chessgames.com
Members · Prefs · Laboratory · Collections · Openings · Endgames · Sacrifices · History · Search Kibitzing · Kibitzer's Café · Chessforums · Tournament Index · Players · Kibitzing

Ding Liren
Ding Liren 
Photo by Emir Gamis 

Number of games in database: 1,657
Years covered: 2001 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2734 (2776 rapid, 2785 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2816
Overall record: +274 -95 =488 (60.4%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 800 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Queen's Gambit Declined (105) 
    D37 D38 D35 D39 D31
 King's Indian (80) 
    E60 E62 E94 E90 E97
 Slav (69) 
    D17 D12 D15 D16 D11
 English, 1 c4 e5 (58) 
    A20 A29 A28 A21 A22
 Grunfeld (53) 
    D70 D85 D78 D76 D90
 Catalan (51) 
    E06 E01 E04 E05 E03
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (137) 
    C78 C84 C65 C77 C67
 King's Indian (78) 
    E60 E63 E94 E99 E81
 Queen's Pawn Game (57) 
    D02 E10 A45 E00 D04
 Sicilian (56) 
    B90 B42 B51 B22 B52
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (55) 
    C84 C89 C92 C91 C85
 Caro-Kann (46) 
    B12 B17 B18 B10 B13
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   J Bai vs Ding Liren, 2017 0-1
   Ding Liren vs Aronian, 2013 1-0
   Kamsky vs Ding Liren, 2011 0-1
   Ding Liren vs H Ni, 2009 1-0
   Firouzja vs Ding Liren, 2022 1/2-1/2
   Ding Liren vs S Lu, 2012 1-0
   Ding Liren vs E Inarkiev, 2015 1-0
   Y Hou vs Ding Liren, 2009 0-1
   H Wang vs Ding Liren, 2010 0-1
   Carlsen vs Ding Liren, 2019 0-1

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Chinese Championship (2009)
   Chinese Championship (2011)
   Chessable Masters (2022)
   World Cup (2019)
   World Junior Championship (2012)
   Chinese League (2011)
   Magnus Carlsen Invitational (2020)
   Chessable Masters (2020)
   Charity Cup (2022)
   Chinese Chess League (2016)
   Tata Steel Masters (2015)
   Chinese Chess League (2017)
   Legends of Chess (2020)
   Chinese Team Championship (2015)
   Istanbul Olympiad (2012)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   2020 The Corona Beer & Black Bears Matter Mo Ode by fredthebear
   World Championship (2023): Nepo - Ding by 0ZeR0
   World Championship (2023): Nepo - Ding by plerranov
   FIDE World Cup 2019 by jcgandjc
   Ding Liren 1. d4 by OnlyYou

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Ding - Gukesh World Championship Match
   Ding Liren vs D Gukesh (Dec-12-24) 0-1
   D Gukesh vs Ding Liren (Dec-11-24) 1/2-1/2
   Ding Liren vs D Gukesh (Dec-09-24) 1-0
   D Gukesh vs Ding Liren (Dec-08-24) 1-0
   Ding Liren vs D Gukesh (Dec-07-24) 1/2-1/2

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Ding Liren
Search Google for Ding Liren
FIDE player card for Ding Liren

DING LIREN
(born Oct-24-1992, 32 years old) China
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

Grandmaster (2009), three-time Chinese Champion (2009, 2011 and 2012), World Champion (2023). He will defend his title against Dommaraju Gukesh beginning in a few days (November 25-December 13, 2024).

Championships

<Youth and Junior> Ding Liren was runner up on tiebreak to Nan Zhao at the 2004 World U12 Championship in Heraklio. He placed =3rd at the World Junior Championship (2012), half a point behind Richard Rapport and the ultimate winner, Alexander Ipatov.

