FIDE Candidates Chess 2022 – Chessdom https://www.chessdom.com Chess, chess news, live chess games Wed, 06 Jul 2022 13:23:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 – Highlights (VIDEO) https://www.chessdom.com/fide-candidates-chess-tournament-2022-highlights-video/ Wed, 06 Jul 2022 13:23:53 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79421 The FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 concluded in Madrid with Ian Nepomniachtchi lifting the Winner’s trophy, thus qualifying for the World Chess Championship Match. Altogether with the convincing victory of the Russian grandmaster, the event brought much excitement and record interest. The 2-minute video presents the highlights from the tournament and can be seen below.

Read more: FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 – Closing Ceremony / Post-Candidates events in Madrid / Magnus Carlsen negotiates the format of the World Chess Championship Match

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Anish Giri’s last Candidates recap (VIDEO) https://www.chessdom.com/anish-giris-last-candidates-recap-video/ Wed, 06 Jul 2022 09:25:00 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79402 Anish Giri presents the chessable recap of the FIDE Candidates Round 14. “While the battle for the first place already settled for a while, with Ian Nepomniachtchi in the clear first place – nobody can catch him anymore. But the battle for the second place could be ever so important as Magnus Carlsen still teasing the public, not telling them whether he wants to defend the title, not clear in which format he wants to defend it and what exactly are his conditions“, explains Anish before the analysis. See the video below.

Read more: Magnus Carlsen flags Anish Giri after blundering the mate trick (VIDEO)Anish Giri arrives in Madrid, looking for Nakamura to play some chess / Anish Giri wins the Chess24 Premium Blitz Tournament in Madrid /

Videos by Anish GiriR13 Candidates recap / R12 Candidates recap / R11 Candidates recap / R10 Candidates recap / R9 Candidates recap / R8 Candidates recap / R6 Candidates recap / R5 Candidates recap / R4 Candidates recap / R3 Candidates recap / R2 Candidates recap / R1 Candidates recap

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FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 – Closing Ceremony LIVE https://www.chessdom.com/fide-candidates-chess-tournament-2022-closing-ceremony-live/ Tue, 05 Jul 2022 19:26:23 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79367 The closing ceremony of the FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 takes place from 21:00 CEST in Madrid. The Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 will is officially declared closed soon, and Ian Nepomniachtchi lifted the Winner trophy. Nepomniachtchi qualified for the World Chess Championship Match which will be played next year, but his opponent in the Match is not confirmed yet, as Magnus Carlsen considers retirement from the World Championship.

After intonations of the FIDE and Spanish anthems, the speeches of the FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich, FIDE Managing Director and Tournament Organizer Dana Reizniece-Ozola, President of the Spanish Chess Federation Javier Ochoa de Echaguen Estibalez and other distinguished guests, the awarding ceremony and announcement of the Winners concluded the ceremony.

A famous chess streamer Anna Cramling streamed the Closing ceremony live:

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Post-Candidates events in Madrid https://www.chessdom.com/post-candidates-events-in-madrid/ Tue, 05 Jul 2022 18:36:30 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79363 All the games of the FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 have finished, but the event is not officially closed yet. The Closing Ceremony will take place today at 21:00 CET. During the last day of the most exciting chess tournament in 2022, the fans and chess enthusiasts could have enjoyed the post-candidates events: simultaneous exhibitions with the 15th World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand, WGM Dana Reizniece-Ozola, and GM Richard Rapport, or girls only chess tournament.

Earlier today, the Medalists of the Candidates Tournament Ian Nepomniachtchi, Ding Liren and Teimour Radjabov joined the press conference and answered the journalist’s questions. (scroll down for press conference video)

Anna Cramling streamed the closing press conference live on her twitch channel, and you can replay the stream below.

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FIDE Director-General: We will have a decision for the World Championship Match by July 20 https://www.chessdom.com/fide-director-general-we-will-have-a-decision-for-the-world-chess-championship-match-by-july-20/ Tue, 05 Jul 2022 10:15:52 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79317 FIDE Director-General Emil Sutovsky yesterday joined the live studio of the FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 and spoke about his impressions from the Candidates, the venue, the upcoming World Chess Championship Match, negotiations with Magnus Carlsen, the new format of the Women’s Candidate Chess Tournament, different time-controls of different events and importance of online chess.

Candidates is always a great tournament. Every event whether it was this place or that place, it’s obviously a landmark in chess history and this event was no exception,” said Sutovsky about the Candidates 2022. “All in all, I think the event was a great success and we saw a lot of people following it both online and here in Spain. It generated a lot of interest and we are happy to organize it in Madrid,” he added.

