Young Grandmasters Try to Make Chess Cool

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Magnus Carlsen, left, and Fabiano Caruana played in Zurich in February. Credit Walter Biere Keystone/Associated Press

Fabiano Caruana is a chess champion all but made for the age of social media.

In August, on the eve of the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis, the most competitive chess tournament ever played on American soil, he took the Ice Bucket Challenge. Sitting at a chess table, playing white, he moved out his pawn and was promptly doused from above, the icy water drenching his T-shirt. Videos were posted to YouTube and collected 30,000 views.

He went on to win seven straight matches against the best players in the world, a nearly impossible feat that some chess historians equated with Bobby Fischer’s 20-game streak in the early 1970s.

The Miami-born, Brooklyn-raised Mr. Caruana became an overnight sensation online. Fivethirtyeight.com weighed in on the tournament with a post stating that he was “doing the impossible.” Fans congratulated him, with one joking that he should refer to his opponents as “punchbags.”

Mr. Caruana, typically understated, sent out a single tweet to his followers, his first since posting the Ice Bucket Challenge video: “Just completed the best performance (so far!) of my career. 8.5/10 and clear 1st place in the highest rated chess tournament ever! #SinqCup.”

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An 11-year-old Fabiano Caruana, on right in back, played Oliver Chernin. Credit Vincent Laforet/The New York Times

As Mr. Caruana, 22, continues to move through the highest reaches of competitive chess (Sunday he finishes up in the four-day, six-player London Chess Classic), he has begun to embrace the role that social media can play in heightening his profile both in the sport and beyond. It’s not exactly by accident.

“These days, because of social media, chess doesn’t just happen at a table,” said Eric Kuhn, a friend of Mr. Caruana’s who was formerly the head of social media at United Talent Agency, and who has been informally advising Mr. Caruana on his social media presence.

It’s been some time since chess was considered central to America’s sense of itself; the 1972 Match of the Century, when Mr. Fischer defeated Boris Spassky, thrust chess forward as a Cold War metaphor, and chess stars in those days had a national celebrity. In the years since, chess has flourished in schools and clubs, according to the United States Chess Federation, which says it is witnessing robust participation in the sport among both boys and girls. Yet interest has languished at the highest levels. The byzantine world of competitive chess makes it a tough sell as a spectator sport, and champions are perceived as esoteric talents without much relevance in the real world.

But that may be changing, at least partly because of Magnus Carlsen. The 23-year-old Norwegian, the reigning world champion, is blond and square-jawed; from certain angles, it’s as if you’re looking at Matt Damon. He has modeled for a clothing label, G-Star, in print ads (shot by Anton Corbijn, co-starring Liv Tyler) and television commercials (co-starring Lily Cole). And he has been aggressive about embracing new technologies. Mr. Carlsen has 85,000 Twitter followers and recently released an app, Play Magnus, that lets fans challenge simulations of him at different ages, from 5 to 23.

And, now, in Mr. Caruana, he has the kind of foil that chess fans think could make their sport electric again. Mr. Caruana is young, like Mr. Carlsen. He is immensely talented. He projects a certain image — bookish rather than fashionable, though his adherents say that doesn’t pose a problem.

“The nerd is the new celebrity,” Mr. Kuhn said. “Think of the rise of Benedict Cumberbatch and the Jack Dorseys of the world. Smart is the new handsome.”

The time is right for Mr. Caruana from a historical standpoint as well. “America seems to produce an absolute master every 50 years or so,” said Kenneth Rogoff, 61, a Harvard economics professor and grandmaster who competed in national championships when he was younger. “You had Paul Morphy in the mid-19 century, Harry Nelson Pillsbury in the late 19th, and then Fischer, of course. Fabiano is clearly the best American player since Fischer.”

And yet, Professor Rogoff is speaking wishfully. Mr. Caruana isn’t an American player, and hasn’t been for a decade. He plays for Italy, where he has dual citizenship. But American chess fans are willing to overlook that stubborn fact, if only tentatively for now, and imagine him as a national hero, an ascendant star in an ancient game that is having trouble finding its footing in the contemporary world.

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Magnus Carlsen, left, the reigning world chess champion, was 13 when he played in the Corus Chess Tournament in 2005 against Alejandro Ramírez of Costa Rica. Credit Marcel Antonisse/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mr. Caruana’s chess odyssey began in Brooklyn in the late ’90s, when his parents put him in an after-school program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope. Carol Ann Caronia, a Brooklyn chess educator, was his first teacher. “You could spot his talent immediately,” she said. “He was winning, first of all. And he had an incredible ability to concentrate.”

“I remember my first tournament,” Mr. Caruana said. “I knew the rules but I couldn’t figure out how to press the clock. It wasn’t a big success the first time.”

As Mr. Caruana became more devoted to the game, he worked with Ms. Caronia and Bruce Pandolfini, the famed chess coach and author, in an attempt to find the limit of his talent.

They didn’t find it.

The royal game wasn’t long for Kings County. In 2004, when Mr. Caruana was 12, his family moved to Europe; the following year, he joined the Italian Chess Federation. “It made sense to change federations,” said Fabiano’s father, Louis Caruana. “He would qualify for additional tournaments and get to the top more quickly. That would give him a psychological boost.” The strategy worked. Mr. Caruana became the Italian champion in 2007.

On the surface, a rivalry between Mr. Caruana and Mr. Carlsen, the Norwegian, seems to set up perfectly. They have opposed styles: Mr. Caruana is affable and approachable, while Mr. Carlsen affects a certain coolness (a representative said he was preparing for a tournament and  would answer questions for this article only via email). It makes sense on the board, too. Mr. Caruana has a reputation for establishing himself early in a game; the chess writer Leonard Barden has referred to his openings as “Caruana bombs.” Mr. Carlsen is renowned for his end game, his ability to extract victories from situations that look like certain draws. And while Mr. Carlsen employs a highly complex positional style, Mr. Caruana is a master of simplicity.

Professor Rogoff called his game “Shakespearean,” explaining that Mr. Caruana is harnessing ideas that are available to any player and elevating them to a level surpassing poetry. “He does things that any player can understand, but does them so much better,” Professor Rogoff said. “In that, he’s like Fischer.”

Mr. Caruana’s former teacher agrees. “It’s one of the reasons I use Fischer’s games to teach my students,” Ms. Caronia said. “They’re very straightforward in some ways. I can imagine using Fab’s games in that same way.”

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The chess master Magnus Carlsen (in blue socks) with Mena Suvari and the actor Daniel Flaherty, to her right, at a G-Star 2011 show in New York. Credit Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images for IMG

With chess thriving in the classroom but failing to capture the attention of the American public on the professional level, do the players themselves think a sustained Carlsen-Caruana rivalry would help?

“I think it would, yes,” Mr. Caruana said, though he declines to talk anything approaching trash. Chess players, like chessboards, are squares. “He’s quite likable,” Mr. Caruana said of Mr. Carlsen.

Mr. Carlsen returns the favor, more in the fashion of one man holding the door for another than of two Nascar drivers swapping paint. “Caruana has had a great development lately, especially on the ratings,” Mr. Carlsen said. “He has established himself as the world No. 2 now. He represents an exciting group of new, promising players.”

Eventually, a bit of competitive steel pokes through. “He’s used to his unchallenged status as the world’s No. 1,” Mr. Caruana added. “I also think he enjoys when people are unconfident against him. And I don’t think I show that at all. I respect him greatly as a player but I’m still not afraid. I don’t think he likes that.”

After St. Louis, Mr. Caruana started the Baku Grand Prix with a pair of victories that brought him within 10 ratings points of Mr. Carlsen. Subsequent tournaments have opened Mr. Carlsen’s lead back up to 30 points. But Mr. Caruana is closing the social-media gap. He is tweeting more. He has joined Instagram.

And he has his informal team of boosters, including the former agent Mr. Kuhn, to help him maximize the power of new technologies. “For the first time, with Fab and Magnus, we have a potential rivalry between two phenomenal players who are of this generation, who are digital natives,” Mr. Kuhn said.

Some chess observers feel that while social media can help to increase Mr. Caruana’s visibility, the prospect of a rivalry depends on whether or not Mr. Caruana returns to play for America. “I think chess needs that, in the sense that chess needs America,” Professor Rogoff said. “It would certainly help professional chess if it became more visible in the States, if there were clearly defined personalities.”

Mr. Caruana says that talk of a return is premature. “St. Louis was the first time I had played in the United States in a number of years,” he said. “Naturally, lots of people were interested in me returning to play for the U.S. But right now, nothing is happening. I don’t have any immediate plans.”

The governing body of American chess is circumspect. “We have an obligation to think about that upper level, of course,” said Jean Hoffman, the executive director of the United States Chess Federation. “That’s an incredibly important part of our organization. But we have other things to think about as well — other age levels, other competitive levels. As the national federation for the sport, we have a range of stakeholders and people that we are responsible for serving.”

Maybe the place to end is back at square one: in Park Slope, where Mr. Caruana first picked up a chess piece.

“I think Fabiano has the ability to bring back interest in chess at the highest level,” said Ms. Caronia, his former teacher. “I would hope that he would come back.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/14/fashion/young-grandmasters-try-to-make-chess-cool.html?_r=0

The Prince’s Gambit

A chess star emerges for the post-computer age.

By

In many ways, tournament chess is still played very much as it was a century ago. Players land their pieces with the delicate thump of baize on wood, then jot their moves on scoresheets and tap the clock forcefully, or gently, depending on the mood they wish to communicate to their opponents. Flanking attendants, called arbiters, make sure that nobody cheats. It’s still quiet enough at a tournament that, among the spectators, you can hear your neighbors’ breathing. But the game has changed in at least one fundamental respect: it is now monitored, and even shaped, by computers. Chess pieces are embedded with magnetic sensors that transmit their location on the board to a computer, which relays this information to the Internet. Online, chess programs provide running commentary, evaluating which player is ahead and whether the move he or she is making is brilliant or a blunder. In a modern tournament, just about the only people who don’t know precisely how well they are doing are the players.

But by the sixth round of the London Chess Classic, in December, Magnus Carlsen, the Norwegian phenom, knew that he was behind. If he lost the game, having already been defeated in two earlier ones, he would probably lose the tournament. He was No. 2 in the world rankings, and a victory would give him a good shot at recovering the top spot; he had played inconsistently in recent months, falling from No. 1. There was talk that he was distracted, underprepared, and overexposed. Chess players trying to get out of trouble act a lot like students taking an exam that they haven’t studied for. Carlsen, who had turned twenty just two weeks earlier, often gives off a vibe of someone who is too cool to do his homework, but now he looked a bit panicked. He cupped his head in his hands, rocked his body, and stared at the board, trying to reboot his brain. At one point, it took him twenty-seven minutes to move a piece.

Carlsen’s problems had begun on his second move. Playing black, he had sent out his queen-side knight beyond his pawns—an unusual decision, given that his opponent, the thirty-five-year-old Russian champion Vladimir Kramnik, had already placed two white pawns in the center of the board. So Kramnik had a nice line of pawns where they would do the most good, and Carlsen had a poorly placed piece that threatened to block any attack he might want to mount. A database of nearly five million games indicated that, when these moves were made, white was twice as likely to win as black; Carlsen was already at a significant disadvantage.

Kramnik, one of the last players trained by the old Soviet chess machine, was eerily steady before the board—at times nearly motionless. Carlsen’s eyelids fluttered in a trance of concentration. He looked boyish in a crisp white shirt and a pair of slim-fit pants that had been given to him by G-Star RAW, the Dutch fashion company, with which he has an endorsement deal.

