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Viswanathan Anand
Anand 
Photo copyright © 2009 Milan Kovacs (www.milankovacs.com)  

Number of games in database: 4,065
Years covered: 1984 to 2025
Last FIDE rating: 2743 (2727 rapid, 2732 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2817
Overall record: +664 -244 =1134 (60.3%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 2023 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (654) 
    B90 B33 B30 B31 B80
 Ruy Lopez (491) 
    C65 C67 C78 C84 C89
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (176) 
    C84 C89 C92 C95 C96
 Sicilian Najdorf (165) 
    B90 B92 B93 B96 B91
 French Defense (162) 
    C11 C10 C18 C19 C02
 Caro-Kann (117) 
    B12 B18 B17 B13 B14
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (285) 
    B90 B92 B48 B47 B32
 Ruy Lopez (209) 
    C65 C78 C67 C80 C84
 Queen's Indian (118) 
    E15 E12 E17 E19 E14
 Semi-Slav (111) 
    D45 D47 D43 D44 D46
 Queen's Gambit Declined (103) 
    D37 D38 D39 D30 D35
 Nimzo Indian (101) 
    E34 E21 E32 E20 E46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Anand vs Lautier, 1997 1-0
   Karjakin vs Anand, 2006 0-1
   Aronian vs Anand, 2013 0-1
   Anand vs Topalov, 2005 1/2-1/2
   Anand vs Karpov, 1996 1-0
   Kramnik vs Anand, 2008 0-1
   Anand vs Bologan, 2003 1-0
   Kramnik vs Anand, 2008 0-1
   Anand vs Kasparov, 1995 1-0
   Anand vs Topalov, 2010 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Kasparov - Anand PCA World Championship Match (1995)
   Karpov - Anand FIDE World Championship Match (1998)
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000)
   FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005)
   World Championship Tournament (2007)
   Anand - Kramnik World Championship Match (2008)
   Anand - Topalov World Championship Match (2010)
   Anand - Gelfand World Championship Match (2012)
   Anand - Carlsen World Championship Match (2013)
   Carlsen - Anand World Championship Match (2014)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   World Junior Championship (1987)
   Indian Championship (1988)
   Corsica Masters (2004)
   Eurotel Trophy KO (2002)
   Corsica Masters (2011)
   Coimbatore (1987)
   Groningen Candidates (1997)
   Hoogovens Group A (1999)
   Corsica Masters (2005)
   Manila Interzonal (1990)
   Levitov Chess Week (2019)
   Calcutta (1986)
   World Junior Championship (1985)
   Thessaloniki Olympiad (1984)
   Dubai Olympiad (1986)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Anand Grand Isa by fredthebear
   Match Anand! by chessgain
   Match Anand! by amadeus
   Admirable Anand! by chocobonbon
   Deary to the Gods by Gottschalk
   Power Chess - Anand by Anatoly21
   anand's ruylopez as white by Mrbotvinnik
   anand's ruylopez as white by nakul1964
   anand's ruylopez as white by webbing1947
   anand's ruylopez as white by senankit
   Anand's immortal by senankit
   admirable anand by senankit
   anand's ruylopez with black by senankit
   anand's ruylopez with black by Mrbotvinnik

GAMES ANNOTATED BY ANAND: [what is this?]
   Nijboer vs Anand, 1998

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 38th Leon GM
   Anand vs F Oro (Jul-04-25) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   F Oro vs Anand (Jul-04-25) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   F Oro vs Anand (Jul-04-25) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   Anand vs F Oro (Jul-04-25) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   F Oro vs Anand (Jul-04-25) 0-1, blitz

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Viswanathan Anand
Search Google for Viswanathan Anand
FIDE player card for Viswanathan Anand

VISWANATHAN ANAND
(born Dec-11-1969, 55 years old) India

[what is this?]

Vishwanathan Anand ("Vishy" to his fans) was the 15th undisputed World Champion, reigning from 2007 until 2013. He was also FIDE World Champion from 2000-2002. Anand was born in 1969 in Mayiladuthurai, a small town in southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, but grew up in Chennai. When he was six, his mother taught him to play chess.

Trailblazer

As an Indian and an Asian chess player, Anand blazed a trail with a number of firsts, including in 1984 becoming the youngest Indian to earn the title of IM (aged 14), becoming the youngest ever Indian Champion at 16, becoming in 1987 the first Indian to win the World Junior Championship and India's first grandmaster, and becoming India's (and Asia's) first World Champion. He was also the first World Champion since Robert James Fischer and the second since Max Euwe who did not originate from Russia or eastern Europe. Anand was, moreover, the first and only player to have won the putative world championship via knockout tournament, round robin tournament and traditional match play.

Championships

<Youth and Junior>: Anand's first serious impact in Indian chess was as a 14 year old, winning the 1983-84 National Sub-Junior Championship with a perfect score of 9/9. From 1983 until 1986, he was the National Junior (under 19) Champion and in 1984 and again in 1985 he won Lloyd's Bank Junior championship. Also in 1984 and again in 1985, Anand won the Asian Junior (under 19) Championships, the youngest to achieve this distinction. Anand capped his junior career by winning the 1987 World Junior Chess Championship.

<National>: Anand won the Indian National Championships in 1986, 1987 and 1988.

