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Yue Wang
Y Wang 
Photo copyright © 2008 Farid Khayrulin.  

Number of games in database: 1,265
Years covered: 1997 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2640 (2650 rapid, 2646 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2756
Overall record: +314 -105 =514 (61.2%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 332 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Slav (85) 
    D12 D11 D15 D10 D14
 Queen's Pawn Game (59) 
    E10 A45 D02 A41 E00
 King's Indian (55) 
    E92 E81 E71 E94 E90
 Queen's Gambit Declined (51) 
    D30 D38 D31 D35 D39
 English (50) 
    A15 A13 A14 A16 A10
 Nimzo Indian (43) 
    E21 E34 E20 E46 E32
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (143) 
    B30 B33 B92 B47 B90
 Slav (134) 
    D10 D17 D15 D12 D11
 Petrov (82) 
    C42 C43
 English (24) 
    A13 A11 A14 A18 A17
 Queen's Gambit Declined (23) 
    D37 D35 D39 D38 D30
 Ruy Lopez (23) 
    C67 C65 C95 C77
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Carlsen vs Y Wang, 2009 0-1
   Ivanchuk vs Y Wang, 2009 0-1
   Y Wang vs Ponomariov, 2005 1-0
   Y Wang vs Carlsen, 2009 1/2-1/2
   Y Wang vs S Agdestein, 2008 1-0
   Y Wang vs Carlsen, 2009 1-0
   R Gruettner vs Y Wang, 2003 0-1
   D Svetushkin vs Y Wang, 2007 0-1
   Y Wang vs Radjabov, 2008 1-0
   S Li vs Y Wang, 2006 0-1

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   NH Chess (2008)
   Hastings 2011/12 (2011)
   Turin Olympiad (2006)
   Chinese Championship (2013)
   Chinese Championship (2024)
   PRO Chess League KO Stage (2019)
   Reykjavik Open (2008)
   Torch Real Estate Cup China Chess League (2005)
   World Junior Championship (2006)
   Asian Nations Cup (2016)
   Chinese Chess League (2016)
   Chinese Team Championship (2015)
   Calvia Olympiad (2004)
   PRO League Group Stage (2019)
   Pro Chess League (2018)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Yue Tide Hello! by chocobonbon
   2002 WYCC (open) U-16 by gauer
   1997 WYCC (open) U-10 by gauer

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Budapest Olympiad
   Y Wang vs S Vokhidov (Sep-21-24) 0-1
   M Parligras vs Y Wang (Sep-19-24) 1/2-1/2
   Y Wang vs Harikrishna (Sep-18-24) 1/2-1/2
   T M Tran vs Y Wang (Sep-16-24) 0-1
   Y Wang vs M Sebenik (Sep-13-24) 1-0

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Yue Wang
Search Google for Yue Wang
FIDE player card for Yue Wang

YUE WANG
(born Mar-31-1987, 38 years old) China
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

IM (2000); GM (2004); Chinese Champion (2005 & 2013).

Preamble

Born in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, Wang Yue learned to play at the age of four. He is China's 18th Grandmaster, twice Chinese Champion (2005 and 2013), the first Chinese player to achieve a rating of 2700 and the first to make the world top 10.

Championships

When he was 9, Wang Yue joined the National Junior Team and won the Li Chengzhi National Children's Cup.

<National> Wang Yue participated in the Chinese Championships in 2002 and 2004, coming =3rd in the latter with 7.5/11 behind Bu Xiangzhi and Zhong Zhang. In December 2005, he won the Chinese Championship with a score of 12.5/18 in Beijing. Also, in 2005 he also won both the National Youth Championship and the National Collegiate Championship. He also competed in the 2006 Chinese Championship, scoring 5.5/11. In the Chinese Championship of 2007, he came =2nd with 7.5/11, half a point behind the winner Hua Ni in the 2008 edition of the event, he again came =2nd behind Ni Hua this time with 7/11. In the Chinese Championship (2011) he was =6th with 5.5/11 and in 2012 he came 4th with 6/11 in the Chinese Chess Championship (2012). He decisively won the Chinese Championship (2013) with a round to spare.

