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Anish Giri
Giri 
Pic: Frans Peeters Wikimedia Commons  

Number of games in database: 3,076
Years covered: 2005 to 2025
Last FIDE rating: 2746 (2685 rapid, 2703 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2798
Overall record: +457 -172 =864 (59.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 1583 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (187) 
    B90 B30 B31 B40 B67
 Ruy Lopez (154) 
    C65 C67 C78 C84 C80
 Queen's Pawn Game (93) 
    D02 E10 E00 A40 A45
 Queen's Gambit Declined (85) 
    D37 D38 D31 D35 D30
 Grunfeld (84) 
    D85 D78 D73 D70 D97
 Giuoco Piano (82) 
    C50 C53
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (314) 
    B90 B51 B50 B92 B48
 Sicilian Najdorf (126) 
    B90 B92 B91 B97 B93
 Ruy Lopez (106) 
    C65 C67 C78 C80 C77
 Queen's Pawn Game (104) 
    A45 D02 E10 D00 E00
 Grunfeld (94) 
    D85 D78 D90 D97 D70
 Queen's Gambit Declined (89) 
    D38 D37 D30 D31 D35
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Giri vs D Gukesh, 2023 1-0
   Carlsen vs Giri, 2011 0-1
   Giri vs Morozevich, 2012 1-0
   Giri vs Carlsen, 2023 1-0
   Kamsky vs Giri, 2013 0-1
   So vs Giri, 2010 0-1
   Carlsen vs Giri, 2017 1/2-1/2
   Nisipeanu vs Giri, 2010 0-1
   Giri vs F A Cuijpers, 2009 1-0
   Nakamura vs Giri, 2012 0-1

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Corus Group B (2010)
   Reykjavik Open (2017)
   Tolstoy Memorial (2021)
   MrDodgy Invitational (2020)
   Dutch Open (2009)
   Qatar Masters (2014)
   Chessable Masters (2020)
   Magnus Carlsen Invitational (2021)
   Chessable Masters (2022)
   Chess.com Global Championship (2022)
   Legends of Chess (2020)
   French Team Championship (2015)
   Meltwater Tour Final (2021)
   World Cup (2015)
   Bullet Chess Championship (2023)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Anish Giri's best games by Leonardo da Vinci
   Anish Giri's best games by Bezlitosci
   India da dama by MatheusRanieri
   ivilic's favorite games by ivilic

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 FIDE Grand Swiss
   Firouzja vs Giri (Sep-14-25) 1/2-1/2
   Giri vs J van Foreest (Sep-13-25) 1-0
   P Maghsoodloo vs Giri (Sep-12-25) 1/2-1/2
   Giri vs Mishra (Sep-11-25) 1/2-1/2
   M A Maurizzi vs Giri (Sep-09-25) 0-1

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Anish Giri
Search Google for Anish Giri
FIDE player card for Anish Giri

ANISH GIRI
(born Jun-28-1994, 31 years old) Russia (federation/nationality Netherlands)
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

FIDE Master (2008); Grandmaster (2009); Dutch Champion (2009, 2011, 2012, 2015, and 2023). Married to IM Sopiko Guramishvili.

Giri has been in the world's top 100 since May 2010 and in the top 10 since October 2014.

Preliminary

Anish Giri was born in St Petersburg, Russia to Sanjay Giri, a Nepalese research scientist, and Olga Giri, a Russian civil engineer. Anish is a typical Hindu name used in parts of India and Nepal. He started playing chess at age seven. After a few years in Japan where he was a member of the Japan Chess Association and the Sapporo Chess Club, Giri and his parents and sisters, Natasha and Ayusha, settled in the Netherlands. He won his FM title in 2008, and in the following year, he became the youngest Grandmaster in the world at that time at the age of 14 years 7 months and 2 days. He is one of a small number of players who became Grandmasters without first acquiring the IM title.

He gained his first GM norm by winning the Intomart GfK Open in Hilversum in 2008, his second by scoring 6-3 at Groningen Chess Festival (2009), and his third and final norm by finishing second at the Corus Group C (2009) tournament. Giri's style of play is active, and he has consistently demonstrated a strong work ethic in his continuous participation in tournaments, having played in almost every rating period since he first registered on FIDE's rating system in 2005.

Giri was coached by Vladimir Chuchelov, but is now being coached by Vladimir Tukmakov.

Championships

<Youth> He won the Russian U12 championship in 2006 and placed =3rd in the Russian U14 Championship in 2007. This was followed by outright 3rd in the St.Petersburg U18 Championship of 2007.

