 'birthday gift' came Magnus Carlsen's way at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium after a personal invitation from Real Madrid CF President Florentino Pérez. Pérez also presented Carlsen with a shirt and engraved watch as birthday gifts.

Realmadrid.com notes that Carlsen “received an ovation from the Bernabéu for winning the World Chess Title by beating Viswanathan Anand, who is also a Real Madrid supporter”. Real Madrid proceeded to beat Valladolid 4-0, with Gareth Bale scoring his first hat-trick in the club. The website has plenty of photographs: 



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Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Magnus Carlsen already thinking about Defending his World Chess Champion Title Next Year!

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen was crowned the World Chess Champion in Chennai on Monday. Here are top quotes by Magnus Carlsen from an interesting interview given to LiveMint:

On the nervousness carried forward from close victory at London Chess Candidates
Magnus Carlsen: I stopped thinking about it. Obviously the candidates’ tournament was a close call. It was very tiring and very exciting as well. But when I reached the final, I put everything behind and focused on what was happening in the final and not on how I got to it.


Official photo: World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen receiving the World Chess Champion trophy in Chennai on November 25


Preparing for World Chess Championship Match:

Magnus Carlsen: My main objective was to get playable positions—not to come under any great pressure from the beginning. I think I managed to equalize games from the opening, especially with black pieces, and outplay Anand, or at least pressure him in the rest of the games.

Was beating five-time World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand easier than expected:


Magnus Carlsen: The match was difficult in the beginning because, for instance, in the first game, Vishy came up with a novelty in a really obscure line of play. When I analysed the game later, I was very impressed with the things that he had considered and how fast he was thinking. I was thinking to myself, if he was going to play this way, how am I going to ever catch him off-guard. But fortunately, it turned out that he, too, was a bit nervous.

Besides your preparation, what helped win:

Magnus Carlsen: It helped me to stay relaxed during the match and treat it like any other tournament. I did what I usually do. To stay relaxed, I like to take part in other sports, watch movies in between games, and not think about the result all the time.

Does becoming the world chess champion make you anxious:


Magnus Carlsen: Not really. I’ve been the No. 1 (by rating) for some time, but it has always been a bit of burden on me that I did not have the world title. Now that I have it, I can relax a little bit and do what I do best.

Do you plan to go back to university?


Magnus Carlsen: For now, I am happy playing chess.

You have named some players as potential challengers to your world title, but not Anand. What are your thoughts about his future as a chess player?

Magnus Carlsen: First of all, he’ll have to figure out if he wants to play in the candidates’ tournament. His results lately have not been too good. He’ll need some time to readjust. If he is able to play at his highest level, I think he can come back, but right now I don’t think he is the favourite to become the challenger.

So do you think Anand’s era of chess is over?


Magnus Carlsen: I think it all depends on his motivation. He’ll have to figure a lot of things out. If he manages to keep his motivation after this match, he’ll be a force to reckon with.

Why have you refused to name your seconds even after winning the world title?


Magnus Carlsen: I am already thinking about defending the title and that is the reason why I don’t want to talk about my seconds too much, because they would be part of my team going forward.
Chess appears to have got a huge fillip in Norway.


What we’ve seen in Norway is (that) an amazing number of people who did not play chess previously are now following chess—playing the game in schools and at work, and discussing it all the time.

Who do you owe this title to?


Magnus Carlsen: I think I owe it to everyone: my seconds (players who assisted), my team, my family, and especially my father. My team has attended to every need and every request however unreasonable it might have been.

Is there anything at all that you have learnt from this match or Anand?


Magnus Carlsen: To be honest, I think I’ve learnt a great deal from him in the past, both by playing against him and training with him. Previously, he could outplay me in certain positions, and he could do that in ways that no else could. But I think I showed him in a way that although he has taught me many things in the past, now it’s probably my turn to teach him.

From Alexandra Kosteniuk's
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Friday, November 22, 2013

Blind Chess film receives Praise at the World Chess Championship in Chennai

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

A full house and an enthusiastic response greeted the award winning documentary Algorithms about young blind chess players from India, screened at the FIDE World Chess Championship on Thursday evening.


Directed by British filmmaker Ian McDonald and produced by Geetha J for the South Indian production house AkamPuram, Algorithms is the first ever feature documentary on blind chess.

Shot over three years, it follows three youths and their mentor, Charadutta Jadhav from the All India Chess Federation for the Blind, as they travel to national and international chess championships.

