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Grischuk 
 
Alexander Grischuk
Number of games in database: 1,513
Years covered: 1992 to 2013
Last FIDE rating: 2779
Overall record: +323 -133 =469 (60.3%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      588 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (153) 
    B90 B30 B31 B47 B32
 Ruy Lopez (114) 
    C67 C78 C84 C88 C95
 French Defense (65) 
    C02 C11 C10 C05 C18
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (54) 
    C84 C88 C95 C92 C91
 Slav (44) 
    D15 D17 D10 D16 D13
 Queen's Gambit Declined (38) 
    D37 D31 D39 D38 D35
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (119) 
    B90 B97 B92 B45 B51
 Ruy Lopez (107) 
    C88 C84 C89 C96 C65
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (72) 
    C88 C84 C89 C96 C90
 King's Indian (65) 
    E97 E60 E92 E71 E81
 Sicilian Najdorf (62) 
    B90 B97 B92 B91 B96
 Nimzo Indian (43) 
    E32 E21 E46 E58 E34
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   V Gashimov vs Grischuk, 2010 0-1
   Grischuk vs Ponomariov, 2000 1-0
   Grischuk vs Rublevsky, 2007 1-0
   Grischuk vs Bareev, 2001 1-0
   Rublevsky vs Grischuk, 2007 0-1
   Grischuk vs Judit Polgar, 2007 1/2-1/2
   Jobava vs Grischuk, 2009 0-1
   Grischuk vs Fressinet, 2000 1-0
   Grischuk vs J Geller, 2004 1-0
   I Cheparinov vs Grischuk, 2008 0-1

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004)
   FIDE World Championship Tournament (2007)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   11th Ordix Open (2004)
   FIDE World Cup (2005)
   European Club Cup (2006)
   Ordix Open (2007)
   Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2007)
   4th FIDE Grand Prix (2009)
   World Cup (2009)
   Ordix Open (2009)
   Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2010)
   European Club Cup (2010)
   World Cup (2011)
   Chess Olympiad (2012)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Match Grischuk! by amadeus
   Cannes World Cup Rapid 2001 by KingG
   Wijk aan Zee Corus 2002 by suenteus po 147
   Alexander Grischuk vs. Teimour Radjabov by Method B
   [Candidate Matches 2007]--Grischuk-Rublevsky by chessmoron
   french advance Qb6 by Sparky123

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Alexander Grischuk
Search Google for Alexander Grischuk
FIDE player card for Alexander Grischuk


ALEXANDER GRISCHUK
(born Oct-31-1983) Russia

[what is this?]
Alexander Igorevich Grischuk was born in Moscow, where he lives to this day. His father taught him the game when he was four and his early coaches were Mikhail Godvinsky until age 7, and Maxim Blokh until age 10, before being mentored by Anatoly Bykhovsky for five years until after he gained his IM title. He won his IM title in 1998 and his Grandmaster title in 2000. His formative influences were the games (and teachings) of Aron Nimzowitsch, Robert James Fischer and Anatoly Karpov.

Championships

<Age> Grischuk’s first international success was coming equal first, but second on count back, at the World U10 Championship in 1992. During the 1990s, he won the under 10, 12, 14 and 16 Russian Championships in which he competed.

<National> Grischuk has been highly successful in Russian Championships in their various forms. He came =3rd in the 56th Russian Championships (2003), outright second in the Russian Championships 2004 (2004) behind Garry Kasparov, 2nd in the Russian Superfinals (2007), and then finally won the Russian Championship Superfinal (2009). He followed up with 3rd in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2010) and =3rd in the Russian Superfinals (2011). His placement in the 2011 event qualified him to contest the Russian Superfinals (2012), in which he scored 4.5/9 after losing his final round game to Peter Svidler, finishing a half point off the lead in a low scoring event.

