Tag: shootout

  • Chess: Ding and Nepomniachtchi go to the wire as speed shootout looms

    Chess: Ding and Nepomniachtchi go to the wire as speed shootout looms

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    Ding Liren and Ian Nepomniachtchi drew the 13th and penultimate round of their world championship match in Astana, Kazakhstan, on Thursday as the prospect of another draw on Saturday and a speed shootout for the crown on Sunday loomed closer. Nepomniachtchi, 32, again opened with the Ruy Lopez but stood worse in the middle game until Ding, 30, spoiled his advantage and opted to halve by threefold repetition of position, saying later: “It was still some kind of dark ocean position, so I didn’t go further into it.”

    The final outcome now depends on Saturday’s 14th and final classical game. If the score is then 7-7, they go to rapid and blitz tie-break games, the chess equivalent of a penalty shootout, on Sunday. Play begins at 10am BST, and the official website with grandmaster commentary is worldchampionship.fide.com. The games can also be watched on chess.com, chess24.com and chessgames.com.

    The speed tie-break, if needed, will consist of four 25-minute games, with a 10-second increment from move one. If they are still tied, up to two pairs of 5+3 games will be played. If tied again, they go to single 3+2 games, with colours reversed each game, until there is a winner.

    Deciding the crown by rapid and blitz games has happened four times previously, following a change in title rules which used to allow the champion to keep his title after a drawn match. Vlad Kramnik v Veselin Topalov in 2006, Vishy Anand v Boris Gelfand in 2012, Magnus Carlsen v Sergey Karjakin in 2016, and Carlsen v Fabiano Caruana in 2018 were all decided by speed tiebreaks.

    Anand and Carlsen were renowned for their skills at fast chess, This time Ding, who ranks No 2 to Carlsen in rapid, has a slight edge in the ratings, but the outcome may be determined more by who has the better nerves under extreme pressure.

    Ding dramatically levelled the scores at 6-6 when he recovered from a lost position in Wednesday’s error-strewn game 12, where a computer analysis showed 21 inaccuracies, mistakes, missed opportunities or blunders and which culminated in Nepomniachtchi’s massive error at move 34.

    The howler, which brought gasps of disbelief from the online commentators, gave away a free pawn and opened up his defences to an invasion by Ding’s army. Nepomniachtchi spent all but two minutes of his remaining time seeking a way out, and slumped in his chair as he realised his position was hopeless.

    Chess 3865
    3865: Jiri Stocek v Milo Tomic,Golden Sands, Bulgaria 2012. White to move and win. In the game, White lost after the poor move 1 Rc7.
    Can you do better?

    The Russian’s greatest strength, his speed of thought in sharp tactical positions, became a weakness as he blitzed out errors and the final blunder. Fabiano Caruana, the 2018 title challenger, was scathing in his chess.com commentary. “I don’t understand this decision to rush every move. It’s a world championship,” he said. “You have one or two chances in your lifetime – how can you play every move like it’s a Titled Tuesday game? These are responsible decisions to make.”

    The drama of game 12 was a total contrast not only to game 13, but also to the 10th and 11th games, which were drawn on Sunday and Monday after relatively calm play.

    Carlsen, Norway’s world No 1, who has abdicated his world champion crown after a 10-year reign, never had such drama and reversals of fortune in his five title matches. There were long stretches of draws in 2016 and 2018, and even in 2021 there were five draws before the marathon 136-move sixth game and Nepomniachtchi’s subsequent collapse.

    The gap between Carlsen and his rivals was not fully translated into overwhelming match results. Instead, his clear superiority on tie-breaks at faster time rates became a kind of goal difference, a potential threat which tempted opponents to overpress in the classical section.

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    The combative approach by both players in Astana, a clear contrast to Carlsen’s matches, has split chess fans, with some delighted by the increased fighting spirit but others displeased by the higher percentage of errors.

    Will Carlsen be tempted into a comeback against whoever wins in Astana? It seems highly unlikely. The 32-year-old played only 40 classical games in 2022, the smallest number of his career apart from the pandemic-affected 2020. His current schedule for 2023 also plans for only around 40, starting next month with his home tournament of Stavanger. It is possible that he will add the Sinquefield Cup in St Louis, from which he withdrew in controversial circumstances last year following his loss to Hans Niemann, where the fallout included a still unresolved lawsuit.

    Instead, Carlsen is giving priority to the online Champions Tour of rapid and blitz games, although he will be absent from the next Tour event, the ChessKid Cup, a five-day knockout starting on 22 May. The No 1 has a growing interest in poker. He has always said that he plans to retire from chess by his 40s, so 2023 could be viewed as the early stages of a winding down.