Speaking about the massive viewership of the event, Sutovsky shared his thoughts about classical chess and what the future holds with respect to the fans: “I think this event proved very much and again proves that the classical chess is very much alive and kicking. (…) We had to realize that we are not here to be the guardians of classical chess, but also to feel the trends, to feel what the audience is looking for, and what kind of new ideas can be introduced. And indeed we are experimenting with those and we are talking with players about all that. Because for us is also very important that we are not imposing some time control without checking or asking opinions of top players, or sometimes a broader audience to see what’s their reaction.“.

FIDE Director-General revealed parts of the negotiations with Magnus Carlsen about the format of the World Chess Championship Match. The meeting of the FIDE President, FIDE Director-General, and the reigning World Chess Champion took place yesterday in Madrid, during the last round of the FIDE Candidates, and was held in private. “The meeting was with Magnus, FIDE President, and myself, because I am in charge basically for all the major events, including the Candidates and World Championship Match – their formats, and the venues and everything. Of course, it was important to talk and to understand“. He added that there is a misconception about Magnus’s attitude towards the Match: “If you knew Magnus you would take his words seriously, and we did. Our conversation yesterday also proved that he literally means what he is saying. And we are looking for the ways to have him stay within the World Championship cycle. There is one clear point I want to clarify, because there’s been a bit of means concepts that FIDE is going to change the format or adopt the new regulations. In fact, there are no regulations for Match 2023 so far. We have uncommitted ourselves because the talks about Magnus possibly not playing came right after Dubai (World Championship Match 2021), so we felt it would be wrong now to adopt, and then to talk to hear what Magnus has in mind, and then maybe to change. We didn’t actually approve it (the regulations for the World Chess Championship Match 2023) and we are still having quite a bit of time to decide and to finalize“.

World Chess Championship Match Carlsen – Nepo 2021, Photo: Niki Riga

Speaking about what would keep Magnus in the World Championship cycle, Sutovsky said: “Magnus was quite reasonable with his ideas. I will not disclose details here, it will be unfair. But I can tell that we have started discussing it internally in FIDE – what could be done to preserve the balance between what we feel is right, maybe also to hear some ideas of Magnus being implemented“.

At the same time, we don’t have a lot of time to waste. Because, imagine today, let’s say today we know Nepo is playing Magnus. But we can’t carry on for three months or something to not know, and then suddenly to start finding the venue and sponsor for the match with Hikaru or Ding. I mean, it would be absolutely different match, probably different venue and so on. So that’s why we agreed we have to intensify both internal consultations and also talking to Magnus“, he added.

With no much time left before the World Chess Championship Match 2023 Sutovsky says he believes the decision on the format will be made within 2-3 weeks: “I believe that the decision on the format will be within maybe two or three weeks time. (…) We haven’t set a formal deadline (for Magnus to decide), but I would say July 20 which is also International Chess Day is about the time when we will have a decision (whether Magnus agrees to play the Match).” See the complete interview below.

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FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 – R14 recap https://www.chessdom.com/fide-candidates-chess-tournament-2022-r14-recap/ Mon, 04 Jul 2022 22:16:27 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79314 Today in Chess: FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 R14 recap

Ian Nepomniachtchi seals the tournament victory with a rocky draw against Jan-Krzysztof Duda, putting a historical Candidates score 9,5 points out of 14 in the books. Ding Liren beats Hikaru Nakamura in a rollercoaster of a game to claim the second place.

Round 14 results:
Richard Rapport – Teimour Radjabov 0-1
Fabiano Caruana – Alireza Firouzja 0-1
Ding Liren – Hikaru Nakamura 1-0
Jan-Krzysztof Duda – Ian Nepomniachtchi 1/2-1/2

Meanwhile, Magnus Carlsen is in talks with FIDE about adjusting the World Championship format as reported by Leontxo Garcia for El Pais. Vishy Anand, former World Champion and the FIDE Deputy President for the upcoming elections, talked about the new developments and much more during his guest appearance on the Today in Chess broadcast.

Round 14 results
Round 14 standings

Ding Liren – Hikaru Nakamura 1-0

The key game of the last round was initially developing well for Hikaru Nakamura, who needed just a draw to secure the second place. He managed to neutralize Ding’s opening advantage quite easily, landing the game into a balanced, almost symmetrical, endgame. Everything seemed to be petering towards a draw, as more and more pieces got swapped.

The turning point came on move 32. After Ding offered to repeat moves once (most likely just testing Nakamura, not with a true intent to draw the game), Nakamura sidestepped with the active 32…Bh4 move, but mixed up something and couple of moves later moved the bishop back in panic with 35…Bd8, which tured out to be the real mistake. Ding Liren stabilized a big advantage after the first time control.

