Artemiev Retakes Lead Heading To Final Round Of Gibraltar Chess Festival
Round 10 of the 2019 Gibraltar Chess Festival is going to be a throwback. All the way back to Tuesday, when the 20-year-old GM Vladislav Artemiev was even two days younger.
In yesterday's round nine, he retook sole possession of first place in the tournament's 17th edition. While Artemiev was the only player getting to 7.5/9, his countryman GM Kirill Alekseenko fell back. Thus Artemiev is now his country's lone hope to become the second Russian to win the event.
If Artemiev wins against GM Yu Yangyi (7.0/9) on board one today, he will do just that. Even a draw is not the worst result in the world, as it guarantees him at least a playoff. After all, Artemiev is the number-five blitz player in the world in case it goes to extra games. In addition, the four-time champion and blitz specialist GM Hikaru Nakamura (6.5/9) is now mathematically unable to join him after a draw in round nine.
One person who will be lurking and watching board one carefully is GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (7.0/9), who is actually even higher than Artemiev on the blitz charts (world number-two). He won with some intra-country prep yesterday. However, he's already faced Artemiev earlier so now he will rely on the top Chinese player here to not lose against the leader.
There's no way for MVL to win without employing his blitz skills, since someone on the top board must get to 8.0 points or more. The dark horse will be the Frenchman's opponent on board two. GM Murali Karthikeyan was probably nobody's pick to lead the large Indian contingent, but he nonetheless also got to 7.0/9 yesterday and is the only other player mathematically able to get to a tiebreak.
Here's how Artemiev got closer to one of the biggest tournament wins of his young career. He played another double-fianchetto (just like against Nakamura in round seven).
Artemiev told Chess.com that the decision to play 12. Nfd2 instead of 12. Nbd2 was critical. After the game he didn't make a big deal about what appeared to be a speculative exchange sacrifice.
"Of course it's a good performance for me, definitely," he said. He added that he won't prepare much for today. Instead, he just wanted to sleep a lot before the morning beginning to the final round.
Many players at the tournament have been seen sniffling and catching a cold, but Artemiev said he had stayed healthy. Maybe it's all the walking—Artemiev is staying just across the border in Spain and walks some 45 minutes to the host Caleta Hotel each day. Youth!
Here's even more about the game with both combatants' thoughts:
Another man who often exercises at tournaments (when his countrymen aren't keeping him out late) is Vachier-Lagrave. In fact his best "helper" in round nine was a Frenchman who wasn't even here! MVL played a line in the Spanish he's used many times against GM Levon Aronian, but then uncorked some preparation courtesy of GM Etienne Bacrot. After a long thought, the novelty 19. dxc6 wasn't handled well by 21-year-old Alekseenko and the tournament's top seed had all kinds of straightforward tactics to win the game. It took him less than 2.5 hours.
"If Kirill had been better prepared the game would have been drawn," Vachier-Lagrave said. He wasn't being malicious—he was explaining that he knew the novelty to only be equal, but it required an exact response that the Russian didn't find.
Alekseenko actually went into the tank shortly after the novelty, giving Vachier-Lagrave confidence. "If he had played [the response] in two minutes instead of 55, I would have been very pessimistic about the outcome."
For even more of Vachier-Lagrave's thoughts on trying to finally win a title in Gibraltar after many attempts, here's his interview with IM Tania Sachdev.
GMs Ivan Saric and Levon Aronian could only draw each other on board three, and the same for GM David Howell and Nakamura a few boards lower. Nearly-local hero GM David Anton always seems to factor into the hunt here, but his draw versus former champion GM Nikita Vitiugov put them both out of the running.
This was Yu's win over GM Le Quang Liem that put him on board one in round 10.
And here's how Karthikeyan became the final and most unlikely player to get to 7.0/9.
And in the "endings you don't see every day" department, here's a bishop, knight, and three pawns beating a lone queen:
In the race for the top women's prize, the Muzychuk sisters and GM Tan Zhongyi are all on 6.0/9. GM Mariya Muzychuk got there with a draw against the Bird's Opening.