On the eleventh move, Kramnik traded a knight for one of Carlsen’s bishops—an exchange that Kramnik loves. Kramnik’s game is formidable, and his confidence in the endgame is particularly admired. Carlsen, who is largely self-taught, can play various styles; most often, he works toward gaining over-all control of the board, instead of trying to capture prized pieces. The Russian champion Garry Kasparov describes Carlsen’s style as “strangling pressure, not direct hits.”

Kramnik and Carlsen traded queens, then a pair of rooks. With many of the high-value pieces off the board, the real contest began: the march of the pawns. While Carlsen had been experimenting with his knight, Kramnik had been able to wipe out Carlsen’s center pawns and push his own forward. When a pawn reaches the opposite end of the board, it becomes any piece the player wants, usually a queen. Computer programs now gave Kramnik a commanding advantage. Carlsen had to forfeit his knight to stave off Kramnik’s pawns.

Meanwhile, west of London, Kasparov, who had flown from Moscow to sign autographs at the competition, landed at Heathrow. He turned on his smartphone, examined the game’s positions on the screen, and pronounced Carlsen’s situation “impossible.” Kasparov trained Carlsen for most of last year; Carlsen found him too intense, and ended the arrangement. Kasparov still seems to look out for Carlsen, though, as if worried about a careless nephew.

Chess is played on the board and in the head. As the game continued, Carlsen skirted disaster again and again, and Kramnik’s confidence appeared to fray. After taking Carlsen’s knight, Kramnik could have reasonably expected a quick win, and now it was clear that he’d have to settle for a slow one. Kramnik is said to resent the attention that Carlsen gets, and to take special pleasure in beating him. It must particularly rankle Kramnik when Carlsen adopts a blasé pose—declaring, for example, that losing at Monopoly upsets him more than losing at chess. Carlsen’s dislike of Kramnik might be even stronger. He blames his former tutor Kasparov, whom Kramnik dethroned in 2000: “Kasparov really hates Kramnik. And so by listening to Kasparov . . . it’s really hard not to get some of these thoughts myself.”

Kramnik kept advancing, and Carlsen stayed one step ahead of him. Kramnik drank his tea; Carlsen sipped orange juice. Carlsen managed to move a pawn down the board, forcing Kramnik to send his bishop to block it. On the sixty-second move, more than six hours after the game started, Kramnik erred. He likes to clean up the board before finishing off his opponent, and so he initiated an exchange of knights and rooks when he ought to have dealt with Carlsen’s pawn.

The two players were now down to only eight pieces: their kings, five pawns, and Kramnik’s stuck bishop. The computer programs still favored Kramnik, but they do not take into account momentum and fatigue; complex endgames confuse them. (Kasparov, who had just arrived at the tournament, looked at the game on a large screen in the V.I.P. lounge and said, “The computer is useless.”)

Eight moves later, Kramnik had a chance to make a move that would soon lead to checkmate—the computer programs saw it and Carlsen saw it.

Kramnik did not. He moved his king to the side. Carlsen immediately boxed it in with his own. Kramnik tested the boundaries of the prison, but he could not get out. The new reality dawned on him; the computer programs now called the game even. The two players jockeyed. Kramnik assayed with his bishop, and Carlsen countered with his king. They did this three times, resulting in an automatic draw.

Customarily, the players go from the auditorium to a nearby “analysis room,” where they discuss their game with the tournament’s commentators. When Carlsen ambled in, people put down their phones and laptops and applauded. His recovery had been more dramatic than many of his victories. Kasparov was amazed. “It happens,” he said, happily. Carlsen, with a lopsided grin, sat down to discuss the game. Kramnik never showed up. I saw his pretty wife rushing toward an exit, as if the building were on fire. Later that night, Carlsen sent out a tweet: “Good thing I didn’t resign.”

“At the time I started to play chess, I was a pretty much normal kid,” Carlsen recalled. We were sitting in an outlet of Costa, a British coffee chain, off the lobby of the Hilton hotel in Kensington. It was two days after his match with Kramnik. (Carlsen had won the next day’s match and therefore the tournament, regaining his No. 1 ranking.) He had arrived in London on December 5th and was scheduled to leave on the 20th. He has essentially been a full-time chess player since he was fifteen, and spends more than a hundred and sixty days on the road each year. When he is not travelling, he lives with his family in a house in Baerum, an affluent suburb of Oslo. He rents the basement from his parents. For this trip, some friends from the chess club at his high school had come with him to play in the open part of the tournament. Carlsen, who left school two years ago without formally graduating, had gone out with his old friends for pizza and bowling, but at most tournaments he is either alone or with his father, Henrik, who helps manage his career and, to an extent, his life. If Carlsen plays in a tournament in less than clean clothes, chances are that Henrik did not come with him. Carlsen spends evenings in his hotel room, streaming TV shows on his laptop—“The A-Team” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” are favorites—and going on Skype and Facebook. Sometimes, he works out at the gym to relieve the tension of a match. When he is at home, he plays Wii Sports Resort and Mario Kart, and with his family he plays SingStar, a karaoke game; he also likes to tease his three sisters. I asked Carlsen if he wanted to go to college. “I have no interest,” he said.

The first time I met Carlsen, last May in New York, he had seemed even more introverted than you’d expect a chess pro to be. Henrik sat by his side, and Carlsen let his father do nearly all the talking. Carlsen barely made eye contact with me. By that time, Kasparov, among others, had called him the most promising player of his generation, but Carlsen’s reputation was limited to the chess world. In the months since, he had become a minor celebrity, thanks mostly to advertisements that he had made for G-Star. Carlsen has a baby face that is quickly solidifying into that of a young man, and he has the same loose sandy locks as Justin Bieber. Carlsen now makes more than a million dollars a year in endorsements and fees.

We met up again four months later, at the Cooper Square Hotel, in the East Village. It was Fashion Week, and Carlsen’s face—turned tough through strenuous furrowing of his eyebrows—glowered from billboards and magazines. An event called Magnus Carlsen Against the World had been put together by G-Star. He played against a team of three grandmasters. Each member of the trio suggested a move, and an online audience chose which one to play against Carlsen. Not surprisingly, Carlsen won. Many people in the chess world considered the contest vulgar. Simen Agdestein, who trained Carlsen as a boy in Oslo, and who remains an admirer of his playing, said, “The only point of that was to make Magnus more famous.” At the trophy presentation, the actress Liv Tyler, another G-Star endorser, gave Carlsen, who wore a G-Star cardigan and jeans, a silver plaque, and TV interviewers lobbed softball questions at him.

“There are lots of pretty girls in New York,” an interviewer said. “Any you’d want to meet?”

“I’m sure there’ll be some at the G-Star show,” he said, awkwardly.

Fresh from his comeback against Kramnik, Carlsen was a lot more relaxed. Well built, he was wearing a checked shirt over a T-shirt—both his own purchases—and he looked like a European college kid on holiday. Indeed, his next stop was a Manchester United soccer game. Most grandmasters start chess extremely young—the great Cuban José Raúl Capablanca, with whom Carlsen is sometimes compared, was four years old when he first played—and I assumed that Carlsen had begun at a very early age, too. He hadn’t. As a little boy, however, he had shown unusual mathematical aptitude, which is often found in chess talents. “He would be thinking ten to the second, ten to the third power, and he would go on and on,” his grandfather Kurt Carlsen, a retired chemist, recalled. Before Magnus was two, he could complete a fifty-piece jigsaw puzzle. By four, he had memorized the names and populations of most of Norway’s four hundred and thirty municipalities. He built elaborate models with Lego bricks. “My parents tell me I used to weigh them,” he recalled.

When Carlsen was about five, his father, who was then working as a supply manager for Exxon, brought out the chessboard. Henrik had played the game well as a young man. He wanted to teach his oldest child, Ellen, and Magnus, who is a year younger. But neither paid much attention, and Henrik grew frustrated and gave up. “I said to myself, ‘Maybe chess is not for them. It doesn’t matter—they can do something else.’ ” During these years, Magnus was more engaged by soccer and skiing, and the family already played hearts, bridge, and Monopoly; in those contests, Ellen and Ingrid, who is three years younger than Magnus, ganged up on him.

When Magnus was almost eight, Henrik made another attempt to interest the kids in chess. Magnus liked games, and this time, he recalled, he found it “just a richer and more complicated game than any other.” He soon beat Ellen, who quit playing. Magnus began consulting his father’s small collection of chess books. He read “Find the Plan,” by Bent Larsen, a standard introductory text, and more advanced books, like “The Complete Dragon.” (The title refers to a form of defense in which the pattern of pawns resembles a dragon’s tail.) He was the sort of child who studied what interested him and ignored what didn’t. School, which bored him, was quickly supplanted by chess. “During the whole third grade, I think it’s fair to say, I didn’t do my homework once,” he recalled. At breakfast, he sat down at his own table and tested chess moves on a board. He recalled, “I found it natural—I didn’t really have the need to socialize with my family over meals. Dinner I, of course, ate with them.”

After playing for a year, Magnus beat Henrik for the first time, in a game of “blitz chess,” in which each player has five minutes to make all his moves. Magnus began to play in local junior competitions. Henrik picked him up after ski-jump practice and ferried him to the chess tournaments. Carlsen’s family was not unlike those American families in which the parents are careful not to tell their children that they have to excel but the children sense it anyway. Håkon Åmdal, a friend of Carlsen’s from school, says, “My impression is that Magnus chose to play chess by himself, but he has this feeling that he satisfies his dad by it.”

In March, 2000, Henrik arranged for Magnus, now nine, to spend a few hours every week with a chess teacher, Torbjørn Ringdal Hansen, a former Norwegian junior champion. Carlsen liked Hansen’s casual style; the classes were more like spirited bull sessions. The teacher, in turn, was struck by his pupil’s gifts. “Everything I said he understood so easily,” Hansen told me at the Sjakkhuset, or Chess House, in Oslo, where a biography of Carlsen—the second one—was for sale. “It didn’t take long before it got more and more difficult for me to win.” Hansen was particularly impressed with Carlsen’s prodigious memory for board positions and moves. Last year, when Hansen and Carlsen played together in the Siberian Olympiad, Carlsen pointed to a game that they were both watching and said to Hansen, “That’s a variation you showed me.”

Soon after Carlsen began instruction with Hansen, other kids stopped playing chess with him on the board in the school library. “It very quickly became pointless,” he said. He was so good that it was easy to forget that he’d been at it for only a few years. After he finished poorly in one competition, Hansen had to explain to him that it was permissible to get up and go to the bathroom. Carlsen was small and cute, with candid eyes and uncombed hair. He brought along HobNobs and comic books. The combination of his cherubic face, dangling legs, and Donald Duck lulled his opponents. It felt like competing against the boy in “The Red Balloon.” Henrik recalls that, at a 2002 championship, one player exclaimed in disgust, “I lost to that little prick?”

Chess is no sexier in Norway than in America. Carlsen would rather have become a sports star than a chess champion. In London, he told me that, during his most recent visit to New York, he had gone to Washington Square Park and, unrecognized, played against the chess hustlers, beating them all. The story reminded me of the movie “Searching for Bobby Fischer,” and Carlsen said that he had seen it once on TV but had not paid much attention: “The Olympics in Salt Lake were also on, and that was more interesting to me.”

Åmdal, his school friend, said of Carlsen, “It was easy to mock him for playing chess—it was easy to call him a nerd.” But Carlsen enjoyed being extraordinary at something. Once, when the boys were in their early teens, they went online and joined a beginners’ chess group; Carlsen handily beat everyone, playing so well that his opponents accused him of using a computer program to choose his moves. In fact, he was less interested in computers than most players his age. He liked to go online to find human opponents, but he resisted playing against the programs themselves. Computer chess struck him as mechanical—the machine always won, and he did not like being told that there was one “best” move. “It’s like playing someone who is extremely stupid but who beats you anyway,” he said.

