Chess: Adams may rue missed chances
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Your support makes all the difference.KAMSKY, Kramnik, Anand and Salov are through to the next round of the Fide Candidates' matches; the Timman-Lautier and Adams-Gelfand matches have their final games today. Lautier and Adams trail by a point, so need to win to force their matches into overtime. If a match ends 4-4, they contest further games with a quick time-limit to resolve the tie. If that fails, they will draw lots.
Michael Adams, playing Black in today's game, faces a hard task. In the seventh game, he outplayed Gelfand completely from a weird opening that began 1. e4 c5 2. c3 Nf6 3. e5 Nd5 4. Nf3 Nc6 5. Bc4 Nb6 6. Bb3 c4 7. Bc2 g6 8. Na3. In the middle-game, Adams established a winning position, but let Gelfand escape. Then, in a level endgame, Adams went wrong and had to play well yesterday to save himself and keep the match alive.
'It was always going to be a match with a lot of hacking with the White pieces,' says John Nunn, who is acting as Adams' second. With games four, five and six all won by White, Nunn bemoaned Adams' missed chances in games one and seven.
In later rounds, the men to watch seem to be Anand, who still plays at least as well and twice as fast as any other grandmaster, and Vladimir Kramnik, who is terrifyingly good for a man still in his teens. Here are the full moves of his opening win. His coolness in refusing to weaken his position with a6, and his later sacrifice of the d-pawn, set the tone for a neat combination.
White: Yudasin
Black: Kramnik
1 e4 c5
2 Nf3 Nc6
3 d4 cxd4
4 Nxd4 Nf6
5 Nc3 e5
6 Ndb5 d6
7 Nd5 Nxd5
8 exd5 Ne7
9 a4 Nf5
10 c3 g6
11 Be2 Bg7
12 0-0 0-0
13 Qb3 Re8
14 Qb4 e4
15 Bf4 Be5
16 Bxe5 Rxe5
17 Rad1 Nh4
18 Kh1 Qg5
19 Rg1 Bg4
20 Bxg4 Qxg4
21 Rde1 Qf4
22 Qxd6 Nf5
23 Qc7 e3]
24 Rxe3 Qxe3]
25 Nd6 Re7
26 Nxf5 gxf5
27 Qd6 Qe5
28 Qb4 Rae8
29 Qh4 f6
30 h3 Qxd5
White resigns
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