Belt and Road Open: Will Ganguly take home US$ 50,000?
The Belt and Road International Open is taking place from 28th July to 7th August in the Changsha city of Hunan Province, China. It is a nine rounds swiss event following a time control of 90 minutes with 30 seconds increment from move 1. Strong Grandmasters such as Wei Yi, Yu Yangyi, Le Quang Liem, Amin Bassem, Maxim Matlakov, Francisco Vallejo Pons, Arkadij Naiditsch, David Anton Guijarro, Evgeniy Najer are competing for a whopping first prize of 50,000 USD. After five rounds the tournament has found four leaders namely, Ivan Cheparinov, Surya Shekhar Ganguly, Wang Hao, and Amin Bassem. In this comprehensive report we bring you the glimpses of the most important moments from rounds 1 to 5.
The Belt and Road tournament in China 2019 has three categories - A, where players above 2400 can compete, B - where you have players between 2000 and 2400, and C - is for players below the Elo of 2000. The organizers must be commended because they have been strict on these rating barriers for different categories. That's the reason why you have only 73 players fighting it out in the A category. However, from those 73 participants, you have 66 titled players! There are 42 GMs and 20 IMs taking part! The thing which makes this event unique is the first prize of US $50,000. Yes, you read that right! This is more than what MVL won (US $37,500) recently by finishing first at the Paris Grand Chess Tour 2019. Thanks to this huge prize fund you have six players above 2700 who have participated in the event. Wei Yi, with an Elo of 2737, is the top seed. He is followed by Yu Yangyi, Wang Hao, Le Quang Liem, Bassem Amin and Maxim Matlakov. India has six players taking part - Adhiban, Ganguly, Sethuraman, S.L. Narayanan, Harshit Raja and Himal Gusain.
Round 1: Ganguly dashes ahead with a thumping victory!
Surya Sekhar Ganguly started off the tournament with a crushing victory against the twenty-year-old Indonesian IM Yoseph Theolifus Taher. The game opened with symmetrical English but soon transposed into a variation of the accelerated Sicilian Dragon. Yoseph seemed out of his depth in the opening itself as his position aggravated quite early. The Indian Grandmaster missed no chance to punish all the dubious choices that his opponent made and brought home the full point convincingly. Let us begin by looking at the highlights of this encounter.
Surya Sekhar Ganguly - Yoseph Theolifus Taher, Round 1
Round 2: Sethuraman sizzles, Ganguly keeps soaring!
In the second round of the event both Surya Sekhar Ganguly and Sethuraman S P registered impressive victories with black pieces. The former won against Kateryna Lagno and the latter defeated Zou Chen. Let us check out the critical moments from both these games. First we look at Lagno versus Ganguly, this was a French Winawer where the Russian eschewed the poisoned pawn variation by playing a calmer 8.Bd3 line. Yet soon the game meandered into unusual complications.
Kateryna Lagno - Surya Sekhar Ganguly, Round 2
White is intending to play gxh5 after which Black will be forced to move the knight to h8. Ganguly played the move 16...Nxd3+! here, first eliminating the bishop, this indeed is the only move that preserves the balance. After 17.Qxd3 Bd7 (Not 17.cxd3 because of 17...f6), 18.gxh5 was countered with 18...f6!
There are nice tactics at work here! After 19.exf6 came 19...Nxf4 20.Bxf4 e5! - a fork, if White goes 21.Bxe5 then 21...Rae8 regains the piece by force!
Next, White played 21.Bg5 and after 21...Qxd4 22.Qxd4 exd4 23.0-0-0 gxf6 Black stood tangibly better.
The Zou Chen versus Sethuraman game in contrast saw fireworks on the queenside. Playing the black side of Sicilian Rauzer Sethuraman initiated a deadly flank attack on move 17!
Zou Chen - Sethuraman S P, Round 2
Replay the full game along with computer generated analysis below:
Rounds 3-4: Ivan Cheparinov emerges as the sole leader!