<National> Ding Liren (丁立人) first competed in the Chinese Championship when he turned 13 in 2005, scoring 3.5/7. He competed again in the 2008 event before winning the Chinese Championship (2009), becoming the youngest player ever to win the Chinese national title, This result also gained Ding the final GM norm he needed to be awarded the GM title. In 2011, he won the national championship a second time, when he took out the Chinese Championship (2011) with a round to spare, and two points clear of the field. Ding completed a hat trick of championship wins in China when he won the Chinese Chess Championship (2012) outright with 8/11, a full point clear of outright second placed Yangyi Yu. He narrowly missed a fourth championship win in the Chinese Championship (2014) when he placed =1st alongside Yangyi Yu, but came second on tiebreak. A year later, Ding finished clear second, behind fellow wunderkind Wei Yi at the Chinese Championship (2015).

<Continental> Ding gained his first GM norm, a double norm, at the 8th Asian Continental Chess Championship (2009). Soon after winning the 2012 Chinese Championship, he placed equal fourth (sixth on tiebreak) at the Asian Continental Chess Championship (2012).

<World> In 2007, Ding scored 6.5/9 at Chinese Zonal 3.5, failing to qualify for the World Cup (2007) by the narrowest tiebreak. He subsequently qualified for the World Cup (2011) as nominee of the FIDE President, but lost the first round rapid game tiebreaker to Filipino prodigy, GM Wesley So, thereby exiting the competition. He qualified by rating for the World Cup (2015) in the first round he played and defeated Canadian Tomas Krnan in the opening round to advance to the second round where he defeated Ernesto Inarkiev. In the third round he overcame Gadir Guseinov to win through to the Round of Sixteen where he lost to compatriot wunderkind Wei Yi to exit the event.

Ding finished second to Ian Nepomniachtchi in the World Championship Candidates (2022). After world champion Magnus Carlsen announced that he would not defend his title, Ding and Nepomniachtchi met for the title in the Nepomniachtchi - Ding World Championship Match (2023). Ding won in tiebreaks to become world champion.

Standard Tournaments

In August-September 2010, he was =3rd at the Florencio Campomanes Memorial Tournament in the Philippines, half a point behind the joint winners Le Quang Liem and Jun Zhao. In October 2011, he placed =4th with 6.5/9, a half point behind the three joint leaders, Jianchao Zhou, Truong Son Nguyen and at the 1st Qinhuangdao Open Chess Tournament. There followed =3rd behind Hua Ni and Xiangzhi Bu in the 3rd Hainan Danzhou Super Grand Master Chess Tournament held in June 2012 and =2nd (3rd on tiebreak), half a point behind the winner Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, at the SPICE Cup (2012).

In February 2013, Ding placed =4th with 7.5/10, half a point behind the three co-leaders at the Reykjavik Open (2013). In April 2013, he was invited to the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013) his 3.5/9 was near the bottom of the field, but against that it was close to a par for rating performance, and includes a brilliancy against the eventual winner of the event, Levon Aronian. (1) In May 2013, Ding Liren won the Hainan Danzhou GM (2013), a category 15 event, outright with 7/9. In July-August 2013, he came =2nd (3rd on tiebreak) at the category 19 Biel (2013) tournament. He placed =3rd at the Cappelle-la-Grande Open (2014), equal first at the Hainan Danzhou GM (2014) and 5th at the Petrosian Memorial (2014).

Ding Liren's best result to date came at the Tata Steel Masters (2015) in January 2015, when he scored 8.5/13 to place =2nd alongside Anish Giri, Wesley So and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, half a point behind the winner Magnus Carlsen. This result pushed him into the world's top 20 and became the second best player in Asia, second only to Anand. A few months later in July 2015, he played in the category 17 Hainan Danzhou GM (2015), placing outright 3rd with 5.5/9 (+3 -1 =5), an absolutely rating-neutral result, behind the winner Yue Wang and runner-up Hua Ni. He was equal third at the quadrangular round robin event, Bilbao Masters (2015), staged in October 2015, drawing all his games with a performance rating slightly below actual rating. He reprised his result at Wijk aan Zee when he again placed equal second at the Tata Steel Masters (2016) behind Carlsen and alongside Fabiano Caruana. During this event, he momentarily overtook Anand as the top Asian player in the live ratings.

