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Levon Aronian
Aronian 
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons  

Number of games in database: 4,269
Years covered: 1993 to 2025
Last FIDE rating: 2744 (2747 rapid, 2777 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2830
Overall record: +647 -266 =1143 (59.3%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 2213 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (238) 
    B50 B90 B30 B31 B40
 Queen's Pawn Game (172) 
    D02 A45 A46 E10 E00
 English (130) 
    A13 A15 A14 A18 A11
 Slav (122) 
    D11 D10 D15 D17 D12
 Queen's Gambit Declined (119) 
    D37 D38 D30 D39 D35
 English, 1 c4 e5 (107) 
    A29 A20 A28 A25 A21
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (469) 
    C67 C65 C84 C78 C89
 Queen's Gambit Declined (175) 
    D38 D39 D37 D31 D35
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (148) 
    C84 C89 C87 C90 C86
 Sicilian (147) 
    B90 B22 B51 B76 B72
 Nimzo Indian (129) 
    E32 E46 E20 E39 E21
 Queen's Pawn Game (115) 
    A45 D02 E00 E10 A46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Aronian vs Anand, 2007 1-0
   I Sokolov vs Aronian, 2006 0-1
   Giri vs Aronian, 2012 0-1
   Shirov vs Aronian, 2006 0-1
   Aronian vs V Popov, 2005 1-0
   Aronian vs A Volokitin, 2008 1-0
   Anand vs Aronian, 2008 0-1
   Shabalov vs Aronian, 2004 0-1
   S Iuldachev vs Aronian, 2004 0-1
   Aronian vs Carlsen, 2017 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999)
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004)
   World Championship Tournament (2007)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   World Junior Championship (2002)
   Lausanne Young Masters (2001)
   World Cup (2017)
   Tata Steel Group A (2012)
   Tata Steel Masters (2014)
   FTX Road to Miami (2022)
   Chessable Masters (2021)
   World Junior Championship (1999)
   Skilling Open (2020)
   New In Chess Classic (2021)
   Meltwater Tour Final (2021)
   Airthings Masters 2020/21 (2020)
   chess.com Speed Chess (2020)
   Julius Baer Generation Cup (2022)
   World Cup (2005)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   18 Aro Dynamic Masters Blogging Fredthebear by fredthebear
   Aronian's Games 4 Study by jakaiden
   A Players Announced to Fredthebear's Audience by Patca63
   Match Aronian! by amadeus
   Match Aronian! by chessgain
   WHEN THE LEVI BREAKS by egoego
   English: Levon Aronian Collection by chess.master
   English: Levon Aronian Collection by doug27
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 105 by 0ZeR0
   Power Chess - Aronian by Anatoly21
   Chess World Cup 2017 by Penguincw
   Exchange sacs - 2 by Baby Hawk
   Exchange sacs - 2 by obrit
   Exchange sacs - 2 by pacercina

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 FIDE Grand Swiss
   A Demchenko vs Aronian (Sep-15-25) 1/2-1/2
   Aronian vs A Donchenko (Sep-14-25) 1/2-1/2
   Aronian vs A Woodward (Sep-13-25) 0-1
   Y K Erdogmus vs Aronian (Sep-12-25) 1-0
   Aronian vs A Puranik (Sep-11-25) 1/2-1/2

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Levon Aronian
Search Google for Levon Aronian
FIDE player card for Levon Aronian

LEVON ARONIAN
(born Oct-06-1982, 42 years old) Armenia (federation/nationality United States of America)

[what is this?]

Levon Grigorievich Aronian was born in Yerevan and learned to play chess when he was nine years old. He is a former U12 (1994) and Junior (U20) World Champion (2002), became an International Master in 1996 at 13, and became a Grandmaster in 2000 at 17. He has been a Candidate on six occasions: 2007, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, and 2018.

Championships

<Age> In 1994, he won the World Under-12 Championship in Szeged with 8/9, ahead of future top-ten players Ruslan Ponomariov, Alexander Grischuk, Etienne Bacrot as well as Francisco Vallejo Pons. In 2001, he was runner up in the World Junior Championship with 9.5/13 just behind Peter Acs and went one better in 2002, when he became World Junior Champion, scoring 10/13 and finishing ahead of Surya Shekhar Ganguly, Artyom Timofeev, Luke McShane, Bu Xiangzhi, and Pentala Harikrishna.

