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🏆 Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals (2022)

  PARTICIPANTS (sorted by highest achieved rating; click on name to see player's games)
Magnus Carlsen, Wesley So, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Arjun Erigaisi, Anish Giri, Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Le Quang Liem

Chessgames.com Chess Event Description
Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals (2022)

Name: Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals Event Date: November 14-20, 2022 Site: chess24.com INT Format: 8-player Round-robin Time Control: 15 minutes for the whole game with a 10-second increment from move one

Official Website: https://chess24.com/tour/

Rank Team MP 1 Magnus Carlsen 20 2 Wesley So 13 3 Liem Le 11 4 Jan-Krzysztof Duda 10 5 Praggnanandhaa 9 6 Arjun Erigaisi 9 7 Shakhriyar Mamedyarov 6 8 Anish Giri 6

 page 2 of 5; games 26-50 of 111  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
26. Le Quang Liem vs So  1-0832022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
27. A Erigaisi vs Carlsen 0-1412022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
28. Mamedyarov vs Duda  ½-½612022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals A35 English, Symmetrical
29. Giri vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0582022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E20 Nimzo-Indian
30. Duda vs Mamedyarov  ½-½452022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals A47 Queen's Indian
31. R Praggnanandhaa vs Giri  0-1712022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals B11 Caro-Kann, Two Knights, 3...Bg4
32. R Praggnanandhaa vs Giri 0-1292022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals A45 Queen's Pawn Game
33. Giri vs R Praggnanandhaa  ½-½592022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E11 Bogo-Indian Defense
34. R Praggnanandhaa vs Le Quang Liem 1-0412022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E53 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3
35. Duda vs Giri  1-0412022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D38 Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation
36. So vs A Erigaisi  ½-½492022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals B51 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
37. Carlsen vs Mamedyarov 1-0352022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D78 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.O-O c6
38. Giri vs Duda  ½-½582022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E42 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3 c5, 5.Ne2 (Rubinstein)
39. A Erigaisi vs So 0-1712022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D02 Queen's Pawn Game
40. Mamedyarov vs Carlsen 0-1482022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
41. Le Quang Liem vs R Praggnanandhaa  0-1462022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
42. So vs A Erigaisi  1-0502022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
43. Carlsen vs Mamedyarov 1-0182022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals B40 Sicilian
44. R Praggnanandhaa vs Le Quang Liem  1-0532022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E46 Nimzo-Indian
45. Duda vs Giri 1-0332022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D38 Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation
46. Giri vs Carlsen  0-1362022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals C11 French
47. Le Quang Liem vs Duda ½-½572022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals D38 Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation
48. R Praggnanandhaa vs So  ½-½422022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E46 Nimzo-Indian
49. Mamedyarov vs A Erigaisi  ½-½592022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E34 Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Noa Variation
50. Duda vs Le Quang Liem  ½-½1062022Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals E04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
 page 2 of 5; games 26-50 of 111  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 2 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-18-22  SymphonicKnight: Through Day 4 of this tournament, is anyone else disheartened by the Niemann-Carlsen scandal, the War and lack of certain competitors, the disappearance of Ding from the circuit, the abdication of Magnus, and the lack of competition in this tournament for Magnus as all his foes wilt and show nothing of their real strength; and other circumstances in the world at large that increase cynicism? It seems so from the silence. This lawsuit is just in its infancy, and might take years to process if it is given substance.
Nov-18-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Atterdag: <SymphonicKnight>

I am sure we are many who are seriously disheartened by all the things you mention plus some more: the climate crisis, the inflation, the shortage of energy, the un-democratic movements in democratic countries and so forth.

2022 has been a horrible year so far, one of the worst in my lifetime. A misanthrope would claim that the draconical urges of human nature can't be covered in the varnish of civilisation. The ugly side of the human mind will always find a person who gains power to execute it.

However, I see no other option than converting this paralyzed position into active support for all the good that fortunately still rules many parts of the world. We should not give in to the Saurons in this world - that has never worked.

Nov-18-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals (2022) (kibitz #2)

I'm in full agreement with you Atterdag.

Nov-18-22  Mayankk: Yes. Far too many of these events with the same names. And the events themselves are of little consequence. It's just the star power of Carlsen that draws the sponsors and thereby high prize money.

This is indeed an era of excess. And not just in chess.

Nov-18-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: As I have noted across the years, AVRO 1938 had the charm of novelty; with travel conditions much improved, the same top 15-20 players can play anywhere, multiple times each year, and do. Probably not that interesting for even the elite to play each other twentyleven times each year.

Bit of new blood would be welcome.

Nov-18-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  tamar: Carlsen seems in a zone where if he was playing classical time controls, he could reach 2900. But rapid and blitz events have superseded the classical circuit.
Nov-18-22  Chessius the Messius: Simply because Carlsen would lose 1000-0 versus SF.
Nov-19-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: where's the smoking gun? Surely investigative authorities have looked into adult novelty on line stores that sell vibrating love beads? you can probably break into these sites with a can opener. Any instances of these love beads being sold to chess professionals?

