World Blitz Chess Championship Day 2: Vachier-Lagrave and Assaubayeva New World Blitz Champions
GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (also known as MVL) finished first in the World Blitz Chess Championship with 15/21 in the Swiss tournament, after defeating GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda in their third blitz playoff game. Duda finished in second and GM Alireza Firouzja finished in third, each with 15/21 as well. With the same controversial system as the rapid event in place, Firouzja did not play in the playoff games due to tiebreaks.
17-year-old Kazakh IM Bibisara Assaubayeva continued a nearly unstoppable streak of wins to finish first with 14/17, having an entire round to spare. GM Alexandra Kosteniuk, the new women's world rapid champion, finished in second with 12.5/17 and GM Valentina Gunina finished in third with 12/17. IM Polina Shuvalova, who finished with 12 points also, had the inferior tiebreak and did not place in third.
The final day of the most prestigious blitz event in the world was the furthest thing from quiet. To start, three players unfortunately tested positive for the COVID-19 virus, a fan-favorite among them.
Wasn't feeling well before the Rapid, told @FIDE_chess , got tested - was neg and I played. Needed to take a test today to fly tomorrow - it's positive. I cannot finish the tournament and now am worried for all my opponents. Will be seeing you on stream doing commentary, I guess.
— Hikaru Nakamura (@GMHikaru) December 30, 2021
The identities of the other two players were not released, but according to FIDE, the affected players and opponents were contacted privately.
The beginning of the first round was delayed by 30 minutes initially, and finally an hour, as many players took the test before the round began and organizers met to discuss how to proceed. Of course, one concern for the players was getting back home to celebrate the new year, as it would not be possible to board a plane after testing positive.
It’s disappointing that players have to stand for hours(!) in freezing cold to get the basic pcr test done right before the games. pic.twitter.com/iTSjjpvzHZ
— Vidit Gujrathi (@viditchess) December 30, 2021
Nakamura, who began streaming from his hotel room to cover the games, spoke to Dutch GM Benjamin Bok in a short interview. When asked if today's news affected his plans for playing in the Grand Prix (which will feature the last two open spots for the upcoming Candidates Tournament in Madrid) or other future events, Nakamura responded: "I was thinking about that too. There's some kind of horrible irony... out of everybody, I was more cautious [and did not play in over-the-board events]... I was worried about the COVID situation in Latvia... and the one event I try to play at, I get it [the COVID-19 virus]."
...There's some kind of horrible irony... out of everybody, I was more cautious.
—Hikaru Nakamura
Nevertheless, the games commenced. Masks were recommended by FIDE, not required, and many players chose not to wear their masks during the games.
GM Levon Aronian, the leader on 10/12 after day one, started the tournament consolidating his lead after defeating the second-placed GM Amin Bassem in round 13, then drawing GMs Arjun Erigaisi and Ian Nepomniachtchi before beating GM Anish Giri in round 16 in a rook endgame.
This was a tough blow to the Dutch number-one, who had just inflicted GM Magnus Carlsen's fourth loss of the event in a crushing attack. It featured a nice moment where Carlsen seemed to threaten Giri's b7-pawn on move 41, but GM commentator Jon Ludvig Hammer elucidated: "Carlsen makes a threat, and Anish ignores it!"
The world champion in two time controls (classical and blitz, but not rapid anymore!) had a tragic end to the day as he suffered two more defeats, to GM Alexander Grischuk in the next round and to Vachier-Lagrave in the final round 21 of the Swiss tournament.
Aronian seemed to be destined for victory after round 16. However, an incredible moment of crisis was his round 17-game against MVL. In a wild back-and-forth game where Aronian was actually winning for most of it, the Frenchman took the full point after a decisive blunder, 54...Ra1??
Still, Aronian maintained a half-point lead above GM Daniil Dubov, but suffered a train-wreck, losing the next two games to 21-year-old Armenian GM Haik Martirosyan and Russian GM Vladislav Artemiev, once called the "Chuck Norris of chess" by Grischuk.
