
Ruslan PONOMARIOV: “SO FAR THE FINAL MATCH IS BORING”
The second game of the final match Gelfand vs. Ponomariov was drawn. This is the traditional press conference after the game:
– B.G.: The “Catalon” opening was played today, which was led to the “stone wall” variation of the Dutch defense. It brought us to a tough and flexible fight. I did not see a concrete plan of further development in the endgame. Ruslan did not see it either. I offered a draw and he agreed.
– R.P.: To my mind it was the only reasonable end. It is strange: it seemed that there are a lot of pieces on the board still, but all useful moves were already made. In such a position a draw is a logical result.
– Boris, why were you playing so slowly today?
– B.G.: I could keep my opponent in a deadlock only by making precise moves. I was trying to find some variations to puzzle Ruslan. But I did not manage.
– How did you estimate the final games of the Cup?
– B.G.: So far it is equal. We came back to the formula which we used during first 6 rounds. The two last Rounds will decide everything. In extremis we will play the tie breaks.
– R.P.: So far the final match is boring. We don’t manage to have interesting games, to create new combinations, to keep an opponent under tension.
– Do you follow the tournament in London ?
– R.P.: Yes, I follow some games. Internet considerably quickens the exchange of information. Do you remember an old story of the match Korchnoi-Polugaevsky? Before a decisive game Korchnoi prepared an interesting opening idea. In the day of a game, his second bought a morning newspaper and saw that the same idea was already used in a tournament which was taking place at the same time. The question was: should they use the novelty or not? They decided positively. The reasons were: Polugaevsky does not wake up early. And the head of the Soviet delegation would not spend the foreign currency to buy a newspaper. As a consequence, an opponent would not know about the used novelty. And now? You had hardly used a novelty when it had been already analyzed online.
– B.G.: An instructive story. I remember in 80s I was in Moscow and struggled to get into the files of the Central Chess Club to see the games of big tournaments. It is a fortune to get in there! You had to tell how talented you are, how important it is for you. Even they wrote some letters from Minsk : please, let Boris have an access.
http://www.ugra-chess.ru/eng/interv_49.htm
Not as boring as this Children’s show that demonstrates puppets on acid.
Nakamura is also part of the top 30…
There are only two players in the World Cup, they don’t compare with Carlsen and Kramnik, and they aren’t doing anything interesting.