News
Carlsen Wins Final Clash To Take Tuesday From Nakamura

Carlsen Wins Final Clash To Take Tuesday From Nakamura

NathanielGreen
| 11 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Tuan Minh Le won the early edition of Titled Tuesday on May 7 with a score of 9.5/11, while the rest of Tuesday's highlights belonged to GM Magnus Carlsen. Carlsen first played a4/a5 on move one and Ra3/Ra6 on move two in all 11 games of the early tournament—good enough for 8.5 points and 14th place—and then won the late tournament in come-from-behind fashion after winning in the final round against GM Hikaru Nakamura. It ended up being the rare 9.5-point victory that did not require tiebreaks.


Early Tournament

Le looked good to best the field of 717 for most of the early event, starting with 6/6 to build a sole lead with 8.5 points through nine rounds. Unfortunately for Le, disaster struck in the 10th round, where he spent a long time successfully defending a pawn-down endgame until he hung a second pawn to GM Nihal Sarin with 65...Rd4.

With that, Nihal took the sole lead in the tournament, leaving Le in a pack of four players half a point behind. But Nihal would settle for a 20-move draw with Black in the 11th round against GM Bogdan-Daniel Deac, which allowed Le and GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda to catch up. 

Duda did so against GM Alireza Firouzja, but his tiebreaks only put him in third place. It was Le, after using his beloved London System to launch a successful checkmating attack against GM Thomas Beerdsen, who reclaimed his first-place position.

As far as we know, the "Meadow Hay Mistake" variation of the Ware Opening is not a beloved opening of Carlsen's, but the guy does love his memes. He won seven games with just one loss despite picking an opening even worse than the Bongcloud—the computer evaluation between 1.a4 e5 2.Ra3 and 1.e4 e5 2.Ke2 is closer than you might expect, but at least in the Bongcloud, White can often expect Black to reciprocate with 2...Ke7. Of course, Carlsen's opponents were under no obligation to take the free exchange either, and some opponents didn't even give themselves the chance.

Carlsen's shenanigans didn't end up affecting the prizes, except perhaps in some tiebreak calculations, as none of his opponents finished in the top 40. And if Magnus could score 8.5 points hanging a rook on move two, how many points could he score playing normally? That question would be answered in the later tournament.

May 7 Titled Tuesday | Early | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 10 GM @wonderfultime Tuan Minh Le 3126 9.5 76
2 4 GM @nihalsarin Nihal Sarin 3159 9.5 74.5
3 9 GM @Polish_fighter3000 Jan-Krzysztof Duda 3126 9.5 67.5
4 11 GM @BogdanDeac Bogdan Daniel Deac 3120 9 78
5 13 GM @DanielNaroditsky Daniel Naroditsky 3076 9 70
6 26 GM @OparinGrigoriy Grigoriy Oparin 2998 9 69.5
7 36 GM @DrVelja Velimir Ivic 2986 9 68.5
8 21 GM @Msb2 Matthias Bluebaum 3046 9 68
9 27 GM @DominguezOnYoutube Leinier Dominguez Perez 2993 9 67.5
10 52 GM @Genghis_K Federico Perez Ponsa 2961 9 67
11 1 GM @Hikaru Hikaru Nakamura 3216 8.5 79.5
12 7 GM @jefferyx Jeffery Xiong 3118 8.5 75.5
13 47 GM @kleinebeer98 Thomas Beerdsen 2964 8.5 73.5
14 2 GM @MagnusCarlsen Magnus Carlsen 3207 8.5 67.5
15 15 GM @Oleksandr_Bortnyk Oleksandr Bortnyk 3059 8.5 66.5
16 28 GM @vugarrasulov Vugar Rasulov 2991 8.5 65.5
17 17 GM @mishanick Aleksei Sarana 3042 8.5 65.5
18 23 GM @Baku_Boulevard Rauf Mamedov 3018 8.5 61.5
19 3 GM @Firouzja2003 Alireza Firouzja 3188 8 75.5
20 44 GM @Nitzan_Steinberg Nitzan Steinberg 2947 8 72.5
59 337 IM @Fh2411 Le Thao Nguyen Pham 2573 7.5 57.5

(Full final standings here.)

Le won $1,000 for first place, while Nihal and Duda settled for $750 and $350, respectively. Deac's nine points tied six other players for fourth place, but his massive tiebreak edge earned him $200. The $100 prizes went to GM Daniel Naroditsky in fifth place and women's leader IM Le Thao Nguyen Pham.

Late Tournament

A group of 524 players tried their luck at the day's second tournament, but its course was dominated by Carlsen and Nakamura. However, neither of them was the last perfect player after Nakamura was held to a draw in round three by GM Krikor Mekhitarian, while GM Leinier Dominguez defeated Carlsen in round six.

Instead, it was Dominguez, GM Oleksandr Bortnyk, and GM Alexey Sarana who ran out to 6/6 starts, but that state of affairs quickly subsided after Dominguez and Bortnyk drew each other in round seven while Nakamura beat Sarana.

Then, out of four players on 6.5/7 points, only Nakamura won in round eight, but his draw in the ninth round reintroduced a multiway tie for first with two rounds to go. After round 10 saw Nakamura yet again be the only player in the group to win, he seemed poised to claim his 11th Titled Tuesday of the year.

However, five players were right behind him, and the opponent he ran into, needing a win to guarantee first place, was Carlsen. Under the eye of Game Review, it wasn't necessarily the cleanest game. They played a traditional opening, the Berlin Defense, but didn't go down the usual drawing lines. Carlsen soon had a large advantage and even missed a mate-in-one before Nakamura worked things back into a drawn rook endgame.

