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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
Qatar Masters Tournament

Magnus Carlsen7/9(+5 -0 =4)[games]
Yangyi Yu7/9(+5 -0 =4)[games]
Vladimir Kramnik6.5/9(+4 -0 =5)[games]
Sergey Karjakin6.5/9(+4 -0 =5)[games]
Sanan Sjugirov6.5/9(+5 -1 =3)[games]
Hua Ni6.5/9(+4 -0 =5)[games]
Vasyl Ivanchuk6.5/9(+4 -0 =5)[games]
Anish Giri6/9(+3 -0 =6)[games]
Yinglun Xu6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Surya Shekhar Ganguly6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Pentala Harikrishna6/9(+3 -0 =6)[games]
Ruslan Ponomariov6/9(+3 -0 =6)[games]
Vladimir Akopian6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Jan-Krzysztof Duda6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Truong Son Nguyen6/9(+3 -0 =6)[games]
Nikita Vitiugov6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Sethuraman P Sethuraman6/9(+6 -3 =0)[games]
Wesley So5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Chao Li5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Dariusz Swiercz5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Zhong Zhang5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Radoslaw Wojtaszek5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Kacper Piorun5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
David Howell5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Alexander Ipatov5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Daniel Naroditsky5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Maxim Matlakov5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Dmitry Jakovenko5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Nils Grandelius5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Anton Korobov5.5/9(+4 -2 =3)[games]
Victor Bologan5.5/9(+5 -3 =1)[games]
* (132 players total; 100 players not shown. Click here for longer list.)

Chessgames.com Chess Event Description
Qatar Masters (2015)

Played 19-30 December 2015. Crosstable: http://www.chess-results.com/tnr199...

 page 2 of 24; games 26-50 of 589  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
26. S P Sethuraman vs A Gholami  1-0402015Qatar MastersB42 Sicilian, Kan
27. R Haria vs Sasikiran  ½-½422015Qatar MastersA06 Reti Opening
28. Naroditsky vs S Mahadevan 1-0542015Qatar MastersD11 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
29. Z Saiyn vs Lenderman  ½-½432015Qatar MastersD36 Queen's Gambit Declined, Exchange, Positional line, 6.Qc2
30. A R Saleh Salem vs K Abhishek  1-0372015Qatar MastersC92 Ruy Lopez, Closed
31. Z Abdumalik vs M Bartel  ½-½452015Qatar MastersC16 French, Winawer
32. A Slavin vs Z Zhang 0-1272015Qatar MastersE32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
33. Firouzja vs P Tregubov 1-0422015Qatar MastersA06 Reti Opening
34. B Esen vs P Roy  ½-½452015Qatar MastersE11 Bogo-Indian Defense
35. S Guramishvili vs F Rambaldi 0-1392015Qatar MastersA36 English
36. A Bivol vs Kosteniuk 0-1462015Qatar MastersE17 Queen's Indian
37. C Lin vs C Dai  1-0402015Qatar MastersB56 Sicilian
38. A Stefanova vs J Goriatchkin 1-0382015Qatar MastersA07 King's Indian Attack
39. H Dronavalli vs D Derakhshani 1-0442015Qatar MastersA04 Reti Opening
40. Carlsen vs N Batsiashvili ½-½572015Qatar MastersA06 Reti Opening
41. B Khotenashvili vs Kramnik 0-1592015Qatar MastersE10 Queen's Pawn Game
42. Goryachkina vs So 0-1612015Qatar MastersE15 Queen's Indian
43. Mamedyarov vs N Zhukova 1-0492015Qatar MastersC69 Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation
44. S Gagare vs Wei Yi 1-0532015Qatar MastersE10 Queen's Pawn Game
45. Vitiugov vs Y Xu 0-1602015Qatar MastersB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
46. I Krush vs Wojtaszek  0-1622015Qatar MastersE53 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3
47. A Korobov vs L Moroni Jr 1-0502015Qatar MastersE00 Queen's Pawn Game
48. B Adhiban vs A Puranik  ½-½522015Qatar MastersA15 English
49. S Sagar vs V Fedoseev  ½-½692015Qatar MastersA28 English
50. Bologan vs P L Basso 1-0562015Qatar MastersB12 Caro-Kann Defense
 page 2 of 24; games 26-50 of 589  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 46 OF 46 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-09-16  Clemens Scheitz: <AylerKupp>,I was under the impression that the ultimate goal was to determine if a machine can establish the absolute strength of a player, and the result of a game as well as the frequency of matching "the computer best moves" by a player are not sufficient. My example of the 3 players points to the fact that there could be significant factors that will always be unknown to the computer.

<Karne>, unfortunate? why?,.. because I will be judged negatively by<Bobwhoosta>'imaginary god?. That's actually a compliment. I would never want to have the same moral standard of that genocidal maniac ( remember that time when things didn't go his way, he threw tantrums and killed millions Genesis 7.21)

Jan-09-16  nok: <I think SS mentioned Alekhine.>

Klaus Junge even played Alekhine.

Jan-09-16  Bobwhoosta: <Clemens Sheitz>

Oh it's far worse than that. Death itself started because Adam ate a piece of fruit.

Jan-09-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: Hi,

Yeah I meant players strengths, we have enough armchair psychiatrists to sort out that view of the players.

Ignoring computers for now as they need a giant leap in a new direction to play like humans, the views of strong players should be noted by the fact they are strong players and therefore in theory should understand the game better.

