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Eljanov Wins; Vidit, Caruana, Rodshtein All Circling Like Sharks

Eljanov Wins; Vidit, Caruana, Rodshtein All Circling Like Sharks

MikeKlein
| 14 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Alexei Shirov came back to the board today after his round-five rest, but the break ended his mojo. After winning four straight to start the Chess.com Isle of Man International, yesterday's bye didn't help him stay on form against GM Pavel Eljanov.

Eljanov's clean win on board one put him all alone on 5.5/6 with three rounds to go. Now the heavyweights are about to face off.

It took almost one week, but there's finally one sole leader in Isle of Man—GM Pavel Eljanov.

GM Fabiano Caruana continued his creep back to board one, but he still didn't quite get there for tomorrow's game. After unexpected draws in rounds three and four, Caruana won for the second day in a row with a clever queen sacrifice after which his lone remaining piece would rule the board.

Still, they won't face off Friday afternoon as many expected (including Caruana) from the pairings program. Instead GM Santosh Vidit gets Eljanov, while Caruana takes GM Maxim Rodshtein on board two. Those two boards will go a long way to deciding who will win the £12,000 first prize. Keeping a keen eye on the marquee matchups will be everyone else, most especially the octet that is a further half-point back.

GM Santosh Vidit (right) is back leading the Indian delegation after beating GM Max Illingworth.

Eljanov turned the tables today on his own history. The system with 1.Nf3, 2 g3, 3.Bg2, 4.h3 was used against him by GM Anish Giri this year in Shamkir, Azerbaijan. Today he decided to use the understated weapon himself by reversing the colors.

"Maybe Alexei wasn't really that prepared in this line," Eljanov said, explaining that he struggled in that previous game.

"Today, I wanted to check it as White!"

Unlike Eljanov against Giri, Shirov ceded the bishop pair after being kicked, but then Black made a more grievous error according to Eljanov. The lost tempo that came with 6...e6 and then 10...e5 was nearly unrecoverable.

GM Alexei Shirov lost a tempo, and that was all his opponent needed.

Eljanov went further by saying that by move 18 he was just winning after his the simple play.

"I have two bishops, and Black has a lot of weaknesses. From a practical point of view, it's very hard to defend such positions."

Games via TWIC.

"Maybe it wasn't the best day from Alexei's point of view," Eljanov concluded.

Caruana could have trailed by a full point and not met the leader in round seven, but for a far-from-obvious mis-step by the women's world champion. GM Hou Yifan's errant queen placement allowed for a winsome win by the field's only 2800.

Nearly everyone has a nemesis, and the loss puts Hou Yifan's career record against Caruana at 0-6 in decisive games.

Here's a few more thoughts by Caruana on his event.

Two more players go to sleep tonight knowing that they only trail by one half-point—Rodshtein and Vidit.

The young Indian player contested quite an original game against Australia's newest grandmaster, Max Illingworth, who Chess.com interviewed yesterday after his win.

Today Illingworth wasn't as fortunate. Black's mobile center pawns needed to infiltrate White's king before his collapsed queenside proved fatal, and Vidit did just that.

Yesterday's hero, GM Jorden van Foreest, who is being universally praised (by among others, Caruana), played an unorthodox double-finachetto setup but could not survive the multi-pronged attack by Rodshtein. The open c- and g-files provided too many invasion squares for Black to cover them all.

In the only other game between those with four points, GM Benjamin Bok continued to impress by holding a draw against GM Wesley So in a mostly-correct game.

GM Wesley So was back in the sidesaddle today.

Chess.com caught up with Bok after the game:

Among the other games, the most impressive came from GM David Howell.

England's Olympiad captain, IM Malcolm Pein, (right) showed up today and got great delight seeing GM David Howell's game, as he was likely telling GM Nils Grandelius here.

Does it count as a miniature if you win in 21 moves, but you toggled randomly for two of them? Whether 19 or 21 moves, it was certainly a crush.

