Campeonato del Mundo 2014 en Sochi
Partida 5: tablas
Anna Burtasova entrevistando a Alexandra Kosteniuk
¿Y la gente de la prensa, qué hace? ¡Pues jugar al ajedrez, cuando pueden!
Anastasya Karlovich, la jefa de prensa frente al tablero
Eteri Kublashvili
Elmira Mirzoeva, Mark Glukhovsky, Anastasya Karlovich
El reportero alemán de Zeit
La prensa rusa y alemana
La partida con comentarios de Alejandro Ramírez (en inglés)
[Event "WCh 2014"] [Site "Sochi RUS"] [Date "2014.11.14"] [Round "5"] [White "Anand, V."] [Black "Carlsen, M."] [Result "1/2-1/2"] [ECO "E15"] [WhiteElo "2792"] [BlackElo "2863"] [Annotator "Ramirez Alvarez,Alejandro"] [PlyCount "78"] [EventDate "2014.11.08"] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 b6 {Carlsen switches out of the Orthodox lines of the QGD and chooses instead to go for the Queen's Indian Defense, a system that has stood the test of time.} 4. g3 Bb4+ {This finesse is becoming an increasingly popular alternative to the normal 4...Ba6 and 4...Bb7.} 5. Bd2 Be7 6. Nc3 Bb7 7. Bg2 c6 (7... O-O {this move order is more common, and more often than not Black plays the knight to a6, but one could argue it is an older and less flexible setup.}) 8. e4 {Anand's first think of the game was of six minutes, probably trying to remember some of his variation in this already off-beat position.} d5 9. exd5 cxd5 10. Ne5 O-O 11. O-O Nc6 12. cxd5 Nxe5 13. d6 Nc6 14. dxe7 Qxe7 15. Bg5 h6 16. d5 Na5 17. Bxf6 (17. d6 Qd8 18. Bxf6 Qxf6 { and the pawn on d6 looks weaker than it looks strong.}) 17... Qxf6 18. dxe6 Qxe6 {This was Carlsen's first think, of only four minutes and a half. Before this he had confidently blitzed his moves.} (18... Bxg2 19. exf7+ Qxf7 20. Kxg2 Nc4 {seems to give compensation in form of pressure down the f-file and well placed pieces, but I dont' see the need to give up a pawn.}) 19. Re1 Qf6 20. Nd5 $1 {Carlsen must have been unfamiliar with this move, which is practically speaking an interesting attempt at mixing up things. White only has a few moves to play before the game is completely drawn due to the symmetrical pawn structure.} Bxd5 $1 (20... Qxb2 21. Re2 $1 {The queen is in some surprising trouble. Black is forced to play a few moves:} Qa3 22. Re3 Qb2 23. Rb1 Qxa2 24. Ra1 $1 Qc4 25. Rxa5 bxa5 26. Ne7+ {and White emerges with two pieces for a rook and two pawns, but with the shattered structure on the queenside and the lack of targets for Black's rooks it does seem that White is already better.}) 21. Bxd5 Rad8 22. Qf3 $1 {The only way to keep pressure. Anand's play is very strong, and Carlsen has to decide if he wants to accept the pawn on b2 or go for an inferior endgame.} Qxb2 (22... Qxf3 23. Bxf3 Nc4 24. b3 Nd6 25. Re7 {is without a doubt better for White. How much better is something that can be argued, but it is not a pleasant position to defend.}) 23. Rad1 Qf6 {A good practical decision! Carlsen sees that the pressure is mounting and decides to ruin his pawn structure in order to simplify matters on the queenside.} 24. Qxf6 gxf6 25. Re7 Kg7 26. Rxa7 {Natural, but perhaps with more patience Anand could have set up more problems.} (26. Rc7 $5 $14 {The point is that Black has no really useful move while the a-pawn will fall sooner or later. This will preserve the b6 pawn for Black and the a-pawn for White.}) 26... Nc6 27. Rb7 Nb4 {The point. Now that the bishop must move and the rooks will be swapped, a2 is undefended.} 28. Bb3 Rxd1+ 29. Bxd1 Nxa2 30. Rxb6 Nc3 31. Bf3 {Black's pawn structure is ugly, but he has very little to worry about. The bishop is too clumsy to great real threats and although the knight is stranded for now, it won't be stranded forever.} f5 $1 {Anchoring the knight on e4. Even if Carlsen loses a pawn on e4 because of a trade of minor pieces, the endgame will be easily drawn.} 32. Kg2 Rd8 33. Rc6 Ne4 34. Bxe4 {In this scenario White doesn't even get a pawn and the game is trivially drawn, but there wasn't much else to do anyways.} fxe4 35. Rc4 f5 36. g4 Rd2 37. gxf5 e3 38. Re4 Rxf2+ 39. Kg3 Rxf5 1/2-1/2
Anand y Carlsen en la rueda de prensa tras la partida
Vídeo con análisis de Daniel King
Sochi
Sochi desde el mar Negro
Terreno olímpico
La Villa Olímpica (en invierno de 2014)
El centro de prensa
Fotos: sitio web oficial (Anastasya Karlovich, Vladimir Barsky), Federación Rusa (Eteri Kublashvili, Maria Emelianova, Vladimir Barsky)
Todas las partidas para reproducir y descargar
Resultados
Los comentaristas
Sergio Estremera con asistencia de su esposa Mónica Calzetta, siempre que quiera y pueda, comentará las partidas restantes del Campeonato del Mundo, salvo la décima (21 de noviembre), que volverá a estar a cargo de Ana Matnadze y Marc Narciso. Los comentarios comienzan a la misma hora que las partidas, a las 13:00 CET, en la sala "Retransmisiones".