Carlsen’s early style was enormously aggressive; he liked to press the attack as hard as he could. He had a remarkable instinct for where to place his pieces, and his study of strategy books gave him an unusually varied repertoire of moves. “He was playing every opening that ever existed,” Hansen said.

In 2001, Carlsen began studying with Simen Agdestein, a top Norwegian grandmaster. Agdestein told me that Carlsen was “the best natural player I had ever seen. He would play with almost perfect form. You would just say, ‘Whoa!’ ” Going online to play others certainly honed the boy’s skills: Agdestein estimates that, during the four or so years that he was Carlsen’s tutor, Carlsen played more than seven thousand games online. Agdestein emphasizes that he taught Carlsen only sporadically, while the boy continued with school, soccer, and other ordinary pursuits. “The main job he’s done himself,” Agdestein said. The training ended when Carlsen was thirteen. (Agdestein was once on the Norwegian national soccer team, so they also kicked the ball around. Carlsen, Agdestein recalled, “has a nice left foot.”)

In 2003, Henrik took a break from his work, and he and his wife removed their children from school for a year to tour Europe, much of the time in a minivan. “We went on a ten-thousand-kilometre route through chess tournaments and cultural places and nice vacation spots along the seaside,” Henrik said. The object was to broaden the children’s horizons and to get Magnus to the sorts of high-level games that you could not consistently find in Norway. The children did their homework in the back of the minivan or in hotel rooms at night. Carlsen was playing constantly—about a hundred and fifty major tournament games a year—and he did well. He was hard to intimidate, and his interest in the game was prodigious. After a chess match, he went to his computer and played more chess online, especially if he had just lost. He still does this, now under pseudonyms. “I do it to blow off some steam,” Carlsen says. “It might have the positive effect just to show myself that I can actually win a game of chess.”

At a 2004 tournament in Reykjavik, Carlsen beat Anatoly Karpov, the former champion, in a game of blitz chess. The next day, he played Garry Kasparov in two games of “rapid chess,” in which each side is given twenty-five minutes; he played the first to a draw and quickly lost the second. “I played like a child,” he said afterward, in disgust. Kasparov, though, remembers knowing immediately that Carlsen “was an outstanding player.” A month later, Carlsen became a grandmaster—the second youngest in history. These two events made international news, but his parents remained uncertain whether to think of their son as a future professional chess player or as someone who happened to be very good at chess. One night, Henrik Carlsen recalled, the family was gathered at dinner when “60 Minutes” called to discuss the possibility of an interview; he told them to call back when the family was finished eating. They never did.

Carlsen had now risen to the level of players who have full-time coaches or employ “seconds” who help them work with databases so that they can test openings against future opponents. But he continued working mostly on his own. Carlsen wasn’t thinking about being the best, he recalled: “I was just enjoying the game, really. I don’t think I’ve ever really been much into setting myself these goals. It hasn’t been necessary. I mean, just playing the game has been enough for me. I’ve always really been positively surprised by how well I did.” Henrik Carlsen told me, “For years and years, people have told us, ‘Magnus is very promising, but how does he work on his chess?’ And we tell them, ‘He does what he likes.’ . . . It’s curiosity as opposed to discipline.” Carlsen himself is unsure of the roots of his talent. “Maybe I’ll be able to say in twenty years,” he said. “Right now I just cannot pinpoint it.”

Because Carlsen has spent less time than most of his cohort training with computers, he is less prone to play the way they do. He relies more on his own judgment. This makes him tricky for opponents who have relied on software and databases for counsel. Most of all, Carlsen keeps trying out fresh stratagems. He can look at an opening once and remember it. These are some of the reasons that, at an age when many prodigies peak, Carlsen kept getting better, winning tournaments and beating the game’s élite. He went from No. 700 in the world in 2004, when he played Karpov, to No. 6 in 2008. “The trainer of the Russian juniors is a former top player—I think he was third in the world at some stage,” Henrik Carlsen said. “And he said at some point, ‘Of course, we are doing our best in Russia, but we don’t have talent like Magnus’s.’ ”

In 2009, Carlsen hired Kasparov to train him. Kasparov had long had his eye on Carlsen and was eager to take on the job. The Web site Chessvibes declared that it was a “dream team.” Kasparov was an expensive coach—his annual fee was set at several hundred thousand dollars—but Carlsen and his family thought that the tutelage was worth it. With Kasparov suggesting openings and helping him prepare for his opponents, Carlsen went on a tear through the major competitions, playing his best chess ever. One year after the collaboration began, on January 1, 2010, Carlsen reached the No. 1 spot. “It was not, like, a great struggle,” he recalled. Two months later, his Elo rating—the chess world’s official measure of a player’s skills, based on his tournament results—was the second highest in history, behind that of Kasparov.

Around this time, the collaboration came to an abrupt end. Carlsen was playing in a tournament in Wijk aan Zee, in Holland. Kasparov, who was in Moscow, was communicating with him via Skype, and he proposed a substitute opening less than an hour before a game against Kramnik. Carlsen went to the board and sat immobilized, trying to wrap his mind around the new moves. He lost the game (though he won the tournament). Carlsen decided that he and Kasparov were just too different. “I felt like every day I just had to build up my energy to be able to face him,” he told me. Kasparov hugely admires Carlsen’s talent, but thinks that he threw away an opportunity out of a fear of hard work. Carlsen, he thinks, could have surpassed Kasparov’s own Elo rating, one of the most storied records in chess. He told me, “I was not in the position to make him change his personality.”

Chess was brought to the West from India by way of Persia, sometime between the eighth and tenth centuries. European aristocrats adopted it and adapted it. Chess fit into their idea of a world with clear distinctions between the privileged and the poor. The game emphasized that society was bound by rules that even royalty had to obey: the Magna Carta made pastime.

The Russian Revolution changed how chess was played. Lenin, an enthusiastic player, made the game a priority for the new nation. In 1920, Alexander Ilyin-Zhenevsky, a commissar of Soviet chess, wrote that chess, “in some ways even more than sport, develops in a man boldness, presence of mind, composure, a strong will, and, most important, a sense of strategy.” The Soviets set about mass-producing chess excellence. In 1991, the year the Soviet Union broke up, the top nine players in the world were from the U.S.S.R. By then, Soviet-trained players had held the world championship for all but three of the past forty-three years.

The Soviet program emphasized focus, logic, and, above all, preparation. The board was an informational battleground, and work put in before the game allowed you to see chances that your opponent might miss. The Soviets’ foremost chess practitioner, the world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, was also an electrical engineer. “Some experts say my principal strength is my zest, my aggressiveness,” he once said. “I think it’s my scientific training, the logic of a scientist’s search for truth.” The directors of the Soviet chess program accumulated vast archives of opening moves, as well as records of the play of foreign opponents. The data gave them a significant advantage, but decades of Soviet dominance also led to complacency and a reliance on received wisdom.

The Soviets considered idiosyncratic players like America’s Bobby Fischer—the only player to interrupt more than four decades of dominance—the biggest threat to their system. In fact, their reign was ended by unlikely kindred spirits: Western computer programmers. Mastery of chess wasn’t an end in itself for either group. The Soviets thought that training a generation of chess players would compensate for historic flaws in the Russian character; Western coders chose chess as a vehicle for exploring artificial intelligence. Alan Turing, the brilliant code breaker who first proposed a chess-playing computer in the forties, wrote that the goal of such a project was not just to teach a computer to play chess but to teach it to play chess like a human.

But how does a grandmaster play? The early computer programmers struggled to solve this puzzle. They took note of the chess adept’s highly developed memory, his understanding of the value of having pieces on certain squares on the board, and his ability to have his moves informed by previous games that he had played or read about. Replicating the thinking of a human chess player was extremely difficult, though. Well into the nineteen-nineties, top grandmasters were still beating computers. But computers eventually got so fast that they no longer needed to be particularly smart to beat humans at games—they could just play out every scenario for the subsequent ten to fifteen moves and choose the best one. Brute force replaced finesse as the favored approach in computer chess. In 1997, Kasparov famously lost a six-game match against the I.B.M. mainframe Deep Blue. In the final game, he was crushed in just over an hour.

In 2007, a computer “solved” checkers—that is, went through every possible move to determine the optimal game. The number of possible moves in a chess game is dizzying, more than the number of atoms in the universe; no current computer can “solve” chess. But processors are now so powerful that no human stands a chance of winning a match. I asked Carlsen if he would be interested in a Deep Blue-type contest, and he said no—it would discourage him. Among the chess élite, the idea of challenging a computer has fallen into the realm of farce and retort. At the London Chess Classic, one commentator quoted the Dutch grandmaster Jan Hein Donner, who, when asked what strategy he would use against a computer, joked, “I would bring a hammer.”

Computers have no skills and they have nothing approaching intuition. Carlsen finds their games inelegant, and complains about “weird computer moves I can’t understand,” whereas in talking about his own game he speaks of achieving “harmony” among the pieces on the chessboard, and even of “poetry.” He told me about watching two advanced computers play one another in a recent match in Norway: “My conclusions were, one, the best computers are stronger than the best players, and, two, the games are not interesting at all.”

Computers don’t need to play interesting chess, however, to have affected the way humans play chess. You can now become a pretty good chess player without ever playing a live opponent. Chess software programs are always ready for a game. For seventy dollars, you can buy a comprehensive database that documents every move your opponents have ever made in tournaments. A beginner can easily have access to more information than a Soviet grandmaster once held.

Viswanathan Anand, an Indian grandmaster and the current world chess champion, said, “Every decision we make, you can feel the computer’s influence in the background.” Among grandmasters, there has been an over-all rise in the level of play; it’s as if all the Olympic athletes in the world were able to train together, year round, with the best coaches and equipment. Mig Greengard, a commentator who blogs at the Web site ChessNinja, says, “You’ve got two hundred guys walking the planet who, with a little tailwind, are playing strongly enough to beat the world champion.” But, in the view of many commentators, the improvement in play has coincided with an impoverishment of style. Speaking of the new generation, Kasparov said, “Everyone looks at the position now from the computer lens.” Carlsen noted that, before computer chess became dominant, an exposed pawn was often avoided by opponents, as it was seen as a possible trap. Today’s players, having analyzed countless games with computers, are confident of being able to distinguish a ruse from an opportunity; they take the pawn. Many top players are so used to running openings by computers that they shy away from the ones that computers rate poorly. Kasparov believes that, as a result, intuition has been undermined. “When we played, it was very clear you couldn’t see everything,” he says. “Now it’s not about the pattern. It’s more number crunching.”

Carlsen is often identified with, as he puts it, the “new Information Age.” Certainly before the age of online play it would have been nearly impossible for someone from Norway—which the British grandmaster Nigel Short has called “a small, poxy chess nation with almost no history of success”—to rise to No. 1 by the age of nineteen. But Carlsen’s casual attitude, Kasparov says, makes him “somehow immune” from the homogenization of modern chess. Carlsen has described himself to Der Spiegel as “chaotic” and said that he had a tendency to be “lazy.” In the lead-up to tournaments, when other players are testing out strategies on their computers, Carlsen is often staying up late playing video games or online poker. Before tournament days, he likes to get plenty of sleep—optimally, ten or eleven hours—waking up an hour or two before the start. “It’s no secret that the best players’ opening preparation is much deeper than mine,” Carlsen told me. In London, he went into some games with only the first move chosen; most players typically map out their first dozen or so moves. He believes that things even out because, as he put it, “I’m younger and have more energy, and it’s easier to adapt.”

Frederic Friedel, a co-owner of the popular software company ChessBase, has invited Carlsen to come to his Hamburg offices to receive instruction on how to get the most out of his programs. Carlsen has declined the offer repeatedly, even though many of his rivals have accepted. Friedel said that he is willing to wait for Carlsen: “I think Magnus is storing this as a backup plan—plan B, if he starts to slip. It’s like a tennis player playing with a wooden racquet: he can always get the graphite one.”

