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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
Reggio Emilia 2010/11 Tournament

Vugar Gashimov6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Francisco Vallejo Pons6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Sergei Movsesian5/9(+1 -0 =8)[games]
Vasyl Ivanchuk5/9(+3 -2 =4)[games]
David Navara5/9(+4 -3 =2)[games]
Fabiano Caruana4.5/9(+1 -1 =7)[games]
Alexander Onischuk4.5/9(+1 -1 =7)[games]
Alexander Morozevich4/9(+2 -3 =4)[games]
Nigel Short3.5/9(+3 -5 =1)[games]
Michele Godena1.5/9(+0 -6 =3)[games]

 page 2 of 2; games 26-45 of 45  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
26. Short vs Movsesian 0-1202011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B40 Sicilian
27. Caruana vs F Vallejo Pons ½-½242011Reggio Emilia 2010/11D47 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
28. V Gashimov vs Ivanchuk 1-0272011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B12 Caro-Kann Defense
29. Navara vs M Godena 1-0382011Reggio Emilia 2010/11A13 English
30. Morozevich vs Onischuk 0-1472011Reggio Emilia 2010/11D31 Queen's Gambit Declined
31. Movsesian vs Morozevich ½-½442011Reggio Emilia 2010/11C07 French, Tarrasch
32. F Vallejo Pons vs V Gashimov 0-1572011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B08 Pirc, Classical
33. M Godena vs Short 0-1592011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B16 Caro-Kann, Bronstein-Larsen Variation
34. Ivanchuk vs Navara 0-1422011Reggio Emilia 2010/11A15 English
35. Onischuk vs Caruana  ½-½292011Reggio Emilia 2010/11D10 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
36. V Gashimov vs Navara 1-0542011Reggio Emilia 2010/11C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer
37. Morozevich vs M Godena 1-0442011Reggio Emilia 2010/11A06 Reti Opening
38. Caruana vs Movsesian ½-½272011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B47 Sicilian, Taimanov (Bastrikov) Variation
39. F Vallejo Pons vs Onischuk 1-0282011Reggio Emilia 2010/11C45 Scotch Game
40. Short vs Ivanchuk 0-1372011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
41. Onischuk vs V Gashimov  ½-½172011Reggio Emilia 2010/11D15 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
42. Movsesian vs F Vallejo Pons  ½-½172011Reggio Emilia 2010/11C07 French, Tarrasch
43. Navara vs Short 1-0432011Reggio Emilia 2010/11A21 English
44. Ivanchuk vs Morozevich 1-0722011Reggio Emilia 2010/11E32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
45. M Godena vs Caruana  ½-½522011Reggio Emilia 2010/11B08 Pirc, Classical
 page 2 of 2; games 26-45 of 45  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 10 OF 11 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-05-11  Al2009: Very strange game Gashimov - Navara..., I'm watching it online.

Gashimov thought for more than 20 minutes at 47th move, in a winning position.

He missed an easy win with 47.R1f6! and if 47...Re1+ 48. Kh2 Bf4+ 49.Rxf4! mating.

20 minutes to find a worse move like 47.R7f6?!, which allows a longer resistance...very strange

OK, now Navara resigned at 54th...

Jan-05-11  Eyal: <Gashimov thought for more than 20 minutes at 47th move, in a winning position.

He missed an easy win with 47.R1f6! and if 47...Re1+ 48. Kh2 Bf4+ 49.Rxf4! mating.

20 minutes to find a worse move like 47.R7f6?!, which allows a longer resistance...very strange>


click for larger view

Not so strange, actually. 47.R1f6?? allows Black to escape with 47...Re1+ 48.Kh2 Qe3! (not Bf4+?), and now White has to force a perpetual with 49.Rh7+ Kxh7 50.Qg6+ etc., otherwise he would lose.

