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Boris Gelfand
Gelfand 
 

Number of games in database: 3,525
Years covered: 1979 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2657 (2630 rapid, 2583 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2777
Overall record: +593 -309 =1251 (56.6%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 1372 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Slav (153) 
    D12 D15 D17 D10 D11
 Catalan (148) 
    E06 E04 E01 E09 E05
 Queen's Indian (147) 
    E15 E12 E17 E16 E14
 Queen's Pawn Game (138) 
    E10 E00 D02 A41 A46
 King's Indian (133) 
    E97 E92 E94 E60 E98
 Semi-Slav (122) 
    D45 D47 D46 D43 D44
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (596) 
    B90 B30 B33 B92 B23
 Sicilian Najdorf (225) 
    B90 B92 B96 B93 B91
 Petrov (142) 
    C42 C43
 Semi-Slav (141) 
    D45 D43 D44 D47 D48
 King's Indian (128) 
    E97 E60 E94 E81 E92
 Queen's Pawn Game (92) 
    D02 A45 E00 E10 A46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Gelfand vs Shirov, 1998 1-0
   Gelfand vs Kramnik, 1994 1-0
   Mamedyarov vs Gelfand, 2011 0-1
   Gelfand vs Jobava, 2011 1-0
   Gelfand vs Shabalov, 2004 1-0
   Karjakin vs Gelfand, 2009 0-1
   Gelfand vs Anand, 1993 1-0
   Gelfand vs Aronian, 2007 1-0
   Gelfand vs Aronian, 2013 1-0
   Gelfand vs Y Wang, 2010 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999)
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000)
   World Championship Tournament (2007)
   Anand - Gelfand World Championship Match (2012)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   European Youth Championship 1987/88 (1987)
   GMA Baleares Open (1989)
   Dortmund-A (1990)
   Belgrade Investbank (1991)
   Tilburg Interpolis (1992)
   World Cup (2005)
   World Cup (2009)
   Oakham Young Masters (1988)
   Linares (1990)
   European Junior Championship 1988/89 (1988)
   USSR Championship (Young Masters) (1987)
   URS-ch First League Klaipeda (1988)
   Wydra Memorial (2000)
   World Junior Championship (1988)
   Legends of Chess (2020)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Match Gelfand! by amadeus
   Gelfand's Games 4 Study by jakaiden
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 70 by 0ZeR0
   Boris Gelfand: My Most Memorable Games by Resignation Trap
   Boris Gelfand: My Most Memorable Games by hakkepof
   English: Boris Gelfand Collection by chess.master
   Boris in the najdorf by deepthinker
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by Okavango
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by plerranov
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by Qindarka
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by isfsam
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by edwin.n.walker
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by Olcol
   Dynamic Decision Making (Gelfand/Aagaard) by hakkepof

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 World Blitz Championship
   Gelfand vs S Lu (Dec-30-24) 0-1, blitz
   X Bu vs Gelfand (Dec-30-24) 1/2-1/2, blitz
   Gelfand vs Q L Le (Dec-30-24) 1/2-1/2, blitz
   A Suleymenov vs Gelfand (Dec-30-24) 0-1, blitz
   Gelfand vs A Woodward (Dec-30-24) 1/2-1/2, blitz

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Boris Gelfand
Search Google for Boris Gelfand
FIDE player card for Boris Gelfand

BORIS GELFAND
(born Jun-24-1968, 57 years old) Belarus (federation/nationality Israel)

[what is this?]

IM (1987); GM (1989); Soviet Junior Champion (1985); European Junior Champion (1989); Olympiad Gold Medalist (1990); World Cup winner (2009); Candidate (1991, 1994, 2002 (Dortmund - PCA), 2007, 2011 and 2013); World Championship Challenger (2012).

Preamble

Boris Gelfand's longevity as a player, and his ability to maintain his playing strength, are legendary. Born in Minsk in Belarus (then part of the USSR), he emigrated to Israel in 1998 where he currently resides. One of the most experienced of the elite players in the world, he has been a contender for the World Championship for most of his life, starting in 1991 when he first contested the Candidates, and culminating with his closely fought, if unsuccessful, challenge for the world crown in 2012 when he was 44 years old.