Computers are aggressive, directed chess players. This is a by-product of their programming: their software is designed to improve their chances of winning in ways that can be quantified. (A computer never makes a mistake in a game with six or fewer pieces on the board.) Friedel says that a human player trying to deflect a computer’s attack should “do nothing and do it well.” In other words, he should play a counter-game so subtle that the computer’s relentless attempt to “solve” the game is thwarted. As Carlsen likes to put it, computers “are really good tactically and they can’t play chess.” The kind of chess they don’t play easily is called “positional”—a style that focusses less on driving toward checkmate and more on having an over-all sense of the board. Carlsen, as he has matured, has increasingly adopted this approach. In the computer age, the only way to win may be to have no evident plan. As Anand sees it, Carlsen’s main strength is that he is “capable of being many different players. He can be tactical. He can be positional. He can be many things.”

In the Hilton coffee shop, I complimented Carlsen on a set of moves that, in 2004, made his name in the world of chess. He was thirteen at the time, working toward becoming a grandmaster. At Wijk aan Zee, a prestigious tournament on the Dutch coast, he had been in the weakest group of players. In the penultimate round, Carlsen played white against Sipke Ernst, a capable opponent more than ten years his senior. They played evenly for a while, going through moves that top players had used many times before. Then, before his seventeenth move, Carlsen paused and thought for about half an hour. On his eighteenth move, he placed a knight where one of Ernst’s pawns could take it. Three moves later, Carlsen sacrificed a bishop in a similar way. On the next move, he gave up a rook. Seven moves later, however, Ernst found himself checkmated, his king nailed by Carlsen’s queen as Ernst’s two rooks stood uselessly on either side. (The technical term is “epaulette mate.”) The grace with which Carlsen had detonated a bomb in a routine game left the audience amazed. Lubomir Kavalek, writing in the Washington Post, dubbed Carlsen the Mozart of chess.

Carlsen isn’t so impressed with his younger self’s play. “It was spectacular, and it is spectacular, but at the same time anyone could have done it,” he said. “Well, not anyone, but a lot of people. It amazes me that when people talk about my best games these are still the games they talk about.” Such games now strike him as merely clever—and, not incidentally, as the sort of thing that you can get away with mainly as an obscure player. In our era of total information, even a player’s boldest moves soon become absorbed into the realm of shared knowledge. “In former times, you could play a novelty,” Frederic Friedel, the chess-program publisher, says. “Now, as soon as the knight moves to g3, everyone who is interested in this line finds out.”

Carlsen said that, for him, great chess playing is less the “scientific search for the best approaches” than “psychological warfare with some little tricks.” He took me through a few of his best-loved games. The first match that he mentioned was against Vasilios Kotronias, a Greek grandmaster, in the fall of 2004, just a few months after his victory over Ernst. He had not won it—he only came to a draw—but this did not seem to bother him. He was pleased with the way that he had sacrificed a knight, and then a rook, in order to gain a position. “I just thought I’d never seen this combination before, this theme,” he says. “There’s no better feeling than discovering something new.”

He had a similar epiphany, he said, during a match that he had played against Anand this past fall, in Nanjing, China. Carlsen loves playing Anand, who brings out his highest game, whereas Kramnik brings out his street side. In the Nanjing match, Carlsen recalled, play had begun ordinarily, with both competitors moving pawns to the center of the board and sending their knights and bishops out, searching for weakness and advantage. But Carlsen methodically pushed Anand back. “He was putting up really tough resistance, and I was breaking it down,” Carlsen said, enjoying the memory of the “really subtle positional chess” that he was playing. His pieces almost imperceptibly took control of the more important squares on the board; the computer programs didn’t give him any real advantage. But after move 38 Carlsen was clearly ahead, his queen and rook bearing down on Anand’s king. Anand’s pieces were gathered in a huddle, as if preparing for a wolf attack. Soon afterward, the computer programs saw a quick route to checkmate; Carlsen did not, however, and Anand recovered. The game ended in a draw. Nevertheless, Carlsen felt that he had got “the upper hand from a relatively innocuous-looking position.” He had “created something special,” a small legacy of intuition and feeling that no computer or trainer had forecast for him.

In February, I saw Carlsen again at the Cooper Square Hotel; he was in town for another Fashion Week. Liv Tyler was not there, but Carlsen again walked the red carpet for G-Star, and this time he was paired at the event with Gemma Arterton, a former Bond girl. A fashion magazine had asked Carlsen to let his hair grow longer, and at noon, just out of bed, it was still moussed into ringlets from a photo shoot the previous day.

After winning the London tournament in December, Carlsen had gone home. He now shared the basement with his sister Ingrid. The Carlsens still gathered upstairs to have dinner, and afterward they played SingStar. They went to the family ski cabin, in Engerdal. All the same, being at home when other kids your age are in college, or working, was a mixed experience. “At times, I’m just sitting there, wondering what to do,” Carlsen said. In January, he was glad to be back in action, at the 2011 tournament in Wijk aan Zee. Some good things happened there. Playing black, he beat Kramnik in another long game; it ended with his forcing Kramnik into a Zugzwang, a bind in which any move a player makes worsens his position. While Kramnik’s bishop was frozen out, Carlsen’s king jauntily moved in to finish off his opponent’s pawns. After the eightieth move, Kramnik resigned. “I don’t often feel the need to pump my fist in the air after a game,” Carlsen told me. “But, well, it was Kramnik.”

That was the high point. The low point was a game on Day Three, when Carlsen played white against Anish Giri, a sixteen-year-old Dutch player. Giri is not yet a full-time professional, though his play has attracted many admirers. Frederic Friedel had joked to me about Giri, “I told Magnus he’s my backup.” In London, Carlsen had said that, as good as Giri was, he doubted he would “ever be stronger than me.” But in Wijk, Giri beat Carlsen in just twenty-two moves—a humiliation. Carlsen let one of Giri’s pawns travel most of the way down the board and lost a knight trying to stop it. On the next move, he resigned. Blogs called the game one of the worst of Carlsen’s career. Carlsen, who had never before lost to such a young player in a major tournament, described his play to me as “just pathetic.”

He had then bounced back, winning three games and playing to a draw in three others, calling up memories of his London come-from-behind victory. Friedel wrote to me, “I have a new theory. Magnus is so strong that he is simply bored. (I know from personal experience that he bores easily.) So he has come up with a new strategy to make things more interesting for himself: play like an idiot in the first few games, move to the bottom of the table, and then try to win the tournament anyway.”

Carlsen might have pulled off such a feat, except that in Round 10 he played Ian Nepomniachtchi, a Russian who is the same age. Carlsen had the opportunity for a draw early in the game, but went for the win instead, trying to catch up to the tournament leaders, and wound up losing. The turnabout hurt all the more because Nepomniachtchi, an uneven player, had just been drubbed in a game and, after beating Carlsen, went on to lose another two just as badly. The tournament prize went to the American Hikaru Nakamura, one of the three grandmasters who had participated in G-Star’s Magnus Carlsen Against the World event.

After the Wijk tournament, Carlsen dropped to No. 2 in the world rankings, behind Anand. Carlsen told me that he felt chastened: “It’s really getting competitive at the top. I realized against Nepomniachtchi, for example, that there were some areas of the game where he could outplay me.” He told me that something odd had happened to him at Wijk, when he was getting ready to play Anand, in Round 7. He was bouncing back from the Giri debacle and had just won twice when he mysteriously lost his confidence. He was checking his preparations, he remembered, “when, suddenly, I started to get these doubts. All of a sudden, my fighting spirit was almost gone.” He began the game with an unusually timid opening and played to a draw.

Carlsen was already thinking ahead to the Amber chess tournament, which is being played this month, in Monaco. The games there do not affect anyone’s official ranking, since the participants play either rapid or blindfold chess; all the same, he said, “I really, really want to win and restore the power balance.” He added, “I just have to improve so much myself now.” He was even willing to let someone help him, if that’s what it took. In the days after Fashion Week, he had contacted Wesley So, a rising seventeen-year-old Philippine grandmaster, and offered to pay his way to Europe if he would train with him. In London, Carlsen had described So to me as his stylistic opposite. “I think his entire training has been with a computer,” he had noted with amazement. When I last spoke to Carlsen, he was in Majorca with So, and they had been working together. Carlsen once told me that if chess ever stopped being fun for him he’d “have to do something else.” He added, “If you have that feeling all the time, what’s the point of playing?” But, for now, he was appreciating the new training: “We’ll see if something good comes of it.” If he wound up playing more like other modern players, so be it. As Carlsen had put it, “I absolutely hate losing.” It was nice to create something special, but it was even nicer to win. ♦

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/03/21/the-princes-gambit

Tata Steel 2015

The Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2015 will take place from 9th to 25th of January.

Tata Steel 2015 is boasting a superb field, a stronger average ELO than last year’s event. The participants of the 2015 edition of the competition are Magnus Carlsen, Fabiano Caruana, Levon Aronian, Anish Giri, Wesley So, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Radoslaw Wojtaszek, Teimour Radjabov, Baadur Jobava, Ding Liren, Vassily Ivanchuk, Ivan Saric, Hou Yifan, and Loek van Wely.

The playing venue is once more the traditional city of Wijk aan Zee. On 15 January the 5th round of the Tata Steel Masters will take place in De Rotterdam, the recently opened eye-catching building at the waterfront of the River Meuse in Rotterdam, designed by renowned architect Rem Koolhaas. And on 21 January, the 10th round of the Tata Steel Masters will take place in the recently renovated press centre Nieuwspoort in The Hague.

Games will be daily live with triple by the top engines of the TCEC competition

What to look for at Tata Steel Chess 2015

* Number 1 and Number 2 in the FIDE ELO rating list – Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana – will meet on the board, in what many call a future World Championship preview.

Caruana – Carlsen 0:1 (Tromso) / Carlsen – Caruana 0:1 (Sinquefield) / Carlsen – Caruana 1/2:1/2 (Norway Chess)

* Yifan Hou has a chance to overtake Judith Polgar for the first time in the Women FIDE rating list (current difference is 2 points)

*The second of Anand, Radoslaw Wojtaszek, will have a direct game with Carlsen. They already played in Tromso this year (replay the game)

* Anish Giri has a chance to prove his high form shown during the start at Qatar Masters

* Wesley So will be the US chess federation player in the field

* Vassily Ivanchuk comes after an unsuccessful Ukrainian championship looking for a Mtel Masters start

* Maxime Vachier-Lagrave has been in and out of the world top 10, he will be looking to stabilize his position

* Loek Van Wely has his personal national race vs Anish Giri

* Tata Steel 2015 is the first in many years not to have a Russian player


Radoslaw Wojtaszek completes the field

Today Polish grandmaster Radoslaw Wojtaszek has accepted the invitation to be the 14th participant of the Tata Steel Masters the last player to complete the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2015 field. With an average rating of 2747 in the Tata Steel Masters the 2015 edition of the tournament is slightly stronger than that of 2014 (12 participants with an average rating of 2743).

The tournament organisers had agreed with the ACP, the union for professional chess players, that the highest ranking player in the ACP-Tour with a rating under 2750 (as of 1 January 2014) would be invited for the final slot in the Tata Steel Masters. Competition for this invitation remained exciting until the very end. It had been decided that the strong tournaments in Qatar (won by Yu Yangyi from China) and the Russian championship (won by Igor Lysyj) would be the last opportunities to vie for the spot. Competing for the 14th position were Wojtaszek (who did not play himself), Eljanov from Ukraine (who played Qatar) and Russian Jakovenko (who participated in the Russian championship). Eljanov did not play a meaningful role in Qatar and thus dropped out of the race, but Jakovenko was still full in the race. Had he been able to catch up with eventual champion Lysyj on the final day, the invitation would have been his.

