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World Cup 2009 - Round 1

Submitted by SonofPearl on Mon, 11/23/2009 at 12:40pm.

The first round of the 2009 Chess World Cup in Khanty Mansiysk has been completed, and the top seeds managed to get through unscathed.

The highest rated player to fail to make the next round was no.16 seed, Sergei Movsesian (pictured, Elo 2718), who lost the first game of his 2-game match with Yu Yangyi (Elo 2527) of China and couldn't recover in game 2.  These mini-matches can be brutal in their brevity.

However, plenty of other favourites had to work hard to advance to the second round.  Leinier Dominguez (2719) drew both regular games, and three rapid games with Australian David Smerdon (2525) before winning the final rapid game to progress.

Arkadij Naiditsch (2689) also needed all four rapid tie-break games to squeeze past the brilliant 15-year old Chinese girl Hou Yifan.

David Navara, Etienne Bacrot and Ivan Cheparinov were taken to tie-breaks before winning through, but less fortunate notable casualties from the first round include Gabriel Sargassian, Alexandra Kosteniuk, Ray Robson and Emil Sutovsky.

No sudden-death "Armageddon" games were needed, but it was a close run thing in the match between Varuzhan Akobian and Pavel Tregubov, where the former won the final blitz game to break the tie 9-7 (at 8-8 the sudden-death game would have been played).

The easiest match victory of the round went to Judit Polgar, whose opponent withdrew from the event at the last minute.

The full results of round 1 can be found at this page on the official site.  The pgn scores of all the games can be found here.

The first games of round 2 start tomorrow at 3pm local time.

 

 

 

 

 

Comments:

by nerv - 2 years ago
Czech Republic
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 129

And Navara is written with only one "r".

by nerv - 2 years ago
Czech Republic
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 129

Ivanchuk had a draw, but he played on and lost.

by cdpjr16 - 2 years ago
Laguna Philippines
Member Since: Jan 2009
Member Points: 5

two or our guys were eliminated by two highest rated.. super gm's navarra and kamsky, but im proud of them, especially darwin laylo, who played well against navarra.. only then he lost to navarra in playoffs.. but one our remaining guy wesley so, one of the youngest grandmaster, at 15 was doing well.. in the next round he will be facing ivanchuk.. i think this is his strongest opponent ever in chess.. GO WESLEY, kaya mo yan... GOD WILL HELP YOU..

by shareefh - 2 years ago
Amman Jordan
Member Since: Sep 2009
Member Points: 227

Thank you for the great coverage..

by SilentWalker - 2 years ago
Milpitas, CA United States
Member Since: Nov 2008
Member Points: 595

I was watching the Hou Yifan game in real-time and was rooting for her.  She played very well, and I look forward to her growth as a chess player in years to come.

by kunduk - 2 years ago
kolkata India
Member Since: Feb 2009
Member Points: 964

good..

by PhilipN - 2 years ago
Oregon United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 1104

@thechesstick:

The tiebreaks work like this:  The players play four rapid games at a 25 10 time control (i.e. 25 minutes + 10 bonus seconds per move).  If they are still tied after the four-game rapid match, they play a two-game blitz match at a 5 3 time control.  If they're still tied after the two-game blitz match, they play another two-game blitz match.  And another. And another. And another.  If the scores are still even after five two-game blitz matches, an Armageddon game is played, with White having 5 minutes, Black 4 minutes plus draw odds, and both players receiving a 3 second increment from move 61 onward.

This Armageddon match is not the ideal way to break a tie, but it has the advantage of forcing a winner after all other attempts have been made.  The match between Akobian and Tregubov was almost decided by Armageddon game; Akobian finally won 2-0 in the final blitz match!

by thechessstick - 2 years ago
Toledo, OH United States
Member Since: Sep 2009
Member Points: 45

What is up with the tiebreaks?  I mean why does a match go into overtime being tied after 2 games and then a person has to win 3 more in a row, without another loss,  to advance?   It just seems strange....

by metalpawn - 2 years ago
monagas Venezuela
Member Since: Jul 2008
Member Points: 280

Go Iturrizaga Go !!!!

   The Venezuelan GM eliminated to Tiviakov !!! Cool

by radasin - 2 years ago
petlovac Serbia
Member Since: Dec 2008
Member Points: 1

Veze si nemate!!!

by staggerlee - 2 years ago
United States
Member Since: Mar 2008
Member Points: 891

It will be interesting to see how this progresses.

by nerv - 2 years ago
Czech Republic
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 129

But our Navara and Láznička are doing well.

by nerv - 2 years ago
Czech Republic
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 129

Sergei is a great player and great guy. To bad he didn't managed to win. And to bad he represents Slovak instead of Czech. He lives in Czech Republic only few km from my house.

by SerbianChessStar - 2 years ago
Belgrade Serbia
Member Since: May 2009
Member Points: 4012

I watched most of the Akobian-Tregubov games,

it was tight, Tregubov was leading most of the time, it must suck going through 16 games and then finally losing.., it also must suck to win and then go play tomorrow where your mental energy is gone due to playing so much games the previous day.

 

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