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Aronian, Mamedyarov, Arjun Live Dangerously As Top Teams Win
Levon Aronian blundered a full piece, but in the end only Wesley So failed to win for the United States in round one. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Aronian, Mamedyarov, Arjun Live Dangerously As Top Teams Win

Colin_McGourty
| 21 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Levon Aronian blundered a piece against 607-point-lower-rated FM Andre Mendez, but still went on to win as top-seed United States claimed a 3.5-0.5 victory over Panama—GM Wesley So's solid draw cost him a place in the top 10. None of the top seeds dropped more than half a point in round one of the 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad, but GMs Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Nodirbek Yakubboev, and Aryan Tari were all lucky to scrape draws.

The top teams also prevailed in the Women's 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad, with nearly every one of them scoring 4-0 wins.

Round two of the 2024 FIDE Chess Olympiad starts on Thursday, September 12 at 9 a.m. ET/15:00 CEST/6:30 p.m. IST.


Open Section: Aronian Leads The Swindlers

On the surface, round one of the 2024 FIDE Chess Olympiad was everything you would expect. The start of the massive spectacle suffered delays, top stars such as GMs Magnus Carlsen, Fabiano Caruana, Ding Liren, and Gukesh Dommaraju were rested by their teams, and the favorites won everywhere you looked.

Full results here

You had to go down to the 30th match to find a losing team that won a game against the winners—Mozambique's Joao Farisse (1851) beat Danish FM Jens Ramsdal (2328).

There are more games than anyone can possibly follow! Photo: Mark Livshitz/FIDE.

There were some grandmaster casualties: Australian GM Bobby Cheng went for a flawed queen sacrifice against Saudi Arabian FM Ahmed AlRehily, Faroe Islands GM Helgi Dam Ziska seemed to lose on time in a winning position against 1982-rated Mathurin Nathaniel from St. Lucia, while Icelandic GM Gudmundur Kjartansson fell for a trick when he pushed his b-pawn two squares against 14-year-old FM Xavier Mompel Ferruz from Equatorial Guinea.

The upsets were few and far between, however, with no underdog team scoring more than a point out of four. A quiet round? Not at all! We were a move (or draw offer) or two away from several sensations.

Andre Mendez nearly took down Levon Aronian. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

The most spectacular turnaround came for Aronian, a three-time Olympiad-winner for Armenia who's now representing the United States, the top seed. He could essentially have resigned against his teenage opponent from Panama when his 12...Qc7? was met by 13.g4!.   

If the knight moves, Nd6+! wins the house, so after a sobering 17-minute think Aronian played 13...Qb7 and left the knight to its fate. The situation should have been hopeless, but the former world number-two found a way not just to escape but to win.

That may have felt unfair to his teammate So, who made a professional draw on the top board and was punished by losing four rating points and falling from 10th to 13th on the live rating list. 54-year-old Viswanathan Anand is back in the top 10, for now! 

Wesley So with Peter Leko before the round. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Mamedyarov dropped out of the top 20 with a draw, though it could have been much worse for the legendary attacking player who has been put on board four to rack up points against somewhat weaker opponents. 1994-rated Jordanian teenager Anas Khwaira could have been his nemesis, after spotting some fine middlegame tactics. The Jordan team leader explained the trick—and why you shouldn't underestimate the youngster.

The game would fizzle out, however, since the 739-point-lower-rated player decided to take a draw at the end, in a position where he was still a full exchange up for no compensation.

Mamedyarov lived to fight another day. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

We saw the same end when Yakubboev, playing for the defending champion Uzbekistan, stumbled into some lethal opening theory against 500-point-lower-rated FM Quinn Cabralis from Trinidad and Tobago.

A true sensation briefly looked possible as teammate FM Kevin Cupid was also winning, but that game soon turned against the islanders, before Cabralis took a draw by repetition in a position that the all-seeing computer assesses as winning for him.

Praggnanandhaa's win was smooth, Arjun's not so much! Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

One player who didn't stumble into trouble but sought it out is GM Arjun Erigaisi, the world number-four and the Indian board-three. Against FM Jacques Elbilia he went for a piece-sac that horrifies computers, but to no one's great surprise he prevailed in the complications.

That win, which helped India to a 4-0 victory over Morocco, is our Game of the Day, and has been analyzed by GM Rafael Leitao below

Aryan Tari was another top GM to survive a terrible position, while his teammate Johan-Sebastian Christiansen won a beautiful attacking game in Norway's 3.5-0.5 win over South Korea. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

It was an action-packed round, which ended with GM Anish Giri drawing water from a stone to win the longest game of the day. 

It's going to get a lot tougher in round two, as we get grandmasters meeting in all the top matchups.

2024 Chess Olympiad Round 2 Team Pairings: Open (Top 15)

No. SNo FED Team : Team FED SNo
1 1 United States of America : Singapore 45
2 9 Hungary  : Peru 53
3 46 Iceland : India 2
4 3 China : Chile 47
5 48 Egypt : Uzbekistan 4
6 5 Netherlands : Belgium 49
7 50 Canada : Norway 6
8 7 Germany : Philippines 51
9 52 Mexico : England 8
10 54 Portugal : Iran 10
11 11 Poland : Hungary C 55
12 56 Finland : Azerbaijan 12
13 13 Spain : Bosnia & Herzegovina 57
14 58 Paraguay : France 14
15 15 Ukraine : Uruguay 59

There are still 15 unpaired teams at the bottom of the standings, due to visa and travel issues. Zoltan Polyanszky, President of the Hungarian Chess Federation, said: "We did a lot to get teams to Budapest," and added that other teams were still on their way: "I would like to ask one-two days of patience. This is a problem of the Schengen area."