<Nationals> He was runner up in the Armenian Championship in 2001 behind Smbat Lputian before improving in 2002 by winning the Armenian Championship.

<Continental> A regular participant at the European Individual Championships since their inception, he came =4th in 2003 with 8.5/13 behind the winner Zurab Azmaiparashvili, and the joint runners up Alexander Graf and Vladimir Malakhov in 2004 he came =3rd a half point behind joint leaders Vasyl Ivanchuk and Predrag Nikolic and in 2005 he came =3rd, a point behind Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu and a half point behind 2nd place getter Teimour Radjabov.

<World> Aronian took part in the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004) in Tripoli, eliminating Magnus Carlsen and Gadir Guseinov before losing his third-round match with Pavel Smirnov. He capped a highly successful 2005 by winning the World Cup (2005) in December, without loss of a single game. After beating Ali Farahat, Darmen Sadvakasov, Alexander Areshchenko and Francisco Vallejo Pons in the preliminary 4 rounds, he disposed of Mikhail Gurevich in the quarter finals and Bacrot in the semi finals before defeating Ponomariov in the final round. His World Cup victory qualified him for the Candidates Tournament of the World Chess Championship 2007, being played in May–June 2007. In this tournament he played Magnus Carlsen in the World Championship Candidates (2007), and they tied 3-3 in the initial six games, then 2-2 in rapid chess, before Aronian finally prevailed 2-0 in the blitz deciders. In the finals, he won the bad tournament link by 3½-2½. This qualified him for the final stage of the championship, the World Championship Tournament (2007) in Mexico City. There, he scored only six points out of 14, finishing seventh out of eight players, with Viswanathan Anand becoming the World Chess Champion.

Aronian easily won the FIDE Grand Prix 2008–2010, qualifying him for the World Championship Candidates (2011). He was was eliminated from the latter contest in the first round when he fell to Alexander Grischuk in the rapid game playoff 1.5-2.5 (+1 =1 -2) after tieing the classical games 2-2 (+0 =4 -0). Aronian qualified via his rating for the right to play in the World Championship Candidates (2013) that was played in London in March 2013. He was in contention for first for most of the tournament, but he lost some games late in the tournament to place 3rd with 8/14, half a point behind the leaders Carlsen and Vladimir Kramnik respectively. He was seeded into the World Championship Candidates (2014) by rating, as he met the condition that he must first participate in the World Cup (2013), where he defeated Kyrgyzstani IM Mikhail Markov in the first round and Igor Lysyj in the second round but lost to eventual semi-finalist GM Evgeny Tomashevsky in the third round. At the World Championship Candidates (2014) in Khanty-Mansiysk, Aronian was in strong contention for the lead until round 9, but then crashed to score only 3 draws in the last 6 rounds to finish 6th in the final standings.

He qualified by rating for the World Cup (2015). There he defeated Michael Wiedenkeller of Luxembourg in the first round to advance to the second round only to be eliminated from the tournament in the shock of the round when he lost in the first rapid tiebreaker to Alexander Areshchenko. Nevertheless he qualified for the Moscow Candidates Tournament 2016 as the event's wild card entry.