Team Events

<Olympiads> Ding played board 3 for China at the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) held in Istanbul in September 2012, narrowly missing both team and individual medals when he scored 7.5/10 with a TPR of 2764. He played board 2 for China at the Tromso Olympiad (2014), winning individual bronze and team gold.

<World Team Championships> Ding played for China at the World Team Championship (2011) as a reserve, helping his team to win silver. Playing board 2 for China in the World Team Championship (2013), he won team silver and individual bronze and won the team gold and individual silver (on board 2) at the World Team Championship (2015).

<Regional Team Championships> Winning the the 2012 Asian Team Championship Chinese Team Selection Tournament qualified Ding to play in the 17th Asian Team Championships held in Zaozhuang, China in May 2012. There he won team gold and individual silver playing board 4 for China. At the 18th Asian Team Championships held in 2014, he won team and individual gold (for board 1).

<Summit Friendlies> He played on the Chinese team that lost to Russia in the Russia - China (2009) summit event. A few years later Ding was a member of the Chinese team at the Russia - China (2012) summit, which was won by China in the classical section, although Russia won the overall event. In April 2015 he helped China defeat India in their summit match in Hyderabad. Ding was also a member of the Chinese team in the novel China - Russia Challenge (2015) event, which involves one member of each team playing one game at a time, with the winner of the game remaining to play opponents from the next team until he loses, at which time the new winner "defends the stage" against the next opponent(s) from the other team. In his match up against Sergey Karjakin, Ding drew the classical game and traded wins in the two blitz tiebreakers before bowing out in the Armageddon blitz game that Karjakin drew as Black. The second half of the event was completed at the end of 2015, and won by Russia.

<National Leagues> Ding Liren's first FIDE rated game was at the 2004 Chinese Team Championship, when he scored 1/4. He has played for the Zhejiang team in the Chinese League since at least 2008 inclusive. During this time, his team took the bronze in 2010 and he has played 134 games with a 67.9% result ( +65 =72 -17) overall. He won team bronze in 2010.

Ding Liren played for the T.S. Alyans team in the Turkish Superleague in 2014, his team placing 5th.

Rapid and Blitz

On 13 May 2012, Ding Liren played in the 11th Asian Blitz Championship and placed equal second with 7/9, half a point behind Wesley So. He participated in the IHMS Mind Games staged in Huai'an in China in 2016. The Mind Games consisted of men and women's groups each contesting rapid, blitz and Basque portions of the event. He won the Basque portion (two rapid games played at the same time against the opponent) of the event after scoring 4/7 in the IMSA Elite Mind Games (Rapid) (2016), a point from the lead, and 17.5/30 in the IMSA Elite Mind Games (Rapid) (2016), two points from the lead.

Match

Ding Liren won the Ding Liren - Gelfand (2015) match held in July 2015 by 3-1 (+2 =2). He was eliminated in the first round of the China Chess Kings (2015) by Shanglei Lu.

Ratings and Rankings

Ding Liren's initial rating was 2230 in January 2004. He rapidly rose in the ratings, crossing 2600 in November 2010 and 2700 in October 2012. He did not fall under these benchmarks at any time since. He was one of the world's top juniors ranking in the top 20 from January 2011 exiting in January 2013 when he was too old to be qualified as a Junior. His highest ranking was world's #3 Junior throughout the 2012 calendar year. He also entered the world top 100 in May 2011 and has remained in that elite group on continuous basis since then.

His highest rating and ranking to date occurred in June 2018 when his rating climbed to 2798, and his world ranking to #4.