<National> Soon after he won his GM title, Giri placed clear first with 6/8 at the Dutch Championship (2009). In June 2010 he placed second to Jan Smeets in the Dutch Championship (2010). He won both the Dutch Championship (2011) and the Dutch Championship (2012) with a round to spare, the latter restoring him to the 2700 club after a mediocre run that coincided with a disastrous showing in the European Championship and finalising his school studies. He also won the Dutch Championship (2015) with 5.5/7, a clear point ahead of Loek van Wely. Giri won the 2023 Championship after a tiebreaking match against J van Foreest vs Giri, 2023.

<Continental> Giri has participated in several European Championship events, but has yet to hit the leader board.

<World> The FIDE Grand Prix London (2012) was the first in the six legs of the 2012-13 Grand Prix series; Giri participated as an AGON nominee but scored only 4/11, accumulating only 15 GP points that accrued to shared 10th and 11th place. Giri's second and third Grand Prix events, namely the FIDE Grand Prix Zug (2013) and the FIDE Grand Prix Beijing (2013), did not produce the desired outcomes, eliminating him from contention for the top 2 needed to qualify for the Candidates via the Grand Prix series.

He qualified to play in the World Cup (2013) as a ratings reservist. He defeated UAR GM A R Saleh Salem in the first round and Chinese GM Chao Li in the second round but was knocked-out in the third round by Julio Ernesto Granda Zuniga of Peru.

Qualifying as the presidential nominee to the 2014-15 Grand Prix series portion of the 2016 World Championship cycle, Giri placed lone 9th at the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014), winning 40 Grand Prix points. His modest result at the 2nd leg of the series, the FIDE Grand Prix Tbilisi (2015), where he scored 5.5/11 and placed =4th to gain another 75 GP points, put him out of reach of the top 2 finish needed to qualify for the Candidates Tournament in 2016. An identical result in the final leg of the series at FIDE Grand Prix Khanty-Mansiysk (2015) left him well down the ladder.

Giri had another bite of the cherry with his participation in the World Cup (2015), to which he qualified to play by reason of his rating. In the first round he surprisingly drew with 125 seed Ugandan player Arthur Ssegwanyi in the first game of the match before winning the second game to advance to the second round where he defeated Alexander Motylev. He then beat Peter Leko and Radoslaw Wojtaszek in the third round and in the Round of Sixteen (fourth round) respectively. In the quarter final, he defeated Maxime Vachier-Lagrave by 1.5-0.5 to proceed to the semi final where he lost to Peter Svidler by 0.5-1.5 to be eliminated from the tournament. This was not the end of the 2016 World Championship challenge bid by Giri as he won the number two rating spot to qualify for the Candidates Tournament that commences in March 2016.

<Other> Giri assisted Viswanathan Anand in his World Championship title defence against Veselin Topalov in April 2010.

Standard Tournaments

<2005-2007> Giri's initial rating was 2112, which was published in FIDE's July 2005 rating list and immediately established him as a powerful junior player at the age of 11. His rating never fell below that initial level. At present, the first internationally rated event in which he participated in for the July 2005 rating list is not known as it was not published within FIDE's database links in his player card. His second participation in an internationally rated event was when he returned to his home city, St Petersburg, to contest the White Nights Open held in June 2005. There he scored 4/9, a modest enough result to add 10 points to his inaugural rating. A poor showing at the European U12 Championship in September 2005 was the first and last rating dip on his player card for next almost six years until May 2011 when he registered a very slight dip from slightly below rating performance at the Russian Team Championship (2011) in April of that year. He finished 2007 with =3rd at the Chigorin Memorial B Group, held in December.

<2008> The year started with a win in January at the 27th Blokadny St.Petersburg Open, followed in the same month by an 8.5/9 win at the Winter on Petrograd Side 2008 Open. In April, he won the Intomart GfK Open where he gained his first GM norm. In August 2008, he placed 2nd at the GM Tournament Kunsthalle in Austria, a point behind Sarunas Sulskis. He closed out 2008 with =4th at Groningen, half a point behind the 3 co-leaders Arkadij Rotstein, Merab Gagunashvili and Robin Swinkels, winning his 2nd GM norm.

