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Aronian 
Photograph copyright © Fred Lucas, www.fredlucas.eu  
Levon Aronian
Number of games in database: 1,665
Years covered: 1993 to 2013
Last FIDE rating: 2813
Highest rating achieved in database: 2825
Overall record: +462 -172 =631 (61.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      400 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Slav (78) 
    D15 D10 D11 D12 D17
 Queen's Pawn Game (60) 
    A45 E10 A41 E00 D01
 Sicilian (59) 
    B23 B90 B50 B30 B40
 King's Indian (58) 
    E60 E61 E63 E90 E62
 Semi-Slav (49) 
    D45 D43 D44 D47 D48
 Queen's Indian (48) 
    E15 E17 E16 E12 E18
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (207) 
    C67 C89 C88 C84 C65
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (99) 
    C89 C88 C84 C87 C90
 Sicilian (99) 
    B22 B90 B70 B51 B76
 Queen's Gambit Declined (63) 
    D37 D38 D31 D39 D30
 Grunfeld (59) 
    D85 D91 D76 D94 D77
 Semi-Slav (43) 
    D45 D47 D43 D44
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Aronian vs Anand, 2007 1-0
   I Sokolov vs Aronian, 2006 0-1
   Shirov vs Aronian, 2006 0-1
   A Giri vs Aronian, 2012 0-1
   Aronian vs V Popov, 2005 1-0
   Aronian vs Morozevich, 2006 1-0
   Anand vs Aronian, 2008 0-1
   S Iuldachev vs Aronian, 2004 0-1
   Anand vs Aronian, 2009 0-1
   Aronian vs A Volokitin, 2008 1-0

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

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   41st World Junior Championships (2002)
   5th Individual European Chess Championship (2004)
   6th European Individual Championship (2005)
   FIDE World Cup (2005)
   Linares 2006 (2006)
   Candidates Match: Aronian-Carlsen (2007)
   FIDE Jermuk Grand Prix (2009)
   4th FIDE Grand Prix (2009)
   Chess Olympiad (2010)
   20th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2011)
   Tata Steel (2012)
   Chess Olympiad (2012)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Guess-the-Move Chess: 2000-2010 (Part 1) by Anatoly21
   Match Aronian! by amadeus
   Exchange sacs - 2 by obrit
   ARONIAN: TACTICAL GENIUS by notyetagm
   Book of Samurai's favorite games 3 by Book of Samurai
   Jakaiden's Games 4 Study by jakaiden
   Book of Five Rings' favorite games by Book of Five Rings
   GP by acirce
   Match Carlsen! by amadeus
   Art of War's favorite games by Art of War
   D45 QGD: Semi-Slav: Stoltz [White] by chess.master
   Levon Aronian Great Games by Bufon
   mejores partidas de los mejores de la historia by afabian
   Armenians trashing Azeris!!! by Davolni

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Levon Aronian
Search Google for Levon Aronian
FIDE player card for Levon Aronian


LEVON ARONIAN
(born Oct-06-1982) Armenia

[what is this?]
Levon Grigorievich Aronian was born in Yerevan and learned to play chess when he was nine years old. He is a former U12 and Junior (U20) World Champion, became an International Master in 1996 when 13 years old, and became a Grandmaster in 2000 when he was 17 years of age. He is currently the world's third ranked player.

Championships

<Age> In 1994, he won the World Under-12 Championship in Szeged with 8/9, ahead of future top-ten players Ruslan Ponomariov, Alexander Grischuk, Etienne Bacrot as well as Francisco Vallejo-Pons. In 2001, he was runner up in the World Junior Championship with 9.5/13 just behind Peter Acs and went one better in 2002, when he became World Junior Champion, scoring 10/13 and finishing ahead of Surya Shekhar Ganguly, Artyom Timofeev, Luke McShane, Bu Xiangzhi, and Pentala Harikrishna.

<Nationals> He was runner up in the Armenian Championship in 2001 behind Smbat Gariginovich Lputian before improving in 2002 by winning the Armenian Championship.

