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Shevchenko Leads Carlsen And Abdusattorov After Perfect Start
Gukesh lost to Shevchenko, who finished the day on a perfect score. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

Shevchenko Leads Carlsen And Abdusattorov After Perfect Start

Colin_McGourty
| 15 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Kirill Shevchenko is the absolute underdog in the 2024 Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland, but he scored a perfect 6/6 on day one of the 2024 Grand Chess Tour after pouncing on blunders by GMs Gukesh Dommaraju, Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu, and Vincent Keymer. GMs Magnus Carlsen and Nodirbek Abdusattorov are second, two points back, after a wild start to the tournament.

Day two starts Thursday, May 9, at 7 a.m. ET / 13:00 CEST / 4:30 p.m. IST.

Pawns meant seed numbers for the 10 players at the opening ceremony. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

No one could have predicted the standings after the first day of action at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw.

Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland Standings After Day 1


Twenty-one-year-old Shevchenko, born in Ukraine and now representing Romania, is playing as a wildcard chosen by the sponsors, and had no illusions about what awaited him. He commented, after his amazing first day, "For me it is the strongest tournament I ever played, because the field is really without underdogs... except me!"

The field is really without underdogs... except me!

—Kirill Shevchenko

Shevchenko mentioned that this year, he was trying to put no pressure on himself since a year ago, he'd approached the event with clear goals, only to crash and burn in the rapid section.

Shevchenko didn't win a rapid game in the 2023 event.

Although Shevchenko did recover well in the blitz to score seven wins, he might have feared a repeat in rapid when he found himself on the defensive against newly-minted world championship challenger Gukesh. "He’s better, but his king is weak, my king is weak, so it’s a fight," was Shevchenko's hope, and suddenly things went his way after the shocking time-trouble blunder, 34.Qd3??.

Shevchenko, in fact, proved to be a blunder-magnet, as in the very next game, another hugely talented Indian star, Praggnanandhaa, went astray early on.

Shevchenko beat two of the three Indian stars—he's yet to face Arjun. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

9...Bg4? was a disastrous move, but this time you needed to be eagle-eyed to spot the winning shot: 10.Nxe5!. Shevchenko did, though his opponent fought back, and the last decisive mistake only came on move 36.

Shevchenko was on a roll, and his third game, against Keymer, would also be determined by a shocking blunder. Once again, however, he'd earned it by making the decision not to win back a pawn and make a draw but to play on a pawn down in an unclear position.

Down to seconds, his German opponent slipped with 41.Rhc1?, which ran into 41...f4!, winning the pinned knight on e3. 

It's going to be hard for Shevchenko to follow up on such a start, but he's already scored almost half as many points in one day as he managed in five in 2023.

Abdusattorov is a beast in rapid and blitz chess... or just in chess in general. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Chess.com.

For the first two rounds the one player to match Shevchenko was Abdusattorov, who carried his momentum from winning the TePe Sigeman Chess Tournament in Malmo into the start in Warsaw. His first game, against GM Anish Giri, had some shaky moments but finished with an absolutely wonderful queen-sacrifice!

Don't miss GM Rafael Leitao's full analysis of our Game of the Day:

Abdusattorov followed that up by inflicting more misery on Gukesh, who once again played well only to miss a detail that allowed his opponent to trade down into a winning endgame.

It wasn't to be a perfect start for the Uzbek star, however, since Praggnanandhaa bounced back from his blunder against Shevchenko to overcome huge resistance and defeat Abdusattorov in the final round of the day. 

The impressive venue was graced with dramatic chess. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

Abdusattorov is one of just four Grand Chess Tour regulars playing in Warsaw (the others are Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa, and Giri) who will be eligible for prizes at the end of the season, while no less than six players are wildcards. They're led by a certain Carlsen, who joined Abdusattorov in second place after ending the day on an unbeaten 4/6. 

The former world champion is, at 33, the oldest player in the tournament, with the next oldest being 29-year-old Giri. Another former champion knows how that feels. 