<2009> The year started in excellent fashion for Giri when he came 2nd at the Corus Group C (2009) event behind fellow prodigy Wesley So, to win his 3rd GM norm and the GM title, thereby becoming the youngest grandmaster in the world at that time. In July, he came =2nd behind Erwin L'Ami at the Dutch Open and followed up in September by winning the first of his three Dutch Championships. 2009 finished with a rating neutral =4th at Groningen Chess Festival (2009).

<2010> He started off 2010 with a bang by winning the Corus Group B (2010) tournament, thereby earning an invitation to the A-division of the 2011 event, followed it up in May 2010 by winning the Sigeman & Co (2010) with 4.5/5 and a 2936 performance rating. He scored 3rd in the quadrangular Unive Tournament (2010) in October 2010.

<2011> Giri's debut in the Tata Steel Group A (2011) super tournament was mildly auspicious, finishing in the middle of the table with 6.5/13 (+2 -2 =9) and a 2744 performance rating, defeating Magnus Carlsen and Hao Wang in their individual encounters. He came 3rd with 5/10 in his inaugural Dortmund Sparkassen (2011). In June, he placed =1st at the category 15 Sigeman & Co (2011) with 3/5 alongside Wesley So and Hans Tikkanen. Late in the year, he came second behind Vladimir Kramnik at the 15th Unive (Crown Group) (2011) with 3/6. Giri finished 2011 as the lowest rated entrant in the category 20 Reggio Emilia (2011), and started 2012 by emerging as the outright winner of that tournament with 6/10 (+4 -2 =4, TPR 2822), a half point ahead of Alexander Morozevich, Hikaru Nakamura and Fabiano Caruana.

<2012> His recent gains were undone in his first tournament of 2012, when he placed equal last in the category 21 Tata Steel Group A (2012) with 4.5/13 (+2 -6 =5; TPR 2648). A strong =3rd at the Grandmaster tournament in the Biel Chess Festival (2012) and winning the Dutch Championship (see above) considerably boosted his stock, restoring him to his peak rating.

<2013> The beginning of 2013 saw him play at the category 20 Tata Steel Group A (2013), where he placed =8th, scoring 6/13, followed by =4th with 7.5/10 at the Reykjavik Open (2013), half a point behind the three co-leaders, Pavel Eljanov , Wesley So and Bassem Amin.

<2014> He placed 2nd behind Levon Aronian with 6.5/11 in the category 20 Tata Steel Masters (2014) event, and was the only player who was undefeated in the tournament. He placed =2nd at the Qatar Masters (2014) in November 2014 and in the following month, he was =1st alongside Kramnik at the London Chess Classic (2014). He was 2nd at the London Classic rapid play event with 8.5/10 and =4th at the London Chess Classic 2014 Elite Player Blitz.

<2015> He started 2015 with a strong =2nd at the Tata Steel Masters (2015) with 8.5/13, half a point behind the winner Magnus Carlsen, and behind Vachier-Lagrave on tiebreak to ultimately take 3rd position. After a nondescript result in the category 21 Gashimov Memorial (2015) event held in April, he performed steadily a couple of months later in June to remain undefeated and to place 4th in the category 22 Norway Chess (2015) event with 5.5/9 (+2 =7), inflicting the sole defeat suffered by the tournament leader, Veselin Topalov. November saw Giri placing equal first alongside Wesley So in a low scoring Bilbao Masters (2015), the tie being broken in So's favor with a two-game blitz match. The following month he competed in the powerful London Chess Classic (2015), placing equal first with 5.5/9 alongside Carlsen and Vachier-Lagrave, but placed third in the blitz tiebreakers. Giri wound up 2015 with a slightly above par-for-rating performance at the Qatar Masters (2015), scoring 6/9, a point from the lead.

Team events

<Olympiads> The Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010) was a successful event for Giri, winning the bronze medal by scoring 8/11 and producing a 2730 performance on board four for the Netherlands. He also represented the Netherlands on board 1 at the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) in Istanbul, scoring 4/7 at rating par. In August 2014, he represented the Netherlands on board 1 at the Tromso Olympiad (2014), winning an individual bronze and leading his team to 12th in the event.

<National Team> He played top board for the Netherlands in the European Team Championship (2011), helping his team to 6th place, at the European Team Championship (2013), with his team placing 11th and for the Netherlands in the World Team Championship (2013), his team placing 6th in this event. He again played top b oard for the Netherlands at the European Team Championship (2015), his team placing 11th.

<Cities> At the end of 2012, he played top board for the Hoogoven team at the World Cities Team Championship (2012), and lead the team to victory in the final, thereby claiming the Sheikh Zayed Cup.