<Continental>: In 1986, Anand won the Arab-Asian International Chess Championship. In 1989, he won the 2nd Asian Active Chess Championship held in Hong Kong. In 1990 he won the Asian Open Chess Championship in Manila.

<World>: Anand's first tilt at the World Championship cycle took place during the last of the traditional FIDE cycles that had been established after World War II, albeit a cycle cut short at the final by Kasparov's split from FIDE in 1993. Anand kicked off his world championship campaign when he won the gold medal at the 1990 Asian Zonal Championship, qualifying for the Manila Interzonal later that year. He came third at that Interzonal, half a point behind co-leaders Vasyl Ivanchuk and Boris Gelfand, thereby qualifying for the Candidates Matches. In 1991, he defeated Aleksey Dreev in Chennai in the first round of Candidates matches, but lost to Anatoly Karpov in Brussels in the quarter finals.

In 1993, Anand came =1st with Michael Adams at the PCA Interzonal tournament in Groningen, the strongest Swiss tournament played until that time. Also in 1993, he contested the Biel FIDE Interzonal Tournament, coming 10th in a tightly fought contest, thereby qualifying for the FIDE Candidates cycle. In the PCA Candidates, Anand defeated Oleg Romanishin 5-2 in a best of eight match held in New York in 1994, then followed up shortly afterwards with a 5.5-1.5 demolition of Adams at Linares in the Candidates semi-final. In Las Palmas in 1995, he defeated Gata Kamsky in the final for the right to meet Garry Kasparov. In 1995, Anand met Kasparov at the World Trade Center in New York to play the match. After an opening run of eight draws, Anand won game nine but lost four of the next five to eventually concede the match 10½–7½. Conversely, in the concurrent FIDE cycle, Anand lost his quarter-final match to Kamsky, who went on to lose the 1996 FIDE championship match against Karpov. In 1997, Anand won the knock-out matches at Groningen for an opportunity to challenge FIDE World Champion Karpov, defeating Predrag Nikolic 2-0, Alexander Khalifman 3.5-2.5 (in the rapid and blitz tiebreak), Zoltan Almasi 2-0, Alexey Shirov 1.5-0.5, Boris Gelfand 1.5-0.5, and Adams 5-4 in a hard fought sudden death tiebreaker. In the 1998 FIDE cycle, FIDE controversially seeded the reigning champion Karpov directly into the final against the winner of the seven-round single elimination Candidates tournament. Despite coming through an extremely arduous campaign of 31 games in 30 days, Anand was able to draw the regular match 3-3, forcing a rapid playoff. However, the rapid playoff was won 2-0 by Karpov, allowing him to defend his FIDE championship.

In 2000, Anand beat Alexey Shirov 3½–½ in the final match of the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000) in Teheran to become the FIDE World Chess Champion, after defeating Victor Bologan, Smbat Lputian, Bartlomiej Macieja, Khalifman, and Adams in the preliminary rounds. He failed to defend the title in 2002, losing in the semifinals to Ivanchuk after defeating Olivier Touzane, Peter Heine Nielsen, Vladislav Tkachiev, Dreev, and Shirov in the earlier rounds. Anand did not compete in the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004), but tied for second with Peter Svidler in the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005) at San Luis in Mexico with 8½ points out of 14 games, 1½ points behind the winner, Veselin Topalov.

On the basis of his results at San Luis, Anand was seeded directly into the double round-robin World Championship Tournament (2007) in Mexico City, which he won with a score of 9/14 points, a full point ahead of joint second place finishers, Vladimir Kramnik and Boris Gelfand, thereby succeeding Kramnik as the title holder of the unified World Championship. Kramnik had taken the non-FIDE world championship title from Kasparov in the Kasparov - Kramnik Classical World Championship Match (2000), so this victory made Anand the undisputed world champion for the first time. In Bonn in October 2008, Anand again bested Kramnik for the championship, this time in a traditional one-on-one match, scoring 6.5-4.5 (+3 -1 =7) in the Anand - Kramnik World Championship Match (2008).

The following year, Anand successfully defended his title in the Anand - Topalov World Championship Match (2010) by 6.5-5.5 after winning the 12th and final classical game scheduled for the match. In May 2012, he faced the winner of the World Championship Candidates (2011), Boris Gelfand, to again successfully defend his title, winning the Anand - Gelfand World Championship Match (2012) 2.5-1.5 (+1 =3) in the rapid game tiebreaker after drawing the classical games 6-6 (+1 -1 =10).

As a result of Magnus Carlsen winning the World Championship Candidates (2013), the Anand - Carlsen World Championship Match (2013) was played in November 2013. The first four games were drawn before Carlsen won the fifth and sixth games. The seventh and eighth games were drawn, with Carlsen then winning the ninth game and drawing the tenth and last game to win the crown from Anand, producing a final score of 6.5-3.5 (+3 =7) in Carlsen's favor.

Rematch with Carlsen 2014

Anand's loss in the 2013 World Championship match with Carlsen did, however, qualify him to play in the World Championship Candidates (2014), which he won with a round to spare. He therefore won the right to challenge Carlsen in a rematch, the Carlsen - Anand World Championship Match (2014), which commenced on 8 November 2014 in Sochi, in Russia and finished on 23 November.