Tournaments

<Classical> At the International Open at Capelle-La-Grande in 2001, Aronian scored 7/9, half a point behind the joint leaders Einar J Gausel and Vladimir Chuchelov . At Lausanne a few months later, he won the Young Masters tournament ahead of Harikrishna. In 2002, he was equal first in the International Open in Bad Wiessee and was also =1st in the International Neckar Opens held in Deizisau in Germany in 2002 and 2003. In 2004, he was =1st in the Reykjavik Open and 2005 proved to be Aronian's most successful year thus far - it saw him gain over 50 FIDE rating points to claim a spot in the top 10 and a 2724 rating on the July list. He was joint first with Zahar Efimenko, Kiril Georgiev, Alexey Shirov and Emil Sutovsky at the Gibraltar Masters (2005), outright first at the Karabakh International (2005) and won the World Cup (see above). He went on to even greater successes in 2006: after achieving a modest result in Corus Group A (2006), he won in the last round of Morelia-Linares (2006) to take first place by half a point ahead of Teimour Radjabov and Veselin Topalov. Toward the end of the year he shared first place in the Tal Memorial (2006) 2006 with Peter Leko , and then followed up in 2007 with a joint victory with Topalov and Radjabov at the category 19 Corus Group A (2007). The year 2008 started with a great success at Corus Group A (2008) where he shared first place with Carlsen, scoring 8/13, and continued strongly as he came =3rd at Morelia-Linares (2008), and won the FIDE Grand Prix (2008) in Sochi and the 4th FIDE Grand Prix (2009) in Nalchik. Along with his joint second place score in the FIDE Jermuk Grand Prix (2009), Aronian secured his place in the candidates tournament by winning the FIDE Grand Prix series in just three of the four events each player was slated to attend. He also came =2nd behind Topalov at the Grand Slam Chess Final (2008) tournament alongside Ivanchuk and Carlsen with 5/10 and finished 2008 with outright second behind Topalov with 5.5/10 at the Pearl Spring Tournament (2008).

In 2009 he came =2nd with 7.5/13 at Corus a half point behind Sergey Karjakin and alongside Sergei Movsesian and Radjabov, took clear first place with four wins, one draw, and one loss in the Grand Slam Chess Final (2009). In November 2009, he competed in the Tal Memorial (2009), at the time the strongest tournament in history (in terms of average Elo, 2763). He finished fourth with 5/9, and in the final round memorably demolished world champion Viswanathan Anand with the Black pieces in just 25 moves. He was 3rd at Linares (2010) behind Topalov and Grischuk and in September 2010, he played in the preliminary stage of the Bilbao Grand Slam in Shanghai, the Shanghai Masters (2010), against Vladimir Kramnik, Alexei Shirov, and Hao Wang, but could not qualify for the final tournament after losing to Kramnik in an Armageddon game after they drew the tiebreaker match. In November 2010, he finished shared first with Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and Karjakin at the category XXI Tal Memorial (2010). He started 2011 with a joint third with Carlsen in the Tata Steel Group A (2011) (formerly Corus) super tournament behind Hikaru Nakamura and Anand, scoring 8/13 with a 2821 performance rating. In November 2011, he came second in the category 22 Tal Memorial (2011) with 5.5/9 (+2 =7 -0 and TPR of 2853) on tiebreak behind Magnus Carlsen, and in December 2011 he broke even at the London Chess Classic (2011) with 4/8 (+1 -1 =6). Aronian started 2012 with his first outright win at Wijk aan Zee scoring 9/13 (+7 -2 =4; TPR of 2891) at the category 21 Tata Steel Group A (2012) and then placed =4th at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2012) with 4.5/9 followed by 3rd at the Grand Slam Chess Final (2012) in October. He finished 2012 with a disappointing 3.5/8 at the London Chess Classic (2012), placing 6th out of 9 and losing his world number 2 ranking.

However, 2013 saw Aronian placing clear second behind Carlsen at the category 20 Tata Steel Group A (2013) event, scoring 8.5/13 and signalling a strong return to form prior to the Candidates Tournament that was held in March 2013. Subsequent to the Candidates, Aronian won the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013) with 5.5/9 on tiebreak ahead of Boris Gelfand and then placed =4th at the category 21 Norway Chess (2013), scoring 5/9. In September he placed 3rd in the category 22 DRR Sinquefield Cup (2013) quadrangular tournament behind Magnus Carlsen and Hikaru Nakamura, falling below 2800 for the first time since September 2010. However, he recovered his form and his 2800 rating in a major hitout in the lead up to the 2014 Candidates by winning the category XXI quadrangular DRR Bilbao Masters (2013) using the "soccer scoring" system wherein his +2 =4 translated into an outright first with 10 points ahead of the 9 points (+2 -1 =3) scored by runner up Michael Adams. Possibly the best result of his career came when he won the category 20 Tata Steel Masters (2014) event with a round to spare, the final score being 8/11, a point and a half clear of the field. He placed 2nd behind Carlsen in the category 23 standard time Zurich Chess Challenge (2014), even after losing his 5th round game to Loek van Wely. Immediately before the standard time event he was =1st with Carlsen in the preliminary Zurich Chess Challenge (Blitz) (2014) which determined the draw. He placed 3rd in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2014), which when combined with the results in the main event provided him with an overall placement of 2nd, again behind Carlsen. His next major event was the Sinquefield Cup (2014), and which produced a relatively poor result by his standards, 5th placement with 4/10. He performed better at the Bilbao Masters (2014), placing 2nd behind Anand on the 3-1-0 scoring system used for the event and at the Petrosian Memorial (2014), where he placed =3rd behind Grischuk and Kramnik.