<Continental> A regular participant at the European Individual Championships since their inception, he came =4th in 2003 with 8.5/13 behind the winner Zurab Azmaiparashvili, and the joint runners up Alexander (Nenashev) Graf and Vladimir Malakhov; in 2004 he came =3rd a half point behind joint leaders Vassily Ivanchuk and Predrag Nikolic and in 2005 he came =3rd, a point behind Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu and a half point behind 2nd place getter Teimour Radjabov.

<World> Aronian took part in the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004) in Tripoli, eliminating Magnus Carlsen and Gadir Guseinov before losing his third-round match with Pavel Smirnov. He capped a highly successful 2005 by winning the FIDE World Cup (2005) in December, without loss of a single game. After beating Ali Frhat, Darmen Sadvakasov, Alexander Areshchenko and Francisco Vallejo Pons in the preliminary 4 rounds, he disposed of Mikhail Gurevich in the quarter finals and Bacrot in the semi finals before defeating Ponomariov in the final round. His World Cup victory qualified him for the Candidates Tournament of the World Chess Championship 2007, being played in May–June 2007. In this tournament he played Magnus Carlsen in the Candidates Match: Aronian-Carlsen (2007), and they tied 3-3 in the initial six games, then 2-2 in rapid chess, before Aronian finally prevailed 2-0 in the blitz deciders. In the finals, he won the Candidates Match: Aronian vs Shirov (2007) by 3˝-2˝. This qualified him for the final stage of the championship, the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2007) in Mexico City. There, he scored only six points out of 14, finishing seventh out of eight players, with Viswanathan Anand becoming the World Chess Champion.

Aronian easily won the FIDE Grand Prix 2008–2010, qualifying him for the World Championship Candidates (2011). He was was eliminated from the latter contest in the first round when he fell to Alexander Grischuk in the rapid game playoff 1.5-2.5 (+1 =1 -2) after tieing the classical games 2-2 (+0 =4 -0). Aronian qualified via his rating for the right to play in the World Championship Candidates (2013) that was played in London in March 2013. He was in contention for first for most of the tournament, but he lost some games late in the tournament to place 3rd with 8/14, half a point behind the leaders Carlsen and Vladimir Kramnik respectively. He is eligible to play in the World Cup 2013, and if he retains his rating in the top 3, he could again be seeded into the Candidates in 2014.

Tournaments

<Classical> At the International Open at Capelle-La-Grande in 2001, Aronian scored 7/9, half a point behind the joint leaders Einar J Gausel and Vladimir Chuchelov . At Lausanne a few months later, he won the Young Masters tournament ahead of Harikrishna. In 2002, he was equal first in the International Open in Bad Wiessee and was also =1st in the International Neckar Opens held in Deizisau in Germany in 2002 and 2003. In 2004, he was =1st in the Reykjavik Open and 2005 proved to be Aronian's most successful year thus far - it saw him gain over 50 FIDE rating points to claim a spot in the top 10 and a 2724 rating on the July list. He was joint first with Zahar Efimenko, Kiril D Georgiev, Alexey Shirov and Emil Sutovsky at the Gibraltar Masters (2005), outright first at the Karabakh International (2005) and won the World Cup (see above). He went on to even greater successes in 2006: after achieving a modest result in Corus Wijk aan Zee (2006), he won in the last round of Linares 2006 (2006) to take first place by half a point ahead of and Veselin Topalov. Toward the end of the year he shared first place in the Tal Memorial (2006) 2006 with Peter Leko , and then followed up in 2007 with a joint victory with Topalov and Radjabov at the category 19 Corus (2007). The year 2008 started with a great success at Corus (2008) where he shared first place with Carlsen, scoring 8/13, and continued strongly as he came =3rd at Morelia-Linares (2008), and won the FIDE Grand Prix (2008) in Sochi and the 4th FIDE Grand Prix (2009) in Nalchik. Along with his joint second place score in the FIDE Jermuk Grand Prix (2009), Aronian secured his place in the candidates tournament by winning the FIDE Grand Prix series in just three of the four events each player was slated to attend. He also came =2nd behind Topalov at the Bilbao Grand Slam Chess Final (2008) tournament alongside Ivanchuk and Carlsen with 5/10 and finished 2008 with outright second behind Topalov with 5.5/10 at the Pearl Spring Chess Tournament (2008).

