ANAND VS GELFAND ON WORLD CHESS TITLE MATCH

Sort:
AWARDCHESS

Anand and Gelfand only the 7th higher age-group pair in the history of WCC

 
 
 
 

CHENNAI: Viswanathan Anand and Boris Gelfand will form a rare pair of World Chess Championship contestants when they start their 12-game match, in Moscow on Friday. In the 126-year history of the championship, this would be the first time since 1993 that two 

Grandmasters in their 40s figure in the title contest. And there have just been seven such pairs since 1886. 

Ever since Bobby Fischer became the youngest Grandmaster in the 1950s, chess seems to have broken barriers and become a young man's game. The youth brigade rewrote the record from 1990 onwards, and 15-year-olds and 14-year-olds became Grandmasters before they could even play a serious GM tournament. Not long ago, we had Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine setting a world record by becoming the youngest world champion at the age of 18, and right now, we have a 22-year-old at the top of the rating list in Magnus Carlsen of Norway

Well, all these marks don't count now as 42-year-old Anand will be up against 43-year-old Gelfand for the most prestigious contest in world chess. 

Chess history has instances when 40-year-olds played the title match but most of them were against younger rivals; it also provides instances of 50-year-olds fighting for the world title. But they are from the distant past, almost 50 years ago. Gary Kasparov once said, "A world champion should retire at 40." 

But what he said was true to him because he had been fighting the battles since he was in his early 20s. Vishy Anand would beg to differ, because he got to know the system rather late when he was in his mid-30 s and reached his peak when he was nearly 40. 

If you talk of the oldest pairs in world championship history, this match features two masters who are almost of the same age. Only twice did such pairs in the 40s locked wits -- Emanuel Lasker vs David Janowski in 1910, and Jan Timman vs Anatoly Karpov in 1993. 

Players such as Viktor Korchnoi ( Switzerland), Wilhelm Steinitz (Germany), Mikhail Botwinnik and Vassily Smyslov (both Russia) contested in the World Championship matches when they were in their 50s, but in those days technology and information were non-existent compared to what we have now. 

Indians usually mature slowly, what with Manuel Aaron winning the Nationals in 1981 when he was in his 40s, and TN Parameswaran repeating the feat 15 years later. 

In fact, Aaron was on record saying of Parameswaran's triumph , that though he felt happy for his Tamil Nadu mate, he was sorry for the health of Indian chess that a 40-year-old had come ahead of the young talents. 

40-Plus Pairs At Worlds 

2012: Viswanathan Anand (42) vs Boris Gelfand (43) 

1993: Anatoly Karpov (42) vs Jan Timman (41) 

1934: Alexander Alekhine (41) vs Efim Bogolyubov (45) 

1910: Emanuel Lasker (41) vs Dawid Janowski (42) 

1908: Emanuel Lasker (40) vs Siegbert Tarrasch (46) 

1892: Wilhelm Steinitz (56) vs Mikhail Chigorin (41) 

1886: Wilhelm Steinitz (50) vs Johannes Zukertort (43)
AWARDCHESS
Chess kings begin Moscow epic with draw

MOSCOW — The opening match of the first chess title to be decided in Moscow since the Cold War ended in a cagey draw on Friday as the rivals probed for weaknesses ahead of an epic three-week series.

India's title-holder Viswanathan Anand and Boris Gelfand of Israel shook hands after a compelling start to a clash that chess authorities hope will grip the public as it did when the Cold War shadowed the game in the 1970s and 80s.

Moscow is hosting the 12-match series at the State Tretyakov Gallery with a view to bringing back some of the Soviet-era magic to a city that many Russians regard as the game's natural home.

The 42-year-old Anand began his third defence of the world title since 2007 playing white and the overwhelming favourite despite a recent run of uninspired form.

His Minsk-born rival for his part was making his maiden challenge at 43 and hoping to fulfil the promise that once made him a hope of the great Soviet chess machine in his youth.

Gelfand opened with a classic Grunfeld defence but turned a deep red and cupped his ears in his palms when Anand surprised him with a quick sixth move that shredded the challenger's queen-side defence.

But things turned sour for the Indian grandmaster when he tried to break the game open in the 14th move by pushing his queen's pawn down the flank instead of taking material at c6.

Gelfand -- spending much of the match pacing and wandering off stage -- raised his eyebrows in surprise when he returned to the board and quickly struck back with a flurry that had Anand playing for a draw by the 20th move.

The Israeli in fact looked the slightly more frustrated player as the two spent a few minutes amicably discussing the match after shaking hands on a draw after 24 moves.