<World> Grischuk became quite famous as a junior, reaching the semifinals of the 2000 FIDE world championship when he was only sixteen, losing to runner up Alexey Shirov in the second last round, after defeating Darcy Lima, Ilya Smirin, Grigory Serper, Jaan Ehlvest and Vladislav Tkachiev in the preceding rounds. He was less successful in the 2002 FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament, as he lost to Alexander Motylev in round two after beating Ehsan Ghaem Maghami in the first round. In the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004) he made it to the quarter finals, defeating Kenneth T Solomon, Vasilios Kotronias, Valerij Filippov, and Alexander Beliavsky before losing 3-1 to eventual champion Rustam Kasimdzhanov. He finished in the top 10 in the 2005 FIDE World Cup, which qualified him for the 2007 Candidates Tournament in May–June 2007. In 2007, he won the Candidates Match: Grischuk-Malakhov (2007) and the Candidates Match: Grischuk vs Rublevsky (2007) to qualify for the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2007), but there he finished last out of the eight players. Grischuk finished third in the FIDE Grand Prix 2008-2010, which qualified him as the first alternate for the World Championship Candidates (2011). Upon the withdrawal of Magnus Carlsen from the Candidates tournament, Grischuk was appointed to take his place. Grischuk caused a major upset in the first round by ousting tournament favourite Levon Aronian in the rapid game tiebreaker after drawing the classical match 2-2 (+0 =4 -0). He met Vladimir Kramnik in the semi-finals, winning in the blitz tiebreaker 1.5-0.5 (+1 =1) after drawing the classical games 2-2 (+0 -0 =4) and the rapid games 2-2 (+0 -0 =4). He met Boris Gelfand in the final match of the Candidates and after drawing the first 5 games, lost the sixth and last game to be eliminated from the Candidates. By virtue of his rating, he qualified to play in the World Cup (2011) as part of the 2013 World Championship cycle; he beat countryman and IM, Vladimir Genba in the first round, French GM Sebastien Feller in the second, compatriots Alexander Morozevich and Vladimir Potkin in the third and fourth rounds, Czech GM David Navara in the quarter final, and Ukrainian Vassily Ivanchuk in the semi final to qualify for the World Championship Candidates (2013). In the final, he met countryman Peter Svidler but lost 2.5-1.5 to secure second place. At the Candidates he scored a rating neutral 6.5/14 (+1 -2 =11) to place 6th out of 8, his sole win being against Ivanchuk.

Grischuk started auspiciously in the 2012-13 Grand Prix series by placing 4th in the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012) behind the 3 co-leaders to collect 90 points to kick off his GP points tally.

Tournaments

Grischuk’s best results are 1st at the Young Masters in Lausanne in 2000, 1st at the Chigorin Memorial Tournament in 1999, 1st at the Torshavn International, also in 2000, 2nd at Linares in 2001; 2nd at Wijk aan Zee in 2002, where he scored 8.5/13, =1st with 6.5/9 at Aeroflot A 2002 and 4th at Wijk aan Zee in 2003. He won the 5th Karpov It Tournament (2004) on count back ahead of Sergei Rublevsky and came =3rd in the same event in 2005. He played in his first Tal Memorial (2006) scoring 4.5/9, one point behind the joint winners. At the Tal Memorial (2010), he came =4th, half a point behind the joint winners. In 2009 he scored his first victory at Linares (2009), finishing in first place on count back ahead of Vassily Ivanchuk. In 2010, he finished second in Linares (2010) to Veselin Topalov.

A dab hand at 960 chess, Grischuk won the FiNet Chess 960 Open in 2009 ahead of a huge field of GMs and IMs.