References

Everipedia article: https://everipedia.org/wiki/Ding_Li... Wikipedia article: Ding Liren ; Live ratings: http://www.2700chess.com/;

(1) Ding Liren vs Aronian, 2013

Last updated: 2024-11-22 08:54:47

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 67; games 1-25 of 1,657  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Ding Liren vs W Wu  0-1552001Chinese Team ChampionshipC67 Ruy Lopez
2. C Wang vs Ding Liren 1-0432001Chinese Team ChampionshipE86 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6
3. Ding Liren vs Zhang Jianhua 1-0592001Chinese Team ChampionshipC41 Philidor Defense
4. Tang Zijian vs Ding Liren 1-0352001Chinese Team ChampionshipD03 Torre Attack (Tartakower Variation)
5. Ding Liren vs Y Xu  ½-½612001Chinese Team ChampionshipB12 Caro-Kann Defense
6. Y Wen vs Ding Liren  1-0582001Chinese Team ChampionshipC00 French Defense
7. R Liu vs Ding Liren  ½-½742001Chinese Team ChampionshipC01 French, Exchange
8. Ding Liren vs Huang Yicheng 1-0352001Chinese Team ChampionshipC42 Petrov Defense
9. Ding Liren vs T Qiu 1-01082001Chinese Team ChampionshipB29 Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein
10. L Bregadze vs Ding Liren  0-1602002Wch U10E81 King's Indian, Samisch
11. Ding Liren vs So 1-0232004Wch U12A04 Reti Opening
12. Ding Liren vs S Sjugirov  1-0702004Wch U12A05 Reti Opening
13. H Ni vs Ding Liren  ½-½292008TCh-CHN AC10 French
14. Motylev vs Ding Liren  1-0462008TCh-CHN Torch Real Estate CupC10 French
15. J Zhou vs Ding Liren  ½-½6620098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipE87 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox
16. Ding Liren vs Negi  ½-½3020098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipD85 Grunfeld
17. Ding Liren vs E Ghaem Maghami  ½-½7320098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipE15 Queen's Indian
18. T S Nguyen vs Ding Liren  ½-½6520098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipC07 French, Tarrasch
19. Ding Liren vs H Abdullah 1-03420098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipE17 Queen's Indian
20. D Khamrakulov vs Ding Liren  0-16120098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipC00 French Defense
21. Ding Liren vs E Hossain 1-04320098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipD17 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
22. Le Quang Liem vs Ding Liren  ½-½2020098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipA48 King's Indian
23. Sasikiran vs Ding Liren  1-04320098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipA48 King's Indian
24. Ding Liren vs A Filippov  ½-½6620098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipE11 Bogo-Indian Defense
25. Ding Liren vs A Gupta 0-15020098th Asian Continental Chess ChampionshipD02 Queen's Pawn Game
 page 1 of 67; games 1-25 of 1,657  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Ding Liren wins | Ding Liren loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 6 OF 35 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-13-11  wordfunph: <pulsar: I remember, during the Campo Cup, one of the players at Challenger's section happened to glance at Ding Liren, the spindly young GM who, as a habit looks around when playing, and when their eyes met, Liren smiled furtively and started...rolling his eyes! His eyes only showed whites, goodness. And the player in the Challenger's had to look down and concentrate on his game to avoid laughing out loud. Who says chess players have no sense of humor?>

nice one <pulsar> :)

Jul-18-11  plimko: Nice game by Ding Liren at WTCC 2011: Ding Liren vs Areshchenko, 2011
Jul-21-11  plimko: First round World Cup 2011: Ding Liren-Wesley So. Very interesting match!

http://www.fide.com/images/stories/...

Aug-12-11  plimko: Spectacular game!

