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Peter Svidler CRUSHES Ponomariov - FIDE Chess World Cup 2011 Semi-Finals


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♕ OCL SHOP: http://www.onlinechesslessons.... ARTICLE: http://www.onlinechesslessons.... http://facebook.com/chesstutor...http://twitter.com/OnlineChess... The Semi-Finals, as expected, featured an incredibly high class of chess. Svidler was able to overcome Ponomariov in game 2 of regulation time with an excellent exchange sac early on from the black side of a Grunfeld Defense. It was no surprise that Svidler played the Grunfeld, however it was strange how quickly Svidler was able to achieve an unbalanced position out of the opening because Ponomariov had undoubtedly prepared this line for this game - as by move 12 Ponomariov had used 8 minutes and Svidler had used 27 minutes. While many argue that a diversified opening repertoire yields the highest dividends, Peter Svidler has played the Grunfeld Defense with rare exception at the highest level. Svidler emerged from the opening with a bishop + pawn for a rook, however his coordinated mass of queenside pawns coupled with excellent technique disabled Ponomariov's counterplay. Svidler went on to win the game with 2 very nice tactical finesses - 42. ...c3! and 43. ...Bc5!CORRESPONDING ARTICLE WITH INTERACTIVE BOARD, OTHER GAMES, TOURNAMENT OVERVIEW AND MORE: http://www.onlinechesslessons.... THIS TAG FOR OUR LATEST ARTICLE AND VIDEO OF THE WORLD CUP: http://www.onlinechesslessons.... [Event "FIDE World Cup 2011"][Site "Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia"][Date "2011.09.13"][Round "6.2"][White "GM_Ponomariov"][Black "GM_Svidler"][Result "0-1"][WhiteElo "2764"][BlackElo "2739"][Opening "Gr�nfeld: exchange variation"][ECO "D85"][NIC "GI.04"][Time "04:31:43"][TimeControl "5400+30"]1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 Nxd5 5. e4 Nxc3 6. bxc3 Bg7 7. Qa4+ Bd78. Qa3 Nc6 9. Nf3 e5 10. Be3 exd4 11. cxd4 Qe7 12. Qxe7+ Nxe7 13. Rb1 O-O-O14. Bc4 f5 15. Ng5 fxe4 16. Nf7 Nf5 17. O-O Nxd4 18. Bxd4 Bxd4 19. Nxh8 Rxh820. Bd5 b5 21. Bxe4 c5 22. g3 a5 23. Kg2 b4 24. Bd5 Kc7 25. Bc4 Kd6 26. Rfe1a4 27. f3 Rb8 28. Re2 Bf5 29. Rd1 b3 30. axb3 axb3 31. g4 Bd7 32. Re3 b2 33.Rb3 Rxb3 34. Bxb3 Bb5 35. Ba2 Kc6 36. Rd2 Kb6 37. f4 Bc6+ 38. Kg3 Be4 39.Rd1 Kb5 40. Re1 Bd3 41. Re7 c4 42. Rd7 c3 43. Rd5+ Bc5 {Black wins} 0-1Interface: http://www.chessclub.com/from/...

Canal: Education
Subido: 16/09/11 a las 10:55 am
Autor: OnlineChessLessons

Duración: 15:25
Valoración: 4.822222
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Ultimos comentarios:
SuperShakespeare (el 21/07/12 a las 6:14 am)
thx for the comment - at the moment I am studying Grunfeld - and what could be better for this task then studying Svidlers games
IndigoBassNotes (el 22/04/12 a las 10:09 am)
After I heard ....." Its seems..." ...."and Mabey".....over and over I wondered If you looked at the game more than a quick play through before you made this video. I lost interest after the 9th " mabey...." as it seemed you were unsure of nearly everything the players were doing.
MrPeachski (el 17/09/11 a las 11:35 am)
Svidler the six-time Russian champion then agrees to a 16 move disgraceful draw with white against Grischuk today. Tal said "To play for a draw, at any rate with White, is to some degree a crime against chess."
mcpartridgeboy (el 16/09/11 a las 8:53 pm)
hello good day sir, from the spiffing location of England ! have a jolly good chess game old boy. Fantastic commentary from the americano gentleman bravo dear chap bravo !
PhrozenTiger (el 16/09/11 a las 5:09 pm)
@OnlineChessLessonsLove it when you say.. (the bishop) is just killing it XD (07:22)and all similar situations..
Emanuel Colon (el 16/09/11 a las 4:34 pm)
very good ....and you got the sound up :0]
OnlineChessLessons (el 16/09/11 a las 12:49 pm)
Thank you for your kind words and no I haven't heard of his channel, I'm currently working on a "best chess channels on youtube" article and I'll make sure to include it in there.
HardieUK (el 16/09/11 a las 12:11 pm)
Your coverage of the FIDE world cup has been excellent. Have you seen GM Simon Williams' chess channel, its called darkpheonixmedia
colourmegone (el 16/09/11 a las 11:42 am)
GM Yermolinsky on ICC suggests 13... Rc1, if now 14. O-O-O then Bf4 to provoke c6. I can't remember the entire analysis but he seemed to think Rb1 was inexact.

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