A long and lively Q&A with Director Ian McDonald and Producer Geetha J followed the screening. They were joined by Chennai boy Sai Krishna who features in the film and Prasanna, who scored original music for the film.

The discussion was emotionally charged and ranged from talking about the players and the music to the struggle to make the film.

One visitor remarked, “I came here to watch the match between Anand and Carlsen, but went to the screening out of curiosity and ended up staying for the whole film. It was so good”, while another reacted that he thought the film was “better than Hoop Dreams”.

Ian McDonald said, “It was a really special night. We have had a fantastic response to the film on the international film circuit, but it’s the response in India that matters most to me. So I am overjoyed that people really liked the film. Thanks must go to FIDE for inviting us to screen the film here.”

Ian McDonald and Geetha J

The producer, Geetha J commented that she is planning to take the film on a screening tour of India next year, “We are trying to raise funds to make this happen, and also to do a high spec audio-description so blind and visually impaired people can enjoy the film. We want this film to be experienced by every Indian in the country”.


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Congratulations! Magnus Carlsen of Norway is World Chess Champion

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

World No. 1 has picked up the next big title - the only one missing from his collection - of World Chess Champion.


Game 10: Magnus Carlsen en route to 
winning the World Chess Championship 2013 
in Chennai on Friday.


Magnus Carlsen of Norway became the World Chess Champion after drawing a fascinating endgame in Game 10 with defending champion Viswanathan Anand in Chennai today. The final score read 6,5-3,5 in favour of Magnus Carlsen.

The match was sponsored by the Tamil Nadu state and organized by FIDE and AICF.

The 10th game started with the Sicilian defence. Anand attempted a sharper line with black, possibly Naidorf, but Carlsen stirred the play into quiet waters with an early trade of the light-squared bishops.

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In the relatively stable pawn structure the players maneuvered the pieces until a careless queen move (28…Qg5) by Anand permitted a neat combination that would net a pawn for white.

Carlsen continued correctly (29.e5), but then released the tension too quickly when 30.Nc3 would have piled the pressure. Anand was allowed to win the pawn back. After the massive exchanges on d6 a knight endgame appeared on the board.

Expecting a draw offer, the press room was getting ready to meet the players. However, the fight continued beyond the first time control.

New Queens appeared on the board, one for each player, but the equilibrium was not ruined. Draw signed on move 65.

The FIDE World Chess Championship Anand - Carlsen 2013 was held between defending champion Viswanathan Anand of India and Challenger Magnus Carlsen of Norway. The World Chess Championship took place from November 9 to 28 at the Hyatt Regency, Chennai, India. The match included twelve games, with time controls of 120 minutes for the first 40 moves, 60 minutes for the next 20 moves and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of 30 seconds per move starting from move 61. (official website)

The winner would be the player earning 6.5 points which Magnus Carlsen duly accomplished. 

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Thursday, November 21, 2013

Carlsen Wins Game 9, Needs 1/2 Point to become World Chess Champion 2013

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

Game 9 at the FIDE World Chess Championship Match on Thursday had absolutely everyone on the edge. World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand was at his attacking best with a Kingside onslaught, but he faltered and the 28-move game gave World No. 1 a three-point lead in the Match.



Viswanathan Anand changed his opening move to go with 1.d4 which was greeted with an enthusiastic applause in the playing hall. The challenger and world’s top rated player responded with his trusted Nimzo-Indian defence.

Anand repeated the line that he has already used in the match with Vladimir Kramnik in Bonn 2008. Black was obviously well prepared, as he made a rare recapture on move 7 (exd5 instead of more common Nxd5) and then immediately closed the Queenside with 8…c4.

The experts from the Norwegian lounge claimed that this line was analysed among the members of their national team.


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Anand got an impressive pawn mass rolling towards the Black King, while Carlsen created a passed pawn on b3, deep within opponent’s territory. Anand spent around 30 minutes to calculate complicated lines before going all in with 23.Qf4.

White went directly for the checkmate and Black promoted a new queen on b1. However, playing too quickly, Anand erred with 28.Nf1, which effectively concluded the game after Carlsen’s reply 28…Qe1.

Carlsen is now leading 6-3 and needs only one draw in the remaining three games to claim the title of FIDE World Chess Champion.

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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Game 8 Quick Draw at Carlsen - Anand World Chess Match; Will Anand Strike Back at Carlsen Lead of 5-3?

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

Much to the disappointment of Viswanathan Anand fans, the eighth game at the FIDE World Chess Championship Match, ended in a 33-move draw in Chennai today. 