Rapid Play

Along with being a top-level professional, Grischuk is also known as one of the best blitz chess players in the world, having once held the record for highest rating achieved on the Internet Chess Club. His successes at rapid and blitz chess include reaching the last four in the Cap D'Agde FRA (2003), and winning the 2003 Ordix Open and the 11th Ordix Open (2004). In 2006 he won the World Blitz Championship (2006) in Rishon Lezion, Israel with 10.5 points out of 15 games (+9 =3 -2). In 2008, he competed in the 2008 ACP World Cup defeating Karpov, Peter Svidler, and Sergey Karjakin in mini-matches before losing in the final to Teimour Radjabov. In 2009, he won the Moscow blitz championship, came =2nd with 7/9 at the XXIV International tournament at Ciudad De Villarrobledo and defeated Pavel Eljanov and Alexander Moiseenko to make it to the semi-final of the 2009 ACP World Rapid. In 2010 he won the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2010) section of the Amber Melody tournament. He lost the CCM5 Rapid Match (2005) (Anand-Grischuk Rapid Match) by 3/8 (+2 =2 -4). In July 2012, Grischuk lead most of the way to win the World Blitz Championship (2012) by half a point ahead of a fast-finishing Carlsen, with 20/30. He placed 3rd with 4.5/7 in the SportAccord World Mind Games (Men's Rapid) (2012) and finished with a poor 8.5/15 in the SportAccord World Mind Games (Men Blitz), shedding 49 blitz rating points. He came second on tiebreak behind Karjakin at the Piterenka rapid in late December 2012 and was runner-up to Karjakin at the Aeroflot Rapid Open (2013) after losing on time in a dramatic Armageddon tiebreaker.

Olympiads

A member of the gold medal winning Russian team at the 2000 and 2002 Olympiads, Grischuk has also represented Russia at the Olympics in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and most recently on board 2 at the Chess Olympiad (2012) held in Istanbul. He earned a bronze medal in 2000 for his results as second reserve.

Team

In the four World Team Championships that were held in 2001, 2005, 2010, and 2011 he won a team silver (2001) and two team golds (2005 and 2010), the individual silver and gold medals for board 3 in 2001 and 2005, the individual silver medal for board 2 in 2011, and the individual bronze medal for board 1 in 2010. As a 16 year old IM, he played for the Russian Team in 1999 in the European Team Championship, coming fourth at first reserve in a team that came 5th; subsequently, he played board three in his team which won gold in the 2003 and 2007 European Team Championships, and then struck individual gold on board 2 at the European Team Championship (2011) when Russia came 5th.

Grischuk’s success in the European Club Cup over the last decade or so from 2001 and 2012 has been outstanding: in that time he has won 5 team golds, a team silver and three team bronzes, combined with two personal gold medals and 3 personal silvers. In 2010 he played for SOCAR Baku (winning individual silver for board 3) after four years with the highly successful Ural Sverdlovsk team, and then in the 28th European Club Cup (2012) he again played for SOCAR Baku, helping his team to gold. Grischuk was a member of the successful Russian team that defeated the Chinese team in the inaugural Russia-China friendly match that was held in 2001. He has also played in the French Team Championships from 2001-2006, the Russian Team championships in 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and most recently for his Malakhit Ekaterinburg team where he helped his team to a silver medal in the Russian Team Championships (2013) picking up a gold medal for board 2 (5/6: TPR 2980), the Russian Club Cup in 2009 and 2010, the Bundesliga in 2003; and the Spanish Club Championship in 2007.

Ratings

<Classical> As of 1 May 2013, Grischuk's rating was 2779, and is therefore number 2 in Russia and number 6 in the world;

<Rapid> 2825 (world #2); and

<Blitz> 2858 (world #2).

Other

Grischuk is married to GM Natalia Zhukova. He is also a professional poker player.

Sources and references

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Lengthy online interview: [http://crestbook.com/node/1322; and Wikipedia article: Alexander Grischuk


