Carlsen And Anand Play A Titanic 122-Move Game 7 At The World Chess Championship
Boring? Hardly.
Well, it was a bit boring at the end - after more than 100 moves had been played! It was fairly clear where the game was head by this point, but it continued until move 122, consuming over six hours of challenger Vishy Anand and champion Magnus Carlsen's lives.
For the first 30 moves or so, viewers were treated to the unique spectacle of Grandmaster preparation. If you've been following my game recaps, you'll already be family with an opening known as the Berlin Defense in the Ruy Lopez. You can bone up on it here.
The game was a must-win for Anand, who lost a heartbreaker in Game 6 after missing a blunder by Carlsen that could have ended the encounter in one move. So for the 44-year-old Indian, it was mission accomplished: He would have preferred to come out of two consecutive games as black with a score of 1.5-1 in his favor, making the match score Anand 4, Carlsen 3, with five game to go.
But then again, there was a good chance that, with the white pieces, Carlsen would win at least one of his two white games. Anand's task, especially in Game 7, was to be sure that he notched a draw. To do it after such a long game shows that he's recovered from the Game 6 loss. If he was going to crack under the pressure, the 23-year-old Carlsen gave his older opponent ample opportunity: the setup was vintage Carlsen, the reigning king of the grinding endgame pressure-cooker.
This is the Norwegian's Elysium, his glad and happy place - and the context of many a foe's misery, tears, and trembling collapse.
Anand knows this. But somehow he was up to the task.
AN ENDGAME FOR THE AGES
The Berlin Defense, as I've already noted, has a reputation at GM-level play for yielding draws. But those draws certainly aren't automatic. In fact, as Game 7 proves, they're far from automatic.
Additionally, Carlsen, prior to Game 7, had busted Anand in the Berlin twice. Anand played the opening four times in the 2013 WCC and lost one. And in Game 2 of this year's match, Magnus crushed Anand, smashing his "Berlin Wall" to pieces.
Some background. Even in GM play, a chess game can be separated into three phases:
The Opening, or the first 10-15 moves of the game
The Middle Game, when the players looks for opportunities to develop advantages, capitalize on a better opening position, or engage in tactical forays intended to lead to checkmate and avoid...
The Endgame, when most of the pieces have come off the board, often including the queens, and the players try to outmaneuver each other to convert slight edges into wins, or in some case, "hold" a draw
Interestingly, from an intellectual standpoint, endgames can be the most demanding part of a game. They have all been extensively studied and, unlike the middle game (where tactics can come to the fore) or the opening (where extensively prepared lines of play can be critical), the endgame demands precision. One bad - One! - move can literally be the difference between a win, a loss, or a draw.
As it turned out, Carlsen and Anand played one of the longest games in the history of the World Chess Championship (two more moves and it would have been the longest).
It was a strange endgame, in that Carlsen perhaps hung in there it to deplete Anand for the rest of the match - but there were points when Anand looked as if he might be able to do something with the imbalance of his pieces versus Carlsen's.
But it came down to this final position:
The position is instructive, because it's an automatic draw - there's no way for Carlsen to win the game with a king and knight versus a lone king, because the white side doesn't have enough "material" to deliver checkmate. The black king can always get away.
This is the critical position in the game, however:
It might look basically even, but it isn't. Anand has "structural" problems. He has five pawns to Carlsen's four and a bishop and a rook versus a knight and rook.
But two of Anand's pawns are "doubled" on the c-file, and one is "isolated" on the e-file, unprotected. But Anand can use his remaining pieces - all of them, his king, rook, and pawns - to gang up on white's pawns on the c2 and d2. He actually needs to reduce Carlsen's pawn force, and he does this by taking the pawn on g4 with his bishop.
It's a "sacrifice," but as many observers of Game 7 pointed out, it allowed Anand make it from move 31...to move 122!
Anand loses the e-pawn in the process, but Carlsen ends up with a lot of Anand's pawns staring down at the two pawns he has remaining - and Anand can now effectively use his king as a sort of "super pawn," joining the attack.
Carlsen doesn't have a solid chance of promoting one of the pawns to a queen. Anand could get one of his pawns home and make a queen, but he also has to contend with white's bishop and knight.
Extensive maneuvering followed, until it became apparent that a draw was in the cards (or the pieces!).
And then they played until they got to move 100.
And then they played some more.
WHAT WILL THEY COME UP WITH NEXT?
Somewhat ridiculous, to be sure, but it was one of those endgames that could - Could! - have pivoted into a win for either side, if Carlsen or more likely Anand cracked. Anand botched several endgames last year. Carlsen is supposed to be the endgame master. So Carlsen had to push things as far as he could.
After Game 6, I kind of expected a long struggle. Carlsen's goal was to put Anand away, securing his WCC defense - a margin of two wins, even with five game remaining in the match, would be exceptionally difficult for Anand to overcome.
Anand's goal was to stave off that fate. By any means necessary.
The result proved that the Berlin Defense can still produce a draw.
But it was an epic struggle. Both Carlsen and Anand have to be completely exhausted. And on Tuesday, they'll be back. Anand will have white. But will he have the energy left to go for a win?
He's behind by a point, so he needs to find that energy and find it fast.
You can watch the Game 7 replay here - and be sure to fast-forward to the end if you don't want to watch the whole thing so you can listen to what happens to a Grandmaster like Peter Svidler, doing commentary, when he's had to talk about chess for almost seven hours. Hilarious.
You can review the game at ChessBase, with comments by GM Alejandro Ramirez.