The press conference touched on the missing teams. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich backed that up: "The normal rejection rate for Schengen visas is 16.5 percent. Our rejection rate is significantly lower."

Women's Section: Favorites Thrive

With the exception of a few individual half-points lost, the favorite teams prevailed in round one. The following teams finished the day with 4-0 starts: Georgia, Poland, China, Azerbaijan, United States, Germany, Spain, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Bulgaria, France, England, Turkiye, the Netherlands, Mongolia, Vietnam, Romania, and Italy. 

See full results here

There is a 75-year difference between the birth years of the oldest and youngest players in the Women's tournament. The oldest player is Pauline Woodward (Guernsey), born in 1940, while there are five players who were born in 2015.

  • Arianna Balcombe (St. Vincent and the Grenadines)
  • Skye Attieh (Lebanon)
  • WFM Bodhana Sivanandan (England)
  • Tauriel A.B. Frank (Grenada)
  • Ginger Jubitana (Netherlands Antilles)
Skye Attieh of Lebanon is one of the youngest players in the event. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

Nine-year-old Sivanandan is the highest-rated of the group at 2196, with the world under-eight champion title under her belt. She spoke to FM Mike Klein before her team went on to score 4-0 against South Korea.

In every edition of the Olympiad, many teams sport colorful and often creative uniforms or traditional clothing. You can see several of them in the photographs below.

Team Bangladesh. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.
Team Vietnam. Photo: Mark Livshitz/FIDE.
Team Ethiopia. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

Barbados shows team spirit both with uniform and hair! Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.
Team Vanuatu has an average age of 16 in the Women's tournament. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.
Team Andorra. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

There are two glaring sets of absences among the top countries in the Women's tournament. First, China is missing its top four players: three world champions, GMs Hou Yifan, Ju Wenjun, Tan Zhongyi, and former World Championship Challenger Lei Tingjie. Despite that, they are the fourth seed and 14-year-old WGM Lu Miaoyi (rated 2438) makes her debut as the reigning Chinese women's national champion. The Chinese team defeated South Africa 4-0.

Lu Miaoyi played on board four in round one. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

The other notable absence is Ukraine's top-two players who led the team to winning gold at the last Olympiad, the same year it was invaded by Russia. This time, Ukraine is the fifth seed, and the players are IM Yuliia Osmak, GM Anna Ushenina, IM Nataliya Buksa, IM Inna Gaponenko, and WGM Evgeniya Doluhanova, and they made it through round one with a 3.5-0.5 victory against Kyrgyzstan. 

Ushenina (left) and Buksa lead the Ukrainian women's team this year. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

The top team is India again, followed by Georgia and then Poland. GM Vaishali Rameshabu played on board one on the first day as GM Harika Dronavalli, the second highest-rated player in the tournament after Georgian GM Nana Dzagnidze, sat out. Two young stars make their debut on the team, IMs Divya Deshmukh and Vantika Agrawal, while IM Tania Sachdev returns. 

Will this be India's year? Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

India didn't make it to the list of teams winning 4-0 matches, as WFM Raehanna Brown held Vantika to a draw in a queen endgame. Tania won the nicest game; starting with 17.c4, her attack never lost steam.

Georgia was the first of the top teams to finish the day, and they did so with four convincing wins. With a 20-move miniature, IM Lela Javakhishvili showed that the London System has some teeth, in case anyone still holds any doubt. There's a saying that with a knight on f8 there is no mate, but this game proved to be an exception.

Georgia sends another formidable team. Photo: Mark Livshitz/FIDE.

One team to watch out for that's lower on the overall list is Sweden, 33rd seed, where mother and daughter GM Pia and WFM Anna Cramling play side-by-side, and father GM Juan Manuel Bellon Lopez is the team captain. In round one, Anna won her game before her mother did, and Sweden overall beat Fiji 4-0. Anna told Klein before the game: "There's the fire within me to win, and I think I have that still from my competitive chess era."

GM Hikaru Nakamura recapped that game and more of the day's action:

Thursday will feature India vs. the Czech Republic on the top board, an average team rating of 2467 against 2149. You can see the other pairings in the list below.

2024 Chess Olympiad Round 2 Team Pairings: Women (Top 15)

No. SNo FED Team : Team  FED  SNo
1 1 India : Czech Republic 41
2 54 Ecuador : Hungary 14
3 42 Montenegro : Georgia 2
4 3 Poland : Brazil 43
5 44 Colombia : China 4
6 5 Ukraine : Lithuania 45
7 46 Australia : Azerbaijan 6
8 7 United States of America : Philippines 47
9 48 Belgium : Germany 8
10 9 Spain : Hungary C 49
11 50 Finland : Kazakhstan 10
12 11 Armenia : Mexico 51
13 52 Egypt : Bulgaria 12
14 13 France : Luxembourg 53
15 15 England : Denmark 55

NM Anthony Levin contributed reporting to this article.

How to watch?

You can watch our live broadcast on the chess24 YouTube and Twitch channels, while GM Hikaru Nakamura will also be streaming on his Twitch and Kick channels. The games can also be checked out on our dedicated 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad events page

The live broadcast was hosted by GM Robert Hess and John Sargent.

The 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad is a massive team event for national federations that takes place every two years. In 2024 it's being held in Budapest, Hungary, with 11 rounds that run September 11-22. In Open and Women's sections teams of five players compete in a Swiss Open, with each match played over four boards. There are two match points for a win and one for a draw, with board points taken into account only if teams are tied. Players have 90 minutes per game, plus 30 minutes from move 40, with a 30-second increment per move.


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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