London Chess Classic Day 6 Round-Up
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10th December 2015 LONDON CHESS CLASSIC DAY 6 ROUND-UP Today saw the return of the Grand Chess Tour, with the identity of this year’s winner still very much in the balance. With 3 rounds to go, almost anyone could still win both the LCC and overall title. Anish Giri maintains his unbeaten record (both in the GCT and against Carlsen!) The first result to come in today was yet another draw in a Berlin, this time in the game between Vachier-Lagrave and Caruana. Next up drawing their encounter were Anish Giri and Magnus Carlsen, meaning the former not only remains unbeaten in all three tournaments of the Grand Chess Tour, but also undefeated by the World Champion. Nakamura and Aronian also split the point as soon as the time control was made, as there was nothing left to play for in a level rook endgame. At this stage, it looked like the two remaining games, Topalov-Adams and Grischuk-Anand, would both end in White’s favour. Indeed, Britain’s number 1 had just blundered with 32...Ne7, missing that after 33.Nb3 a fork on c5 was inevitable. However, the Bulgarian returned the favour by overlooking a fork himself, and a draw then became inevitable. In the last game of the day, Grischuk secured his first victory thanks to a nice positional game against Anand. However, by the Russian’s own admission, he wasn’t sure he was winning had Vishy played 51...d3 instead of 51…Kd3. At the end of the day though the result is all that matters, and Grischuk joins Nakamura, Giri and Vachier- Lagrave in the lead, with each having won one game and drawn the rest. Grischuk-Anand was today’s lone decisive encounter With the tournament standings remaining largely unchanged, this is a good opportunity to take a closer look at the provisional overall Tour standings. Nakamura is currently in the lead, but he is closely followed by Giri and Vachier-Lagrave. However, bearing in mind the close standings of the LCC and the fact that the tournament winner will earn 13 GCT points, a handful of players could still take home the 75,000$ cheque for the overall champion. Unlike the LCC, there is no shortage of decisive results in the FIDE Open, where there were only two draws on the first 10 boards today. After overcoming Eric Hansen with the white pieces, Benjamin Bok is now the sole leader with 7/8, but with four players trailing him by half a point, anything could still happen in tomorrow’s last round. Benjamin Bok, sole leader of the FIDE Open In other news, chess once again made primetime TV as the BBC ran a story on the daily junior events for tonight’s BBC London News. You can watch the replay on BBC’s iPlayer (starting from 15:24). You can now read John Saunders’ excellent detailed report of round 5 on the London Chess Classic website, and the one from today’s round 6 will be available soon. You can also find photo galleries of the Classic, the Junior events and other events (such as the British Knockout Championship Final and the FIDE Open) on Ray Morris-Hill’s website. All the results and tournament details are up on the LCC website, while you can download the PGN files of the games by clicking on the following links: London Chess Classic: http://pgn.londonchessclassic.com/gct/06/games.pgn FIDE Open: http://pgn.londonchessclassic.com/fide/games.pgn British Knockout Championship: http://pgn.londonchessclassic.com/bko/games.pgn All the live games will be broadcast at: http://live.londonchessclassic.com/ Fiona Steil-Antoni Press Officer Email: [email protected] Website: www.londonchessclassic.com/ Twitter: @LondonChess2015 .