<European Club Cup > Giri first played in the European Club Cup in 2009 when he represented the Dutch team HMC Calder at the European Club Cup (2009), albeit without significant results on that occasion. He skipped the 2010 season and shifted to play board 4 for the ShSM-64 Moscow team in the European Club Cup (2011), helping his team to 5th place in the competition. Staying with his Moscow team for the European Club Cup (2012), he helped it to a bronze medal, placing 6th for board 4. Changing to the SOCAR Baku club for 2013, he was a double medal winner in the European Club Cup (2013), again helping his team to win bronze and picking up silver as a first reserve. He finally struck gold at the European Club Cup (2014) for SOCAR when his team won gold and he won individual gold for board 4. Playing for the same club in the European Club Cup (2015), Giri won team silver.

<National Leagues> Giri started playing in the Dutch League in 2007. The following year, he started playing for SK Turm Emdsdetten in the Bundesliga in 2008, becoming the youngest player at that time to have participated in this powerful league. He also started playing in French leagues in that year, graduating to the top league in France very quickly. In 2011, he started playing in the Spanish League and the Russian Team Championship, in 2012 in the Belgian Interclub competition and in 2014 in the 4NCL.

His results at the Russian Team Championship (2011) playing for the local ShSM-64 Moscow team yielded team gold and individual bronze for board 4. The following year, again playing board 4, Giri helped his team to a bronze at the Russian Team Championship (2012).

<Rising Stars vs Experience> Giri was on the winning Rising Stars team that won the Rising Stars - Experience (2010) in August.

Matches

In May 2010, Giri drew 2-2 (+1 -1 =2) with Nigel Short at the Max Euwe Memorial match held in Amsterdam. Giri played a combined rapid/blitz match against Vasyl Ivanchuk at the 26th Leon Masters 2013. Giri won the 45 minute (G45) 2-game match with 1 win and 1 draw, and then took out the 4-game G20 rapid match with 3 wins and 1 draw. However, he decisively lost the blitz (G5) portion of the match by 2.5-7.5 (+1 -6 =3). Giri was declared the winner of the match as the slower games were given greater weighting than the blitz games. In October 2014, Giri played a 6 game match against Alexey Shirov in the Unive events in Hoogoven, winning by 4.5-1.5 (+3 =3).

Rapid/Blitz events

In August 2013, he was the decisive winner of the Norges Rafisklag Blitz 2013, winning with 11.5/12, 2.5 points clear of 2nd placed Daniil Dubov. He won the Dutch Rapid Championship in 2015 with a round to spare, scoring 6.5/7.

Ratings and Rankings

Giri's highest rating to date was 2797, which also coincided with his peak ranking to date of world #5. He exited the Junior (U20) ranks on 1 January 2015, after being #1 Junior in the world continuously for 24 months from 1 January 2013 until the end of December 2014. He was also #1 Junior for the two months from 1 September 2011 until 31 October 2011, bringing the total period of his dominance of the Junior ranks to 26 months.

Sources and References

The main source of data for non-team events was FIDE's database linked through Giri's player card. Data on team events was predominantly derived from http://www.olimpbase.org/playersc/y....

Giri's official website (English): http://anishgiri.nl/; Giri's official website (Japanese): http://anishgiri.nl/html/jpn/news.h...; live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/' Wikipedia article: Anish Giri