2015 started poorly for Aronian with a relatively weak performance at Tata Steel Masters (2015), scoring 5.5/13 (+1 -3 =9) and finishing toward the bottom of the field. He played in the category 20 GRENKE Chess Classic (2015), placing mid table. His form later in February did not improve, when despite a strong win in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Blitz) (2015) curtain raiser, he placed =4th (6th and last on tiebreak) at the category 22 standard portion of the Zurich Chess Challenge (2015). A strong second place finish in the second part of the event, the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2015), was not enough to put him on the leader board and he finished 4th overall. His woes deepened in June 2015 when he placed last at the category 22 Norway Chess (2015), dropping his rating to his lowest since July 2009, and resulting in him dropping out of the top 10 for the first time since January 2009.

However, he returned to form with a clear 6/9 (+3 =6) win at the category 22 Sinquefield Cup (2015), a full point clear of the four co-runners up including the World Champion Magnus Carlsen, Hikaru Nakamura, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Anish Giri. In December 2015, he placed fourth at the London Chess Classic (2015) with 5/9.

<Chess960> In 2003 Aronian won the Finet Chess960 open at Mainz; this qualified him for a match against Chess960 World Champion Peter Svidler at Mainz the following year, a match which he lost 4½-3½. He won the Finet Chess960 open tournament again in 2005 which earned him a rematch with Svidler in 2006, and this time he won the match this time 5-3 in an 8-game match to become Chess960 World Champion. In 2007 he successfully defended his title of Chess960 World Champion by beating Anand, but lost the title in 2009 to Nakamura.

Olympiad

Aronian played for Armenia 2 in the 1996 Olympiad in Yerevan, the Calvia Olympiad (2004) in Calvia, the Turin Olympiad (2006) in Turin, the 38th Dresden Olympiad (2008) in Dresden, the 39th Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010) in Khanty-Mansiysk, the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) in Istanbul and in the Tromso Olympiad (2014) held in Tromsø. He helped the team to a bronze medal in 2004 and to gold medals in 2006, 2008 and 2012. In the 2010 Olympiad he won the silver medal for his individual performance on board one and in 2012 he went one better to win gold on top board.

Teams

Always a team player, Aronian has played in the German Bundesliga, the Israeli National League, in the Dutch, Spanish and French Team championships, in the European Club Cup as well as the World Team Championship (2005) and World Team Championship (2010). In the Russian Team Championship in 2005, he scored 7.5/9 with an Elo performance rating of around 2850, and in the World Team Championship (2011) he lead Armenia to gold, scoring a personal silver for top board with his 5/8 (TPR 2826). He also won an individual gold playing top board for Armenia in the World Team Championship (2013). He has played for Armenia in the European Team Championships in 1999 (winning team gold), 2005, 2007 (individual silver), 2009. He lead Armenia to fourth place in the European Team Championship (2011) and in the European Team Championship (2013), winning individual silver and bronze on board 1 in 2011 and 2013 respectively. He won team and individual silver playing board one at the European Team Championship (2015).

Match

In April 2012, Aronian and Vladimir Kramnik, as part of their preparation for the 2013 Candidates Tournament, played a six-game training match in Zurich. The Kramnik - Aronian (2012) match was drawn 3-3 (+1 -1 =4).