World No. 1 played 1.e4 for the first time in the match and ended up facing the Berlin - which he had been using against Anand in the previous games in Chennai! The defending champion held an easy enough draw. Carlsen is known not to like the mainline when facing the Berlin endgame and opted for 5.Re1. 
Carlsen and Anand have played this before in 2010 with drawn results. Carlsen was also held to a draw in a similar line by Hikaru Nakamura in Saint Louis a few weeks back. Magnus Carlsen took just 20 minutes on his clock for Game 8. The current score is 5-3 in favour of the challenger.


The players also went for doping test after Game 8. The tests were done by Dr Jana Bellin. FIDE, to be part of the International Olympic Committee, initiated doping tests at the Bled Olympiad of 2002. (Also read An interesting article on doping in chess).

The World Chess Championship is not over yet. Viswanathan Anand is of the caliber that he could jolly well draw the score yet again and force a tiebreak. Wednesday is a rest day. Thursday's game, in which the defending champion will play White, is as crucial as any other game of the World Chess Championship has been so far.

Game 8 Moves at Carlsen - Anand World Chess Championship, Chennai, 2013 
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. Re1 Nd6 6. Nxe5 Be7 7. Bf1 Nxe5 8. Rxe5 O-O 9. d4 Bf6 10. Re1 Re8 11. c3 Rxe1 12. Qxe1 Ne8 13. Bf4 d5 14. Bd3 g6 15. Nd2 Ng7 16. Qe2 c6 17. Re1 Bf5 18. Bxf5 Nxf5 19. Nf3 Ng7 20. Be5  Ne6 21. Bxf6 Qxf6 22. Ne5 Re8 23. Ng4 Qd8 24. Qe5 Ng7 25. Qxe8+ Nxe8 26. Rxe8+ Qxe8 27. Nf6+ Kf8 28. Nxe8 Kxe8 29. f4 f5 30. Kf2 b5 31. b4 Kf7 32. h3 h6 33. h4 h5 ½-½

Replay Game 8 of the Carlsen - Anand Chennai World Chess Championship 2013 with Chess King.  

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Monday, November 18, 2013

Game 7 a Quiet Draw at World Chess Match as Carlsen keeps Lead over Anand 4.5 - 2.5

Chess Blog for Daily Chess News and Trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2013

Hello everyone,

World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand held Magnus Carlsen for a draw in the 7th game at the FIDE World Chess Championship Match, in Chennai, on Monday. The 32-move Berlin Ruy Lopez game was drawn by repetition. 


Anand decided to give up the pair of Bishops to double Black pawns on the c-file and very much followed the line he has used earlier against Russia's Sergey Karjakin successfully at the Norway Chess Tournament. Magnus Carlsen deviated on the sixth move and a series of exchanges followed. 

The endgame did not appeal to any ambitious ideas for both players and they decided to settle for a draw when the opportunity arose. 

Magnus Carlsen continues to lead in the match with an extra two points that he earned with victories in Game 5 and 6. The score, after seven games, is Carlsen - Anand 4.5 - 2.5. Five games remain to be played in the classical time control. Magnus Carlsen needs only two more points from five games to win the title of World Chess Champion 2013. In the remaining five games, Anand has two Whites remaining. 

Game 7 Moves
[Event "FWCM 2013"]
[Site "Chennai"]
[Date "2013.11.18"]
[Round "7"]
[White "Anand, Viswanathan"]
[Black "Carlsen, Magnus"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "C65"]
[WhiteElo "2775"]
[BlackElo "2870"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. d3 Bc5 5. Bxc6 dxc6 6. Nbd2 Bg4 7. h3 Bh5 8. Nf1 Nd7 9. Ng3 Bxf3 10. Qxf3 g6 11. Be3 Qe7 12. O-O-O O-O-O 13. Ne2 Rhe8 14. Kb1 b6 15. h4 Kb7 16. h5 Bxe3 17. Qxe3 Nc5 18. hxg6 hxg6 19. g3 a5 20. Rh7 Rh8 21. Rdh1 Rxh7 22. Rxh7 Qf6 23. f4 Rh8 24. Rxh8 Qxh8 25. fxe5 Qxe5 26. Qf3 f5 27. exf5 gxf5 28. c3 Ne6 29. Kc2 Ng5 30. Qf2 Ne6 31. Qf3 Ng5 32. Qf2 Ne6 1/2-1/2

Replay the game with Chess King.


From Alexandra Kosteniuk's
www.chessblog.com
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