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Carlsen-Caruana Chess World Championship
Anybody following the Magnus Carlsen- Fabiano Caruana Chess World Championship which began yesterday in London? The first game took seven hours and 115 moves and ended in a draw. Caruana somehow got into a losing position by move 15 but hung on for another hundred moves to pull out a draw. Crazy start to an important match.
I'm a big fan of Fabi but he did not look ready yesterday. Perhaps it was first game jitters. |
At seven hours that is the equivalent of an 18 inning World Series game without a Caruana home run to break the tie (gotta tie this thread into baseball some way). Is every checkmate in chess considered a walk off?
While channel surfing last night I ran into a new one for me that will allow me avoid basketball all together this winter CURLING NIGHT IN AMERICA Mixed doubles format with Team Italy defeating Team USA 5 to 4. I remember the early days of ESPN, when it was live sports 24/7, and you could treat your insomnia with live sheep racing from Scotland at 2AM, which was vastly more engaging than non stop sports center reruns. No attempt to hijack your thread Barry, for you can read my post between moves in the chess match. Wait! I think Caruana is reaching for his King’s Bishop. That’s all for now. |
To answer one question Frank, high level games very rarely end in checkmate. When the losing side recognizes that his game is hopeless, he typically resigns. It usually entails a simple handshake followed by his signing off on his scoresheet. The image of the winner making a move and loudly declaring "Checkmate" is pretty much a myth and nonexistent.
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Trying my best to follow online. Sounds like Carlsen missed a win in game 1.
I was hoping for more coverage given the first US participation since Fischer in '72. Oh well. Ironically, I did watch a documentary on Kasparov vs. Deep Blue last week. Basically saying that IBM cheated to provoke a bump in their stock price. Not sure I believe it, but still pretty interesting. |
Carlsen definitely missed a win in Game 1. Game 2 was a more conventional draw, so the match now stands at 1-1.
You can watch the moves being played live during the match. I watch on Chess.com but I'm sure there are other venues. It's not as exciting as watching the Superbowl, but if you love chess it is certainly interesting. |
Still tied up after game 6.
From the reports, it sounds like Caruana missed the win in the last game. That makes six ties and one missed win each. |
Game six was extremely complicated. It went into an endgame that is seldom seen. The players have to figure out all the intricacies over the board, and Caruana missed his chance at move 67. I'm disappointed he didn't get the win. But chess is like that.
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Hey Barry. I am not a chess player but have always been fascinated with the game since I followed the Fischer/ Spassky matches. At that time I lived in St Louis and the matches had a lot of coverage in the paper there. I live in San Antonio now and have not noticed any coverage in our paper here. So I enjoy you updates.
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I believe I'll tune in to the radio broadcast...yawn
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Cheep related plug.
My most recent book discusses briefly Deep Blue beating Kasparov, computer versus human, in chess, concerning the theory of how to identify intelligence in computers. There are various theories, methods, tests (the Turing test being the most famous) and games (such as chess) to try to identify intelligence in computers. And some famous philosophers say that, even if it exists, intelligence in a computer cannot be verified. Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence |
Peter-- likely could, but Barry's summaries are just right sized :)
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Well, after eight rounds we have eight draws, and I'm really not sure how this match will end. If all twelve games are drawn, quicker tiebreaker games will be played until someone wins. And Carlsen is a much better speed player and would have the advantage.
Caruana had a nice attack in today's game, as well as winning chances, but the pattern of the match has been he hasn't been able to bring home the point. |
The 9th game just ended with yet another draw. The match is tied 4 1/2- 4 1/2, with all nine games drawn. Caruana plays white in two of the last three games, which are his best chances to win.
If the match ends tied, with either all twelve games drawn or with each player winning once, they will play a tiebreaker consisting of four games in one day, with each side getting 25 minutes per game. That's how the 2016 World Championship ended, with Carlsen steamrolling to the championship. Caruana should consider winning one of the last three games if he hopes to become World Champion. |
After some spirited play, the 10th game ended in a draw. The match is now tied 5-5, with two games to play.
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I'm by no means an expert on chess but this is starting to feel a little repetitive to me. Each player has the opportunity to be aggressive every other game.
This just feels like the same game, over and over no matter who is black and who is white. Carlsen does his best to be unpredictable and throw Caruana of his prepared script and then both players go into a shell and hope to draw. I agree it is advantage Carlsen if the game goes to a blitz tiebreaker. Just hoping for more wins and less draws, maybe I watch too many movies. |
If this ends in a 6-6 tie, I think they should just kick field goals. Right, Jake.
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Players today have access to reams of analysis, which anyone with a smartphone can utilize. I think the problem with the Carlsen-Caruana match is they are both playing too cautiously, rarely willing to take chances. And if one player falls behind, he has the ability to find a way to draw, even in very difficult positions. Both are incredibly skilled and know all the current theory. And their preparation is exceptional. The only thing that has been boring and predictable are the games. |
Perhaps the way to shake things up is to do what Fischer eventually suggested -- for each game, pick a random order for the pieces in the back row.