 page 1 of 61; games 1-25 of 1,514  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Grischuk vs G Tatarliev  1-024 1992 Wch U10C10 French
2. Grischuk vs Basim A Mohsin  1-041 1992 Wch U10A07 King's Indian Attack
3. Grischuk vs Das Neves  1-030 1992 Wch U10A07 King's Indian Attack
4. Grischuk vs R Simons 1-015 1992 Wch U10C70 Ruy Lopez
5. McShane vs Grischuk 1-034 1992 Wch U10C09 French, Tarrasch, Open Variation, Main line
6. L Pliester vs Grischuk  1-027 1992 Leiden opC18 French, Winawer
7. Grischuk vs Bacrot 1-031 1992 Ch World (cadets) (under 10)B01 Scandinavian
8. H Geanta vs Grischuk  0-136 1992 Wch U10C02 French, Advance
9. Grischuk vs L Aronov  1-041 1992 Wch U10C50 Giuoco Piano
10. Grischuk vs Bacrot 0-131 1993 Wch U10C42 Petrov Defense
11. Grischuk vs S Azarov  1-055 1993 Wch U10C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer
12. Q Li vs Grischuk  1-027 1993 Wch U10E88 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6
13. T Purev Dorj vs Grischuk  0-156 1993 Wch U10B06 Robatsch
14. Grischuk vs S Guliev 0-118 1993 Wch U10C42 Petrov Defense
15. Ganguly vs Grischuk  0-171 1993 Wch U10B08 Pirc, Classical
16. Grischuk vs M Szymanski  1-052 1993 Wch U10C07 French, Tarrasch
17. Grischuk vs M Sebenik  1-029 1993 Wch U10B18 Caro-Kann, Classical
18. Grischuk vs S Azarov  1-034 1994 Wch U12C42 Petrov Defense
19. N Siegel vs Grischuk  0-151 1994 Wch U12E92 King's Indian
20. Grischuk vs D Bunzmann  0-135 1994 Wch U12B30 Sicilian
21. G Kafka vs Grischuk  0-121 1994 Wch U12B06 Robatsch
22. M Nedobora vs Grischuk  1-036 1994 Moscow opE61 King's Indian
23. Z Minjun vs Grischuk  1-025 1994 Wch U12C05 French, Tarrasch
24. Grischuk vs R Markus  1-030 1994 Wch U12C42 Petrov Defense
25. Ponomariov vs Grischuk 1-023 1994 Wch U12 Szeged (9)B09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
 page 1 of 61; games 1-25 of 1,514  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Grischuk wins | Grischuk loses  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 27 OF 29 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  kellmano: <BobCrisp: <I read Grischuk as saying that the Western version of these events (9/11) is ridiculous (i.e. that it's just like a Hollywood film with some baddy stroking his beard in the mountains while the goodies fight back). I agree with him here.>

So what version do you subscribe to?

<I agree with him here. OK,he does go on to imply it's a conspiracy 'the truth' style, which is a bit silly.>

A bit silly!? A BIT SILLY???

Ah, piss off.
>

Watch your language. With regards to your earlier question, the implication is that you subscribe to the version that there are a load of baddie Muslims out there who are jealous of the Americans because the Americans are all clever and stuff.

My version would be that sections of the Islamic world feel aggrieved by American imperialism. One man's terrorist ... and all. DOubt i'm fully correct though.

Your vitreolic reaction to everything here just confirms another of AG's points - that the land of the free is not as free as it could be due to the supression of opinion that doesn't fit.

Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  kellmano: <bronkenstein> Nice one. I have always been a big Grischuk fan and agree he should have more pages kibitzing :-)

He's now up to 27 for me, but I have no-one on ignore.

Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <parmetd: heh apparently chessgames.com too has a filter for one of the 5 words I typed.... very strange.>

From my online poker at Pokerstars.com:

You can't type the words wistful or lustful-the site bleeps four letters, as they form that dreaded combination 'stfu'; 'fag', 'faggot' or 'homo'; 'wh*re' and 'b***h', to name a few.

Two-thirds of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_V... gets bleeped out as well.

Jul-06-11  bronkenstein: Ty <Kelm> . BTW , no1 on ignore here as well , page No 27.
Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  tpstar: <The only good consequence of all the flaming here is that Sasha will get few pages more (only 26 ATM o,O , ain`t that a shame?). So , keep on doing good job my little troll friends>

Condescension, patronizing generalizations and Stupid Moron Idiot Nuts Troll belong on the Vladimir Kramnik page.

Page count and post count are pretty meaningless in cyberspace.

<the land of the free is not as free as it could be due to the supression of opinion that doesn't fit>

You are still talking about Stalin, right?!

<summer league of Fantasy League Dictators>

Count me out, Counsellor. :-)

Jul-06-11  bronkenstein: Before :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...

and after:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...

reminds me of <tpstar>`s removing < =) > from my quote .

Comrade Stalin would be proud =)

Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  kellmano: <bronkenstein> again, nice one.
Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  Shams: <bronk> Anyone who removes an "emoticon" from your prose counts as an editor who deserves your thanks.
Jul-06-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <Shams: <keypusher> <Shams> <Others> <Here's the final report by NIST on the collapse of WTC7. I've only skimmed it, and I'm not an engineer, but the basic story is that a critical support column, weakened by fires that had burned for many hours, buckled, leading to a progressive failure and eventual collapse of the building. Is there some reason that isn't plausible?>

Unfortunately, there are some pretty solid reasons, yeah. My advice is not to start googling on this.>

Uh oh...

Jul-07-11  BobCrisp: <Shams>, <cg.com>'s resident controlled demolition expert. Pah!
Jul-10-11  BobCrisp: <With regards to your earlier question, the implication is that you subscribe to the version that there are a load of baddie Muslims out there who are jealous of the Americans because the Americans are all clever and stuff.

My version would be that sections of the Islamic world feel aggrieved by American imperialism.>

Well, I'm not sure how far apart these supposedly opposing positions are. But I think you're ignoring the problem of Islamic imperialism. How do you think a small tribal cult of the 7th century became a worldwide religion with 1.5 bilion adherents? For the followers of such a supremacist religion, the reality of Western military and financial dominance must constitute something of a problem. White supremacy is infuriating!

Jul-10-11  BobCrisp: <Grischuk>'s blog on the new Whychess site. Depending on his level of interaction, we might ask him to clarify his views on 9/11.

http://www.whychess.org/blogs/alexa...

Jul-10-11  BobCrisp: For people who think that top figures in the American government and military conspired to kill 3000+ of its own citizens as a pretext for war (resulting in another 6000+ American troop casualties), the 911 truthers on board seem strangely reticent about taking up the cudgels and promoting their case. If I believed what they did, I'd never stop agitating toward that goal.
Aug-13-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  notyetagm: V Gashimov vs Grischuk, 2010

<DrMAL: Voted game of the year, Grischuk's king walk is indeed one of the most spectacular ever played at high level. It gives him a throne of his own even if the WC lottery marble this year based on silly short/blitz games landed on red instead of black.>

Voted <2010 GAME OF THE YEAR> by IM Max Notkin's chesspro.ru panel of experts.

http://chesspro.ru/_events/2011/bes...


click for larger view

39 ... Ra8-c8! with the idea ... Rc8-c1#!


click for larger view

Sep-09-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  hedgeh0g: It never ceases to amaze me just how many people adhere to various 9/11 conspiracy theories. I'd think something fishy was at hand if a skyscraper DIDN'T collapse after a commercial airliner loaded with jet fuel smashed into it at 400mph.

If the past couple of decades have been any indication, the US will invade whoever it likes without resorting to staging an elaborate terrorist attack to justify it.

Sep-10-11  Beautiful.LMS: <hedgeh0g: It never ceases to amaze me just how many people adhere to various 9/11 conspiracy theories. I'd think something fishy was at hand if a skyscraper DIDN'T collapse after a commercial airliner loaded with jet fuel smashed into it at 400mph.>

These conspiracy theories are usually so much crap it isn't even funny, and I think they must be a good way to line someone's pockets.

Sep-13-11  Xenon Oxide: <BobCrisp: Well, I'm not sure how far apart these supposedly opposing positions are. But I think you're ignoring the problem of Islamic imperialism. How do you think a small tribal cult of the 7th century became a worldwide religion with 1.5 bilion adherents?>

I could ask the same about Christianity. What's your answer to that?