[Event "12. Chinese Chess League 2011"]
[Site "Chongqing/China"]
[Date "2011.08.12"]
[Round "11"]
[White "Ding, Liren"]
[Black "Wu, Xibin"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "A35"]
[WhiteElo "2654"]
[BlackElo "2365"]
[PlyCount "57"]
[EventDate "2011.??.??"]
[TimeControl "40/7200:20/3600:1800"]

1. Nf3 c5 2. c4 Nc6 3. Nc3 g6 4. e3 Bg7 5. d4 cxd4 6. exd4 d6 7. Be2 e5 8. dxe5 dxe5 9. Qxd8+ Nxd8 10. Nb5 Kf8 11. Nc7 Rb8 12. Be3 Nc6 13. O-O-O Nge7 14. b4 Bg4 15. b5 Bxf3 16. Bxf3 Nd4 17. Rxd4 exd4 18. Bf4 d3 19. Ne6+ fxe6 20. Bxb8 b6 21. Rd1 Kf7 22. Bxa7 Bd4 23. Rxd3 Bxf2 24. Kb2 Rc8 25. Kb3 Nf5 26. a4 e5 27. a5 Nd4+ 28. Rxd4 Bxd4 29. Bxb6 1-0

Aug-22-11  parisattack: <plimko: Spectacular game!>

Thank you for posting!

At the risk of sounding redundant - there is a special genius at work here. I hope Ding Liren can get some experience against the top players while he is still in his formative years.

His attacks against the K-Side fianchetto are certainly worthy of study.

Aug-22-11  wordfunph: 5 days to Ding Liren (2654) - Wesley So (2658) World Cup match..

vicious dogfight coming up!

guys, take your pick..

Dec-26-11  iking: here is the result ....

W So vs Ding Liren, 2011

Ding lost in the rapids .....

Mar-30-12  plimko: Impressive start by Ding Liren to Chinese Champ 2012. Here a pic from the third round http://slide.sports.sina.com.cn/go/...
Apr-01-12  Nightsurfer: Dear <Zhijun>, thank you for your commentary on <June 6th, 2009> when you have put all that fuss - about the performance of young Chinese players in International Chess - into the right perspective, namely by stating that <" ... in China ,chess is not popular at all!">

How come?! You have added that <"... the reason is that people usually play Chinese chess XIANGQI and Go. Believe it or not, almost every little boy can play Chinese chess but not chess!">.

And you have added a stunning number: <" ... as you know or not, China has 1.4 billion people, that means more than 1 billion people can play Chinese chess.">

Apr-01-12  Nightsurfer: In case that you would like to know how Chinese Chess XIANGQI looks like, I herewith point out to a clip that the German-language channel of MTV has aired on the Chinese contribution to the culture of chess: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NBX...

And herewith the demonstration of a whole game of Chinese Chess:

http://www.gameone.de/blog/2010/9/g...

And herewith a clip that features a standard mating attack by Red, namely the capture of Black General by the help of the Cannon-Horse-Palcorner scheme. The link: http://www.

The clip features a game of Chinese Chess that has been played between <Rene Gralla> and Phan Thang in Hamburg, Germany, in the early sping of 2003. The link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_ef...

Apr-01-12  Nightsurfer: In case that you would like to know how Chinese Chess XIANGQI looks like, I herewith point out to a clip that the German-language channel of MTV has aired on the Chinese contribution to the culture of chess: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NBX...

And herewith the demonstration of a whole game of Chinese Chess:

http://www.gameone.de/blog/2010/9/g...

And herewith a clip that features a standard mating attack by Red, namely the capture of Black General by the help of the Cannon-Horse-Palcorner matrix.

That very game of CHINESE CHESS has been played between <Rene Gralla> and <Phan Thang> in Hamburg, Germany, in the early sping of 2003. The link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_ef...

Apr-01-12  parisattack: Chinese chess and Japanese (Shogi) are both interesting variants of western chess. But for depth of course, Go trumps them all. A nice Go site is www.gobase.org. My problem with Go was always (to me) the monotony of the combinations.
Apr-01-12  wordfunph: now that GM Ding Liren leads 4.5/5, i can see <pulsar>'s grin from ear to ear.
Apr-02-12  Nightsurfer: Dear <parisattack>, thank you very much for pointing out to GO. Yes, when we are talking of dephts, both XiangQi and Shogi are no match for Go, but on the other hand one can argue that Go is no match for Shogi nor XiangQi when we are talking of the thrill of action.