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They definitely need to do something to make the matches more interesting. Yes, most high level games are drawn, and always have been. But to have every game drawn is not good. I don't know what they can do.
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Random chess has been played casually among players, but you would never get them to agree to play a World Championship match that way. Could you imagine if at the beginning of the World Series the umps said the field will have five bases and players were free to run them in either direction? Not gonna happen.
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Baseball is even worse. The American and National Leagues play with different rules and then compete in a World Series.:confused: If the 2017 Mahjong champ squared off against the 2018 Mahjong champ, each using their own cards, utter chaos would ensue.:D In the worst case scenario, in chess, every match ends in a draw and all the competitors get a participation trophy at the end of the day, and everyone goes home happy ........ or not.:rolleyes: |
My mom used to play mahjong and I remember she would get the new rules each year.
There is something in chess called the Armageddon game, and it's pretty interesting, though I don't believe one has ever been played. It's a single game where white gets 5 minutes for all his moves and black gets only 4 minutes. Now that sounds like white has two advantages- the first move, plus an extra minute. But here's the rub: if the game ends a draw, black is declared the winner. I've never played one but I think it would be an advantage to be black. Caruana and Carlsen could have one of these if all the rounds of tiebreakers fail to crown a champion. |
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Without getting political leaving gender identity and LGBTQ issues out of the argument,
Is a women’s team ever going to compete in the World Series, the Super Bowl, the NBA finals or win the Stanley Cup? Most would say no, but why not a female chess grandmaster winning the ultimate championship? Is Polgar the best of the fair sex? What would be her chances in the Chess World Championship? |
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Hou Yifan is now the strongest woman player, but she is currently a Rhodes Scholar and is not playing as much as she once did. The best women can compete with the top male grandmasters, but not quite at the world championship level. |
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Chess is a game. It is not a sport, or quasi-sport, IMO.
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Furthermore if pawns weighed five hundred pounds each, would it not be a sport? |
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Either way, Polgar's achievement of defeating a reigning male world champion is unique. |
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If so, maybe I should have said Polgar was the first, and not the only. |
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Judit Polgar, born in 1976, didn't become a grand master until 1991. It looks like Polgar was the third, not the first. Sorry, Barry. |
She spent 87 hours in temperatures plunging to -50 degrees, tended sled dogs who needed emergency rations, and endured blizzards so bad that the competition had to be stopped twice so the competitors could take shelter. Libby Riddles earned her place in history the hard way — by being the first woman to win the Iditarod — the 1,100-mile trans-Alaska dog sled race often referred to as “The Last Great Race on Earth.”
A bit tougher than sitting behind a chessboard. |
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Well I know I read that Polgar's achievement was a first, so there must be some technicality here. Perhaps depending on dogs disqualifies her as being the first to defeat a male, since Iditarod is a team sport. What do I know? I'm just some hack trying to sound smart on a chatboard. |
The 11th game of the match just ended...(drum roll)...in a draw. It is now tied 5 1/2- 5 1/2. It really was a bland game, even by the standards of this match.
The final game is on Monday. The match is probably headed for a tiebreaker on Wednesday. |
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So how does the betting work in chess?
Bet on either player to win in a match and you lose. Bet on a tie and you get your money back. Bet on both players to win and you lose double. If you factor in the bookie, you lose every time. Checkmate for the bookie.;) |
I don't think the bookies are getting big chess money.
It would be amazing if Caruana, playing with the white pieces, pulls out a win in game 12. But I'm not counting on it. |
I predict Magnus wins game 12.
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Overall, this match has been very disappointing. In the early 1960's, when Bobby Fischer played Mikhail Tal, nearly every game was a titanic struggle. They often featured amazing attacks, deep combinations, piece sacrifices, and incredible artistry that these two geniuses were able to create. They were truly a thing of beauty. The current match is dull and uninspiring. The players are playing mostly heavily analyzed positions, that they might tweak with a new move here and there. Both are risk averse, and the games have very little creativity. I have yet to see any great plan in even a single game. Too bad. |
I likewise have been following the match. I think the dull play is attributable to the significant advance in computer programs in recent years. I think both players are extremely well prepared as a result of computer analysis and realize that risky play will almost certainly be met with defeat. I hope Fabiano finds a way to win game 12 but I'm not optimistic.
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If game 12 is a draw, I think organized chess has a real problem on its hands. If you're Magnus, and you figure you probably have a big advantage in a tiebreaker, and you're playing black, do you just play for the draw unless Fabiano makes a major blunder? On the other hand, will anyone really respect a champion who couldn't win even ONE conventional game? So maybe he plays aggressively after all.
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Perhaps somewhere, Robert James Fischer is looking up (I assume) with contempt.
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I agree that chess at the highest levels may well be in trouble, especially insofar as public interest. It appears that championship matches henceforth may unfortunately always or nearly always be resolved by rapid or blitz games.