Championships

<Age> Gelfand won the Junior Championship of the Soviet Union with 9/11 in January 1985, at the age of 16, a half point ahead of Vassily Ivanchuk. He came =1st (2nd on count back to Joel Lautier) in the World Junior Championship in 1988 and became European Junior Champion in 1989.

<World> In 1990, Gelfand won the Manila Interzonal to qualify as a Candidate for the 1993 World Championship. At the 1991 Candidates, he prevailed over Predrag Nikolic, but was then defeated in the quarter final by eventual Candidates winner and championship challenger Nigel Short. He qualified for the FIDE 1994 Candidates event by winning the last Interzonal in Biel, beating Michael Adams and Vladimir Kramnik only to lose to Anatoly Karpov in the finals.

Gelfand competed in all the knockout tournaments that either determined the World Championship, or was part of the World Championship cycle apart from the 2004 tournament in Tripoli. In the knockout tournament that was held in Groningen in 1997, he defeated Lautier in round three, where he was seeded directly because of his results in the last FIDE cycle, and then beat Vladislav Ivanovich Tkachiev and Aleksey Dreev before bowing out to the winner of the tournament, Viswanathan Anand. In the world championship knockout tournament of 1999 held in Las Vegas, Gelfand was seeded into the second round where he defeated Jonathan Speelman, and then beat Lautier in round three before losing to the eventual winner, Alexander Khalifman. In 1999 in New Delhi, he was again seeded into round 2 where he defeated Emir Dizdarevic, and then Jeroen Piket in round three before he was defeated by Alexey Shirov in round four. In the 2001-02 knockout tournament held in Moscow, Gelfand lost to Peter Svidler in round 5 after defeating Alexis Cabrera, Leinier Dominguez Perez, Aleksander Petkov Delchev and Zurab Alekseyevich Azmaiparashvili. He played in the 8-player 2002 Dortmund Tournament, which was the Candidates for the Classical World Chess Championship match in 2004, but failed to reach the semi-finals after coming third in the quadrangular round robin preliminary round.

Gelfand finished 6th at the World Cup (2005), which produced 10 Candidates for the 2007 Candidates tournament, defeating Watu Kobese, Ruben Felgaer, Levan Pantsulaia, and Dreev in the preliminary rounds. In the two rounds of matches at the 2007 Candidates, Gelfand won both the Candidates Match: Gelfand - Kasimdzhanov (2007) and the Candidates Match: Gelfand - Kamsky (2007) to qualify for the World Championship Tournament (2007) in Mexico City, where he tied for second with Kramnik, a point behind the winner, Anand. Subsequently, he won the World Cup (2009) by defeating Judit Polgar, the then reigning World Junior Champion Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Dmitry Jakovenko, and Sergey Karjakin to reach the final, where he then faced former FIDE World Champion Ruslan Ponomariov, winning the match 7-5 in a playoff. In doing so he qualified for the World Championship Candidates (2011) for another shot at the World Championship in 2012. He played and defeated Shakhriyar Mamedyarov by 2.5-1.5 (+1 =3 -0) in the first round of the World Championship Candidates (2011), moving into the semi final where defeated Gata Kamsky in the tiebreaker; the result was 2-2 (+0 -0 =4) in the classical games, 2-2 (+1 -1 =2) in the rapid tiebreaker, and 1.5-0.5 in his favour in the blitz tiebreaker. He faced Alexander Grischuk in the final match, and after five draws, Gelfand won the sixth and final game thus gaining the right to challenge Viswanathan Anand for the world crown. The Anand - Gelfand World Championship Match (2012) was played in Moscow in May 2012, and Gelfand lost in the rapid game tiebreaker 1.5-2.5 (-1 =3) after drawing the 12 games played under classical time controls 6-6 (+1 -1 =10). As the loser in the World Championship match, he qualified to play in the World Championship Candidates (2013) in London, where he placed a rating-enhancing 5th with 6.5/14 (+2 -3 =9).