Dubov, the recent second to Carlsen against Russian compatriot Nepomniachtchi, suddenly took off. After mysteriously forfeiting his first round of the tournament (which counted as a full loss), he started the day with a forfeit-win over Nakamura. Once the pairing between them was published, it could not be changed, even though the American blitz-phenom had withdrawn from the tournament over an hour before the game's start.
The tables turned as Dubov took the lead following a critical win against GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda in round 18. The Polish star-player, whom we will see return later, played an understandable but nevertheless losing blunder with 29.Rg1??, immediately resigning without making his next move.
In a dramatic hand-off of the top spot, Dubov switched places with Aronian, leading the tournament with 13.5/18 and the latter (at this point) tied at 13 points with Vachier-Lagrave. Dubov maintained his lead by drawing the Frenchman in round 19, but suddenly lost to the youngest 2800-player in history and the world's number-two in classical chess, Firouzja.
We had not heard as much as expected about the 18-year-old prodigy, who had back-and-forth results in the first half, but spectacularly won all of his last five games in the tournament. The win against Dubov, however, was a showstopper as the young super-grandmaster finally got his due. In the game, Dubov was under pressure, but blundered with the unfortunate 12.Ra4??, which got his rook trapped. Firouzja gave him zero chances from there.
After this game-changer, the gates to first broke wide open. There were six players tied with 14/20 going into the last round, and all six of them had chances to win the championship! They were Aronian, Dubov, Artemiev, Duda, Vachier-Lagrave, and Firouzja. Just behind, by the way, was Carlsen, with 13.5!
The Norwegian had just earned an important game, on a personal level, against Nepomniachtchi. Having a more active knight and rook against bishop and rook, he converted exceptionally, but by this point was too far from the top of the standings.
Going into the final round, commentator and GM Irina Krush expected: "Everyone should be going all-out in the final round."
Everyone should be going all-out in the final round.
—GM Irina Krush
While a victory alone would in no way earn the world title—with six players competing, this was clear by now—it could earn one of two spots in the playoff. Identically to the rapid event, the final playoff games would be settled between only the top two players with the best tiebreaks.
Inexplicably, Dubov agreed to a draw with Giri (who was on 13 points and had no chance to win) after eight moves, ending the former's chances.
Why are draw offers by agreement still allowed in tournaments like this? #RapidBlitz
— Benjamin Bok (@benjamin_bok) December 30, 2021
Meanwhile, Duda beat Artemiev, Firouzja won against Aronian, and Vachier-Lagrave managed to serve Carlsen's sixth (!) and final defeat. Finally, the players with 15/21 were Vachier-Lagrave, Duda, and Firouzja (in tiebreak order). As such, the promising young player, who had just produced a fiery comeback, was unable to compete with the other leaders in the end.
Some days you just don't have it. I was nowhere close to the level I needed to be today. Good outcome for the public though, pretty sure no chess fan wanted to see Alireza in the playoffs anyway. Good luck to Duda and MVL!
— Magnus Carlsen (@MagnusCarlsen) December 30, 2021
The Polish and French grandmasters were to play blitz games with the standard time control of 3+2. According to the tiebreak regulations, if the first two games ended in an even score, they would continue playing blitz games (ad infinitum) until one win.
Thus, the first person to win game three or onward would become the world blitz champion without a follow-up game.
Before the game started, there was a drawing of lots. Duda, selecting between two white boxes, selected one with a black pawn inside, so he would play with the black pieces.
We saw a Ruy Lopez in the first game. Despite being in some trouble in the middlegame, Duda was able to trade pieces and liquidate the position into a drawn rook endgame.
The second game featured a Queen's Gambit Accepted, which was somewhat a surprise as the Frenchman is better known to consistently play the Grunfeld with the black pieces against 1.d4. It also ended in a draw that was well-played by both sides.
In the third and decisive game, which started as another Ruy Lopez, MVL achieved a "bone-in-the-throat" bishop on c6 that paralyzed the black position, preventing the activation of both black rooks. Even despite the trade of queens, Black was never able to wriggle out.
"I really wanted to win a title this year. A few times I came close and I thought this could be a good goal for me."
