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Caruana Reaches Quarterfinals Match Vs. Nakamura, Knocks Out Abdusattorov

Caruana Reaches Quarterfinals Match Vs. Nakamura, Knocks Out Abdusattorov

AnthonyLevin
| 29 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Fabiano Caruana will face five-time SCC Champion Hikaru Nakamura in the Quarterfinals of the 2023 Chess.com Speed Chess Championship Presented by Coinbase. Caruana defeated GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov with a score of 13.5-10.5 in the Round of 16. 

The score on paper does not reflect the double-sided nature of the match. Caruana took a comfortable lead in the first segment, but then Abdusattorov strung together a five-game winning streak at the end of the 3+1 phase of the match. The American super-GM stomped out the flames and regained control in the second half of the bullet segment.

There will be two Round of 16 matches on Tuesday, September 12. GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave vs. GM Dommaraju Gukesh begins at 7:30 a.m. ET / 13:30 CEST / 5:00 p.m. IST and GM Magnus Carlsen vs. GM Vidit Gujrathi starts at 12:00 p.m. ET / 18:00 CEST / 9:30 p.m. IST. 

How to watch?
You can watch the 2023 Chess.com Speed Chess Championship Presented by Coinbase on Chess.com/TV. You can also enjoy the show on our Twitch channel and catch all our live broadcasts on YouTube.com/ChesscomLive. Games from the event can be viewed on our events page.

The live broadcast was hosted by GM Aman Hambleton and IM Danny Rensch.

This was Abdusattorov's third time in the SCC, but it was also his first time ever playing someone not named GM Wesley So in the first round. Surprisingly, he and Caruana played just one blitz game before on Chess.com, which Abdusattorov won. Despite several games played at the rapid time control in the Champions Chess Tour, blitz was a relatively untrodden path.

Although 70% of the community predicted a Caruana victory, SmarterChess predicted a closer struggle. It predicted Caruana would win by just one point and that he would only surpass his younger opponent in the 3+1 portion.

The actual match went very differently than anticipated as Caruana won the first segment, lost the second, and barely snuffed out the comeback in the third to win the match.


5+1: Caruana 5-3 Abdusattorov 

After dropping a loss in the first half, Caruana won nearly every game of the second half to take an early lead.

The first four games should have been draws. Three of them were, but Abdusattorov took the lead after Caruana overpressed in an equal endgame in their second game.

Then Caruana went on a three-game winning streak. Game five was dramatic as Abdusattorov hung a full knight on d6 unprovoked and—due to mutual blindness—Caruana missed it. The two-time U.S. champion won the game later anyway after a desperate piece sacrifice by his opponent.

The next two games were wins for the American super-GM too. The first, he won on time; the second ended with perhaps the most beautiful checkmate sequence of the day. 

They say a knight on the rim is dim, but Caruana used two dim knights and a pawn to finish the job. This is our Game of the Day, annotated by GM Rafael Leitao below.

The last game ended in a draw. This meant that Caruana led by two going into the 3+1 phase of the match.

3+1: Caruana 3.5-4.5 Abdusattorov

This segment started as a continuation of the last, but it ended with a 180-degree swing-around. In the second half, Abdusattorov started the comeback that would bleed into the bullet segment.

Abdusattorov won the first game. The rook endgame should have been a draw despite two extra pawns for Black, but he took the full point after Caruana made a decisive mistake with little time.

Abdusattorov was about to win the next game until he made a slap-your-forehead kind of blunder:

Tilt continued to spread its roots for the young Uzbek GM as Abdusattorov lost the next game in 26 moves after hanging a one-move discovered attack. In the following game, he had to give up his whole queenside to save a rook from getting trapped. He saved the rook but lost the game.

That's three consecutive wins for Caruana and a five-point lead by this point. While a four-point lead had been overcome in the past, five points never have. The weight of history hung on the prodigy's shoulders.

Here's how Caruana summarized it later: "I thought I was basically running away with it, but then I started to choke game after game."

After a draw, Abdusattorov won game after game after game after game—the last three of the segment. The very last one ended with a deadly attack on the dark squares after the cruncher 37.Rg5!

The segment ended with just a one-point lead for Caruana.

1+1: Caruana 5-3 Abdusattorov

Abdusattorov's three-game winning streak from the 3+1 games extended to a five-game streak as he won the first two games. The reigning U.S. champion was able to stop the bleeding and take over the reigns once again in the second half.

Every single one of the eight games played in this segment was decisive. Abdusattorov continued his impressive streak even when the position on the board didn't suit him. 

Caruana was completely winning in the first game up a full piece with play against a weak king. Take a look for yourself below.

You may have also noticed that both players combined had fewer than six seconds. The evaluation bar swung up and down, and Abdusattorov won the time scramble.

"He's lost his marbles!" said Rensch as Hambleton exclaimed, "Who's walking into what here?! This is madness!"

After the Uzbek talent won yet another game, making it five and taking the lead, it looked like he might really turn the match around.

That's when Caruana won five of the last six games in the segment. The tactic to finish game three was the opening salvo to the anti-comeback comeback. 

Can you find it?

Nobody said all the games were going to be pretty. It's bullet chess, after all. At one point, both players missed there was a hanging queen on e2, prompting Hambleton to quip: "They're not on the right page, but they're on the same page!"

In the last two minutes, Abdusattorov was down by two points. If he won on demand, he would have had a shot at evening the score in one final game. He did reach a winning position, in fact, but blundered into a clever tactic that lost his rook and the match.

Caruana joined the broadcast for an interview and mentioned how the SCC matches seem to usually be decided in the bullet segment no matter the score in the blitz.

He named players like Carlsen, Nakamura, and GM Alireza Firouzja who are fantastic at playing at a high level with little time on the clock. About himself, a little self-deprecatingly, he added: "Sometimes I can scrape my way out of trouble, but purely by luck... For me, the main task is not to flag!"

For me, the main task is not to flag!

—Fabiano Caruana

He called the upcoming match against Nakamura "a very tough match, I won't sugarcoat it." No player besides Carlsen or Nakamura has ever won the SCC. 

He shared an anecdote from Sunday. After the Champions Showdown 9LX concluded in St. Louis, he observed Nakamura playing against GM Ray Robson with odds of about 35 seconds against one minute, over the board. 

He concluded the anecdote: "In terms of bullet, he really is a monster. But I'll do my best."

Caruana advances while also making $4,687.50. Abdusattorov earns $1,312.50 of the split prize by win percentage.

Please note that GM Ding Liren has withdrawn and has been replaced by GM Ian Nepomniachtchi, who will face GM Arjun Erigaisi on Thursday. 

Bracket

 

All Games | Caruana vs. Abdusattorov | Round Of 16

The main event of the 2023 Speed Chess Championship Presented by Coinbase takes place September 4-22. It is the strongest online speed chess contest in the world, with 16 players—12 invited and four qualifiers—vying for a share of the $150,000 prize fund along with one of the most prestigious titles in online chess. 


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AnthonyLevin
NM Anthony Levin

NM Anthony Levin caught the chess bug at the "late" age of 18 and never turned back. He earned his national master title in 2021, actually the night before his first day of work at Chess.com.

Anthony, who also earned his Master's in teaching English in 2018, taught English and chess in New York schools for five years and strives to make chess content accessible and enjoyable for people of all ages. At Chess.com, he writes news articles and manages social media for chess24.

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