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World Junior Championship (Boys) (2005)

  PARTICIPANTS (sorted by highest achieved rating; click on name to see player's games)
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Vugar Gashimov, Wang Yue, Wang Hao, Evgeny Tomashevsky, Radoslaw Wojtaszek, Evgeny Alekseev, Sergei Zhigalko, Li Chao, Ferenc Berkes, Viktor Laznicka, Davit Maghalashvili, Mateusz Bartel, Igor Kurnosov, Vasily Papin, Jan Smeets, Parimarjan Negi, Ildar Khairullin, Tomi Nyback, Borki Predojevic, Luka Lenic, Evgeny Romanov, Daniel Stellwagen, Erwin L'Ami, Wen Yang, Nidjat Mamedov, Tornike Sanikidze, Geetha Narayanan Gopal, Andrey Zhigalko, Stephen Jessel, Hans Tikkanen, Baris Esen, Matthieu Cornette, Elshan Moradiabadi, Deep Sengupta, Bartlomiej Heberla, Aleksandr Alekseevich Kharitonov, Stefan Macak, David Jojua, Yaroslav Zinchenko, Mesgen Amanov, Felipe de Cresce El Debs, Jakob Vang Glud, Levon Babujian, Vlad-Victor Barnaure, Kalin Karakehajov, Andrey Kvon, Kirill Kuderinov, Malkhaz Sulashvili, Emre Can, Gogineni Rohit, George Xie Wendi, Emilis Pileckis, Oliver Kurmann, Hannes Rau, Kevin Terrieux, Gaby Livshits, Marko Krivokapic, S Poobesh Anand, Gabriel-Andrei Grecescu, Faik Aleskerov, Julien Carron, Khamparia Akshat, Chenpeng Wei, S Moosavian, Muhammad Khusenkhojaev, Roderick Nava, Leandro Perdomo, Thibaut Maenhout, Giuseppe Lettieri, Selim Citak, Nurdin Samakov, Yasin Emrah Yagiz, Shinsaku Uesugi, Farid Zeynalov, Erhan Tanrikulu, Vitali Shlykov, Mehdi Ouakhir, Azzedine Bekkat, Brice Laval, Kamber Berkay Tulay, Kgaugelo Mosetlhe, Heinrich Stander, Emil Agdestein, Deniz Murat Tasdelen, Alexandr Lauda, Fuat Uzun, Hasan Kivanc Cil, Ronald Villa, Leon W De Bruyn, Hamidullah Sarwary, Emrah Acuner

 page 1 of 20; games 1-25 of 497  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. R Villa vs K Terrieux  0-135 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B23 Sicilian, Closed
2. M Cornette vs E Tanrikulu  1-061 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C91 Ruy Lopez, Closed
3. F Zeynalov vs H Rau  ½-½54 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)A16 English
4. V Papin vs K B Tulay  1-028 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B40 Sicilian
5. A Bekkat vs L Babujian 0-142 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)D53 Queen's Gambit Declined
6. K Kuderinov vs Y Yagiz  1-048 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
7. N Samakov vs D Maghalashvili  ½-½64 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
8. V Barnaure vs B Laval  0-134 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)E61 King's Indian
9. V Shlykov vs B Heberla  0-142 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B56 Sicilian
10. L Lenic vs M Ouakhir  1-026 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)D45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
11. H Stander vs T Sanikidze  0-135 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C77 Ruy Lopez
12. G Rohit vs F Uzun  1-034 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B04 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
13. H Cil vs D Sengupta  0-141 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C00 French Defense
14. L Perdomo vs D Tasdelen  1-033 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)D11 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
15. H Sarwary vs Wen Yang  0-121 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B84 Sicilian, Scheveningen
16. G Grecescu vs K Mosetlhe  0-145 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
17. M Khusenkhojaev vs G Livshits  1-073 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)E60 King's Indian Defense
18. B Esen vs L De Bruyn 1-032 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C50 Giuoco Piano
19. E Acuner vs M Sulashvili  0-150 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B12 Caro-Kann Defense
20. C Wei vs A Lauda  1-033 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
21. S Uesugi vs K Karakehajov 0-123 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C50 Giuoco Piano
22. S Poobesh Anand vs E Agdestein  1-039 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)E21 Nimzo-Indian, Three Knights
23. E Pileckis vs E Romanov  0-122 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)E52 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line with ...b6
24. Y Zinchenko vs S Moosavian  ½-½42 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)C09 French, Tarrasch, Open Variation, Main line
25. S Macak vs B Predojevic  0-131 2005 World Junior Championship (Boys)B42 Sicilian, Kan
 page 1 of 20; games 1-25 of 497  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 2 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-22-05  VishyFan: surprise! surprise! Shakh has played 12 moves so far in the last round game with jan smeets, i expected a draw inside 10 moves.. :)
Nov-22-05  DCP23: A draw.

Shakh wins the Junior Championship!

Nov-22-05  VishyFan: Li Chao(b) finished with a score of 8.5/13......., he is set to gain a whooping 132 ELO points.....
Nov-23-05  nsteinme: The official list has Li Chao gaining only 54 points (only 54!? still amazing).

http://www.tsf.org.tr/worldchess/bo...

