Reseña del torneo semanal de Chess Brothers S4T7 "Instructivo" | Chess Brothers weekly tournament review S4T7 "Instructive"
ES
Reseña del torneo semanal de Chess Brothers S4T7 "Instructivo"
La ronda siete de la liga fue jugada y lo más resaltante de esta fue la participación de los trebejistas, bastante reducida en comparación con los torneos anteriores. Quizá la mayoría de jugadores se encontraban celebrando/conmemorando el Día del padre, que es una festividad común en muchos países. Con todo, 13 ajedrecistas estuvieron presentes, siendo el rating promedio de 1984 puntos, lo cual nos indica que el nivel se mantuvo a la altura acostumbrada.
En total, 47 partidas fueron disputadas en este torneo arena de control de tiempo 3+1. Nuevamente un ritmo bastante movido en el que ese segundo de incremento no suele ser suficiente, pero es mejor que nada y ello agudiza las tensiones.
Noticias de ajedrez
En cuanto al panorama internacional, el Torneo de candidatos ha arrancado y con ello la cuenta regresiva para conocer el nuevo retador por el campeonato del mundo. En este round-robin de doble vuelta, 14 rondas serán las que se disputarán, por lo que tendremos todo un mes lleno de adrenalina sobre las 64 casillas.
Al momento de editar estas líneas, 7 rondas han sido completadas y el jugador ruso Ian Nepomniachtchi ha emergido como el líder solitario con 5.5 puntos, aunque seguido muy de cerca por el norteamericano Fabiano Caruana, quien acumula 5 puntos. Parece que ambos están pisándose los talones, forzándose el uno al otro a mantener el ritmo y ganar.
Tabla de posiciones del Torneo de candidatos tras siete rondas. Imagen: Chessbase.com
Muchos habían sido los pronósticos y los vaticinios, pero una de las más grandes sorpresas sin lugar a dudas ha sido la caída del chino Ding Liren ante el subcampeón del mundo Ian Nepomniachtchi (mejor conocido como "Nepo"), quien condujo las piezas negras en su encuentro en la primera ronda.
Análisis de la partida Ding Liren vs Ian Nepomniachtchi por parte del GM Pepe Cuenca con su estilo característico. Vídeo: Chess24 en español
Es una sorpresa, por cuanto Ding es el segundo jugador en el ranking internacional, lo que lo hace un favorito. Él tiene la fama de "no perder", pues su increíble fortaleza lo hace un hueso duro de roer, por lo que siempre es un formidable candidato. Además, Ding Liren, junto con Caruana, es unos de los favoritos del propio Carlsen, considerado "de primer nivel" por él. Es interesante que para Carlsen, tanto Nepo como Alireza son jugadores de "segundo nivel" para ganar este evento, mientras que todos los demás, de "tercer nivel". Expresó el campeón que prácticamente no puede imaginarlos ganando el torneo. ¡Vaya honestidad!
La verdad es que nos toma un poco por sorpresa a los aficionados del ajedrez el excelente rendimiento de Nepo, tomando en cuenta el escandaloso y desastroso match del campeonato mundial que tuvo el pasado noviembre. Muchos habían bajado las expectativas por el ruso, pero este, con grandes ánimos y ganas de revancha, dio el primer golpe ante Ding Liren (China), luego a Firouzja (Francia), luego a Duda (Polonia) y más recientemente a Rapport (Hungría), teniendo la hazaña de incluso ganar dos partidas con piezas negras. La verdad es que Ian se ve muy bien armado y puede que se deba a los dividendos de su preparación para el mencionado match.
Ian Nepomniachtchi, el exretador al campeón mundial, contemplando de pie su ventajosa posición contra Duda Jan-Krzysztof en la ronda seis. Imagen: Chessbase.com
Una cosa es segura y es que el torneo apenas ha llegado a la mitad, por lo que todavía es difícil sacar más que conclusiones provisorias. La fuerza de todos los jugadores en este importante evento es descomunal y cualquier cosa puede suceder aún. Seguiremos muy de cerca las rondas y veremos quien se alza con el triunfo. ¿Será que Nepo conseguirá su revancha? Ya veremos.
Los resultados
Volviendo al ajedrez de Hive...
El jugador @eniolw (milignus en Lichess) se las arregló para imponerse una vez más al cristalizar 19 sólidos puntos tras más de una hora de juego. Le siguió @rosmarly, quien viene haciendo una extraordinaria actuación en esta liga y en los demás torneos en Hive. Consagró la medalla de plata con 11 puntos. Cierra el podio @fcastro177, quien se mantiene bastante consistente, logrando el bronce que le permite conservar su presencia en los primeros puestos de la clasificación general.
