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Gelfand 
 
Boris Gelfand
Number of games in database: 2,435
Years covered: 1982 to 2013
Last FIDE rating: 2744
Highest rating achieved in database: 2761
Overall record: +503 -258 =1007 (56.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      667 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Semi-Slav (113) 
    D45 D47 D46 D43 D44
 Queen's Indian (111) 
    E12 E15 E17 E16 E13
 Slav (104) 
    D15 D17 D10 D11 D16
 King's Indian (98) 
    E92 E94 E97 E98 E73
 Grunfeld (73) 
    D85 D80 D76 D91 D70
 Queen's Gambit Declined (73) 
    D37 D38 D31 D39 D30
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (377) 
    B90 B92 B23 B96 B30
 Sicilian Najdorf (209) 
    B90 B92 B96 B93 B91
 Petrov (123) 
    C42 C43
 King's Indian (112) 
    E97 E94 E81 E60 E92
 Slav (88) 
    D12 D11 D17 D19 D10
 Semi-Slav (87) 
    D43 D45 D47 D44 D48
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Gelfand vs Shirov, 1998 1-0
   Mamedyarov vs Gelfand, 2011 0-1
   Gelfand vs Kramnik, 1994 1-0
   Gelfand vs Jobava, 2011 1-0
   Gelfand vs Anand, 1993 1-0
   Gelfand vs Salov, 1996 1-0
   Karjakin vs Gelfand, 2009 0-1
   Shabalov vs Gelfand, 2004 0-1
   Gelfand vs Adams, 2013 1-0
   Gelfand vs Kramnik, 1994 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2001)
   FIDE World Championship Tournament (2007)
   Anand-Gelfand World Chess Championship (2012)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Rubinstein Memorial (2000)
   Enghien-les-Bains (2003)
   Pamplona Tournament (2004)
   Bermuda Round Robin (2004)
   FIDE World Cup (2005)
   16th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2007)
   Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2008)
   2008 Olympiad (2008)
   Karen Asrian Memorial (2008)
   World Cup (2009)
   FIDE Jermuk Grand Prix (2009)
   20th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2011)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Match Gelfand! by amadeus
   Boris Gelfand: My Most Memorable Games by Resignation Trap
   Boris in the najdorf by deepthinker
   Najdorf - 6. Be3 by pcmvtal
   USSR Championship 1989 by suenteus po 147
   Fide 2007 world cup by King mega
   Tilburg Interpolis 1990 by suenteus po 147
   Biel 1995 by suenteus po 147

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Boris Gelfand
Search Google for Boris Gelfand
FIDE player card for Boris Gelfand


BORIS GELFAND
(born Jun-24-1968) Belarus (citizen of Israel)

[what is this?]
Boris Gelfand was born in Minsk in Belarus (formerly part of the USSR), and emigrated to Israel in 1998 where he currently resides. He was awarded the IM title in 1987 and the GM title in 1989.

Championships

<Age> Gelfand won the Junior Championship of the Soviet Union with 9/11 in January 1985, at the age of 16, a half point ahead of Vassily Ivanchuk. He came =1st (2nd on count back to Joel Lautier) in the World Junior Championship in 1988 and became European Junior Champion in 1989.

<World> In 1990, Gelfand won the Manila Interzonal to qualify as a Candidate for the 1993 World Championship. At the 1991 Candidates, he prevailed over Predrag Nikolic , but was then defeated in the quarter final by eventual Candidates winner and championship challenger Nigel Short. He qualified for the FIDE 1994 Candidates event by winning the last Interzonal in Biel, beating Michael Adams and Vladimir Kramnik only to lose to Anatoly Karpov in the finals.

Gelfand competed in all the knockout tournaments that either determined the World Championship, or was part of the World Championship cycle apart from the 2004 tournament in Tripoli. In the knockout tournament that was held in Groningen in 1997, he defeated Lautier in round three, where he was seeded directly because of his results in the last FIDE cycle, and then beat Vladislav Tkachiev and Alexey Dreev before bowing out to the winner of the tournament, Viswanathan Anand . In the world championship knockout tournament of 1999 held in Las Vegas, Gelfand was seeded into the second round where he defeated Jonathan Speelman , and then beat Lautier in round three before losing to the eventual winner, Alexander Khalifman . In 1999 in New Delhi, he was again seeded into round 2 where he defeated Emir Dizdarevic , and then Jeroen Piket in round three before he was defeated by Alexey Shirov in round four. In the 2001-02 knockout tournament held in Moscow, Gelfand lost to Peter Svidler in round 5 after defeating Alexis Cabrera , Leinier Dominguez Perez , Aleksander Delchev and Zurab Azmaiparashvili . He played in the 8-player 2002 Dortmund Tournament, which was the Candidates for the Classical World Chess Championship match in 2004, but failed to reach the semi-finals after coming third in the quadrangular round robin preliminary round.

Gelfand finished 6th at the FIDE World Cup (2005) , which produced 10 Candidates for the 2007 Candidates tournament, defeating Watu Kobese , Ruben Felgaer , Levan Pantsulaia , and Dreev in the preliminary rounds. In the two rounds of matches at the 2007 Candidates, Gelfand won both the Candidates Match: Gelfand-Kasimdzhanov (2007) and the Candidates Match: Gelfand vs Kamsky (2007) to qualify for the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2007) in Mexico City, where he tied for second with Kramnik, a point behind the winner, Anand. Subsequently, he won the World Cup (2009) by defeating Judit Polgar , the then reigning World Junior Champion Maxime Vachier-Lagrave , Dmitry Jakovenko , and Sergey Karjakin to reach the final, where he then faced former FIDE World Champion Ruslan Ponomariov , winning the match 7-5 in a playoff. In doing so he qualified for the World Championship Candidates (2011) for another shot at the World Championship in 2012. He played and defeated Shakhriyar Mamedyarov by 2.5-1.5 (+1 =3 -0) in the first round of the World Championship Candidates (2011), moving into the semi final where defeated Gata Kamsky in the tiebreaker; the result was 2-2 (+0 -0 =4) in the classical games, 2-2 (+1 -1 =2) in the rapid tiebreaker, and 1.5-0.5 in his favour in the blitz tiebreaker. He faced Alexander Grischuk in the final match, and after five draws, Gelfand won the sixth and final game thus gaining the right to challenge Viswanathan Anand for the world crown. The Anand-Gelfand World Chess Championship (2012) was played in Moscow in May 2012, and Gelfand lost in the rapid game tiebreaker 1.5-2.5 (-1 =3) after drawing the 12 games played under classical time controls 6-6 (+1 -1 =10). As the loser in the World Championship match, he qualified to play in the World Championship Candidates (2013) in London, where he placed a rating-enhancing 5th with 6.5/14 (+2 -3 =9).

Gelfand's 2014 World Championship campaign started well when he placed =1st alongside Veselin Topalov and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov at the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012), scoring 7/11 (+4 -1 =6; TPR 2836) and netting GP 140 points from the event. However, his 10th out of 12 placement at the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2012) earned him only 30 Grand Prix points, for a combined tally of 170 points. Despite the poor showing in Tashkent, Gelfand is still in the running, with two more Grand Prixs events in which to improve his standing.

Tournaments

Gelfand has an imposing tournament record dating back to the late 80s. He won or came =1st at Klajpeda 1988, Majorca (GMA) 1989, Moscow 1992, Wijk aan Zee 1992, Manila 1993, Chalkidiki 1993, Biel 1993, Dos Hermanas 1994, Debrecen and Belgrade in 1995, Vienna and Tilburg in 1996, Polanica Zdroj in 1998 and 2000, and Malmö in 1999. He also won at Pamplona Tournament (2004) . In 2005, he was =1st with Pentala Harikrishna at the Bermuda International (2005) and 1st at 38th Biel Chess Festival (2005). In 2010 he was in the Experience Team that narrowly lost against the Rising Stars at the Rising Stars vs Experience (2010), although he top scored in the tournament with 7/10. He also won outright first with 7/10 at the 2010 NH Tournament in the Netherlands.

Other strong results include 2nd at Linares 1990, 3rd at Tilburg 1990, 3rd at the Reggio Emilia of 1991/92, 2nd in the category 16 tournament in Munich 1993, 3rd at Dortmund in 1996, 2nd in the 14th Dr Milan Vidmar Memorial tournament in Slovenia, 3rd at Biel 2001, 2nd at the category 18 tournament in Cannes in 2002 behind Topalov, =3rd at Dortmund Sparkassen (2006) , and 4th at the Tal Memorial (2006) a half point behind joint leaders, Ponomariov, Peter Leko and Levon Aronian. In 2009, he came 2nd behind Ivanchuk at Bazna Tournament (2009) . Also in 2010, he came 2nd in the King's Tournament (2010) behind Magnus Carlsen . In the lead up to his World Championship contest with Anand, Gelfand competed at the category 21 Tata Steel (2012) tournament at Wijk aan Zee, finishing 9th out of 13, scoring 5/13 (+2 -5 =6; TPR 2675). In April/May 2013, he came =1st with 5.5/9 at the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013), coming 2nd on tiebreak behind Aronian.

Gelfand’s results in the FIDE Grand Prix 2008-2010 were modest, coming 11th.

Olympiads

Gelfand played in ten Chess Olympiads, representing the Soviet Union once (1990), Belarus twice (1994 and 1996), and Israel seven times (2000-2012). In 1990, he won the team gold medal playing board 2 for Soviet Union, in the Olympiad (2008) held in Dresden, he won the team silver medal and also individual silver medal playing board 1 for Israel and in the Chess Olympiad (2010) held in Khantiy Mansiysk, he won team bronze playing board 1 for Israel.

Team

Gelfand is a team player and has participated in the German Bundesliga, and team championships in Israel, Spain, Poland, and Russia. He has also been part of the European Team Championships, the European Club Cup, the Russian Club Cup and the World Team Championships in 2005 and 2009. One of his best results was assisting his Moscow team ShSM-64 to win the Russian Team Championships (2010) with 16 out of a possible 18 match points. Playing for SHSM-64, he won team bronze at the 28th European Club Cup (2012) concluded in October 2012.

Match

Outside of the world championship cycle, Gelfand has played matches in France against Etienne Bacrot in 2002 which he lost 2.5-3.5, and a drawn match (2-2) against David Navara in the Czech Republic in 2006.

Rapids

Like most top players, Gelfand is a skilled rapid player. He was =1st with Kramnik in the rapid play section of the 2001 Amber event, and outright 1st in the 2002 edition of Amber's rapid play section. He came first in the 2002 Cap d'Agde, defeating Karpov in the final. In 2003, he defeated Polgar in the George Marx Rapid Match (2003) and in 2007, he came =1st at the Villa de Canada de Calatrava (2007) , following up with =1st at the Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2008) in Odessa. He also won the 2009 ACP World Rapid Cup (2009) with a 3-1 win over Svidler in the finals and won the Leko-Gelfand Match (2010) rapid match in Hungary by 4.5-3.5. Most recently, he defeated Aronian in the Leon Rapid (2010).

Ratings

Gelfand rating as of 1 June 2013 is:

<Classical> 2755, and is therefore Israel's top player and number 12 in the world;

<Rapid> 2728 (world #20); and

<Blitz> 2694 (world #42).

Other

In 2005, Gelfand published a book titled My Most Memorable Games.

Interview: Part 1 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail...; Part 2 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... and Part 3 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... Live rating list: http://www.2700chess.com/ Extended biography of Gelfand at the official FIDE 2012 World Championship website: http://moscow2012.fide.com/en/prese... Article by the Indian Express dated 6 May 2012: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/m...


 page 1 of 98; games 1-25 of 2,436  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Gelfand vs Veremeichik 0-147 1982 MinskE12 Queen's Indian
2. P Korzubov vs Gelfand 0-157 1983 BLR-chB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
3. Gelfand vs A Kovalev  0-138 1983 BLR-chB62 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer
4. B Itkis vs Gelfand  1-040 1983 BLR-chA48 King's Indian
5. Gelfand vs Veremeichik  1-059 1983 BLR-chA46 Queen's Pawn Game
6. B Maryasin vs Gelfand 1-066 1983 BLR-chB95 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6...e6
7. Gelfand vs V Litvinov  1-037 1983 BLR-chB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
8. S Yuferov vs Gelfand  1-054 1983 BLR-chA54 Old Indian, Ukrainian Variation, 4.Nf3
9. V Dydyshko vs Gelfand  1-041 1983 BLR-chE94 King's Indian, Orthodox
10. Gelfand vs B Malisov  1-056 1983 BLR-chB07 Pirc
11. Gelfand vs Glek  ½-½32 1985 tE73 King's Indian
12. T Tabatadze vs Gelfand  ½-½55 1985 LeningradB87 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5
13. M Golubev vs Gelfand ½-½49 1985 KlaipedaB87 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5
14. Gelfand vs Ivanchuk ½-½19 1985 USSRC05 French, Tarrasch
15. S Temirbaev vs Gelfand  1-053 1985 URSE76 King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack
16. Gelfand vs Ulibin 1-030 1985 YurmalaC03 French, Tarrasch
17. Movsziszian vs Gelfand 1-058 1986 MinskB87 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5
18. Gelfand vs Mikhalchishin  1-038 1986 MinskE12 Queen's Indian
19. Ulibin vs Gelfand ½-½46 1986 Sochi (Russia)B93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
20. Gelfand vs A Ryskin  1-033 1986 MinskB63 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack
21. Gelfand vs Balashov  ½-½54 1986 Gelfand,B; Kapengut,AD26 Queen's Gambit Accepted
22. Gelfand vs E Raisky  1-041 1986 MinskD46 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
23. S Gross vs Gelfand  0-144 1986 It (cat.9)A25 English
24. Gelfand vs M Sorokin 1-041 1986 USSRE09 Catalan, Closed
25. V Dydyshko vs Gelfand  0-144 1986 MinskE83 King's Indian, Samisch
 page 1 of 98; games 1-25 of 2,436  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Gelfand wins | Gelfand loses  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 23 OF 28 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Apr-10-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <And Topalov was even more hard done by the relative short match format.>

Topalov was more hard done by his supersitions.

Apr-12-12  voyager39: A slightly older but interesting interview of Gelfand...

http://www.thehindu.com/sport/artic...

Apr-22-12  voyager39: Interesting preperation by Gelfand. So far high altitude training was only restricted to athletes.

As the website states
<Advocates say the practice gives endurance athletes a competitive advantage and increases mental alertness because they retain a higher concentration of red blood cells for up to two weeks when they return to lower altitude for competition>

Read the details here...

http://www.haaretz.com/news/nationa...

Apr-28-12  voyager39: Boris is giving it his everything!! High Altitude Training included...

http://www.haaretz.com/news/nationa...

Admire the spirit.

Apr-28-12  MORPHYEUS: Maybe Gelfand will shock the world?
Apr-30-12  Everett: Gelfand will likely pleasantly surprise everyone with his strong play, save Anand.
Apr-30-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  PinnedPiece: I predict five decisive games.

Anand gets 2 wins with white within first 5 games.

Gelfand 1 win with black about halfway, Anand wins another about halfway.

Anand then, with 3-1 advantage going into game 12, which Anand will win with black.

4 Anand wins, 1 Gelfand win, 7 draws.

Or some other equally unlikely scenario.

.

May-03-12  Troller: <JoergWalter: I'm not really sure how "hiding preparation" works. Can somebody help and explain?>

Say you have a WC match or a Candidates match or simply a match or a tournament planned sometime in the future. Then when you lose a game of chess in the meantime, you are in fact not losing, but "hiding prep". I do that all the time, haven't lost a game in years.

May-03-12  JoergWalter: <Troller> now I understand. Thanks a lot. In fact, I was imitating your style all the years without knowing and sometimes even hiding something I did not have. All makes sense. Life is good.
May-03-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Shams: "So how's that weekend tournament go?"

"Decent, three wins and four 'hidings-of-prep'."

May-03-12  JoergWalter: I'm going to give my first blindfold simul this weekend (just 8 boards). Is it reasoable to assume that I can hide my prep when my opponents play blindfolded?
May-03-12  SimonWebbsTiger: A classic story about prep is Kasparov-Karpov, the Seville Match.

Garry had a pawn sac in the English up his sleeve. Tolya didn't have to face it because Igor Zaitsev found 9...e3(!) in that line.

A little later, at the 1988 Soviet Chp. Garry could spring his pawn sac on Ivanchuk. Chucky was blown off the board in 24 moves. Garry relates the wry smile Tolya had when he saw the pawn sac on the board. The Karpov team had probably found it in their prep for the championship match.

May-03-12  JoergWalter: <SimonWebbsTiger> 9...e3 was already prepared by Zaitsev for the match with Korchnoi in Meran, wasn't it?

The most famous "hidden" preparation was probably Marschall's gambit, followed by Pillsbury's Bxf6 against Lasker in 1904. How about Fischer's queensgambit against Spassky in 1972?

May-11-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  PinnedPiece: <Me: Anand then, with 3-1 advantage going into game 12,...>

Hmm-mmm. They wouldn't play that game, would they? Why bother?

May-14-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Interesting quote by GM Shipov while commenting on the third WC game between Anand and Gelfand:

<By the way, in actual fact Gelfand almost never sits still at the board. He makes movements with various parts of his body, sometimes spinning a piece in his hands out of sight of his opponent, or changing how he's seated to and fro. All of those manoeuvres are simply a feature of his nervous system. Solid players exist who are capable of thinking comfortably while remaining absolutely still for long periods of time, but more often than not players "dance" a little at the board. As movement = life.> http://www.chessintranslation.com/l...

May-20-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  PinnedPiece: <PinnedPiece: I predict .....

4 Anand wins, 1 Gelfand win, 7 draws.

<Or some other equally unlikely scenario>>

WOW! Did I call it or what?

.

May-20-12  Shadowmancer: One game at a time :)... yodaman!!
May-21-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  firebyrd: At the press conference, Anand delivers the Gelfand line, when questioned whether the initial string of draws made them feel any pressure to play differently: "No, I was just playing each game".

http://moscow2012.fide.com/vid-arch..., @ 19:08

May-21-12  Mr. Bojangles: <Apr-28-12    MORPHYEUS: Maybe Gelfand will shock the world? >

U better believe it.

May-21-12  ksr: Hail to the would be World Champion Gelfand
May-21-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  whiteshark: You couldn't wait for another week, could you? A lot can still happen...
May-28-12  micartouse: Congratulations to Gelfand! History is remade today - the Israeli has joined a very elite group of grandmasters who have distinguished themselves by drawing the world champion in a match for the world title. By adding this to his list of remarkable career accomplishments, his status as a modern chess legend is made permanent.
May-28-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Who else drew a title match? Karpov v. Kasparov. Maybe one of Botvinnik's title matches.
May-28-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Karpova: <HeMateMe: Who else drew a title match? Karpov v. Kasparov. Maybe one of Botvinnik's title matches.>

No drawn match in Kasparov-Karpov

Schlechter (vs. Dr. Lasker), Bronstein (vs. Botvinnik) and Leko (vs. Kramnik) and also Smyslov but he won the title then anyway.

May-28-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  pawn to QB4: <<No drawn match in Kasparov-Karpov >

'course there was: Kasparov-Karpov World Championship Match (1987)

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