Duda
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R14
Liren
Nakamura
1
0
R14 LIVE
Caruana
Firouzja
0
1
R14
Rapport
Radjabov
0
1
R14
Radjabov
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R13
Firouzja
Liren
1/2
1/2
R13
Nakamura
Duda
1
0
R13
Nepo
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R13
Nepo
Nakamura
1/2
1/2
R12
Duda
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R12
Liren
Radjabov
0
1
R12
Rapport
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R12
Caruana
Liren
0
1
R11
Radjabov
Duda
1/2
1/2
R11
Firouzja
Nepo
0
1
R11
Nakamura
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R11
Nakamura
Firouzja
1
0
R10
Nepo
Radjabov
1/2
1/2
R10
Duda
Caruana
1
0
R10
Rapport
Liren
0
1
R10
Liren
Duda
1
0
R9
Caruana
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R9
Radjabov
Nakamura
1
0
R9
Firouzja
Rapport
1
0
R9
Firouzja
Radjabov
1/2
1/2
R8
Nakamura
Caruana
1
0
R8
Nepo
Liren
1/2
1/2
R8
Rapport
Duda
1
0
R8
Caruana
Radjabov
1
0
R7
Liren
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R7
Duda
Nakamura
1/2
1/2
R7
Rapport
Nepo
0
1
R7
Nepo
Duda
1
0
R6
Nakamura
Liren
1/2
1/2
R6
Firouzja
Caruana
0
1
R6
Radjabov
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R6
Nakamura
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R5
Firouzja
Duda
1/2
1/2
R5
Radjabov
Liren
1/2
1/2
R5
Caruana
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R5
Liren
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R4
Duda
Radjabov
1/2
1/2
R4
Nepo
Firouzja
1
0
R4
Rapport
Nakamura
1/2
1/2
R4
Firouzja
Nakamura
1/2
1/2
R3
Radjabov
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R3
Caruana
Duda
1/2
1/2
R3
Liren
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R3
Duda
Liren
1/2
1/2
Nepo
Caruana
1/2
1/2
Nakamura
Radjabov
1
0
Rapport
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
Radjabov
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
Caruana
Nakamura
1
0
Liren
Nepo
0
1
Duda
Rapport
1/2
1/2
Aronian
MVL
0
1
TB 1.3
MVL
So
1
0
TB 1.2
So
Aronian
1
0
TB1.1
Dominguez
So
1/2
1/2
R9
Firouzja
MVL
0
1
R9
Deac
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R9
Rapport
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R9
Aronian
Mamedyarov
1/2
1/2
R9
Nepo
Aronian
1/2
1/2
R8
Caruana
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R8
MVL
Deac
1/2
1/2
R8
So
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R8
Mamedyarov
Dominguez
1/2
1/2
R8
Firouzja
Dominguez
1
0
R7
Deac
So
1/2
1/2
R7
Rapport
MVL
0
1
R7
Aronian
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R7
Nepo
Mamedyarov
0
1
R7
Caruana
Nepo
1/2
1/2
R6
MVL
Aronian
0
1
R6
So
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R6
Dominguez
Deac
1
0
R6
Mamedyarov
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R6
Deac
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R5
Rapport
Dominguez
1/2
1/2
R5
Aronian
So
1/2
1/2
R5
Nepo
MVL
1/2
1/2
R5
Caruana
Mamedyarov
1
0
R5
MVL
Caruana
1
0
R4
So
Nepo
1
0
R4
Dominguez
Aronian
0
1
R4
Firouzja
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R4
Mamedyarov
Deac
1/2
1/2
R4
Rapport
Deac
0
1
R3
Aronian
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R3
Nepo
Dominguez
1/2
1/2
R3
Caruana
So
1/2
1/2
R3
MVL
Mamedyarov
1/2
1/2
R3
So
MVL
1/2
1/2
R2
Dominguez
Caruana
1/2
1/2
R2
Firouzja
Nepo
0
1
R2
Deac
Aronian
1/2
1/2
R2
Mamedyarov
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R2
Aronian
Rapport
1/2
1/2
R1
Nepo
Deac
1/2
1/2
R1
Caruana
Firouzja
1/2
1/2
R1
MVL
Dominguez
1/2
1/2
R1
So
Mamedyarov
1
0
R1
MVL
Wang
1
0
Ding
Nepo
1
0
Giri
Alekseenko
0
1
Caruana
Grischuk
1/2
1/2
Grischuk
Giri
1
0
Ding
Alekseenko
1
0
MVL
Nepo
1/2
1/2
Caruana
Wang
1
0
Nepo
Wang
0
1
MVL
Alekseenko
1
0
Ding
Grischuk
1
Caruana
Giri
0
1
Ding
Giri
0
1
MVL
Grischuk
0
1
Wang
Alekseenko
1/2
1/2
Caruana
Nepo
1/2
1/2
ALekseenko
Nepo
0
1
Grischuk
Wang
1/2
1/2
Giri
MVL
1/2
1/2
Ding
Caruana
1/2
1/2
MVL
Ding Liren
1/2
1/2
Wang
Giri
0
1
Nepo
Grischuk
1/2
1/2
Caruana
Alekseenko
1/2
1/2
Grischuk
Alekseenko
0
1
Giri
Nepo
1/2
1/2
Ding
Wang
1/2
1/2
MVL
Caruana
0
1
Grischuk
Giri
1/2
1/2
Alekseenko
Ding
1/2
1/2
Nepo
MVL
0
1
Wang
Caruana
1/2
1/2
Caruana
MVL
1/2
1/2
The first round of classical chess at the Biel Grandmaster Tournament GMT had it all: the players with the black pieces were victorious in three of the four games. Of the top 3 in the standings, only Esipenko was able to score and thus takes the top spot in the intermediate ranking due to his draw against Keymer. In the open tournaments MTO and ATO there were also quite a few surprising results and it shows that the favourites have to be very careful of their challengers. In the Ladies’s Quadriathlon, Cornileau prevailed over Ciarletta in the top battle of the day.