In 2009 he came =2nd with 7.5/13 at Corus a half point behind Sergey Karjakin and alongside Sergei Movsesian and Radjabov, took clear first place with four wins, one draw, and one loss in the 2nd Grand Slam Masters Bilbao Final (2009). In November 2009, he competed in the Tal Memorial (2009), at the time the strongest tournament in history (in terms of average Elo, 2763). He finished fourth with 5/9, and in the final round memorably demolished world champion Viswanathan Anand with the Black pieces in just 25 moves. He was 3rd at Linares (2010) behind Topalov and Grischuk and in September 2010, he played in the preliminary stage of the Bilbao Grand Slam in Shanghai, the Shanghai Masters (2010), against Vladimir Kramnik, Alexei Shirov, and Wang Hao, but could not qualify for the final tournament after losing to Kramnik in an Armageddon game after they drew the tiebreaker match. In November 2010, he finished shared first with Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and Karjakin at the category XXI Tal Memorial (2010). He started 2011 with a joint third with Carlsen in the Tata Steel (2011) (formerly Corus) super tournament behind Hikaru Nakamura and Anand, scoring 8/13 with a 2821 performance rating. In November 2011, he came second in the category 22 Tal Memorial (2011) with 5.5/9 (+2 =7 -0 and TPR of 2853) on tiebreak behind Magnus Carlsen, and in December 2011 he broke even at the London Chess Classic (2011) with 4/8 (+1 -1 =6). Aronian started 2012 with his first outright win at Wijk aan Zee scoring 9/13 (+7 -2 =4; TPR of 2891) at the category 21 Tata Steel (2012) and then placed =4th at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2012) with 4.5/9 followed by 3rd at the Bilbao Masters (2012) in October. He finished 2012 with a disappointing 3.5/8 at the London Chess Classic (2012), placing 6th out of 9 and losing his world number 2 ranking.

However, 2013 saw Aronian placing clear second behind Carlsen at the category 20 Tata Steel (2013) event, scoring 8.5/13 and signalling a strong return to form prior to the Candidates Tournament that was held in March 2013. Subsequent to the Candidates, Aronian won the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013) with 5.5/9 on tiebreak ahead of Boris Gelfand.

<Chess960> In 2003 Aronian won the Finet Chess960 open at Mainz; this qualified him for a match against Chess960 World Champion Peter Svidler at Mainz the following year, a match which he lost 4˝-3˝. He won the Finet Chess960 open tournament again in 2005 which earned him a rematch with Svidler in 2006, and this time he won the match this time 5-3 in an 8-game match to become Chess960 World Champion. In 2007 he successfully defended his title of Chess960 World Champion by beating Anand, but lost the title in 2009 to Nakamura.

Olympiad

Aronian played for Armenia in the 1996 Olympiad in Yerevan, the 36th Olympiad (2004) in Calvia, the 37th Chess Olympiad (2006) in Turin, the 38th Olympiad (2008) in Dresden, the 39th Chess Olympiad (2010) in Khanty-Mansiysk and in the Chess Olympiad (2012) in Istanbul. He helped the team to a bronze medal in 2004 and to gold medals in 2006, 2008 and 2012. In the 2010 Olympiad he won the silver medal for his individual performance on board one and in 2012 he went one better to win gold on top board.

Teams

Always a team player, Aronian has played in the German Bundesliga, the Israeli National League, in the Dutch, Spanish and French Team championships, in the European Club Cup as well as the World Team Championship (2005) and World Team Championship (2010). In the Russian Team Championship in 2005, he scored 7.5/9 with an Elo performance rating of around 2850, and in the World Chess Team Championship (2011) he lead Armenia to gold, scoring a personal silver for top board with his 5/8 (TPR 2826). He has played for Armenia in the European Team Championships in 1999 (winning team gold), 2005, 2007 (individual silver), and 2009. He lead Armenia to fourth place in the European Team Championship (2011), winning silver on board 1.

Match

In April 2012, Aronian and Vladimir Kramnik, as part of their preparation for the 2013 Candidates Tournament, played a six-game training match in Zurich. The Kramnik vs Aronian (2012) match was drawn 3-3 (+1 -1 =4).

Rapids

Aronian is a worthy successor to Anand in the rapid play versions of the game, and a fierce rival of Carlsen and Nakamura. In May 2007 he won 4-2 in the Kramnik-Aronian Rapid Match (2007). He also won the 2009 World Rapid Championship when he took out the Chess Classic Mainz (rapid) (2009), and then followed up by winning the World Blitz Championship (2010) with 24.5/38, clinching the title with a round to spare. In March 2008 he won the 17th Melody Amber blindfold/rapid tournament held in Nice, France, 2˝ points ahead of the other nearest competitors. Apart from his first place win in the overall tournament, he also took sole first place in the Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2008) section of the tournament (winning by a margin of 1˝ points) and shared first place in the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2008) section with Kramnik, Alexander Morozevich, and Topalov. In March 2009 he again won at the Melody Amber tournament, scoring a combined 14 points in 22 games, and sharing the lead in both sections. In 2011, he won the 20th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2011) with 8.5/11 by a clear point and a half, and came second behind Carlsen in the 20th Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2011) section with 7/11 to take the overall prize for the third time. In June 2008, Aronian won the Karen Asrian Memorial (2008) rapid chess tournament in Yerevan, finishing with 8˝/14 ahead of second placed Peter Leko. In August 2010, he attempted to defend the World Rapid Chess title, but lost to eventual champion American Gata Kamsky.

Awards

Aronian was declared the best sportsman of Armenia in 2005 and in December 2009 was awarded the title of "Honoured Master of Sport of the Republic of Armenia".

Rating

Aronian's FIDE ratings as at 1 May 2013 are:

<Classical>: 2813, making him Armenia's top player, and the European and world number 2. He is only one of six players to cross the 2800 boundary, the others being Kasparov, Kramnik, Anand, Topalov and Carlsen;

<Rapid>: 2783, number 6 in the world; and

<Blitz>; 2817, number 7 in the world.

Other

His handle on the Internet Chess Club (ICC) is "L-Aronian".

Sources and references

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Extended interview on WhyChess on 21 Sep 2011: http://whychess.org/node/1960; Wikipedia article: Levon Aronian


 page 1 of 67; games 1-25 of 1,665  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. D Kozlenkov vs Aronian 1-042 1993 Wch U12C63 Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense
2. A Horvath vs Aronian 1-056 1993 Wch U12B78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
3. Aronian vs A Zabojlovich 1-034 1993 Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
4. Aronian vs I Khamrakulova 1-034 1993 Wch U12A45 Queen's Pawn Game
5. Nur Nawrose vs Aronian  0-134 1993 Wch U12B70 Sicilian, Dragon Variation
6. Ngo Ngoc Quang vs Aronian 0-132 1993 Wch U12E60 King's Indian Defense
7. Aronian vs S Munizaba 1-038 1993 Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
8. E Shaposhnikov vs Aronian 1-060 1993 Wch U12B55 Sicilian, Prins Variation, Venice Attack
9. Aronian vs M Sitnik 1-041 1993 Ch World (cadets) (under 12)C55 Two Knights Defense
10. A Boldyrev vs Aronian  ½-½45 1993 Wch U12B20 Sicilian
11. Aronian vs Das Neves 0-158 1993 Wch U12D01 Richter-Veresov Attack
12. Bacrot vs Aronian 0-140 1994 WYFWC Szeged B12(8)B22 Sicilian, Alapin
13. E Khalilov vs Aronian  0-133 1994 EU-ch U12A07 King's Indian Attack
14. H Geanta vs Aronian  1-042 1994 Wch U12C63 Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense
15. Aronian vs A Hrusciov 1-024 1994 EU-ch U12A45 Queen's Pawn Game
16. F Langheinrich vs Aronian  1-030 1994 EUch U12 DisneyB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
17. Aronian vs D Bunzmann  1-025 1994 Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
18. V Raceanu vs Aronian  0-143 1994 EU-ch U12D74 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.cd Nxd5, 7.O-O
19. Aronian vs J Mont-Reynaud  1-052 1994 Wch U12D01 Richter-Veresov Attack
20. M Adnani vs Aronian 0-122 1994 Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
21. V Shinkevich vs Aronian  ½-½25 1994 EU-ch U12A49 King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4
22. Aronian vs A Bokros  1-037 1994 Wch U12A45 Queen's Pawn Game
23. Aronian vs O Kondarevich  1-048 1994 EUch U12 DisneyC16 French, Winawer
24. C Mamedov vs Aronian 0-145 1994 EUch U12 DisneyB78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
25. Aronian vs D Mastrovasilis 0-116 1994 EU-ch U12B80 Sicilian, Scheveningen
 page 1 of 67; games 1-25 of 1,665  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Aronian wins | Aronian loses  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 118 OF 129 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-29-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  spawn2: congrats to Arianne!
Jan-29-12  joeyj: <spawn2: congrats to Arianne!>

see here who's behind & Levon's secret arsenal to victory ???

http://chessvibes.com/reports/aroni...

Jan-29-12  timhortons: <All we can add is that Aronian can certainly not be blamed. The Armenian played a fantastic tournament and finished as the deserved winner. In fact Aronian himself considered it to be the best individual performance in his career thus far, as he noted in a brief press conference on Sunday afternoon.>

radja and aronian are two calculating giants, if you read the report radja wou;d say why he will push for something he cant be sure of the ending, he is contedted with a draw as that would give him the result of clear second place and not lossing any single game in the game, beside the man must be tired already and his body is not up for such feat.

some people just blame their failure on others but this two guys levon and radja are very cool players.

very smart ones.

Jan-29-12  timhortons: I cant see directly the face of arianne but surely the couple is a portrait of love.

arianne is levon lucky charm, young GMs must learn from this, have a normal life,engaged in other sport and be a fan of other sport as well as have a gf.

btw their relationship survived for quite a while now,goodluck!

Jan-30-12  bronkenstein: <I cant see directly the face of arianne...> you can check some pics of her here ---> http://www.google.rs/search?q=image...
Jan-31-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Garech: Does anybody know Aronian's performance rating for Tata Chess 2012? Would be grateful if someone could let me know as I'm writing an article. Cheers,

-Garech

Jan-31-12  joeyj: < Garech: Does anybody know Aronian's performance rating for Tata Chess 2012? Would be grateful if someone could let me know as I'm writing an article. Cheers>

2891

see here:
http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...

Jan-31-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Garech: Cheers buddy, I appreciate it.

-Garech

Feb-01-12  M.D. Wilson: Well done on winning Tata, Levon. Champion player, champion bloke. I think 2012 will be a great year. Onwards and upwards, mate.
Feb-01-12  AlphaMale: Get a new tailor. Your clothes suck.
Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: http://chess-news.ru/en/node/5988

Thats one interesting letter, folks. Looks like Aronian is under heavy pressure from Armenian authorities if he urgently send such letter tom FIDE. I was never fond of FIDE but this is just ridiculous that one player dictates his rules to organization even if he is current no. 2 in rankings. In any case it is my strong opinion that FIDE could or should do something right now to prevent such precedents happening in the future. Yes, indeed the FIDE slogan is We are one family, but one person should not blackmail whole organization in such disgusting way, IMHO.

Feb-02-12  khursh: <Chessmaster9001:> Should I explain what the red-herring is? Or you can continue playing <the naive> ?
Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: Khursch, everything is clear for me in this case and YOU please do not start here naive games. The fact is Aronian should play chess and not blackmail FIDE with such political letters. I am from Azerbaijan and even considering tensions between our countries I just love Aronian as a chessplayer and admire his personality. But in this case it is clear that Aronian was under heavy pressure from Armenian chess federation and thats how the letter story began. I definitely reject the fact that Aronian is on his own in this scandal. Look, I am not talking about any politics here, just mentioning the clear evidences.
Feb-02-12  polarmis: The situation was exactly the same before the last Candidates Matches: http://www.chessintranslation.com/2...

It's perfectly understandable given the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan that Aronian wouldn't want to play in Azerbaijan. The problem is Azerbaijan is currently the country with the most money and the most interest in getting at least one of their players into the Candidates (well, apart perhaps from Russia, but they're probably not so keen given Kramnik qualified). I wouldn't be surprised if we again have the event held somewhere else (Georgia?) but with Azerbaijan funding it and getting a player into the event.

That said, I've seen Bulgaria, London and New York all mentioned elsewhere as possible locations.