— International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) December 30, 2021
Press conference with @Vachier_Lagrave: https://t.co/JS9rXLF4Mu pic.twitter.com/BQ7cMMPIPp
🏆 GM @Vachier_Lagrave has won the FIDE World Blitz Chess Championship 2021! 🎉🎉🎉 #RapidBlitz pic.twitter.com/vNSeWjaGLM
— Chess.com (@chesscom) December 30, 2021
Jan-Krzysztof Duda: "With my play here, I am extremely happy to get the silver. Somehow I am not quite satisfied with my games. I was much more satisfied with rapid but did manage to deliver at the very end." #rapidblitzhttps://t.co/itajQFRuCS
— International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) December 30, 2021
2021 World Blitz Championship | Final Standings (Top 20)
Rk. | SNo | Fed | Name | Rtg | Pts. | TB1 | TB2 | TB3 | |
1 | 8 | GM | Vachier-Lagrave Maxime | 2787 | 15 | 244 | 251.5 | 2660 | |
2 | 6 | GM | Duda Jan-Krzysztof | 2792 | 15 | 242 | 249.5 | 2640 | |
3 | 4 | GM | Firouzja Alireza | 2810 | 15 | 237 | 245.5 | 2609 | |
4 | 14 | GM | Dubov Daniil | 2749 | 14.5 | 253.5 | 262 | 2670 | |
5 | 15 | GM | Aronian Levon | 2740 | 14 | 256 | 264.5 | 2682 | |
6 | 12 | GM | Mamedyarov Shakhriyar | 2754 | 14 | 249.5 | 258.5 | 2640 | |
7 | 3 | GM | Artemiev Vladislav | 2830 | 14 | 245 | 253.5 | 2646 | |
8 | 133 | GM | Sindarov Javokhir | 2452 | 13.5 | 259 | 269.5 | 2689 | |
9 | 22 | GM | Fedoseev Vladimir | 2690 | 13.5 | 258.5 | 267 | 2674 | |
10 | 76 | GM | Oparin Grigoriy | 2580 | 13.5 | 256 | 266 | 2678 | |
11 | 19 | GM | Martirosyan Haik M. | 2707 | 13.5 | 252.5 | 262 | 2659 | |
12 | 1 | GM | Carlsen Magnus | 2892 | 13.5 | 252 | 262.5 | 2664 | |
13 | 47 | GM | Kravtsiv Martyn | 2638 | 13.5 | 250.5 | 258.5 | 2641 | |
14 | 11 | GM | Grischuk Alexander | 2757 | 13.5 | 248.5 | 257 | 2665 | |
15 | 105 | GM | Kobalia Mikhail | 2532 | 13.5 | 247.5 | 257.5 | 2677 | |
16 | 9 | GM | Giri Anish | 2778 | 13.5 | 247.5 | 256.5 | 2651 | |
17 | 30 | GM | Alekseenko Kirill | 2663 | 13 | 247 | 257 | 2619 | |
18 | 52 | GM | Vidit Santosh Gujrathi | 2628 | 13 | 238.5 | 247 | 2594 | |
19 | 20 | GM | Nihal Sarin | 2705 | 13 | 236 | 244 | 2584 | |
20 | 28 | GM | Sarana Alexey | 2672 | 13 | 234.5 | 243.5 | 2576 |
(Full final standings here.)
All World Blitz Championship Games
Concurrently, Assaubayeva downright owned the women's section, not only consolidating her half-point lead after the first day but winning almost every one of 17 games she played over two days. She is the second IM to win the women's world blitz title after Gunina did so in 2012 (back then still an IM!).
On the second day, she won five games, lost one, and drew two (including a quick last-round draw agreement with GM Nana Dzagnidze, after she had already clinched the title). Importantly, she defeated former women's rapid champion GM Humpy Koneru in round 11 to take a 1.5-point lead. By this point, commentator Krush said of the Kazakh dark horse: "[She is] looking like a boss today; she has every intention of winning this tournament."
Round 15 was a critical moment as she lost to the former women's blitz champion GM Kateryna Lagno after failing to save a defensible but difficult pawn-down endgame.
