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MATCH STANDINGS
Kramnik-Topalov World Championship Match

Vladimir Kramnik8.5/16(+5 -4 =7)[view games]
Veselin Topalov7.5/16(+4 -5 =7)[view games]

  WCC Overview
 
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Kramnik vs Topalov, 2006
Toiletgate in Elista

In 2006, the schism which began with the Kasparov-Short World Championship was to finally end, unifying the World Championship title after 13 long years. Bulgarian grandmaster Veselin Topalov, the winner of the 2005 FIDE World Championship in San Luis was due to play Vladimir Kramnik, the Classical World Champion, and the winner was to emerge as the single, unified, World Chess Champion.

 Kramnik-Topalov 2006
 Kramnik and Topalov, Elista 2006
The contest began with Kramnik winning both of the first two games, and due to the extreme brevity of the match (a mere 12 games) this established an early commanding lead. After two more drawn games, on a rest day, Topalov's manager Silvio Danailov, issued a press release which threatened to abort the match. The press release read, in part:

The careful study of the video recordings from the rest rooms done by the technical experts of the Bulgarian team revealed the following facts which we would herewith like to bring to your attention:

  1. After each move Mr. Kramnik immediately heads to the rest room and from it directly to the bathroom. During every game he visited the relaxation room 25 times at the average and the bathroom more than 50 times - the bathroom is the only place without video surveillance.
  2. Unlike Mr. Kramnik, the World Champion Veselin Topalov spends his time mainly at the playing table. The average number of times he visited the rest room and the bathroom is 8 and 4 respectively.
In our opinion these facts are quite strange, if not suspicious. ... Should this extremely serious problem remain unsolved by 10.00 o'clock tomorrow (September 29th, 2006), we would seriously reconsider the participation of the World Champion Veselin Topalov in this match. 1

The FIDE Appeals Committee, after viewing the video tapes, found that the frequency of Kramnik's visits to the toilet had been exaggerated, but nevertheless took these allegations seriously, and decreed that the private toilets would be closed and a common toilet opened for both players.

Kramnik Forfeits Kramnik's team rejected this decision, declaring: "The protests of the Topalov team and the suspicions in the press release of Mr. Topalov are utterly disgraceful and are touching Mr. Kramnik's privacy."2 Kramnik refused to play under the altered conditions, and as a result, Kramnik forfeited game 5.

In a state of chaos, the match was placed on hold while FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov flew to Elista in the hope for bringing a solution to this crisis, which by this time had been given the pejorative name, "Toiletgate." After several days of strife and intense negotiations, Ilyumzhinov declared that the match would continue. The members of the Appeals Committee had been replaced, the access to the toilets was restored, and the forfeited game 5 would remain a loss for Kramnik.

As the match continued, Topalov won both game 8 and game 9, giving him a one point lead with only three games left to play. His lead was not to last long, as Kramnik scored a brilliant victory in game 10, thereby tying the score, and after two more draws the match was sent into overtime.

The first phase of the tiebreaks was a four game mini-match played with 25 minutes per side, and a 10 second increment. Kramnik's victory in game 16 allowed him to win the mini-match. Vladimir Kramnik, after 13 years of chaos in the chess world, had thus become the the solitary undisputed World Chess Champion.

click on a game number to replay game 12345678910111213141516
Topalov00½½1½½110½½½010
Kramnik11½½0½½001½½½101

FINAL SCORE:  Kramnik 8½;  Topalov 7½
Reference: game collection WCC Kramnik-Topalov Elista 2006

NOTABLE GAMES   [what is this?]
    · Game #2     Topalov vs Kramnik, 2006     0-1
    · Game #10     Kramnik vs Topalov, 2006     1-0
    · Game #5     Kramnik vs Topalov, 2006     0-1

1 Topalov threatens to abandon the World Championship Match, Chessbase, Sep. 9 2006.
2 Kramnik may stop playing the match, Chessbase, Sep. 9, 2006.

 page 1 of 1; 16 games  PGN Download 
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Kramnik vs Topalov 1-075 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchE04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
2. Topalov vs Kramnik 0-163 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD19 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch
3. Kramnik vs Topalov ½-½38 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchE04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
4. Topalov vs Kramnik ½-½54 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD47 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
5. Kramnik vs Topalov 0-10 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchA00 Uncommon Opening
6. Topalov vs Kramnik ½-½31 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD17 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
7. Topalov vs Kramnik ½-½60 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD27 Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical
8. Kramnik vs Topalov 0-152 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD47 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
9. Topalov vs Kramnik 1-039 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
10. Kramnik vs Topalov 1-043 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchE00 Queen's Pawn Game
11. Topalov vs Kramnik ½-½66 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
12. Kramnik vs Topalov ½-½47 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
13. Topalov vs Kramnik ½-½47 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD19 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch
14. Kramnik vs Topalov 1-045 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
15. Topalov vs Kramnik 1-050 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
16. Kramnik vs Topalov 1-045 2006 Kramnik-Topalov World Championship MatchD47 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
 page 1 of 1; 16 games  PGN Download 
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 676 OF 1162 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Oct-04-06  bgkuzzy: Danailov must go after this match!
Oct-04-06  MR. NIMZO: i guess Danailov is right
because game 5 that topalov won has "no" moves from fritz!!

