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Chess: Top two in world chess tournament in Libya advance to round 4

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  • Chess: Top two in world chess tournament in Libya advance to round 4

    Associated Press Worldstream
    June 25, 2004 Friday

    Top two in world chess tournament in Libya advance to round four

    by MAHMOUD KASSEM; Associated Press Writer

    TRIPOLI, Libya


    The top two seeds at the World Chess Championship advanced to round
    four Friday after drawing their games, but the tournament's
    third-strongest player was knocked out.

    No. 1 seed Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria and No. 2 seed Michael Adams
    of England went through, but Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine was defeated
    by the lower-ranked Rustam Kasimdzhanov of Uzbekistan.

    Topalov ended his streak of five consecutive wins on Thursday night
    when he drew with Sergei Movsesian of Slovakia.

    Adams drew with Hichem Hamdouchi of Morocco. Playing white, Hamdouchi
    began solidly with a Ruy Lopez opening, but black quickly took
    control of the 'a' file as Adams doubled his rooks and threatened
    white's king with his queen. Hamdouchi ultimately fell foul of the
    time limits.

    Topalov and Adams, numbers 5 and 8 in the world respectively, beat
    their opponents by 1.5 points to half a point.

    Topalov and Adams are the only two players from FIDE's top 10 to play
    in the US$1.5 million tournament, which Libya is staging as part of a
    campaign to shake off its image as a rogue state accused of
    sponsoring terrorism.

    In the Ivanchuk-Kasimdzhanov encounter, the players agreed to draw
    their first two games Thursday, but Kasimdzhanov defeated his
    Ukranian opponent in the first rapid game.

    In the most beautiful game Thursday, Croatia's Zdenko Kozul earned a
    place in round four when he showed that advancing pawns and
    sacrifices can be as deadly as a full-frontal attack with major
    pieces.

    Kozul cooly turned the tables on an over-confident queen attack by
    Russia's Sergei Rublevsky, playing a Slav defence game. Sacrificing a
    rook and pushing his pawns on the 'b' and 'c' files relentlessly
    forward, Kozul won an extra queen and forced Rublevsky to resign
    after 47 moves.

    "Kozul sacrificed a rook to create an extremely complicated and
    exciting position which had everyone following this game with great
    attention," said FIDE master Geoffrey D. Borg.

    The youngest player left in the tournament, 16-year-old Hikaru
    Nakamura of the United States, drew his Slav defence game with
    Alexander Lastin of Russia, but the result was enough to advance him
    to round four following his win Wednesday.

    Cuba's Lenier Dominguez also goes through after a dazzling display.
    In a Caro-Kann exchange variation with a Panov-Botvinnic attack,
    Dominguez forced France's Vladislav Tkachiev to resign after only 33
    moves.

    In arguably the most exciting chess of round three, Armenia's Levon
    Aronian fought against Russia's Pavol Smirnov into the early hours of
    Friday. Both players are roughly of equal strength.

    His face showing the stress, Smirnov beat Aronian in the first blitz
    game, lost the second, and came back in the third in play so fast
    that some of the pieces were accidentally knocked over.

    Going by nation, Russia has made the best show in the tournament so
    far, having four of the 16 players remaining in the contest.

    Round four resumes on Saturday after a rest on Friday.

    The FIDE championship began June 19 amid controversy. Libya refused
    to allow players from Israel to attend. Many top players decided not
    to compete, apparently because they were angry that the world's
    strongest-rated player, Garry Kasparov of Russia, is to be allowed to
    play the winner without taking part in the qualifying rounds.
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