Anand-Gelfand 2012
#1
Posted 2012-May-11, 09:32
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2012-May-11, 18:58
Sure, you and I would have liked to have seen more moves, but you can't blame Gelfand for saving his fuel for one of his White games, where he has a better chance to get something in the middlegame that he can convert.
A bishop pair and an outside passed pawn are good assets, but are they enough to push for a full point at this level, with both pairs of rooks still on the board?
#4
Posted 2012-May-14, 09:05
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2012-May-15, 07:13
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2012-May-21, 17:00
JLOGIC, on 2012-May-21, 14:23, said:
Bit harsh! The commentators (Leko and Nepomniachtchi, who are no slouches) didn't see that coming either, and were recommending Qf6. It's quite a subtle trap, really - a quiet move (Qf2) in a variation which just looks lost for white. It is understandable, perhaps, that Gelfand didn't devote as much time to that variation as, in hindsight, he should have.
#11
Posted 2013-January-15, 16:48
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2013-January-25, 12:35
#13
Posted 2013-February-02, 01:16
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2013-February-02, 01:19
we can all debate the answer
ARE YOU REALLY SURE THAT IS THE Question?
#15
Posted 2013-February-02, 01:35
mike777, on 2013-February-02, 01:19, said:
we can all debate the answer
ARE YOU REALLY SURE THAT IS THE Question?
'What is the fairest Candidates format that is still compatible with the financial needs of today's players?'
George Carlin
#17
Posted 2013-February-02, 02:07
George Carlin
#19
Posted 2013-February-02, 11:14
[/quote]
After a lot of experimentation FIDE has settled on the present format whereby the world's strongest Grandmasters play a tournament to decide the challenger for the world title.The reigning world champion then plays a match with the challenger to decide the next world champion. This seems a fair format.
Comparing Anand and Carlsen, Carlsen does show a willingness to go on playing till he can squeeze out a win whereas Anand does not show the same spirit. But then Anand is 41 years old and has won the world title 5 times in different formats and has held the number one rating slot many times in the past. Carlsen is 23 years old, at present has the highest elo rating in history but has yet to win the world title. Surely this explains the motivation levels of the 2 grandmasters?
Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.
"Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly recognizes genius".
#20
Posted 2013-February-02, 13:07
zasanya, on 2013-February-02, 11:14, said:
After a lot of experimentation FIDE has settled on the present format whereby the world's strongest Grandmasters play a tournament to decide the challenger for the world title.The reigning world champion then plays a match with the challenger to decide the next world champion. This seems a fair format.
Comparing Anand and Carlsen, Carlsen does show a willingness to go on playing till he can squeeze out a win whereas Anand does not show the same spirit. But then Anand is 41 years old and has won the world title 5 times in different formats and has held the number one rating slot many times in the past. Carlsen is 23 years old, at present has the highest elo rating in history but has yet to win the world title. Surely this explains the motivation levels of the 2 grandmasters?
It is definitely better than the super short matches from last time around but I'm not sure if it's best. Anyway it seems to favour Carlsen and I'm a Carlsen fan so why not?
George Carlin