64: Carlsen’s rampage

The participating GMs are Carlsen, Leko, Topalov, Radjabov, Jakovenko and Wang. The average rating is 2763, making it a category 21 tournament.

Fresh from his training sessions with Kasparov, Carlsen, who will be 19 next month, has gone on a rampage since round 1, scoring five wins and three draws with only two rounds left. He could lose the final two games and still end in a tie for first, assuming Toppy wins his last two games. But Carlsen needs only one draw to clinch solo first place and is already on the verge of yet another brilliant tournament triumph. Better watch out world champ Anand!

Game of the week. Here is Magnus in a stunning first round victory against one of the world’s hardest players to beat. Annotations are from ChessBase.

White: M. Carlsen (2772)

Black: P. Leko (2762)

2nd Pearl Spring, Nanjing 2009

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4. Is Magnus Carlsen working with Garry Kasparov? Yes, we seem to recall he is. This is the Scotch Opening, which Kasparov played very successfully during his active career. Magnus seems to have played it ten times in his career, between 2002 and 2008. Result: he won four, drew five and lost one. We are probably going to see a greater number of Scotches in the future. 3…exd4 4.Nxd4 Bc5 5.Be3 Qf6 6.c3 Nge7 7.Bc4 Ne5 8.Be2 Qg6 9.0-0 d6 10.f4 Qxe4 11.Bf2 Bxd4 12.cxd4 N5g6 13.g3 0-0 14.Nc3 Qf5 15.d5 a6 16.Re1 Kh8. This appears to be the novelty, played by Leko very quickly. But this does not indicate, as some thought, that the Hungarian GM was ready for the new Carlsen, armed with the Scotch. In fact Peter thought so long on his 15th move that he was getting low on time already and wisely followed the plan shaped the move before. He basically was out of preparation at move six. 17.Rc1 Bd7 18.Bf3 Rac8 19.Qb3 b5 20.Ne2. Carlsen abandons the idea of putting his knight on e4 and moves it toward d4 instead. 20…Qh3 21.Nd4 Bg4 22.Bg2 Qh5 23.h4. Putting the black queen pretty much out of commission on the kingside. 23…Ng8? Not a good move, because it frees a great infiltration square for the white rook: 24.Rc6! Nf6 25.Rxa6 Bd7 26.Nxb5 Rb8 27.a4 Ng4 This was the goal of the knight move at 23: Black has the optically nice g4 square for his knight, but at what cost? 28.Bf3 Qh6 29.Qc4. Carlsen calmly takes his queen out of the pin on the b-file. 29…Nxh4. Black is losing, and desperately wants to whip up some kind of mating attack on the kingside. 30.Bxg4 Bxg4 31.gxh4 But White has everything under control. 31…Bf3 32.f5 Qh5 33.Qf4 Bxd5 34.Nxc7 Bb7 35.Rb6. It’s all over, Black is a piece down with nothing to show for it. Even 35.Rxd6 was possible, with an overwhelming material advantage. 35…f6 36.Bd4 Qf7 37.Ne6 Rg8 38.Kf2 Rbc8 39.Bc3 Bd5 40.a5. Black had one final hope, that Carlsen would blunder in time trouble, but that is taken as the young Norwegian makes it safely to move 40. 40…Rc4 41.Nd4 Ba8 42.Qxd6 Qh5 43.Qf4 Rcc8 44.Rbe6. The final moves were pure desperation. Now a piece and a pawn down Peter Leko finally resigns. A very nice win for Magnus — Garry Kasparov will be proud! 1-0.

Puzzler.

White — Ka4, Ba6, Nb8, Nc6, Qc1, pawns on e3 and h4

Black — Kd5, Nd6, Rf7, Bh7, Rh3, pawns on b3, c4, c7, d4, e6 and f3

White to play and mate in four.

Send your answers to “64” c/o Marianas Variety, P.O. Box 500231, Saipan MP 96950. Our fax no. is 670-234-9271. You can also e-mail idlasts @lycos.com or [email protected].

 

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