<Continental> Although he competed in the Asian Continental Championship in August 2001, his first result was in October 2005 when he came in third with 6.5/9 at the Asian Chess Championship (2005) in Hyderabad, India.

<World championship> In 1999, Wang won the World U12 Championship in Oropesa del Mar, Spain. In 2000, he came second in the U-14 World Youth Championship, which was also held in Oropesa del Mar, to Alexander Areshchenko, but failed to repeat that feat in the same event in 2001. At the World Youth U16 Championship in 2002, he scored 7.5/11 to place =5th. In November 2005, he came fifth with 8.5/13 at the World Junior Chess Championship in Istanbul and came sixth with 8.5/13 at World Junior Championship (2006) in Yerevan.

Wang Yue reached the second round of the World Cup (2005) but was eliminated by Ilia Smirin. At the World Cup (2007), he defeated Aleksei Pridorozhni (1.5-0.5), Sergei Tiviakov (2.5-1.5) and his compatriot Bu Xiangzhi (1.5-0.5), only to be eliminated by Ivan Cheparinov (0.5-1.5) in the fourth round. At the World Cup (2009), he was the tenth seed, and defeated Nikolai Kabanov (2-0) and Boris Savchenko (2.5-1.5) before falling to Etienne Bacrot (1.5-3.5) in the third round playoff.

He failed to qualify for the 2011 Candidates through the Grand Prix series but did qualify for the World Cup (2011) through his rating, however, his was a shock exit after falling to Brazilian GM Alexandr Fier in the first round. He did not qualify for the World Cup (2013). He is the 7th rating reserve for the World Cup 2015, and is therefore unlikely to participate in this event unless he qualifies via one of the remaining Asian qualifying events.

Standard Tournaments

In April 2005, he scored 6.0/9 at the Dubai Open, a point behind the outright winner, countryman Wang Hao. In July, he came third on tiebreak with 6.5/11 (+3 -1 =7) at the 2nd Sanjin Hotel Cup (2005) in his hometown Taiyuan. In August 2006, Wang scored 5.0/10 (+1, =8, -1) and came joint third at the Category 15 4th Marx Gyorgy Memorial (2006) in Paks, Hungary. On 7 September, at the 7th Lausanne Young Masters (2006), he came second after having lost to Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the final rapid game playoff.

In February 2007, he came second with 6/7 behind Hua Ni at the Calvi International Open and immediately following this in March when he successfully participated at the Cappelle la Grande (2007), which hosted 87 GMs, 81 IMs and 465 FIDE rated players; he won the tournament on tie-break ahead of five other players with 7.0/9 points, and a performance rating of 2784. In so doing he achieved an ELO of 2700, the first Chinese player to do so. In April 2007, he won the Philippines International Open Chess Championship in the Subic Bay Freeport Zone with 7.0/9 points on tiebreak from Ni Hua and Zhang Zhong. In July 2007, he came second with 5.0/8 at the 4th Sanjin Hotel Cup in Taiyuan half a point behind Vadim Zvjaginsev. In December 2007, Wang came second on tiebreak behind Francisco Vallejo Pons at the Category 17 XVII Pamplona International (2007) tournament in Spain having scored 4.0/7 (performance rating of 2695). In February 2008, Wang Yue scored 7.0/10 (+4,=6,-0) at the Gibraltar Masters (2008) finishing =10th with a 2653 performance. He followed this at the Reykjavik Open (2008) by scoring 7/9 to achieve a 3-way tie with ultimate winner on tiebreak, Wang Hao and Hannes Hlifar Stefansson a total of 24 GMs and 18 IMs competed. At the NH Chess (2008) (aka Youth vs Experience), Wang Yue scored a stunning 8.5/10 (+7 -0 =3) for a TPR of 2892. In September 2009 he won the Chinese Chess King tournament with 5.0/7 points and a 2797 performance. In September 2010, he won the World University Championship with 8½ points out of 9 games, two points clear of the field, and with a rating performance of 2957. At the 26th Summer Universiade in 2011, he came equal second with 6.5/9 behind Chao Li, who scored an astonishing 8.5/9. However, at the 1st Qin Huangdao Open Chess Tournament that finished in October, Wang Yue scored a poor 5/8, shedding nearly ten ratings points to drop him below the 2700 level for the first time since July 2008. His 5.5/9 at the Indonesia Open 2011 also decreased his rating slightly. He returned to form by winning the Hastings (2011/12) with 7.5/9 (+6 -0 =3 and TPR of 2774), this result boosting him back into a rating of over 2700. Later in the year he scored a par 4.5/9 to place 5th out of 10 in the Karpov Poikovsky (2012).

In July 2015, after somewhat of a hiatus in terms of top flight results, Wang Yue decisively won the powerful category 17 Hainan Danzhou GM (2015) with 7/9 (+5 =4), a full point ahead of runner-up Hua Ni.

<Aeroflot> In 2004, Yue competed in his first Aeroflot Open (2004) at the age of 16, but lost every game. He fared better at the Aeroflot Open (2005), scoring 5.5/9 and at the Aeroflot Open (2006), scoring 4.5/9. In the Aeroflot Open (2007), he made the leader board with joint second and 6.5/9 behind the winner Evgeny Alekseev.

<Super tournaments> In his super tournament debut at the Baku Grand Prix (2008), in April 2008 Wang Yue shared first place (2nd on tiebreak) with Magnus Carlsen and the ultimate winner on tiebreak Vugar Gashimov, scoring 8/13 (+3 -0 =10), with a TPR 2806. In July–August 2008, at the FIDE Grand Prix (2008) in Sochi, he came joint third with Gata Kamsky with 7.5/13 (+2, =11, -0; TPR 2765) behind winner Levon Aronian and second placed Teimour Radjabov. In December 2008, he scored 6.5/13 at the 3rd Elista Grand Prix (2008) and finished his Grand Prix circuit in May 2010 when he competed in the FIDE Grand Prix (2010) in Astrakhan, again scoring 6.5/13, just missing the cut for the 2011 Candidates. From March to December 2008, Wang Yue went 85 consecutive games without a loss, one of the longest streaks on record. His unbeaten run began in the second round of the Reykjavík Open and ended in round 1 of the Elista Grand Prix.

In his debut in 2009 at the category 19 Corus Group A (2009), he came joint 8th with 6.0/13 (+2=8-3) and a 2685 TPR. At his debut in the Linares (2009), Wang Yue finished with 6.5/14 (+1=11 -2) in joint 5th to 7th place. At the M-Tel Masters (2009) , he scored 4.5/10 (+1 -2 =7) to come fourth. At the category 21 Pearl Spring Chess Tournament (2009), he again scored 4.5/10 (+0 -1 =9) to take equal third place with a TPR of 2735; in this competition Magnus Carlsen 8/10 was so dominant that only Veselin Topalov made a plus score. In 2010, Wang Yue played in the King's Tournament (2010) scoring 3/10 (+0 -4 =6) and at Nanjing Pearl Spring Tournament (2010) he again scored 3/10 (+0 -4 =6). In July 2013, he replaced Vugar Gashimov (who had dropped out due to health problems) in a one-off participation in the Grand Prix series to play in the FIDE Grand Prix Beijing (2013), scoring a solid 5.5/11 to place =5th out of 12 in a field in which he was the lowest seed.

Team Events

<Olympiads and World Team Championships> In 2000, in Artek, Ukraine, and again in 2002 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, he competed for the Chinese national chess team at the World Youth U-16 Chess Olympiads. In 2000, the team came 9th, with Wang scoring 6.0/9 (+4,=4,-1) a 2430 performance. The 2002 team won gold and he also achieved an individual gold on first board for his scoring 8.5/10 (+7,=3,-0), a 2657 performance. Wang played second board for China at the World Team Championship (2011), winning a team silver and an individual gold medal, scoring 7/9 for a stunning TPR of 2916. He played top board for China in the Tromso Olympiad (2014), helping China to break through to win its inaugural Olympiad gold medal.

