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Carlsen Takes A Tuesday Warming Up For World Cup

Carlsen Takes A Tuesday Warming Up For World Cup

NathanielGreen
| 21 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Magnus Carlsen won the early Titled Tuesday event on August 1 and then finished second late. It was GM Alexander Grischuk who won the late event. Both of them are playing in the second round of the 2023 FIDE World Cup on Wednesday, but decided to get in some blitz warmup while first-round tiebreaks were ongoing in the World Cup.


Early Tournament

The early tournament was joined by 589 players, the most for any Titled Tuesday of 2023. One player not in the field was GM Hikaru Nakamura, leaving Carlsen as the favorite, and Magnus met those expectations by leading the tournament wire-to-wire.

Carlsen and GM Dmitry Andreikin were the last perfect players on 6/6, and they made a draw. Then, of the five players on 6.5/7, only one won their game in the eighth round. Of course, it was Carlsen, who defeated IM Rudik Makarian to take an outright tournament lead that he would never relinquish.

Perhaps trying to stay in form for the World Cup to come later, there were no opening shenanigans the like of which Carlsen has been known to engage in during a Titled Tuesday—just straight chess from move one. Game nine was a fantastic English Opening against fellow super grandmaster GM Levon Aronian. Unfortunately for Aronian, this tournament could not be a World Cup tune-up for him, with the Armenian-American unable to attend that event being held in Azerbaijan.

Carlsen's draw in round 10 did not allow anyone to catch up, especially as it came against eventual second-place finisher GM Susanto Megaranto. Carlsen then wrapped up victory in the tournament with a quick knockout over GM Xu Xiangyu.

At the same time, Megaranto secured an uncontested second place with a win over Andreikin.

August 1 Titled Tuesday | Early | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 1 GM @MagnusCarlsen Magnus Carlsen 3255 10 78
2 16 GM @garcho08 Susanto Megaranto 3005 9.5 75
3 15 GM @TigrVShlyape Gata Kamsky 3008 9 82
4 74 GM @Rodalquilar Leonardo Tristan 2823 9 74.5
5 2 GM @DanielNaroditsky Daniel Naroditsky 3103 9 73.5
6 4 GM @Firouzja2003 Alireza Firouzja 3082 9 72
7 9 GM @vi_pranav Pranav V 3025 9 70
8 31 GM @crescentmoon2411 Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son 2925 9 70
9 52 GM @ContrVersia Valery Kazakouski 2887 9 66.5
10 8 GM @FairChess_on_YouTube Dmitry Andreikin 3050 8.5 77
11 12 IM @Rud_Makarian Rudik Makarian 3017 8.5 77
12 3 GM @mishanick Aleksei Sarana 3091 8.5 74.5
13 5 GM @Oleksandr_Bortnyk Oleksandr Bortnyk 3071 8.5 72
14 28 GM @kuli4ik Mikhail Demidov 2937 8.5 68.5
15 18 GM @GMBenjaminBok Benjamin Bok 2960 8.5 67.5
16 19 GM @shimastream Aleksandr Shimanov 2959 8.5 67
17 13 GM @xxysoul6 Xu Xiangyu 3013 8.5 66
18 6 GM @artooon Pranesh M 3053 8 76.5
19 27 CM @stollenmonster Egor Baskakov 2936 8 75.5
20 24 FM @Sina_Movahed Sina Movahed 2953 8 74.5
32 259 WGM @meoluoi91 Hoang Thi Bao Tram 2685 8 50.5

(Full final standings here.)

Carlsen won $1,000 for first place, and he wasn't done for the day. Megaranto claimed $750 in second place. GMs Gata Kamsky ($350), Leonardo Tristan ($200), and Daniel Naroditsky ($100) rounded out the top five with the best tiebreaks out of seven players on nine points. WGM Hoang Thi Bao Tram won the $100 women's prize, scoring 8/11.

Late Tournament

Carlsen would again fight for first place in the late tournament, but this time came up just short on a tiebreak score against Grischuk. The two of them never faced off one-on-one during the tournament, however, with Grischuk's second-round loss to IM Semetey Tologontegin keeping his score and Carlsen's score from matching up until the final round.

In the 10th round, Carlsen made a draw with GM Oleksandr Bortnyk, which allowed Grischuk to finally catch up by defeating GM Alireza Firouzja.

Both players won their game in the final round, locking out the rest of the field from the top two spots. Carlsen still had over a minute on his clock when GM Steven Zierk resigned from their game.

But Grischuk, playing in his comfort zone—a hair-raising, both players-under-30-seconds type of game—against GM Sergei Zhigalko, also won in the last round. And with that, he took the tournament, too.

August 1 Titled Tuesday | Late | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 8 GM @Grischuk Alexander Grischuk 3026 9.5 73
2 1 GM @MagnusCarlsen Magnus Carlsen 3253 9.5 71
3 14 GM @BillieKimbah Maxim Matlakov 2986 9 76
4 3 GM @Oleksandr_Bortnyk Oleksandr Bortnyk 3080 9 72
5 2 GM @Firouzja2003 Alireza Firouzja 3094 9 69
6 38 GM @platy3 Alan Pichot 2877 9 67
7 24 GM @Zhigalko_Sergei Sergei Zhigalko 2924 8.5 70.5
8 31 GM @Zkid Steven Zierk 2899 8.5 70
9 17 IM @0gZPanda Anthony He 2944 8.5 68
10 36 GM @alexrustemov Alexander Rustemov 2843 8.5 66
11 52 GM @Elsa167 Leon Livaic 2800 8.5 65.5
12 26 GM @Vaathi_Coming Aravindh Chithambaram 2886 8 75.5
13 18 GM @kuli4ik Mikhail Demidov 2941 8 74
14 34 IM @mbojan Bojan Maksimović 2859 8 71
15 5 GM @FairChess_on_YouTube Dmitry Andreikin 3044 8 68
16 127 IM @Semetey Semetey Tologontegin 2632 8 64.5
17 130 FM @Rutricks Rubén Domingo Núñez 2605 8 63.5
18 49 GM @krzyzan94 Marcin Krzyżanowski 2796 8 62
19 32 GM @hansen Eric Hansen 2862 8 61.5
20 95 GM @Harry_Rakkel Krzysztof Jakubowski 2678 8 61
45 148 FM @Leebit02 Liya Kurmangaliyeva 2576 7 61.5

(Full final standings here.)

Grischuk earned $1,000 with his victory, while Carlsen took the second-place prize of $750, giving him $1,750 on the day. GM Maxim Matlakov finished third for $350, Bortnyk fourth for $200, and Firouzja fifth for $100. FM Liya Kurmangaliyeva won the $100 women's prize with seven points.

Titled Tuesday

Titled Tuesday consists of two 11-round Swiss tournaments Chess.com hosts for titled players every Tuesday. The first tournament starts at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time/17:00 Central European/20:30 Indian Standard Time, and the second one 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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