Gelfand’s results in the FIDE Grand Prix 2008-2010 were modest, coming 11th. His 2014 World Championship campaign started well when he placed =1st alongside Veselin Topalov and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov at the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012), scoring 7/11 (+4 -1 =6; TPR 2836) and netting GP 140 points from the event. However, his 10th place out of 12 placement at the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2012) and his =9th at the FIDE Grand Prix Beijing (2013) eliminated him for the contest for the top two in the Grand Prix series, and attendant qualification into the 2014 Candidates Tournament. However, a strongly motivated player, Gelfand placed =1st (2nd on tiebreak) at the FIDE Grand Prix Paris (2013) alongside Fabiano Caruana to place 4th in the Grand Prix series with 325 points.

He had another chance to qualify for the Candidates via the World Cup (2013) to which he qualified by rating; he defeated Bangladeshi GM Ziaur Rahman in the first round, Uzbek GM Anton Filippov in the 2nd round and Ukrainian GM Alexander Moiseenko in the third round. However, he was eliminated by eventual semi-finalist French GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the Round of 16 (round 4), reversing the same result against the same player in the same round of the World Cup of 2009.

Qualifying by rating for the 2014-15 Grand Prix Series portion of the 2016 World Championship cycle, Gelfand was =1st alongside Fabiano Caruana with 6.5/11 in the first leg of the Series, namely the FIDE Grand Prix Baku (2014). This earned Gelfand 155 GP points. In the second leg, the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014), Gelfand suffered a lapse of form, placing =11th and earning only an extra 15 GP points. Although he performed strongly at the final leg of the series at FIDE Grand Prix Khanty-Mansiysk (2015), it was insufficient to qualify for the Candidates Tournament of 2016.

His remaining chance to qualify for the Candidates in 2016 by his own effort was dashed at the World Cup (2015), for which he qualified via his rating, when in the shock of the first round he was defeated by the young Chilean IM Cristobal Henriquez Villagra and eliminated from the Cup. His final and somewhat slim chance is to be nominated as the Organizer's wild card entry for the Candidates Tournament.

Tournaments

Gelfand has an imposing tournament record dating back to the late 80s. He won or came =1st at Klajpeda 1988, Majorca (GMA) 1989, Moscow 1992, Wijk aan Zee 1992, Manila 1993, Chalkidiki 1993, Biel 1993, Dos Hermanas 1994, Debrecen and Belgrade in 1995, Vienna and Tilburg in 1996, Polanica Zdroj in 1998 and 2000, and Malmö in 1999. He also won at Pamplona Tournament (2004). In 2005, he was =1st with Pentala Harikrishna at the Bermuda International (2005) and 1st at 38th Biel Chess Festival (2005). In 2010 he was in the Experience Team that narrowly lost against the Rising Stars at the Rising Stars - Experience (2010), although he top scored in the tournament with 7/10. He also won outright first with 7/10 at the 2010 NH Tournament in the Netherlands.

Other strong results include 2nd at Linares 1990, 3rd at Tilburg 1990, 3rd at the Reggio Emilia of 1991/92, 2nd in the category 16 tournament in Munich 1993, 3rd at Dortmund in 1996, 2nd in the 14th Dr Milan Vidmar Memorial tournament in Slovenia, 3rd at Biel 2001, 2nd at the category 18 tournament in Cannes in 2002 behind Topalov, =3rd at Dortmund Sparkassen (2006), and 4th at the Tal Memorial (2006) a half point behind joint leaders, Ponomariov, Peter Leko and Levon Aronian. In 2009, he came 2nd behind Ivanchuk at Bazna Tournament (2009). Also in 2010, he came 2nd in the King's Tournament (2010) behind Magnus Carlsen. In the lead up to his World Championship contest with Anand, Gelfand competed at the category 21 Tata Steel Group A (2012) tournament at Wijk aan Zee, finishing 9th out of 13, scoring 5/13 (+2 -5 =6; TPR 2675). In April/May 2013, he came =1st with 5.5/9 at the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013), coming 2nd on tiebreak behind Aronian and then went one better in June with an extraordinary outright win at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013) - ahead of outright 2nd placed Magnus Carlsen - on the day before his 45th birthday. This result also raised his rating to a career high of 2773 in the July lists and returned him to the top 10.