Radoslaw Wojtaszek is a familiar face in Wijk aan Zee. During this year’s edition and that of 2011 he participated in the Tata Steel Challengers. He is known for seconding former world champion Viswanathan Anad, with whom he has workded for a very long time. This year he has also been working on his own reputation: almost unnoticed, in line with his modest character, he has moved into the 15th position of the world ranking. His participation in the Tata Steel Masters is his debut on the highest level.


Tata Steel Chess and the long tradition

The Tata Steel Chess Tournament has a long tradition. Starting as an employee tournament, it has grown into an international tournament of world class renown, for which grandmasters and amateurs alike will clear their diaries. Tata Steel has chosen for chess, because chess entails strategic thinking and focuses on finding creative solutions for complex issues. The same goes for steelmaking, a high-tech process with a crucial role for innovation. Tata Steel employees are continuously working on improving processes and products in order to help customers be successful in their markets while contributing to creating a sustainable society. Next year will see the 77th edition of the tournament. Among chess aficionados the tournament in Wijk aan Zee is known as ‘The Wimbledon of Chess’.

Every year the best chess players in the World measure their strengths at the Tata Steel Chess Tournament in January. They do so in the same room as hundreds of participants in the amateur tournaments, thus creating a unique atmosphere. All over the village of Wijk aan Zee chess competitions are organised. Wijk aan Zee is transformed into the Mecca of chess for two weeks each year. During the tournament more than 1 million people visit the tournament official website.

http://susanpolgar.blogspot.com/2014/12/tata-steel-2015.html

Sochi G11: In dramatic finale, Carlsen retains title

11/23/2014 – The game was all the fans could hope with dramatic play throughout. Vishy Anand played the Berlin to groans but after a critical 23…b5! the situation looked very promising. Whether due to nerves or fatigue, he followed this up with a dubious plan that gave up the exchange with no obvious counterplay. This was the death knell as Magnus Carlsen capitalized. Express report.

 

Sochi G11: In dramatic finale, Carlsen retains title

11/23/2014 – The game was all the fans could hope with dramatic play throughout. Vishy Anand played the Berlin to groans but after a critical 23…b5! the situation looked very promising. Whether due to nerves or fatigue, he followed this up with a dubious plan that gave up the exchange with no obvious counterplay. This was the death knell as Magnus Carlsen capitalized. Express report.

FIDE World Chess Championship Carlsen-Anand 2014

Round Eleven

The game started with a predictable opening: a YABB (yet another boring Berlin). However things took a turn for the better for Anand, and very soon after, for the worse! A brilliant pawn push with 23…b5!! didn’t quite put Carlsen against the ropes, but it signaled that Black had his own attacking chances!

A packed room with GM Negi Parimarjan, Chris Ward and Rustam Kasimdzhanov doing
commentary while Garry Kasparov shows up to see the action live on http://www.playchess.com

Svidler and Nepomniachtchi commenting on the game when suddenly…

Magnus’ reaction to b5!!

The problem was that Anand grossly overestimated his position. The follow-up exchange sacrifice on b4 was, to put it simply, overly optimistic and Carlsen gladly gobbled the offering. Black’s position was unable to support the passed pawn, and all Carlsen needed to do was reduce material to put Anand in grave danger.

White’s play after being up the exchange was precise and accurate, not afraid of calculating variations and finding ‘only’ moves to retain a decisive advantage. At the end, the Challenger’s position could not hold together any more and Carlsen emerged as the defending World Champion!

Carlsen, Magnus2863Anand, Viswanathan2792World Chess Championship 20141123.11.2014Robot 8

1.e4 e5 2.f3 c6 3.b5 f6 4.0-0 xe4 5.d4 d6 6.xc6 dxc6 7.dxe5 f5 8.xd8+ xd8 9.h3 d7 10.c3 h6 11.b3 c8 12.b2 c5 12…b6 13.ad1 e7 14.fe1 c5 was eventually a draw in Anand-Nakamura, 2010. 13.ad1 b6 14.fe1 Played after a ten minute think. It’s possible that Carlsen was not entirely familiar with this position specifically and already started to figure out how to place his pieces. 14.d5 a5 15.d2 e7 16.e3 Kokarev-Leko in the Russian team championship earlier this year. The game was drawn without much happening. 14…e6 15.d5 g5!? An interesting approach. This move severely weakens f6, but Anand claims that he can live with a knight there. On the other hand, on g5 Black protects f4, essentially cutting off reinforcements to the e5 pawn in the future. Also the pawn majority has been successfully halted. 16.c4 b7 17.h2 a5 18.a4 e7 19.g4 g6 So far Anand has played a very nice Berlin. His position is good, but of course White’s central domination and extra space allow him to be at least equal. 20.g3 e7 21.d2 hd8 22.e4 f8 23.ef6 b5‼ A bomb shell! This incredibly unexpected move comes with beautiful timing. The pawn cannot be taken or White already risks standing worse. 24.c3 The strongest idea for White is to ignore the pawn, but now Black’s position is quite strong. 24.axb5 a4 25.bxa4 xa4 allows Black to attack the weak c4 pawn and gives him control (for now) of the open a-file. Black is already better and it is not clear how White will hold his position together. For example: 26.c1 f4! 27.xf4?! gxf4+ 28.xf4 d2! 24.cxb5 c6! 25.bxc6+ xc6 and now it is White’s b3 pawn that is a big issue. The knight on d5 is destabilized which means it must retreat, exposing the weakness on b3. 26.e3 xb3-+ 24…bxa4 25.bxa4 c6 26.f3 db8?! Played after a 22 minute think. This idea of playing Rdb8 is not bad per se, but its follow-up is not nearly as good. 27.e4 b4 Black sacrifices the exchange, obtaining the pair of bishops, a passed pawn, and fixing his structure on the queenside. Overall he has good chances of obtaining compensation, but not for the full exchange unfortunately. 27…b3 28.b1 ab8 29.xb3 xb3 30.c1 is playable for both sides, though White does have some annoying pressure against a5. 28.xb4 cxb4 28…axb4! If Black wanted to sacrifice the exchange, he absolutely had to back it up with activity. The only way of doing so was activating his rook on a8. 29.h5 The main issue for Black is that his position is still very solid, but it does not have an active way of making progress. If White keeps trading, and trading, and trading, eventually the extra exchange will just be an extra exchange. b7 30.f4 gxf4 30…d7! Was an interesting resource, but White would have an ace up his sleeve. 31.f5 xa4 32.fxg6 fxg6 33.hf6 c2+ 34.d4 xd1 35.xd1 c6 36.d7! And ignoring the pawn attack no d5 grants White a huge initiative and two monster passed pawns. 31.hxf4 xf4?! This only helps White. 31…c6 32.xg6 fxg6 33.f4 xc4 34.xg6 c5 was rather bad, but better than the game continuation. 32.xf4 xc4 33.d7! The activity of the rook is starting to make itself felt. Black cannot dislodge this intruder. a6 33…c6 34.d4! a2 35.c1+ b7 36.d7 only makes things worse. For example: c8 37.d5 b3 38.c3! b2 39.xa2 bxc1 40.xc1 and Black’s position is simply falling apart, starting by the f7 pawn. 34.d5 c6 35.xf7 c5 The material difference is too big. Anand is clawing for activity, but White’s next stroke ends it. 36.xc7+! xc7 37.xc7 c6 37…b3 38.d5 b2 39.e6 and the powerful pawn on b2 is not going anywhere. 37…xc7 38.c1 instantly loses. b3 39.xc4 b2 40.xc5+ and Rb5 next, right on time. 38.b5! xb5 39.axb5+ xb5 40.e6 b3 41.d3 e7 42.h4 a4 43.g5 hxg5 44.hxg5 a3 45.c3 The last accurate move, and now Black cannot hold his pawns together anymore. 45.g6 a2 46.g7?? b2=

Anand started to realize his position was not good after sacrificing the exchange

Stockfish sees mate, as does Komodo, which has a quaint way of showing it (+250)

Game, match and title: a subdued Anand in the press conference.
When asked if he considered retiring after this loss, his answer was a firm “no”.

Chief press officer Anastasiyia Karlovich,
who did an incredible job throughout the event

“I feel happy and relieved” the defending World Champion: Magnus Carlsen!

We will be bringing you a full coverage of the press conference and the player’s reactions to the match in a future report.

Score

Game:
Rtg
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
Score
M. Carlsen 2863
½
1
0
½
½
1
½
½
½
½
1
6.5
V. Anand 2792
½
0
1
½
½
0
½
½
½
½
0
4.5

Summary of round eleven for Indian readers by Niklesh Jain

कार्लसन जीते !! फिर बने विश्व शतरंज विजेता !!

मुझे आज समझ नहीं आ रहा की किस तरह इस मैच के बारे में आपको बताऊँ । सबसे पहले तो युवा मेगनस कार्लसन को पुनः विश्व विजेता बनने के लिए बहुत बहुत बधाई । वो शायद पहले ऐसे विश्व विजेता जो अपने खेल से सामने वाले को परास्त नहीं करते बल्कि अपने असाधारण अचूक खेल से सामने वाले को कोई मौका ही नहीं देते उन्हे परास्त करने का और फिर सामने वाला खुद ही गल्तियाँ करना शुरू करता है और कार्लसन मशीनों की तरह उसकी गलती को उसे दंड दे देते है । आनंद आज शानदार खेले और फिर अचानक समय के दवाब में गलत चालें चलते चले गए । शायद इस महान खिलाड़ी पर उम्र का प्रभाव अब दिखने लगा है । पाँच बार के विश्व चैम्पियन यकीनन अभी भी दुनिया के सबसे बेहतरीन खिलाड़ियों में से एक है पर विश्व चैम्पियन के हकदार अब मेगनस उनसे भी ज्यादा है ये अब उन्हे मानना ही होगा । क्यूंकी आनंद हर बार इस प्रतियोगिता में दवाब के क्षणो में बिखरते नजर आए है । पर हाँ आनंद की पिछले बार की हार से लेकर इस विश्व चैंपियनशिप के अंतिम मैच तक उन्होने एक बात हमेशा के लिए साबित कर दी की इंसान को कभी हार नहीं माननी चाहिए वो वाकई एक शेर की तरह लड़े । उन्हे अपने इस शानदार प्रयास के लिए और उनके इस जज्बे के लिए सलाम । खेल एक बार फिर बर्लिन ओपनिंग में खेला गया और आनंद ने आज अपनी तैयारी और शानदार चालो के मिश्रण से खेल को एक ऐसे स्थान पर ला दिया था जंहा से वो बहुत मजबूत नजर आ रहे थे और उनका हारना तो लगभग असंभव ही लग रहा था पर अचानक 23 चाल पर कार्लसन की एक थोड़ी कमजोर चाल के जबाब में आनंद ने जैसे ही b5 जैसी शानदार चाल चली अचानक खेल में एक चमक आ गयी पूरी दुनिया के बड़े दिग्गज खेल के विशेषज्ञ इसे अपने अपने हिसाब से आकलन करने लगे आनंद ने कुछ बहुत बेहतरीन चालों के मिश्रण से कुछ देर के लिए लोगो को उनकी जीत के बारे में भी सोचने का मौका भी दिया। ट्वीटर पर तो जैसे बड़े ग्रांड मास्टरों के ट्वीट की बाढ़ सी आ गयी थी और होती भी क्यूँ न बात विश्व विजेता के तय होने की जो थी । पर इसके बाद अचानक आनंद जब Be7 चल कर कार्लसन को और दवाब में ल सकते थे उन्होने अचानक बहुत सोच कर अपने हाथी को कार्लसन के ऊंट के बदले कुर्बान करने का ऐसा निर्णय लिया जो शायद किसी और के लिए तो शायद काम कर भी देता पर कार्लसन के खिलाफ ये उनकी सबसे बड़ी और आखिरी गलती साबित हुई ।मै शायद आज आनंद की जीत के बारे में लिखकर गर्व महसूस करता पर यकीन मानिए आनंद भी अपनी बादशाहत को इस नए युवा अभेद योद्धा के हाथो सौंपकर आज नहीं तो कल संतुष्ट जरूर होंगे ।आनंद को भी उनके आने वाले समय ओर कार्यो के लिए शुभकामनाए भारत को आप पर गर्व है और हमेशा रहेगा ।कार्लसन को जीत की पुनः बहुत बहुत बधाई दोनों खिलाड़ी जमकर खेले और शतरंज दुनियाँ भर में और प्रसिद्ध हुई इससे ज्यादा एक शतरंज प्रेमी को क्या चाहिए ।

उम्मीद है आपको हिन्दी के लेख पसंद आए होंगे ….