A continuación los resultados del torneo:
Standings finales (Lichess)
Y aquí la tabla de posiciones de la temporada hasta los momentos:
Pos | Lichess | Hive | Rating | Puntos | Núm-torneos | Performance |
1 | milignus | @eniolw | 2473 | 102 | 6 | 2326,33 |
2 | vjap55 | @vjap55 | 2126 | 91 | 6 | 2066,17 |
3 | FCastro17 | @fcastro177 | 2101 | 90 | 7 | 2058,57 |
4(+1) | rosmarly | @rosmarly | 2032 | 85 | 7 | 1994,71 |
5(-1) | emichessmaster | @emic | 2089 | 80 | 7 | 2029,14 |
6 | stayoutoftherz | @stayoutoftherz | 2106 | 74 | 7 | 1946,71 |
7 | Pavarotty | @lucianosky | 2270 | 63 | 4 | 1997,25 |
8 | pereu4uwatch | @pereu4ivatel | 2088 | 59 | 5 | 2061,8 |
9(+1) | realdeadleaf | @deadleaf | 2048 | 51 | 5 | 1955,8 |
10(-1) | lighteye | @lighteye | 1760 | 46 | 7 | 1685,0 |
11 | Tz995 | 2147 | 43 | 4 | 1934,0 | |
12 | jaki01 | @jaki01 | 2297 | 40 | 3 | 2159,0 |
13(+1) | pamboy27 | @pamboy27 | 2101 | 34 | 3 | 2015,33 |
14(-1) | ZGM_Samostically | @samostically | 1800 | 28 | 2 | 1990,0 |
15(+1) | HerbyW | @schamangerbert | 1771 | 27 | 4 | 1747,25 |
16(+2) | agreste | @agreste | 1813 | 27 | 5 | 1698,0 |
17(-2) | Kreur | 1793 | 26 | 2 | 2063,0 | |
18(-1) | rodrook | @rodrook | 1355 | 26 | 7 | 1517,29 |
19(+2) | howarth2 | 1762 | 24 | 3 | 1908,67 | |
20(-1) | stranger27 | @stranger27 | 1793 | 24 | 5 | 1584,2 |
21(-1) | falcout | @falcout | 1475 | 21 | 4 | 1231,75 |
22 | vasyam | 2117 | 19 | 1 | 2336,0 | |
23 | orfischer | 2060 | 18 | 1 | 2477,0 | |
24 | Levolev | 2052 | 18 | 1 | 2214,0 | |
25 | AntonyWasHere | 2274 | 14 | 4 | 1470,75 | |
26 | Toxo1982 | 1692 | 13 | 1 | 1790,0 | |
27 | BolshakovA | 1935 | 11 | 1 | 2016,0 | |
28 | MYtens | 2165 | 11 | 1 | 1993,0 | |
29 | emadam | 1973 | 11 | 2 | 1793,0 | |
30 | pravesh007 | @pravesh0 | 1585 | 10 | 1 | 1593,0 |
31 | KabetoDisk | 2087 | 9 | 1 | 1975,0 | |
32 | Polancote | 1517 | 8 | 4 | 1636,0 | |
33 | Myownbussiness | 1551 | 7 | 1 | 1711,0 | |
34 | fiona777 | @fiona777 | 1471 | 7 | 4 | 1337,0 |
35 | Abrazumov | 2011 | 5 | 1 | 1796,0 | |
36 | Bobzy | 2015 | 4 | 1 | 1646,0 | |
37 | nachit0_we | 1490 | 3 | 1 | 1469,0 | |
38 | Jonbellionfan | @kintokris | 2128 | 2 | 2 | 1442,5 |
39 | Gjqvbyjdf-123 | 1916 | 2 | 1 | 1385,0 | |
40 | Kirill_Agaf2008 | 1763 | 1 | 1 | 1480,0 | |
41 | ESPINOZA_STEFANY_3A | 1174 | 1 | 1 | 1383,0 | |
42 | aluxinogenox | 2042 | 0 | 1 | 1797,0 | |
43 | jose014 | 1569 | 0 | 2 | 1796,0 | |
44 | PERMISI | 1971 | 0 | 1 | 1735,0 | |
45 | hilde | 2095 | 0 | 1 | 1713,0 | |
46 | Utamapametula | 1817 | 0 | 1 | 1643,0 | |
47 | vadulchik | 1846 | 0 | 1 | 1492,0 | |
48 | chrissdulceyxd | 2131 | 0 | 2 | 1172,0 | |
49 | Wildthougts | @wildthougts | 1728 | 0 | 1 | 0,0 |
(Si eres un hiver y estás participando, pero tu nombre de hive no aparece aquí, significa que no estás inscrito. Debes dejarnos un comentario indicando que deseas ser inscrito)
Giros inesperados
@schamangerbert vs @rosmarly: Las blancas están mejor, pero con su última jugada de pronto darán sentido a la posición negra.
