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Arianne Caoili
A Caoili 
 

Number of games in database: 388
Years covered: 1996 to 2015
Last FIDE rating: 2137 (2171 rapid, 2166 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2309
Overall record: +166 -153 =69 (51.7%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games.

Repertoire Explorer
Most played openings
A07 King's Indian Attack (20 games)
D45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav (13 games)
A04 Reti Opening (11 games)
D02 Queen's Pawn Game (11 games)
D37 Queen's Gambit Declined (10 games)
B40 Sicilian (8 games)
B42 Sicilian, Kan (8 games)
E12 Queen's Indian (8 games)
B22 Sicilian, Alapin (8 games)
C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer (8 games)

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Stepanakert Women's Rapid
   A Caoili vs L Mkrtchian (May-10-15) 0-1, rapid
   S Gaboyan vs A Caoili (May-10-15) 0-1, rapid
   A Caoili vs E Danielian (May-10-15) 0-1, rapid
   R Pert vs A Caoili (Dec-07-12) 1-0
   A Caoili vs B Arvola Notkevich (Dec-06-12) 1-0

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ARIANNE CAOILI
(born Dec-22-1986, died Mar-30-2020, 33 years old) Philippines (federation/nationality Australia)

[what is this?]

Born in Manila, Arianne Caoili learned chess at the age of six and was a WIM. She died on March 30, 2020 in Armenia after being critically injured in an automobile accident on March 15 of that year.

Tournaments At the age of 14, Arianne scored 5.5/9 at the powerful Conca Della Presolana in Italy in 2001. In 2002, she came in third at the Australian Masters in Melbourne behind co-winners IM Guy West and IM Mikhail Gluzman. In 2009, Caoili won the London Chess Classic Woman's Invitation Tournament with 8/9. In 2010, she was on the winning all-female Snowdrops team, which defeated the all-male Old Hands Team, 18-14. Most recently, she played in the 2012 London Classic Open. Although she only scored 3.5/8, she picked up 17 rating points, due in part to her defeats of GM Alexander Cherniaev and IM Alexey Slavin.

Olympiad Caoili participated in seven consecutive Olympiads, from 2000 to 2012 inclusive, twice for the Philippines and five times for Australia.

World Championship competition: Caoili participated in several world youth championships including the U10 (Girls) in 1996 and the U12 (Girls) in 1997. In 2001 at Oropesa del Mar in Spain, Caoili scored =7th-13th in the World Youth U18 Championship (Girls). In 2009, she won the Oceania Zonal (Women) that was held on the Australian Gold Coast, thereby qualifying to play in the Women's World Championship Knockout Tournament (2010). Caoili then lost in a walkover in the first round to Wenjun Ju when she failed to appear. (1)

In February 2015, Caoili and Levon Aronian announced on Twitter that they were engaged. (2) They married on September 30, 2017 (3)

Trivia: Caoili was a celebrity dancer on the Australian television show, Dancing with the Stars.

(1) http://www.fide.com/component/conte...

(2) https://twitter.com/caoili/status/5...