Feb-02-12  khursh: <Chessmaster9001:> Thanks for opening the brackets. If you love Aronian's play and chess, you probably realize that chess requires clear mind and concentration. So Aronian's participation in Baku is meaningless and he simply wants not only to participate but to win. <Aronian was under heavy pressure from Armenian chess federation> This is funny. What kind of pressure, and why to do that? And the fact that after six years of not kibitzing here, simply entering with a purpose of blaming Armenia proves that Aronian is right. It will be impossible to play under such intolerance. So who plays the politics?
Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: khursch, you are welcome. If Aronian is a true chess professional then he should participate and try to win ANYWHERE.

Baku held many notable international sport tournaments lately, with Armenian sportmen participating and there were not even a slightest complaint from Armenian side.

I am glad you have interested in my profile and searched my kibitzing history, but what is the relation between kibitzing and Aronian story? Please, enlighten me on this.

I dont blame Aronian at all...

Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: khursch, have you found any INTOLERANCE in my posts?
Feb-02-12  amateur05: The root of the Karabakh conflict and many other conflicts involving muslims from Nigeria to the Philippines can be found here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divisi...

The muslim wars will continue until submission and peace (islam) are achieved, a zombie world. Armenians are a tough nut to crack but they will be swallowed and then the rest of the world will follow.

Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: May be FIDE could consider to held Candidates in two cities with four players in each and Aronian playing outside of Azerbaijan? That could be a fair solution.
Feb-02-12  Poulsen: For the chessworld - and certainly for Aronian himself - it will be a great pity to see him not playing the Candidates, because he feels, that he cannot concentrate in Azerbaijan. I for one does NOT question his motives - or see any evidence of pressure from others on him.

But I also think, that this should have no bearing on the choise of host for the event. If Azerbaijan comes up with the best offer - then FIDE should accept.

We have seen all this several times before (hints: israeli/iranian players, Kamsky, Fischer etc.) - and it all winds up to this: no individual GM should have a say on how and when an event shall be held.

Chess should bring people together - not divide.

Feb-02-12  DUS: <Looks like Aronian is under heavy pressure from Armenian authorities if he urgently send such letter tom FIDE.>

So only Aronian is under heavy pressure from Armenian authoritative since your next posting acknowledges

<Baku held many notable international sport tournaments lately, with Armenian sportmen participating and there were not even a slightest complaint from Armenian side.>

Why you contradict yourself in such naive way?

Or, are you saying the Armenian authorities dislike just Aronian among the Armenian sportsmen?

Feb-02-12  khursh: <Chessmaster9001:>
Thanks for the reply. And, yes, there is no intolerance in your answers towards me, but I found your assessment of the situation which talks about your attitudes towards Armenia: <I definitely reject the fact that Aronian is on his own in this scandal> or <Aronian is under heavy pressure from Armenian authorities>.

<Baku held many notable international sport tournaments lately, with Armenian sportmen participating and there were not even a slightest complaint from Armenian side.>

You are right in BAKU there were afraid even to complain, so you haven't heard about complains. But what can you say about their press conferences later?

Look at this one http://www.izvestia.ru/news/503551

And the guy is even not Armenian, but an ethnic yezid with "yan" ending in his surname.

Aronian doesn't even seriously complain about intolerance, but for example, the fact, that security guards will always follow him. A chess player can't play chess in such conditions.

Feb-02-12  Chessmaster9001: ...Chess should bring people together - not divide. Well said, Poulsen, fully agree with you!
Feb-02-12  DUS: <I was never fond of FIDE but this is just ridiculous that one player dictates his rules to organization even if he is current no. 2 in rankings.>

This one impresses me. Especially the part that you were never fond of FIDE.

Feb-02-12  khursh: <Poulsen:> you wrote <and it all winds up to this: no individual GM should have a say on how and when an event shall be held.>

There is always ethical dilemma. When a non democratic country comes up with tax-payers money to finance such events, then politics sure is involved there. Chess was full of politics back in cold war. Miloshevich was financing Spassky-Fischer match not because he was chess admirer. The question is: if there is lack of money and political interests can be a source of money, then what to do? My answer, take the money but not harm the sport. So, in my opinion, Aronian out of competition means politics won over sport. It's not Aronian vs FIDE, it's chess vs politics, or single strong contender vs money.

FIDE found solution during Grand Prix series. May be the solution is really in having two stages and one is in Baku? I am not against such scenario.

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