Olympiads

Gelfand played in ten Chess Olympiads, representing the Soviet Union once (1990), Belarus twice (1994 and 1996), and Israel eight times (2000-2014). In 1990, he won the team gold medal playing board 2 for Soviet Union, in the Olympiad (2008) held in Dresden, he won the team silver medal and also individual silver medal playing board 1 for Israel and in the Chess Olympiad (2010) held in Khantiy Mansiysk, he won team bronze playing board 1 for Israel.

Team

Gelfand is a team player and has participated in the German Bundesliga, and team championships in Israel, Spain, Poland, and Russia. He has also been part of the European Team Championships, the European Club Cup, the Russian Club Cup and the World Team Championships, the last in 2005, 2009 and 2015. One of his best results was assisting his Moscow team ShSM-64 to win the Russian Team Championship (2010) with 16 out of a possible 18 match points. Playing for SHSM-64, he won team bronze at the European Club Cup (2012) concluded in October 2012.

Matches

Outside of the world championship cycle, Gelfand has played matches in France against Etienne Bacrot in 2002 which he lost 2.5-3.5, and a drawn match (2-2) against David Navara in the Czech Republic in 2006. In 2015 he lost the Ding Liren - Gelfand (2015) match by 1-3 (=2 -2).

Rapids

Like most top players, Gelfand is a skilled rapid player. He was =1st with Kramnik in the rapid play section of the 2001 Amber event, and outright 1st in the 2002 edition of Amber's rapid play section. He came first in the 2002 Cap d'Agde, defeating Karpov in the final. In 2003, he defeated Polgar in the George Marx Rapid Match (2003) and in 2007, he came =1st at the Villa de Canada de Calatrava (2007), following up with =1st at the Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2008) in Odessa. He also won the 2009 ACP World Rapid Cup (2009) with a 3-1 win over Svidler in the finals and won the Leko - Gelfand Match (2010) rapid match in Hungary by 4.5-3.5. Most recently, he defeated Aronian in the Leon Rapid (2010) and made the final of the London Chess Classic (Knockout) (2013). However in July, he lost a rapid match to Svidler by 3-5.

Ratings

Gelfand has been one of the top 20 players in the world, rated 2700+, for most of his life.

He first entered the top 100 in July 1988 with a bullet, when he leapt to #33 in the world while still an IM, one who had just turned 20, and has remained in the top 100 since that time.

His highest ranking to date was in January 1991, when he was #3 in the world behind Kasparov and Karpov, with a rating of 2700.

Gelfand's highest rating to date was 2777 in November 2013 when he was ranked #7 in the world.

Other

In 2005, Gelfand published a book titled My Most Memorable Games.

Interview: Part 1 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... Part 2 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... and Part 3 - http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... Live rating list: http://www.2700chess.com/ Extended biography of Gelfand at the official FIDE 2012 World Championship website: http://moscow2012.fide.com/en/prese... Article by the Indian Express dated 6 May 2012: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/m...