In the Calvia Olympiad (2004), in Calvià, Majorca he scored 8.0/12 (+5,=6,-1) on the first reserve board with a 2621 performance, achieving his last GM norm and becoming China's then youngest grandmaster. In June 2006 at the Turin Olympiad (2006) in Turin, China won silver. Wang, on board four, was undefeated scoring 10.0/12 points (8 wins and 4 draws) and received an individual gold medal for this board four result, as well as an individual silver medal for his rating performance of 2837. In November 2008, he played on board one for the Chinese team at the Dresden Olympiad (2008) in Dresden, Germany (6.5/10 (+3,=7-0; TPR 2773)). The team finished 7th overall. At the Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010), at which China came 5th, Wang Yue played on board 1, scoring 6/9 and a 2772 performance rating. In the Istanbul Olympiad (2012), Wang Yue again played on board 2 for China, this time scoring 5.5/9 (TPR 2707), helping his country to 4th place.

He played board 3 for China in the World Team Championship (2013), scoring a team silver and individual bronze.

<Continental> At the Asian Games in Doha in December 2006, the national team won silver with Wang Yue on board two scoring 6.0/9 points (+4, =4, -1) with a 2647 performance. In January 2008, at the 15th Asian Team Chess Championship in Visakhapatnam, the national team won gold with Wang on board one scoring 4.5/7 points (+3, =3, -1) with a 2534 performance.

<National Team Summit Matches> Wang has participated in the national team summit matches against the United States (2002), Russia (2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2012), France (2006), the UK (2007) and Romania (2014). China has won all these summit matches barring the 2012 match with Russia on overall scores (combining results from the men's and women's teams)

<Asian Teams> Wang Yue won team gold and individual silver playing board 2 for China at the 17th Asian Team Championship held in Zaozhuang, China in May 2012.

<Chinese league> In April 2004, Wang produced the best individual result by scoring 9.0/11 at the Chinese Men's Team Championships in Jinan. He now plays for Tianjin chess club in the China Chess League, and although he did not compete in the 2012 season, he played top board in 2013, helping his team to win gold. (1) In the 2014 Chinese League, Wang Yue played board 1 for Tianjing, helping his team to win silver. In 2015, he is again playing board 1 for Tianjing.

<Other> He played for the city of Wu Xi in the World Cities Team Championship (2012) held in Al-Ain in the UAE in late December, helping the city he represented to win through to the quarter final. His positive results also restored him to the 2700 rating group for the first time since March 2012.

Rating and Ranking

Wang Yue's highest rating to date was 2756 in November 2010 when he was ranked #10 in the world, while his highest world ranking was #8 in May 2010, when his rating was 2752.

Other

His Internet Chess Club handle is yueyue.

References and sources

(1) http://chess-results.com/tnr99752.a...

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Wikipedia article: Wang Yue (chess player)

Last updated: 2022-12-05 12:16:31

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 51; games 1-25 of 1,265  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Y Wang vs M Srebrnic 1-0291997Wch U10E80 King's Indian, Samisch Variation
2. Y Wang vs M Llaneza-Vega  1-0691997Wch U10A41 Queen's Pawn Game (with ...d6)
3. Y Wang vs V Soskov  1-0311997Wch U10D30 Queen's Gambit Declined
4. S Alavi vs Y Wang 1-0411997Wch U10C01 French, Exchange
5. Y Wang vs T Halay  0-1691997Wch U10D03 Torre Attack (Tartakower Variation)
6. Y Wang vs Y M Isaza  1-0411997Wch U10A59 Benko Gambit
7. Y Wang vs A Iljin  1-0681997Wch U10E11 Bogo-Indian Defense
8. S Megaranto vs Y Wang  ½-½231999Wch U12B22 Sicilian, Alapin
9. Q Huang vs Y Wang 0-1381999Wch U12A07 King's Indian Attack
10. Y Wang vs A Bellaiche  1-0311999Wch U12E61 King's Indian
11. Y Wang vs Stellwagen  ½-½561999Wch U12E66 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno
12. C Balogh vs Y Wang  0-1531999Wch U12A00 Uncommon Opening
13. Y Wang vs Nakamura 1-01121999Wch U12A04 Reti Opening
14. Y Wang vs A Volokitin  ½-½462000Artek ol U16E80 King's Indian, Samisch Variation
15. Y Wang vs J Bernasek  1-0252000Wch U14A04 Reti Opening
16. Y Wang vs V Bhat  ½-½422001US-China SummitD31 Queen's Gambit Declined
17. J Zhang vs Y Wang  0-1482001Chinese Team ChampionshipB92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
18. Y Wang vs Z Zhang  0-1342001Chinese Team ChampionshipA46 Queen's Pawn Game
19. T Weng vs Y Wang 0-1512001Chinese Team ChampionshipA13 English
20. Y Wang vs Lu Wei  ½-½202001Chinese Team ChampionshipD92 Grunfeld, 5.Bf4
21. C Wei vs Y Wang  0-1472001Chinese Team ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
22. Y Wang vs Ta Lin  ½-½142001Chinese Team ChampionshipA80 Dutch
23. Y Wang vs Y Wang  ½-½182001Chinese Team ChampionshipA90 Dutch
24. Y Wang vs F Chi ½-½32001Chinese Team ChampionshipD11 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
25. W Zhang vs Y Wang  ½-½182001Chinese Team ChampionshipA95 Dutch, Stonewall
 page 1 of 51; games 1-25 of 1,265  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Wang wins | Wang loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 7 OF 18 ·  Later Kibitzing>
May-08-08  Augalv: China may not repeat history at M-Tel Masters.
Jul-30-08  dumbgai: Wow, despite being a co-winner at Baku, Wang Yue had 75:1 odds at the chess bookie for Sochi (I would definitely have bet on him but unfortunately I'm broke). While I realize that in terms of rating he is still an underdog, I think he showed at Baku that he is capable of competing with the very best. Hopefully he will continue to play well in the second leg of the GP.
Jul-30-08  percyblakeney: <Wow, despite being a co-winner at Baku, Wang Yue had 75:1 odds at the chess bookie for Sochi (I would definitely have bet on him but unfortunately I'm broke)>