The first game of the match was a fighting draw, with Anand playing a queen pawn's opening and Carlsen successfully defending a Grunfeld. Carlsen drew first blood in game two, playing the White side of a quiet Ruy Lopez. After the first rest day, Anand struck back strongly, playing the White side of a Queen's Gambit Declined (D37), and overcame Carlsen before the first time control. In game 4, Anand played the Sicilian, but Carlsen steered the opening into a quiet positional struggle that ended in a draw. Game 5 was a Queen's Indian Defence which also ended in a draw. Game 6 may have been the turning point in the match. Playing Black, Anand missed a simple tactical stroke that would have given him a very strong, if not winning position. After missing this continuation, Anand's game weakened and Carlsen brought home the point to take the lead in the match for the second time.

Anand defended Game 7 with another Berlin Defence but eventually encountered difficulties and surrendered a piece for two pawns. However, his defence kept Carlsen at bay for 122 moves before the game was finally drawn due to insufficient mating material on the board. Game 8 in the match was another QGD, with Anand playing White. Carlsen introduced an innovation from his home preparation that guaranteed him a relatively easy draw, forcing a mass exchange of pieces that left the position easily drawn. After the fourth rest day, play resumed with Anand employing a Berlin Defence to Carlsen's Ruy Lopez. The game soon finished through a draw by repetition, with Carlsen content to maintain his one-point lead. In Game 10, Anand again faced Carlsen defending a Grunfeld, albeit not as convincingly as in Game 1. Anand had a long initiative but failed to secure the win, with Carlsen exhausting the opportunities against him to force the draw. Game 11 was another Berlin Defence by Anand which turned into a complex and hard fought middle game following an innovation by him on the queenside, which he followed up with an exchange sacrifice. Anand was unable to make sufficient inroads into Carlsen's position, and after a series of trades that increased Carlsen's material advantage, Anand resigned the game and the match.

Match result: Anand lost by 4.5-6.5 (+1 -3 =7).

World Championship Cycle 2016

As the loser of his world title challenge to Carlsen in 2014, Anand automatically qualified for the Candidates Tournament of 2016.

Tournaments

Anand is the only player to have won the super tournament at Wijk aan Zee (Corus from 1989-2010) five times. He is the first player to have achieved victories in each of the three big chess supertournaments: Corus/Wijk aan Zee (1989, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2006), Linares (1998, 2007, 2008), Dortmund (1996, 2000, 2004).

One of Anand's earliest serious successes in international tournaments that brought him to international attention include his tie for first place in the Sakthi Finance International Grandmasters Chess Tournament in 1987, enabling him to win his third GM norm, and thereby becoming the youngest Grandmaster in the world at that time. In 1989, he competed in the 4th International Games Festival in France, placing second overall in the Veterans vs. Youth Tournament, although he was first in the Youth category. During that event, Anand defeated former World Champions, Mikhail Tal and Boris Spassky in their individual encounters. In 1990, he won the 1990 Manchester Chess Festival and was =1st in the 1990 Triveni Super Grandmasters Tournament in Delhi. In 1992, Anand finished first in the category 18 Reggio Emilia Chess Tournament ahead of Kasparov and Karpov in the strongest tournament ever held until this time. Also in 1992, he won the Goodrich Open International Tournament in Kolkata and won the category 18 Alekhine Memorial tournament in Moscow ahead of Karpov. This raised Anand's rating to 2700, making him only the eighth person to attain the mark at that time. In 1994, he won the PCA Grand Prix in Moscow ahead of Kasparov

Major successes followed rapidly in 1996, when he finished 2nd at the Las Palmas super tournament and at the Magistral Tournament in Leon. There followed, in 1997, wins in the category 19 tournament in Dos Hermanes, the Invesbanka Chess tournament in Belgrade, the Credit Suisse Classic Tournament in Biel, and 2nd place in Dortmund. In 1998 he won the category 21 (average 2752) Linares tournament, as well as at Madrid and at the Fontys-Tilburg International Chess Tournament. In 1999, he won again at Wijk aan Zee. In 2000, he was runner up at Linares, won at Leon (beating Shirov 1½:½) and at Dortmund and also at the 2000 FIDE World Cup in Shenyeng, defeating Evgeny Bareev 1.5 - 0.5 in the final to win. He successfully defended his World Cup title in 2002 in Hyderabad. In 2001, Anand finished 1st in the 2nd Torneo Magistral Tournament in Mexico City, a clear point ahead Nigel Short, Khalifman and Hernandez. In 2002, he won the Eurotel World Chess Trophy in Prague, defeating Jan Timman (2-0), Khalifman (2-0), Sokolov (1.5-0.5), Ivanchuk (2.5-1.5) and Karpov (1.5-0.5) in the final. He won Corus in 2003 and 2004, and took out Dortmund in 2004. In spring of 2006, following a record-extending fifth victory at Corus Group A (2006), Anand became only the fourth player ever to crack the 2800-Elo mark in FIDE ratings, following Kasparov, Vladimir Kramnik, and Veselin Topalov. A few months after he won the World Championship in 2007, he won the (category 21) Morelia-Linares (2008) outright with 8.5 points, winning at Linares for the third time in his career. Following mediocre (for Anand) results in 2012 which saw him slip out of the top 5 for the first time in nearly 20 years, Anand scored 8/13 to place =3rd behind Carlsen and Aronian at the category 20 Tata Steel Group A (2013) event, and defeated Aronian in round 4 in a game that is becoming known as Anand's Immortal.*