Rapids

Aronian is a worthy successor to Anand in the rapid play versions of the game, and a fierce rival of Carlsen and Nakamura. In May 2007 he won 4-2 in the Kramnik - Aronian Rapid Match (2007). He also won the 2009 World Rapid Championship when he took out the Chess Classic Mainz (rapid) (2009), and then followed up by winning the World Blitz Championship (2010) with 24.5/38, clinching the title with a round to spare. In March 2008 he won the 17th Melody Amber blindfold/rapid tournament held in Nice, France, 2½ points ahead of the other nearest competitors. Apart from his first place win in the overall tournament, he also took sole first place in the Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2008) section of the tournament (winning by a margin of 1½ points) and shared first place in the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2008) section with Kramnik, Alexander Morozevich, and Topalov. In March 2009 he again won at the Melody Amber tournament, scoring a combined 14 points in 22 games, and sharing the lead in both sections. In 2011, he won the 20th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2011) with 8.5/11 by a clear point and a half, and came second behind Carlsen in the 20th Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2011) section with 7/11 to take the overall prize for the third time. In June 2008, Aronian won the Karen Asrian Memorial (2008) rapid chess tournament in Yerevan, finishing with 8½/14 ahead of second placed Peter Leko. In August 2010, he attempted to defend the World Rapid Chess title, but lost to eventual champion American Gata Kamsky.

In December 2013, he placed =1st at the SportAccord World Mind Games (Men, Blitz) (2013) with 19.5/30. In June 2014, he was =2nd behind Carlsen at the World Rapid Championship (2014).

Awards

Aronian was declared the best sportsman of Armenia in 2005 and in December 2009 was awarded the title of "Honoured Master of Sport of the Republic of Armenia".

Rating

Aronian is only one of nine players to officially cross the 2800 boundary, the others being Garry Kasparov, Kramnik, Anand, Topalov and Carlsen, Fabiano Caruana, Nakamura and Grischuk. His highest FIDE rating to date was 2830 in March 2014 when he was ranked #2 in the world, also his highest ranking to date. He was world #2 for a total of 26 rating periods covering 29 months.

After Aronian's round 4 victory over US super-GM Hikaru Nakamura in the Zurich Chess Challenge standard time event on 2 February 2014, his live rating reached a new personal best of 2835.5.

Other

His handle on the Internet Chess Club (ICC) is "L-Aronian". He was married to WIM Arianne Caoili, who died following a car accident.

Sources and references

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Extended interview on WhyChess on 21 Sep 2011: http://whychess.org/node/1960; Wikipedia article: Levon Aronian

Last updated: 2023-05-02 11:48:10

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 171; games 1-25 of 4,269  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Aronian vs M Sitnik 1-0411993Wch U12C55 Two Knights Defense
2. Aronian vs S Munizaba 1-0381993Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
3. N Q Ngo vs Aronian 0-1321993Wch U12E60 King's Indian Defense
4. Aronian vs I Khamrakulova 1-0341993Wch U12A45 Queen's Pawn Game
5. A Boldyrev vs Aronian  ½-½451993Wch U12B20 Sicilian
6. Aronian vs N Das 0-1581993Wch U12D01 Richter-Veresov Attack
7. D Kozlenkov vs Aronian 1-0421993Wch U12C63 Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense
8. N F Nur vs Aronian 0-1341993Wch U12B70 Sicilian, Dragon Variation
9. Aronian vs A Zabailovich 1-0341993Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
10. E Shaposhnikov vs Aronian 1-0601993Wch U12B55 Sicilian, Prins Variation, Venice Attack
11. A Horvath vs Aronian 1-0561993Wch U12B78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
12. Aronian vs P De Bortoli 1-0211994EUch U12 DisneyD01 Richter-Veresov Attack
13. C Mamedov vs Aronian 0-1451994EUch U12 DisneyB78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
14. Aronian vs O Kondarevich  1-0481994EUch U12 DisneyC16 French, Winawer
15. F Langheinrich vs Aronian 1-0301994EUch U12 DisneyB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
16. E Khalilov vs Aronian  0-1331994EU-ch U12A07 King's Indian Attack
17. Aronian vs D Mastrovasilis 0-1161994EU-ch U12B46 Sicilian, Taimanov Variation
18. E Kobylkin vs Aronian 0-1491994EU-ch U12D86 Grunfeld, Exchange
19. Aronian vs A Khruschiov 1-0241994EU-ch U12A45 Queen's Pawn Game
20. V Shinkevich vs Aronian  ½-½251994EU-ch U12A05 Reti Opening
21. Aronian vs N Shavtvaladze 0-1411994EU-ch U12B52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
22. G Szabo vs Aronian  0-1291994EU-ch U12B22 Sicilian, Alapin
23. V Raceanu vs Aronian  0-1431994EU-ch U12D74 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.cd Nxd5, 7.O-O
24. Aronian vs H I Geanta  1-0411994EU-ch U12C18 French, Winawer
25. M El Adnani vs Aronian 0-1221994Wch U12B23 Sicilian, Closed
 page 1 of 171; games 1-25 of 4,269  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Aronian wins | Aronian loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 62 OF 148 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jun-03-07  Big Rab: < To all lovers/haters of Armenia> I'm glad I live in a society where everyone respects the culture and traditional beliefs of each other "said tongue in cheek" check out my profile to see where i am from. After 38 years of internal struggle we are supposedly reaching a point where agreement is on the horizon, for the sake of your sanity dont go down the route that we as a nation followed for so long. To sum it up "WISE UP" and restrict your comments and analysis to chess its what we are all here for, if I wanted to listen to politics I would have watched TV instead of coming to CG, frankly having listened to tribal politics for almost 40 of my 42 years one becomes sick to the teeth of it you may say use the ignore feature but it seems no matter where i go on CG politics dominates the discussion. In a society where tribal politics dominates your every day life chess is a blessed relief please dont spoil it.< sorry everyone for the rant>
Jun-03-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: Congratulations to Aronian!
Jun-03-07  whiteshark:

You are on solid ground with that, <Big Rab>!!

Thanks for these <conspicuously intrinsic words>!!

Jun-03-07  adair10: Thank you < Big Rab>. Hopefully it would take less than 38 years for many nations and people to wise up. But not much hope
Jun-03-07  elLocoEvans: Congrats to Levon! It's going to be great seeing him at the WCC. My two and a half cents for the future champ!
Jun-03-07  malthrope: Just had to pop in and express to Levon my Congrats! Young Magnus gave a fantastically great fight but in the end the Blitz got him.

The upcoming match with 'Fire on Board' GM Alexey Shirov will be the one to watch! I'm expecting like most of us that post here on this 'sacred page' for Aronian to win. However, on his way to victory and the ticket to Mexico, I'm hoping for some really great chess games. Don't think we'll be disappointed! ;-) Regards, - Mal

PS: <Big Rab> - thanks for your rant... Some wise words spoken there! :-)

Jun-03-07  DUS: I think this is interesting.

http://globalchess.eu/main.php

<... Aronian could claim a threefold repetition, but continuing the game seemed harmless for Black. The queen ending was totally drawn, however, Black made an incomprehensible mistake and lost it. Carlsen tied the score 2-2, and the players proceeded to blitz games.>

The above is about 4th rapid game. So Aronian had draw in it but wanted to continue the game? Why? It wouldn't even give him Elo points. Someone in big forum told that Aronian just wants to play more chess... I was sure it was a joke, but now I am starting to trust...

<Games 5 and 6 (blitz). Supporters of the Armenian grandmaster were obviously worried whether he is able to recover after such a shocking loss. He recovered! Aronian dominated in both games, confirming his reputation of one of the best blitz players in the world.>

Concerning recovery, perhaps all really strong GMs are very stable, because otherwise they wouldn't be in strong category.

Jun-03-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <<... Aronian could claim a threefold repetition, but continuing the game seemed harmless for Black. The queen ending was totally drawn, however, Black made an incomprehensible mistake and lost it. Carlsen tied the score 2-2, and the players proceeded to blitz games.>>

<The above is about 4th rapid game. So Aronian had draw in it but wanted to continue the game? Why? It wouldn't even give him Elo points. Someone in big forum told that Aronian just wants to play more chess...>

DUS, what you are quoting is probably a translation of the GM analyst's thoughts, so I don't want to sound too confident as to what the analyst meant. But I suspect he did not mean to imply that Aronian saw the threefold repetition and decided not to claim the draw. What I think he meant was: the threefold repetition happened, Aronian did not claim the draw, but still should not have lost the endgame.