"The black position looked better, but I could not find a way to close out the match," Gelfand told the post-match press conference.

Anand simply admitted that he was "not playing with an advantage" at the end.

The series marks the World Chess Championship's first return to Moscow since the epic 1984-85 clash between Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov was controversially aborted and replayed at the end of the year.

The flamboyant Kasparov then went on to infuriate the Soviet authorities by beating their strait-laced favourite Karpov to become the youngest chess champion of the time.

Organisers decided to add drama to this event by staging it in the 19th century splendour of the Tretyakov -- the first title decided in an art gallery since Stalin ordered one played at the Pushkin Museum in 1935.

But both Anand and Gelfand enter the $2.55 million face-off smarting from a string of disappointing performances that saw the world champion slip to fourth in the rankings and below the coveted 2,800-point chess rating mark.

Anand finished fifth in his last tournament in December while Gelfand ended up tenth in January.

"If Anand had not been so disappointing (in recent months), there would be no question about who is the favourite," Moscow Chess Federation deputy head Sergei Smagin told the RIA Novosti news agency.

But bookmakers in both Moscow and London make the Israeli the underdog. Gelfand has not beaten his rival in the timed classical chess format since 1993 and is currently ranked 20th.

But he enters the match after putting together a dazzling performance at a star-studded 2011 championship qualification tournament from which Norway's top-ranked prodigy Magnus Carlsen had surprisingly pulled out.

"I can only say one thing about my opponent's strong suits," Gelfand said Thursday when asked to pick apart Anand's play. "He is a very good chess player."

The two grandmasters' first match-up in 1989 also came in Moscow and saw them settle for a draw with Gelfand playing black and enjoying a marginally better position.

Anand has held the world crown since 2007 and last defended it against Veselin Topalov on the Bulgarian's home turf in 2010.

AWARDCHESS

World Chess Championship 2012: Anand draws again, 2-2 now

Published: Tuesday, May 15, 2012, 21:39 IST 
Place: Moscow | Agency: PTI
 

World champion Viswanthan Anand played his fourth draw in the world chess champion against Boris Gelfand of Israel as the deadlock continued in the prestigious contest, in Moscow on Tuesday.

Playing black for the second time in the match, Anand continued his faith in the Slav defense and yet again did not have much difficulty equalising.

It was a continuation of discussion in the second game of the match wherein Anand had gone for a fifth move surprise and yet again the World champion went for it, emphasising that it was not an opening gamble he had gone for in his first game as black.

The fact that Anand went for something new that has obviously been home-cooked a long time and that Gelfand could not find any way to break is a good sign for the defending champion but as Anand himself mentioned, "I cant tell you much about what was around unless I have a deeper look at it."

The five-time champion was referring to a question in the post match conference when he was if Gelfand could have done better.As it happened in the game, there were some striking similarities to the second game if one looked at the material balance as Gelfand found a way to win a pawn and it seemed secured for sometime.

However, in the last game when Anand had played, he was close to attaining the decisive edge, something that Gelfand could only hope for without coming really closer to it any time.

 

 

AWARDCHESS

New opening, same result for Anand at World Chess Championship

 quib. Though challenger Boris Gelfand was expected to change his defence with black, it was the World champion who deviated by revisiting his old love, the king-pawn opening, thereby bringing a new line to the table.

But the result was the same, a draw in 27 moves at the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow on Thursday and the chess world was left to wonder whether the deadlock would last the course, summoning the shorter tiebreaker games. Anand, known for his king-pawn opening in the first two decades of his career, had shifted his loyalty to his queen-pawn in 2008 with telling effect and since then stayed with it.

Five draws mean Anand and Gelfand, locked at 2.5-2.5 all with seven more to go in the classical format, have moved closer to the record eight draws at the start in the 1995 World championship between Kasparov and Anand in New York.

The arrival of Sicilian in the fifth game pointed to a sharp game but the Sveshnikov variation was played through rather quickly on the board, the first 20 moves taking hardly any time compared to the first four games. Probably, Gelfand had expected Anand to change to the king-pawn opening somewhere along the match and the Israeli had prepared home stuff in the Sicilian.

"Both of them are old foxes," remarked former women's World champion Zsuzsa Polgar at this stage. "They're using their experience to avoid possible home preparation. With computertechnology today, it can be dangerous."

Gelfand's 16th move raised some eyebrows as the central capture with the bishop was not very popular. However, white kept only a small edge after Gelfand retreated the bishop to the edge of the board on the kingside.