2013 saw Anand breaking his tournament drought by winning outright at the category 19 GRENKE Chess Classic (2013) with 6.5/10, winning in the last round to head off Fabiano Caruana by half a point at the pass. This was his first tournament win since Linares in 2008. A few weeks later he placed 2nd behind Caruana at the Category 21 Zurich Chess Challenge (2013) with 3/6 (+1 -1 =4), losing one game to Caruana and defeating Kramnik in his sole win. In April-May 2013, Anand placed outright 3rd at the category 20 Alekhine Memorial (2013), a half point behind Levon Aronian and Gelfand, with 5/9 (+2 -1 =6), a par for rating performance. Soon afterwards he played in the category 21 Norway Chess (2013), scoring 5/9, another par for rating effort. His next tournament was the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013) in June 2013 was one of his worst results in many years, finishing near the bottom of the field with 3.5/9 (+1 -3 =5), also causing him to shed 11 rating points and four places in his world ranking.

After he lost his title defense to Carlsen, Anand next's tournament was the category 23 Zurich Chess Challenge (2014) in which he placed 4th with a scored of 2/5. In the lead up to the return match against Carlsen in November 2014, Anand placed a decisive 1st at the category 21 Bilbao Masters (2014), winning with a round to spare in the six game round robin event. Soon after his unsuccessful attempt to regain the crown from Carlsen in November 2014, Anand won the category 22 London Chess Classic (2014) in December 2014 ahead of Kramnik, Giri, Nakamura, Adams and Caruana. A few months later he racked up another major league triumph when he won standard section of the category 22 RR Zurich Chess Challenge (2015) ahead of outright runner-up, Hikaru Nakamura and the supporting cast of Kramnik, Sergey Karjakin, Aronian and Caruana respectively. He was unable to maintain the lead in the follow-up section of the event, the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2015), and tied with Nakamura for first place. However, he lost an Armageddon tiebreaker to finish with second prize. Anand continued his strong form at the category 21 Gashimov Memorial (2015) held in April 2015, placing outright second with 6/9 (+3 =6), a point behind the winner Carlsen, and a point ahead of joint third place getters Wesley So and Fabiano Caruana. Two months later, he again displayed his excellent form, finishing an undefeated 2nd behind a resurgent Topalov at the category 22 Norway Chess (2015) event in Stavanger, with 6/9 (+3 =6; TPR 2899) and defeating Carlsen in their individual game.

Olympiads

Anand played board 4 for India in 1984, and top board in 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2004 and 2006, winning a silver medal on top board in 2004.

Matches

In 1992, Anand defeated the then number 3 Vassily Ivanchuk by 5:3 in a match held in Linares. In 1997, he played an exhibition simul against 6 computers at the Aegon Man Vs Computers chess event, winning 4-2. In 1998 at the Siemens Nixdorf Duell (Rapid) event in Frankfurt, he beat the then world open category computer chess champion Fritz 5 (1.5-0.5). In 1999 at the Torneo Magistral de Ajedrez in Leon, he beat Karpov 5:1. He won the 2001 "Duel of the Champions", defeating Kramnik in a rapid game match 6.5-5.5 and in 2009, he defeated Leko 5-3 in the Leko - Anand Rapid Match (2009).

Teams

In 1986, he won a team silver medal and a an individual gold medal for board four in the Asian Team Championship. He scored 7/7 in the 1989 Asian Team Chess Championship thereby helping his team to a team bronze as well as winning the top board prize as well as the individual best performance of the tournament. He has played in the Bundesliga, the French and Hungarian Team Championships and the European Club Cup. In 2009, he lead the Rest of the World from board 1 to a decisive 21.5-10.5 victory in the Azerbaijan vs the World (2009) event. He played top board for Baden-Baden in a couple of rounds, helping his team to win the 2013-14 Bundesliga.

Rapids

Anand has always been renowned for the speed of his calculation and moves. His early classical games were often played at close to blitz speed and this prowess has stood him in good stead to enable him to become perhaps the greatest blitz and rapid player of all time. His prowess at quick-play chess has earned him the nickname "The Lightning Kid."

The Chess Classic at Mainz, essentially the annual open world rapid championship, that had commenced in 1994 and finished up in 2010 had become Anand's personal property as he won it 11 times out of the 17 times it had been staged, including nine consecutive wins from 2000 through to 2008. In addition, he has won the annual overall Amber Blindfold and Rapid Chess Championships in 1994, 1997, 2003, 2005 and 2006, the Amber Rapid 7 times, and he was the only player to win the blind and rapid sections of the Amber tournament in the same year (twice: in 1997 and 2005). Other significant sequences were the six consecutive wins at Corsica from 1999 through 2005, and seven wins at Leon in 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, Ciudad de Leon XVIII (2005), XIX Ciudad de Leon (2006), and 2007. Other victories include 1st place at the 1996 Credit Swiss Rapid Chess Grand Prix, in Geneva, where he beat Garry Kasparov in the final, 1st in Wydra in Haifa in 1999 and 2000, 1st in the 2000 Plus GSM World Blitz Chess Cup in Warsaw where he won outright with 17.5 Points in 22 Games, defeating Karpov, Gelfand and Svidler, 1st in the 2000 Fujitsu Siemens Giants Chess (Rapid) in Frankfurt, winning the 2006 Mikhail Tal Memorial Blitz Tournament in Moscow with 23/34, which involved winning 11 out of 17 mini-matches to claim the strongest Blitz tournament in the history of the game, beating his eventual successor to the rapid crown, Aronian, by a 2 point margin. He is also the 2003 FIDE World Rapid Chess Champion by virtue of winning the Cap D'Agde FRA (2003). On 27 March 2011 in Tashkent in Uzbekistan, Anand defeated Rustam Kasimdzhanov in a rapid play match by 3.5-0.5 and in September 2011, he won the Botvinnik Memorial Rapid (2011) ahead of Aronian, Kramnik and Carlsen with 4.5/6 (+3 =3 -0). In In June 2011, he won the rapid XXIV Magistral de Ajedrez Ciudad de Leon (2011) 4.5-1.5 (+3 -0 =3) and in October 2011, he defeated Shakhriyar Mamedyarov by 2-0 in the final to win the Corsica Masters (2011).