That's a massive odds, even if I don't think he will repeat what he did in Baku. My bet would be on Radjabov, with over 10 times the money the odds is good. At least it's higher than Kamsky's and Svidler's odds, and they have never been close to such tournament results as Radjabov has had in Corus and Linares. Finally Radjabov has had some rest after playing almost non-stop close to 60 rated games in four months, ought to improve his play.

Aug-09-08  akhc: well after a solid 7 draw start wang has come alive! he outplayed gelfand from a drawish position and in the current round he's got radjabov on the ropes. I think he'll move into a tie for the lead :D
Aug-09-08  akhc: two consecutive wins now :).. and against Radjabov in the KID no less. someone toss this guy an invite to corus or linares pls :D
Aug-09-08  Udit Narayan: Wang Yue will be the 2nd best Asian chess player after Vishy Anand!!! Go Wang!!
Aug-10-08  micahtuhy: The way the FIDE Grand Prix is set up, with six tournaments and each player invited can only participate in up to four of them, the play with the most Grand Prix points at the end of the tournament (maximum 560, 140x4) plays the winner of the next World Cup as a challenger match for the World Chess Crown. If, Wang Yue wins Sochi, or shares the win with Radjabov, he will have 270 or 265 points respectively. If he gets second, He will have 260 points. Such back to back results in a Grand Prix tournament gives him a bit mathematical edge in the Grand Prix. Two extremely favorable results with him choosing which two of the final four tournaments to participate it.

Wang Yue winning the Grand Prix and being one of the Challengers in the Next Candidates's match (who will play the winner of Kramnik/Anand vs. Topalov/Kamsky.

Aug-13-08  wolfmaster: Wang Yue is amazingly difficult to beat. He has (as of today) lost only once in 46 games played in 2008.
Aug-14-08  pawnofdoom: <akhc: two consecutive wins now :).. > Unfortunately he seems to have fallen back asleep and he went on to draw the rest of his games. in a cool supersolid way
Aug-15-08  dumbgai: I think that judging by recent results the Chinese team might want to play Wang Yue at board 1 and Bu Xiangzhi on board 2. Wang has been super-solid against very tough competition so far this year. Bu had a bad tournament at M-Tel but has proven himself to be very good at beating 2650s, so he might excel on board 2.

On the other hand, Bu played very well on board 1 at the last Olympiad, drawing against Anand, Aronian and Kramnik and winning against Kamsky. It should be interesting to see the Chinese board order.

Aug-15-08  akhc: <pawnofdoom: Unfortunately he seems to have fallen back asleep and he went on to draw the rest of his games. in a cool supersolid way>

still 2 wins and no losses in the tournament has got to be a good result for wang whose relative new to this level of competition.

