28 January 2011
Chess blog for latest news and trivia (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2011
Don’t worry Mama, I got all the enemy pawns
Ana Cramling Bellon, 8-year-old daughter of GMs Pia Cramling and Juan-Manuel Bellon Lopez/www.gibraltarchesscongress.com
Hi everyone,
There are four players with a perfect score after three rounds at the Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Congress 2011 being played from Jan. 24 to Feb. 3, 2011, at the Caleta Hotel. There are 231 players in the Masters section: 53 grandmasters, three of whom are rated over the elite level of 2700, and 15 between 2600-2699. A special £10,000 prize will be awarded to the best womenn player. The tournament leaders on 3/3 are Nigel Short (England), Nadezhda Kosintseva (Russia), Victoria Cmilyte (Lithuania), Deep Sengupta (India).
Here are the top-20 board results.
John Saunders wrote in his interesting wrap-up report of Round 3:
Bo. | No. | Name | Pts. | Result | Pts. | Name | No. | ||
1 | 23 | GM | Felgaer Ruben | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Ivanchuk Vassily | 1 |
2 | 4 | GM | Vallejo Pons Francisco | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Buhmann Rainer | 29 |
3 | 11 | GM | Short Nigel D | 2 | 1 – 0 | 2 | GM | Kosintseva Tatiana | 31 |
4 | 28 | GM | Kulaots Kaido | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Fridman Daniel | 12 |
5 | 13 | GM | Roiz Michael | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Rapport Richard | 41 |
6 | 33 | IM | Kosintseva Nadezhda | 2 | 1 – 0 | 2 | GM | Sandipan Chanda | 14 |
7 | 17 | GM | Berg Emanuel | 2 | 0 – 1 | 2 | GM | Cmilyte Viktorija | 43 |
8 | 38 | GM | Korchnoi Viktor | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Akobian Varuzhan | 18 |
9 | 19 | GM | Kotronias Vasilios | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | GM | Zhu Chen | 51 |
10 | 42 | GM | Sengupta Deep | 2 | 1 – 0 | 2 | GM | Gopal Geetha Narayanan | 20 |
11 | 21 | GM | Erdos Viktor | 2 | ½ – ½ | 2 | FM | Weber Tom | 90 |
12 | 2 | GM | Adams Michael | 1½ | 1 – 0 | 1½ | IM | Harika Dronavalli | 45 |
13 | 44 | GM | Speelman Jon S | 1½ | 0 – 1 | 1½ | GM | Sasikiran Krishnan | 6 |
14 | 55 | IM | Krush Irina | 1½ | 1 – 0 | 1½ | GM | Nisipeanu Liviu-Dieter | 8 |
15 | 48 | GM | Hoffmann Michael | 1½ | 0 – 1 | 1½ | GM | Harikrishna Pentala | 10 |
16 | 69 | IM | Sarkar Justin | 1½ | ½ – ½ | 1½ | GM | Ikonnikov Vyacheslav | 25 |
17 | 75 | GM | Bellon Lopez Juan Manuel | 1½ | 0 – 1 | 1½ | GM | Dzagnidze Nana | 36 |
18 | 40 | GM | Kanep Meelis | 1½ | ½ – ½ | 1½ | WGM | Pogonina Natalija | 57 |
19 | 85 | Tabatt Hendrik | 1 | 0 – 1 | 1 | GM | Caruana Fabiano | 3 | |
20 | 86 | FM | Zaremba Andrie | 1 | 0 – 1 | 1 | GM | Bologan Viktor | 5 |
John Saunders wrote in his interesting wrap-up report of Round 3:
WOMEN TO THE FORE
It was a particularly good day for the women players. As well as Victoria Cmilyte’s and Nadezhda Kosintseva’s wins against higher-rated GMs, Irina Krush beat former world championship finalist Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu, Nana Dzagnidze beat Juan-Manuel Bellón and Monica Calzetta beat Jean-Pierre Le Roux – which was incidentally Monica’s second GM scalp and Jean-Pierre’s second disaster against a lower-rated opponent. It wasn’t all one-way traffic, however, with former women’s world champion Antoaneta Stefanova falling victim to a much lower rated amateur player, Francisco Javier García Jiménez of Spain. Regrettably most of the women’s wins were rather long and technical, whereas this Spanish amateur’s win against Antoaneta was brisk and entertaining.
Here is a nice game from Round 3. You can run the moves in our pgnplayer or watch in flash below.
PGN: . d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Bb4 5. cxd5 exd5 6. Bg5 Nbd7 7. Qb3 c5 8. a3 Bxc3+ 9. Qxc3 c4 10. Qe3+ Qe7 11. Qxe7+ Kxe7 12. a4 h6 13. Bc1 a5 14. b3 cxb3 15. Nd2 b6 16. Ba3+ Kd8 17. e3 Ba6 18. Bxa6 Rxa6 19. Rb1 Ra8 20. Rxb3 Rc8 21. f3 Re8 22. Ke2 Rc6 23. Rc1 Rxc1 24. Bxc1 Re6 25. Kd3 Ne8 26. e4 Nc7 27. Ba3 Rc6 28. Nb1 dxe4+ 29. fxe4 Rf6 30. Rb2 Rf1 31. Nc3 Ne6 32. Bd6 f6 33. Rc2 Re1 34. Bg3 Ra1 35. Kc4 Nc7 36. Bxc7+ Kxc7 37. Kd5 Nf8 38. Nb5+ Kd8 39. Rc7 Rxa4 40. Rxg7 Ra2 41. Kd6 Re2 42. Rb7 Kc8 43. Rxb6 1-0
From Alexandra Kosteniuk’s
www.chessblog.com
Also see her personal blog at
www.chessqueen.com
Here is a nice game from Round 3. You can run the moves in our pgnplayer or watch in flash below.
PGN: . d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Bb4 5. cxd5 exd5 6. Bg5 Nbd7 7. Qb3 c5 8. a3 Bxc3+ 9. Qxc3 c4 10. Qe3+ Qe7 11. Qxe7+ Kxe7 12. a4 h6 13. Bc1 a5 14. b3 cxb3 15. Nd2 b6 16. Ba3+ Kd8 17. e3 Ba6 18. Bxa6 Rxa6 19. Rb1 Ra8 20. Rxb3 Rc8 21. f3 Re8 22. Ke2 Rc6 23. Rc1 Rxc1 24. Bxc1 Re6 25. Kd3 Ne8 26. e4 Nc7 27. Ba3 Rc6 28. Nb1 dxe4+ 29. fxe4 Rf6 30. Rb2 Rf1 31. Nc3 Ne6 32. Bd6 f6 33. Rc2 Re1 34. Bg3 Ra1 35. Kc4 Nc7 36. Bxc7+ Kxc7 37. Kd5 Nf8 38. Nb5+ Kd8 39. Rc7 Rxa4 40. Rxg7 Ra2 41. Kd6 Re2 42. Rb7 Kc8 43. Rxb6 1-0
From Alexandra Kosteniuk’s
www.chessblog.com
Also see her personal blog at
www.chessqueen.com