Original: Kramnik - Topalov World Championship Match (2006)
Kramnik vs Topalov, 2006
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EDIT <JFQ>
I think that we should delete "Toiletgate" here on the grounds that it is totally inappropriate language for this or any other event, regardless of the actual cheating accusations.
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EDIT <Boomie>
<"The contest began with Kramnik winning both of the first two games""Both is redundant - "winning the first two games"
"After two more drawn games, on a rest day, Topalov's manager Silvio Danailov, issued a press release which threatened to abort the match"
The use of "more" is wrong as there haven't been any draws yet. The reference to a rest day adds nothing. The last comma is unnecessary.
"After two drawn games, Topalov's manager Silvio Danailov issued a press release which threatened to abort the match."
"Unlike Mr. Kramnik, the World Champion Veselin Topalov..."
I know this is a quote of sorts but where do they get off call Top O' Love the WC? Jess sayin'.
I second the WCC on the use of "Toiletgate". Not only is it vulgar, it is one of those exaggerated analogies that infests language intended to stir up emotions>
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In 2006, the schism which began with the Kasparov-Short World Championship was to finally end, unifying the World Championship title after 13 long years. Bulgarian grandmaster Veselin Topalov, the winner of the 2005 FIDE World Championship in San Luis was due to play Vladimir Kramnik, the Classical World Champion, and the winner was to emerge as the single, unified, World Chess Champion.
The contest began with Kramnik winning both of the first two games, and due to the extreme brevity of the match (a mere 12 games) this established an early commanding lead.
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EDIT <Karpova>
<Regan on the cheating accusations in Kramnik - Topalov, 2006: http://www.cse.buffalo.edu/~regan/c...>
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After two more drawn games, Silvio Danailov, Topalov's manager, issued a press release threatening to withdraw from the match The press release read, in part:
The careful study of the video recordings from the rest rooms done by the technical experts of the Bulgarian team revealed the following facts which we would herewith like to bring to your attention:
After each move Mr. Kramnik immediately heads to the rest room and from it directly to the bathroom. During every game he visited the relaxation room 25 times at the average and the bathroom more than 50 times - the bathroom is the only place without video surveillance.
Unlike Mr. Kramnik, the World Champion Veselin Topalov spends his time mainly at the playing table. The average number of times he visited the rest room and the bathroom is 8 and 4 respectively.
In our opinion these facts are quite strange, if not suspicious. ... Should this extremely serious problem remain unsolved by 10.00 o'clock tomorrow (September 29th, 2006), we would seriously reconsider the participation of the World Champion Veselin Topalov in this match. 1
The FIDE Appeals Committee, after viewing the video tapes, found that the frequency of Kramnik's visits to the toilet had been exaggerated, but nevertheless took these allegations seriously, and decreed that the private toilets would be closed and a common toilet opened for both players.
Kramnik's team rejected this decision, declaring: "The protests of the Topalov team and the suspicions in the press release of Mr. Topalov are utterly disgraceful and are touching Mr. Kramnik's privacy."2 Kramnik refused to play under the altered conditions, and as a result, Kramnik forfeited game 5.
In a state of chaos, the match was placed on hold while FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov flew to Elista in the hope for bringing a solution to this crisis, which by this time had been given the pejorative name, "Toiletgate." After several days of strife and intense negotiations, Ilyumzhinov declared that the match would continue. The members of the Appeals Committee had been replaced, the access to the toilets was restored, and the forfeited game 5 would remain a loss for Kramnik.
As the match continued, Topalov won both game 8 and game 9, giving him a one point lead with only three games left to play. His lead was not to last long, as Kramnik scored a brilliant victory in game 10, thereby tying the score, and after two more draws the match was sent into overtime.
The first phase of the tiebreaks was a four game mini-match played with 25 minutes per side, and a 10 second increment. Kramnik's victory in game 16 allowed him to win the mini-match. After 13 years of chaos in the chess world, Vladimir Kramnik became the undisputed World Chess Champion.
1 http://en.chessbase.com/home/TabId/..., Chessbase, Sep. 9 2006.2 http://en.chessbase.com/home/TabId/..., Chessbase, Sep. 9, 2006.