    3865: 1 Rd6! Qxd6 2 f3+ Kh5 3 Kh3 (threat 4 g4 mate) g5 4 Rg7! with 5 g4 mate or 4…g4 5 fxg4 mate or 4…Nf6 5 g4+ Nxg4 6 fxg4 mate. Black can avoid mate by 1…Nc5 2 Rxd3 Nxd3 or by 1…Qe4 2 f3+ Qxf3, but then has a hopeless ending.

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    #Chess #Ding #Nepomniachtchi #wire #speed #shootout #looms
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Special Task Force gets success in Umesh Pal shootout

    Special Task Force gets success in Umesh Pal shootout

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    Syed Husain Afsar
    Syed Husain Afsar

    Special Task Force (STF) has got great success in the Umesh Pal shootout. Inputs have been received about Umesh Pal’s shooters reaching Nepal. The STF arrested Qayyum Ansari, a close aide of Atiq, late on Thursday evening on charges of helping Asad, Muslim Guddu, Sabir and Armaan, son of Mafia Atiq Ahmed, cross the Nepal border and giving them shelter in Nepal. STF is questioning him. STF has got many important clues in the inquiry.

    Qayyum is a big businessman in Nepal

    Qayyum Ansari is a resident of Mauaima in Prayagraj. He is an influential businessman in Nepal. He has a petrol pump in the name of Ansari Diesels at Chandrota in Kapilvastu district of Nepal. Qayyum has been caught by a team of 4 STF officers. According to sources, it was Qayyum who got the shooters to cross the Nepal border from Siddharthnagar. The STF took him to Bardpur in Siddharthnagar district, where he was interrogated. After this he has been shifted somewhere else. However, the police has not given any official information about this.

    Guddu was giving backup to all the shooters including Muslim Asad by throwing bombs. He had also stopped the traffic by throwing bombs on both sides of the road.

    Guddu was giving backup to all the shooters including Muslim Asad by throwing bombs. He had also stopped the traffic by throwing bombs on both sides of the road.

    The clue of the shooters can be found from Qayyum

    Umesh Pal was shot dead on 24 February. The entire family of Atiq Ahmed has been named in this murder case. Atiq’s wife Shaista Parveen, his third son Asad and Muslims Guddu, Sabir and Armaan are absconding.

    According to STF sources, the location of the shooters was found in Nepal. After this, adding link to link, STF has arrested Qayyum Ansari, who crossed the border of Nepal and gave shelter in Nepal. STF is collecting information about shooters from Qayyum. It is Qayyum who has taken the shooters to a safe place somewhere in Nepal.

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    #Special #Task #Force #success #Umesh #Pal #shootout

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Twins killed in Canada bank shootout aimed to kill as many police as possible

    Twins killed in Canada bank shootout aimed to kill as many police as possible

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    Twin brothers who died in a hail of gunfire last summer outside a Canadian bank had been planning their attack for years, with a goal to kill as many officers as possible, police said on Friday.

    An investigation by the Vancouver Island integrated major crime unit found that 22-year-old Isaac Auchterlonie and his twin, Mathew, showed up at the Victoria, British Columbia, area bank on 28 June 2022 wearing full body armor and carrying semi-automatic rifles.

    The pair had strong anti-government and anti-police views and did not expect to live past the confrontation, police said.

    “It was determined the suspects’ primary objective was to shoot and kill police officers in what they saw as a stand against government regulations, especially in relation to firearms ownership,” Cpl Alex Bérubé of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said during a news conference at the Saanich police department.

    As the twins left the bank, members of the Greater Victoria emergency response team, who were in the area on an unrelated matter, drove into the parking lot to assist other officers, police said.

    Six officers were injured in the ensuing gunfight. An earlier report said police fired as many as 100 rounds at the suspects, killing them both.

    Bérubé said the pair had been planning some sort of “act of extreme violence” since 2019 and originally wanted the shootout to happen in mid-2023.

    They decided to move up their timeline after finding out they had to move out of the house they shared with their mother.

    “The suspects concluded that they could not move their arsenal of weapons to a new location without attracting attention, and thus electing the bank location at random,” Bérubé said.

    In the trunk of their vehicle, police discovered more than 30 improvised explosive devices, four additional firearms and more than 3,500 rounds of ammunition.

    The brothers had licenses for both non-restricted and restricted firearms, Bérubé said.

    Police say the 22 staff and customers being held by the men during the 16 minutes they were in the bank were not targeted and were only being held to draw a police response.

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    #Twins #killed #Canada #bank #shootout #aimed #kill #police
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )