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Peter Leko
Leko 
Photo copyright © 2006 by Milan Kovacs (www.milankovacs.com)  

Number of games in database: 2,559
Years covered: 1989 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2666 (2710 rapid, 2738 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2763
Overall record: +394 -205 =1042 (55.8%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 918 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (441) 
    B90 B42 B32 B33 B80
 Ruy Lopez (250) 
    C78 C67 C84 C89 C92
 Sicilian Najdorf (124) 
    B90 B93 B91 B92 B97
 French Defense (120) 
    C11 C18 C10 C16 C12
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (119) 
    C84 C89 C92 C95 C99
 Caro-Kann (87) 
    B12 B17 B18 B10 B11
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (198) 
    B33 B30 B31 B65 B22
 Ruy Lopez (152) 
    C84 C65 C89 C67 C78
 Queen's Indian (133) 
    E15 E12 E14
 Grunfeld (107) 
    D85 D97 D91 D82 D79
 English, 1 c4 c5 (96) 
    A30 A33 A35 A37 A34
 Nimzo Indian (87) 
    E32 E20 E53 E49 E55
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Kramnik vs Leko, 2004 0-1
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004 1/2-1/2
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004 1-0
   Leko vs Radjabov, 2006 1-0
   Anand vs Leko, 2005 0-1
   Leko vs E Ghaem Maghami, 2001 1-0
   Leko vs Radjabov, 2003 1-0
   Leko vs W Heckel, 1989 1-0
   Leko vs A Beliavsky, 1998 1-0
   Leko vs Kasparov, 2003 1/2-1/2

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999)
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000)
   Kramnik - Leko Classical World Championship Match (2004)
   FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005)
   World Championship Tournament (2007)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Budapest FS04 GM (1993)
   Linares (2003)
   Corus Group A (2005)
   World Youth Championship (Under-14) (1993)
   Australian Open 1992/93 (1992)
   Dortmund Candidates (2002)
   Budapest FS03 GM (1993)
   ARG-World (1994)
   Balatonbereny Open (1992)
   Amber Blindfold (2006)
   Biel (2019)
   Tilburg Fontys (1997)
   Legends of Chess (2020)
   Dortmund Open-A (1992)
   Dresden Olympiad (2008)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Match Leko! by amadeus
   Match Leko! by docjan
   Exchange sacs - 1 by pacercina
   Exchange sacs - 1 by obrit
   Exchange sacs - 1 by Baby Hawk
   Peter Leko's road to the top by VictorVonDoom
   CHESS IN HUNGARY by DIONPOGIME
   Leko! by larrewl
   2001-2007, 4.g3 Ba6 5.b3 or 5.Nbd2, Rated 2700+ by cybermarauder
   maestro37's favorite games C89 Marshall by nakul1964

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Budapest Olympiad
   Leko vs D Anton Guijarro (Sep-22-24) 1/2-1/2
   A Sarana vs Leko (Sep-21-24) 1/2-1/2
   Leko vs So (Sep-20-24) 1/2-1/2
   S Sargsyan vs Leko (Sep-19-24) 1/2-1/2
   Leko vs P Pultinevicius (Sep-18-24) 1-0

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Peter Leko
Search Google for Peter Leko
FIDE player card for Peter Leko

PETER LEKO
(born Sep-08-1979, 45 years old) Hungary
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

International Master (1992); Grandmaster (1994); U16 World Champion 1996; Candidate 2002 (PCA) and 2007; Classical World Championship Challenger (2004).

Preamble:

Péter Lékó was born in Subotica in Northern Serbia. When he became a grandmaster in 1994 at the age of 14 years 4 months and 22 days, he was the youngest person ever to have become a grandmaster (GM), and the first under 15, eclipsing the records previously set by Robert James Fischer in 1958 and then by Judit Polgar in 1991. In 1996 he won the World U16 Championship. Eight years later in 2004, he contested the Classical World Championship against the incumbent Vladimir Kramnik. He has been a regular participant in the World Championship cycle and in major tournaments since he was 15.

Classical Tournaments:

Lékó’s first encounter as a participant in a super tournament occurred as a 15 year old in 1995, when he created a minor sensation by placing 3rd at the category 17 Dortmund event. Between 1995 and 1997, he capitalised on his success and started building his reputation by winning several GM tournaments in Denmark, Cuba and Columbia (Yopal (1997)). In 1998 he came in second behind Viswanathan Anand at the category 18 Tilburg Fontys (1998). Lékó’s first super tournament victory came at the category 19 tourney at Dortmund in 1999. The following year, he placed =2nd with 8/13, a point and a half behind Garry Kasparov at the category 18 Corus Group A (2000), and =3rd behind Kasparov and Kramnik at the category 21 Linares (2000). His form continued into 2001 when he came 3rd at Dortmund, a category 21 event that year, and then into 2002 when he took 2nd place at the category 17 Essen quadrangular, =3rd behind Veselin Topalov and Boris Gelfand at the category 18 NAO Masters in Cannes, and 2nd at the category 16 Borowski tournament behind Vadim Zvjaginsev, also winning that year’s edition of Dortmund, which doubled as a Candidates tournament to select a challenger for Classical World Champion Kramnik. He maintained his good form into 2003 and onwards to the extent that won the Category 20 Linares ahead of Kramnik and Kasparov, placed 3rd behind Nigel Short and Judit Polgar at the Category 17 “Talent and Courage” GM tournament in Hungary, and placed 2nd in the 2004 edition of Linares (also category 20).

Shortly after his near-miss at winning the World Championship match against Kramnik (see below), Lékó came 2nd at the category 19 Corus Group A (2004) behind Anand and then won the Corus Group A (2005) ahead of Anand, Topalov and Kramnik. Lékó thus became the fifth player to win what were then the "big three" annual super tournaments, namely Corus, Linares, and Dortmund. In 2004, he also won the Petrosian Memorial Tournament with 4/6 ahead of Peter Svidler on tiebreak, and half a point ahead of Kasparov, Anand, Etienne Bacrot and Rafael Vaganian. He experienced something of a hiatus in terms of results until 2006, when he won the 1st Tal Memorial (2006). In 2007, he placed =2nd behind Kramnik, while in 2008, he again won at Dortmund, and then came 2nd at Dortmund Sparkassen (2009). There followed a longer hiatus in leader board results, broken only by a medals winning performance at the Russian Team Championships (see below) and 2nd place in the Sigeman & Co (2012) behind Fabiano Caruana and =3rd at Dortmund Sparkassen (2012), a half point behind Sergey Karjakin and Caruana. More recently he placed 5th at the category 20 Tata Steel Group A (2013), =3rd at the category 19 Dortmund Sparkassen (2013) and =2nd at Dortmund Sparkassen (2014).

World Championship:

Lékó’s good form in tournaments did not carry over into his early assaults on the FIDE World Championship. The 19-year old was seeded directly into round two of the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999) that was staged in Las Vegas. He won his first match against Christian Bauer, but lost in the 3rd round to Sergei Movsesian. His next attempt was a repeat of the first. Seeded directly into the 2nd round of the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000) played in New Delhi and Tehran, Lékó defeated Sergey Volkov, but then lost in an extended tiebreaker to defending FIDE World Champion, Alexander Khalifman. He also lasted the first two rounds of the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2001/02) played in Moscow, losing to then-six time Armenian champion, Ashot Gamletovich Anastasian, in the second round.

Under the terms of the "Prague Agreement" facilitated by Yasser Seirawan, and intended to unite the two World Chess Championships that had split in 1993, Leko's 2002 win at Dortmund qualified him to play a match against Vladimir Kramnik. It was intended that the winner of this match would play the winner of a match between Kasparov and the FIDE World Chess Champion (first Ruslan Ponomariov, then Rustam Kasimdzhanov) to decide the undisputed world champion. After several delays, the Kramnik - Leko Classical World Championship Match (2004) was held from September 25-October 18, 2004 in Brissago, Switzerland. Lékó came extremely close to becoming Hungary's first World Champion. Leading by one point going into the fourteenth and final game, he was beaten by Kramnik who thereby tied the match 7-7 and retained his title.

In October 2005, Lékó was invited by reason of his Classical World Championship match with Kramnik in 2004 to play in the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005) in San Luis, Argentina. He accepted the invitation but only placed fifth out of a field of eight with 6½/14 points. However, this was sufficient for him to qualify for the 2007 Candidates Tournament to determine the final four qualifiers to the World Championship Tournament (2007). At the Candidates matches, he won the Candidates Match: Leko - Gurevich (2007) (+3−0=1) and the Candidates Match: Bareev - Leko (2007) (+2−0=3), to qualify for the eight-player championship tournament in Mexico City, where he finished fourth out of eight.

Lékó placed 7th in the 2008-2009 Grand Prix series, and as he did not compete in the World Cup (2009), he did not qualify for the Candidates tournament of matches that were eventually held in Kazan in 2011. There followed a disastrous result at the World Cup (2011), when he was eliminated in the first round – and from the 2013 World Championship cycle - by the young US GM Samuel Shankland. His 2014 campaign for the World Championship started modestly at the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012) when he placed outright 5th with 6/11, starting his GP points tally with 80 points. In his remaining Grand Prix events, the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2012), the FIDE Grand Prix Zug (2013) and the FIDE Grand Prix Beijing (2013), he scored totals of 5.5/11 (+1 -1 =9) (7th place), 5/11 (+0 -1 =10) (=7th place) and 6/11 (+1 =10) (=3rd place), adding a total of 200 GP points to make a best-of-3-event total of 230, ending his chances to finish in the top 2 and thereby qualify for the 2014 Candidates Tournament. He had a chance to qualify for the Candidates via the World Cup (2013) for which he qualified by reason of his rating; he defeated Norwegian GM Leif Erlend Johannessen in the first round but in one of the shocks of the round, he lost to Peruvian #1 Julio Ernesto Granda Zuniga in the second round.

For the 2016 World Championship cycle, Lékó qualified for the World Cup (2015) through his rating. He defeated Alexey Goganov and Wen Yang in the first two rounds but lost to Anish Giri in the third round to be eliminated from the Cup.

Other Matches:

<Classical>: In 2000, he defeated Alexander Khalifman in match play in Budapest by 4.5-1.5. In 2015, he lost the Leko - Li Chao (2015) match by 2-4.

<Fischer Random Chess>: In 2001, Lékó narrowly defeated Michael Adams in an eight-game match played as part of the Mainz Chess Classic.

<Rapid>: From 2005 until 2010, Péter Lékó has played a rapid chess match in the Hungarian city of Miskolc:

• In 2005, he drew Leko & Adams (2005) 4–4

• In 2006, he won the Leko - Karpov Match (2006) 4½–3½

• In 2007, he lost the Leko - Kramnik Rapid Match (2007) 3½–4½. In 2007 he also played the Ivanchuk - Leko Rapid Match (2007) losing by 6½-7½, and then lost the rematch, the Ivanchuk - Leko Match (2009), by 2½-3½.

• In 2008, he lost the Carlsen - Leko Rapid Match (2008) 3–5

• In 2009, he lost the Leko - Anand Rapid Match (2009) 3–5 and

• In 2010, he lost the Leko - Gelfand Match (2010) 3½–4½

Rapid:

Lékó was somewhat more successful in rapid tournaments. In 1999, he won the Rapid Grand Prix in Bordeaux (France) and two years later (in 2001), he won the Rapid Master Event in Nordhorn. In 2002, he won the Rapid Grand Prix in Dubai and managed to place 3rd at Monaco 2002. In 2007, he took first place at the ACP Rapid (2007) and =2nd at the 16th Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2007). In 2008, he was =3rd at the Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2008) and =5th, a half point behind the four joint leaders, at the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2008). In June 2013, he placed =3rd behind Karjakin and Topalov at the Sberbank Rapid Open 2013 held in Ukraine. In December 2013, he was =1st alongside Wang Yue at the SportAccord World Mind Games (Men, Rapid) (2013) with 5/7.

Team Events:

<Olympiads>: He represented Hungary in the Olympiads of 1994, 1996, 2000, Bled Olympiad (2002), Olympiad (2008), Chess Olympiad (2010), Chess Olympiad (2012) and Chess Olympiad (2014), winning team silver in 2002 and 2014 and individual gold for board 1 in 2008.

<World Team Championship>: Lékó represented Hungary at the World Team Championships in 2001 and at the World Chess Team Championship (2011), both times on board 1. On the latter occasion he won individual bronze.

<European Team Championships>: He represented the Hungary 3 team on board 4 in the European Team Championships in 1992, when he was a 13 year old FM, posting a modest +3 =4 -2 result. He again played for Hungary in 1999, this time on board 1 and won team and individual silver. There followed a long absence from the competition until the European Team Championship (2011) when he lead his national team from board 1 to team bronze.

<European Club Cup>: Lékó played for Honved Budapest from 1995 until 1997, winning team silver in his inaugural year in the competition. Lékó’s absence from the ECC since then was also notable for its length as he did not resume until 2012 when he was recruited to play board 3 for DhSM-64 Moscow, winning team bronze. In 2013 he played board 2 for Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk, which placed 6th, (1) while in the European Club Cup (2014) he played board 3 for Malakhit Ekaterinburg, helping his team to a bronze medal. (2)

<Other Team Competition>: He played board 3 for the Rest of the World in the Russia - The Rest of the World (2002), helping his team defeat Russia with a personal performance of +2 =7 -1. Lékó also played with his ShSM-64 Moscow team in the Russian Team Championship (2012) on board 3, winning individual silver and team bronze. Playing for Malachite in the Russian Team Championship (2014), he won individual silver for board 3 and helped his team to win the gold medal.

Ratings:

Lékó entered the top 100 in July 1995 and has remained in the top 100 since. He has been ranked as high as fourth on the FIDE World Rating List, that ranking first being achieved in April 2003 and from April to December 2005, when he also reached his peak rating of 2763 (April-September 2005). He was in the world’s top 10 for most of the decade from January 2000 until November 2009 and has been rated over 2700 since July 1999.

Personal:

Peter Lékó married Sofya Petrosyan, the daughter of Armenian grandmaster Arshak B Petrosian, on September 2nd 2000. He currently lives in Szeged, Hungary. His hobbies are soccer, tennis, bowling and music.

Sources:

Live rating list: http://www.2700chess.com/ Wikipedia article: Peter Leko Lékó’s official website: http://www.lekochess.com/index.php?...

(1) http://www.olimpbase.org/index.html...; (2) http://www.olimpbase.org/playersc/b...

Last updated: 2020-10-11 03:31:34

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 103; games 1-25 of 2,559  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. G Mathe vs Leko  1-0411989Kecskemet opB50 Sicilian
2. D Seyb vs Leko ½-½311989Nuremberg opB22 Sicilian, Alapin
3. Leko vs U Jahr  0-1501989Nuremberg opC07 French, Tarrasch
4. Leko vs W Heckel 1-0251989Nuremberg opA07 King's Indian Attack
5. Leko vs R Leitao  0-1501989wch u10bA07 King's Indian Attack
6. D Indjic vs Leko  0-1511989Werfen Open-AD91 Grunfeld, 5.Bg5
7. Leko vs A Rotstein 0-1431989Werfen Open-AA07 King's Indian Attack
8. R Hanel vs Leko  1-0541989Werfen Open-AA27 English, Three Knights System
9. Leko vs W Wirth  ½-½411990Nuremberg opB86 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack
10. Branko Kusic vs Leko 1-0741990Nuremberg opD94 Grunfeld
11. Leko vs M Meiser  1-0301990St IngbertB07 Pirc
12. Leko vs A Alawieh 0-1591990Paris-ch opC41 Philidor Defense
13. G Koschka vs Leko 0-1541990Nuremberg opB57 Sicilian
14. Leko vs A Labarthe 1-0411990Paris-ch opB01 Scandinavian
15. Stojan Gorgievski vs Leko 0-1501990Paris-ch opA07 King's Indian Attack
16. Leko vs T Souche 1-0401990Paris-ch opC44 King's Pawn Game
17. T Brionne vs Leko  0-1271990Paris-ch opD87 Grunfeld, Exchange
18. M Gretzer vs Leko 0-1241990Nuremberg opD85 Grunfeld
19. Leko vs K Pytel  0-1341990St IngbertB10 Caro-Kann
20. Leko vs S Grunberg 0-1411990Budapest Spring OpenB02 Alekhine's Defense
21. Leko vs W Von Alvensleben  1-0341990Budapest Spring OpenB12 Caro-Kann Defense
22. Leko vs R Leitao 1-0201990Wch U12B02 Alekhine's Defense
23. R Libeau vs Leko  ½-½161991Dortmund-DA15 English
24. Leko vs S Buecker 0-1531991Dortmund-DC41 Philidor Defense
25. B Stein vs Leko  ½-½491991Dortmund-DA01 Nimzovich-Larsen Attack
 page 1 of 103; games 1-25 of 2,559  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Leko wins | Leko loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 68 OF 99 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-24-06  sapfy: Interview with Leko after Tal Memorial:
http://www.russiachess.org/eng/cont...
Nov-24-06  percyblakeney: In the interview Leko confirms that he chose not to participate in Corus since he wants to relax and prepare for Linares.
Nov-24-06  suenteus po 147: <peryblakeney> Glad to know it was his choice he won't be participating.
Nov-24-06  acirce: I'm also glad that he was at least invited. It would have been strange to say the least otherwise. Also nice to hear his thoughts about a couple of the Tal Memorial games, and last but not least I'm happy that he stands up for the WC match tradition!
Nov-25-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  plang: Personally, I think the tournaments are more interesting when players with his style are not invited.
Nov-25-06  shintaro go: Great insights from Leko. Quite interesting to find out he also supports the match format to determine the Champion. He criticizes Aronian and Morozevich and calls Aronian's +2 as the maximum. Overall, it's nice to see he has confidence in himself again.
Dec-17-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ron: I heard that Peter Leko is a vegetarian, and that the only meat that Anand eats is fish. Here is a recent story linking vegetarianism and a high IQ. Be a vegetarian to play better chess perhaps?

