Russia vs. China Match: Clash of the Titans |
Written by Administrator | ||||
Tuesday, 31 July 2012 | ||||
by Natalia Pogonina for her Chess.com Tuesday column From July 1-9 St. Petersburg, the cultural capital of Russia, hosted the 8th unofficial match between Russia and China. The format of the event has usually been different each year. This time the participants had to play 5 classical games and 10 rapid ones. Each team was composed of 5 male and 5 female players. For the Russian grandmasters the match was especially important since it normally plays a large role in determining the Olympic Team. Of course, the confrontation between the womens teams is more important in the sense that Russia is the reigning Olympic Champion, while China is the current World Team Champion. The Russian mens team is obviously stronger than the Chinese, but the best GMs of the latter team (Wang Hao, Wang Yue) are of world class and can also lead their comrades to victory over anyone else. From the Russian side there were mainly candidates for the Olympic team and some juniors. Our womens team was: Valentina Gunina, Alexandra Kosteniuk, Natalia Pogonina, Olga Girya, Baira Kovanova (average rating 2451.4). The Russian mens team: Dmitry Jakovenko, Evgeny Tomashevsky, Ian Nepomniatchi, Nikita Vitiugov, Maxim Matlakov (average rating 2711.6). The Chinese team was more or less at its optimal composition. Men: Wang Hao, Wang Yue, Li Chao, Ding Liren, Yu Yangyi (average rating 2691.8). Chinese womens team: Zhao Xue, Ju Wenjun, Huang Qiang, Shen Yang, Ding Yixin (average rating - 2472.8). At the Olympid Yu Yangyi will be replaced by Bu Xiangzhi and Shen Yang by Hou Yifan. A separate score is kept for men and women; both for classical chess and for rapid. However, the final result of the match is the sum of the points of each of the national teams. Up to this point Russia was losing to China 4-3. Hence, we were hoping to equalize the score after this match. This article will be dedicated to the classical part of the womens confrontation, while the second part will be about rapid chess. Also, you can find more details about the members of the team, ratings, etc., in this preview post. Your Chess.com columnist near one of the most beautiful churches in St. Petersburg Five rounds is a very short distance, so the teams have to be extremely careful. On Day 1 our team missed two great chances to score: Alexandra Kosteniuk vs. Ju Wenjun I barely drew against Huang Qian, Olga Girya shared the point with Shen Yang, while Baira Kovanova lost to Ding Yixin. Summarizing, China won 3-2. In round 2 the situation had reversed: Valentina Gunina and Alexandra Kosteniuk won; I and Olga Girya drew, while Baira Kovanova got another 0. 3-2 for Mother Russia. The playing hall
Valentina Gunina and her coffee ritual that she used to perform before each game.
Round 4, another challenge. I lost again, Olga Girya couldnt save her game as well. Alexandra Kosteniuk earned us a point; other games were drawn. Grimly watching my friend Alexandra play vs. Ding Yixin While we still had theoretical chances to save the classical part of the match, we failed to compensate for the 3 point lag. Four draws and yet another loss by Baira Kovanova (to Zhao Xue) defined the final score: 14.5-10.5 in Chinas favor. Gunina vs. Ju Wenjun was a thriller Our men performed better and won their part of the match: 13.5-11.5. Now who do you think prevailed in rapid chess? In case you dont know yet, stay tuned for Part II of the article! ;-) All the photos except the first one are courtesy of Eteri Kublashvili, russiachess.org
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