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Chess: Aronian Easily Wins Melody Amber

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  • Chess: Aronian Easily Wins Melody Amber

    New York Times Blogs, NY
    March 29 2008


    Aronian Easily Wins Melody Amber

    By Dylan Loeb McClain

    Levon Aronian of Armenia ran away from the field to capture the
    annual Melody Amber tournament, which this year was held in Nice,
    France. The tournament ended Thursday. Aronian finished with 14.5
    points out of 22, 2.5 points ahead of a logjam of four players in
    second: Magnus Carlsen of Norway, Vladimir Kramnik of Russia, Peter
    Leko of Hungary and Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria. A list of the
    participants and the final standings are available on the
    tournament's Web site.
    The tournament had two parts: rapid games played at the rate of 25
    minutes per player per game, with 10 seconds added to each player's
    clock after each move, and blindfold games in which players typed
    their moves into a computer and could see only boards on a screen.
    Aronian won so handily because he excelled in both formats, although
    particularly in the rapid portion where he finished with 8 points,
    1.5 points ahead of Vassily Ivanchuk of the Ukraine.
    Aronian's victory was not a surprise. Over the last few years, he has
    established himself as one of the best players in the world, winning
    a number of major events. His most significant victories include the
    2005 World Cup, the Morelia-Linares super tournament in 2006 (sole
    first), the 2006 Tal Memorial in Moscow (tie for first with Leko and
    Ruslan Ponomariov of the Ukraine), the 2007 Corus tournament (tie for
    first with Topalov and Teimour Radjabov of Azerbaijan), and the 2008
    Corus tournament (tie for first with Carlsen). Aronian also won two
    candidates matches to earn the right to play in the World
    Championship tournament in Mexico City last year.
    If there was a surprise, it was the performance of Viswanathan Anand
    of India, the world champion. Anand finished in a tie for sixth,
    mostly because of his dismal results in the rapid games. Anand has
    been considered the best rapid player in the world for more than a
    decade, having even won the world rapid championships in Cap d'Agde
    in 2003. His performance at Melody Amber was almost certainly his
    worst rapid result ever.
    A bit less surprising was how Alexander Morozevich and Vladimir
    Kramnik of Russia did in the blindfold segment. Both are blindfold
    experts and usually distance themselves from the rest of the field.
    This year, they finished in a tie for the lead in the blindfold games
    with Topalov and Aronian. Aronian even beat Morozevich in their
    blindfold game.
    An unusual feature of the event was that most of the fireworks
    occurred in the rapid games, not the blindfold ones. Normally, the
    biggest mistakes and most dramatic victories are in blindfold games
    because players forget where some pieces are. That was not true this
    year as some of the shortest games were rapid ones, including
    Aronian's victory over Topalov in Round 7, Boris Gelfand of Israel's
    win over Anand in Round 10, and Ivanchuk's win over Topalov in Round
    11.

    http://gambit.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/29/aroni an-easily-wins-melody-amber/
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