(3) http://chess-news.ru/node/23794

Wikipedia article: Arianne Caoili

Last updated: 2024-09-16 08:00:21

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 16; games 1-25 of 388  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. G Gonzalez Intelangelo vs A Caoili  1-0721996Las Palmas opA49 King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4
2. Isaac Sanchez vs A Caoili  ½-½541996Las Palmas opB77 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
3. H Eymann vs A Caoili  0-1431996Las Palmas opA05 Reti Opening
4. L Gonzalez Perez vs A Caoili  1-0251996Las Palmas opA48 King's Indian
5. A Caoili vs C Rossello Padron  1-0481996Las Palmas opA07 King's Indian Attack
6. A Caoili vs C Rodriguez Monteiro 0-1261996Las Palmas opA07 King's Indian Attack
7. A Caoili vs A Perez Toledo  1-0441996Las Palmas opB52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
8. A Caoili vs P Najera de Miguel  0-1221996Las Palmas opB52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
9. A Caoili vs J Splinter 0-1431996Illinois opC03 French, Tarrasch
10. A Caoili vs S L Henderson  ½-½371996Illinois opC07 French, Tarrasch
11. A Caoili vs I Naiditsch  0-1351996Wch U10 GirlsC26 Vienna
12. J Zhang vs A Caoili 1-0231996Wch U10 GirlsB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
13. K Bolon vs A Caoili 0-1351996Wch U10 GirlsB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
14. A Caoili vs N Zdebskaja  0-1481996Wch U10 GirlsB20 Sicilian
15. A Caoili vs N Pentala  1-0361996Wch U10 GirlsC05 French, Tarrasch
16. A Caoili vs G Shapoval  1-0301996Wch U10 GirlsA07 King's Indian Attack
17. A Caoili vs Y Chong  1-0561997AUS-ch U18 GirlsB01 Scandinavian
18. A Caoili vs J Cadillon Costa  ½-½491997Gran Canaria opC00 French Defense
19. A Caoili vs A Fernandez Manrique  1-0581997Gran Canaria opA07 King's Indian Attack
20. A Caoili vs H Galvao  ½-½401997Gran Canaria opC28 Vienna Game
21. A Caoili vs L Gonzalez Perez  0-1311997Gran Canaria opB12 Caro-Kann Defense
22. M Calzetta vs A Caoili  1-0331997Gran Canaria opB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
23. D Fischer vs A Caoili  0-1271997Gran Canaria opB78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
24. B Rodriguez Gonzalez vs A Caoili  ½-½141997Gran Canaria opA04 Reti Opening
25. E A Mertens vs A Caoili ½-½121997Gran Canaria opA46 Queen's Pawn Game
 page 1 of 16; games 1-25 of 388  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Caoili wins | Caoili loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 15 OF 19 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Apr-25-09  Dredge Rivers: Olympiads without causing an international incident:

<<<<<<<<<<1!>>>>>>>>>>

May-29-09  timhortons: Wow! arianne looks so sexy!

http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquire...

By Mahar Mangahas
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:28:00 05/30/2009

Filed Under: Chess, Opinion surveys, Sport, Games, Education, Agrarian Reform, Statistics

This piece is inspired by Florencio B. Campomanes, honorary president of the World Chess Federation, whom I had the pleasure of meeting for the first time a few days ago in Baguio City. We met through mutual friend Ed de Jesus, president of the University of the Cordilleras, who had invited me to lead a workshop with his faculty on the ABCs of survey research (which I will write on next time).

Despite his age, the maestro is well-recovered from a recent bad car accident, and his mind is as sharp as ever. Campo (as he likes being addressed) asked me if there is any survey on how many Filipinos play chess, and at what age do they begin. He believes that national excellence in chess comes from mass participation in it, if possible starting at the age of five.

Campo’s question can be answered, partially, from the national Survey of Leisure Time and Sports (LTS), done on March 30-April 2, 2008 for the International Social Survey Program, of which Social Weather Stations is a member. Such surveys only cover adults, which in the Philippines means people aged 18 and up.

The LTS survey has separate items on sports which are also physical activities (of which the most popular among Filipinos is, naturally, basketball) and those which are non-physical, called “games” instead. It asks: “Thinking about games rather than sports or physical activities, what type of game do you play most frequently?”

Chess is the No. 1 game. It turns out that chess is the Filipinos’ most popular game, meaning non-physical sport. Those citing it as the game they play most frequently are 15.6 percent in the country. This projects to 8.5 million adult chess players nationwide, based on a population of 54.1 million Filipino adults when the survey was done.

Chess is relatively more popular in Metro Manila, where it is cited by 20 percent, than in the rest of Luzon (18 percent), in Visayas, and in Mindanao (the last two both 12 percent).

Chess is much more a man’s game (26 percent) than a woman’s game (5 percent).

Chess gets less popular as people get older—with percentages of 21 in the 18-24 age group, 20 in the 25-34 group, 17 in the 35-44 group, 13 in the 45-54 group, and 5 among those of 55 and up.

The popularity of chess grows with education and socio-economic class. It is the favorite game of only 1 percent of those who didn’t finish elementary school, 10 percent of those with some high schooling, 20 percent of those with some college, and 26 percent of college graduates. Only 11 percent of class E adults, compared to 24 percent of class ABC adults, call chess their favorite game.