It was only a matter of time before his dominating position, even if the material was equal, materialized into a full point. A great performance for Ding considering his terrible start into the tournament; it was impossible to imagine him finishing in clear second place after starting with one loss and 7 draws in a row. 

All eyes on Ding Liren-Nakamura; photo: FIDE/Stev Bonhage

Jan-Krzysztof Duda – Ian Nepomniachtchi ½-½

Similarly to the previous edition of the Candidates, Nepomniachtchi was extremely shaky once the tension was gone after winning with a round to spare. Jan-Krzysztof Duda managed to punch a hole in his solid preparation in Petroff defense and come out  with a courageous attack on the kingside, bringing the tournament winner to the brink of his first loss in the tournament.

Nevertheless, the young Pole, who had a tough second half of the tournament, was not precise enough and instead of the critical 23.Rxd8+ followed by 24.Rd1, he decided to force the matter. Flashy bishop sacrifice led only to simplifications, though, and players soon found themselves in a drawish endgame — the scoresheet was signed a couple of moves later after massive exchanges, with no mating material left on the board.

Trophy for the tournament winner; photo: FIDE/Stev Bonhage

The last bits of pressure have fallen off the new challenger after the game ended: “Now it’s time [to enjoy]. I won’t tell you [what my plans for the evening are]. (…) I will have about a 10 days break [before the Grand Chess Tour starts], to exhale a little bit. I will see, but I’m looking forward, finally some games without huge pressure.

Ian Nepomniachtchi managed to hold off Duda’s dangerous attack; photo: FIDE/Stev Bonhage

Richard Rapport – Teimour Radjabov 0-1

Teimour Radjabov had a surprisingly good tournament after a couple of dry years, not playing classical chess much and showing a particularly bad performance just a couple of weeks before in Stavanger during Norway Chess. Taking down Nakamura and Ding in the second half, trying to keep matters as solid as possible throughout the tournament, he took on Richard Rapport with the black pieces.

The Hungarian cannot be overly satisfied with his performance — especially the unnecessary loss against Nepomniachtchi in Round 7 that will enter the books. He tried to push his luck one more time and got a very perspective position with quite some creative middlegame play. He was just the precise 20.h4! move away from starting a powerful attack against Radjabov’s king.

But he took the creative spirit too far and overpressed with 20.Ng5? piece sacrifice. Black was clearly not comfortable at all and Radjabov was shaking his head a lot, and gradually repelled Rapport’s attack while keeping the material advantage. There were ways to put up more resistance from White’s side, but never enough compensation for the piece. Instead, Rapport quickly collapsed and the third victory helped Radjabov to climb to the shared 3rd place.

Richard Rapport overpressed; photo: FIDE/Stev Bonhage

Fabiano Caruana – Alireza Firouzja 0-1

Both players must have been terribly disappointed with the tournament — Fabiano Caruana had a great start into the tournament and was сhasing Ian Nepomniachtchi until his loss against Nakamura in round 8. On the opposing side, Alireza Firouzja was one of the biggest favorites on paper, yet his Candidates performance was underwhelming from start to finish.

Fabiano Caruana got a nice Anti-Berlin position and it seemed like a one-sided game after he managed to install an invulnerable knight on e4 in the middlegame. Yet he decided to go for complications, giving up all his positional pluses and opening the position. Soon, the tables turned completely and Firouzja was clearly winning.

It seemed like a futile defensive task for the American, but he managed to create sufficient counter-chances and actually bring the game back into drawish territory. Unfortunately for him, he slipped at the last moment, on the second time control move and lost his last pawn, allowing Firouzja to win in this marathon endgame. 

Viswanathan Anand making the first move in the Caruana-Firouzja game; photo: FIDE/Stev Bonhage
The final touch that stayed behind the curtain was a cute 64.Nd3 Rxd3! strike, sacrificing an exchange for queening Black’s a-pawn — Caruana did not wait for the inevitable and resigned on move 63.

Replay the broadcast from round 14 here.

Congratulations to the winner Ian Nepomniachtchi for his brilliant performance, and to the runner-up Ding Liren for his incredible comeback. We will see whether we’ll finally have a rematch between Magnus Carlsen and Ian Nepomniachtchi, or a match between Nepomniachtchi and Ding Liren — that mystery is yet to unfold!

