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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
FIDE Grand Prix Tournament

Levon Aronian8.5/13(+5 -1 =7)[view games]
Teimour Radjabov8/13(+5 -2 =6)[view games]
Wang Yue7.5/13(+2 -0 =11)[view games]
Gata Kamsky7.5/13(+3 -1 =9)[view games]
Sergey Karjakin7/13(+3 -2 =8)[view games]
Peter Svidler7/13(+4 -3 =6)[view games]
Dmitry Jakovenko7/13(+2 -1 =10)[view games]
Vassily Ivanchuk6.5/13(+2 -2 =9)[view games]
Vugar Gashimov6.5/13(+2 -2 =9)[view games]
Alexander Grischuk6/13(+1 -2 =10)[view games]
Ivan Cheparinov6/13(+3 -4 =6)[view games]
Boris Gelfand5.5/13(+1 -3 =9)[view games]
David Navara4/13(+0 -5 =8)[view games]
Mohamad Al-Modiahki4/13(+1 -6 =6)[view games]

 page 2 of 4; games 26-50 of 91  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
26. Svidler vs Radjabov 1-041 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
27. V Gashimov vs Grischuk  ½-½23 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
28. I Cheparinov vs Gelfand ½-½41 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC42 Petrov Defense
29. Aronian vs Karjakin ½-½34 2008 FIDE Grand PrixA17 English
30. Navara vs Jakovenko ½-½29 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC78 Ruy Lopez
31. Ivanchuk vs M Al-Modiahki  ½-½31 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB18 Caro-Kann, Classical
32. Wang Yue vs V Gashimov ½-½42 2008 FIDE Grand PrixE34 Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Noa Variation
33. Gelfand vs Kamsky  ½-½37 2008 FIDE Grand PrixA13 English
34. Grischuk vs Svidler ½-½24 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB96 Sicilian, Najdorf
35. Radjabov vs I Cheparinov 1-038 2008 FIDE Grand PrixD44 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
36. V Gashimov vs Navara 1-070 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC99 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin, 12...cd
37. Kamsky vs Karjakin ½-½47 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
38. Svidler vs Wang Yue ½-½36 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC53 Giuoco Piano
39. M Al-Modiahki vs Aronian 0-164 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC67 Ruy Lopez
40. Jakovenko vs Ivanchuk  ½-½32 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB84 Sicilian, Scheveningen
41. Gelfand vs Radjabov 0-149 2008 FIDE Grand PrixE97 King's Indian
42. I Cheparinov vs Grischuk 1-055 2008 FIDE Grand PrixD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
43. Karjakin vs M Al-Modiahki 1-089 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC28 Vienna Game
44. Navara vs Svidler ½-½49 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB87 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5
45. Grischuk vs Gelfand ½-½46 2008 FIDE Grand PrixE04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
46. Aronian vs Jakovenko ½-½30 2008 FIDE Grand PrixD56 Queen's Gambit Declined
47. Ivanchuk vs V Gashimov  ½-½34 2008 FIDE Grand PrixC49 Four Knights
48. Radjabov vs Kamsky ½-½50 2008 FIDE Grand PrixD85 Grunfeld
49. Wang Yue vs I Cheparinov ½-½56 2008 FIDE Grand PrixD30 Queen's Gambit Declined
50. Kamsky vs M Al-Modiahki 1-052 2008 FIDE Grand PrixB31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
 page 2 of 4; games 26-50 of 91  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 108 OF 108 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Aug-14-08  HFBA: A note for the people who manage the website (I don't know if it's been posted yet, but Aronian won the tournament half a point ahead of the field, not one and a half like the description says.
Aug-14-08  Marmot PFL: <messachess> "Black is better, there's no doubt about that.Question is how much.Main problem of White are his Rooks, they can't find any open file.Plus his pawn structure is badly damaged and disabled for any serious use.Also we should not forget the psychological pressure.Radjabov was more that hour ahead on clock and, this position is very very ungrateful to play as White.There is no clear plan, there is nothing you can do.You can just sit tight and wait...such tragedy for White..." Karjakin. I think white made a mistake trading queens. Might have lost either way but it's easier to fight back with queens than in a lost ending. Also when you lose you don't suffer as long.
Aug-14-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  messachess: <Kamsky's big mistake> Well, he started out with med-school ambitions, etc. Then, there is the family influence.
Aug-14-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  messachess: It was probably something like: "Let's do this. If you beat Karpov, stay in chess. You lose, go to med-school."
Aug-14-08  Jim Bartle: but hey, no pressure...
Aug-14-08  randzo: We can said that Aronian has now great chances to win Grand Prix
Aug-14-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  messachess: How about Svidler, winning his last three games!
Aug-14-08  cannibal: Thanks, <TheBB>, for the crosstable! We can see the great value of <unshared> top places there. Aronian with his unshared 1st would need only a shared 5th-6th (if he were the one to play in the next GP tournament, that is) to pull ahead of Wang Yue, who had shared 1st and 3rd so far.
Aug-14-08  gazzawhite: Al-Modiahki came last yet still performed above his rating. Seems to suggest that he MAY be a little out of his league here. At least he won a game.
Aug-14-08  DUS: <Since Karjakin-Radjabov will probably be a decisive game Aronians needs to try to win without taking the risk of losing. Hard task.>