There is no playoff for the first women's prize despite this being announced at last year's closing ceremony. Instead, it will be decided by tiebreak and it is not shared.
Watch Gibraltar Chess Festival, round 9 with GM Simon Williams and IM Jovanka Houska from GibChess on www.twitch.tv
2019 Gibraltar Chess Festival Masters Section | Standings After Round Nine
Rk. | SNo | Name | FED | Rtg | Pts. | |
1 | 11 | GM | Artemiev Vladislav | 2709 | 7,5 | |
2 | 1 | GM | Vachier-Lagrave Maxime | 2780 | 7,0 | |
2 | 4 | GM | Yu Yangyi | 2764 | 7,0 | |
2 | 49 | GM | Karthikeyan Murali | 2570 | 7,0 | |
5 | 6 | GM | Navara David | 2738 | 6,5 | |
5 | 55 | GM | Lalith Babu M R | 2547 | 6,5 | |
5 | 20 | GM | Grandelius Nils | 2682 | 6,5 | |
5 | 2 | GM | Aronian Levon | 2767 | 6,5 | |
5 | 17 | GM | Saric Ivan | 2690 | 6,5 | |
5 | 8 | GM | Vitiugov Nikita | 2720 | 6,5 | |
5 | 41 | GM | Vaibhav Suri | 2590 | 6,5 | |
5 | 13 | GM | Adams Michael | 2701 | 6,5 | |
5 | 28 | GM | Alekseenko Kirill | 2637 | 6,5 | |
5 | 5 | GM | Nakamura Hikaru | 2749 | 6,5 | |
5 | 19 | GM | Howell David W L | 2685 | 6,5 | |
5 | 23 | GM | Melkumyan Hrant | 2660 | 6,5 | |
5 | 27 | GM | Anton Guijarro David | 2642 | 6,5 | |
18 | 62 | GM | Muzychuk Mariya | 2540 | 6,0 | |
18 | 9 | GM | Le Quang Liem | 2714 | 6,0 | |
18 | 3 | GM | So Wesley | 2765 | 6,0 | |
18 | 7 | GM | Naiditsch Arkadij | 2734 | 6,0 | |
18 | 37 | GM | Deac Bogdan-Daniel | 2603 | 6,0 | |
18 | 26 | GM | Edouard Romain | 2643 | 6,0 | |
18 | 18 | GM | Adhiban B. | 2689 | 6,0 | |
18 | 36 | GM | Lagarde Maxime | 2604 | 6,0 | |
18 | 12 | GM | Mamedov Rauf | 2703 | 6,0 | |
18 | 35 | GM | Jumabayev Rinat | 2604 | 6,0 | |
18 | 80 | IM | Gukesh D | 2497 | 6,0 | |
18 | 99 | IM | Abel Dennes | 2458 | 6,0 | |
18 | 15 | GM | Cheparinov Ivan | 2691 | 6,0 | |
18 | 21 | GM | Eljanov Pavel | 2680 | 6,0 | |
18 | 83 | GM | Chandra Akshat | 2492 | 6,0 | |
18 | 42 | GM | Antipov Mikhail Al. | 2589 | 6,0 | |
18 | 63 | GM | Puranik Abhimanyu | 2536 | 6,0 | |
18 | 14 | GM | Matlakov Maxim | 2700 | 6,0 | |
18 | 45 | GM | Santos Latasa Jaime | 2581 | 6,0 | |
18 | 30 | GM | Indjic Aleksandar | 2630 | 6,0 | |
18 | 33 | GM | Moussard Jules | 2605 | 6,0 | |
18 | 32 | GM | Tari Aryan | 2625 | 6,0 | |
18 | 50 | GM | Muzychuk Anna | 2569 | 6,0 | |
18 | 53 | GM | Moroni Luca Jr | 2562 | 6,0 | |
18 | 73 | GM | Gallego Alcaraz Andres Felipe | 2502 | 6,0 | |
18 | 74 | GM | Tan Zhongyi | 2502 | 6,0 |
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