Carlsen Beats So As Champions Chess Tour Finals Begin In San Francisco
The Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals began on Monday in San Francisco with a win for the world champion. GM Magnus Carlsen toppled GM Wesley So, the recent winner of the Chess.com Global Chess Championship, in the opening round.
The games of the Champions Chess Tour Finals can be found here as part of our live events platform.
The Finals, the last event in this year's Meltwater Champions Chess Tour, has the top six players in the overall standings in the tour—Carlsen, GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda, GM Praggnanandhaa R., GM Le Quang Liem, GM Anish Giri, and GM Shakhriyar Mamedyarov—plus GM Arjun Erigaisi and So. The latter is making his debut this season.
Carlsen, Giri, Praggnanandhaa, and So are playing from the San Francisco Ferry Building, while Duda, Erigaisi, Le, and Mamedyarov are playing from their homes. Visa issues might have played a role for some of the players.
A beautiful day to play some chess! pic.twitter.com/2Y1g3Kve0h
— Meltwater Champions Chess Tour (@ChampChessTour) November 12, 2022
Especially Erigaisi (starting at 1:30 a.m.) and Mamedyarov (starting at midnight) are somewhat handicapped having to play way after dark in their specific time zones. Mamedyarov, who gave his post-match interview at 4 a.m. local time in Baku, said he didn't mind:
"We are professional chess players. Of course, it's OK to play at four or five, or to wake up and play chess immediately. It's absolutely normal, and for this reason I'm absolutely happy to play in this tournament."
The Azerbaijani GM had reasons to smile after a 2.5-1.5 match win vs. Praggnanandhaa, which means he got the full three points. A win after a tiebreak yields just two points, with one going to the loser.
Here's their decisive fourth game:
The big clash of the first day was obviously Carlsen vs. So, which started with two draws. Interestingly, in the second game the world champion once again played the Pirc, a slightly risky but fighting opening that he has tried quite a few times now in recent months.
The third was the only decisive game. Carlsen wasn't surprised that his opponent played the solid Berlin twice and felt he got a good position in both of his white games. "Apparently in the third game, there were a number of mistakes made, but I felt like practically I was always doing well with his weaker king," he said.
The world champion wasn't sure about his form, calling it "not great" and acknowledging a number of mutual errors on the first day: "To be honest, the match today was pretty weak for our standards. I thought both of us could have done better."
In a match between two players playing from their homes, Duda defeated Erigaisi. The Polish GM needed just three games as he won both times as White. The last game was easy as Erigaisi suffered an opening disaster:
Giri and Le (who is playing from his home in Missouri) drew all four games, so this was the only match that saw a tiebreak. The Dutchman prevailed with 1.5-0.5, winning the first blitz game.
This match also saw an ongoing discussion between the players in the Open Ruy Lopez:
"Yeah, I am happy that I won today," said Giri. "Especially because my last two matches against Le Quang, I think I lost 2.5-0.5, both of them. I didn't even last four games, so I was happy today."
Day 1 standings
# | Fed | Name | Rtg | Score |
1-3 | Jan-Krzysztof Duda | 2798 | 3 | |
1-3 | Magnus Carlsen | 2848 | 3 | |
1-3 | Shakhriyar Mamedyarov | 2756 | 3 | |
4 | Anish Giri | 2732 | 2 | |
5 | Le Quang Liem | 2775 | 1 | |
6-8 | Arjun Erigaisi | 2733 | 0 | |
6-8 | Wesley So | 2774 | 0 | |
6-8 | Praggnanandhaa R. | 2750 | 0 |
All games day 1
The Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals take place November 14-20, 2022 on chess24. The format is an eight-player round-robin; each round has four-game rapid matches, and the winner gets three points. The time control is 15 minutes for each game plus a 10-second increment. A tiebreak follows immediately in case of a 2-2 tie and in that case, the winner gets two points and the loser, one.