Malcolm Pein on…Vachier-Lagrave’s Path to the Final

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Malcolm Pein’s Daily Telegraph chess column focuses on a very tough semi-final match featuring World Champion Magnus Carlsen and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave.

The games were certainly very lively and the players were clearly not interested in playing for draws!

Malcolm Pein on…Vachier-Lagrave’s Path to the Final

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave reached the final of the Chess.com Speed Chess Championship, as he eliminated the world champion Magnus Carlsen in the semifinals. Carlsen had won the competition in 2016 and 2017, but did not participate in 2018 and 2019 when Hikaru Nakamura took top honours.

Each match in the competition is a three-hour battle with games played with progressively faster time limits. MVL has always troubled Carlsen at speed chess and he had the edge after the opening 90 minutes of Blitz played with five minutes on the clock and a one-second increment, as he took the eight games completed by the smallest possible margin, despite losing the first two.

There were also eight games played in an hour of 3+1 Blitz. Carlsen was White in the first game, which was a draw, after which all games were won by White as MVL again emerged slightly ahead and led 9-7 going into the concluding 30 minutes of 1+1 Bullet. MVL won the first two and kept this nose in front to win 13-11 overall and he takes on Hikaru Nakamura who narrowly defeated Wesley So in the other semifinal.

M. Carlsen – M. Vachier-Lagrave
Gruenfeld Defence
3+1

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.Nf3 Bg7 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Qa4+ Nc6 7.e4 Nb6 8.Qc2 0–0 (8…Nxd4 9.Nxd4 Qxd4 10.Nb5 or 9…Bxd4 10.Nb5 or 10.Bh6 looks risky) 9.d5 Nb4 10.Qb3 a5 11.a3 Na6 12.Bg5 Nc5 13.Qc2 a4 (13…Bxc3+ 14.bxc3 f5 would be risky in Blitz) 14.Rd1! Bg4 15.Be2 Nb3 16.Be3 Bxf3 17.gxf3 Qd7 18.h4 e5 (18…c5!) 19.Nb5 Rac8 20.h5 f5? 21.hxg6 hxg6 22.exf5 gxf5 23.d6! cxd6 24.Qd3 Nc4

Test Your Strength

Magnus Carlsen - Maxime Vachier-Lagrave Path to the Final

White to play and win
The answer is at the end the post

This batty sequence may have put the champ on tilt. Carlsen’s 42…Qd3-f5 has just appeared on the board, winning MVL’s knight and, one would think, the game – but no.

Vachier-Lagrave's Path to the Final

43.f4 Qe4+ (43…f6 is simpler) 44.Kh3 Ne3? (44…Qf5!) 45.Qc6! (Now it’s a draw) 46…Qb1 46.Qf3 (Pretty much any sensible move is equal, Carlsen found) 46…Qg6?? 47.Nxg6 1-0

Highlight the space below the text to reveal the answer – and a defeat which ultimately did not derail Vachier-Lagrave’s path to the final.

25.Qxc4+ Rxc4 26.Bxc4+ Rf7 27.Nxd6 1–0

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