Enquiring minds what to know.

Probably a good thing that Hans and Magnus aren't from England. Fleet street would be publishing lewd, bad taste cover stories, one after the other.

Nov-19-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Atterdag: <perfidious>

AVRO 1938, what a tournament! No less than four world champions participating - former, present and coming. And two of their strongest opponents, Keres and Fine, who won the tournament but never got the title. Reshevsky was also very strong in those days - only Flohr was an inch below the rest.

Incidently, I played a simul game against Flor decades ago. He was in Copenhagen for a tournament and visited my then working place. I have rarely seen a more sad and sombre looking person. Not the one, you'd choose in the classic "Which three players from the past would you invite to dinner" enquète.

The games in that tournament have become iconic and some of the most inspirational in my life with chess.

I sense you feel the same!?

Nov-20-22  NrthrnKnght: SymphonicKnight: you forgot the scamdemic
Nov-20-22  boz: Watching these guys go up against Magnus is like watching a meat grinder at work.
Nov-20-22  boz: Interesting anecdote, Atterdag. I didn't know that about Flohr. It's funny because I remember the first time I saw a photograph of him, I remarked to myself how boyishly happy he appeared. It was early in my chess life and I was reading Chernev's <Most Instructive Games in Chess History > which was my introduction to all the great masters of the past. Sad to hear that the photo deceived me. Of course time will do that to a person.
Nov-20-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Atterdag: Hi <boz>,

As one can read in great Wiki article about Flohr, he had a very troublesome life at times. Both parents being massacred, he and his brother orphaned, but then flourishing brilliantly in the 30s in the Soviet.

But it was the fate of the original Czech that he became almost contemporary with an exceptional group of star players in the Soviet Union: Botvinnik (foremost), Keres (in the rise), Bronstein, Smyslov etc. etc.

When I met him - I think it was before the dissolution of the USSR but also by the end of his life - he looked like a man carrying tons of sorrow. Nonetheless, a great chess player, who also contributed to opening theory and the overall knowledge of our game. One of those who have a lesser place in history than deserved.

Nov-20-22  boz: Thank you for that, Atterdag. As we all know and many remember, the 20th Century was a period great progress and terrible suffering especially in Europe. I'm sorry to hear of Fohr's misfortunes. It is nice, though, that you met a player who competed in the era of the great legends of chess.
Nov-20-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: Flohr was well within the first ten players in the world through the 1930s, with his result at AVRO being the nadir of his career. Weeks after conclusion of his debacle in the Netherlands came Flohr's greatest triumph: Leningrad / Moscow training (1939), in which Reshevsky came second, 1.5 points behind, and Keres, joint winner of AVRO, finished minus in a strong field.
Nov-20-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Wasn't flohr the second best player in the world, in the 30s, after Alekhine?
Nov-21-22  Olavi: Flohr was easily one of the eight best players in late 1938, not an inch below the rest, but AVRO was played a month after the Munich pact, annexation of the Sudetenland - and the First Vienna Award was signed a week before AVRO. He will not have been in the best of spirits.
Nov-21-22  Everett: Interesting Liem was the only one to give Carlsen problems
Nov-21-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Atterdag: Correct, <Olavi>.

The inch was meant contextual on his performance in that tournament, not as a general assessment of Flohr. I should have made that more clear.

Nov-21-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: On Flohr, from the Leningrad/Moscow page:

<....The surprising news was that Flohr won so convincingly over a very strong field, especially after finishing last at AVRO 1938, and being virtually "written off" as a top-flight player....>

Funny how things go sometimes; the 'pundits' don't always get there.

Nov-21-22  karik: Final results

1 Carlsen, Magnus 20
2 So, Wesley. 13
3 Le, Liem 11
4 Duda, Jan-Krzysztof. 10
5 Praggnanandhaa, R 9
6 Erigaisi, Arjun. 9
7 Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar 6
8 Giri, Anish 6

Nov-22-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Atterdag: Some pretty games by which Carlsen defeated Duda. It seems that all the foolish things he has been involved in only have strengthened him and made his gameplay more creative and sharp.
Nov-22-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Foolish indeed, but on the other hand he no longer carries the burden of the crown and he's come out against cheaters. Now he can get back to doing what he loves, being the best chess player.
Nov-24-22  tonsillolith: Carlsen killed it in this tournament. The games against Giri and Mamedyarov were a lot more one-sided than I would have expected.

Congratulations to Le Quang Liem for not losing too badly to Carlsen in their match, and congrats to So for not coming in quite as far behind Carlsen as the rest.

Nov-26-22  Chessmusings: Some memorable chess positions from the 2022 Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals in San Francisco.

https://dailychessmusings.com/2022/...

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