Lessons to be learned from Tata Steel Chess (Part 2)
Beginners at chess often think that grandmasters are infallible. But they are not. Even grandmasters of chess make mistakes. Even the world champion can miss the winning move. If there is one thing to be learned from the last seven rounds of the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2017, it is that making mistakes is part of the game.
In the blog post about the first six rounds of the prestigious tournament in Wijk
Tata Steel Masters
Round 7 was probably the decisive round of the tournament. In this round, Pavel Eljanov spoiled a winning position against leader Wesley So.
Carlsen, Magnus - Giri, Anish
Carlsen checked the king with his bishop and threatened the rook at the same time: a double attack. He had planned this move way in advance and did not take the time to consider other possible moves when it was his turn. It took him only a few seconds to move his bishop! Had he taken more time to think, he would surely have spotted the stronger continuation: by checking the king with the rook (see green arrow), White forces the black king to step forward.
Black would rather not interpose his knight or rook. White can take and Black
A double attack on king and queen! Black could take the rook with his queen, but White's bishop would recapture. White would have the material advantage of a rook and two pawns!
Back to the first move:
Once the Black king is forced to step forward, it is time for the other white rook to help. Do you remember the Lawn Mower Mate I discussed in my previous blog post? If Carlsen had only read that! With the 8th row guarded by a
The black king has to step forward again and White can checkmate. Do you see how?
Well done! The rook on rank 8 checks the king and creates
An interesting detail is that during the World Champion Match, Carlsen did manage to spot a similar mating plan. In the decisive game for the title, he sacrificed his queen (for Dutch readers, see: Wat
It is very rare for a top chess player to miss a simple winning move (read Blunders door
Grandmaster games usually take long and are decided in the middle game or endgame. However, in his game against Levon Aronian, Sergey
Karjakin, Sergey - Aronian, Levon
Black has played the pawn that stood between his king and his bishop. This leaves the bishop undefended. Fortunately, White cannot immediately take the bishop. That's why White moves up the pawn in front of the queen. If Black takes it with his own pawn, White's rook can capture the bishop. Black's pawn is pinned. It is not obliged to capture the pawn, so the game is still wide open.
White could have benefited from the undefended bishop in another way. How? By pushing another pawn (green arrow). This pawn threatens the knight. If the knight flees, it becomes clear why this is a smart move:
With the knight gone, White can attack the light-squared bishop by moving up the pawn once more:
It's a discovered attack! The light-squared bishop is under attack and White will be able to capture the other bishop in the next move. If Black's bishop takes the pawn, White's bishop will capture the light-squared bishop:
Black could choose to take the white bishop now and capture the pawn
Black has to get out of check and White's pawn takes the bishop.
In round 8, Carlsen suffered a surprising loss to Hungarian Richard Rapport. Maybe he was still lamenting his missed chances in the previous game and got distracted. Rapport ended
Wesley So had a series of four
So, Wesley - Wojtaszek, Radoslaw
The bishop threatens the knight, but that does not worry So. On the contrary, he decides to attack the bishop with his rook, almost forcing the knight to capture:
Why's that? Look at White's passed pawn on the 7th rank. So wants this pawn to reach the other side of the board for promotion. This is more important that fretting over his knight. If Black takes the knight, the White rook comes to the aid of the pawn:
Black's rook cannot take the pawn, for that would put his king in check. White has pinned the rook to the king! If the rook takes the White rook, the pawn will take back and promote to a queen at the same time! Black cannot defend his rook and will lose it.
That's why Wojtaszek chose to retreat his bishop. In doing so, he created an x-ray defense of the square on the 8th row that the White rook is eyeing.
Surprise! So moved his rook there anyway:
The rook has one defender and two attackers. Black took first the rook and then the pawn. He gained 1 point and got rid of the nasty passed pawn. Did So make a mistake?
Nope. It's all part of his plan! You see, White has another passed pawn that he can use. He moved this pawn and Black resigned. Do you see what will happen in the next moves? The White knight will join the pawn (green arrow). Black will lose his bishop to a pawn. White will be a knight up and that secures the win for chess players at this level!
Round 11 put the excitement back in the tournament. 17-year old Wei Yi from China,
At the start of round 13, four players could still win the tournament. But So easily won his final round game against Ian Nepomniachtchi and secured the Tata Steel Chess 2017 title. Both Wei Yi and Aronian lost their game.
This is the final ranking:
Wesley So is now the third strongest chess player in the world. He has an unbeaten string of 56 games and won top tournaments in Saint Louis, London, as well as the chess Olympiad in Baku as part of the American team. In this video, So talks about his tournament in Wijk
Tata Steel Challengers
After round 8,
Xiong, Jeffery - Jones, Gawain
Things look gloomy for Black. White is
and Xiong's queen takes the rook. Checkmate! Note: taking the rook with the pawn would have created a stalemate
Oops!
Stalemate traps come in handy as a method to draw the game in a losing position. When the board is nearly empty,
Xiong, Jeffery - Jones, Gawain
Even when your king still has freedom of action, you can use a stalemate trap (see the lesson Stalemate traps (2), Knight Level). This is pretty to hard spot, even for a grandmaster! Black could have moved the rook to the left corner:
If white takes, it is a stalemate situation. And if White's rook moves away, Black can capture an important pawn!
Xiong won again in round 10 and joined
Jones, Gawain - Dobrov, Vladimir
Jones sacrifices his rook by taking the bishop.
The idea is to seduce the king into taking the rook,
for this creates the opportunity
Another important aspect of the position (second diagram) is this one: Black's rook cannot take the knight because it is pinned to a mating square. If the rook takes the knight, White's queen gives checkmate by following the green arrow.
Dobrov captured none of the white
White used the same trick again. He sacrificed his rook by taking a pawn and thus checking the king:
If the king captures the rook, White can once more create a knight fork (green arrow). That's why the Black king fled to the corner. White now used his rook to threaten the queen:
Not only should Black defend his queen, there is also a mating threat (green arrow). A double attack on a piece and a mating square! Black resigned.
In round 12, Xiong couldn't pull a stunt and lost. Jones and
The final ranking of the Challenger Group:
Beautiful tournament
Both groups of the tournament had a very exciting conclusion. The Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2017 was a great event for chess lovers! This year's edition paid a lot of attention to children, to which Chessity - as an official partner of the tournament - happily contributed. Kids are important to the future of chess
Next year will bring Tata Steel Chess' 80th edition. You can jot down January 2018 in your agenda for a lot of fun chess activities, for this anniversary edition promises to be a very special one! If you want to stay in Tata Steel Chess mood, you should watch the entertaining video's made by the tournament's press team (check out their YouTube channel for more):
Chess rocks!