Just take XiangQi: Every game of Chinese Chess is like an action movie en miniature.

Just have one more look at the clip that I have posted on April 1st, 2012: the clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_ef... features Red army cornering Black General, that is the matrix of the HORSE-CANNON-PALCORNER-CHECKMATE.

The clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_ef... has transformed the final moves of the friendly game Rene Gralla (Red) vs Phan Thang (Hamburg 2003) into a scenario of <Chinese Battle Chess>.

That very game <Rene Gralla vs Phan Thang> has been battled out on February 28th, 2003, at Hamburg, Germany, at the place of Vietnamese <Doctor Quang Nguyen-Chi> at the square <Berliner Platz> in the eastern part of Hamburg.

The well-known <Doctor Quang Nguyen-Chi> is a mentor of Chinese Chess, herewith a photo: http://shaolinchess.de/svalban0.gif .

The original game has been played with traditional pieces, herewith the link that leads to the recording of the moves of the final attack by Red Army that can be replayed by the help of an animated diagram: http://24.212.173.247/wxf/index.php... (you will find the recording of the game by first clicking on the headline of the article <"In The Footsteps Of Epameinondas"> - that has been published on March 16th, 2006 - and then, after having opened the link that leads to that very article, by scrolling down to some paragraphs after the subtitle <"Echoes of Epameinondas">.

Apr-02-12  Nightsurfer: When we are talking about - International - Chess and Chinese Chess in China, one should not forget that both the former Chinese-born Ladies World Champions Xie Jun and Zhu Chen have learned Chinese Chess XIANGQI before switching sides to International Chess, please have a look at the section of comments where corresponding comments have been posted with regard to the early steps in the scenario of Chinese Chess XIANGQI that have been executed both by Xie Jun and Zhu Chen.
Apr-03-12  Ladolcevita: <NightSurfer>
Nice to meet you here again!
I also know Chinese chess before international chess,well actually long before I shall say.When I was but a kid,I used to play it regularly with my father at home and classmates in primary school,so for me they are really some breezy ages with joyous memory in picture,whereas I came to know international chess only after those years when some Chinese chess(I mean international chess) players achieved splendid results one after another and the news media started to eulogize and chant for them,so gradually international chess walked into people's sight.(Though nowadays it is still just known to some small group of people,people who are interested and curious,with some particular knowledge.A common way of saying this is that in practice,unlike Chinese chess,it is not actually played by the crowd,the common people)

So I think it is very normal that both Xiejun and Zhuchen learned Chinese chess before international chess,as <Zhijun> has mentioned,Chinese chess is so popular(at least in the past,in that age,when modern recreation hasnt befallen Chinese people,but I think Chinese chess is still quite popular nowadays,particularly so in the competition of Qis---for sure Go is popular too,I have already seen a Go club here in person but none of other kinds---indeed Go is very popular even since from the ancient ages,but one practical advantage of Chinese chess among the crowd over Go is that Chinese chess is apparently more vivid and simpler in an outward manner,while Go might demand much deeper thinking and more time per game)that most Chinese people should always have some occasion to learn or play it,perhaps from the time when they were but kids.

Apr-03-12  Nightsurfer: Hi, <Ladolcevita>, nice to meet you here again.

The big fun in Chinese Chess XIANGQI is the fact that you can plan and execute there flank attacks and pincer moves - without having to be the undisputed No. 1 in the center of the board. Those flank attacks and pincer moves make you feel like a great strategist - and that is real fun, of course!

Whereas pincer moves and flank attacks are common strategies in Chinese Chess XIANGQI, the situation in the scenario of checkered 64 squares is different. In the scenario of the 64 checkered squares of International Chess, there you have to turn to CIRCULAR CHESS if you want to plan and execute flank attacks and pincer moves, please compare the feature: http://www.chessbase.de/nachrichten...

It looks like real fun!

The young British Master David Howell is an expert on the sector of CIRCULAR CHESS, he has already won the World Championship in CIRCULAR CHESS in 2002 when he was 11 (!!!) years old.

