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Carlsen, Nakamura Start Fast, Fedoseev Falls
Carlsen in the Lusail Sports Arena in Qatar. Photo: Qatar Masters.

Carlsen, Nakamura Start Fast, Fedoseev Falls

Colin_McGourty
| 65 | Chess Event Coverage

World number-one Magnus Carlsen won a 23-move miniature as he set out to defend his title in the 2023 Qatar Masters, a tournament last held in 2015. GMs Hikaru Nakamura and Anish Giri were among the star names to win in round one, but GMs Gukesh Dommaraju and Nihal Sarin had to fight for draws, while GM Vladimir Fedoseev was put to the sword by 19-year-old Indian IM Kushagra Mohan.

Round two starts on October 12 at 8 a.m. ET/14:00 CEST/5:30 p.m. IST.

How to watch?
You can watch the 2023 Qatar Masters on the Qatar Chess Association YouTube: YouTube.com/QatarChessqa and on Hikaru Nakamura's Kick channel: kick.com/gmhikaru. Games from the event can be viewed on our events page.

The live broadcast was hosted by IM Irine Sukandar, IM Jovanka Houska, and GM Evgenij Miroshnichenko.


The 2023 Qatar Masters is the third edition of a trendsetting chess open that we first saw almost a decade ago. Let's take a quick look back at the history.

The 2014 And 2015 Qatar Masters

The chess world has long been divided between a rich elite and a mass of players struggling to make ends meet. To get to the elite you need talent, sometimes a little luck, and above all to perform well in "open tournaments," which, as the name suggests, are events that are more or less open to everyone willing to pay an entry fee and their own expenses. 

As soon as top young players could, they'd stop playing open events for modest and hard-to-win prizes and instead compete in small all-play-all tournaments against their elite colleagues, where even relative failure would be financially rewarded. The drawback of such events for chess fans, however, is that we quickly become familiar with all the top players and sometimes tire of seeing them compete against each other week after week.

That led, in the last decade, to a new trend to hold open tournaments, but to make them attractive to the world's very best players with hefty top prizes and appearance fees. The Qatar Masters, along with similar events held in Gibraltar and on the Isle of Man, was a trailblazer with its first edition in 2014.

Yu beat Kramnik to take the title in the 2014 Qatar Masters. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Chinese GM Yu Yangyi, at the time just 20 years old, was the surprise winner, after taking down former World Champion GM Vladimir Kramnik in the final round. Kramnik tied with Giri for second, half a point behind.

Carlsen made a family outing of the event back in 2015. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

A year later, World Champion Carlsen had joined the fray. He duly won but needed a playoff against Yu, who had defeated GM Wesley So on demand in the final round, while Kramnik again took third place. Among the participants that year were future GMs 12-year-old Alireza Firouzja and 11-year-old Nodirbek Abdusattorov

Sadly that was the last Qatar Masters, until now, although the organizational effort in 2016 went into holding the World Rapid and Blitz Championships in Doha. Carlsen said of that event when interviewed after round one: "I tied for first in both rapid and blitz, but I only got bronze and silver on tiebreaks. I still have something to prove!"

The 2023 Qatar Masters

The Qatar Masters is back, and though the venue has shifted from Doha to the nearby Lusail Sports Arena in Lusail, the format remains the same.

160 players are competing in the top group over nine rounds of classical chess, for $108,250 in prizes. The top prize is $25,000.

There are also other prizes on offer, including $5,000 for the top female player.

The line-up is formidable, including eight 2700+ rated players, as well as Carlsen, Nakamura, Giri, and Gukesh from the world's top-10.

Round 1

For round one, the rating list was cut in two, so that number-one-ranked Carlsen played number 79, 17-year-old Indian IM L R Srihari, number-two-ranked Nakamura played number 80, 21-year-old Indian IM Vantika Agrawal, and so on. That meant there were heavy favorites on all the top boards, and many stars did grab the expected wins. For instance, Carlsen shrugged off a late arrival in Qatar to beat Srihari in just 23 moves. He claimed to have made a very late choice of what to play:

"I didn’t know what to play on move 1, so I just asked Mohammed [organizer Qatari GM Mohammed Al-Modiahki], who made the first move, to make a move, and he played 1.c4, and I thought it looked like a good move, so I’ll play it!"

He played 1.c4, and I thought it looked like a good move, so I'll play it!

—Magnus Carlsen

Carlsen said he was surprised in the opening, but then things swung his way, since his opponent, "chose a very concrete approach later, going for some material, which was flawed, because he had no pieces protecting his king and then it was a fairly pleasant job attacking after that."

The former world champion got to offer multiple piece sacrifices, including a choice of rooks.

The sparkling 23-move win that follows is our Game of the Day, annotated by GM Dejan Bojkov.

Chess.com Game of the Day Dejan Bojkov


Nakamura admitted he had a "very, very tough game" against the talented Vantika, though he credited his 62-move victory to cranking up the pressure when his opponent was low on time. Her weakening 28.f5? was essentially the losing move, and was played with under 20 seconds on the clock.

With 28...Qe2+! and then 29...Qd3 Nakamura was able to force a favorable endgame, and he never gave his opponent another chance. Check out his full recap below.  

Seven of the top-ten seeds won, with GM Jorden van Foreest pouncing on a less-than-obvious blunder to trap German IM Raphael Lagunow's queen. Just to emphasize the point, when the queen briefly managed to escape the box, it was only to find itself doomed to be lost.

No one said it was going to be easy, however. Giri did eventually win, but only after again and again seeming to let a win slip against another talented young Indian IM, S Rohith Krishna. You could definitely be forgiven for missing the strength of 20.Rh5! (with the main threat simply to follow up with Qb5 and take on d5).

Giri made very hard work of what followed, however, and allowed his opponent to come incredibly close to taking a draw.

All's well that ends well, but for other top players, it was an even tougher day at the office.

Nihal had to defend an inferior endgame until move 109, while Indian IM Mohammad Nubairshah Shaikh had the mighty Gukesh on the ropes. The world number-eight eventually exchanged off queens and groveled for a draw, but it still cost 3.7 rating points and dropping out of the top-ten on the live rating list.

Of course, that wasn't the worst that could happen, with Fedoseev losing 8.4 points after falling to 279-point-lower-rated Kushagra in a game where things escalated fast.

There are still eight rounds to go, however, so early misfortunes are no insurmountable obstacle to overall success. 

 

Qatar Masters | All Games Round 1


The 2023 Qatar Masters is a nine-round open tournament for players rated 2300+. It takes place in Lusail, Qatar on October 11-20, and boasts a $108,250 prize fund with $25,000 for first place, as well as a $5,000 prize for the top female player.


Previous Coverage:

Colin_McGourty
Colin McGourty

Colin McGourty led news at Chess24 from its launch until it merged with Chess.com a decade later. An amateur player, he got into chess writing when he set up the website Chess in Translation after previously studying Slavic languages and literature in St. Andrews, Odesa, Oxford, and Krakow.

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