Latest from the Candidates: 
Ian Nepomniachtchi wins FIDE Candidates Chess 2022 with a round to spare 
Ian Nepomniachtchi speaks about the Candidates and World Championship Match (VIDEO) 
Magnus Carlsen negotiates the format of the World Chess Championship Match

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Hikaru Nakamura: “I cared too much” https://www.chessdom.com/hikaru-nakamura-i-cared-too-much/ Mon, 04 Jul 2022 21:23:13 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79309 Hikaru Nakamura lost the last round of the FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2022 finishing the event in shared third place with 7.5 points. Nakamura needed a draw against Ding Liren to clinch silver and get the chance to participate in the World Chess Championship Match since Magnus Carlsen considers to retire from it. Hikaru posted the last recap video from the FIDE Candidates 2022: “Dear YouTube, I cared too much” and said he continues with Titled Tuesday streams tomorrow. See the video below.

Latest from the Candidates: Ian Nepomniachtchi wins FIDE Candidates Chess 2022 with a round to spare / Ian Nepomniachtchi speaks about the Candidates and World Championship Match (VIDEO) / Magnus Carlsen negotiates the format of the World Chess Championship Match

Featured photo: FIDE/David Llada

Reactions on Nakamura’s loss and recap:

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Ian Nepomniachtchi speaks about the Candidates and World Championship Match (VIDEO) https://www.chessdom.com/ian-nepomniachtchi-speaks-about-the-candidates-and-world-championship-match-video/ Mon, 04 Jul 2022 15:34:29 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79301 Russian grandmaster Ian Nepomniachtchi secured the trophy at the 2022 FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament with a round to spare. Nepomniachtchi is the second player ever who managed to win the Candidates Tournament two consecutive times, repeating Vasily Smyslov’s feast from 1956.

The post-game interview with WGM Dina Belankaya opened with ovations for Nepomniachtchi, who was touched by the non-stopping applause. Being asked how he feels now that is almost over, Nepo said: “I feel extremely tired. I mean, it’s an insanely difficult tournament and despite the score, it was never easy. It was up and down, and in every game I could have a potential danger“. He spoke about the game against Richard Rapport who chose to play the Sicilian defense: “The line I wanted to see at the board was Berlin. I wouldn’t mind the repetition of the previous game” he added with a smile.

Ian Nepomniachtchi will be the Challenger in the World Chess Championship Match which will be played next year. His opponent should be the reigning World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen who might withdraw from the match. Carlsen yesterday visited Palacio de Santona, the venue of the FIDE Candidates Tournament, and met with the FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich to discuss the format of the World Championship. Answering the question what would he tell Magnus, Nepo said: “I mean, stop playing these h4, a4 nonsense” and laughed. See the video below.

Read more: Carlsen goes with 1.h4 / Wesley So: I felt like playing 1…h5 or 1…a5 against Carlsen (VIDEO)

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FIDE Candidates 2022 R14 live with GM Judit Polgar, GM Jan Gustafsson and GM David Howell https://www.chessdom.com/fide-candidates-2022-r14-live-with-gm-judit-polgar-gm-jan-gustafsson-and-gm-david-howell/ Mon, 04 Jul 2022 11:31:29 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79291 This is the FIDE Candidates 2022 live video with GM Judit Polgar, GM Jan Gustafsson and GM David Howell, in collaboration with Chess24.com. Round 14 pairings:Richard Rapport – Teimour Radjabov / Fabiano Caruana – Alireza Firouzja / Ding Liren – Hikaru Nakamura / Jan-Krzysztof Duda – Ian Nepomniachtchi

Latest from the Candidates 2022:Ian Nepomniachtchi wins FIDE Candidates Chess 2022 with a round to spare / Anish Giri’s FIDE Candidates R13 recap live from Madrid / R14 preview / R13 recap

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FIDE Candidates 2022 R14 live with GM Alejandro Ramirez, GM Yasser Seirawan and IM Dorsa Derakhshani https://www.chessdom.com/fide-candidates-2022-r14-live-with-gm-alejandro-ramirez-gm-yasser-seirawan-and-im-dorsa-derakhshani/ Mon, 04 Jul 2022 11:29:22 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=79288 This is the FIDE Candidates 2022 live video with GM Alejandro Ramirez, GM Yasser Seirawan and IM Dorsa Derakhshani, in collaboration with Saint Louis Chess Club and Today in Chess Candidates edition. Round 14 pairings:Richard Rapport – Teimour Radjabov / Fabiano Caruana – Alireza Firouzja / Ding Liren – Hikaru Nakamura / Jan-Krzysztof Duda – Ian Nepomniachtchi

Latest from the Candidates 2022:Ian Nepomniachtchi wins FIDE Candidates Chess 2022 with a round to spare / Anish Giri’s FIDE Candidates R13 recap live from Madrid / R14 preview / R13 recap

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