Carlsen commented at the opening ceremony:

"I’m really happy to be the only representative of adults, 30 and older. It’s going to be an interesting challenge, for sure. I’ve played tournaments where there’s a mix, but I don’t think I’ve played a tournament like this where it’s almost exclusively young players, so it’s going to be fun. Sometimes it’s easy to underestimate younger players because you don’t know how quickly they develop. You expect them to have a certain level and then the very next tournament they’ve actually gotten a bit better, so it’s going to be super fun and super interesting to see, and hopefully I can still teach them a thing or two."

"Hopefully I can still teach them a thing or two." Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

The first game against GM Arjun Erigaisi felt like a case of being the adult in the room, but that was mainly down to Arjun, who made three draws on Wednesday with 98.2, 98.9, and 96.9 accuracy scores. 

Carlsen's win, against Chinese GM Wei Yi, came from what the Norwegian confessed was a "pretty suspicious opening," but he was happy with how he went on to win.

Carlsen, not famous for making fast starts, shared his feelings going into the final game of the day against local hero GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda:

"Before the game I was thinking I’ve sort of survived the first day, let’s try and be safe, and the game starts and I’m out of control from the get-go. I could feel that he was not completely on form, he was probably a bit tilted after losing the previous game, otherwise he might have punished me harder in that game."

Duda had some help from Rey Enigma in his previous game, but it didn't go well. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

The game looked set to be a Najdorf before Carlsen met 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 with 3.h3!?, which was a theme for his day. Against Arjun, he'd used an early h3 in the Exchange French recommended by Nikos Ntirlis, and now he followed the Sicilian recommendation.

When GM Cristian Chirila suggested that it's hard to find anything against the Najdorf, Carlsen countered:

"You can always play something against the Najdorf. If the Najdorf was the only playable opening against 1.e4 everybody would play e4, I think."

If the Najdorf was the only playable opening against 1.e4 everybody would play e4.

—Magnus Carlsen

What followed was a fine bar brawl of a game where both players missed winning chances.

That eventful day left Carlsen in a healthy second place, as almost all the players experienced ups and downs.

The world number one found some time for autographs. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

One game that deserves to be mentioned is Keymer-Wei, which saw the young German GM sacrifice a knight in the opening for a winning position, then a queen (a sound sac, though not even the best move!), then a bishop (three times!), before Wei got in on the act and sacrificed material of his own to make a 130-move draw, though he also missed a chance to win. It's too much to try and annotate, but you can play through the rollercoaster below! 

The tournament is just beginning, with another six rounds of rapid chess to be played on Thursday (including Gukesh-Carlsen) and Friday, before 18 rounds of blitz over the weekend.

So far Gukesh and Carlsen have had mixed fortunes—they meet in Thursday's round six. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour.

It's a tough schedule for the players, but it's noteworthy that Carlsen and Keymer will both be playing the Champions Chess Tour Chess.com Classic from Friday, while the likes of Giri, Abdusattorov, and Duda are playing today's Play-In as they attempt to join them.  

How to watch? You can watch the 2024 Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland on the Saint Louis Chess Club YouTube channel. The games can also be followed from our Events Page.

The live broadcast was hosted by IM Jovanka Houska, GM Yasser Seirawan, IM Nazi Paikidze, GM Cristian Chirila, and WGM Anastasiya Karlovich.

The 2024 Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland is the first event on the 2024 Grand Chess Tour and runs May 8-12 in the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland. The 10 players first compete in a single rapid round-robin with a time control of 25 minutes plus a 10-second increment per move, followed by a blitz double round-robin with a 5+2 time control.


Previous coverage:

Colin_McGourty
Colin McGourty

Colin McGourty led news at Chess24 from its launch until it merged with Chess.com a decade later. An amateur player, he got into chess writing when he set up the website Chess in Translation after previously studying Slavic languages and literature in St. Andrews, Odesa, Oxford, and Krakow.

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