Wikipedia article: Boris Gelfand

Last updated: 2020-11-23 12:52:29

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 141; games 1-25 of 3,525  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. M Glizer vs Gelfand  1-0281979Krylenko Memorial (Juniors)B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
2. Rozentalis vs Gelfand  1-0211981Trade Unions Championship (Juniors)B22 Sicilian, Alapin
3. Gelfand vs V Veremeichik 0-1471982Sokolsky MemorialE12 Queen's Indian
4. A Ryskin vs Gelfand  0-1371982Sokolsky MemorialE75 King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line
5. A Kapengut vs Gelfand 0-1651982Sokolsky MemorialC05 French, Tarrasch
6. Gelfand vs A Cherepkov  0-1701982Sokolsky MemorialC50 Giuoco Piano
7. Minasian vs Gelfand  1-0381982Sochi U16 selectionB51 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
8. Gelfand vs Dreev  0-1621982Sochi U16 selectionB40 Sicilian
9. Gelfand vs V Litvinov  1-0371983Belarusian ChampionshipB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
10. Gelfand vs V Veremeichik  1-0591983Belarusian ChampionshipA46 Queen's Pawn Game
11. Gelfand vs A Kovalev 0-1381983Belarusian ChampionshipB62 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer
12. Gelfand vs B Malisov  1-0561983Belarusian ChampionshipB07 Pirc
13. S Yuferov vs Gelfand  1-0541983Belarusian ChampionshipA54 Old Indian, Ukrainian Variation, 4.Nf3
14. B Maryasin vs Gelfand 1-0661983Belarusian ChampionshipB95 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6...e6
15. B Itkis vs Gelfand  1-0401983Belarusian ChampionshipA48 King's Indian
16. P Korzubov vs Gelfand 0-1571983Belarusian ChampionshipB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
17. V Dydyshko vs Gelfand  1-0411983Belarusian ChampionshipE94 King's Indian, Orthodox
18. E Mochalov vs Gelfand  ½-½751983Belarusian ChampionshipD37 Queen's Gambit Declined
19. Gelfand vs S Begun  ½-½211983Belarusian ChampionshipC03 French, Tarrasch
20. Gelfand vs M Shereshevsky  ½-½721983Belarusian ChampionshipC07 French, Tarrasch
21. Gelfand vs O Chernikov  ½-½231983Belarusian ChampionshipD46 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
22. L Basin vs Gelfand  ½-½341983Belarusian ChampionshipD35 Queen's Gambit Declined
23. A Deiko vs Gelfand  ½-½391983Belarusian ChampionshipB87 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5
24. Gelfand vs Vyzmanavin  ½-½511983Belarusian ChampionshipA46 Queen's Pawn Game
25. Gelfand vs A Blodstein 0-1391984USSR Junior ChampionshipA60 Benoni Defense
 page 1 of 141; games 1-25 of 3,525  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Gelfand wins | Gelfand loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 31 OF 34 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Sep-30-13  dx9293: <Eggman> The point is that since 2011 Gelfand has been as impressive as anyone not named Carlsen. I also don't see any reason why he cannot keep this up for a year or two more. Gelfand's only relative weakness is his play in time pressure, which he can usually avoid because of his preparation.

Gelfand is not the best player in the World, but he's the most motivated--full stop. That counts for a lot.

This is the best he has played in over 20 years, probably ever (remember, Gelfand was the fifth player ever to reach 2700 Elo, after Fischer, Karpov, Tal, and Kasparov).

Sep-30-13  AsosLight: I am stunned with Mr. Gelfand.
Bad physique, bad habits, "old" player, old school player and yet rocks.

I don't like him as a player, I find his playing style quite boring, I don't play his openings but still I greatly admire his dedication. Pure player.

Sep-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Eggman: <<The point is that since 2011 Gelfand has been as impressive as anyone not named Carlsen.>>

If that's true then you could say that about a heck of a lot of people. Gelfand has had some poor showings mixed in with the triumphs. In fact, I don't think he's been as impressive as Aronian over the last *two* years, surely. This year, perhaps.

Sep-30-13  dx9293: <Eggman: If that's true then you could say that about a heck of a lot of people. Gelfand has had some poor showings mixed in with the triumphs. In fact, I don't think he's been as impressive as Aronian over the last *two* years, surely. This year, perhaps.>

You're right, not since 2011. I mixed up Gelfand's World Cup win from 2009 somehow with 2011, which was of course won by Svidler.

Still, he had two huge results by winning Kazan 2011 and drawing the match with Anand in Moscow 2012. And since then, he has only gained steam.