Carlsen continued to claw forward and was eventually up two pawns, but it was the known theoretical draw of f- and h-pawn. Two pawns are still two pawns, though, and Carlsen would find a win once Nakamura gave him the opportunity.

As it turned out, it was now also Carlsen's turn to be the only player in a group on the same score to win their game. Firouzja and GM Matthias Bluebaum drew their game against each other, while GMs Nodirbek Abdusattorov and Luca Moroni Jr. lost theirs (against different opponents, of course).

As a result, Carlsen won outright while Nakamura settled for third place, as Sarana beat Moroni and ended up with the better tiebreaks over Nakamura despite losing their one-on-one matchup.

May 7 Titled Tuesday | Late | Final Standings (Top 20)

Number Rk Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Tiebreak 1
1 2 GM @MagnusCarlsen Magnus Carlsen 3217 9.5 66.5
2 13 GM @mishanick Aleksei Sarana 3068 9 80
3 1 GM @Hikaru Hikaru Nakamura 3222 9 73.5
4 18 GM @h4parah5 Jaime Santos Latasa 3035 9 70.5
5 3 GM @Firouzja2003 Alireza Firouzja 3194 9 69.5
6 23 GM @ChristopherYoo Christopher Woojin Yoo 3005 9 68
7 40 FM @Iball95 Igor L. Vakhlamov 2923 9 64.5
8 5 GM @BogdanDeac Bogdan Daniel Deac 3126 9 63
9 14 GM @GM_dmitrij Dmitrij Kollars 3052 9 63
10 11 GM @Msb2 Matthias Bluebaum 3055 9 58.5
11 56 GM @moro182 Luca Moroni Jr 2916 8.5 76.5
12 8 GM @FairChess_on_YouTube Dmitry Andreikin 3079 8.5 75
13 50 GM @ContrVersia Valery Kazakouski 2922 8.5 69
14 37 GM @baki83 Etienne Bacrot 2945 8.5 67.5
15 57 GM @AlexeiShirov Alexei Shirov 2916 8.5 66
16 26 GM @ChessLover0108 Mahammad Muradli 2971 8.5 65
17 32 GM @Durarbayli Vasif Durarbayli 2954 8.5 61.5
18 64 GM @ChessWarrior7197 Nodirbek Abdusattorov 3138 8.5 54
19 22 GM @DominguezOnYoutube Leinier Dominguez Perez 3017 8 78.5
20 16 GM @Sanan_Sjugirov Sanan Sjugirov 3021 8 74
56 120 IM @Meri-Arabidze Meri Arabidze 2728 7 62.5

(Full final standings here.)

Carlsen won $1,000 for his efforts, Sarana earned $750, and Nakamura $350. Fourth place and $200 ended up going to GM Jaime Santos Latasa, while Firouzja finished fifth for $100. IM Meri Arabidze won the $100 women's prize.

Titled Cup Standings

Nakamura lost a slight bit of ground to Duda and Sarana in the Titled Cup standings, but nothing of major concern to him. 

The women's standings continue to be the site of most interest, as GM Aleksandra Goryachkina now leads second-place IM Karina Ambartsumova by 4.5 points. GM Alexandra Kosteniuk is only 5.5 points back of Goryachkina as well after jumping ahead of Arabidze into third place. Kosteniuk has played in only 19 tournaments so far, giving her one more chance to gain a full tournament's worth of points instead of merely improving on past scores. 

GM Denis Lazavik, GM Gata Kamsky, and WCM Veronika Shubenkova continue to hold safe leads in the juniors, seniors, and girls sections.

Open

# Username Score Player
1 @Hikaru 192.0 GM Hikaru Nakamura
2 @Polish_fighter3000 182.0 GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda
3 @mishanick 180.5 GM Alexey Sarana
4 @Jospem 177.0 GM Jose Martinez
5 @jefferyx 174.5 GM Jeffery Xiong

Women

# Username Score Player
1 @Goryachkina 134.5 GM Aleksandra Goryachkina
2 @karinachess1 130.0 IM Karina Ambartsumova
3 @ChessQueen 129.0 GM Alexandra Kosteniuk
4 @Meri-Arabidze 122.0 IM Meri Arabidze
5 @Sanyura 115.0 IM Aleksandra Maltsevskaya
4 @Meri-Arabidze 122.0 IM Meri Arabidze

Other Category Leaders

Juniors: GM Denis Lazavik (171.5 points)

Seniors: GM Gata Kamsky (164.0 points)

Girls: WCM Veronika Shubenkova (99.0 points)

The Titled Cup fantasy game Chess Prophet continues as well. Current standings can be found here. (Login required.)

Titled Tuesday


Titled Tuesday is Chess.com's weekly tournament for titled players, with two tournaments held each Tuesday. The first tournament begins at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time/17:00 Central European/20:30 Indian Standard Time, and the second at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time/23:00 Central European/2:30 Indian Standard Time (next day).

NathanielGreen
Nathaniel Green

Nathaniel Green is a staff writer for Chess.com who writes articles, player biographies, Titled Tuesday reports, video scripts, and more. He has been playing chess for about 30 years and resides near Washington, DC, USA.

More from NathanielGreen
How Sweep It Is, As Nakamura Takes Double Victory

How Sweep It Is, As Nakamura Takes Double Victory

Decisive Tuesdays Continue As Nakamura Wins Another

Decisive Tuesdays Continue As Nakamura Wins Another