(Of course although they understand the game better this will not stop Kibitizers from advising them on what openings to play, how they should train, what seconds to use and what side to part their hair. I think Carlsen should sport a Mohican for 2016 just to show he means business.)

However these strong players do change their minds on who was the greatest.

Aronian was of the opinion it's Alekhine in 2012, then in 2015 it was Kasparov.

In 2005 Kramnik had Kasparov as the best ever till 2011 when he changed it to Anand.

Anand in 2008 said Fischer and Kasparov with Kasparov slightly ahead. In 2012 he changed his mind to simply just Fischer.

Carlsen recently rated Fischer & Kasparov as the best but also gave a firm nod in Kramnik's direction. Possibly when Kramnik retires he will be Carlsen's top choice.

in 2001 Chess Informant ran a readers poll it came out. Fischer, Kasparov, Alekhine, Capablanca, Botvinnik, Karpov, Tal, Lasker, Anand and Korchnoi.

I reckon if they took a poll of all the players over 2700 and keeping the choice to inactive players then Kasparov would figure in everyone's top three and in the majority of cases have him as number one. (provided of course they can stick to chess and not chess politics.)

---

Grades are OK in lieu of a better method (it's probably the best we will ever have) but inflation and regional games where an overrated player can spread his grade around like the pox making it possible to get a grade of over 2600 without ever beating a player over 2600 thus giving birth to the ridiculous term 'a weak grandmaster', can produce lopsided and some eyebrow raising results.

If you think that Nakamura, Wes So, Radjabov, Karjakin, Morozevich and Ivanchuk are better than Fischer and Karpov (all of those six have posted higher grades than Fischer and Karpov) then the grading system is your back up.

Although all six are admirable players capable of displaying flashes of pure brilliance ...better than Fischer and Karpov? (you might get more than a few disagreeing with you on that one.)

I'm also thinking if you asked any of that six if they thought they were better than Karpov and Fischer they would all answer 'No' or hedge their bets and say 'Not yet'.

Jan-10-16  BOSTER: < AzingaBonzer: The average centipawm loss feature>. I don't know what is the correct direction, but my feeling that <average > is very rough tool to compare real game with computer.
Jan-10-16  AzingaBonzer: <BOSTER> Erm... what?
Jan-10-16  BOSTER: Maybe the smallest loss , or max loss during the game can be criterion for comparison.
Jan-10-16  BOSTER: Or 1/2( max loss +min loss).
Jan-10-16  latvalatvian: For a computer to help a human it would have to emulate human thought and this it will never do just like a computer will never drink coffee and go to the bathroom.
Jan-10-16  1971: Yet no human can beat a computer why is that?
Jan-10-16  diceman: <latvalatvian:

just like a computer will never drink coffee and go to the bathroom.>

...guess you've never seen a water cooled computer take a leak?

Jan-11-16  BOSTER: <AzingaBonzer : What?>. Let's consider one ex.
Two players as white played two games.
First player.
Move N- 50 cp loss.
Move N+1-shot in best -0 cp loss.
ACL for him 1/2 (50+0) = 25cp loss.
Second player .
Move N- 30 cp loss.
Move N+1 -20 cp loss.
ACL for second player 1/2 ( 30+20)=25
My Q is: are these two players really <equal good>? My guess that <average> hides a big mistakes.
Jan-11-16  AzingaBonzer: I'd say they're equally good. What's the problem with that?
Jan-11-16  BOSTER: Thanks.
Jan-11-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  AylerKupp: <latvalatvian> So I suppose that you judge human greatness by our ability to drink coffee and go to the bathroom?
Jan-11-16  john barleycorn: <AylerKupp: <latvalatvian> So I suppose that you judge human greatness by our ability to drink coffee and go to the bathroom?>

The greatness comes from doing it in the right order at the right time. :-)

Jan-11-16  diceman: <AylerKupp: <latvalatvian> So I suppose that you judge human greatness by our ability to drink coffee and go to the bathroom?>

If we're going there,
I'm rated 2731.

Jan-11-16  BOSTER: <If we're going there>. Ktamnik was rated 2743.
Jan-12-16  john barleycorn: < diceman: ...

If we're going there,
I'm rated 2731.>

Is that achieved by going to and from the bathroom with dry pants?

Jan-12-16  diceman: <john barleycorn: < diceman: ...

If we're going there,
I'm rated 2731.>

Is that achieved by going to and from the bathroom with dry pants?>

...depends.

Jan-18-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <Sally....(not being their field of expertise has never stopped any of the kibitzers on here.)>

I resemble that remark!!

Jan-18-16  john barleycorn: <perfidious: <Sally....(not being their field of expertise has never stopped any of the kibitzers on here.)>

I resemble that remark!!>

that is why CG was invented.

Jan-18-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <john b> Till now, the purpose behind the inception of CG was unfathomable to me--there are some mysteries in life which are inexplicable, try as one might.
Jan-18-16  john barleycorn: <perfidious> never, never, never give up. Who ever strives with all his might, that man we can redeem.

Or ask me hahaha

Feb-24-16  King Radio: I think it's more true that Lasker would play the move that led to a position that better suited him. I think it's nonsense that he'd play a move that made his opponent uncomfortable even if it was objectively inferior. Nunn's recent book pretty much puts the lie to that myth.
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