आपका निकलेश जैन

FIDE World Chess Championship Carlsen-Anand 2014, Round 3

Sochi G3: Anand strikes back – with a vengence!

What a turn of events! When Magnus Carlsen won the first decisive game of the match in the previous round, many gave the challenger, Viswanathan Anand, no hope of recovering. After all, last year he was unable to put any pressure on the then-Challenger Carlsen and he won not a single game. But this has all changed already.

A fantastic preparation by team Anand left the Indian in a commanding position. The players repeated the game Aronian-Adams from 2013, but Vishy had a nasty surprise in store. The precise sequence of events allowed White a strong advantage and a powerful passed c-pawn. Anand took the advantage and with surgical precision he won the game.

Carlsen seemed very unfamiliar with the position, taking a long time for his moves

Anand was also taking his time, but somehow it certainly felt he was in his preparation. He revealed in the press conference that there are so many variations in this complicated line that he did not want to reveal exactly when his preparation ended. However he did let know that the move 24.Qxb6 was still in his preparation, while 27…Bb4 was not considered by Anand.

Anand, V.2792Carlsen, M.28631–0D37WCh 2014311.11.2014

1.d4 f6 2.c4 e6 3.f3 d5 4.c3 e7 5.f4 0-0 6.e3 bd7 7.c5 This style of the “Aronian Queen’s Gambit” has become popular in recent years. In the super-tournament going on in Moscow, Tashir, we have seen his position several times. c6 7…h5 has been the favorite of the Black players in Tashir. 8.d3 b6 9.b4 a5 10.a3 White’s expansion on the queenside looks scary, but if Black can look it down, open the a-file successfully and trade off his light-squared bishop (which is many times simply dead), then he can hold comfortably. Of course, doing this takes a long time. a6 11.xa6 xa6 12.b5! This creation of a passed pawn has been known for some time. All of this is well-known theory. cxb5 13.c6 c8 14.c7 b4 15.b5 a4 16.c1 e4 17.g5 Taking twice on g5 is certainly impossible, but taking once might be necessary. df6 17…xg5 18.xg5 a5 18…xg5?? 19.d6+- rips apart the blockade and wins the queen. 19.e7!? e8 19…xb5 20.xf8 xf8 21.xa4 a5 22.xb4+ is somewhat unclear. The passed pawn on c7 does compensate for Black’s two knights against a rook. e8!∞ 20.xb4 xb5 21.xa4 and the rook on b5 is trapped. This must favor White as Black’s rook on e8 is very passive. 18.xe4 xe4 19.f3 a5 20.fxe4 Even though both players took a long time to get here (about an hour and a half to get to this position between the both of them) only 20.fxe4! is a novelty. 20.e2 d7 21.fxe4 c8! Aronian-Adams, 2013. Vishy must have taken a fresh look at this game. 20…xb5 21.xa4 a5 22.c6 bxa3 23.exd5 xd5 24.xb6 A fascinating position. Material is equal, but White’s position is clearly to be preferred. The reason is that the a-pawn is not as dangerous as the c-pawn, which needs to be blockaded immediately. d7 25.0-0 25.a6 The computers were screaming for this move to be played in many occassions, but it was not always that clear. 25…c8 25…g5 26.b8! c8 27.xc8+ xc8 28.b1± 26.c6 Interestingly, this exact position was seen in the game Tomashevsky, Evgeny – Riazantsev, Alexander from the 2008 Russian Super Final. Except, in that game, White’s pawn was on h3, and not on h2!  Tomashevsky also won that game rather cleanly. g5 Black is running out of resources. He has to devote too much to stopping the c-pawn and this means that his a-pawn is not playing. 27.g3 b4 28.a1! An excellent move. There is no way to rip through the blockade immediately, so Anand adds pressure on the a-pawn. a5 29.a6! Keeping an eye on the a-pawn and especially the bishop on a5. xc7 30.c4! The pressure on the bishop is huge. This will cost Carlsen a piece. At this point he was also very low on the clock. 30.xa3 was also strong as the bishop is pinned regardless. 30…e5 31.xe5 xe5 32.dxe5 As Svidler pointed out, Black has excellent chances to draw this game if he can break the pin and put pressure on White’s weak pawns. But that, simply put, is not going to happen! e7 33.e6! The easiest. Now Black’s king is also a factor. There is no way to dismantle the pin, Black’s position is simply resignable. f8 34.c1 And it is over! Anand does it! Excellent preparation by the Indian player and absolutely precise and surgical game to beat Carlsen very cleanly. 1–0

Carlsen “It was a poor choice of opening, and he played very well… I could have done better”.

Carlsen: “I was trying to hold on… I had seen this position from afar, this stuff with Qb6, I thought I would be a little worse but I would be able to neutralize it, but he got in Rc6… after that all this stuff with g6 and Bb4 just did not work. I probably had to do something else earlier on.”

Anand claims that he only prepared three hours on the rest day. He was aware of a Tomashevsky-Riazantsev game that was very similar to the game, but with the pawn on h3 instead of h2, but the Indian claimed that detail changed things.

The face of despair

It’s over! Carlsen resigns the game after Anand’s 34th move…

The first Anand victory over Carlsen in classical chess in quite some time

“When something goes wrong it is always my fault” – Carlsen answering
the question how much influence his seconds had in choosing this opening.

What a turn of events! When Magnus Carlsen won the first decisive game of the match in the previous round, many gave the challenger, Viswanathan Anand, no hope of recovering. After all, last year he was unable to put any pressure on the then-Challenger Carlsen and he won not a single game. But this has all changed already.

A fantastic preparation by team Anand left the Indian in a commanding position. The players repeated the game Aronian-Adams from 2013, but Vishy had a nasty surprise in store. The precise sequence of events allowed White a strong advantage and a powerful passed c-pawn. Anand took the advantage and with surgical precision he won the game.

Carlsen seemed very unfamiliar with the position, taking a long time for his moves

Anand was also taking his time, but somehow it certainly felt he was in his preparation. He revealed in the press conference that there are so many variations in this complicated line that he did not want to reveal exactly when his preparation ended. However he did let know that the move 24.Qxb6 was still in his preparation, while 27…Bb4 was not considered by Anand.

Learn more about this opening!
by Andrew Martin
Anand, V.2792Carlsen, M.28631–0D37WCh 2014311.11.2014

1.d4 f6 2.c4 e6 3.f3 d5 4.c3 e7 5.f4 0-0 6.e3 bd7 7.c5 This style of the “Aronian Queen’s Gambit” has become popular in recent years. In the super-tournament going on in Moscow, Tashir, we have seen his position several times. c6 7…h5 has been the favorite of the Black players in Tashir. 8.d3 b6 9.b4 a5 10.a3 White’s expansion on the queenside looks scary, but if Black can look it down, open the a-file successfully and trade off his light-squared bishop (which is many times simply dead), then he can hold comfortably. Of course, doing this takes a long time. a6 11.xa6 xa6 12.b5! This creation of a passed pawn has been known for some time. All of this is well-known theory. cxb5 13.c6 c8 14.c7 b4 15.b5 a4 16.c1 e4 17.g5 Taking twice on g5 is certainly impossible, but taking once might be necessary. df6 17…xg5 18.xg5 a5 18…xg5?? 19.d6+- rips apart the blockade and wins the queen. 19.e7!? e8 19…xb5 20.xf8 xf8 21.xa4 a5 22.xb4+ is somewhat unclear. The passed pawn on c7 does compensate for Black’s two knights against a rook. e8!∞ 20.xb4 xb5 21.xa4 and the rook on b5 is trapped. This must favor White as Black’s rook on e8 is very passive. 18.xe4 xe4 19.f3 a5 20.fxe4 Even though both players took a long time to get here (about an hour and a half to get to this position between the both of them) only 20.fxe4! is a novelty. 20.e2 d7 21.fxe4 c8! Aronian-Adams, 2013. Vishy must have taken a fresh look at this game. 20…xb5 21.xa4 a5 22.c6 bxa3 23.exd5 xd5 24.xb6 A fascinating position. Material is equal, but White’s position is clearly to be preferred. The reason is that the a-pawn is not as dangerous as the c-pawn, which needs to be blockaded immediately. d7 25.0-0 25.a6 The computers were screaming for this move to be played in many occassions, but it was not always that clear. 25…c8 25…g5 26.b8! c8 27.xc8+ xc8 28.b1± 26.c6 Interestingly, this exact position was seen in the game Tomashevsky, Evgeny – Riazantsev, Alexander from the 2008 Russian Super Final. Except, in that game, White’s pawn was on h3, and not on h2!  Tomashevsky also won that game rather cleanly. g5 Black is running out of resources. He has to devote too much to stopping the c-pawn and this means that his a-pawn is not playing. 27.g3 b4 28.a1! An excellent move. There is no way to rip through the blockade immediately, so Anand adds pressure on the a-pawn. a5 29.a6! Keeping an eye on the a-pawn and especially the bishop on a5. xc7 30.c4! The pressure on the bishop is huge. This will cost Carlsen a piece. At this point he was also very low on the clock. 30.xa3 was also strong as the bishop is pinned regardless. 30…e5 31.xe5 xe5 32.dxe5 As Svidler pointed out, Black has excellent chances to draw this game if he can break the pin and put pressure on White’s weak pawns. But that, simply put, is not going to happen! e7 33.e6! The easiest. Now Black’s king is also a factor. There is no way to dismantle the pin, Black’s position is simply resignable. f8 34.c1 And it is over! Anand does it! Excellent preparation by the Indian player and absolutely precise and surgical game to beat Carlsen very cleanly. 1–0

Carlsen “It was a poor choice of opening, and he played very well… I could have done better”.

Carlsen: “I was trying to hold on… I had seen this position from afar, this stuff with Qb6, I thought I would be a little worse but I would be able to neutralize it, but he got in Rc6… after that all this stuff with g6 and Bb4 just did not work. I probably had to do something else earlier on.”

Anand claims that he only prepared three hours on the rest day. He was aware of a Tomashevsky-Riazantsev game that was very similar to the game, but with the pawn on h3 instead of h2, but the Indian claimed that detail changed things.

The face of despair

It’s over! Carlsen resigns the game after Anand’s 34th move…

The first Anand victory over Carlsen in classical chess in quite some time

“When something goes wrong it is always my fault” – Carlsen answering
the question how much influence his seconds had in choosing this opening.

http://en.chessbase.com/post/sochi-g3-anand-strikes-back-with-a-vengence

The Couch Potato’s Guide to Carlsen-Anand: The Rematch

By GM Ian Rogers
November 6, 2014

CarlsenAnand1.gif

Photo Cathy Rogers

It is only a year since chess fans around the world watched Viswanathan Anand lose his World Championship title to his ex-sparring partner Magnus Carlsen, and this weekend the two rivals will again sit down to battle for the world title.