I would amend my statement to say "in the past year," and 2011 and 2012 were pretty good too!

However you slice it, Gelfand is clearly enjoying another peak.

Sep-30-13  dx9293: <AsosLight> I wish more fans took your approach and respected players they don't necessarily root for.

There's too much sniping between fans in general over players.

For example, I never, ever root for Carlsen, but I respect him greatly.

Sep-30-13  SimonWebbsTiger: I don't understand "fans."

The ppl like Gelfand, etc are exceptional. They play sublime chess.

No need to be a fan of anything but chess.

Sep-30-13  Pulo y Gata: Simon, that's like saying no one should be a fan of Jordan, Nadal, Raikkonen and just be a fan of basketball, tennis and car racing.

It's natural to admire people who excel on their chosen fields, and where there are many good 'players' in a field, some fans gravitate toward certain types or styles. That's natural. That the fans could be more affected by the competition than the admired players themselves is typical in any competitive field, not just chess.

More neutral minds balance things out somehow.

Sep-30-13  Karpova: <dx9293: <AsosLight> I wish more fans took your approach and respected players they don't necessarily root for.>

<AsosLight: LOL Korchnoi and Gelfand have nothing in common. Unlike Korchnoi, Gelfand was never a top player, not even remotely. Being in the top 20 for a long time reaching a final purely by statistical coincidence out of many fruitless attempts doesn't register, I' m sorry. Trying compare Gelfand with someone like Unziger or Hubner would have been much more appropriate IMO.> Source: Viktor Korchnoi

Sep-30-13  dx9293: Lol, <Karpova>! Oh well...
Oct-04-13  strifeknot: Gelfand needs to be given consideration as player of the year. He's been the steadiest of the super GMs and has had as many impressive events as anyone.
Oct-04-13  dx9293: <strifeknot> I totally agree. But the journalists will give it to Carlsen--which would be deserved if he defeats Anand.
Oct-04-13  dx9293: Congratulations, Boris, on another supertournament victory!
Oct-05-13  Billy Vaughan: <strifeknot: Gelfand needs to be given consideration as player of the year. He's been the steadiest of the super GMs and has had as many impressive events as anyone.>

I was just thinking about that. I think the only players who really have a case to win the Chess Oscar are Carlsen, Gelfand, Kramnik, and Anand (if he wins the championship).

Oct-05-13  AsosLight: <Karpova>,<dx9293>

what make you think that I don't respect Hubner or Unzicker as well? :)

It's only that Korchnoi is a different class altogether, although I don't like his style either :)

Nov-23-13  nummerzwei: <AsosLight>:

You need to understand that your contentions are not grounded in fact.

Unzicker was an amateur player who was barely top 20 at his absolute peak, and it is ridiculous to suggest that his accomplishments somehow compare to Gelfand's.

Huebner at least fits your description of a consistent top 20, or indeed top 10 player, but just keep in mind that Gelfand has won three top-tier tournaments <this year>, which is about as many as Huebner has managed over his whole career.

Nov-24-13  RedShield: <I think the only players who really have a case to win the Chess Oscar are Carlsen...>

Any time you see someone opening an envelope, you ought to say in a rising voice: AND THE WINNER IS....!

Jan-16-14  Eyal: <Part 1> Right now things aren't going so great for Gelfand at Tata, but 2013 was certainly a great year for him – though, in a way, of a reverse kind than we got used to, with him doing better in "regular" tournaments than in events of the WC cycle. A few months ago, after he won the Tal Memorial, I got a chance to interview him for my chess blog, and some of the things he said might be of interest (those who know Hebrew may read the whole thing here - http://debuzzer.sport5.co.il/segal/...):

Gelfand said that he considers the win in the Tal Memorial as his greatest tournament achievement since the 90s (comparable perhaps to winning the 93 Biel Interzonal [http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/949... ] or Belgrade 95 [http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... ]). I asked him whether he felt something "special" during the tournament – he said that he had a particularly strong sense of control during the games; he didn't get into inferior positions and managed most of the time to play with a high degree of accuracy in critical moments. Still, he regretted the missed opportunity against Carlsen in their game (Gelfand vs Carlsen, 2013 – where White could have won with 40.f5! instead of Bb3).