Aug-15-08  akhc: <dumbgai: I think that judging by recent results the Chinese team might want to play Wang Yue at board 1 and Bu Xiangzhi on board 2. Wang has been super-solid against very tough competition so far this year. Bu had a bad tournament at M-Tel but has proven himself to be very good at beating 2650s, so he might excel on board 2.

On the other hand, Bu played very well on board 1 at the last Olympiad, drawing against Anand, Aronian and Kramnik and winning against Kamsky. It should be interesting to see the Chinese board order>

it will be interesting to see. they have 4 players in the two wangs/bu/ni who are all capable of playing at the highest level. it's surely a matter of time before the chinese come first in one of the team events.

Aug-15-08  lisyaron: It is interesting to note that Wang Yue has now been undefeated in both these Grand Prix events, being one of the lower-rated players in both.

Truly a testimony to his strength, playing so well in such strong fields! Hopefully he will continue his remarkable rise with time!

Aug-20-08  memento mori: Wang Yue has a chance to get invited to Melody Amber in 2009 if he wins the NH Chess Tournament that has started today in Amsterdam August 20-30, 2008.

http://www.chesscenter.com/twic/twi...
----
The venue of this clash between 'Rising Stars' and 'Experience' is the NH Grand Hotel Krasnapolsky in the centre of the Dutch capital, at a five minutes’ walk from Central Station.

The Experience team consists of: Evgeny Bareev (Russia, 2655), Viktor Kortchnoi (Switzerland, 2602), Artur Jussupow (Germany, 2587), Simen Agdestein (Norway, 2583) and Ljubomir Ljubojevic (Serbia, 2555).

The Rising Stars team consists of Wang Yue (China, 2704), Ivan Cheparinov (Bulgaria, 2687), Fabiano Caruana (Italy, 2630), Daniel Stellwagen (The Netherlands, 2616) and Erwin l’Ami (The Netherlands, 2610).

They play a 'Scheveningen' tournament, which means that each player of one team plays against each of the players of the other team. They do so twice, once with the white pieces and once with the black pieces. However, the Rising Stars may be most interested in the special prize for the player on their team with the highest score: an invitation to the prestigious 2009 Amber Rapid and Blindfold Tournament in Nice.

The rounds start at 13.30 hrs (except for the last round on August 30, which starts at noon; August 25 is a free day) and every day there is expert commentary for the public. Admission is free.

Official site: http://www.nhchess.com

Aug-20-08  suenteus po 147: <memento mori> Thanks for the info! Always like following this tournament.
Aug-20-08  ingberg: chessvibes has coverage also
http://www.chessvibes.com/coverstor...

wang yue's second is Li Wenliang (China, 2443)

Aug-21-08  Strafe: round 1 report

http://www.nhchess.com/RoundReport1...

Aug-21-08  Strafe: 2nd round win by WangYue

http://www.nhchess.com/RoundReport2...

Aug-22-08  ingberg: Now wang has just won his third game. the official website has some videos http://www.nhchess.com/index.html
Aug-22-08  ingberg: & photos too http://www.nhchess.com/photos.html
Aug-22-08  akhc: he's simply showing his class in this tournament. going into this event he had a rating of 2714. he's going to gain more rating points here. the question is how many! 10/10 is good for +35 rating points. every half point below that is -5 rating points. I'm willing to bet he ends up on 8.5 which would be a +7 =3 -0. that would mean +20 rating points and assuming no more tourneys.. probably a top 12 place in the next fide rating list.. at worse a top 15 I think! jia you wang yue!
Aug-22-08  Strafe: this Tournament will also be a good opportunity for Yue to try out new openings. Today he played the grunfeld but was worse off for much of the opening. rybka evaluated +0.5 for much of it. Some how he managed to break through with a pawn storm on the queen-side and won with such subtlety
Aug-22-08  Strafe: round 3 report

http://www.nhchess.com/RoundReport3...

Aug-23-08  digitbo: Wang yue is now on 4/4.

His opponent Korchnoi was holding his own until a few dodgy moves like 26..Ree5 and 27..Rec5.

Aug-23-08  Strafe: round 4 report

http://www.nhchess.com/RoundReport4...

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