World Women's Team Chess Championship-2011: Part II |
| Written by Administrator | ||||
| Tuesday, 10 January 2012 | ||||
![]() by Natalia Pogonina for her Chess.com Tuesday column From the battles of the early rounds to the middlegame of the tournament. Our team had to face two tough competitors Georgia and China. Lately we have scored well against Georgia, but this time that wasnt the case. The match was a really close fight, and we were more likely to lose than to win. Eventually, it ended in a tie. Here is an example of well-timed understanding of the risks of ones position: China vs Vietnam. While last year the Chinese were on the verge of losing and sealed the overall victory only by a negotiation between the captains and agreeing to a 2-2 draw, this time things went wrong for the Vietnamese. China won 3-1, even though Hou Yifan missed a win: Ukraine defeated Greece 3.5-0.5; India-Armenia 3.5-0.5; Turkey-RSA 3-1 (the one and only point for RSA in this event). Now the fifth round became the culminating point of the tournament. The reigning Olympic and European Champion Russia vs the World Champion China. Before the 5th round our team was down two points already as compared to China, so we needed a win pretty badly. I was anxious to play, but the captain decided otherwise. From the opening my teammates got certain problems, and it became clear that a loss was quite likely. Now it was about saving some individual points, but the match ended in a disaster: 4-0! A very cold shower for the Russian team and a telling indication of not being sufficiently well-prepared for the event. The next day was a rest day, which was quite good for us. We got time to recover from the terrible loss against China and prepare for the critical match against India. We got to visit an ancient Byzantine fortress Dara in Mesopotamia.
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