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 A sponsoring agreement has been
agreed between Arctic Securities and Magnus Carlsen. Carlsen is ranked as no. 1 on the world ranking of chess players and is the only western chess player among the top 10. Carlsen has the previous world champion Garri Kasparov as his coach and is working dedicated to towards the goal of becoming ranked as the no 1 chess player in the world. Carlsen is the best representative for top excellence within both analysis and implementation. Further reading » |
| | Arctic Securities Chess Stars, Kr.sund, Final. |
| | Arctic Securities Chess Stars, Kr.sund, Day 2 |
| | Arctic Securities Chess Stars, Group play Day 1 |
| | Arctic Securities Chess Stars, Kr.sund, 28-30/8 |
| | Kings Tournament Bazna 2010 - Final Round |
| | kings Tournament Round 9, June 24th 2010 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 8 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 7 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 6 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 5 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 3 and 4 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 2 |
| | Kings Tournament Round 1 |
| | Kings Tournament, Bazna, Rumania 2010 |
| | My next tournament will be in Rumania, June 14-25 |
| | Amber 2010 Last Round |
| | Amber and blindfold and rapid, round 10 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 9 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 8 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 7 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 6 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 5 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 4 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, round 3 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid, Round 2 |
| | Amber Blindfold and rapid, Round 1 |
| | Amber blindfold and rapid starting on Saturday |
| | Corus 2010 Last Round |
| | Corus 2010 Penultimate Round |
| | Corus 2010 Round 11 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 10 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 9 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 8 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 7 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 6 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 5 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 4 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 3 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 2 |
| | Corus 2010 Round 1 |
| | 2010 Corus Chess Tournament starting Saturday 16th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009. Final round, Dec.15th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009, Round 6, Dec.14th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009, Round 5, Dec.13th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009, Round 4 Dec.12th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009, Round 3 Dec.10th |
| | London Chess Classics 2009, Round 2 Dec.9th |
| | London 2009 Round 1, December 8th |
| | London Chess Classics, December 7th 2009 |
| | Oslo, November 28th, Blitz tournament. |
| | Moscow, Nov.18th 2009, World Blitz Final Day |
| | Moscow, Nov.17th 2009, World Blitz 2009 Day 2 |
| | Moscow, Nov.16th 2009, World Blitz Championship 09 |
| | Moscow, Nov.14th 2009, Tal Memorial Last Round |
| | Moscow, Nov.13th 2009, Tal Memorial R8 |
| | Moscow, Nov.12th 2009, Tal Memorial R7 |
| | Moscow, Nov.11th 2009, Tal Memorial R6 |
| | Moscow, Nov.10th 2009, Tal Memorial Round 5 |
| | Moscow, November 8th 2009, Tal Memorial Round 4 |
| | Moscow, November 7th 2009, Tal Memorial Round 3 |
| | Moscow, November 6th 2009, Tal Memorial Round 2 |
| | Moskva 5.november 2009 |
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| | | Magnus Carlsen`s Blog | | Amber blindfold and rapid, Round 2 | After losing twice yesterday, I wrote that today would be a good moment to strike back. And I'm proud to say that that's what I did, by beating Levon Aronian 2-0. In the blindfold game I played the kings indian defence as black, which usually leads to a sharp and complicated game. I got a dynamic position, and when I got the chance to sacrifice a knight for two pawns and an attack on move 20, I really felt that things were going my way. After he missed a chance to complicate the position on the 25th move, it was over, and he resigned on the 28th move. A very enjoyable win, not least because I spent less than 10 minutes on the clock for the entire game. The rapid game was a completely different story. An equal position was reached out of the opening, and nothing much happened for the first 50 moves. Then, in a completely drawn position, he made a mistake I had being trying to provoke for a while with 50... h5, having underestimated my reply 51.g5! Suddenly, the position was not that clear anymore, and with the additional pressure of being short of time my opponent crumbled and lost 18 moves later. Vassily Ivanchuk and Ruslan Ponomariov are still in the lead with 3/4, both making two draws today, against Peter Svidler and Alexander Grischuk respectively. The aforementioned Svidler is my opponent tomorrow. The five-time Russian champion has been a more or less steady member of the top ten for 10 years now, and rarely loses. Certainly a tough opponent, but I hope to continue in the samne vein as today.
Magnus Carlsen, Nice, March 14th 2010 | 2010-03-14 22:39:00 |
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