I'm disappointed that this match is not receiving more publicity given first American player since Fischer in '72. |
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http://www.thestacksreader.com/the-day-bobby-blew-it/ A priceless line: He wears a business suit about as naturally as a python wears a necktie. |
Thanks, Peter. Good story.
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I know very little about chess, but I followed the game for a while just now and was disappointed to see Carlsen agree to a draw after just 31 moves when it seemed he was starting to press the attack and perhaps had an advantage. In the hour or more I followed it, I did not see a single piece captured. I assume that's unusual. Caruana just seemed to be making nothing moves hoping to survive, although I don't know enough to judge. I imagine by chess standards this was extremely boring and even pathetic. Certainly the posters commenting on the site I was watching were disgusted.
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The 12th and final game just ended in a draw.
With all due respect, the game started out sharply with both players fighting for a win. Fabiano had an early advantage, but let it slip as Magnus developed a very strong attack. He wavered a little, and then without warning offered Fabiano a draw. Apparently he actually said he would have a big advantage in the tiebreaker and expected to beat Caruana. Very strange ending for sure. Wednesday they play four games, 25 minutes each per player, and if that ends 2-2 they will play a long series of 5 minute blitz games until someone wins. In Carlsen's long career, he has never lost a tiebreaker. Wednesday should be interesting. |
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Like waiting 4 years for a Super Bowl game and it's decided in OT by a FG contest. |
I was just watching the grandmasters moderating the match do an analysis of the position. In almost every line, Magnus had a winning game. Yet he decided to offer Fabiano a draw, when Fabiano was in very bad time pressure (which of course makes it harder to find a successful defense). None of them understood why he did not press on to victory.
When Carlsen was shown all his winning lines in the post game analysis, he apparently responded "I don't care." A great mystery to me. |
Peter- I just noticed you posted the result a minute before me. Obviously we were typing at the same time.
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If Caruana were to win the tiebreaker, Magnus's decision to offer a draw will haunt him for a long time to come. If he wins it, it will soon be forgotten.
One thing I learned in this match is that Carlsen was a better player four or five years ago than he is now. Chess players can't stay at their peak forever, and while he is still arguably the strongest player in the world, the rest of the pack is gradually catching up. A 23 year old Magnus would have won this match handily. He is now pushing 28, and while still very young, he is in the early stages of his downswing. |
Maybe he should join Ernie Ratelband's lawsuit in order to lower his age back to 23 :)
This discussion is now getting depressing for old guys like me. :( |
I'm 66 Al, and although I still love to play chess, the old noggin' doesn't always calculate as quickly and clearly as I would like.
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His mental problems continued when the match started. He lost game one on a silly blunder, and forfeited game two when he refused to play. He claimed his chair was bugged with microphones, and there were cameras hidden in the florescent lights. His entourage thought he was having a breakdown and were ready to give up on the match. After a few days he calmed down, and when he sat down for game three he proceeded to play some of the best chess ever seen. Over the final nineteen games he won seven times and only lost once. That is an enormous margin for players of that caliber. It was also the last competitive chess he ever played. He never played another serious game for the rest of his life. |
He was supposed to play Karpov in 1975 but his conditions were rejected.
He played Spassky in 1992. It was not for a title, but I think most people would consider it a serious match. |
The 1992 match was an exhibition and not sanctioned. Fischer was 49 and Spassky was in his mid-50's, and the chess they played was mediocre. It was also what got Fischer banned from ever returning to the United States. IIRC, it was played in Yugoslavia and Americans weren't allowed there. The whole match was kind of sad as it reminded Fischer's fans of how he wasted his talents.
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Magnus Carlsen won the first game of the tiebreaker and leads 1-0.
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Magnus Carlsen just won the second game and leads 2-0. This one was a bit of a steamroller. Carlsen only needs a draw in the final two games to retain his title.
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Carlsen won the third game and has retained his World Champion crown. My take is Caruana was unable to win even a single game, and Carlsen was undoubtedly the better player.
I am very disappointed with the result, but what can you do. I want to thank everyone who participated on this thread. As you may have noticed, I'm a chess junkie. I am also a big fan of Fabiano, and feel bad that he couldn't have played better. |
What a difference a day makes. Complete domination of the rapids by Carlsen.
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Complete domination indeed.
The first game Caruana was behind but looked like he could draw. Then he missed a move and lost in the endgame. In the second game Caruana had a reasonable initiative and attack, but miscalculated and lost very quickly. Needing a win only in the third game, Caruana pressed for victory, but sometimes when you press too hard in an even position you lose. That is exactly what happened. Carlsen showed today, and throughout the match, that he is still the best player in the world, until proven otherwise. |
Did a google search for 2020 World Chess Championship and couldn't find any results with any dates. Pretty much everything was "late 2020".
Does anyone know if this event will take place this year or if Corona will delay this as well? Seems like a type of event that could take place in a "bubble" and with other sports delayed, may get more attention than usual. |
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Barry - sorry I didn't participate in the thread when it was happening. At the time I was avoiding internet discussion forums, and it wouldn't have crossed my mind to check this one. |
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