This year, instead of sunny Chennai, the players will be competing in the Russian seaside resort of Sochi, home of the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Last time FIDE held a major chess event in Sochi, the Grand Prix tournament of 2008, the city became a staging point for Russian troops in a five day war between Russia and Georgia, less than 30 miles away. The war and the Grand Prix concluded within days of each other.

In 2014 the choice of Sochi as a venue, at a time when Russia is involved in a conflict with Ukraine, has been controversial, with Carlsen only agreeing to play in Russia two months ago. The prize fund is the absolute minimum allowed by FIDE, 1m Euros.

On Saturday November 8 at 7am AEST, Carlsen will begin his first world title defence. The 23-year-old has not been in vintage form in 2014, yet has won major tournaments in Zurich and Shamkir.

In contrast, Anand’s form has been better than prior to any of his recent world title matches, with wins of the Candidates tournament in March and the Bilbao Masters Final breaking a five year drought for tournament victories by the Indian veteran.

Nonetheless, it has been many years since Anand won a classical game against Carlsen, though he did account for Carlsen’s only loss on the way to the World Rapid Championship title in Dubai in June.

Betting agencies currently list Carlsen as a 3 to 1 on favourite which might seem a little too negative for Anand except that Carlsen has a not-so-secret weapon, his analyst Peter Heine Nielsen.

Nielsen was former chief second of the Anand team but defected after Anand’s successful title defence against Boris Gelfand in 2012. Nielsen stayed neutral during the 2013 title match between his old and new employers but whatever legal or moral constraints were placed on Nielsen have obviously expired and he will now be part of Team Carlsen in Sochi.

Nielsen has an intimate knowledge of how Anand prepares for these world title matches – he assisted Anand against Kramnik, Topalov and Gelfand – and his insights should be invaluable for Carlsen.

The World Championship match is a best-of-12 contest, with tiebreakers if a 6-6 score is reached. The winner will earn $0.75m (little more than half of the Chennai prize money) and the loser around $0.5m, though the sums will be closer together should the match go to tiebreakers.

The venue is the Sochi Olympic Media Centre. Fans thinking of travelling to Sochi should be warned that spectator positions are limited and expensive (about $100 for a day ticket). So why not relax at home and use this Couch Potato’s Guide to maximise your enjoyment of the Rematch of the 21st Century.
sochimap.gif
Before the Games

Games begin at 7.00am New York time – much more palatable than the 4.30am starting time during the Chennai match.

Your breakfast should, of course, have a Sochi theme and since few will have the culinary competence to make Khachapuri – the wonderful pastry treat from next-door Georgia – the chessplaying chef should probably be content to enjoy cheese balls, not too far removed from the Magnolia cheese balls which make breakfast in Sochi a treat.

You will need to mix together half a pound of cottage cheese, plus two eggs, a couple of tablespoons of sugar and a similar quantity of semolina flour. (True Magnolia balls are based on a type of cheddar but require tricky techniques like separating egg yolks and whites.) Knead the mixture into balls, coat in (wheat) flour and then fry in hot oil for about five minutes.

As regular readers of Couch Potato Guides will know, you should prepare the balls overnight and, once the games have reached the boring part just after the opening, start the frying. For the full Russian experience, serve with sour cream

During the Games

Commentary on the 2014 match is going to be a treat for couch potatoes, with world class players offering their opinions through a variety of sources.

The official site, http://www.sochi2014.fide.com/, will be hard to beat. The brilliant Peter Svidler will be paired with Sopiko Guramishvili and guests such as Vladimir Kramnik are expected. (Do not, however, expect a cameo from Garry Kasparov. Unlike 2013 when  commentators were told by FIDE not to let a visiting Kasparov into the commentary box, this time Kasparov has thought better of visiting Russia at all.)

Chess24.com, the web site which has rapidly become the leader in live chess broadcasting, will simply be relaying the official feed. (Since Svidler and Guramishvili are two of Chess24’s regulars, it is understandable why Chess24 did not want to employ a team to compete with itself!)

Playchess, will offer commentary in English, German and French, with Danny King and Simon Williams the anchors for the English service. Their guests will include Dutch star Loek van Wely and Anand’s former second Rustam Kasimdzhanov.

Internet Chess Club remains a reliable option, and have created a video show featuring a wide variety of commentators including rare appearances of US veterans Gata Kamsky and Maxim Dlugy. CLO editor Jennifer Shahade will host round 1 with GM Gregory Kaidanov while game 4 will be a highlight, with Nakamura in the commentary box. The end of the match will see the reuniting of Chennai World Championship commentary duo Polgar and Ramesh.

Norwegian State broadcaster NRK has television rights to the match and on past form should put on an impressive live show (including plenty of interviews in English). However other Norwegian media may be worth checking out, notably VG.

Text commentary

Text commentary is becoming a dying art, with the master, Sergey Shipov having been recruited for Russian language audio commentary on the official site.

Chessdom remains in the field, but the action is likely to be on Twitter where dozens of pundits, on and off site, can discuss the state of the match. Kasparov offered pithy opinions about the games during the 2013 match, though he tends to mention the guy playing the ceremonial opening move in game one quite a few times, in a non-chess context.

Of the non-GMs, Peter Doggers (@chessvibes) will be on the spot for the first half of the match and should be worth following.

For a Russian perspective on the match, the dual language account @chess_news is excellent for breaking news.

Both Carlsen and Anand have a Twitter presence, the latter recently tweeting some clues about his preparation methods as well as a few anecdotes from past world title matches. However, don’t expect revelations from either player (or their seconds) until the match is over.

After the Games

As soon as the games finish, the two players will be ushered into a press conference, which should be viewable on multiple sites as it happens.

Chess.com are continuing their emphasis on a post-match highlights show. The hour-long post-game show will feature videos and pictures from two on-site reporters, Peter Doggers and Mike Klein.

Two rest day shows on the 13th and 16th are likely to be particularly interesting given the appearance of Hikaru Nakamura as a guest.

The Week in Chess recently celebrating 20 years in the chess news business, is always worth a look. Mark Crowther is always one of the first to use the players’ comments to create quality annotations. ChessPro is a little slower, but produces remarkable analytical work given their short turn-around time.

ChessBase has light annotations and usually a fine pictorial spread of that day’s action.

A few hours after the game is completed, there will be an endless array of material on Youtube, though most video material tends to be extremely basic. ICC’s Game of the Day stands out. You should also be able to find lectures on the STL Chess Club’s burgeoning channel, with analysis from current GM-in-residence Yasser Seirawan.

Of course Chess Life Online will also cover the match, with regular reports from Sochi by the legendary Spanish journalist Leontxo Garcia.

After three weeks of waking early, sitting in front of a computer and living on cheese balls, you will probably be turning to commentator Svidler for even more advice – the Russian lost more than 40 pounds in weight while preparing for the 2013 Candidates tournament. (His diet may, however, not be to everyone’s taste – it involved watching endless hours of cricket rather than chess and giving up pavlova.)

2014 World Championship Match Schedule

Game 1 Saturday  November 8 (All games begin at 3pm Sochi time = 7.00am AEST)
Game 2 Sunday  November 9
Game 3 Tuesday November 11
Game 4 Wednesday November 12
Game 5 Friday November 14
Game 6 Saturday November 15
Game 7 Monday November 17
Game 8 Tuesday November 18
Game 9 Thursday November 20
Game 10 Friday November 21
Game 11 Sunday November 23
Game 12 Tuesday November 25
Playoffs (if needed) Thursday November 27

http://uschess.org/content/view/12848/788

The New York Times and Chess

Lubomir Kavalek Headshot

The world champion Magnus Carlsen is making chess popular around the globe and his title defense against Vishy Anand begins on November 8 in Sochi, Russia. Millions of chess fans are looking forward to the coverage of the World Chess Championship match on the Internet and in the newspapers. Alas, The New York Times chess column will not be one of them. Last month, it was abruptly terminated with a single sentence: “This is the final chess column to run in The New York Times.”

At least the Washington Post was more generous. After they decided to stop my chess column in January 2010, I was able to write the last article as a farewell note, expressing what the column tried to accomplish. But make no mistake about it: every time a newspaper cuts a chess column, chess loses.

Happy times

In 1972 America went chess crazy. Bobby Fischer played the Match of the Century against Boris Spassky and chess was everywhere. The New York Times hired grandmaster Robert Byrne to run the chess column.

2014-10-29-RByrneMontreal79.jpg

On October 10, they devoted almost a full page to chess with three items. The first began with…

BYRNE IS APPOINTED AS CHESS COLUMNIST

Robert Byrne, a United States chess co-champion, has been appointed chess columnist for The New York Times. He replaces Al Horwitz, who has been on a leave of absence.

A 44-year-old grandmaster, Mr. Byrne has won the United States Open Chess Championship three times – in 1960, 1963 and 1966. He shares the title of current co-champion with Samuel Reshevsky and Lubomir Kavalek.

It was not a mistake. We were the co-champions. The 1972 U.S. Championship was also a Zonal qualifier and only two places were available. Robert Byrne won the play-off in February 1973.

A news item followed:

U.S. CHESS PLAYERS BOW TO SOVIET TEAM

SKOPJE, Yugoslavia, Oct. 9 – The United States team lost today to the Soviet Union in the 12th round of the chess Olympics here. On the top two boards, Lubomir Kavalek drew with Tigran Petrosian and Robert Byrne drew with Vasily Smyslov. But Pal Benko lost to Mikhail Tal and Arthur Bisguier lost to Anatoly Karpov.

Karpov was actually the first reserve on the Soviet team.

The U.S. team could have been much stronger. The Coca-Cola company was willing to pay $100,000 on a condition that Fischer plays. He would get $50,000 and each of us $10,000. Bobby wanted to go to Skopje. He told me that before my departure from Reykjavik, where I was performing a double duty: reporting on the match for the Voice of America and working with Bobby on his adjournments from the Game 13 till the end of the match. But it was Fischer’s adrenaline talking: he was, understandably, too tired after the match with Spassky. Larry Evans and William Lombardy also stayed home.

The third item was Byrne’s first column. He wrote about my game against Florin Gheorghiu. At the 1966 Havana Olympiad, the Rumanian grandmaster defeated Bobby Fischer. Byrne based the comments on our mutual analysis before and after the game. The game was also annotated by Hans Kmoch in the Chess Life and Review and I have revisited the comments and added more recent views.

Chess: Flash of Insight, Not Analysis, Gives Kavalek Brilliant Victory

By ROBERT BYRNE

Special to The New York Times

SKOPJE, Yugoslavia, Oct. 9 -The rich stock of opening ideas Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky came up with in their recent world championship match is the spur for dozens of encounters here in the Chess Olympics.

Kavalek,Lubomir – Gheorghiu,Florin
Skopje Olympiad 1972

“Since the 15th Spassky-Fischer game (Reykjavik 1972) Lubomir Kavalek, the former Czech grandmaster now playing Board No.1 on the United States team here, has, like others, thrown enormous effort into mastering the complexities of Spassky’s new attack against the Najdorf variation of the Sicilian Defense. Spassky’s sharp play had broken the defense early in the game for a moral victory, although Fischer’s tenacity and Spassky’s later mistakes led to a draw.” – R. Byrne

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Nbd7 8.Qf3

Gheorghiu’s opening choice was not a surprise since we already played the same variation in the preliminaries. I chose 8.Bc4 but did not get much and the game was quickly drawn.

