Too Strong a Move Even for 2800 | Carlsen vs Mamedyarov | Biel Chess 2018
TL;DR
Magnus Carlsen and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, both leaders at the 2018 Biel Chess Festival, played a complex Ruy López ending in Round 5 that lasted over six hours and ended in a draw. A key engine move (Bishop to e7) was missed by both players, and a late passed pawn push by Carlsen could not convert due to precise defensive play and perpetual check resources. ---
Key Concepts
Ruy López (Spanish Opening)
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1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 — the opening played in this game
Morphy Defense
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3...a6, the variation chosen by Mamedyarov
Rook on the seventh rank
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A positional benchmark achieved by Carlsen (Ra7/Rc7), considered a meaningful advantage even against elite opposition
Passed pawn endgame
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Carlsen's queenside majority (b- and c-pawns) became the central winning attempt in the endgame
Engine move
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A computer-found resource (Bе7) that was objectively superior but missed by both 2800+ players under practical conditions
Perpetual check
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The drawing mechanism Mamedyarov used to neutralize Carlsen's passed c-pawn in the final phase
Notes
§Opening — Ruy López, Morphy Defense
- 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.d3 b5 6.Bb3 Bc5
- Carlsen plays c3 (solid, not tactical)
- Knight captures on e5 was possible but assessed as fine for Black after Qxd6 with active counterplay
- Bg5 h6 — Mamedyarov immediately challenges the bishop's placement
- Bh4, then castles, Nbd2, Be6 — Black offers a bishop trade
- Carlsen declines, avoiding giving Black a strong center and open f-file for the rook
§Early Middlegame — Queenside Play
- Re1, then Bxb3 — Carlsen recaptures with the knight (Nxb3), keeping a semi-open a-file and guarding d4
- d4, Nbd7, a4 — White launches queenside expansion
- Qc2, Qe7, h3, Rab8, axb5, Nа5
- Carlsen threatens Nc6, forking queen and rook
- Mamedyarov accepts the knight; Rxа5 follows, then c6
§Rook on the Seventh
- Rа7 — Carlsen secures the seventh rank, a "small but meaningful victory" against a 2800 opponent
- Rd1, Nd4 maneuvering, Rc7 — White doubles pressure
- Mamedyarov counters with Rc8
- Rxc6 (rook lift/trade sequence), d5 — Carlsen attacks the queen and rook simultaneously
- After exchanges, Carlsen grabs an extra pawn with Qxc6
- Nh4 — preparing Nf5, creating a triple attack on the d6 pawn
§Later Middlegame — Piece Coordination
- Ng6 attacks Carlsen's Be7, but Na5 holds — capturing the bishop would lose the queen
- Rb7 — Mamedyarov finds active rook play, grabbing a pawn rather than defending passively
- Bishop retreats to e3; rook captures force queen recaptures
- Qxe4 with pressure on the f5 knight; knight retreats to e3
- g3 — Carlsen prevents Nf4 ideas
§Endgame — Passed Pawn Race
- Material is equal (5 points each); Carlsen has bishop + knight vs. two knights, plus a queenside pawn majority (2 vs. 1)
- Plan: push b3 and c4 to create and advance a passed c-pawn
- b3, c4, Bxc4, Qc6 — pawn advances proceed
- Bd6 — prepares c5 push
- c5 — the passed pawn is created
§The Missed Engine Move
- After Qe4 by Mamedyarov, Carlsen plays Qf1 — the engine prefers Be7
- Be7 idea: threatens Qd8+ followed by capturing on f6, winning a pawn
- After Nxe7, Qd8+ Kh7, Qxf6 — queen guards c5 pawn and threatens f7
- After Kg6, Qd6 pins the knight, supports pawn promotion push
- Very hard to find over the board; both players missed it
§Drawn Endgame — Perpetual Check Defense
- Carlsen pushes the c-pawn; Mamedyarov defends with precise queen maneuvers, repeatedly targeting f2
- Key resource: e3 by Mamedyarov
- If fxe3, Qxe3 and after c6, Qe2 forces draw by repetition (White king can be perpetually checked)
- Carlsen attempts Qb7+, Qc8+, fxe3 — Mamedyarov responds Qg3, Qg4 offering queen trade
- Trading queens leads to a drawn king-and-pawn ending
- Not trading risks perpetual check
- Carlsen plays Qd8+ conceding the draw; agreed drawn
§Tournament Standings After Round 5 (Biel 2018)
Actionable Takeaways
- Rook on the seventh rank is a concrete, measurable advantage — prioritize achieving it when possible in rook endgames
- Capture toward the center with pieces — Carlsen's Nxb3 over axb3 preserved structure and activity
- When holding a passed pawn advantage, watch for perpetual check resources — the defending side's queen must always have checking escape routes calculated
- Engine moves in endgames often involve quiet, non-obvious bishop repositioning — Be7 here was practically invisible but strategically decisive
- In practical play with equal material, the side with the queenside pawn majority should advance it early and decisively
Quotes Worth Keeping
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Perspective really does matter.
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It's an engine move — if you want to do it, give yourself more than a few seconds.
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They've been playing for six hours — you don't want something like Queen b7 check happening where you would lose your queen and the game.