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News

Kramnik-Andreikin annotated by GM Naiditsch

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Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 12 September 2013


By GM Arkadij Naiditsch, #1 German chess player, FIDE 2710

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We are in the final of the World Cup. Until the final all the matches had been based on 2 games of normal chess and in case of an equal score a tiebreak was played the next day. The final match consisted in 4 classical games. Before the match it was clear that Andreikin would try to be very solid and fight for survival in the classical games and then look for his chances later in the rapid and blitz. So basically Kramnik had 2 tries, his both white games, to win the match in normal chess.

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 12 September 2013 )
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Greatest Female Chess Players. Natalia Pogonina

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Thursday, 12 September 2013
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By International Master Alexander Gelman

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Pogonina.com & IM Alexander Gelman are producing a special series of videos dedicated to the highest-rated women in the history of chess. Today the featured player is Natalia Pogonina. Unfortunately, due to certain Alexander's life circumstances, so far this is the last episode of the series. We will let you know if more videos are coming.

Previous episodes:
Maia Chiburdanidze
Zhao Xue
Nana Dzagnidze
Xie Jun
Nadezhda Kosintseva
Susan Polgar
Tatiana Kosintseva
Anna Muzychuk

Koneru Humpy
Hou Yifan
Judit Polgar

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 12 September 2013 )
 

Hou Yifan wins Game 1 as Black

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Wednesday, 11 September 2013
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Photo from the official website

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Game 1 didn't work out well for the defending Women's World Chess Champion. Anna Ushenina got a comfortable position out of the opening and kept increasing pressure on her opponent. However, Anna's time management was not on par with her play: by move 14 she has already spent more than half her time. Predictably enough, by move 30 White got into severe time trouble and made a couple of blunders. The game was over by move 40.

Generally speaking, Anna looks tired on the photos. We are not sure if this has to do with not being well-prepared physically or with the living conditions. Although, as far as we know, there are certain problems, including lack of European cuisine and the playing hall being not comfortable enough.

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Expert opinions about the match
Women's live chess ratings

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 11 September 2013 )
 

Accumulating small advantages

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Wednesday, 11 September 2013

By GM Lars Bo Hansen, PhD, MBA

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In the short space between the World Cup in Tromsø and the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis, the traditional Karpov tournament was held in Poikovsky, won by Pavel Eljanov. In the first round of that tournament, Dmitry Jakovenko won an instructive positional game against Viktor Bologan. The game was played in the style of the 12th World Champion after which the tournament is named and is very instructive if you want to study the art of patiently accumulating small advantages.

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 11 September 2013 )
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David vs. Goliath: Upsets of the Week

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Tuesday, 10 September 2013
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By candidate master Peter Zhdanov, editor of Pogonina.com

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In this special weekly column we are looking at the most unexpected upsets that happened last week. Players usually face opponents of a similar level. Considerably less frequent are situations when a significantly lower-rated player succeeds in beating a much stronger adversary.

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 September 2013 )
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Chess Week on Twitter

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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 09 September 2013
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Pogonina.com offers you a selection of some of the most informative chess tweets from last week. A digest of the most important chess news in one short post:


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Last Updated ( Monday, 09 September 2013 )
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Women's World Chess Championship Match Preview

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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 09 September 2013
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Left to right: Challenger and ex-Women's World Chess Champion GM Hou Yifan (China),
Women's World Chess Champion GM Anna Ushenina (Ukraine), WGM Anastacia Karlovic


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Venue: Taizhou, China
Schedule: September 10-28
Format: 10 classical games, tie-break if needed
Prize fund: 200,000 (60% to the winner if the match is decided in classical chess; 55%-45% if on tie-break)
Official website


Anna Ushenina, Womens World Chess Champion, FIDE 2500, #17 on the womens rating list

Hou Yifan, Challenger & ex-World Womens Chess Champion, FIDE 2609, #2 on the womens rating list


Historical score, Anna Ushenina vs. Hou Yifan: +2 =3 -3. Notably, Hou Yifan had White in 7 games out of 8.