Anand threw a surprise again with his bishop move now and Gelfand started thinking. The outcome was a series of exchanges with black creating a passed pawn that had no life and support and white blocking the centre with his pawn chain and planting his bishop upfront.

In the exchanges, the passed pawn on the queenside also left the board and the rooks and opposite coloured bishop ending was agreed drawn. The sixth game, with Gelfand having white, will be played on Friday.

Anand-Gelfand (Game 5)

Sicilian Defence: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 e5 6.Ndb5 d6 7.Bg5 a6 8.Na3 b5 9.Nd5 Be7 10.Bxf6 Bxf6 11.c4 b4 12.Nc2 0-0 13.g3 a5 14.Bg2 Bg5 15.0-0 Be6 16.Qd3 Bxd5 17.cxd5 Nb8 18.a3 Na6 19.axb4 Nxb4 20.Nxb4 axb4 21.h4 Bh6 22.Bh3 Qb6 23.Bd7 b3 24.Bc6 Ra2 25.Rxa2 bxa2 26.Qa3 Rb8 27.Qxa2 ½-½
AWARDCHESS
Anand suffers shock setback in chess title fight

MOSCOW — Indian master Viswanathan Anand's world chess crown shook on Sunday when his Israeli challenger won the first game of their 12-match Moscow series after six successive and mostly uneventful draws.

The tortuous four-hour battle marked the Indian master's first defeat to Gelfand in a classical chess match since 1993 and put under threat a title he first won in 2000 and has held for the past five successive years.

"I started to drift a little bit at the opening," the 42-year-old admitted in the post-match press conference.

But he dismissed suggestions that he should have won or assumed a more aggressive strategy in opening matches during which his challenger at times appeared psychologically overwhelmed.

"I play one game at a time," Anand said.

The 43-year-old Gelfand now leads the series 4-3 under a scoring system that awards the winner one point and the loser none. Draws see players share a half point each.

The World Chess Championship is being contested in Moscow -- seen by many as last century's capital of chess -- for the first time since an epic 1984-85 clash between Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov was aborted and later replayed.

Organisers decided to add drama to this event by staging it in the 19th century splendour of the Tretyakov -- the first title decided in an art gallery since Stalin ordered one played at the Pushkin Museum in 1935.

But the matches had largely featured tepid play that lacked the penetrating lightning attacks for which the tournament is fabled until Sunday's watershed moment.

Gelfand began the first match of the second half of the series playing white -- a position that presents him with the opportunity to strike first.

He went on to craft a balanced attack that eventually forced Anand to slide his bishop out of position at b7 on the 14th move and then struggle with the time clock as he tried to think up ways to stay in the game.

A live computer analysis of the match showed Anand straining under pressure and making questionable decisions on both the 23rd and 25th moves that left the Minsk-born and Soviet raised Gelfand smelling blood.

Anand resigned on the 38th move with his king backed unguarded into the corner at h8 and Gelfand moving in for the kill with a rook and two knights.

Gelfand said he felt no jitters as the end drew near and the possibility of him assuming a substantial series lead hung tantalisingly close.

"It was not a very complicated setup," Gelfand told reporters.

"I checked a few times if my mate could be prevented and the answer was no."

Classical chess, in which players have the luxury of time to ponder their moves, often end in draws at the highest level and the win gives Gelfand a massive psychological boost going into Monday's eighth contest.

"This is definitely a big blow," Hungary's 2004 world title contender Peter Leko said in a television commentary.

The Indian veteran's form had already been questioned during a three-year spell without tournament wins that saw his world rank slip to number four.

But bookmakers in both Moscow and London made the 20th ranked the Israeli an underdog despite his brilliant play in a star-studded 2011 championship qualification tournament that earned him the right to challenge Anand.

The 2011 event saw Norway's top-ranked prodigy Magnus Carlsen pull out without an explanation and Anand seemingly destined to retain his title for the third successive time.

The $2.55 million event will see the winner take home $1.5 million in prize money put up by a group of Russian billionaires who outbid their Indian rivals for the right to stage the globally-watched event.

AWARDCHESS

Anand back with a bang, beats Gelfand to level scores

 
 
 
Anand back with a bang, beats Gelfand to level scores
Boris Gelfand too flirted with the opening in Game 8 as he consciously avoided the Gruenfeld and chose a Kings Indian in which he had sufficient experience in the 1990s. (AP Photo)
 
CHENNAI: Viswanathan Anand is back in the match. The World champion played a peach of a game on Monday to force challenger Boris Gelfand of Israel to submission and tie the series at 4-all, with four games to go in the World Chess Championship match in Moscow

The result was probably not a shock for chess lovers, but the way Gelfand stumbled and lost in just 17 moves and less than two hours suggested his opening preparations that looked rock solid suddenly became vulnerable. It was refreshing to see Anand shed his safety-first approach for the first time in the match and go for the kill right from the start. 