http://health.msn.com/pregnancykids...

Dec-17-06  Karpova: <Ron: Be a vegetarian to play better chess perhaps?> No. Assuming the article was correct, the brighter ones are vegetarians because they are brighter and not the other way round.
Dec-18-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  BishopBerkeley: <Ron> & <Karpova> Whether vegetarians play better Chess or not, they certainly may live longer...

Here's a passage from the book
"Fasting and Eating for Health" (ISBN: 031218719X /
http://tinyurl.com/wx6zx ) by Joel Fuhrman, M.D. that might be worth considering. It involves studies of Seventh-Day Adventists, a group that is often studied because they are disproportionately vegetarian (when compared with the general American population). (Incidentally, I'm not a Seventh-Day Adventist myself -- my life's philosophy is much closer to Buddhism - Vedanta - Quakerism, etc.) This passage starts on page 74:

===== Begin quoted passage =====

Many mortality studies have been done on the Seventh-Day Adventists .... They are prohibited from using tobacco, alcohol, and pork, and are discouraged from consuming meats, fish, eggs, and caffeine-containing beverages. Because the latter items are only discouraged and not prohibited, there is a wide range of consumption of these items. .... If we look at multiple scientific investigations done on this group, we find the following:

[continued]

Dec-18-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  BishopBerkeley: [Continued from previous message on vegetarianism & life-expectancy]

1. As a whole, male Adventists live an average of 8.9 years longer than the rest of (nonsmoking) America, and Adventist women 7.5 years longer (this includes both vegetarian and nonvegetarian Adventists). Vegetarian Adventists live the longest in proportion to the time they had been on a vegetarian diet. [note 22] If we extrapolate the results to include those on a vegetarian diet for more than half of their lives, more than 13 years [!!!!] are added to the life span, compared to the nonsmoking American.

2. Egg and meat consumption is strongly associated with all causes of mortality. Dairy product and milk consumption is associated with prostate cancer. The earlier in life that Adventists became vegetarians, the lower their risk of coronary heart disease. [note 23] These findings are consistent with the findings of numerous epidemiologic investigations, including those done on dairy products and their relation to prostate cancer. [note 24]

3. All-cause mortality shows a significant negative association with green salad consumption, meaning the more leafy green vegetables consumed in the diet, the longer the life span. [note 25] This confirms the importance of raw, natural plant foods, the loss of important factors with cooking, and the protective effect of all the health-giving nutrients they contain.

The conclusion one must make is that animal food consumption is more of a risk factor for an early death than even cigarette smoking. [!!!!] Of course, I am strongly against smoking, but a smoking, lifetime vegetarian probably has a better chance to reach 75 years of age than a nonsmoking, lifetime meat eater....

