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HomeChessCarlsen Back On Top, Niemann Possible Opponent Again

Carlsen Back On Top, Niemann Possible Opponent Again


GM Magnus Carlsen is back in the lead at the Julius Baer Generation Cup after scoring three wins and a draw on the third day of the preliminaries. GM Hans Niemann is still in contention of qualifying for the knockout phase and might be paired with Carlsen later in the tournament.

How to watch? The games of the Julius Baer Generation Cup preliminaries can be found here. The rounds start each day at 9 a.m. Pacific/18:00 CEST.

Seemingly unaffected by the tumultuous times in the chess world, Carlsen played another day of fine chess in the Generation Cup on Tuesday. Just like on the first day, he scored 10 out of a possible 12 points, and his only loss so far is the game he resigned quickly vs. Niemann.

After skillfully outplaying GM Ivan Saric (a textbook endgame showing the power of the bishop pair), the world champion drew a 122-move game with GM Vasyl Ivanchuk, who held with a fortress of a rook and knight vs. a queen and pawn.

Carlsen’s win in round 11 must have felt nice; GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda surely had beaten him too many times for his taste in recent years.

With three rounds to go, it’s all about finishing in the top eight who will play a knockout starting on Thursday. Besides Niemann, many more of the up-and-coming players are doing well, such as GM Arjun Erigaisi (just a point behind Carlsen), GM Praggnanandhaa R. and GM Vincent Keymer (currently sharing fourth place), while GM Christopher Yoo can still make it as well.

While Carlsen has secured his qualification, it turns out that his most likely opponent in the quarterfinals is… Niemann.

Niemann scored a remarkably quick win vs. GM Levon Aronian, who mishandled a Dragon-like Sicilian where White seemed to be combining short castling with a kind of Yugoslav Attack. “I think it was a strange game,” Aronian said afterward. “I think Hans played very, very strange moves at some point, and I think I lost my concentration and blundered.”

Hans Niemann Generation Cup
Like Carlsen, Niemann hasn’t given an interview yet during the event. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

The move of the day was by Duda. 10.Ne5 was pretty spectacular, but 14.exd6 was really great. Too bad the engine spoils it by giving Black the advantage right before!

Julius Baer Generation Cup | Day 3 Standings

Julius Baer Generation Cup 2022 standings

All Games Day 3

The 2022 Champions Chess Tour’s seventh event, the Julius Baer Generation Cup, takes place September 18-25, 2022 on chess24. The preliminary phase is a 16-player rapid (15|10) round-robin. The top eight players advance to the knockout phase which consists of two days of four-game rapid matches, which advance to blitz (5|3) and armageddon (White has five minutes, Black four with no increment) tiebreaks only if a knockout match is tied after the second day. The prize fund is $150,000.


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