Did anyone ask Aronian about the threefold repetition?

Jun-03-07  DUS: <keypusher> Thanks! I guess I was confused because of the sentence

<Aronian could claim a threefold repetition, but continuing the game seemed harmless for Black.>

I was thinking it means that Aronian didn't want to claim a threefold repetition. But your reasoning is quite correct.

No, I don't think anyone already has asked Aronian about the threefold repetation. It is too soon, but later perhaps it will be asked to him. And the answer is that he simply didn't see it. I don't think he really wanted to play blitz too...

Jun-03-07  adair10: Love this video of Aronian and Leko from Linares. Two nice people but quite different: Leko is thorough, detailed (boy, he likes talking), Aronian laughs, makes jokes...

<http://blip.tv/file/164759/?skin=po...;

Jun-04-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: From adair 10's post on the Magnus Carlsen page:

<Jun-04-07 adair10: From Henrik Carlsen's blog on the free day after 3rd round: <We played football in the local sports centre and having forgotten to bring money to pay for the lease and Aronian (who arrived simultaneously for a game of table tennis) helped us out with both the translation and lending us the money. A fine gesture by a fine person!>

Jun-05-07  Hayasa: http://www.chesspro.ru/_events/2007...
http://www.schaaknet.blogspot.com/
Jun-05-07  micartouse: <adair10> I like that video of the two players. The game in discussion appears to be:

Aronian vs Leko, 2007

Leko as usual displays remarkable graciousness and professionalism; this must have been a discouraging draw, yet he jumps in front of a camera with a warm smile.

Jun-05-07  DUS: The video is indeed very interesting.

Clearly Leko has comprehensive thinking/chess style and because of that his talking style is a bit comprehensive too. Naturally it is very hard to beat strong comprehensive style player such as Leko; another example was Tigran Petrosian.

Jun-05-07  percyblakeney: In the Chesspro interview Aronian says that he during the tiebreak started thinking about the fairy tale about the dragon with a head one has to chop off time after time since it keeps growing out again...
Jun-05-07  DUS: <Hayasa> Thanks for your web site. I read it regularly. And I am glad it is in different languages. Ogtvelov aritits uzum em shnorhakalutyun haytnel ev hachoghutyun maxtel.
Jun-06-07  ArmeniaNL: it was pity Bu was withdrawn from the tournament
http://www.karabakh2005.com/
But sitll it was a sucessful one, three group tournament with strong players, thanks for keeping the tournemnt website still open, for nice memories it is required and also for new chess players a lot of useful information
Jun-06-07  ArmeniaNL: a very interesting game between shirov and levon, these two giants demonstrate a very impressive game and I do enjoy watching it, if somebody has any opinion about the game quality please share it with me
Jun-06-07  Caloy: Levon has a big resemblance to "sweet chuck" from the Police academy movies :)
Jun-07-07  Jafar219: <ArmeniaNL> I am working on your pictures.I am going to create very good `masterpieces`.Be patient! I hope you will enjoy it. Long live <CG>.:)
Jun-07-07  Jafar219: I am very glad to see that,you armenians can`t do with <ahmadov>.He always makes you feel uncomfortable in <CG>.You are very jealous of his education,english,respect and etc.You should know that he is professional journalist.He is officel member of <chessbase.com>

BTW congratulations to armenian football team for pretty victory against Poland.Your next 2 games will be against us.You have no chances against us.We have always won you in football matches.We will beat you in both games.

Jun-07-07  tsyer: Armenia is doing better than Azerbaijan in the qualifiers though. Azerbaijan is in last place, and has the most goals scored against it. Armenia beat Poland, which currently has the best record in the group. I believe in one of the games Poland beat Azerbaijan 5-0. In any case, both teams aren't very good and it could probably go either way.

Jun-08-07  Hayasa: video pressconference: Aronian and Shirov
www.schaaknet.blogspott.com
Jun-08-07  DUS: <Hayasa> unfortunately there is a misprint in the reference you gave; of course, it should be "blogspot". Here is the video pressconference of Aronian and Shirov.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVZu...

It is also in Hayasa's link

http://www.schaaknet.blogspot.com/

Jun-09-07  Hayasa: Thanks DUS :)
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