Las blancas están a punto de firmar el resultado positivo a su favor. Analizando las fuerzas que operan en el tablero, vemos que las negras parecen tener un grado decente de actividad contra el monarca blanco: tienen un excelente alfil que domina la importante diagonal blanca y sus piezas pesadas trabajan en perfecta armonía. Sin embargo, la formación blanca es lo suficientemente sólida para soportar el contrajuego negro. Peor aún, cuentan con ventaja material y no está claro cómo las negras invadirán el castillo de las blancas.
Pero extrañamente, tras el forcejeo, las blancas colapsan y se "autodestruyen" con la inesperada 51. h4?? De esta manera, toda la posición se derrumba y las negras proceden con gran fuerza, dando jaque mate en pocas jugadas. Qué lamentable.
Veamos otro caso:
@fcastro177 vs @agreste: Una posición de acertijo: Juegan blancas y mantienen la ventaja.
Este es un final súperinstructivo en el que claramente las negras persistieron en defender una posición desesperanzadora desde el medio juego. El segundo jugador se las ha arreglado para extender el juego con calidad de menos. En el diagrama se ve que las blancas deben tomar una decisión vital o, de lo contrario, el negro impondrá su pareja de alfiles y el peón c, el cual está a punto de convertirse en dama. Defender la amenaza sobre b3 es imposible por medios obvios, pero las blancas contaban con el recurso salvador 37. Ad1! y el peón de b3 es intocable por causa del potencial jaque con Te2+, un recurso muy bonito, pero a menudo difícil de ver en este punto de la partida.
Las blancas, no obstante, pasaron por alto esta continuación y con ello tuvieron que inclinar su rey un par de jugadas más tarde al jugar 37. Ta2?? que lamentablemente cede el peón b y el peón c debe llegar a home decisivamente.
Agradecimientos y palabras finales
Como siempre, agradecemos mucho a todos los jugadores que atienden a la cita dominical sobre el tablero de ajedrez con nosotros. También agradecemos a todas las personas que apoyan estas iniciativas y contenidos deportivos en la blockchain, tales como los amigos de la Chess Community y los curadores de @fulldeportes.
Este domingo 26 continuamos con las actividades y como siempre estamos a la expectativa de nuevas interesantes partidas. ¡Nos vemos!
Resultados y campeones de la Liga de Ajedrez Chess Brothers
👑 Temporada 3 'Sacrificio maestro': @eniolw
👑 Temporada 2 'Gens una sumus': @tungphong
👑 Temporada 1 Inauguración: @tungphong
Notas:
- A menos que se haya dicho otra cosa, los materiales tales como imágenes y vídeos en este post son de @ChessBrothersPro.
Para aprender más, visita este post así como también nuestro sitio oficial en la red
www.chessbrothers.com
EN
Chess Brothers weekly tournament review S4T7 "Instructive"
Round seven of the league was played and the highlight of it was the participation of the players, quite reduced compared to previous tournaments. Perhaps most players were celebrating/commemorating Father's Day, which is a common holiday in many countries. Nevertheless, 13 players were present, with an average rating of 1984 points, which indicates that the level was maintained at the usual standard.
In total, 47 games were played in this arena tournament of 3+1 time control. Once again, it was a rather hectic pace in which that extra second is often not enough, but it is better than nothing, and that sharpens the tension.
Chess news
As for the international scene, the Candidates Tournament has started and with it the countdown to meet the new challenger for the world championship. In this double-round round-robin, 14 rounds will be played, so we will have a whole month full of adrenaline on the 64 squares.
As of this writing, seven rounds have been completed and the Russian player Ian Nepomniachtchi has emerged as the lone leader with 5.5 points, although closely followed by the American Fabiano Caruana, who accumulates 5 points. The two seem to be on each other's heels, forcing each other to keep up the pace and win.
