Chess: Carlsen secures narrow victory at Stavanger in possible last classical hurrah

A picture


Magnus Carlsen, the world No 1, squeaked home in the tightest of finishes at Stavanger on Friday night after his Indian rival, the world champion, Gukesh Dommaraju, had missed his chance to draw with the US champion Fabiano Caruana and had instead fallen into a knight fork of his queen and rook.Final scores were Carlsen ­(Norway) 16; Caruana (US) 15.5; Gukesh (India) 14.5; Hikaru Nakamura (US) 14; Arjun Erigaisi (India) 13; Wei Yi (China) 9.5.

In his final Armageddon game, Carlsen blundered into mate in two against Erigaisi in mid-board in a drawn position, although that did not affect the standings.Amid suggestions that Stavanger might be his last classical event, Carlsen told Take Take Take: “It’s a long time since I enjoyed a classical tournament.” Later, he expanded on that comment and on his defeat by Gukesh: “The dream of ­playing a really good tournament burst with that game.I wanted a score that reflects the fact that I’m still ­significantly better at chess, and since I couldn’t achieve that, a potential win of the tournament would not mean as much.”Carlsen’s next chess fixture will be in Wynn Las Vegas in July, as part of the $750,000 five-series Freestyle Grand Slam whose previous legs have been held in Germany and Paris and which will conclude in Rio de Janeiro and Cape Town.

The cream of the world’s chess players will come to the Novotel ­London West Hotel in ­Hammersmith next week, for the World Rapid and Blitz championships, with an ­opportunity for Londoners to watch them in action.Play is daily from 1.30pm to 8.30pm from Wednesday 11 June to Sunday 15 June.Tickets are limited, and priced accordingly.

There are expected to be 55 teams, many of them English, with such well-known names as Nakamura and Ian Nepomniachtchi, playing 12 rounds of rapid and a mixed ­format of blitz chess.Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have entered strong national teams, but the strongest of them all are the top seeds, WR, which is short for Wadim ­Rosenstein, a German millionaire who has hired the elite including Nakamura and ­Nepomniachtchi to play for him, with himself as the captain.The WR squad also includes two of the best female ­players, Hou Yifan and Alexandra Kosteniuk.Other familiar names are Alireza Firouzja, Nigel Short, Anand, and Erigaisi, but there will be no Carlsen, as the Norwegian has fallen out with Fide.England will have numerous teams, amounting to an impressive defence of national honour.

Seeded 9th are Malcolm’s Mates(ECF international director, Malcolm Pein) which is effectively the England team of Luke McShane, Gawain Jones, Michael Adams, Nikita Vitiugov, Elmira Mirzoeva on the women’s board, and a 1900-rated amateur.Seeded 19th are e-therapeutics containing several GM blitz specialists plus England’s 10-year-old Bodhana Sivanandan who is strong in fast play.Seeded 24th are Wood Green, runners-up in the British 4NCL League.Seeded 26th are Sharks 4NCL, another strong 4NCL team, while 26th are Sassy Seniors, a 50+ England team led by two grandmasters.Several of the English teams will be composed predominantly of young players who will be looking eagerly for chances of giantkilling, so some sharp attacking games will be likely.

A new name to look out for is Russia’s Roman Shogdzhiev, who has become the youngest ever international master at age 10,Last week’s strong Cambridge tournament was won jointly by the eight-time British champion Michael Adams and by the former Australian and New Zealand blitz champion Brandon Clarke, who both totalled 7,5/9,Clarke’s final round win was achieved with the Hungarian Dragon Sicilian in only 21 moves,Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionThe game is an offbeat line, which Black knew better than White.

The engine assesses White’s 16th as the decisive error and much prefers 16 0-0-0.Over three years of the Cambridge tournament Adams has now won first prize, alone or jointly, every time and has played 27 games without defeat.This was an impressive performance by a man in his 50s against predominantly younger rivals and testifies to the Cornishman’s excellent judgment of the pace of a tournament, knowing when to press and when to take an occasional short draw.His closest rival throughout the three years has probably been Dan Fernandez, as the younger grandmaster continues his campaign for a place in the England team.The other England players seem to have tacitly accepted that Cambridge is Adams’s personal kingdom.