Anand competed in the rejigged London Classic of 2013, and qualified for the final rounds by placing =1st in the London Chess Classic (Group A) (2013), but then lost to Kramnik in the London Chess Classic (Knockout) (2013). He placed =2nd in the World Rapid Championship (2014) with 10.5/15, half a point behind the winner, Carlsen, whom he defeated in their individual encounter, and scored 13.5/21 (placing =5th) in the World Blitz Championship (2014). He came =3rd with 8/10 at the London Chess Classic 2014 Super Rapidplay Open. Anand became the World Rapid Champion when he won the World Rapid Championship (2017) following a two-game blitz playoff for first with young Russian Grandmaster Vladimir Fedoseev.

Awards

Anand has won the Chess Oscar on 6 occasions, in 1997, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2007, and 2008. He has received many other national and international awards including the Arjuna award for Outstanding Indian Sportsman in Chess in 1985, the inaugural Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award, India's highest sporting honour in the year 1991–1992, the British Chess Federation's 'Book of the Year' Award in 1998 for his book My Best Games of Chess, the Padma Bhushan in 2000, the Sportstar Millennium Award in 1998 from India's premier Sports magazine for being the sportperson of the millennium. In 2007, he was awarded India's second highest civilian award, the Padma Vibhushan, making him the first sportsperson to receive the award in Indian history and received the 'Global Strategist Award' for mastering many formats of World Chess Championships by National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM) in 2011.

Personal

Anand holds a Bachelor's degree in Commerce from Loyola College in Chennai, India. Previously, he attended High School at Don Bosco. He is married to Aruna Anand and lives in Chennai along with his son Akhil Anand. In August 2010, Anand joined the Board of Directors of Olympic Gold Quest, a foundation for promoting and supporting India's elite sportspersons and potential young talent. In 2010 Anand donated his World Championship gold medal from his successful 2008 title defense to the charitable organisation "The Foundation" to be auctioned off for the benefit of underprivileged children.

Rating and Ranking

Anand is one of eight players in history to officially crack the 2800 mark, peaking at 2817 in March and May 2011, when he was also ranked world #1. Between April 2007 and May 2011, Anand was ranked world #1 for a total of 21 months.

At the age of 45 and after placing 2nd at the Gashimov Memorial Tournament in Shamkir, Anand re-entered the "2800 club" for the first time since exiting that rating bracket in November 2011. His result at the Norway Chess tournament in June 2015 pushed his rating back up to 2816, close to his peak rating to date, and to #2 in the world behind Carlsen.

As of November 5, 2023, Anand's live rating is 2748, No. 10 in the world. At age 53 (54 next month), he is 18 years older than Hikaru Nakamura, the second oldest top-10 player.

Sources and references

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Biography of Anand at the official FIDE website for the 2012 World Championship match: http://moscow2012.fide.com/en/prese...; Wikipedia article: Viswanathan Anand; * Aronian vs Anand, 2013

Last updated: 2023-11-05 21:14:23

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 163; games 1-25 of 4,065  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. V Perera vs Anand 1-0601984Asia-ch U20 8thC70 Ruy Lopez
2. Anand vs M Apicella 1-0251984World Championship (U16)B76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
3. F Hellers vs Anand  0-1421984World Championship (U16)B81 Sicilian, Scheveningen, Keres Attack
4. Anand vs M Matlak  ½-½321984World Junior ChampionshipC05 French, Tarrasch
5. J Piket vs Anand 0-1441984World Junior ChampionshipA48 King's Indian
6. Anand vs I B de Souza 1-0211984World Junior ChampionshipB82 Sicilian, Scheveningen
7. Anand vs C Hansen ½-½191984World Junior ChampionshipB05 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
8. S Saeed vs Anand  1-0341984World Junior ChampionshipE69 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line
9. Anand vs L Sandstrom  0-1361984World Junior ChampionshipB62 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer
10. G Rechlis vs Anand 0-1321984World Junior ChampionshipE63 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation
11. Anand vs P Wolff 0-1221984World Junior ChampionshipB09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
12. L Galego vs Anand  0-1431984World Junior ChampionshipB30 Sicilian
13. H Korhonen vs Anand  0-1301984World Junior ChampionshipB21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
14. Anand vs P K Wells  1-0361984World Junior ChampionshipB15 Caro-Kann
15. Anand vs Dreev  ½-½421984World Junior ChampionshipC05 French, Tarrasch
16. K Georgiev vs Anand 1-0351984World Junior ChampionshipE63 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation
17. Chandler vs Anand  1-03819848th Lloyds Bank Masters OpenB62 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer
18. Anand vs P K Wells  ½-½2319848th Lloyds Bank Masters OpenB17 Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation
19. Anand vs A Greenfeld 1-08019848th Lloyds Bank Masters OpenB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
20. Enoch Barumba vs Anand  0-1411984Thessaloniki OlympiadE91 King's Indian
21. Anand vs T Lirindzakis ½-½311984Thessaloniki OlympiadC43 Petrov, Modern Attack
22. Van der Wiel vs Anand 1-0271984Thessaloniki OlympiadB42 Sicilian, Kan
23. Anand vs D Hergott 1-0381984Thessaloniki OlympiadB33 Sicilian
24. Anand vs J Ochoa  0-1401984Thessaloniki OlympiadB33 Sicilian
25. P Ostermeyer vs Anand 0-1411984Thessaloniki OlympiadA15 English
 page 1 of 163; games 1-25 of 4,065  PGN Download
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Kibitzer's Corner
ARCHIVED POSTS
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 691 OF 760 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jun-28-12  shivasuri4: Thank you, <eyal>. That settles the issue then. Much weaker field than expected, although still quite strong.
Jun-29-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: New In Chess has produced a book on the world title match.
Jun-30-12  Eyal: In case some people missed it - that 44 minute lecture by Anand, mentioned by <polarmis>, on the skills needed from chess players is really quite good: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSOw.... I found especially interesting some of his observations about how the growing importance of computers has influenced the required set of skills (in the earlier part) and about the role of emotions (in the later part). There are also some interesting comments about his three WC matches since 2008. Here's how it begins:

<Chess players easily remember ideas and patterns taken from millions of games, and this is normally a skill that is transferable, but with some training. I remember once I was in Switzerland and my wife told me, "I put some of your stuff in the safe. The code is very easy to remember - it's 2706; so you can take whatever you need." And I told her, "Well, 2706 is not really a good Elo rating. Normally it's rounded off to the nearest 5 or 10," so I told her I couldn't see how I could remember that. She looked a bit shocked and then she explained to me that the 27th of June is our anniversary. So you can see that we're very good in patterns in chess but we can be challenged in other areas.>

Jun-30-12  Jim Bartle: I liked how he said he and his team worked on some positions for three weeks for the 1995 match, and a computer program can now do the same in about five minutes.
Jul-02-12  shivasuri4: Ah, Anand has obtained a rating of 2794 in the first ever official rating list for rapids. They include only his 4 games against Gelfand, so you can't read much into it. Most of the top players including Carlsen, Aronian and Kramnik are not yet there in the list.

Gelfand has been rated 2724 after the match in rapid.

The Russian GM Boris Savchenko with a classical rating of 2550 has 29 games in the rapid list, and is rated 2597. He has the highest games played in the first list, with Ukrainian GM Vladimir Onischuk closely following with 28 games and a rapid rating of 2580.

Strngely, the very strong Tal Memorial blitz event has not (yet) been rated.

One should take these ratings with more than a pinch of salt, as they take quite some time to stabilise after their introduction.

Jul-05-12  Kinghunt: I would not be surprised if Anand drops down a few more places in the rating list by the end of the month. Karjakin and Nakamura are only 1 and 2 points behind him, respectively, and both are playing in the upcoming weeks. Additionally, Morozevich is 10 points behind Anand, and could very easily pick up at least that many points with a strong performance in Biel. Anand could theoretically slip down to 8th in the live rankings by the end of the month without requiring anything all that improbable to happen.
Jul-05-12  Kinghunt: Actually, it's almost certain Anand will move down at least one spot. None of the players above him are competing in classical events, and neither is he, so the best he can hope for is to stay where he is. But it seems unlikely that Karjakin, Nakamura, and Morozevich will <all> not gain rating points. When's the last time Anand wasn't in the top five?
Jul-05-12  shivasuri4: <Kinghunt>, true, Anand could drop down the rating list. The only player rated above him competing this month in a classical event is Carlsen, but there's no way the Norwegian will shed 58 points in one tournament.
Jul-05-12  Kinghunt: <shivasuri4> Is Carlsen competing this month? I thought his next classical event was the Olympiad.
Jul-05-12  shivasuri4: <Kinghunt>, oh sorry, I forgot that Carlsen is competing only in the Rapid and Blitz championships, which is not rated in the classical list.
Jul-05-12  shivasuri4: By the way, where will Karjakin and Nakamura play this month? Are they in the Biel event too?
Jul-05-12  Kinghunt: Karjakin is playing in Dortmund, and Nakamura is playing in Biel. If only Bazna hadn't been cancelled, we'd have the perfect summer.
Jul-05-12  shivasuri4: Dortmund includes Kramnik, so he'll have to drop 22 points for Anand to have a good chance of staying in the top 5.
Jul-05-12  talisman: <shivasuii4> you don't have to worry about the top 5 when you are the top dog!
Jul-05-12  visayanbraindoctor: Anand is not only top dog, I regard him as the top natural talent that the chess world has produced since Capablanca.

When in the zone, he plays incredibly fast yet accurate and keeps on finding the objectively best moves. This implies that he is calculating a prodigious amount of variations in a very short time. No one in the world can match him in this, as of the moment.

He just bloomed late because of 'unfortunate' circumstances.

