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Chess: Three Favorites, One Surprise, in Final Four at World Cup

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  • Chess: Three Favorites, One Surprise, in Final Four at World Cup

    New York Times
    Dec 6 2009


    Three Favorites, One Surprise, in Final Four at World Cup

    By DYLAN LOEB MCCLAIN

    Though upsets continued at the World Cup in Khanty Mansiysk, Russia,
    three of the four semifinalists ' Boris Gelfand of Israel, Ruslan
    Ponomariov of Ukraine and Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine ' have enough of
    a pedigree to not count as surprises. But probably no one could have
    predicted the fourth, Vladimir Malakhov of Russia, who was the No. 22
    seed before the tournament began. He beat Peter Svidler of Russia, the
    No. 3 seed, in the quarterfinals.

    Gelfand is the No. 1 seed, so clearly his presence in the semifinals
    is not unexpected. He is, however, the oldest remaining player (he is
    41) and was one of the oldest players at the beginning of the rigorous
    event, so he has performed well, particularly in light of how many
    other top contenders fell by the wayside early on. In the
    quarterfinals, he outlasted Dmitry Jakovenko of Russia, No. 9, beating
    him in the second and third tie-breaker games after the two games of
    regulation ended in draws.

    Ponomariov, No. 7, has a great deal of experience in the format used
    by the World Cup. He won the World Chess Federation championship in
    2002, which was also a knockout event, and he was runner-up to Levon
    Aronian of Armenia in the 2005 World Cup. Like Gelfand, he won his
    quarterfinal match against Vugar Gashimov of Azerbaijan, No. 2, in the
    tie-breaker games, winning the first and second and then drawing the
    third. Ponomariov was a bit fortunate as he unsoundly sacrificed a
    piece in the first tie-break game, but Gashimov misplayed the
    position, allowing Ponomariov to advance a pawn far down the board,
    which ultimately decided the game.

    Karjakin, No. 12, is, at 19, the youngest semifinalist. He holds the
    record as the youngest grandmaster in history (12 years 7 months) and
    he was a semifinalist in the 2007 World Cup, so he has been here
    before. Oddly, while his compatriot, Ponomariov, was beating Gashimov,
    one of the two remaining players from Azerbaijan, Karjakin was beating
    the other, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, No. 13. Unlike Gelfand and
    Ponomariov, Karjakin took care of his opponent in the regulation part
    of the match by winning the first game. Mamedyarov lost by blundering
    in a rook-and-pawn endgame in which he could have probably held a
    draw, but instead walked into a mating net.

    Malakhov also won in regulation after Svidler, who was playing White,
    launched a wild attack in Game 1. Svidler went all out for checkmate,
    but overlooked something rather simple that allowed Malakhov to turn
    the tables and ensnare Svidler's king in a mating net. In Game 2,
    Malakhov had White and easily held a draw to send Svidler home.

    Though Malakhov is among the world's super grandmasters (those rated
    over 2,700), he is not all that well known, so much so that a search
    for him on Google first turns up the ballet dancer and the ice hockey
    player. Of course, few chess players share a name with people famous
    in other disciplines, but Malakhov is ranked No. 24 in the world,
    according to an unofficial, but reliable ranking list. Malakhov might
    have to win the World Cup to get a higher profile than the hockey
    player; the ballet dancer is probably out of reach.

    The semifinals begin Sunday.

    http://gambit.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/0 5/three-favorites-one-surprise-in-final-four-at-wo rld-cup/
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