The major prizes at Cambridge are £1500-£750-£600, as against £6,000-£3,000-£2,000-£1500 for the British Championship at Liverpool in August, for which Vitiugov and Jones have already entered, while prizes for the English Championship at Warwick in July are £2,000-£1250-£750, so that is probably a factor.3975: 1 Bxh6+! Kxh6 (if 1...Kg8 2 Bxf8 Bxf8 3 Nxg6 wins) 2 Nxf7+! Qxf7 3 Rxe7! and if Qxe7 4 Qxg6 mate.

politicsSee all
A picture

‘Lots of bumps in the road’: Keir Starmer faces testing month before one-year milestone

As Keir Starmer approaches his first anniversary in Downing Street, there will be several things he wishes he had done differently. But before he can contemplate that July milestone, he faces a busy month strewn with political bear traps.June has proven a difficult time for successive prime ministers: Theresa May, Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak all had to contend with deeply unhappy parliamentary parties reeling from heavy local and European election losses.While the mood among Labour MPs is nowhere near as mutinous, they too are bruised from a difficult set of local election results in England in May and the surge of Reform UK. “There is more than the usual amount of grumbling and discontent,” a government source said

A picture

Tory proposal to leave ECHR would put peace in Northern Ireland at risk, Labour suggests – as it happened

Here is the full text of Kemi Badenoch’s speech this morning on the establishment of the party’s “lawfare commission” – the review that will consider the case for leaving the European convention on human rights.Labour has dismissed it as an attempt to appease Robert Jenrick and Reform UK, who are both unequivocally in favour of leaving the ECHR. During the Tory leadership contest last year Jenrick said the UK should definitely leave, while Badenoch said she was not ruling it out, but thought it was too simplistic to think leaving would just solve the problem. Some Tory leftwingers voted for Badenoch (who in other respects was more rightwing than Jenrick) just because of her stance on this issue. They regarded EHCR withdrawal as an unacceptable red line

A picture

Labour byelection win shows ‘SNP’s balloon has burst’, says Anas Sarwar

Scottish Labour’s surprise byelection win proves “the SNP’s balloon has burst”, a jubilant Anas Sarwar has said, after the popular local candidate, Davy Russell, defied predictions to beat the incumbent Scottish National party and fight off Reform UK’s “racist” campaigning in the central Scotland seat of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse.The Scottish Labour leader told a victory rally in Hamilton town centre on Friday morning that his party had proved everyone wrong following speculation that Reform UK might push it into third place, as the rightwing populist party gained ground in Scotland for the first time.“The reality is we proved the pollsters, the pundits, the political commentators and the bookies all wrong, and they are not understanding what is happening on the ground,” Sarwar said. “On the ground, people believe the SNP are done. The balloon has burst, people think they are a busted flush and they want them out

A picture

Badenoch says US-style blanket travel bans could be ‘viable’ in UK

Donald Trump-style blanket travel bans on foreign citizens could be “viable” in the UK, Kemi Badenoch has said after giving a speech about law and immigration.The Conservative party leader said she had not seen Trump’s list of banned countries but said: “I think there are scenarios where that is viable.”Earlier this week the US president signed a travel ban on 12 countries, including Afghanistan, Iran, Myanmar and Haiti, citing national security risks. Nationals from those countries will not be allowed to enter the US unless they qualify for an exemption. Seven other countries will face partial restrictions

A picture

Tice defends Reform MP’s question on burqa ban after Zia Yusuf resignation

Reform UK was right to start a debate on banning the burqa even though it triggered the resignation of its chair, Richard Tice, the party’s deputy leader, has said.Tice, who is one of five Reform MPs, said he was “enormously sad” that Zia Yusuf had quit as chair as he was partly responsible for the party’s strong performance in May’s local elections.But Tice said politics could be brutal and defended Reform’s choice to raise the issue of a burqa ban, saying the discussion must not be “forced underground” when it was a policy in a number of European countries.Tice told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I think it is right that we should have a debate about whether or not the burqa is appropriate for a nation that’s founded in Christianity, where women are equal citizens and should not be viewed as second-class citizens.”Asked whether he supported a ban, he said he was “pretty concerned” about whether the burqa was a “repressive item of clothing”, adding: “Let’s ask women who wear the burqa, is that genuinely their choice?”Tice also dismissed claims that Yusuf’s departure showed Nigel Farage struggles to retain senior figures after the Tory leader, Kemi Badenoch, said it demonstrated that Reform was a “fanclub” not a political party

A picture

Hamilton byelection win is vindication of Scottish Labour’s doorstep strategy

Labour’s victory in Hamilton is both a surprise and a vindication – a demonstration that in a byelection, shocks can take different forms.It is a surprise to those of us in the outside world who felt certain of a Scottish National party victory, who saw Labour support plummet in the Scottish opinion polls, and the same polls showing Reform’s steeply rising.The question became: would Labour scrape home in second, behind an experienced and personable SNP candidate, or even endure the humiliation of coming third behind a resurgent Reform. After all, it seemed Scottish Labour’s candidate, Davy Russell, was ill-equipped, so much so his party refused to put him up for a live television debate.But for Scottish Labour’s strategists this is vindication