View the games


Pogonina.com has conducted a survey among top chess players & experts and has asked them two questions:

- Who is more likely to win?
- How do you think is the match going to proceed?


Here are the answers:

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 September 2013 )
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Instructive Endgame

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Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 07 September 2013
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Study, 1923
FEN: 8/8/8/7p/8/4p2B/1K1k4/5R2 w - - 0 2


White to move and win.

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 07 September 2013 )
 

Natalia Pogonina: "One does not become a GM by only reading books"

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Saturday, 07 September 2013
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Natalia Pogonina was interviewed by Dailychess.org about chess books, DVDs, chess training, coaching, Magnus Carlsen vs. Viswanathan Anand and on other topics.

1. As a reviewer it is of major interest for me to know, which books strong players, who reached the highest degree in chess, found especially useful and which they would recommend for the basic education of everyone who wishes to become better in chess.

Here is a list of some of my favorite chess books.

2. What do you think about the development of chess literature, especially with some promising publishing houses available nowadays, i.e. Quality Chess, Everyman Chess, Gambit books, Chess-Stars, NewInChess just to name a few. Do you have any idea which could improve modern chess literature?

In fact, I am positively surprised that authors are still working on chess books. As far as I know, an average chess book sells less than 2,000 copies, so the profit from releasing it doesnt compensate the efforts of the author, especially if we are talking about the top players. I think most of them just love the game and feel like promoting it, sharing their passion with other people. Writing chess books is a form of educational charity.


Unfortunately, there are also many negative issues here. Certain publishers go for quantity, not quality. It is easier for them to release 10 mediocre titles than one real bestseller. They cut production costs by underpaying the authors (and, consequently, agreeing to work with just about anybody who is willing to accept their conditions), not reviewing the manuscripts well enough (resulting in misprints and chess errors), choosing generic and unattractive covers. Also, some of them are too inefficient and slow: the production cycle lasts so long that when the book actually makes it live, it is already outdated.


I believe that in general the trend is shifting towards e-publishing, and many publishing houses havent yet adapted to this new business framework. We will see how it goes.

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 07 September 2013 )
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Pavel Eljanov won Poikovsky

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Friday, 06 September 2013
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Natalia Pogonina (left) and Pavel Eljanov (right)

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Pavel Eljanov emerged as winner of the annual Poikovsky super tournament. This year's edition was XIVth and, as usual, was dedicated to Anatoly Karpov.

Here is the final table:

Player Country Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Score Place
1 Ernest Inarkiev RUS Flag of Russia 2693 Chess figure ½ ½ 0  1  1  ½ ½  0 1  5 III
2 Dmitry Jakovenko RUS Flag of Russia 2724 ½ Chess figure ½  0  ½  ½ ½  ½ 1 ½  4½  7
3 Alexander Motylev RUS Flag of Russia 2663 ½ ½ Chess figure  1 ½ ½  ½ ½ 1  ½  5½ II
4 Pavel Eljanov UKR Flag of Ukraine 2702 1  1  0 Chess figure  1 ½ ½ ½ ½   1  6  I
5 Ivan Cheparinov BGR Flag of Bulgaria 2678  0  ½ ½  0 Chess figure ½ 0 ½ 0  1  3 10
6 Viktor Laznichka CZE Flag of Czech Republic 2677  0  ½ ½  ½ ½ Chess figure ½ 0  1 0  3½ 9
7 Ian Nepomniatchi RUS Flag of Russia 2723  ½ ½  ½ ½ 1 ½ Chess figure  ½  0 ½  4½ 4-5
8 Alexander Onischuk USA Flag of United States 2667  ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1  ½ Chess figure  ½  0  4½  4-5
9 Viorel Bologan MDA Flag of Moldova 2672 1 0 0 ½ 1  0  1  ½ Chess figure  0  4 8
10 Emil Sutovsky ISR Flag of Israel 2660 0 ½  ½  0  0 1 ½  1 1 Chess figure  4½ 6

More information available at the official website (in Russian).

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Last Updated ( Friday, 06 September 2013 )
 
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