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Topalov Ranked No. 1 Again, But Does It Matter?

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  • Topalov Ranked No. 1 Again, But Does It Matter?

    TOPALOV RANKED NO. 1 AGAIN, BUT DOES IT MATTER?

    Dylan Loeb McClain

    New York Times
    July 1, 2009, 4:11 pm

    The official world rankings from the World Chess Federation were
    released July 1 and there were no surprises. Veselin Topalov of
    Bulgaria is ranked No. 1, as he has been for the last year. Viswanathan
    Anand of India, the world champion, is No. 2, a spot that he has
    occupied most of the time since April 2004 (with a period at No. 1
    in 2007 and 2008). While the rankings are still important, if for
    no other reason than that they are often used by organizers of
    tournaments to figure out which players to invite to their events,
    they mean less than they once did. One difference is that people know
    what the rankings will be before they are released because unofficial
    estimates calculate changes accurately on a daily basis. But the
    importance of the rankings has also been diminished because the chess
    world is awash in parity. Lately, it seems any top player has a good
    chance to win a tournament in which he participates. For example, at
    the Corus tournament in January, Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine, currently
    No. 20, won, ahead of Magnus Carlsen of Norway, No. 3, Levon Aronian
    of Armenia, No. 4, and Teimour Radjabov of Azerbaijan, No. 8. In March,
    Alexander Grischuk of Russia, No. 14, and Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine,
    No. 30, tied for first at Linares, ahead of Anand and Carlsen. In May,
    Alexei Shirov of Spain, No. 15, won the M-tel Masters, ahead of Topalov
    and Carlsen, while Ivanchuk finished last. Shirov followed up that
    triumph by finishing last at the Karpov Tournament in Poikovsky, Russia
    in June. The tournament was won by Alexander Motylev of Russia, No. 27,
    ahead of Vugar Gashimov of Azerbaijan, No. 11. Shortly afterward,
    Ivanchuk found his form again and won the Kings Tournament in Bazna,
    Romania, ahead of Shirov, Radjabov and Boris Gelfand of Israel,
    No. 9. Such parity contrasts with the situation 20 years ago. Then,
    Garry Kasparov, who was world champion and ranked No. 1, bestrode
    the chess world. From 1981 to 1990, he won or tied for first in 15
    consecutive tournaments. While he did not continue to win at such an
    incredible pace during the 1990's, he still won most of the events
    he entered. Anatoly Karpov, Kasparov's predecessor as world champion,
    was almost equally dominant during his reign from 1975-85.

    With the advances in overall chess knowledge, it seems unlikely that
    anyone will ever be head-and-shoulders above the competition again.
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