Read more: Vincent Keymer wins ACCENTUS Chess960 tournament in Biel / GM Maxime Lagarde wins Biel Rapid 2022 / Full house at the Biel Congress Center
In the first round of classic games at the Grandmaster Triathlon GMT, the black piece holders ruled! Out of four games, only Vincent Keymer got a draw against Andrey Esipenko playing with White. The other three games were all won by Black, something unusual at this level! Abdusattorov, Lê Quang Liêm, and Salem Saleh were all knocked down by Gukesh, Kamsky, and Naiditsch! Gukesh led a superb attack with Black, not hesitating to refuse a draw when with a pawn down and no direct win: he had correctly judged that the white king was too weak in the long run. Biel GMT 2021 winner, legend Gata Kamsky, is back in the game, after beating the tournament number one, while Naiditsch simply outclassed Salem today. The top places in the ranking are now very close: Esipenko at 11.5, Lê Quang Liêm and Gukesh at 11, Naiditsch at 10 and Abdusattorov at 9. With a victory worth 4 points in the classic games, it is needless to say though that nothing is decided, including for the players further down the ranking…
GMT: Interim Ranking
DAQ: Cornileau pulls away
In Ladie’s ACCENTUS Quadriathlon DAQ, the top game between the two leaders, French Juliette Cornileau and Iris Ciarletta, ended in favour of the first, who thus takes off with 19.5 points in the interim ranking. The second place now belongs to the Swiss player Zhuang Yongzhe, at 15 points, who is half a point ahead of Iris Ciarletta, previously mentioned. The leader Cornileau seems to be in great shape and one of her competitors will probably have to come out with a big game to knock her down!
Open tournaments: a series of surprises!
In the Master Tournament MTO, the Indians ruled! At table 2, 15(!) year-old Master Candidate Vuppala Prraneeth, ranked 2457, defeats Kirill Alekseenko (2708)! At table 4, IM Raja Panjwani (2450 and author of an excellent book on the “Hyper Accelerated Dragon” chess opening) beats Haik M. Martirosyan (2672). And these are only some of the surprises of the day, with notably also a draw of Milos Pavlovic (2461) with Black at table 1 against Yu Yangyi (2720), and a draw of young Marco Materia (2409, 13 years old!) against Eduardo Iturrizaga (2619). The list of other “semi-surprises” is too long to mention, but expectable results were rather rare in this second round of the MTO!
In the Amateur Tournament ATO, two big surprises were to find at the first ten tables with Fabrice Aegerter (1797) winning against Achim Schneuwly (2002) and Ireneusz Lada (1787) beating Kobe Smeets (1963)! There are still 26 players at 2/2, 11 more than in the MTO!
The 44th Chess Olympiad in Chennai, India, set to start on the 29th of July, will be the most prominent chess gathering…
The World Chess Championship Match 1972 between the challenger Bobby Fischer of the United States and defending champion Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union started on July 11th, 50 years ago….
The 44th Chess Olympiad 2022 starts in less than three weeks in Chennai, India and Chennai finalizes preparations to host 349 teams…
Simultaneously with the 20th Sautron International Chess Open which takes place from 3-10 July at the Espace Phelippes Beaulieux, the Sautron Chess…
Ian Nepomniachtchi won the 2022 FIDE Candidates Tournament, thus qualifying for the World Chess Championship Match. But it is still unknown whether…
While the chess world impatiently expects reigning World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen to decide whether he’ll defend his World Champion title in…
Teimour Radjabov seems to be in a good mood after yesterday’s victory over Richard Rapport and overall 3rd place in the 2022…
With today’s draw against Richard Rapport, Ian Nepomniachtchi secured the victory at the FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 with a round to…
MrDodgy, the CEO of Chefable and the Tournament Director of MrDodgy Invitational 2022 says he enjoyed the Candidates recap. MrDodgy published a hilarious video describing…
Hikaru Nakamura decided to spend Friday evening playing chess in Madrid’s park! After today’s 7-minute draw against Ian Nepomniachtchi, Hikaru basically provided…
Chessdom is dedicated to professional and independent coverage of chess news and events from all over the globe! Join us for live chess games, interviews, video and photo reports, and social media reactions. Follow the development of the strongest chess software, which affects all chess today, via the Top Chess Engine Championship with its 24/7 live broadcast with chat.
Copyright © 2007-2022 Chessdom.com