Oct-04-06  Stevens: <. It appears to me Topalov is not fully aware of what his manager does.> no, he's fully aware believe me. it's a copout.

<slomarko> the link will work if you use my original link. If someone copies the text of a post, including a link, only the text is copied and therefore the end of the link is missing, meaning it won't work.

http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail...

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  jamesmaskell: Cant we just send Danailov to a deserted island, one way ticket of course?
Oct-04-06  Siddharta: <HillGentleman: <jamesmaskell>, I often think that World Championships should be played on a deserted island>

It will then be more a fist fighting championship than a chess one!

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  virginmind: i guess 11.d5, to get rid of the isolated pawn?
Oct-04-06  Gowe: I think this deserves to be in this page, just for laugh, just for think, just for nothing, but this is good material.

<First game:
From 75 moves: After the 12th move of Topalov Ba6, a novelty, from 65 remaining moves – 41 moves match with the first line of Fritz 9. (63% of matches)

Second game:
From 63 moves: After 17th move, where the theory ends, from remaining 46 moves- 40 moves match with the first line of Fritz 9. (87 % of matches)

Third game
From 38 moves: after 10th move, when the theory ends, from 46 remaining moves- 40 match with the first line of Fritz 9. (86 % of matches)

Forth game:
From 54 moves: After 14th move, when the theory ends, from 40 remaining moves- 30 match with the first line of Fritz 9. (75% of matches)

Sixth game:
From 31 moves: After 13th move, when the theory ends, from 18 remaining moves – 14 match with the first line of Fritz9. (78% of matches)

Thus, out of 5 games – 78% of GM Kramnik’s moves match with the first line of Fritz9.

Sincerely
Silvio Danailov>

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ulhumbrus: the moves so far: 1 d4 d5 2 c4 c6 3 Nf3 Nf6 4 e3 e6 5 Bd3 dxc4 6 Bxc4 c5 7 0-0 a6 8 Bb3 cxd4 9 exd4 Nc6 10 Nc3 Be7
Oct-04-06  srinathg: has the game stopped or what? the game seems to have "frozen" after move 10. :(
Oct-04-06  moocow: What an unpleasant human being Danailov is. Has he thought to perform a parallel analysis on Topalov's games from San Luis and compare statistics? It's pretty obvious that any top GM will get a significant % of moves matching those suggested by a good program. Furthermore, once you enter forcing combinations, the GM will either have an 100% match with Fritz or will be committing a blunder!
Oct-04-06  islero: Will Topa dismiss <11.Bg5>??
Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  virginmind: 11Re1 oo 12.a4 played
Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ulhumbrus: <srinathg: has the game stopped or what? the game seems to have "frozen" after move 10. :(> 11 Re1 0-0 12 a4 on the official site
Oct-04-06  sheaf: Does anybody notice that 87 % of the moves in second game matches the firs choice of fritz 9 no wonder .. topalov lost it.. kramnik is cheating .... its finally proved
Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  acirce: <I only takes a few minutes to show those statistics are complete BS. First off, recaptures and other practically forced moves always raise the correlation to around 40% just to start. Second, if you cherry pick when the move appears as first on the list (at two seconds, five seconds, two minutes, ten minutes, etc.) you can choose between four or five non-horrible moves, or at least two or three. One of these is bound to be the move the GM made.

But the most ridiculous part is that Kramnik made three very serious blunders in the so-called 87% game 2, moves a computer pick up very quickly. I seriously hope this isn't from Topalov's team, they have disgraced themselves enough already. I'd say 99% of what Danailov says comes out of his ass.> -- Mig Greengard

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  virginmind: a4..........
Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ulhumbrus: Perhaps Kramnik will play ...Bd7, ...Qa5 ,...Rfd8 and ...Be8 like Steinitz.
Oct-04-06  srinathg: <Ulhumbrus> Thanks for the moves. The webpage has updated.
Oct-04-06  pankajdaga: Does anyone notice how the players missed the mate in 3???

<sheaf: Does anybody notice that 87 % of the moves in second game matches the firs choice of fritz 9 no wonder .. topalov lost it.. kramnik is cheating .... its finally proved>

Oct-04-06  Poisoned Pawn: So is Danailov saying that Fritz9 is better than the FIDE world champion?

Where's my credit card...?

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  virginmind: topa should be aware of the fact that by saying nothing about danailov's last accusations, he is letting everybody think these are his own thoughts too. he has to speak out at the post game press conference! otherwise topa=danailov definitely morally-wise.
Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  jamesmaskell: Of all the complaints the Topalov team could have made, this is one of the more silly options. Anyone with an ounce of sense can see right through it.
Oct-04-06  DCP23: <sheaf>: <Does anybody notice that 87 % of the moves in second game matches the firs choice of fritz 9 no wonder .. topalov lost it.. kramnik is cheating .... its finally proved>

Thanks to you, I noticed that my ignore-list is already full (40 entries) :(

Oct-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  kellmano: <Offering draws in my business> from yesterday's press conference. Great words from Vlad.
Oct-04-06  FHBradley: 12 a4 seems to be a novelty here. Is it?
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