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Carlsen goes with 1.h4, Giri takes the lead; Chessable Masters Day 3 recap

Magnus Carlsen played one of the worst possible opening moves and still secured his place in the Chessable Masters knockout on a day his Dutch rival Anish Giri powered into the lead.

Giri, a beaten finalist in the $150,000 Meltwater Champions Chess Tour event two years, emerged from rounds 9 to 12 unbeaten with three wins and a draw to clinch his place in the next stage. Netherlands no.1 Giri, playing from The Hague, said: “I came in today thinking everything was going to be great, and it turned out well so I’m lucky.

He will be joined in the last eight by Norway’s World Champion who went all-out attack to guarantee his place. Carlsen also entertained with a highly unorthodox opening idea – 1.h4.

Read more: Youngsters steal the show at Chessable Masters / Pragg defeats Carlsen, Wei Yi maintains the lead; Chessable Masters Day 2 recap

Anish Giri

The champ started the day aiming to put his loss against Indian teen Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa firmly behind him and was at his super-sharp best as he demolished England’s Gawain Jones. Carlsen then crushed Vidit Gujrathi of India in a Round 10 game when his brave but brilliant move 25.f6! caught the eye. It also led to the champ overtaking caught Wei Yi, the leader over the first two days. Following a draw in the 11th, Carlsen was then in showboating mood as he played the bizarre first move 1.h4 against Wei Yi in Round 12. Carlsen admitted after that his choice was “not great”. In fact, it’s one of the worst opening moves possible! Replay the games here

Carlsen plays 1.h4

Wei seemed unperturbed, but didn’t take advantage and Carlsen went on to push hard for a win. Right at the end, however, Wei found a way to escape with a draw and save his blushes. It was Carlsen’s third bizarre opening choice on the Tour, having already played 1.f3 and 1.c3. Replay the games here

Carlsen said the end was a surprise and his opponent “defended really well, to a certain point”. He added: “It was a bit of a disappointing way to end the day. I think if you’re going to play a rare first move, it’s no less important to be well prepared… I felt like my play was a lot better today than it was yesterday and the day before. It’s still looking up.

Behind Giri and Carlsen, China’s new Ding Liren also virtually secured his place in the last eight with three wins and a draw. Tomorrow he faces Carlsen in a fascinating world no.1 vs world no.2 clash.

Norway’s second strongest player Aryan Tari also had a storming day. The 22-year-old had looked dead and buried in the tournament after a disappointing first two days. Today Tari won three games in a row to haul his score up to 15 points and give himself a shot at making the Knockout. Tari said: “Today, I couldn’t be more happy with my play and everything just worked out.”

Gawain Jones grabbed his first win of the event with a Round 10 win over “El Niño” David Antón, who suffered a slump after performing well on day 2.

Play resumes at 18:00 CEST tomorrow with Rounds 13-15 before the Prelims end and the competition heads into the Knockout stage. LIVE broadcast of the games

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