Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Chess: Team Petrosian gets a draw in round four

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chess: Team Petrosian gets a draw in round four

    Team Petrosian gets a draw in round four

    Chessbase News, Germany
    June 14 2004

    13.06.2004 In the first three rounds the Armenians were overmatched
    by the World all-stars. Today was like two separate tournaments with
    the heavyweights on each team battling it out in a Linares-caliber
    line-up. The decisive games came from below, however, as van Wely and
    Lputian crashed to their third losses. The World kept its four-point
    lead.


    A full point for Armenia

    Round 4 (June 13, 2004)

    Petrosian Team 3 - 3 World Team
    Kasparov ½ - ½ Adams
    Leko ½ - ½ Svidler
    Gelfand ½ - ½ Anand
    Akopian 1 - 0 van Wely
    Vaganian ½ - ½ Vallejo
    Lputian 0 - 1 Bacrot

    Overall score: World Team: 14 – 10 Petrosian Team


    Vladimir Akopian finally put the Armenians on the board by beating
    Loek van Wely in today's fourth of six rounds. That was van Wely's
    third loss, but he was kept out of the cellar, or at least joined
    there, by his opposing board six Smbat Lputian, who lost to Etienne
    Bacrot.

    Both games continued the black plague theme of the tournament. So far
    there have been ten decisive games and six were wins for the second
    player, including the last five in a row. Akopian painted a
    positional masterpiece today to bounce back from two consecutive
    losses. If you go through the moves quickly it looks like van Wely's
    pieces aren't moving while Akopian's take over the board.

    Lputian couldn't quite dig himself out of a positional hole against
    Bacrot, although he could have made much more of a fight of things in
    the endgame if not for time trouble. Lputian is well known for taking
    on strategically dubious positions and making them work tactically.
    He is the veteran of hundreds of winner-take-all open tournaments and
    this style has served him well over the years. It just isn't very
    effective against the world's best players, who take what you give
    them but don't overpress. We won't even get into his black repertoire
    of 1..e6 2...d5 against just about everything.

    Meanwhile, van Wely is the veteran of dozens of supertournaments
    thanks to being born in the Netherlands instead of Armenia. He is a
    permanent invitee to the spectacular Corus Wijk aan Zee events and he
    doesn't even finish in last place anymore! (He made fine scores of +1
    and even in the last two events.) After hitting 2700 and coming close
    to the top ten three years ago, van Wely almost dropped out of the
    top 100 at the end of last year. This year he has been back on track,
    at least until this week.

    Vaganian just held on to draw another French Defense against Vallejo.
    Anand and Gelfand dueled in an interesting Petroff, swapping pieces
    creatively until agreeing to the draw with just a pair of rooks on
    the board. Leko-Svidler was a short, sharp Sicilian that finished on
    move 20 with still a lot of interest in the position. A pity.
    Kasparov again pushed long and hard for a win, this time against
    Adams, and again had to settle for a half point against dour defense
    by the Englishman.

    Vallejo – Vaganian after 40...Qd3

    Things are looking good for White with his passed h-pawn, especially
    now that they have reached the second time control. Black's only hope
    is to swindle a perpetual check draw.

    The Spaniard tried to secure his king with 41.Kf2?, but the wily
    veteran refuted this and forced the draw with 41...Nd4!, threatening
    mate starting with ..Qe2+. White captured the knight and it was all
    checks after that until the draw at move 48.

    We have the luxury of using Fritzy to see every possible check and
    trick, and it looks like 41.Qd2 gave White good winning chances.
    41...Qe4 42.Qd6+ and only then Kf2.


    van Wely – Akopian after 57.Rb6

    Akopian cashed in on his positional domination with 57...f4! The
    White minor pieces are dominated and overloaded.

    58.Rb7+ Ke8 59.Bc1 Rc2 60.Kf3 Ng5+ 61.Kf2 Nxh3+ and the passed h-pawn
    is too much to handle. Van Wely resigned on move 65.
Working...
X