Jan-05-11  Bons92: <<smaragdus: Another loss for Godena. Is he really the second strongest Italian?> Actually yes. He was also the first one to become GM.> The first Italian to become GM was Sergio Mariotti!
Jan-05-11  unsound: <Eyal> At first I thought your line <54...Rc8 55.Rxb5 c3 56.Rc5> lost for white after black swaps rooks and queens his c-pawn--but now I see the point that then the black pawn on e5 means that black's bishop can't stop white from queening his c-pawn, after white gives up the rook on c1. (So, 56...Rxc5 57.bxc5 c2 58.Rc3 c1=Q 59.Rxc1 Bxc1 60.c6 and 1-0, for those scoring at home.) Pretty cool, actually, though unfortunate for poor Navara.
Jan-05-11  Shams: On the list of Italian GMs, where would we put Turati?
Jan-05-11  laskereshevsky: Godena is playing under his usual strenght in this tournament. He defeated dozens of GMs in his careere... But about the time use (or abuse!), Michele was almost always a zeitnot-addicted....
Jan-05-11  Eyal: Short had 5 Whites in this tournament - supposedly an advantage. In 4 of them (the exception being the game vs. Gashimov) he either lost or got a terrible position by move 20 (the one vs. Moro he somehow managed to save).
Jan-05-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  moronovich: Anyone who knows what time they start tomorrow ?
Jan-05-11  Eyal: <moronovich> According to chessvibes, at 12:00 CET - that is, 3 hours earlier.
Jan-06-11  Matsumoto: A warm welcome back to chess to Morozevich; chess would not be the same without him!
Jan-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  moronovich: <Eyal> Thanks a lot !
Jan-06-11  vonKrolock: Last round starts three hours earlier (maybe to spare some with hotel plus transportation ?!)- and this is still the most pro event in the early Year! alas, Chess is losing the prominence ...
Jan-06-11  Eyal: Both prominent games for the standings (Movsesian-Paco, Onischuk-Gashimov) already seem headed for a draw, after early exchanges.
Jan-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  moronovich: <vonKrolock> 2 hours is the normal for the last round.Also because of the prizeceremony,concluding diner and/or transportation.
Jan-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  sisyphus: Gashimov and Vallejo both drew their games, so they finish with 6/9.
Jan-06-11  Eyal: Movsesian remains the only one without a loss, having played very (too?) solidly throughout, but also without enough wins. As someone said about Grischuk's performance in the recent Russian Championship, he's the Anand of the tournament...
Jan-06-11  Karpova: Navara - Short 1-0
Jan-06-11  Eyal: As in the game vs. Anand in London, Short allows Navara to mate him over the board like a gentleman.
Jan-06-11  Skakalec: <vonKrolock> Obviously you haven't played tournament chess. As <moronovich> pointed out it's a normal procedure, not only in chess. Tennis tournaments finals also start earlier.
Jan-06-11  Karpova: Ivanchuk has K+B+N vs K against Morozevich
Jan-06-11  Karpova: For sure, Ivanchuk won the endgame.

Godena and Caruana are the only ones still playing.

Jan-06-11  e4ia: Moro seems to have gone out with a "respect" mate.... a great but aging bull whose best chess days are apparently behind him, brought to rest by an even more senior matador. I'm sure Chuky feels some degree of empathy for Moro.

I hope we see Moro again....
but don't be surprised if we do not,
or in only selective/infrequent top level tournaments.

Jan-06-11  mike1: Godena- Caruana a draw according to the official site but (maybe it is only me) black should win in the final position 54. Ke4(??) Re3+, 55. Kd5 Re5+ and Rxa5....
Jan-06-11  fisayo123: kings are usually placed at the centre of the board when the game is decided,hence 54.Ke4
Jan-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  Gypsy: The game-collection still has two dupplicate games while two other games are missing. That results in a pretty garbled up x-table. If I calculate correctly, the final standings should be thus:

1-2 ... Hashimov, Vallejo-Pons (+3)
3-5 ... Navara, Movsesian, Ivanchuk (+1)
6-7 ... Caruana, Onischuk (=)
8 ...... Morozevich (-1)
9 ...... Short (-2)
10 .... Godena (-6)

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