===== End quoted passage =====

Notes from the passage quoted:

[note 22]: Ruckner C, Hoffman J. "The Seventh-Day Adventist Diet." New York: Random House, 1991.

[note 23]: Snowdon DA. Animal product consumption and mortality because of all causes combined, coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer in Seventh-Day Adventists. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 1988; 48: 739-48.

[note 24]: Rotkin ID. Studies in the epidemiology of prostate cancer: Expanded sampling. Cancer Treatment Reports 1977;61:173-80.

[note 25]: Kahn, HA, Phillips RL, Snowdon DA, Choi W. Association between reported diet and all causes of mortality: twenty-one-year followup on 27,530 adult Seventh-Day Adventists. American Journal of Epidemiology 1984:119:775-87.

=====

[Back to me]: Of course, these conclusions are only as sound as the underlying studies that suggest them. Many studies have supported the correlation of vegetarianism and longer life expectancy, but correlation can easily masquerade as CAUSATION, and this is one of the trickiest fallacies to avoid, even for experienced scientists (and philosophers -- who really should know better!)

Correlation or causation, I plan to remain in the vegetarian camp as more studies roll in (primarily for ethical reasons, but also for health).

Cheers!

(: ♗ Bishop Berkeley ♗ :)

Jan-08-07  adair10: Cograts, Peter with excellent win in Odessa. Even in such a triumphal day no people here to congratulate you. Don't worry. Keep winning. Your skills and personal conduct are very much appreciated. History of chess will have a page for you bigger than for many your contemporaries
Jan-12-07  Method B: I have just the same feelings <adair10>. Lékó did a great job in Odessa. I wasn't too happy when he didn't take part in the Olympics earlier last year, but it looks like he benefits from that rest period.

He hasn't just won games (Tal memorial and now Odessa) recently, but he plays well. It is very promising for the future and for candidates matches as well.

Jan-12-07  Lt. Col. Majid: I am a big Leko fan. He is slightly underrated due to his propensity for draws sometimes.

But make no mistake about it, he is no pretender, he is as legit as they come, a la Anand, Kramnik & Topalov.

Jan-16-07  ianD: Do any LEKO fans know if he is WARGAMES on the Playchess server????
Jan-16-07  linux fan: Even people who are not his fans know it.
Jan-16-07  square dance: yeah, war games is definitely leko. the other day i congratulated war games on his win in odessa and told him i wished he was playing in corus. he replied with "thank you". anyway, war games being leko is probably the worst kept secret on playchess. you should really post the game. its quite impressive to beat one of the 5 or 6 best players in the world. even at blitz he's top 20.
Jan-16-07  square dance: btw, when did you play him? also, whats your playchess handle and rating?
Jan-16-07  positionalgenius: <IanD>You really beat him? Who are you on playchess???
Jan-16-07  ianD: I'll post the game on my home page within the week.

Are you sure it is LEKO ??

Jan-16-07  positionalgenius: <ianD>Yes we are sure. I imagine he was rated 2800+ when you faced him.
Jan-16-07  ianD: It is some time ago and he blundered immediately: I was playing black.

all I knew was that he had a huge rating and he resigned after I took his Q in the middle game. I had no idea who he was and have never got him to chat online alas.

I think it was Alekhine opening

1e4 Nf6
2Nf3 Nxe4 (I get this a lot) as players often make automatic moves.

I any case I have the game stored on my home PC. I played it over a year ago.

Jan-16-07  positionalgenius: Well,Trudodyr just posted an all-time high rating.He just went +5-1 vs Harrypotter2(3090 elo) and is at 3258 right now.
Jan-16-07  Akavall: <positionalgenius> According to <Trudodyr>'s profile, his highest rating was 3301 and his current rating is 3255, though 3258 was his peak lately.

Btw, has Wargames been around for over a year? It seemed like it wasn't that long.

Jan-16-07  positionalgenius: <akavall>Where did you see his all-time high at? And yes,Wargames has been around for awhile.
Jan-16-07  Akavall: <positionalgenius> When viewing the chart, click "All". Of course, it's possible that had an even higher rating before, since the "All" option doesn't show his progress over the whole period, but just over a longer period of time than the initial graph.

<And yes,Wargames has been around for awhile.>

Thanks.

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