2021 FIDE Online Olympiad opens in Shenzhen

On August 13, 2021, the Online Chess Olympiad 2021 was opened in Shenzhen MSU-BIT University in Shenzhen, China. More than 1500 players from 155 teams will compete in rapid chess from August 20 to September 15. The opening ceremony was attended by Ye Jiangchuan, FIDE Vice President and Chairman of the Chinese Chess Association; Wang Zhiqiang, Deputy Inspector of the Shenzhen Municipal Bureau of Culture, Radio, Television, Tourism and Sports; Li Hezhang, Rector of Shenzhen MSU-BIT University and other officials. In his welcome speech, FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich stressed the importance of this tournament for the players and the global chess community. “Warm welcome on behalf of FIDE to all the participants and organizers of the second FIDE Online Olympiad! We are happy to have it for the second year in the row following the success of the last year when more than 160 teams participated in the event. Today we have almost the same number, and this is another confirmation that people love it – both chess players and spectators. We are happy to be joined by Chess.com, and we are specifically grateful to our Chinese partners – their support is enormous and very much welcome at FIDE and the whole chess community. Best of luck! Stay cool and play chess!” he said. The second edition of the Online Olympiad is supported and sponsored by the Shenzhen authorities, including the Shenzhen Longgang District Culture and Sports Bureau, the Shenzhen MSU-BIT University, Shenzhen Chess Academy, Shenzhen Pengcheng Chess Club. Simaland, the Russian wholesale online store and proud sponsor of the Candidates tournament 2020-21 is also a partner for the Online Olympiad 2021. China will have two teams participating in the event – the Chinese National Chess Team seeded directly to Top Division, and the host Shenzhen team, composed of players representing Shenzhen (GMs Zeng Chongsheng, Yu Ruiyuan, and Zhao Xue, WIM Xu Tong, Xue Haowen and WFM Li Xinyu). They also made an appearance at the opening ceremony. The division stage will kick off on August 20. Top Division, featuring 25 seeded teams and 15 qualified teams, will begin on September 08. The decisive play-off stage is scheduled for September 13-15. Like a year ago, each team will consist of six players, including at least two women, at least one player U-20 (born in 2001 or later), and at least one female U-20 (born in 2001 or later). The time control is 15 minutes + 5 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
2021 STL Rapid & Blitz: Nakamura in the lead after rapid

At the end of a dramatic final day of rapid chess, Hikaru Nakamura has emerged as the new tournament leader. With excellent opening preparation, tactical precision, and clever resourcefulness, the American grandmaster remains the only competitor to have not lost a single game thus far. Fabiano Caruana and Richard Rapport trail close behind in 2nd place. With 18 blitz games to come over the next two days, anything can happen. However, Hikaru has proven that he is the man to beat. Round 7 The first round of the day kicked off with fireworks. Jeffery Xiong scored his first win of the event by absolutely pummeling GM Liem Le from the black side of a Caro Kann. Xiong seized the initiative early with a strong central pawn break and did not stop making threats until winning material. The game ended in just 20 moves. Meanwhile, Hikaru Nakamura convincingly defeated Leinier Dominguez from the white side of a Queen’s Gambit Accepted. After misplaying the opening, Dominguez found himself in a horrendous position with his pieces lacking coordination, and his king stuck in the center. Although Dominguez managed to survive longer than expected, it was not enough to escape the powerful claws of Hikaru. The most shocking result of the round took place between Fabiano Caruana and Richard Rapport. The game began with Caruana completely eviscerating Richard Rapport’s Sicilian Defense with a kingside pawn storm that looked almost as sinister as the thunderstorm that hit St. Louis yesterday evening. When it looked like the American would cruise his way to victory, Rapport resisted. He used Caruana’s g7-pawn as an umbrella for his king and defended valiantly in severe time pressure. It was then Caruana who stumbled and found his own king in a mating net. In an unexpected twist, Caruana got mated on the board and lost what should have been an easily winning game. Round 8The second round of the day produced even more drama. The first game to finish was Richard Rapport’s convincing victory over Jeffery Xiong. The Hungarian grandmaster achieved a clear advantage from a King’s Indian Attack and maintained full control through the entire game. His winning technique was nearly as colourful as his vibrant shirt. Many of the other games were decided deep in time pressure situations. Peter Svidler demonstrated a brilliant tactical endgame sequence with less than a minute left to take down Leinier Dominguez. Caruana rebounded from his disappointing loss in round 7 by beautifully outplaying Mamedyarov. He showed how truly overpowering the bishop pair can be in the endgame and Mamedyarov could not tame the diagonal-moving beasts. Sam Shankland gave Liem Le his second loss of the day in a long endgame grind-down. After losing a pawn in the early middlegame, the Vietnamese grandmaster showed great resilience and reached a drawn rook endgame. However, one tragic blunder was enough to let the draw slip away and give Shankland the victory. The only draw of the round was seen in Wesley So versus Hikaru Nakamura. Although Hikaru was under pressure for much of the game, he demonstrated computer-like precision to fend off Wesley’s attack and maintain his no-loss streak. Round 9In the final round of rapid chess, all attention was on the marquee matchup between Fabiano Caruana and Hikaru Nakamura. The American superstars entered a deep theoretical variation of the Ruy Lopez, with Nakamura showing superior opening preparation. Consequently, Nakamura acquired a massive advantage as the position transitioned into an endgame. Caruana’s position was highly unpleasant to defend and quickly crumbled as a result. Nakamura demonstrated stellar technique to cruise his way to victory and leapfrog Caruana in the standings. The only other decisive outcome of the round was seen in the game Jeffery Xiong versus Sam Shankland. In what should have been a drawn position, Shankland made an atrocious blunder in time pressure allowing Jeffery a simple and aesthetic winning tactic. Xiong pounced on the opportunity, and Shankland immediately resigned. If this foreshadows anything, we can expect a lot more blunders and decisive games as the time control will shorten to 5+2 for the remaining two days. The 2021 Saint Louis Rapid and Blitz coverage continues on Saturday, August 14, at 2:50 PM CDT, with live commentaries by GM’s Yasser Seirawan, Alejandro Ramirez, and Maurice Ashley on grandchesstour.org. Watch all the action live on grandchesstour.org and Kasparovchess.com Text: IM Eric Rosen Photos: Courtesy of Grand Chess Tour and Spectrum Studios Credits available on Flickr. Further Information:Web: GrandChessTour.org | Twitter: @GrandChessTourInstagram: @GrandChessTour | Facebook: @GrandChessTour#GrandChessTour#STLRapidBlitz Venue: Saint Louis Chess Club, USAAugust 10- August 16, 2021 Press Contact:press@grandchesstour.org Livestream:Grandchesstour.orgKasparovchess.com