Mamedyarov Wins World Rapid Championship
Shakhriyard Mamedyarov trailed Ian Nepomniachtchi by 2.5 points entering the last day; that is, with five rounds to go, and besides that he lost in their individual game, which meant that if the two of them tied for first Nepomniachtchi would win the title of World Rapid Champion on tiebreak. With Nepomniachtchi "on fire" with 9/10 after the first two days, the idea that Mamedyarov could win seemed almost absurd...but win he did.
Whatever Nepomniachtchi had going those first days disappeared on Saturday. He drew his first two games with difficulty, while Mamedyarov won his first two to close to within a point and a half. Mamedyarov won his third game too, and in the meantime Nepomniachtchi lost with the white pieces to Alexander Grischuk. That put Mamedyarov just half a point back and Grischuk a point behind. In the penultimate round Nepomniachtchi drew - again with difficulty - while Mamedyarov won with Black against his countryman Gadir Guseinov and Grischuk beat Francisco Vallejo Pons. Mamedyarov's win was odd, as Guseinov self-destructed in a draw rook ending, succumbing perhaps to the deadly combination of too much ambition and too little time on the clock.
Going into the last round then, Nepomniachtchi and Mamedyarov were tied for first, with Nepo having in effect draw (or tie) odds, with Grischuk half a point back. If they finished in a three-way tie it would have been Grischuk who would triumph on tiebreaks, so amazingly there was still everything to play for. Nepomniachtchi had White against Alexander Riazantsev, but didn't gain an advantage and Black obtained a fairly easy draw. Grischuk couldn't win with Black against Nikita Vitiugov either, but Mamedyarov broke through once again, finishing the day 5/5 by defeating Ernesto Inarkiev.
That was a great result by Mamedyarov, and a startling collapse by Nepomniachtchi, though again in keeping with the recent trend of tournament leaders falling to pieces on the last day: Carlsen, Kramnik, Moiseenko, Kamsky, etc.
Leading Standings:
1. Mamedyarov 11.5/15
2. Nepomniachtchi 11
3. Grischuk 10.5
4. Le Quang Liem 10
5-14. Various players with 9
The World Blitz Championship starts tomorrow at the same site with (at least approximately if not exactly) the same cast of characters.
Reader Comments (2)
The Curse of Shipov strikes again. Whoever he praises usually lose in the end. This is what he said after Day 2:
Ian is lucky at the tournament to have combined three positive factors: he is in a great shape himself; his main competitors are not showing their best performance, Grischuk is keeping secrets in his openings. Ponomariov is not in the best health shape, Dreev is not so young anymore to cope with such a tough tournament. I was expecting more from Andreikin, but maybe he doesn't want to show his preparation either, since he has a more important tournament ahead: the Tal Memorial. Thirdly, Ian found the right balance between light and deep games. This is very important in rapid chess, where you don’t have the possibility to sink deeply into the game. He plays very quickly and thinks deeply only at critical moments. In recent years Nepomniachtchi hasn't been not so successful, but he has worked hard and sooner or later the results will come. In my opinion, he has a great chance to win two golden medals but let's see what will happen.
The closest analogue to the 2013 World Rapid Championship is probably ... the 2012 World Rapid Championship: Carlsen had a (his own words) 'commanding lead' after day 2, though he "only" scored 8.5/10 and was "just" 1.5 points clear of Topalov and Karjakin. Then Karjakin won the title.
This time, the closest runners-up Khairullin and Cheparinov were already two points behind Nepomniachtchi (and also scored just 2/5 on the last day). I guess many chess writers had half-prepared a different final report after day two, half-expecting to start writing it up when the last round is still underway.
What struck me most on the first two days was _how_ Nepomniachtchi won most of his games: in the style of Carlsen, from equal or equalish endgames. This includes his win against Mamedyarov. In the last round Nepomniachtchi tried the same rather harmless Caro-Kann sideline, but couldn't "draw blood from a stone".