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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Major Tournaments  >  Ivanchuk 1/2 Judit

      Ivanchuk 1/2 Judit

      Anish Giri, Holland, Ivanchuk, Judit Polgar, Tiviakov


      Ivanchuk, V (2756) – Polgar, J (2687) [E21]
      13th Unive Tournament 2009 (2), 19.10.2009

      1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.Nf3 b6 5.Bd2 Bb7 6.g3 c5 7.dxc5 Bxc5 8.Bg2 0–0 9.0–0 Na6 10.a3 Be7 11.b4 Rc8 12.Qb3 Qc7 13.Rfd1 Rfd8 14.Nb5 Qb8 15.Bf4 d6 16.Rac1 h6 17.h3 e5 18.Bd2 Nc7 19.Nc3 Qa8 20.Be3 Bf8 21.Kh2 Ne4 22.Nh4 Nxc3 23.Rxc3 Bxg2 24.Nxg2 Ne6 25.f3 d5 26.cxd5 Rxc3 27.Qxc3 Rxd5 28.Rc1 Qd8 29.Qc8 g6 30.Qa6 Qd7 31.Rc8 Kg7 32.Rb8 Qe7 33.Bc1 Rd7 34.Bb2 Nd4 35.h4 h5 36.Bxd4 exd4 37.Nf4 Kh7 38.Qc8 Kg7 39.Qc2 Rc7 40.Qd1 Qd7 41.Qd3 Qd6 42.Re8 Rc3 43.Qb5 Be7 44.Ra8 Re3 45.Rxa7 d3 46.exd3 Rxf3 47.Kg2 Re3 48.Kf2 Re5 49.Qd7 Qf6 50.d4 Re4 51.Kf3 Re1 52.Kf2 Re4 53.Kf3 Re1 54.Ra8 Ra1 55.Qe8 Kh6 56.Qh8+ Qxh8 57.Rxh8+ Kg7 58.Rb8 Rxa3+ 59.Kg2 Bxb4 60.Rxb6 Be1 61.Ne2 Re3 62.Rb2 Kf6 63.Kh3 Kf5 64.Rb5+ Kf6 65.Rb6+ Ke7 66.Rb2 f6 67.Kg2 Kd6 68.Ra2 Kd5 69.Kh3 Ke4 70.d5 Kxd5 71.Nf4+ Kd6 72.Rg2 Ke5 73.Nxg6+ Kf5 74.Nf8 Rd3 75.Rg1 Re3 Game drawn ½–½
       
      Click here to replay the game.

      Round 2 results:

      1 Ivanchuk, Vassily ( 0.5) 1/2 Polgar, Judit ( 0.5)
      2 Giri, Anish ( 0.5) 1/2 Tiviakov, Sergei ( 0.5)

      Official website: http://www.univechess.nl/index.html

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      14 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 5:27 pm

        Ivanchuk is big patzer.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 5:29 pm

        Dear Judit, good luck with the boys, you toss them around as if they were toys, now lets win some games, yes, against those big chess names.

      3. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 5:36 pm

        Vasilly’s pieces really look silly in the end position, don’t they?

      4. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 5:46 pm

        wow is unbelievable how judit put so much pressure rook n bishop put on g pawn white cant move rook away or king wow go judit goodluck rest of tournament u derseve to win

      5. Lionel Davis Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 6:32 pm

        Wow!, thats funny Susan, Chucky knew he was worse after 28.qd8 but he goes for the cheap chess hahahaha. cuz she havent been playin, what a joke theses guys are! hehehe. I like the way she threw the horse in his face! haha. Susan “im confused” does it seems like i need to ask Kaparov anything about chess? hehe.

      6. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 7:51 pm

        this is y judit is so feared she fights till end she afraid of no1 in chess competition fites till end just when sometime seems she may lose or get in trouble she somehow finds way to escape then turn it ard to her advantage she showed them all y women should compete against men for title once again y she top female player perhaps goodluck go judit please dont ever stop playing im such a big fan of urs best wishes

      7. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 8:13 pm

        A good and impressive result performance by Judit.

      8. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 8:27 pm

        I officially propose that all game not ending in 40 moves be declared as 0-1.

      9. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 9:06 pm

        I am glad to see Judit playing again, and holding her own against powerful players like Ivanchuk. He is dangerous, but her great positional skills allowed her to equalize. I like the way she took risks and fought for the white squares, particularly d5.

        Kamalakanta

      10. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 9:19 pm

        Good luck, Judit. You almost had him!

      11. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 9:24 pm

        Judit will get up to 2750 within 18 months

      12. Anonymous Reply
        October 19, 2009 at 11:42 pm

        Why are you all treating Judit as an underdog? She’s just as strong as anybody else.

        That said, I’ve an unrelated question. How come top-level chess players are all dressed up (business suits) all the time? Take Topalov, or Kasparov, or Karpov, or Fischer, or Judit. Somehow, given the kind of endevour chess is, I’d think people would be all worked up in analysis rooms, with bad hair, and dressed like Ben Feingold! 🙂

        Sorry Ben, just kidding.

      13. Anonymous Reply
        October 20, 2009 at 8:42 am

        ‘Why are you all treating Judit as an underdog? She’s just as strong as anybody else.’

        She’s just as weak as anybody else?

      14. Anonymous Reply
        October 20, 2009 at 8:42 am

        Tiviakov is big patzer.

      Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

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