Indeed Aronian won without taking the risk of losing. In his performance it wasn't hard task at all.

Aug-14-08  DUS: <How about Svidler, winning his last three games!> I think they were great games by a super GM.
Aug-14-08  Atking: Agree with your lats posts <DUS>. Especially the smooth way Aronian won the last game. very Impressive.
Aug-14-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  arkansaw: Leko vs Wang would be interesting....or boring depending on how you see it
Aug-14-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  messachess: <Leko vs Wang> 1,001 draws and 1 ...................canceled (too much pressure.)
Aug-15-08  arsen387: Congratulations to Aronian. He won this tournament fairly and did it in style. +4 in 13 games and 5 victories, including 2 technically perfect endgame wins against Navara and Modiahki, and 2 Capablanca style amazingly beautiful wins against Chepa and Grischuk. Very impressive tournament.
Aug-15-08  yalie: Wang Yue interview after Sochi (and some training from Kramnik):

"I have noticed that Aronian always takes chances, is lucky a little. In our head to head game, though I was no worse.

My repertoire is more suited for a match where beating Wang Yue is no small feat.

Aronian, as usual, was efficient and won against the tailenders, but couldnt win against his opponents 2-9 on the ranking list - while I finished an undefeated +2."

Aronian's response: "Maybe Wang Yue should eat more spinach."

Aug-15-08  arsen387: <yalie: Aronian's response: "Maybe Wang Yue should eat more spinach." > ROTFL! Cool answer. I really like this guy
Aug-15-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  ahmadov: Aronian silently became the leader and then won the tournament... Congratulations!
Aug-15-08  arnaud1959: <HFBA> You should look also at the number of games. At that point Aronian had 8.5/13, Radjabov and Karjakin 7/12
Aug-15-08  amateur05: Brilliant games in the last round!
Aug-15-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  ahmadov: <amateur05: Brilliant games in the last round!> Yes, I wish the whole tournament would like that...
Aug-15-08  amateur05: <ahmadov> Agree. Also nice to see the Berlin wall being knocked down in Jako-Chepa.
Aug-15-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  Cactus: What's happened to Gelfand lately? As a big fan I was very pleased in Mexico, but since then he's seemed to have been near the bottom of every tournement he's in despite being one of the top ranked. Age mabye? And as a Grischuk fan, it seems like he pulled a Ponomoriov, have an prodigal rise to chess prowess, and then simply stop improving. Strange...
Aug-15-08  dumbgai: Despite tying for last place in the Sochi GP with 4/13, Al-Modiahki will actually GAIN rating points. Compare that to Svidler, who recovered nicely from a slow start to finish with a plus score but will nonetheless lose rating points.
Aug-15-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  Annie K.: The whole truth about Sochi is now available at the City of Moscow! ;)
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