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Dubov Goes From Carlsen's Second To Placing Carlsen In Second

Dubov Goes From Carlsen's Second To Placing Carlsen In Second

NathanielGreen
| 20 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Daniil Dubov defeated GM Magnus Carlsen, whom he has assisted in multiple world championships, in the final round of the early Titled Tuesday on October 24 and thus overtook and won the event outright with 10 points. Webster University head coach GM Liem Le was the winner late, with 9.5 points to win on a tiebreak score over last week's two-time winner, GM Jose Martinez.


Early Tournament

GM Wesley So, who would ultimately finish fourth, made some early noise when he toyed with an opponent who refused to resign in round two, deftly avoiding stalemate to win with (count 'em up) seven queens.

But of the 571 players in the field, Carlsen was the story early, racing to 9.5 points in the first 10 rounds. It was a lead built with Carlsen trends of both new and old: dubious blitz openings and classic endgame grinds, and he outlasted GMs Grigoriy Oparin and Vugar Rasulov in rounds six and seven to reach a perfect 7/7.

In round 10, however, GM David Paravyan miscalculated and was lost in just 13 moves. Carlsen easily moved to 9.5/10 and was a draw away from securing the tournament.

After building a lead with 1.a4 and 1.h4 in his games with White, Carlsen played the respectable Queen's Indian Defense with Black for his final game. Although he faced a different variation this time, it was the same opening as his now-infamous loss at the Qatar Masters earlier this month.

That turned out to bode poorly. Dubov, who had hung around with eight wins and two draws going into the game, won with surprisingly little difficulty.

Despite their hiccups against Carlsen, Paravyan and Oparin finished in the top five along with So, all of them on nine points. Five other players also scored nine, but their tiebreaks were not as strong.

October 24 Titled Tuesday | Early | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 7 GM @Duhless Daniil Dubov 3109 10 75
2 1 GM @MagnusCarlsen Magnus Carlsen 3266 9.5 78.5
3 6 GM @dropstoneDP David Paravyan 3098 9 77.5
4 8 GM @GMWSO Wesley So 3075 9 72.5
5 17 GM @OparinGrigoriy Grigoriy Oparin 2994 9 71.5
6 45 GM @Elsa167 Leon Livaic 2895 9 69.5
7 3 GM @nihalsarin Nihal Sarin 3129 9 68
8 51 GM @kleinebeer98 Thomas Beerdsen 2875 9 65.5
9 5 GM @FairChess_on_YouTube Dmitry Andreikin 3096 9 64.5
10 140 FM @lefonghua Lefong Hua 2734 9 61.5
11 21 GM @GroovyKettle Robby Kevlishvili 3003 8.5 75
12 35 FM @JimDiGrease Ivan Zemlyanskii 2885 8.5 62
13 24 GM @Sanan_Sjugirov Sanan Sjugirov 2958 8.5 59
14 497 GM @hansen Eric Hansen 2947 8.5 49
15 23 GM @Zhigalko_Sergei Sergei Zhigalko 2960 8 81
16 40 GM @abhidabhi Abhimanyu Puranik 2906 8 71
17 70 IM @OhanyanEminChess Emin Ohanyan 2854 8 70
18 10 GM @GHANDEEVAM2003 Arjun Erigaisi 3032 8 69
19 128 FM @NovozhilovSemen Semen Novozhilov 2727 8 68.5
20 37 GM @lilleper1 Jonas Bjerre 2892 8 67.5
24 219 IM @Meri-Arabidze Meri Arabidze 2627 8 64.5

(Full final standings here.)

Dubov earned the $1,000 grand prize, while Carlsen settled for $750. Paravyan claimed $350, So $200, and Oparin $100, while IM Meri Arabidze finished 24th on a strong 8/11 score to win the $100 women's prize.

Late Tournament

The late field of 401 produced a first-time winner in GM Liem Le, who was the world blitz champion in 2013 and has a history of strong blitz performances. He reached 8.5/9 but could not hold off Martinez in a rather messy game in round 10, and ended up taking a loss one round earlier than Carlsen had.

Losing in round 10 instead of round 11 does have the benefit of giving a player time to recover, if not very much time. But Le did just that. Martinez was held to a draw with Paravyan, and Le caught up in the standings with a win over GM Igor Kovalenko. Le's tiebreak score was solidly ahead of Martinez, so he won the tournament.

Dubov nearly put together another top-five performance with the best tiebreak score in the field, but his draw in the final round kept him half a point out of third place. Paravyan, on the other hand, did score a second straight top-five finish.

October 24 Titled Tuesday | Late | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 17 GM @LiemLe Liem Le 3004 9.5 77
2 6 GM @Jospem Jose Martinez 3100 9.5 72
3 4 GM @dropstoneDP David Paravyan 3107 9 74.5
4 15 GM @Zhigalko_Sergei Sergei Zhigalko 2967 9 63
5 18 GM @Krakozia Denis Khismatullin 2959 9 62.5
6 2 GM @Duhless Daniil Dubov 3114 8.5 79
7 21 GM @igorkovalenko Igor Kovalenko 2952 8.5 76.5
8 1 GM @DanielNaroditsky Daniel Naroditsky 3191 8.5 74.5
9 70 FM @Alex_Sahakyan2006 Alex Sahakyan 2796 8.5 71.5
10 7 GM @mishanick Aleksei Sarana 3052 8.5 64
11 19 GM @Angry_Twin Andrey Drygalov 2963 8.5 58.5
12 29 GM @sergiochess83 Sergey Grigoriants 2885 8.5 57.5
13 51 GM @eljanov Pavel Eljanov 2838 8 68
14 24 FM @Bauman_Guy Konstantin Popov 2918 8 67
15 14 GM @shimastream Aleksandr Shimanov 2972 8 66.5
16 68 NM @nochewycandy Isaac Chiu 2791 8 65
17 25 GM @MikaelyanArman Arman Mikaelyan 2921 8 64
18 20 GM @Beca95 Aleksandar Indjic 2920 8 61
19 65 FM @Ali_rastbod Ali Rastbod 2747 8 60.5
20 93 CM @Andrei_Skvortsov Andrei Skvortsov 2699 8 60.5
54 203 FM @tteshan Nadya Toncheva 2543 7 53.5

(Full final standings here.)

Le won $1,000 for his victory while Martinez won $750 for second place. Paravyan finished third again for another $350, totaling $700. GMs Sergei Zhigalko and Denis Khismatullin finished fourth and fifth to claim $200 and $100, respectively. FM Nadya Toncheva won the $100 women's prize.

Titled Tuesday

Titled Tuesday is Chess.com's weekly tournament for titled players, with two tournaments held each Tuesday. The first tournament begins at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time/17:00 Central European/20:30 Indian Standard Time, and the second at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time/23:00 Central European/2:30 Indian Standard Time (next day).

NathanielGreen
Nathaniel Green

Nathaniel Green is a staff writer for Chess.com who writes articles, player biographies, Titled Tuesday reports, video scripts, and more. He has been playing chess for about 30 years and resides near Washington, DC, USA.

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