Candidates Tournament Standings after 7 rounds. Image: Chessbase.com
Many had been the predictions and omens, but undoubtedly one of the biggest surprises so far has been the fall the Chinese Ding Liren to world runner-up Ian Nepomniachtchi (AKA "Nepo"), who led the black pieces in their first round encounter.
Analysis of the game Ding Liren vs Ian Nepomniachtchi from the first round by GM Daniel King. Video: Power Play Chess
It is a surprise because Ding is the second player in the international ranking, which makes him a favorite He has the reputation of "not losing", because his incredible strength makes him a tough nut to crack, so he is always a formidable candidate. In addition, Ding Liren, along with Caruana, is one of Carlsen's own favorites, considered "first tier" by him. It is interesting that for Carlsen, both Nepo and Alireza are "second tier" players to win this event, while all the others, "third tier". Expressed the champion that practically he can't imagine them winning the tournament. What an honesty!
The truth is that Nepo's excellent performance comes as a bit of a surprise to chess fans, given the scandalous and disastrous world championship match he had back in November. Many had lowered their expectations for the Russian, but he, in high spirits and eager for revenge, struck the first blow against Ding Liren (China), then Firouzja (France), then Duda (Poland) and most recently Rapport (Hungary), having the feat of even winning two games with the black pieces. The truth is that Ian looks very well armed and it may be due to the dividends of his preparation for the mentioned match.
Ian Nepomniachtchi, former world champion challenger, standing while contemplating his advantageous position against Duda Jan-Krzysztof in round 6. Image: Chessbase.com
One thing is for sure and that is that the tournament is barely halfway through, so it is still difficult to draw more than tentative conclusions. The strength of all the players in this important event is enormous and anything can still happen. We will follow the rounds very closely and see who wins. Will Nepo get his rematch? We'll see.
The results
Coming back to chess in Hive...
The player @eniolw (AKA milignus on Lichess) managed to prevail once again by scoring 19 solid points after more than an hour of play. He was followed by @rosmarly, who has been performing extraordinarily well in this league and the other tournaments in Hive. She won the silver medal with 11 points. Closes the podium @fcastro177, who remains quite consistent, achieving the bronze that allows him to maintain his presence at the top of the overall standings.
The following are the results of the tournament:
Final Standings (Lichess)
And here is the season's leaderboard so far:
Rank | Lichess | Hive | Rating | Points | Rounds played | Performance |
1 | milignus | @eniolw | 2473 | 102 | 6 | 2326.33 |
2 | vjap55 | @vjap55 | 2126 | 91 | 6 | 2066.17 |
3 | FCastro17 | @fcastro177 | 2101 | 90 | 7 | 2058.57 |
4(+1) | rosmarly | @rosmarly | 2032 | 85 | 7 | 1994.71 |
5(-1) | emichessmaster | @emic | 2089 | 80 | 7 | 2029.14 |
6 | stayoutoftherz | @stayoutoftherz | 2106 | 74 | 7 | 1946.71 |
7 | Pavarotty | @lucianosky | 2270 | 63 | 4 | 1997.25 |
8 | pereu4uwatch | @pereu4ivatel | 2088 | 59 | 5 | 2061.8 |
9(+1) | realdeadleaf | @deadleaf | 2048 | 51 | 5 | 1955.8 |
10(-1) | lighteye | @lighteye | 1760 | 46 | 7 | 1685.0 |
11 | Tz995 | 2147 | 43 | 4 | 1934.0 | |
12 | jaki01 | @jaki01 | 2297 | 40 | 3 | 2159.0 |
13(+1) | pamboy27 | @pamboy27 | 2101 | 34 | 3 | 2015.33 |
14(-1) | ZGM_Samostically | @samostically | 1800 | 28 | 2 | 1990.0 |
15(+1) | HerbyW | @schamangerbert | 1771 | 27 | 4 | 1747.25 |
16(+2) | agreste | @agreste | 1813 | 27 | 5 | 1698.0 |
17(-2) | Kreur | 1793 | 26 | 2 | 2063.0 | |
18(-1) | rodrook | @rodrook | 1355 | 26 | 7 | 1517.29 |
19(+2) | howarth2 | 1762 | 24 | 3 | 1908.67 | |
20(-1) | stranger27 | @stranger27 | 1793 | 24 | 5 | 1584.2 |
21(-1) | falcout | @falcout | 1475 | 21 | 4 | 1231.75 |
22 | vasyam | 2117 | 19 | 1 | 2336.0 | |