I certainly agree with Campo that children should play chess. I learned it at age seven (and am a low-grade player) and recall that almost all my relatives and friends of the same age could also play chess. But another survey is needed to get numbers on chess-playing among children of age 5 to 17.

Incidentally, another item of the LTS survey finds that 90 percent of Filipino adults agree, and only 5 percent disagree, that “Taking part in sports develops children’s character.”

Other popular games: The second most popular is card games (of all types). This was cited by 9.5 percent, which amounts to 5.1 million players.

Third are video games, a category including computer games, playstation, pinball etc., which was cited by 5.1 percent (2.7 million players).

Tied for fourth, at 4.0 percent (2.2 million players) each, are gambling games (lotto, jueteng, casino games, etc.) and board games (scrabble, monopoly, etc.) At sixth, with 2.2 percent (1.2 million players), is word/number games (crosswords, sudoku). Seventh is dominoes: 1.4 percent or 0.8 million. Eighth is mahjong: 1.2 percent or 0.7 million. Fifty-five percent said they do not play any game.

Sports and national pride. To the LTS question, “How proud are you when the Philippines does well in international sports or games competition,” 74 percent said very proud (talagang ipinagmamalaki) and 19 percent said somewhat proud (medyo ipinagmamalaki). Only 7 percent were either not very proud or not proud at all.

National pride in sports tends to rise with education—from 63 percent among elementary dropouts to 78 percent among college graduates.

On the statement “The Philippine government should spend more money on sports,” it turns out that opinions are divided—47 percent agreeing and 36 percent disagreeing. <It seems to me that the Philippines has achieved so much in four international sports—billiards, bowling, boxing and chess—even without much help from the government.>

Yawn!

Jun-26-09  Ken MacGillivray: Arianne has won the 2009 women's Oceana Zonal championship with a score of 8/9 (7 wins and 2 draws). Congrarulations Arianne, you are more than just a pretty face.
Jun-26-09  notyetagm: <Ken MacGillivray: Arianne has won the 2009 women's Oceana Zonal championship with a score of 8/9 (7 wins and 2 draws). Congrarulations Arianne, you are more than just a pretty face.>

All that time spent with Aronian is paying off. :-)

Jun-27-09  kurtrichards: GM Aronian is blessed with a beauty and brain girlfriend - Arianne Caoili.

Congratulations, Miss Caoili, for winning the 2009 Womens Oceana Zonal Championship. May your winning ways continue.

Jun-27-09  visayanbraindoctor: <It turns out that chess is the Filipinos’ most popular game, meaning non-physical sport.>

Basketball is no doubt the most popular sport in the Philippines, if we include physical sports. I honestly do not think chess is that popular. Most people know it, but as a past time, not a competitive sport.

It's an interesting article though, considering that historical facts should have made chess a popular sport in the Philippines. When the Spanish conquistadores conquered Latin America and the 'Philippine Islands', they must have bought with them those two instruments of recreation that the Spaniards invented - the guitar and Western Chess. This means people in the Philippines have been playing chess (and the guitar) since the 16th century, far longer that in Russia, where chess became popular only in the 19th century. So as a competitive sport played by professionals, why is chess not popular in the Philippines?

I can think of two hypotheses:

1. Chess never developed into a professional competitive sports in the Philippines.

It's mostly just a past time until now. Certainly, some past players like IM Rodolfo Tan Cardoso who was Bobby Fischer's rival as a top junior were of GM caliber. (For ratings-obsessed kibitzers Cardoso's highest chessmetric's rating was 2531 and best individual performance was 2618.) So where have all our promising players gone? I believe that most simply chose a livelihood that is not chess-related. It's quite telling that even after all these years, only exactly one Filipino (Eugenio Torre) has made it to the Candidates.

This is ironic if you come to think that in 1888, the year Capablanca was born, most of South America, Cuba and 'Las Islas de Filipinas' were all provinces of Spain. Had Jose Capablanca of Cuba, Carlos Torre of Mexico, and Eugenio Torre of the Philippines been born in say 1870 and there was a chess Olympiad in 1895, all three would have been legally countrymen carrying the same Spanish passports, and probably playing Boards 1, 2, and 3 for the same team. (Nice to think that the great Capablanca was born legally of the same citizenship as your great-great grandfather.)