8…Qc7 9.0-0-0 b5 10.Bd3 Bb7 11.Rhe1 b4

2014-10-31-1Gheo.jpg

Spassky-Fischer, Game 15, Reykjavik 1972, went: 11…Be7 12.Qg3 0-0-0 (12…b4 became later the most popular move.) 13.Bxf6 (Two years later, at the 1974 Nice Olympiad, GM Velimirovic came up with the dangerous sacrifice: 13.Bxb5!? axb5 14.Ndxb5 Qb6 15.e5.) 13…Nxf6 14.Qxg7 Rdf8 and in a sharp battle Fischer wrested a draw.

“Something more radical than Fischer’s routine play was required if Black was to stay in the game. The answer had to be an early b5-b4, provoking White to attack precipitously by Nc3-d5, accepting the knight sacrifice and squirming tortuously to a won endgame.

When the match had been under way about 20 minutes I was startled to find Kavalek 13 moves deep in the Najdorf Sicilian variation that had stumped us. His opponent, Florin Gheorghiu, was following the track of our analysis, compelling the piece sacrifice by 11…b4 and further improving on Fischer’s play by omitting the development of his king bishop, which otherwise would have been caught in an awkward pin on the king file.

What was wanted was a smashing justification of the knight offer. But every proposal I came up with brought only a sad,”No, Bob, no– it’s no good,” from Kavalek.
That’s how matters stood when the United States met Rumania last Thursday.” – R. Byrne

12.Nd5! exd5 13.exd5+ Kd8

The king walks away. This is the reason why black left his dark bishop home- on the square f8.

2014-10-31-2Gheo.jpg

14.Bf5!

Like a drunken sailor, the light bishop is going to zig-zag its way to the pawn on f7.

Commenting for the Chess Life and Review, Hans Kmoch over enthusiastically awarded this and my next move with a double exclamation point.

Robert Byrne was more down to earth: “Kavalek had stubbornly gone in with nothing better in mind than the 14.Nc6+ Bxc6 15.dxc6 Nb6 we knew to be insufficient. His brilliant inspiration 14.Bf5 and 15.Be6 occurred to him only over the board in the 10 minutes he took on his 14th turn.”

Today, the computers assess the variation 14.Nc6+ Bxc6 15.dxc6 Nb6 as better for white, for example: 16.Qh5 d5 17.Bxf6+ gxf6 18.Be4 Kc8 19.Bxd5±.

14…Be7

The position seems critical. There are several choices:

A. Some of the terrific power is revealed by 14…Qb6 15.Bxd7 Kxd7 16.Bxf6 gxf6 17.Qh5 for example:

a) 17…Kc7 18.Qxf7+ Kb8 19.Re8+ Ka7 20.Nc6+ permits white to mate. – R. Byrne;
b) 17…Rd8 18.Qxf7+ Kc8 19.Qxf6+- (19.Ne6) ;

c) 17…Be7 18.Qxf7 Rae8 19.Nf5 Qd8 20.Qe6+ (20.Re6!+-) 20…Kc7 21.Nxe7 recovering the sacrificed piece with a winning two-pawn lead. – R. Byrne.

B. After 17…Be7 the line 18. Qf5+ Kd8 19.Rxe7! Kxe7 20.Re1+ Kf8 21.Qxf6 is better and wins.

C. Byrne explained that giving extra protection to the weak square e6 by 14…Nc5 would not have rescued Gheorghiu and suggested 15.Bh3 for example 15…Be7 16.Nf5 Bf8 17.Qe3 Qb6 18.Nxg7 Bxg7 19.Qe7 mate.

D. Donner’s suggestion 14…Nb6 is best dealt with 15.Bxf6+! gxf6 16.Qe3 Bh6 17.Nc6+ Bxc6 18.dxc6 ±;

E. 14…h6 15.Nc6+ Bxc6 16.dxc6 hxg5 17.cxd7 Rb8 18.fxg5 Nxd7 19.Qe4 Qc8 20.Rd4+-;

F. We did not consider the move 14…Qc4!? suggested by computers, for example 15.Qh5 Bxd5 (15…Qxd5 16.Ne6+ fxe6 17.Rxd5 Bxd5 18.Bxe6+-) 16.Bxd7 Kxd7 17.Bxf6 gxf6 18.b3 Qc5 19.c4 Rc8 (19…bxc3 20.Nc2 Re8 21.Qf5+ Re6 22.Re3+-) 20.Qf5+ Be6 21.Qxf6 with a repetition of moves after 21…Be7 22.Qh6 Bf8 23.Qf6.

15.Be6! Rf8 16.Bxf7 Rxf7?

Leads to a difficult position. Black should have tried to equalize with 16…Nc5!? 17.Be6 h6 18.Bh4 g5 19.Bg3 a5.

17.Ne6+ Kc8 18.Nxc7 Kxc7

2014-10-31-3Gheo.jpg

“So Gheorghiu’s plan of exchanging his queen for three of the attacking minor pieces was the only one (alternative) feasible. Had he consolidated his position quickly enough, he would have been able to put up tremendous resistance. But Kavalek didn’t give him the chance.” – R. Byrne

“Black has three minor pieces for the Queen, but with two pawns down and his king exposed, he is in very bad shape.” – Hans Kmoch

19.Qe2

White threatens to hunt the queenside pawns or sacrifice the queen back on e7.

19…a5 20.Rd4 Bf8 21.Qb5 Nc5 22.Bxf6 Rxf6 23.Re8 Rxe8 24.Qxe8

Planning to jump back with 25.Qb5 to clean the queenside pawns.

2014-10-31-4Gheo.jpg

24…g5?!

“By move 24 Gheorghiu was so tied up that he was driven to the desperate pawn sacrifice 24…g5, in vain hope that he could organize some sort of counterattack on the white king.” – R. Byrne

“A hopeless bid for counterplay. White was at the point of using his kingside majority, anyhow. Now he can do it with much more immediate effect.” – Hans Kmoch

25.fxg5 Rf1+ 26.Rd1 Rf2 27.Qh5 Kb6 28.Qxh7 Bc8 29.Qh4!

2014-10-31-5Gheo.jpg

“Dislodging the black rook from its commanding position, thus preventing Bc8-f5, to converge on c2.” – R. Byrne

29…Rxg2 30.Qf4 Be7 31.h4 Bg4

After 31…Rg4 32.Qf7 Re4 33.g6 white wins.

32.Re1 Bh5 33.Rxe7 Rg1+ 34.Kd2 Rd1+ 35.Ke3 Re1+ 36.Kf2

After 36…Rxe7 37.Qxd6+ wins.

Black resigned.

Ageless warriors

At the age of 45, Byrne went on to qualify for the Candidates matches, finishing third behind Viktor Korchnoi and Karpov at the 1973 Leningrad Interzonal. Three years later at the 1976 Biel Interzonal, he missed the Candidates by a half point.

Last month, FIDE threw the 45-year-old Boris Gelfand into the lion’s den, organizing two 12-player Grand Prix events close to each other. Gelfand shared first in Baku, Azerbaijan, but finished last in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The first two GP finishers qualify for the Candidates tournament. After two tournaments the leaders are Fabiano Caruana with 230 points and Hikaru Nakamura with 207 points, both in their twenties.

In 2012, Gelfand challenged Vishy Anand for the world title. It was the oldest pair in the history of the world championships and it ended with Anand’s victory in a rapid chess tiebreak. Last year Anand lost the title to Carlsen, but bounced back and against all odds won this year’s Candidate tournament to meet the Norwegian again. Last time they met, Anand grew tired in the middle of the 12-game world championship match.

At 44, Anand knows he is an underdog, but this time he will be better prepared mentally and physically. He sent a clear warning to Carlsen by winning the Bilbao Masters in September. At 23, Carlsen is bursting with energy and can keep the pressure on by playing long games and cutting down on his own mistakes.

It could become an uphill struggle for Anand. It doesn’t take much – two, three blunders perhaps – and the match is gone, and the ageless warrior we so much admire becomes simply too old.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lubomir-kavalek/the-new-york-times-and-ch_b_5992394.html

Magnus Carlsen: World Champion, Model, Actor?

Magnus Carlsen made a very successful career as a chessplayer, created headlines as a model, and now there are rumors that he might appear in Christopher Nolan’s new movie “Interstellar”, alongside Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway and Michael Caine. For Enzo Catalano it is the “most awaited movie of the year” and he speculates about Carlsen’s role in it.

Christopher Nolan’s upcoming movie “Interstellar” is opening in the next days and it is for sure the most awaited movie of the year, featuring a cast that is nothing short of stellar (no pun intended, or maybe it is) and promising to be a space adventure of the epic scale of “2001: A Space Odyssey”.

Stanley Kubrick, chess fan and director of “2001: A Space Odyssey” (Foto: Wikipedia)

Christopher Nolan, chess fan and director of “Interstellar”
(Foto: Richard Goldsmith, http://www.piqtured.com, Source: wikipedia.com)

There is a lot of mystery about the movie, with details about the story remaining scarce, and this is not new for Nolan who has done the same for other movies of his in the past. But this time there is an extra twist in this secrecy in the form of a famous person who is rumored to play a part in the movie but whose identity Nolan is not willing to disclose in his latest interviews. This person does not appear in the trailers nor is he listed in the credits. I think there are clues that indicate that this person might indeed be Magnus Carlsen.

Preparing for a career in film? Magnus Carlsen with Liv Tyler (Foto: G-Star)

Magnus Carlsen and Gemma Atherton

1 – Checking the full list of cast and crew of Interstellar on IMDB, it can be seen that the very last entry is taken by Matt Damon (as uncredited), to whom Carlsen has been likened several times for his resemblance. Indeed, in a famous April Fool’s prank the ChessBase folks came up with the story of Matt Damon being the second cousin of Carlsen (a pretty good prank at that).

Matt Damon (left) and Magnus Carlsen (right)

Magnus Carlsen (left) and Matt Damon (right)

Searching the web for information about Matt Damon in “Interstellar” produces quite a long list of references dating back even to last year (like Indiewire and Examiner.com), and there is even a short clip on YouTube from an interview with Damon for the launch of “Monuments Men” where he is asked how it was to work with Nolan on “Interstellar” (around 2:40 in the clip), and Damon goes on praising him and saying that it has been nothing but great. It sounds now rather strange that Nolan would not disclose the identity of this person in his latest interviews. Moreover, in a report from a preview in Los Angeles I have read that Matt Damon appears in the movie but he is almost not recognizable, which might indicate that it is actually not him – Carlsen, maybe?

2 – Chess is not something that is alien to Christopher Nolan. The plots of his movies have sometimes been described as possessing the qualities of a chess game, and other times his characters have been likened to “just chess pieces in a game”. In “Inception” he made a couple of explicit references to chess – for example the character played by Cillian Murphy is called Robert Fischer, a clear homage to one of the greatest chess players of all times.

Bobby Fischer

In “Inception” there is also another reference in the form of the totem used by Ariadne which happens to be a chess piece, and specifically a golden bishop (the totem is the object that the characters use to help them distinguish between dreams and reality). For “Interstellar” Nolan could have thought “I might just as well feature a true chess icon this time”.

3 – “Interstellar” opens in most countries next week between November 5th and 7th; those are also the days in which the World Chess Championship match begins (the opening ceremony is on Nov 7th), the rematch between Anand and Carlsen, and it might be a good way to create a resonance between the two events (not that “Interstellar” needs any more buzz than what surrounds it already, but it could be good for the WCC match). So can it really be that Magnus Carlsen has a part in “Interstellar”? The answer is just a few days away, but if that were true it would be a real treat for all of us chess fans and aficionados around the world, and especially for those of us who have looked in awe and delight at HAL 9000 playing chess with Frank in “Space Odyssey”. Maybe Carlsen plays an artificial intelligence like HAL…

Interstellar Trailer

http://en.chessbase.com/post/magnus-carlsen-world-champion-model-actor