The queen-pawn opening was back on the board as Anand sidelined his fifth game experiment of playing king-pawn opening which gave him nothing much to play for. Moreover, he was already down in the match after his seventh game adventure and he had to strike back quickly if he were to deal a heavy blow to the challenger's confidence that seemed to increase with every game. 

Gelfand too flirted with the opening in Game 8 as he consciously avoided the Gruenfeld and chose a Kings Indian in which he had sufficient experience in the 1990s. 

However, as early as move 7, the Israeli seemed to drift away from standard practice when he posted his knight on the edge of the board. 

"I am not convinced about the quality of this move," commented GM Peter Leko. "If you say, this move has been played in a World Chess Championship match if I have not seen this game, I would scream, 'No way'" 

The knight move in itself did not create any problems for black but slowly Anand got a position that he wanted. Active pieces, open space and a chance to show his tactical brilliance. Gelfand had to be cautious to avoid opening his kingside. 

With a powerful pawn push on move 12, Anand made Gelfand think for a long time. The challenger had to bring his queen into action to create counter-threats but the Indian steered his king to a safe square before moving on with his kingside attack. On move 14, Gelfand got into a mess when he realized his queen was in danger of being trapped. 

He gave a piece to avoid it and was lost immediately though he could have continued for some more time. 

For Anand it was a memorable win especially since he had lost a piece on Sunday in the previous game in much the same way, though in a longer grind. Gelfand will have white in Game 9 on Wednesday after day's rest. 

Anand-Gelfand (Game 8) Kings Indian Defence 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.f3 c5 4.d5 d6 5.e4 Bg7 6.Ne2 0-0 7.Nec3 Nh5 8.Bg5 Bf6 9.Bxf6 exf6 10.Qd2 f5 11.exf5 Bxf5 12.g4 Re8+ 13.Kd1 Bxb1 14.Rxb1 Qf6Qf6 15.gxh5 Qxf3+ 16.Kc2 Qxh1 17.Qf2 1-0
AWARDCHESS

Anand, Gelfand split points in World chess Round 9 

 
 
 

Moscow: Defending champion Viswanathan Anand was stretched a little by challenger Boris Gelfand of Israel but the Indian ace found his way to a draw in the ninth game of the World Chess Championship here on Wednesday.

Ananad managed to sign peace following a timely queen sacrifice leaving the scores level at 4.5-4.5 after the ninth round.

As expected, Anand decided to shift gears with black and for the first employed the Nimzo Indian defense, moving from the Slav defense that he had employed in the first four black games here.

Anand, Gelfand split points in World chess Round 9
 

Gelfand went for the classical set up giving due importance to development of pieces instead of trying to catch Anand unawares in any subtlety early in the game. The result was a routine opening that guarantees white a minimal advantage but nothing beyond that.

The middle game had all the features of an intense battle. Anand wanted to equalise early and that's what prompted him to part with his Bishop for a knight on the 13th move.

This was in fact still a theoretical discussion in progress as the move had been played before but the real surprise for Gelfand came just a couple of moves later when Anand surrendered his second, and long diagonal Bishop for white's second knight.

This meant that the reigning champion had reached a position with two Bishops against two knights in not-so-close position, the endgames would have been worse certainly but the middle game still remained.

As the game progressed Anand wanted to create a deadlock in the center, something that Gelfand, to his credit, worked against successfully. The first new move in the game was yet again played by Anand on his 16th turn.

Gelfand responded positively as the assessment of the computers also confirmed. White stood slightly better but Anand had judged the position much better.

On the 18th move, Anand declared his real intentions -- to sacrifice the queen and to create a fortress soon after.

Gelfand thought himself to be better still and four moves later he had queen for a rook, knight and a pawn.

In terms of material balance, this is known as equal but the queen is supposedly superior in such kind of imbalance.

Anand showed why he is the king in very quick time while Gelfand glued to his chair to work out plans to make his better piece count. The discussion continued a long time but after Anand's 37th move the result was never in doubt.

The game was drawn in 49 moves. Anand now has two white games out of the last three in the USD 2.55 million championship.

The scale has tilted in favour of the Indian after his victory in the eighth game and Gelfand will have to probably fall back on something other than the Grunfeld that he has been employing here.

The 10th game of the championship will be played on Thursday.