Nov-23-05  VishyFan: <nsteinme> the official list just defaults the 'k' factor for everybody to 10, which is not the case with Li Chao...

his current K-factor is 25.......

so, 5.38 X 25 = 134.5 ELO gain, which is whoooooooping!

is this some sort of record?

Nov-23-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  lostemperor: <VishyFan> Li Chao performance is awesome but there is a boy who gained more this year. Gaston Needleman. He gained over 150 points at Buenos Aires. I hope and think we hear more of them both.

Btw. what's that (B) behind Li Chao name stands for? I see that also in the official list.

Nov-23-05  alexapple: There is another male chess player in China with the exactly the same name of Li Chao and the same characters and of course the same pronounciation.

Maybe you hv noticed that,In China, there are two female chess player with "same" name of Wang Yu. BUT the "Yu" corresponeds diffrent Chinese characters and different tones.

(In China, almost every (NOT ALL) character has its normal tone. there are 4 tones in Chinese offical language,also called PUTONGHUA. so in most cases one prounciation corresponds 4 tones and corresponds mutiple characteres. )

Nov-23-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  lostemperor: <alexapple> maybe we should call this player Li Chao(A):). I notice chessgames.com has some problems with Chinese names also sometimes. Xie used to be confused with Xu. Here an example with a respected kibitzer <whitehead1963> Xie Jun vs Wang Lei, 2000 Sorry that is whitehat1963. Now I got confused here:)

You know what the most frequent name in the databas is? Tan. http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches... With 15 million Tans in the world that may not be so surprising. Four of them use to be one and the same person! It is corrected now. There use to be a <"Tan", "Tan Huang Luang", "Tan H.L."> and Tan Hiong Liong who were one and the same person LOL. No wonder there are so many Tans;). Now I only see two Tans who are one and the same person. Lian-Ann Tan and Tan Lian Ann. I guess..

Nov-26-05  yalie: why didnt koneru humpy play in the boys' section?
Nov-26-05  Udit Narayan: <yalie> LOL!
Nov-29-05  Knight13: Man... I'm gonna work my hardest to become the future World Junior Champion! :). I'm gonna reach 2500 in no time!
Nov-29-05  alicefujimori: One thing that annoys me about the record of the Chinese players' names is that they don't differentiate which one is the surname and which one is the actual name. In case a lot of you don't know, in Chinese the surname actually comes first before the name. So for example...Xie Jun..."Xie" is actually the surname and "Jun" is actually the name. Like "Li Chao". "Li" is actually the surname and "Chao" is actually the name.

So it would be nice if the people doing these pgns and tournament records could record the Chinese names properly.

Nov-30-05  Knight13: <alicefujimori> Well you know what? "Xie Jun" in Chinese is "Jun Xie." Chinese put the last name first, followed by the first name, unlike we do the opposite. It's different countries, man. Different culture. Accept it. The Chinese might even think we got weird names and we write our names strangely ;)
Nov-30-05  notsodeepthought: <Knight13>: <<alicefujimori>... It's different countries, <man>. Different culture. Accept it.> Hmmm, I could be mistaken, but speaking of "different cultures", in most countries where <Alice> is a first name, that person is not a <man>... you may want to "accept" that too.
Dec-01-05  sneaky pete: <notsodeepthought> Go tell that to Alice Cooper and see if he accepts it, man!
Dec-01-05  notsodeepthought: <sneaky pete: <notsodeepthought> Go tell that to Alice Cooper and see if he accepts it, <man>!> I knew that was coming... but seriously, how many other guys whose first name is Alice do you know? (incidentally, how would you know whether I am a guy or not?)
Dec-01-05  Knight13: <notsodeepthought> Okay <<man>>. We got it. It's cool <<man>>. It's cool.
Dec-01-05  Knight13: <notsodeepthought> I mean, come on, man! Don't you hear people say, "What's up, man? How's it goin', buddy?" Saying "man" is how people talk. It's not saying that you're a "man" or something. Another: "Hey, man, you got somethin' ta say?" It's just the cool-talkin'-style some people use. ;)
Dec-01-05  notsodeepthought: <Knight13> I guess I'm not cool. Fortunately I don't sound retarded either.
Dec-02-05  Knight13: <notsodeepthought> True. Not everone's like that.
Jan-10-06  Laskerfan82: Shahriyar won this tournament very convincingly ... it felt like he was in a different league altogether. Should be interesting to see how he performs in Corus (albeit last minute notice)
Apr-29-06  Danny121: You suke
Apr-29-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  technical draw: Knight 13 should not reply after notsodeepthought. It looks like the poor mouse will get will be burned with hot coffee!
Dec-19-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  notyetagm: Mamedyarov went like an undefeated +8 in this tournament. Anyone know what his Tournamnet Performance Rating (TPR) was for this excellent performance?

At one point I believe Mamedyarov's TPR was over 3000(!), before he coasted home to win easily with draws in the later rounds.

Aug-15-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  notyetagm: With this tournament win Mamedyarov becomes the only **2-time** winner of the World Junior Championship.
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 2 ·  Later Kibitzing>
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