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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
Dortmund Sparkassen Tournament

Vladimir Kramnik4.5/7(+2 -0 =5)[view games]
Peter Svidler4.5/7(+2 -0 =5)[view games]
Boris Gelfand4/7(+2 -1 =4)[view games]
Peter Leko4/7(+2 -1 =4)[view games]
Michael Adams4/7(+1 -0 =6)[view games]
Arkadi Naiditsch3.5/7(+1 -1 =5)[view games]
Levon Aronian2/7(+0 -3 =4)[view games]
Baadur Jobava1.5/7(+0 -4 =3)[view games]

 page 1 of 1; 7 games  PGN Download 
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Leko vs Aronian 1-063 2006 Dortmund SparkassenC69 Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 6.d4
2. Leko vs Naiditsch 1-034 2006 Dortmund SparkassenE00 Queen's Pawn Game
3. Adams vs Gelfand 1-0117 2006 Dortmund SparkassenB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
4. Gelfand vs Jobava 1-0113 2006 Dortmund SparkassenB39 Sicilian, Accelerated Fianchetto, Breyer Variation
5. Kramnik vs Leko 1-048 2006 Dortmund SparkassenE32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
6. Gelfand vs Aronian 1-033 2006 Dortmund SparkassenE15 Queen's Indian
7. Naiditsch vs Jobava 1-040 2006 Dortmund SparkassenB19 Caro-Kann, Classical
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 51 OF 51 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Aug-07-06  samikd: <Note that FIDE acknowledges Kramnik as the "Classical Chess World Champion">

Yeah but they also call Topalov 'the world champion'. I don't know what the hell the difference is between a world champion and a classical chess world champion. I dont even understand the meaning of the world classical here. All these classifications seem artificial and ridiculous to me

Aug-07-06  doremi: IMHO, it would be more descriptive to talk about match world champion (Kramnik) and tournament world champion (Topalov)
Aug-07-06  Knight13: More like Kramnik's the "unofficial" world champion and Topalov's the "official" world champion. Topalov fought his way on da top, and Kramnik sleeps all year and calls himself "world champion."
Aug-07-06  positionalgenius: <Knight 13>Yeah,like beating Kasparov in a match a tying Leko is "sleeping".
Aug-08-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  lostemperor: Announcement: the results of the predictioncontest on final standings Dortmund 2006 is known. 1.<mikejaqua> 2. <Jafar219> 3. <cromat>. The complete standings can be found in my forum. You can also check the predictions on game results Dortmund 2006, usually done by cu8sfan, at User: YouRang!
Aug-08-06  EmperorAtahualpa: Does anyone know a nice webpage that gives a complete overview of all tie-break systems?
Aug-08-06  TheBB: FIDE has a list of commonly used tiebreak systems.

http://www.fide.com/official/handbo...

Aug-08-06  EmperorAtahualpa: Thanks, <TheBB>.
Aug-08-06  positionalgenius: <Lostemperor>congrats on winning the Dortmund prediction contest.
Aug-12-06  JoeyCJK: It looks like Kramnik is back in business! Lets watch out for him to come back strong over Topalov and wow the chess world again.
Oct-24-06  anemone: <Note that FIDE acknowledges Kramnik as the "Classical Chess World Champion"> FIDE better start acknowledging a lot of things fast - beginning with their own incompetence.
Oct-24-06  anemone: I heard that the organisation of the World Youth in Georgia is a total mess. Way to go Azmai!(:
Oct-24-06  bakedalaska: The real bottom has not been reached as far as FIDE misconduct go. Every time you think that it is been reached, they do something worse.
Feb-13-07  percyblakeney: Dortmund has always been Kramnik's city, and he had amazing results especially in the middle of the 90's (for example +14 -0 =13 in 1995-97). His scores have not been bad later either, even if he had a run of 20 draws in a row broken by a loss against Sutovsky in 2005. Kasparov only played in Dortmund once (sharing first with Ivanchuk). Counting from Kramnik's first start in 1993 some frequent participants have these results (not counting rapid and blitz games):

Kramnik +32 -3 =70
Leko +21 -20 =70
Anand +18 -9 =46
Topalov +17 -15 =26
Adams +16 -12 =47

From his first start in 1993 to his loss against Sutovsky in 2005 the only game Kramnik lost in Dortmund was Adams vs Kramnik, 2000

Feb-13-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  suenteus po 147: <percyblakeney> Fascinating stats about Kramnik and his long career at Dortmund. Kasparov has Linares, Kramnik has Dortmund, Topalov has Sofia (so far), and some say that Anand has Wijk aan Zee, but even though he's accumulated a number of first and second places there's something about such a sprawling tournament that seems to defeat the chances of consistent performance each year.
Feb-13-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  suenteus po 147: Assuming that Dortmund returns to its ten player, nine round tournament format this year, here's the line-up I see for the 2007 Sparkassen Chess Meeting:

Anand
Kramnik
Ivanchuk
Leko
Adams
Gelfand
Radjabov
Svidler
Naiditsch
Aeroflot Winner TBA

Feb-23-07  percyblakeney: Dortmund 2007:

Anand
Kramnik
Mamedyarov
Leko
Gelfand
Naiditsch
Carlsen
Alekseev

Naiditsch had a rather bad Aeroflot, all his opponents were more than 50 points lower rated than him but he lost three games. This will be Alekseev's first start in this strong a tournament. Hard schedule for Anand and Carlsen in 2007.

http://www.chessgate.de/index.php?o...

Feb-23-07  percyblakeney: +2 will probably be enough to win again. This year there's also Mexico to think about for the strongest participants, and Svidler is absent, so I go for unexpected winners in my very preliminary prediction:

1-2. Gelfand, Mamedyarov +2
3-4. Anand, Kramnik +1
5. Leko =
6. Carlsen -1
7. Naiditsch -2
8. Alekseev -3

Feb-23-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  suenteus po 147: Hard to believe that Svidler wasn't invited back. Maybe he was but declined to have more time to prepare for Mexico? Adams name missing from this year's roster is also conspicuous.
Feb-23-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  suenteus po 147: Also, I hope Mamedyarov doesn't suffer from 'Bacrot syndrome' where he is invited to prestigious tournaments like Sofia and Dortmund only to have terrible scores and not be invited back next year.
Feb-23-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  suenteus po 147: I also find it distressing that Dortmund will be holding its second 8 players, 7 rounds, 28 games format in a row this year. Are they running out of money for the more traditional 10 player, 9 rounds, 45 games format?
Feb-28-08  positionalgenius: Kibitzing pages 35-40 is interesting-watch as a bunch of amatuers try to prognosticate Leko-aronian and Gelfand-jobava :)
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