In the Alekhine Memorial (2013) Gelfand finished shared first with Aronian by number of points, and Aronian was declared the winner due to a better tiebreak (number of wins). In this context, I asked Gelfand whether he takes tiebreaks seriously as determining the winner in a tournament. He said he doesn't, so that with regard to this tournament he considers himself a co-winner (he mentioned that this is why he didn't try very hard to win in his final-round game against Anand there). As reasons for not caring much about tournament tiebreaks, he mentioned the usual argument from history ("20 years from now, no one will remember...") and also that such tiebreaks are rather arbitrary, since pretty much each tournament has its own. He noted, however, that not all elite players share this view – Carlsen & Grischuk, for example, attach great importance to tiebreaks as determining the "real" winner.

Regarding his (very) long stay at the top, he said that the efforts needed for that are huge, especially today when the competition is tougher than it used to be in his youth, so it's essential for a player to be driven by a really powerful motivation in order to achieve that. His own motivation, he believes, stems first of all from basic curiosity about the game, which is still as strong as when he started playing – the urge to analyze and figure out the "truth" of every position. As an early source of inspiration for staying at the top a long time he mentioned Geller winning the Soviet Championship at the age of 54 (in 1979), something which Gelfand had a chance to witness at close range, since it took place in Minsk, where he was born, when he was 11 years old. Another source is – not surprisingly – Korchnoi, with whom he said he had long conversations on this topic at several occasions.

Jan-16-14  Eyal: <Part 2> I asked him about opening preparation, specifically with regard to the rather common occurrence nowadays of players saying after games that they forgot their preparation or got confused, etc. Gelfand said that it has a lot to do with a certain aspect of the use of computers: in the "old days", when players had to work out everything by themselves, the stuff was better engraved into their memories; a computer allows you to analyze faster, deeper, and more accurately, but because you don't really do all the work yourself, you're more prone to mistakes and confusions over the board when you have to use your home analysis. Because of that, as well as the sheer number of variations one needs to prepare, a huge amount of time and energy is consumed by the memorization of lines, and this is the least enjoyable part of the work on chess. He added that he and many other top players recognize this as a serious problem and try to think of ways to deal with it more productively.

I mentioned Carlsen's approach (systematically avoiding main & hyper-analyzed lines, etc.) as a possible alternative direction. In this context, Gelfand made a distinction between players with "analytic" vs. "practical" approach to the opening. For players of the first kind, exemplified by Kasparov & Kramnik (with all the differences between their styles of play), the game begins at move 1 and it's very important for them to try and find all the "correct" moves and get an advantage out of the opening, if possible. Players of the second kind, like Karpov or Carlsen, don't worry so much about that and settle for almost any playable position out of the opening that would allow them to develop a game suited to their style. Gelfand sees himself as a more analytic type of player.

Jan-16-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <As reasons for not caring much about tournament tiebreaks, he mentioned the usual argument from history ("20 years from now, no one will remember...")>

This argument is reversible: 20 years from now, no one will remember that someone shared first with the declared winner :D.

Jan-16-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: <alexmagnus>... troublemaker at large.

:-)

Jan-16-14  achieve: <Eyal> Very interesting and informative interview with good old Gelfy - thanks for that "translation." Wish I could read your blog. ;)
Jan-17-14  shivasuri4: <Eyal>, thanks for posting the interview details in English!
Jan-21-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Good stuff, <Eyal>!
Mar-22-14  RedShield: Boris, that wig is ridiculous: http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-TPKdMVrmJ...
Mar-22-14  Petrosianic: <alexmagnus> <This argument is reversible: 20 years from now, no one will remember that someone shared first with the declared winner :D.>

Reversible, but likely untrue. People will remember a century from now.

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