Herewith two sources:

--> http://www.chessbase.de/nachrichten...

and

--> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circul...

Apr-03-12  Nightsurfer: One of those two game records of CIRCULAR CHESS that have been discussed in the German-language feature http://www.chessbase.de/nachrichten... - namely the World Championship encounter at Lincoln, UK, on May 14th, 2000, between <Francis Bowers (White)> the later World Champion <Herman Kok Black)> - has been discussed in the English-language feature as follows: http://www.chessvariants.org/column... - and there are some nice diagrams that help to understand what was going on during that very game.
Apr-04-12  waustad: <nightsurfer>With your interests in chess variants, have you run across Hans Multhopp?
Apr-04-12  waustad: Perhaps you should open your chess forum for discussion of such variants.
Apr-04-12  Nightsurfer: Hi, dear <waustad>, I am no fanatic of chess variants, I do only mention them when there is a link - namely a link that constitutes relevance with regard to our beloved main version of chess, and that is nowadays International Chess, of course.

Though one has not to forget that International Chess - that is actually governed by FIDE - is not the original version of chess, but only a more or less modernized version of the original version of chess, namely SHATRANJ, herewith some basic information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatranj.

Please compare a corresponding (German-language) feature that underlines those facts, herewith the link: http://www.chessbase.de/nachrichten..., plus my comments that I have posted on <March 27th, 2012> with regard to Master Suchart Chaivichit from Thailand where Siam's version of chess called <MAKRUK> has preserved the spirit of original SHATRANJ until today.

Apr-04-12  Nightsurfer: Why do I stress those links? For I am convinced that one has to think outside the box, dear <waustad>, in order to see the bigger picture - for the sake of getting new insights with regard to nowadays International Chess, as a result!
Apr-04-12  wordfunph: message from <pulsar>..

GM Ding Liren to his opponents..

"Watch and Liren!"

Apr-08-12  wordfunph: congrats to GM Ding Liren for winning the 2012 Chinese Chess Championship!
Apr-08-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Penguincw: The hat trick it is!
Jump to page #   (enter # from 1 to 35)
search thread:   
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 6 OF 35 ·  Later Kibitzing>

NOTE: Create an account today to post replies and access other powerful features which are available only to registered users. Becoming a member is free, anonymous, and takes less than 1 minute! If you already have a username, then simply login login under your username now to join the discussion.

Please observe our posting guidelines:

  1. No obscene, racist, sexist, or profane language.
  2. No spamming, advertising, duplicate, or gibberish posts.
  3. No vitriolic or systematic personal attacks against other members.
  4. Nothing in violation of United States law.
  5. No cyberstalking or malicious posting of negative or private information (doxing/doxxing) of members.
  6. No trolling.
  7. The use of "sock puppet" accounts to circumvent disciplinary action taken by moderators, create a false impression of consensus or support, or stage conversations, is prohibited.
  8. Do not degrade Chessgames or any of it's staff/volunteers.

Please try to maintain a semblance of civility at all times.

Blow the Whistle

See something that violates our rules? Blow the whistle and inform a moderator.


NOTE: Please keep all discussion on-topic. This forum is for this specific player only. To discuss chess or this site in general, visit the Kibitzer's Café.

Messages posted by Chessgames members do not necessarily represent the views of Chessgames.com, its employees, or sponsors.
All moderator actions taken are ultimately at the sole discretion of the administration.

Spot an error? Please suggest your correction and help us eliminate database mistakes!
Home | About | Login | Logout | F.A.Q. | Profile | Preferences | Premium Membership | Kibitzer's Café | Biographer's Bistro | New Kibitzing | Chessforums | Tournament Index | Player Directory | Notable Games | World Chess Championships | Opening Explorer | Guess the Move | Game Collections | ChessBookie Game | Chessgames Challenge | Store | Privacy Notice | Contact Us

Copyright 2001-2025, Chessgames Services LLC