Firstly India in the 1980s did not have a serious social chess infrastructure that would support a player gunning for the world title.

Secondly there was this beast called Kasparov who happened to be the World Champion. Without Kasparov, Anand could have been World Champion by age 25, and who knows, might have reigned continuously until now. I do not think that the young Kramnik of the 1990s and early 2000s could have beaten Anand in a match. And when they finally met at their prime, Anand beat Kramnik.

Third, when Anand became World Champion, he was already at an age when chess masters generally begin losing motivation. The chess player that brings the fight to all of his opponents in every game is almost always inevitably the young one, not the 20 year veteran of innumerable dogfights. Anand plays like a tired-out, burned-out master these days, not avoiding drawish variations for safety's sake.

Anand's most powerful potential Challenger is of course GM Carlsen, who I would suppose has reached his prime years. Contrary to popular opinion though, I do no think that Carlsen is as talented as Anand in the sense that he can calculate concrete variations as deep and as fast as Anand. After studying their head to head encounters, I could sense that all of Carlsen's losses are due to his missing tactical shots that Anand did not miss. In a sense they are knock-out wins; one player misses an incoming punch or combination of punches and that's it. Anand's lone loss to Carlsen is a typical Carlsen positional grind-out in the endgame; a field in which Carlsen has no peer. If they should play each other now in a medium-length match, and both happen to be equally well-motivated I would give Anand 60 to 40 odds of winning, for the reason that most chess games are decided by middlegame tactics.

Anand at present does seem to have psychological problems with Aronian. He undeniably had these with Kasparov. It might sound peculiar but if Aronian shows up as Anand's Challenger, I would give him more chances than Carlsen of dethroning Anand, even if I think that Carlsen is a stronger player than Aronian.

Jul-06-12  Kinghunt: <visayanbraindoctor> It seems we disagree regarding what defines chess talent. I haven't studied the Carlsen-Anand games in enough details to be able to say much myself, but let's just accept your claim that Anand can calculate better than Carlsen can. I would say that calculation is something that can be trained and isn't necessarily a result of talent alone. In contrast, Carlsen's uncanny positional understanding is something that I don't think can be learned by someone not already gifted with it. So from the same premises, I would conclude that Carlsen is the more talented.
Jul-06-12  shivasuri4: So among the top 5 players, Kramnik and Carlsen will be competing now this July in classical events. The latter has apparently replaced Dominguez in Biel. In a way, it's good for Anand's ranking, as the addition of Carlsen means that Nakamura might get an additional loss/draw instead of a win, unless an upset occurs.
Jul-06-12  visayanbraindoctor: <Kinghunt> I tend to agree with you that Carlsen seems to have a better ability than Anand to judge certain positions especially endgames. Anand is a great endgame player as all world champions are, but IMO he falls behind some of his past predecessors and Carlsen too in this stage of the game. His real strength lies in his calculative abilities in the middlegame.

In the Capablanca page, several posts way back when, I theorized that players like Capablanca had the rare ability to see a chess game's variations as rapidly moving pictures flashing in and out of their mind's eye. This happens to most chess players when they are in the zone, including myself and so I think I can vouch for this phenomenon. When this occurs, you do not analyze in the traditional step by step manner: I move this, he moves that, in an iterative process. Instead, chess positions appear and disappear in your mind's eye very quickly. You stop analyzing as much as simply viewing these potential positions. Playing the game then becomes a matter of choosing which of these positions you go into.

I believe that this phenomenon has occurred to most chess players. However, it does not happen all the time, or only rarely. However for chess players like Capablanca, and before him I believe Morphy, it occurred nearly all the time. This explains the rapidity in which they could hack their way through the weirdest and most bizarre middlegame complications with hardly an error.

Anand I believe has this rare ability to a degree better than any one else active today. It is a gift that cannot be taught. It's the reason why in crucial rapid tourneys, when he is motivated he seems to be able to impose his game on other players (note the Botvinnik Memorial last year and the other rapid tourneys he participated in as 'training' for his WC match). It's the main reason IMO why he is so good in calculating variations in the middlegame.

In calculative ability, I do not think Carlsen is up to Anand's level. No one is today, and perhaps we will have to wait for a few more generations before Caissa gifts the chess world with another such player. However, Carlsen IMO has two big advantage over Anand.

One, his accurate evaluations of endgame positions and his tenacity once he gets into these. Many of Carlsen's crucial wins are classic endgame grind-outs. This is great for chess, since many players today seem to have forgotten that after the opening prep and middlegame dogfight, there is still an endgame. No one wins his chess games in the endgame more than Carlsen nowadays.

Two, Carlsen is stronger mentally than Anand. He does not mentally collapse. Anand is known to do this, especially when faced with his jinx players. True Anand has matured and is more immune to such a mental collapse nowadays. However, it probably could still happen. In fact, I believe it might have happened in his WC match with Gelfand. Anand seemed to have lost confidence and stopped bringing the fight to his determined challenger. In the rapids tie-break, Anand just seemed to be moving around purposelessly as though hoping for an automatic draw, and if Gelfand was a stronger rapid player, he could have perhaps won 3 games in the tie-breaks, and we could definitely say that Anand has mentally collapsed.