Ivan was able to liquidate into an ending where he had a 2 to 1 pawn majority on the queenside, this he was able to convert with commendable technique. Check out the full game below:
Among the Indians, S.L.Narayanan was also able to squeeze out a nice victory against Jun Xu with the black pieces. Here's the full game:
In round 4, Sethuraman found a quick win against Liu Yan in just 28 moves. The following was the decisive moment of the game:
Liu Yan - Sethuraman S P, Round 4
The underlying threat in the position is Ne7-Nxd5 exploiting the fact that the rook on c8 is hitting the c1 bishop. The only logical move to stay in the game would have been 18.Be3! but White blundered here with 18.e3? now after 18...Ne7 Black was just winning.
The game followed 19.Bxf7+ Kxf7 20.Rxd8 Rxc1+ 21.Kg2 Rxd8 22.Qxb4 Bf1+ 23.Kf3 and Black had two minor pieces plus a rook for the queen, more importantly White didn't have enough counterplay in compensation.
Round 5: Ganguly's impeccable opening preparation stuns Wei Yi
In round 5, the in-form Surya Sekhar Ganguly shocked Wei Yi by beating him in just sixteen moves! The latter made an unsuspecting error on move 10 which the Indian Grandmaster was able to mercilessly refute in the next six moves forcing the Chinese super GM's resignation in just sixteen!
IM Sagar Shah explains the nuances of this game in the following video:
Results of round 5
Standings after round 5
Rk. | SNo | Name | sex | FED | Rtg | Pts. | TB1 | TB2 | TB3 | TB4 | |
1 | 11 | GM | Cheparinov Ivan | GEO | 2666 | 4,0 | 2682 | 9,0 | 14,0 | 3 | |
2 | 15 | GM | Ganguly Surya Shekhar | IND | 2638 | 4,0 | 2665 | 8,5 | 14,5 | 3 | |
3 | 3 | GM | Wang Hao | CHN | 2725 | 4,0 | 2630 | 8,0 | 13,0 | 3 | |
4 | 5 | GM | Amin Bassem | EGY | 2707 | 4,0 | 2549 | 8,0 | 13,0 | 3 | |
5 | 2 | GM | Yu Yangyi | CHN | 2736 | 3,5 | 2604 | 9,0 | 15,5 | 2 | |
6 | 9 | GM | Anton Guijarro David | ESP | 2678 | 3,5 | 2596 | 9,5 | 15,5 | 2 | |
7 | 7 | GM | Vallejo Pons Francisco | ESP | 2687 | 3,5 | 2579 | 9,0 | 14,5 | 2 | |
8 | 31 | GM | Megaranto Susanto | INA | 2545 | 3,5 | 2554 | 6,5 | 11,5 | 2 | |
9 | 18 | GM | Zhao Jun | CHN | 2636 | 3,5 | 2543 | 8,5 | 13,0 | 2 | |
10 | 6 | GM | Matlakov Maxim | RUS | 2701 | 3,5 | 2541 | 8,5 | 14,0 | 2 | |
11 | 23 | GM | Zhou Jianchao | CHN | 2608 | 3,5 | 2500 | 7,5 | 11,5 | 2 | |
12 | 44 | IM | Khademalsharieh Sarasadat | w | IRI | 2481 | 3,0 | 2677 | 8,0 | 13,5 | 1 |
13 | 43 | IM | Bilguun Sumiya | MGL | 2482 | 3,0 | 2660 | 8,0 | 13,5 | 2 | |
14 | 50 | GM | Yu Ruiyuan | CHN | 2464 | 3,0 | 2645 | 8,0 | 12,5 | 1 | |
15 | 35 | IM | Li Di | CHN | 2523 | 3,0 | 2642 | 9,0 | 14,5 | 1 | |
16 | 17 | GM | Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son | VIE | 2636 | 3,0 | 2626 | 10,0 | 15,5 | 2 | |
17 | 37 | GM | Tan Zhongyi | w | CHN | 2511 | 3,0 | 2622 | 8,5 | 14,0 | 2 |
18 | 29 | GM | Zeng Chongsheng | CHN | 2551 | 3,0 | 2613 | 8,0 | 13,5 | 2 | |
19 | 1 | GM | Wei Yi | CHN | 2737 | 3,0 | 2609 | 9,5 | 15,5 | 2 | |
20 | 32 | GM | Batchuluun Tsegmed | MGL | 2535 | 3,0 | 2578 | 7,5 | 12,0 | 1 |