¿Dónde está Sergio?
Sergio Estremera
Mónica Calzetta
Hoy Garry Kasparov estuvo entre los seguidores de las partidas en la sala de retransmisiones de Playches.com
Leontxo García
Leontxo nos deleitará con algungas crónicas por escrito durante el Campeonato del Mundo. Leontxo estará en Sochi y nos contará lo que está pasando sobre el escenario y entre bastidores.
Leontxo García mandará informes desde Sochi
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Programa
El Campeonato del Mundo 2014 se disputará a un máximo de 12 partidas. Quien primero sume 6,5 puntos habrá ganado el duelo. Si alguno lo consiguiese en menos de 12 partidas, la clausura se adelantaría convenientemente.
Comentarios
Las partidas comenzarán a las 13:00 CET y los comentarios también comenzarán a partir de las 13:00.
Fecha
|
Actividad
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Castellano
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Inglés
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Alemán
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Francés
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08.11.2014
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Partida 1
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Ana Matnadze/Marc Narciso
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Daniel King/Parimarjan Negi
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Thomas Luther
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Yannick Pelletier
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09.11.2014
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Partida 2
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Sergio Estremera
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Simon Williams/Nicholas Pert
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Oliver Reeh/Karsten Müller
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Christian Bauer
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10.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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11.11.2014
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Partida 3
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Sergio Estremera
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Daniel King/Loek van Wely
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Markus Ragger/Harald Schneider-Zinner
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Fabien Libiszewski
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12.11.2014
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Partida 4
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Sergio Estremera
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Daniel King/Rustam Kasimdzhanov
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Klaus Bischoff
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Romain Edouard
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13.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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14.11.2014
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Partida 5
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Sergio Estremera
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Simon Williams/Irina Krush
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Klaus Bischoff
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Sebastien Mazé
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15.11.2014
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Partida 6
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Sergio Estremera
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Daniel King/Yannick Pelletier
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Klaus Bischoff
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Fabien Libiszewski
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16.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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17.11.2014
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Partida 7
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Sergio Estremera
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Simon Williams/Loek van Wely
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Klaus Bischoff
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Sebastien Mazé
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18.11.2014
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Partida 8
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Sergio Estremera
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Daniel King/Loek van Wely
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Klaus Bischoff
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Romain Edouard
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19.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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20.11.2014
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Partida 9
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Sergio Estremera
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Simon Williams/Irina Krush
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Oliver Reeh/Merijn van Delft
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Christian Bauer
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21.11.2014
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Partida 10
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Ana Matnadze/Marc Narciso
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Daniel King/Simon Williams
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Oliver Reeh/Merijn van Delft
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Yannick Pelletier
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22.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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23.11.2014
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Partida 11
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Sergio Estremera
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Chris Ward/Parimarjan Negi
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Yannick Pelletier
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Sebastien Mazé
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24.11.2014
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Día de descanso
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25.11.2014
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Partida 12
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Sergio Estremera
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Simon Williams/Rustam Kasimdzhanov
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Oliver Reeh/Karsten Müller
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Sebastien Mazé
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Traducción: Nadja Wittmann (ChessBase)
Enlaces