Jul-08-12  Chessinfinite: <Two, Carlsen is stronger mentally than Anand. He does not mentally collapse. Anand is known to do this, especially when faced with his jinx players.>

What idiot gave you this idea? It might be better if you stick to bullet points in your posts. writing long posts affects quality, you know.

ps: just check Carlsen's last day at rapid championships, i thought it was mentally weak minded play there...

Jul-08-12  WiseWizard: Happened at the Botvinnik Memorial too and at Olympiad, maybe overconfidence, or his confidence gets shattered once he's outplayed (Aronian's brilliant double exchange sac) like today against Ivanchuk.
Jul-08-12  SetNoEscapeOn: Well, I agree that Anand has "jinx players," but there are only really two: Kasparov and Aronian. More so the latter; Kasparov had a lot of sharp, brilliant, complicated wins against Anand, often from either side of the Sicilian Defense. If Anand had played the way he generally did in those games against others he would probably have won several of them.

However, with Aronian it really has just gotten worse and worse (at least during the worst of it). Just consider the difference between this game

Aronian vs Anand, 2007

and this one

Anand vs Aronian, 2009

(Afterwards Kramnik asked Aronian how he makes Anand play like a 2100 level player!)

Jul-08-12  SetNoEscapeOn: That was a great game by Vishy in Mexico, but I meant to use this one

Aronian vs Anand, 2007

Jul-08-12  visayanbraindoctor: <Chessinfinite: just check Carlsen's last day at rapid championships, i thought it was mentally weak minded play there...>

I just did, all of his games.

<his accurate evaluations of endgame positions and his tenacity once he gets into these. Many of Carlsen's crucial wins are classic endgame grind-outs.>

Carlsen lived up to my evaluation and expectation here (",). His end game grinds against Mamedyarov, Kurnosov, Karjakin, maybe a couple of others can attest to that.

What happened in the last 4 rounds? Maybe Carlsen did mentally collapse, or perhaps he just suddenly met 4 very strong players- Ivanchuk, Grischuk, Radjabov (all Candidates in the present WC cycle), Topalov (a former Challenger 2x).

<WiseWizard: Happened at the Botvinnik Memorial too>

In Botvinnik rapids last year, there was no 'bunny' to beat up on. Playing no one but Anand, Kramnik, and Aronian repeatedly is tough. Anand here was preparing for his WC match and was well-motivated; and won convincingly.

<and at Olympiad>

You seem to be right here; Carlsen bombed out. So Carlsen may occasionally mentally collapse (either through too much confidence or loss of confidence), but still in general IMO he is tougher mentally than Anand.

Regarding a well-motivated Anand in rapids, in the latter part of 2011 he was preparing for his World Championship match with Gelfand, and I believe he was well motivated. In fact, in his last few rapid events previous to the WC match, he won crushingly. Most of these were effectively rapid mini-matches, and not surprising as Anand probably anticipated the possibility of a rapid tie-break mini-match with Gelfand.

vs Carlsen +1 -0 =1

vs Aronian +2 -0 =0

vs Kramnik +0 -0 =2

(Although technically the above was in a double round robin tournament, it was a tournament undiluted by 'bunnies' and you meet the same strong opposition repeatedly.)

vs Kasimdzhanov +3 -0 =1

vs Shirov +3 -0 =3

vs Massoni +2 -0 =0

vs Grigoryan +1 -0 =1

vs Sasikiran +2 -0 =2

vs Mamedyarov +2 -0 -0

Not a single loss in 26 games! This is amazing because it is pretty hard to avoid losses in rapid games. I am not certain but this run of Anand's could be one of the best performances in quick games in chess history. When he is properly motivated, Anand is still the lightning kid.

<perhaps we will have to wait for a few more generations before Caissa gifts the chess world with another such player.>

I do not think Anand gives this much thought though. He does not seem to be much interested in rapid games these days. Maybe like Capablanca he thinks error-filled rapid games are for duds.

Jul-16-12  voyager39: <visayanbraindoctor> <Anand is not only top dog, I regard him as the top natural talent that the chess world has produced since Capablanca> Anand comes up with this amazing self description in his lecture at Accenture...

<"It is much better to be deluded and confident than to have the right information but not know what to do. In the end what you are looking for is clarity at the board or clarity in action. You want to be able to play a position. You want to be able to enter it if that plays to your strengths, and that is all that really matters. So even some false confidence is fine">

And he ascribes his famed "intuition" to hard work!

The author at Chessvibes calls Anand a "chess relativist" and compares him to Asimov instead of Capablanca! But that's ok I guess.

http://www.chessvibes.com/reports/t...

http://www.whychess.org/en/node/2112

Jul-16-12  visayanbraindoctor: <voyager39> Thanks for the links. Anand is simply a modest man; he is more talented than what he makes himself to be.

<I went to bed but I couldn’t sleep and I really had the feeling that since I’d not been able to create any chances so far I couldn’t see how I could come back in the match. And then you start to have these gloomy thoughts – what’s it going to be like as an ex-Champion? All this kind of stuff. But by the next morning at least I was able to generate some anger. I told myself, I have a week. I’m never going to be this close to correcting this mistake again. Once you lose the title you actually have to qualify for it again. The road always gets longer from there, so I told myself there’s another eight or nine days and I’m never going to have such a short path again, so if nothing else I’m going to at least try to give it my best shot from now and somehow motivate myself like this.>

This quote clearly shows that Anand has no intention of retiring yet; even if he loses his Title. Hope he plays until in his 50s ala Lasker.

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