Last updated: 2024-08-24 14:02:01

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 124; games 1-25 of 3,076  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Giri vs D Dolbnya ½-½402005St Petersburg-Moscow mB84 Sicilian, Scheveningen
2. D Dolbnya vs Giri  ½-½342005St Petersburg-Moscow mB78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
3. Giri vs A Butylkin  0-1472005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenB31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
4. A Penkov vs Giri 0-1452005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenA02 Bird's Opening
5. Giri vs A Malofeev  ½-½702005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenB15 Caro-Kann
6. V S Nikolaev vs Giri  1-0622005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenE32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
7. Giri vs N Gaprindashvili  ½-½632005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenE15 Queen's Indian
8. V Bagrunov vs Giri 0-1342005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenE98 King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1
9. Giri vs V Toporov 1-0412005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenC16 French, Winawer
10. V Zamyshlyaev vs Giri  1-0702005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenC15 French, Winawer
11. Giri vs D Vorobiov  0-1352005St. Petersburg Chigorin OpenB40 Sicilian
12. Giri vs Garriy Airapetov 0-1332005St Petersburg White Nights opB08 Pirc, Classical
13. Giri vs D Efremova  1-0712005St Petersburg White Nights opE90 King's Indian
14. V Domnin vs Giri 0-1282005St Petersburg White Nights opE70 King's Indian
15. Giri vs V Abramov  0-1452005St Petersburg White Nights opB31 Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation
16. D Kosarev vs Giri  0-1392005St Petersburg White Nights opE83 King's Indian, Samisch
17. Y Vunder vs Giri  1-0752005St Petersburg White Nights opA20 English
18. Giri vs V Churikov 0-1372005St Petersburg White Nights opC61 Ruy Lopez, Bird's Defense
19. R Kiuttu vs Giri 0-1162005EU-ch U12B47 Sicilian, Taimanov (Bastrikov) Variation
20. Giri vs Z Strzemiecki  0-1332005EU-ch U12C10 French
21. F Ashiku vs Giri  0-1312005EU-ch U12E63 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation
22. V Plat vs Giri  0-1302005EU-ch U12B45 Sicilian, Taimanov
23. V Kovalev vs Giri 1-0222005EU-ch U12C15 French, Winawer
24. O Krivonosov vs Giri  1-01172005Chigorin mem 13thE92 King's Indian
25. Giri vs B Nikitinyh  1-0352005Chigorin mem 13thB15 Caro-Kann
 page 1 of 124; games 1-25 of 3,076  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Giri wins | Giri loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 54 OF 60 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-14-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: There's a film out about him:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CYrJ4Dv...
Jan-14-16  rookpawn101: <offramp> you've got too much spare time on your hands, may I suggest taking up a hobby. I think chess would be something that might interest you :)
Jan-30-16  Eyal: Put your money on Giri in the Candidates! (but only if you're rich):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGG...

Feb-04-16  delftfan: Interesting game statistics...a comparison between Carlsen and Giri...why people blame Giri for draws?

http://worldchess.com/player/magnus...
http://worldchess.com/player/anish-...

Feb-04-16  Eyal: <delftfan> I don't know which period and how many games this statistics covers exactly - but in any case, I suppose that Giri's perception as a "drawish" player is mainly influenced by the most high profile events that he plays, much less so by, say, Dutch Championships and all sorts of team events. And if you look at the top level tournaments that he played this last year, starting from the beginning of 2015 (2 Tata, 2 Grand Prix tournaments, 3 Grand Tour tournaments, Gashimov Memorial, Bilbao & Qatar), his overall score was +19 -7 =73 - that is, nearly 74% draws. Since you mention Carlsen, his overall score in the same kind of events during this period (2 Tata, 3 Grand Tour tournaments, Grenke, Gashimov Memorial & Qatar) was +31 -8 =39 – 50% draws.
Feb-06-16  delftfan: <Eyal> This is not a fair comparison. You are considering 4 tourneys. Carlsen only plays 'this kind' of tournaments. He plays far less than other top GMs. In any case, a player's performance should be evaluated based on all his/her games (more the top players are exposed, more risky as well for them...). Anyway, it is very normal to have larger % of draws in high level. Maintaining top 10 position by only drawing is not possible. I think the chess world is too tiny and cruel (despite the fact that game is rather popular)...they envy strong personalities, and they are looking for where to cling. Rather they must encourage players to be stronger and intelligent personalities. This is my observation. Maybe I am wrong. I consider Giri (and obviously Carlsen and some of other top players as well) as treasure for chess world.
Feb-06-16  Eyal: <delftfan> I have an impression that you think I was trying to "attack" Giri - I wasn't; I actually like him quite a lot both as a player and as a person. It's just that your post presented Giri's perception as a more drawish player than Carlsen as a mystery (ok, you said that Giri is "blamed" for his draws - I don't "blame" him for anything) - so I noted that as far as the events <that draw the most attention> are concerned, Giri's drawing percentage is indeed considerably higher, at least recently. In this regard, I think the comparison is completely fair - I intentionally chose the same kind of events for both, because I believe these are the events that are mainly responsible for how top players are perceieved (and btw it's 10 events for Giri and 8 for Carlsen, not 4).
Feb-07-16  delftfan: Sorry <Eyal>. My comments were not totally against you. And your comments were not against Giri. So, I did not think that you were attacking Giri. If we look at top 10 players' game (even considering only major tournaments), Giri is not one of the worst there. IMO a least now he does not deserve this criticism. This is his style, he likes to play chess correctly. My impression is that for him chess is a science rather than a sport (he likes to explore rather than to play). A "wrong" move in chess could be creativity and lead one to win the game, but in science it's cheating. Anyway, he has some time to see what he really likes to do in life :) . It would not be a surprise if it eventually turns out that he is not for chess world, and belongs to somewhere else. For now, we like him to see playing chess. I wish him good luck with his future tournaments.
Mar-14-16  Forager: "Why risk a win, when a draw would suffice?" - GM Anish Giri (after careful deliberation) ...
Mar-15-16  Ozo Shatranj: "recently someone compared myself to the great Peter Leko. of course that's an exaggerated honour." A.Giri
Mar-22-16  ambongtumbong: A clear win vs Fabby on the 9th round of the candidates but after a coffee house chess player 24th move the advantage was gone..
Mar-22-16  Forager: It's hard to decide if Giri is the King of Draws or the King of trash talk. Probably both.
Mar-24-16  Whitehat1963: Can he get nothing but draws the rest of the way? It seems as though he's trying to.
Mar-24-16  bobthebob: what tactic did he miss in his game against Nakamura? He mentioned something in the press conference, but I couldn't follow what he was saying.
Mar-24-16  Atking: Well to be able of no lost in such field is also impressive. By the way the Candidates isn't ended. Lightly probable but still +2 might be enough to win it.
Mar-25-16  not not: I am creating dossier of famous quotes of GM Anish Giri that would help me to understand chess better; so far I found few:

"I do not ever draw; I either graciously chose not to win, or miraculously manage not to lose" Anish Giri

"Considering Leko's extraordinary nine hundred something draws during his chess career (and still counting), please do not compare me to him - yet!" Anish Giri

"The chess became boring and overanalyzed; I thus invented a new game, similar to Fischer Random Chess, but much better: every starting random position is either stalemate, perpetual, or insufficient mating material position; I hope to popularize my invention by going on a tour with GM Peter Leko and playing some exhibition games" Anish Giri

"I had a dream; dream, how chess should be played, how positional and tactical means complete each other and lead to the ultimate objective of every chess battle: that the starting position and the final position look same." Anish Giri

Mar-26-16  diagonal: <not not> Giri spots draws long before us. But he loves his fans and likes to play OTB that's why he sits down at the board though it's completely unnecessary: Giri solved chess and has found a magic formula that chess has to be a draw by definition. As a real sportsman he still travels to tournaments instead of simply tweeting all his results correctly predicted (50% with a draw against everyone).

It's too early to produce draw series for such a young player. Well, Giri can already prove at Easter that I'm wrong, hopefully he does.

Happy Easter everybody!

Mar-26-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Have you seen the film about him? https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CYrJ4Dv...
Mar-26-16  diagonal: LOL

Who might be the all-time champion of grandmaster draws? The UMD (Ultimate Drawing Master) of the chess world?

Maybe Istvan Csom for short draws: A database has more than 600 Csom draws of fewer than 20 moves. Another guy not ashamed of short draws is Ognjen Cvitan close behind.

Special drawing experts are (in no particular order) Swiss IM Werner Hug ("my life is a draw" unauthorized quote), IM Arthur Dunkelblum (cg database in both cases very incomplete), or Andersson, Sosonko, Ivkov, Hulak, Trifunovic, Parma, Stohl, Sax, Ribli, Adorjan, Balashov, Dorfman, Sakeev, Khalifman, Petrosian in principal (the most drawing World Champion, who drew more than half his total games of chess), late Spassky, late Smyslov,... and from the old school Carl Schlechter.

disclaimer:
Ulf Andersson of Sweden and Zoltan Ribli from Hungary do have the distinction of having drawn the last 30+ games (cg) they have played, which must be close to a record at least.....

Mar-26-16  alfamikewhiskey: For the classically inclined:

- Veni, vidi, vincere perdereque evitavi

(also transmitted as:

- Veni, vidi, peraequavi)

Mar-26-16  john barleycorn: Giri in the playing hall
says: "Draws? I know them all."
and delivers a new proof
against "Svidler on the roof"

(allegedly by W. Blake)

Mar-27-16  not not: "Veni, vidi, Giri" Julius Caesar (describing his failed attempt to conquer Britain)
Mar-27-16  epistle: Back to the drawing board, young man.
Mar-28-16  Pulo y Gata: Probably the real world champion as no one could beat him.
Mar-28-16  sabitsingson: Anish Giri is the only player capable of drawing the Armageddon. Impossible but true. He is the Chuck Norris of chess.
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