After this loss, she was paired against the pre-tournament favorite and over-2600-rated GM Aleksandra Goryachkina—with the black pieces! In a crucial moment where she had to recover emotionally from a tough loss, she not only held her own, but won after swiftly punishing the blunder 35.b3??.
Rapid and Blitz World Championship 2012 (Astana). Then she was just a spectator... pic.twitter.com/6txRFT2bfb
— Sergey Kim (@sergey_e_kim) December 30, 2021
IM Bibisara Assubayeva has clinched the FIDE World Women's Blitz Chess Championship 2021 with a round to spare! 🎉🎉🎉 pic.twitter.com/6eOUiOeqtq
— Chess.com (@chesscom) December 30, 2021
"Before the tournament, I thought taking 10th place would be good because I think I am not too strong in blitz."
— International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) December 30, 2021
And yet she went on to take the title with a round to spare! Interview with Bibisara Assaubayeva: https://t.co/c8dwpOzzIC #rapidblitz pic.twitter.com/VhKtff9NxI
2021 Women's World Blitz Championship | Final Standings (Top 20)
Rk. | SNo | Fed | Name | Rtg | Pts. | TB1 | TB2 | TB3 | |
1 | 29 | IM | Assaubayeva Bibisara | 2285 | 14 | 170 | 177.5 | 2328 | |
2 | 5 | GM | Kosteniuk Alexandra | 2475 | 12.5 | 157.5 | 164.5 | 2274 | |
3 | 6 | GM | Gunina Valentina | 2452 | 12 | 173 | 181.5 | 2332 | |
4 | 24 | IM | Shuvalova Polina | 2306 | 12 | 167.5 | 174 | 2271 | |
5 | 3 | GM | Koneru Humpy | 2483 | 11.5 | 168.5 | 176 | 2326 | |
6 | 43 | IM | Buksa Nataliya | 2199 | 11.5 | 167.5 | 173.5 | 2329 | |
7 | 11 | GM | Dzagnidze Nana | 2394 | 11.5 | 156.5 | 164 | 2193 | |
8 | 7 | GM | Goryachkina Aleksandra | 2441 | 11 | 166.5 | 174 | 2298 | |
9 | 2 | GM | Muzychuk Anna | 2509 | 11 | 161 | 168.5 | 2274 | |
10 | 1 | GM | Lagno Kateryna | 2592 | 11 | 156.5 | 163 | 2274 | |
11 | 4 | GM | Stefanova Antoaneta | 2477 | 11 | 152 | 158 | 2230 | |
12 | 9 | IM | Paehtz Elisabeth | 2412 | 11 | 148.5 | 155.5 | 2234 | |
13 | 36 | GM | Girya Olga | 2262 | 11 | 144.5 | 150.5 | 2183 | |
14 | 21 | IM | Vaishali R | 2313 | 10.5 | 168.5 | 174.5 | 2307 | |
15 | 38 | WGM | Mamedjarova Zeinab | 2250 | 10.5 | 155.5 | 162 | 2263 | |
16 | 26 | IM | Gaponenko Inna | 2292 | 10.5 | 149 | 156 | 2217 | |
17 | 10 | IM | Bodnaruk Anastasia | 2406 | 10.5 | 147 | 154 | 2195 | |
18 | 34 | IM | Kulon Klaudia | 2265 | 10.5 | 145.5 | 151.5 | 2206 | |
19 | 14 | IM | Zatonskih Anna | 2371 | 10.5 | 144 | 150.5 | 2190 | |
20 | 12 | GM | Abdumalik Zhansaya | 2380 | 10 | 170 | 174.5 | 2281 |
(Full final standings here.)
All Women's World Blitz Championship Games
Find more information on the world rapid and blitz here.
Previous reports:
- World Rapid Chess Championship Day 1: Duda, Carlsen, Jobava Share Lead
- World Rapid Chess Championship Day 2: Carlsen and Kosteniuk Surge Ahead
- World Rapid Chess Championship Day 3: Abdusattorov and Kosteniuk Crowned World Rapid Champions
- World Blitz Chess Championship Day 1: Aronian and Assaubayeva Lead