Sep-13-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <bronkenstein: ....reminds me of <tpstar>`s removing < =) > from my quote .

Comrade Stalin would be proud..>

We know you're always right......and yeah, I removed that wretched little emoticon at the end....that a problem?

<Xenon Oxide> <Bob> has an answer for everything; his place in the Hall of Fame For the Omniscient has long been secured.

Oct-25-11  polarmis: Grischuk's analysing his games from the World Cup at WhyChess. Part I: http://www.whychess.org/node/2599

It's fascinating to see what a top player was actually thinking during the games, but it's also very funny. e.g.

<Round 2. Sebastien “1.5a” Feller.>

<That discouraged him, and perhaps the most he undertook in order to save the game was offering a draw when behind on time in a clearly worse position. That turned out to be insufficient…>

<If I was a coach and my student played like that I’d cut off not only his hands, but most likely other parts of his body as well. Fortunately Sasha Riazantsev is a more moderate person and I was able to continue the tournament in one piece.>

Oct-25-11  bronkenstein: Interesting , after <tpstar> removed the smiley while quoting me, <perfidious> comes to `admit` that instead :

<bronkenstein: ....reminds me of <tpstar>`s removing < =) > from my quote...>

and bit later

<perfidious: ...We know you're always right......and yeah, <I removed > that wretched little emoticon at the end....that a problem?>.

Dec-10-11  polarmis: Part 2 of Grischuk's highly recommended account of getting to the World Cup final:

http://www.whychess.org/node/3275

Some quotes:

<I can’t in any way agree with the suggestion that I was particularly lucky in this game. White conducted it like a well-trained pit bull, seeing only his enemy’s throat and not caring in the slightest about his own life, never mind any miserable pawns or pieces.>

<I’ve played enough against Anand, Carlsen and Aronian to realise how effective the tactic of “If you see a reasonable non-losing move – make it” can be.>

Dec-10-11  bronkenstein: Just 2 more excerpts from <polarmis>`s translation : <According to the terms of the “SOCAR” contract each member of the club is obliged to play no less than 10 “King’s Indians” a year.> is wonderful news ! There is still hope for the old lady ( one of the nicks for KID in Russian , derived from ´old indian´ , the virtual KID translation).

<Having managed to restrain Etienne’s joy at this find ("Come on man, if he repeats, you just crush him! 8...d5 and you crush him!"), I got down to studying the position independently. I still couldn’t manage to convince the computer of the complete correctness of the sacrifice, but each time I tried to play White’s position using my own head my position fell apart in a maximum of 5 moves. That’s when I decided: “this is just what I need!”> I should use this approach more in my games =)

I went through the commented games briefly , and my head hurts - there is simply too much insight into superGM thinking process for just one `session`.

PS People are obviously wasting their time on wrong pages here , as usual =)

Dec-22-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  kellmano: Excellent article that merits more discussion.

A quote about the first blitz game with 1.5a Feller:

perhaps the most he undertook in order to save the game was offering a draw when behind on time in a clearly worse position. That turned out to be insufficient…

Dec-23-11  kappertjes: Thanks <polarmis>! Gonna have to take some time for those, but it is rare to have top GMs annotate their games like that. So thanks to Grischuk and all who had a hand in this as well I guess.
Feb-16-12  bronkenstein: Sasha just took solo 2nd prize (finishing just half a point behind Karjakin , with whom he drew) in very strong Aeroflot Blitz (final standings - http://www.chessarbiter.com/turniej...)

He also finished 2nd in strong blitz section of the mind games held in December (http://sportaccord2011.fide.com/ind... , official site) , and took Russian Rapid Cup ´on autopilot´ (´Grischuk cruises to Russian Rapid Cup win´ - http://www.google.rs/url?sa=t&rct=j... , just an excerpt - <The event has now ended with Alexander Grischuk claiming the cup after an almost perfect tournament ´ he didn´t lose a single game and won each of his matches in the two rapid games with no need for Armageddon.>).

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