Getting back on track was IM Lawrence Trent, who forced resignation in the first time control and continued the hard day for the Dutch team (GM Erwin l'Ami also went down). We will present the game without comment, then allow you to tell Trent how you feel about his effort.

As he has been doing all event, Trent invited his followers to comment on his play with first-and-last-letter-parameters.

Now that you've seen his game, feel free to join in the banter. GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave went with an avocado theme.

Finally, GM Hikaru Nakamura kept his slim title hopes alive by beating IM Elisabeth Paehtz. It has probably been quite some time since he was to be found on board 15.

IM Elisabeth Paehtz and GM Hou Yifan are also thinking about nabbing the top female prize. Here Paehtz steals a peek of her rival's game. Both women lost today to the world's elite.

Chess.com Isle of Man | Round 6 Standings

Rk. SNo Fed Title Name Rtg TB1 rtg+/-
1 5 GM Eljanov, Pavel 2741 5,5 9,6
2 1 GM Caruana, Fabiano 2813 5 4
3 8 GM Rodshtein, Maxim 2687 5 13,3
4 9 GM Vidit Santosh Gujrathi 2686 5 7,9
5 2 GM So, Wesley 2794 4,5 -2,7
6 4 GM Adams, Michael 2745 4,5 1
7 10 GM Naiditsch, Arkadij 2684 4,5 7,5
8 11 GM Shirov, Alexei 2679 4,5 7,8
9 16 GM Salem, A.R. Saleh 2650 4,5 4,3
10 21 GM Howell, David W L 2644 4,5 3,9
11 22 GM Grandelius, Nils 2642 4,5 11,6
12 26 GM Bok, Benjamin 2594 4,5 13,4
13 3 GM Nakamura, Hikaru 2787 4 -7,8
14 6 GM Leko, Peter 2709 4 -8,1
15 12 GM Movsesian, Sergei 2677 4 2
16 13 GM Fressinet, Laurent 2676 4 -3,3
17 14 GM Sargissian, Gabriel 2670 4 -2,9
18 15 GM Melkumyan, Hrant 2653 4 -7,3
19 17 GM Hou Yifan 2649 4 4,2
20 20 GM Bachmann, Axel 2645 4 -6,5
21 24 GM Van Foreest, Jorden 2615 4 9
22 29 GM Donchenko, Alexander 2581 4 -5
23 31 GM Brunello, Sabino 2566 4 1,2
24 32 GM Aravindh Chithambaram Vr. 2564 4 -6,4
25 34 GM Svane, Rasmus 2552 4 -2,1
26 35 GM Sunilduth Lyna Narayanan 2536 4 8,5
27 36 GM Harika Dronavalli 2528 4 9,8
28 46 GM Illingworth, Max 2465 4 8,8
29 47 IM Trent, Lawrence 2463 4 4,5
30 71 Hemant, Sharma (del) 2371 4 28,8
31 74 IM Wallace, John Paul 2355 4 21,1
32 76 Balint, Vilmos 2334 4 30,8
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MikeKlein
FM Mike Klein

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Mike Klein began playing chess at the age of four in Charlotte, NC. In 1986, he lost to Josh Waitzkin at the National Championship featured in the movie "Searching for Bobby Fischer." A year later, Mike became the youngest member of the very first All-America Chess Team, and was on the team a total of eight times. In 1988, he won the K-3 National Championship, and eventually became North Carolina's youngest-ever master. In 1996, he won clear first for under-2250 players in the top section of the World Open. Mike has taught chess full-time for a dozen years in New York City and Charlotte, with his students and teams winning many national championships. He now works at Chess.com as a Senior Journalist and at ChessKid.com as the Chief Chess Officer. In 2012, 2015, and 2018, he was awarded Chess Journalist of the Year by the Chess Journalists of America. He has also previously won other awards from the CJA such as Best Tournament Report, and also several writing awards for mainstream newspapers. His chess writing and personal travels have now brought him to more than 85 countries.

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