The match has been evenly poised but with his perfect defense, Anand has yet again dented the confidence of Gelfand.

AWARDCHESS

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/28/crosswords/chess/in-chess-championship-gelfand-takes-anand-to-overtime.html?_r=1

Chess Championship Goes Into Overtime After Another Draw

 



Games 11 and 12 in the match were drawn, leaving the score in the best-of-12 match, which is being held in the Tretyakov Gallery museum in Moscow, tied at 6 points apiece.

To break the tie, there will be a series of four rapid games on Wednesday (the time limits will be 25 minutes per player, with 10 seconds added after every move).

If the match remains tied after those games, there will be two blitz games (five minutes per player, with three seconds added per move). If those do not produce a winner, there will be four additional sets of blitz games, up to a total of 10 games.

Finally, if that does not produce a decisive result, there will an Armageddon game in which White will have five minutes and Black will have four minutes, but will only have to draw to be declared the winner of the match.

The winner will receive 60 percent of the $2.55 million prize fund.

Games 11 and 12 were played Saturday and Monday, respectively, and were as anticlimactic as much of the earlier part of the match. The players agreed to a draw in Game 11 after 24 moves and they drew Game 12 after only 22.

In all, 5 of the 12 games were drawn in 25 moves or less, and one other, Game 8, ended after only 17 moves, but that was because Gelfand blundered.

There has never been a world championship match with such a high percentage of short games.

There seem to be at least two reasons for this phenomenon.

One has been the superb preparation of the players, particularly Gelfand. Though he was the underdog heading into the match, he was able to neutralize Anand rather easily in many of the games because of the ideas he had worked out before the contest started. In most of the games, there were few chances for either player to try to win when they agreed to the draws.

The other factor has been that both men have played very cautiously, unwilling to press for a win even when there was little risk.

For example, in Game 12 on Monday, Anand had more time left to make the moves needed to reach the first time control and had an extra pawn when he offered a draw. Admittedly, chances were about equal, but there was almost no reason why Anand could have not have played on and tried to do something.

This cautious approach has annoyed fans, and even many top players, who have complained on the Internet about how little action there has been in the match.

That will have to change on Wednesday, when a winner will emerge as the world champion.

AWARDCHESS

http://www.hindustantimes.com/sports-news/OtherSports/Viswanathan-Anand--wins-world-chess-title-for-the-fifth-time/Article1-863549.aspx

 

Viswanathan Anand wins world chess title for the fifth time
 
 
World Chess champion Viswanathan Anand from India, contemplates his next move during a match against Boris Gelfand of Israel at the FIDE World Chess Championship tie break match at Moscow's Tretyakovsky State Gallery, Russia. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze
 
Viswanathan Anand on Wednesday beat Israel's Boris Gelfand in tie breaker to retain world title for the fifth time. Anand clinched the tie-breaker 2.5-1.5.
After drawing on Monday the final regular match in their 12-game Moscow series to leave the world championships level, the two
 
 
 
 
grandmasters were forced into the chess equivalent of a football penalty shootout.

 

Dubbed the "Battle of the Armageddon" in chess circles, Wednesday's match saw two of the finest players the world has ever seen lock horns in up to 15 thrilling speed chess games to determine the world champion.

Gelfand and Anand drew the first game of the tie-break but the Indian then recorded a nailbiting victory while playing white in the second game amid huge tension at the host venue of the Tretyakov art gallery in Moscow.

The Israeli was in all sorts of trouble at the start of game one despite playing first with the white pieces but pulled himself out of jail with a series of brilliant moves.

Game two initially appeared to have a similar pattern, as Gelfand used all his defensive resources to repel a series of attacks by the Indian champion.

But with the game apparently heading to a draw in the endgame, Gelfand ceded control of the board with a poorly judged move as massive pressure from his rapidly elapsing time allowance took its toll.

After a series of rapid exchanges and the position hopeless, Gelfand resigned. He must now win one of Monday's next two matches to stop the Indian retaining the title.

With the players knowing one mistake could cost the championships, the match was marked by the almost unbearable tension of past great clashes like the epic world title match between Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov in 1984-85.

Anand, dressed in his usual blue shirt, sat rooted to his chair as the more expressive Gelfand ran his hands through his hair and took long walks away from the board to think out his positions.

As tension mounted, Gelfand indulged in his favourite stress-busting habit of repeatedly rotating one of the taken bishop pieces in his right hand.

The two masters have displayed titanic control of the board in the 12-game series this month. But with just one win apiece, it lacked the lightning strikes featured in some of the classic encounters of the past.