Let us take the strongest chess-playing country in the world as a contrast, namely Russia. Although chess arrived rather late in the Russian Empire, the Russian Czar, who represented their government in the 19th century, started sponsoring regular tournaments, which caused the creation of a caste of professional chess players, who depended on chess for their livelihood. By the 1910s, the Russian Empire had become the chess power of the world. Had there been an Olympiad in 1913, the Russian Empire team could have been a powerhouse, made of Alekhine, Rubinstein, Nimzovich, Bolgolyubov, Bernstein, Janowski, Tartakover, Levenfish, Dus-Chotimirsky, Znosko-Borovsky, etc..

Even earlier in the 19th century, the other European Empires (British, German, Hapsburg Empires) had started having the tradition of one-on-one matches for privately-backed stakes and eventually privately sponsored regular tournaments in the latter half of the 19th century, which also allowed the creation of caste of professional chess players. The arrival of the chess clock in Europe also helped in standardizing competitive chess conditions.

The solution is therefore to create conditions in which a caste of professional chess players can exist, but this is easier said than done.

2. The average chess intelligence of people in the Philippines is lower than those from China, India, and Vietnam, that have been producing top-notch chess players in the last two decades. (I certainly hope not..)

Nov-19-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  Richard Taylor: Evil.
Dec-14-09  Thuellin: She's doing really well in the Women's Invitational in London right now. She's won six games in the seven rounds played thus far.
Dec-15-09  jon01: Arianne Caoili got 8/9 in London Women's Invitational!

Looks like she and Aronian have time to play chess too...

Dec-15-09  Caissanist: Unfortunately that was a pretty weak tournament, it looks like the average rating was in the high 2000s or low 2100s.
Dec-16-09  kurtrichards: London Womens Invitational 2009 was won by Miss Arianne Caoili. Congratulations!
Dec-22-09  wordfunph: happy birthday WIM Caoili!

hope you bring GM Levon Aronian here in Pinas....with his barong on!

Dec-23-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  Open Defence: < wordfunph: happy birthday WIM Caoili!

hope you bring GM Levon Aronian here in Pinas....with his barong on! > I hope Barong does not mean what I think it does lol

Dec-23-09  NakoSonorense: Who wouldn't give his barong to her?
Apr-11-10  Shah Mat: <NakoSonorense> all our base are Barong to her.
Apr-11-10  wordfunph: guys, never mind what you think of that Barong.. :-)
Jun-12-10  wordfunph: 1996 EDSA Central Simul by IM Ricardo de Guzman: Then an eight-year-old, Arianne Bo Caoili participated by sitting atop four closely stacked plastic monoblock chairs with her feet dangling!

(Source: The New Wave - Rising Stars of Philippine Chess by GM Eugenio Torre)

Nov-26-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: She's a Babezilla, dude!
Dec-02-10  bartonlaos: <HeMateMe - She's a Babezilla, dude!>

Let her sing to you <HeMateMe>:

http://www.angelfire.com/funky/caoi...

http://www.angelfire.com/funky/caoi...

http://www.angelfire.com/funky/caoi...

http://www.angelfire.com/funky/caoi...

Dec-02-10  Shams: <bartonlaos> Tease!
Dec-02-10  bartonlaos: <Shams> Sorry. Try this one:

http://www.angelfire.com/funky/caoi...

Dec-02-10  bartonlaos: I think the songs Angel and Blue Skies are nice, professional quality, but she's missing on Autumn Leaves - too much vocal steering, and not enough diaphragm. But maybe she doesn't like using the diaphragm.
Jan-19-11  shakechess: She's beautiful like a checkmate...
Feb-11-11  BLarsen1967: Last year in Marienbad the Charming Arianne said hello to Herr Wolfgang Uhlmann. He really did try his best relying on some solid French Defense but things got too esoteric for him and after 40 moves he went down http://www.praguechess.cz/poradane-...
Feb-11-11  bartonlaos: They closed her angelfire account.
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