23 | orfischer | 2060 | 18 | 1 | 2477.0 | |
24 | Levolev | 2052 | 18 | 1 | 2214.0 | |
25 | AntonyWasHere | 2274 | 14 | 4 | 1470.75 | |
26 | Toxo1982 | 1692 | 13 | 1 | 1790.0 | |
27 | BolshakovA | 1935 | 11 | 1 | 2016.0 | |
28 | MYtens | 2165 | 11 | 1 | 1993.0 | |
29 | emadam | 1973 | 11 | 2 | 1793.0 | |
30 | pravesh007 | @pravesh0 | 1585 | 10 | 1 | 1593.0 |
31 | KabetoDisk | 2087 | 9 | 1 | 1975.0 | |
32 | Polancote | 1517 | 8 | 4 | 1636.0 | |
33 | Myownbussiness | 1551 | 7 | 1 | 1711.0 | |
34 | fiona777 | @fiona777 | 1471 | 7 | 4 | 1337.0 |
35 | Abrazumov | 2011 | 5 | 1 | 1796.0 | |
36 | Bobzy | 2015 | 4 | 1 | 1646.0 | |
37 | nachit0_we | 1490 | 3 | 1 | 1469.0 | |
38 | Jonbellionfan | @kintokris | 2128 | 2 | 2 | 1442.5 |
39 | Gjqvbyjdf-123 | 1916 | 2 | 1 | 1385.0 | |
40 | Kirill_Agaf2008 | 1763 | 1 | 1 | 1480.0 | |
41 | ESPINOZA_STEFANY_3A | 1174 | 1 | 1 | 1383.0 | |
42 | aluxinogenox | 2042 | 0 | 1 | 1797.0 | |
43 | jose014 | 1569 | 0 | 2 | 1796.0 | |
44 | PERMISI | 1971 | 0 | 1 | 1735.0 | |
45 | hilde | 2095 | 0 | 1 | 1713.0 | |
46 | Utamapametula | 1817 | 0 | 1 | 1643.0 | |
47 | vadulchik | 1846 | 0 | 1 | 1492.0 | |
48 | chrissdulceyxd | 2131 | 0 | 2 | 1172.0 | |
49 | Wildthougts | @wildthougts | 1728 | 0 | 1 | 0.0 |
(If you are a hiver and you are participating, but your hive name does not appear here, it means that you are not registered. You must leave us a comment indicating that you wish to be registered)
Unexpected twists and turns
@schamangerbert vs @rosmarly: White is better off, but with his last move he will give meaning to the black position.
White is about to sign the positive result in his favor. Analyzing the forces operating on the board, we see that Black seems to have a decent degree of activity against the white monarch: he has an excellent bishop dominating the important white diagonal and his heavy pieces work in perfect harmony. However, the white formation is solid enough to withstand black counterplay. Even worse, they have a material advantage and it is not clear how Black will invade White's castle.
But strangely, after the struggle, White collapses and "self-destructs" with the unexpected 51. h4?? Thus the whole position collapses and Black proceeds with great force, giving checkmate in a few moves. How unfortunate.
@fcastro177 vs @agreste: A puzzle position: White plays and keeps the advantage.
This is a super-instructive endgame in which Black clearly persisted in defending a hopeless position from the middlegame. The second player has managed to extend the game despite being the exchange down. In the diagram you can see that White must make a vital decision or else Black will impose his bishop pair and the c-pawn, which is about to become a queen. Defending the threat on b3 is impossible by obvious means, but White counted on the saving resource 37. Bd1! and the b3-pawn is untouchable because of the potential check Re2+, a very nice resource but often difficult to see at this point in the game.
White instead overlooked this continuation and thus had to tilt his king a couple of moves later by playing 37. Ra2?? which unfortunately gives up the b-pawn and the c-pawn must come home decisively.
Acknowledgments and final words
As always, we are very grateful to all the players who attend the Sunday appointment on the chessboard with us. We also thank all the people who support these initiatives and sports content on the blockchain, such as the friends of the Chess Community and the curators of @fulldeportes.
This Sunday 26th we continue with the activities and as always we are looking forward to new interesting games. See you!
Results and Champions of the Chess Brothers League
👑 Season 3 'Master Sacrifice': @eniolw
👑 Season 2 'Gens una sumus': @tungphong
👑 Season 1 Inauguration: @tungphong
Notes:
- Unless otherwise stated, materials such as images and videos in this post are from @ChessBrothersPro.
To learn more, visit this post as well as our official website
www.chessbrothers.com
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