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Krzysztof Ejsmont

Number of games in database: 31
Years covered: 2004 to 2007
Last FIDE rating: 2415
Overall record: +8 -13 =10 (41.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games.

Repertoire Explorer
Most played openings
B30 Sicilian (4 games)
B33 Sicilian (3 games)
C18 French, Winawer (2 games)
D43 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav (2 games)
A09 Reti Opening (2 games)
C41 Philidor Defense (2 games)
C78 Ruy Lopez (2 games)
C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer (2 games)

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FIDE player card for Krzysztof Ejsmont

KRZYSZTOF EJSMONT
(born Oct-02-1987, 37 years old) Poland

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 page 1 of 2; games 1-25 of 31  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. D Szoen vs K Ejsmont  1-0412004POL-chT2 U18B30 Sicilian
2. K Ejsmont vs D Szoen  0-1222004POL-ch U18C05 French, Tarrasch
3. K Ejsmont vs A Volokitin  1-0492004Warsaw AIG Life rapidB41 Sicilian, Kan
4. K Ejsmont vs T Warakomski  ½-½172005POL-ch U20C95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer
5. K Ejsmont vs Z Pakleza  ½-½432005POL-ch U20C41 Philidor Defense
6. J Tomczak vs K Ejsmont  ½-½532005POL-ch U20B33 Sicilian
7. D Szoen vs K Ejsmont  1-0362005POL-ch U20B30 Sicilian
8. K Ejsmont vs G Gutman  1-0492005Czech Open-AC18 French, Winawer
9. J Candela Perez vs K Ejsmont  0-1502005Czech Open-AD43 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
10. K Ejsmont vs V Shalimov  0-1292005Czech Open-AB32 Sicilian
11. E Zude vs K Ejsmont  ½-½222005Czech Open-AD43 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
12. K Ejsmont vs P Neuman  1-0582005Czech Open-AC41 Philidor Defense
13. E Vorobiov vs K Ejsmont  ½-½592005Czech Open-AB30 Sicilian
14. K Ejsmont vs N Maiorov  ½-½602005Czech Open-AC95 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer
15. B Socko vs K Ejsmont  1-04320055th Amplico AIG LifeB80 Sicilian, Scheveningen
16. K Ejsmont vs A Deviatkin  ½-½2220055th Amplico AIG LifeB16 Caro-Kann, Bronstein-Larsen Variation
17. K Ejsmont vs A Moen  1-0482006Pardubice Open-AC42 Petrov Defense
18. J Hartung vs K Ejsmont  ½-½202006Pardubice Open-AB33 Sicilian
19. G Meier vs K Ejsmont  0-1582006Pardubice Open-AB31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
20. K Ejsmont vs E Andreev  0-1482006Pardubice Open-AC18 French, Winawer
21. D Szoen vs K Ejsmont  ½-½302006Pardubice Open-AD15 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
22. K Ejsmont vs B Kovacevic  0-1272006Pardubice Open-AB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
23. A Kveinys vs K Ejsmont  1-0522006Polish Team ChampionshipA09 Reti Opening
24. K Ejsmont vs V Dydyshko  0-1402006Polish Team ChampionshipB84 Sicilian, Scheveningen
25. Fedorchuk vs K Ejsmont  1-0402006Polish Team ChampionshipB30 Sicilian
 page 1 of 2; games 1-25 of 31  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Ejsmont wins | Ejsmont loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
Jul-24-07  Mameluk: http://www.susanpolgar.blogspot.com/
Now that is a coincidence, Kramnik is a bad cheater. Confident boy, regular participant of Pardubice, beating Navara last year in Poland in not that much Rybka-like game.

I wonder what has happened with those cases as DP Singh or young players from Phillipines. Stanislav Novikov was suspect at Aeroflot and they stopped transmission of his games, now he normally plays in Pardubice again.

I think this is worse than Afromeev who only takes rating points from players who agree so. Life sentence or very serious fine cause people love money most and life sentence for the second cheating are only appropriate punishments. This is stealing money from old professionals like Malaniuk.

Jul-24-07  Karpova: <Mameluk: Now that is a coincidence, Kramnik is a bad cheater.> Could you elaborate on this accusation?
Jul-24-07  Mameluk: <Karpova> Have you read the Polgar article?
Jul-24-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <mameluk> Do you mean Kramnik or Ejsmont?
Jul-24-07  Karpova: Karpova: <Mameluk>
Of course, I did read the article and (not to my surprise considering what it's about) Kramnik is not mentioned anywhere.

So why do you bring him up? Did you confuse the names as <keypusher> insinuates?

Jul-24-07  percyblakeney: I doubt that <Mameluk> actually means that Ejsmont's 49 moves out of 50 matching Rybka 2.3.2 is a coincidence, and that Kramnik is the cheater of the two because of Danailov's slightly less convincing calculations :-)

Still a bit strange that someone should follow Rybka for 49 of 50 moves, and that for five games in a row. Something like that is bound to make everyone suspicious. Ejsmont isn't far from 2400 and should be able to make more than one move on his own in every game (maybe depending on how he got close to 2400...).

Jul-24-07  percyblakeney: Someone posted the games in question on the Polgar blog together with the Rybka suggestions. In several games Ejsmont is following Rybka to the end without one single deviation, and he beats much higher rated GM's in less than 30 moves. At a couple of occasions he plays something like h4 instead of Nh4, and after the 7th round he was expelled from the tournament.
Jul-24-07  Mameluk: Maybe I confused words bad for bad. I mean that Kramnik cannot even cheat properly. But funny how some people have alergy seeing words Kramnik and cheater together:) But no offense <Karpova>.

The games with evaluations are posted at susanpolgar, so I first wanted to replay Ivanchuk´s games from Canada to learn something, but I will try to learn from Ejsmont instead.

Jul-24-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <The games with evaluations are posted at susanpolgar, so I first wanted to replay Ivanchuk´s games from Canada to learn something, but I will try to learn from Ejsmont instead.>

LOL, good plan. Sorry I misunderstood.

Jul-24-07  Karpova: <Mameluk: Maybe I confused words bad for bad.>

Nice to see that you didn't even read my question properly or else you would have seen at once that you confused the names (and no further question if I had read the article would have been necessary).

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