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Radjabov Jumps Ahead In Geneva

Radjabov Jumps Ahead In Geneva

PeterDoggers
| 14 | Chess Event Coverage

With two rounds to go, Teimour Radjabov is yet again the sole leader at the FIDE Grand Prix in Geneva, Switzerland. On Thursday he defeated Peter Svidler, who played inaccurately early on and quickly found himself in a strategically difficult endgame. 

Radjabov is back in the lead. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

Radjabov's win brought him in a most luxurious position, since finishing with two draws will almost certainly make him joint, or even sole winner in Geneva. The round saw a small upset as Riazantsev won again, this time vs Li Chao. On board eight Eljanov bounced back with an excellent win over Salem.

Geneva Grand Prix | Round 7 Results

Bo. No. Fed Name Rtg Pt. Result Pt. Fed Name Rtg No.
1 8 Harikrishna 2737 4 ½ - ½ 4 Grischuk 2761 4
2 12 Radjabov 2724 4 1 - 0 Svidler 2749 5
3 2 Mamedyarov 2800 ½ - ½ Nepomniachtchi 2742 6
4 17 Riazantsev 2654 3 1 - 0 Li Chao 2735 10
5 3 Giri 2775 3 ½ - ½ 3 Aronian 2809 1
6 9 Adams 2736 3 ½ - ½ 3 Jakovenko 2703 14
7 16 Hou Yifan 2666 2 ½ - ½ 3 Gelfand 2728 11
8 7 Eljanov 2739 1 - 0 Salem 2638 18
9 13 Inarkiev 2707 ½ - ½ Rapport 2694 15

In his post-game interview, Teimour Radjabov revealed that he has been working a lot on his time management in recent months. ("At the top level every little detail matters.") He was getting into time trouble too often, and that needed to change.

It seems to be helping. Radjabov is putting his opponents under pressure both on the board and on the clock, in Geneva.

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Radjabov scored his third win in the tournament vs Svidler. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

His win over Peter Svidler was also a psychological success. "My opening choice was quite clever, even though it looks strange," Radjabov said. "I was just hoping to get some kind of slight press, with the positions that Peter doesn't really like to play. I think when I played 6.dxc3 his mood was already very much down."

It was an endgame that looks harmless indeed, but more importantly, there are almost no chances for Black to create dynamics. Maybe that's why both Ulf Andersson and Anthony Miles tried it more than once, as White.

Today, Radjabov showed what happens when Black isn't careful.

FIDE Press Officer Goran Urosevic spoke with Teimour Radjabov after the game.

After two consecutive losses. Pavel Eljanov is back in business. He defeated Salem Saleh, whose Benoni failed in a standard way: the typical e4-e5 break came at a moment when it was more or less decisive.

"17...h5 was a mistake," Eljanov said, after analysing for quite a while with his opponent. "After 18.h4 I have a very clear plan and also, Black's king is weak."

The alternative for Salem was a plan with both ...g5 and ...f5. "I liked my position but I wasn't totally sure what's going on," said Eljanov.

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Eljanov and Salem analysing their game. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

Eljanov was of course feeling good after this game. "I was quite dissatisfied with the quality of my play in the previous rounds. I just tried to play a normal game. Today I played OK at least."

WGM Anna Burtasova spoke with Pavel Eljanov after the game.

In the previous round Alexander Riazantsev scored his first win in the whole Grand Prix series, and the very next day he won again. Well prepared for Li Chao's Schlechter System, Riazantsev got both the bishop pair and pressure on an isolated queen's pawn. What more to wish for?

Li Chao managed to limit the damage as he reached an endgame with rooks and opposite-colored bishops, but White was still better thanks to the pressure on f7. Riazantsev traded the bishops, but the rook endgame and even the queen endgame was drawn—theoretically.

In this game, Riazantsev's perseverance paid off.

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Riazantsev won his second game in a row. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

The other games ended in draws. Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and Ian Nepomniachtchi split the point after a spectacular queen sacrifice that led to a perpetual check. Nepomniachtchi: "I thought: if I lose after 26.Qxd5 at least it's not some boring game!"

FIDE Press Officer Goran Urosevic spoke with the players after the game.

Geneva Grand Prix | Round 7 Standings

Rk SNo Fed Name Rtg Perf Pts
1 12 Radjabov, Teimour 2724 2926 5
2-3 4 Grischuk, Alexander 2761 2837 4,5
2-3 8 Harikrishna, Pentala 2737 2848 4,5
4-6 2 Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar 2800 2783 4
4-6 6 Nepomniachtchi, Ian 2742 2774 4
4-6 17 Riazantsev, Alexander 2654 2757 4
7-14 1 Aronian, Levon 2809 2741 3,5
7-14 3 Giri, Anish 2775 2713 3,5
7-14 5 Svidler, Peter 2749 2748 3,5
7-14 7 Eljanov, Pavel 2739 2724 3,5
7-14 9 Adams, Michael 2736 2722 3,5
7-14 10 Li Chao 2735 2737 3,5
7-14 11 Gelfand, Boris 2728 2738 3,5
7-14 14 Jakovenko, Dmitry 2703 2746 3,5
15 13 Inarkiev, Ernesto 2707 2658 3
16 16 Hou Yifan 2666 2599 2,5
17 15 Rapport, Richard 2694 2537 2
18 18 Salem, Saleh 2638 2485 1,5

Round eight, on Friday, has these pairings: Radjabov-Riazantsev, Grischuk-Mamedyarov, Li Chao-Harikrishna, Nepomniachtchi-Aronian, Gelfand-Eljanov, Jakovenko-Inarkiev,  Hou Yifan-Giri, Rapport-Adams, and Salem-Svidler.

The Geneva Grand Prix takes place July 6-15 in the Hotel Le Richemond in Geneva. The prize fund is €130,000 / $148,520. The time control is 100 minutes for the first 40 moves, 50 minutes for the next 20 moves and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game plus an additional 30 seconds per move starting from move 1.


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PeterDoggers
Peter Doggers

Peter Doggers joined a chess club a month before turning 15 and still plays for it. He used to be an active tournament player and holds two IM norms. Peter has a Master of Arts degree in Dutch Language & Literature. He briefly worked at New in Chess, then as a Dutch teacher and then in a project for improving safety and security in Amsterdam schools. Between 2007 and 2013 Peter was running ChessVibes, a major source for chess news and videos acquired by Chess.com in October 2013. As our Director News & Events, Peter writes many of our news reports. In the summer of 2022, The Guardian’s Leonard Barden described him as “widely regarded as the world’s best chess journalist.”

Peter's first book The Chess Revolution is out now!

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