THE WEEK IN CHESS 689 21st January 2008 by Mark Crowther

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Contents

1) Introduction
2) Robert James Fischer 1943-2008
3) Corus Wijk aan Zee
4) Maalot-Tarshiha
5) 68th Armenian Championship
6) ASEAN Masters Tarakan City
7) Keres Memorial
8) Belarus Championship
9) Croatian Chess Championship
10) Prague Open
11) 6th Parsvnath International Open
12) Corus-70 composing tourney 2007-8
13) Forthcoming Events and Links

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Games Section
Corus Wijk aan Zee 109 games
Maalot-Tarshiha 5 games
68th Armenian Championship 71 games
ASEAN Masters Tarakan City 114 games
Keres Memorial 90 games
Belarus Championship 49 games
Croatian Chess Championship 30 games
Prague Open 149 games
6th Parsvnath International Open 400 games
Corus-70 composing tourney 2007-8 26 problems
1017 games 26 problems

1) Introduction

My thanks to Pascal Villalba, Leonid Galperin, Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam, Sinisa Joksic, Jan Mazuch, Nigel Freeman, Steffen Wirths, Kristianus Liem, Yochanan Afek, Frits Agterdenbos, Michiel Abeln and everyone else who helped with the issue.

The death of Bobby Fischer brings to an end an epic story of glory and disgrace. Fischer was responsible for the boom in chess that brought many people of around my age and older into the game. I give an obituary below which was compiled on the road in Wijk aan Zee so is perhaps not as comprohensive as I would have liked. I've spent many, many hours of my life with his games and that's what he should be remember for, not the sad decline where he gave into mental illness that was probably always with him and that concentrating on his chess helped him cope with.

Wijk aan Zee is a terrific place to be at this time of year. The A-Group is being led by Magnus Carlsen and it would be great for him to break through and win here but there is, of course some way to go and he has Kramnik, Aronian, Radjabov and Anand all within striking distance. I'm writing more detailed reports daily on the front page.

Finally apologies to those who sent material that didn't make it this week. I simply ran out of time in the end, just too much to do in Wijk aan Zee, I will publish the stories when I get home in TWIC 690.

Hope you enjoy this issue.

Mark

2) Robert James Fischer 1943-2008

Robert James "Bobby" Fischer was born in Chicago, Illinois USA 9th March 1943 died in Reykjavic, Iceland 17th January 2008 at the age of 64 of kidney problems. He achieved international fame and notoriety at the height of cold war on the way to becoming World Chess Champion in 1972.

Bobby Fischer learned his chess in Brooklyn New York at the age of 6. His progress at first was not spectacular but by the age of 13 he, in his own words "got good". He became US Junior Champion in 1956 and defended it the following year. Increasingly good results allowed him entry to the 1958 Championships. In a shock result he won the first of his eight US Championship titles (every time he entered) with 10.5/13, becoming in January 1958, at the age of 14, the youngest US champion and with it he became an International Master (the youngest at the time).

Its only possible to go through some of the key moments of Fischer's career, especially as its so well known.

Fischer qualified for the 1958 World Championship Interzonal in Portorož, Slovenia, his first international tournament. Just as in his first US Championships Fischer was not expected to do very well in the Interzonal but his idea of targetting the weaker players and drawing with the stronger came off and Fischer edged out David Bronstein amongst others to qualify for the Candidates and become the youngest Grandmaster in history to that time at the age of 15.

Portoroz Interzonal, viii-ix 1958
1 Tal,M 13.5  
2 Gligoric,S 13  
3 Petrosian,T 12.5 117.25
4 Benko,P 12.5 115.25
5 Olafsson,F 12 115.75
6 Fischer,R 12 106
7 Bronstein,D 11.5 112.75
8 Averbakh,Y 11.5 105.5
9 Matanovic,A 11.5 105.5
10 Szabo,L 11.5 100.75
11 Pachman,L 11.5 99.75
12 Panno,O 11 104.25
13 Filip,M 11 98
14 Sanguineti,R 10  
15 Neikirkh,O 9.5  
16 Larsen,B 8.5  
17 Sherwin,J 7.5  
18 Rossetto,H 7  
19 Cardoso,Ro 6  
20 De Greiff,B 4.5  
21 Fuster,G 2  

Fischer warmed up for the Candidates tournament in Bled/Zagreb/Belgrade 1959 with respectable finishes in some international tournaments. He fought extremely hard and became the top western finisher in a creditable 5th from 8.

Candidates Bled/Zagreb/Belgrade Yugoslavia, ix-x 1959
1 Tal M 20  
2 Keres P 18.5  
3 Petrosian T 15.5  
4 Smyslov V 15  
5 Fischer R 12.5 156.5
6 Gligoric S 12.5 162
7 Olafsson F 10  
8 Benko P 8  

The Soviet players had revealed some of his weaknesses but its clear they already feared him. Already Fischer was a true star in the chess world and his play rapidly continued to improve.

Fischer tied with Boris Spassky in Mar-del-Plata 1960 losing their individual game. In Buenos Aires 1960 he had his only true failure as a professional finishing 13th from 20 with 8.5/19. In a harbinger of things to come the 1961 match between Fischer and Sammy Reshevsky was abandoned when Fischer walked out in a dispute over the playing schedule. Fischer finished in 2nd place in Bled in an international tournament but had the satisfaction of beating Mikhail Tal for the first time.

Fischer qualified for the Interzonal in 1962 in Stockholm and at 19 he won the event by a two and a half point margin and clearly thought he was on his way to taking the world title.

Interzonal Stockholm, i-iii 1962
1 Fischer,R 17.5  
2 Geller,E 15 161.25
3 Petrosian,T 15 152.5
4 Korchnoi,V 14 144.25
5 Filip,M 14 139.5
6 Gligoric,S 13.5 135.75
7 Benko,P 13.5 134.5
8 Stein,L 13.5 131.75
9 Uhlmann,W 12.5 134.75
10 Portisch,L 12.5 126.75
11 Pomar,A 12 116.75
12 Olafsson,F 12 111
13 Bolbochan,Ju 11.5  
14 Barcza,G 11 112.25
15 Bilek,I 11 96.75
16 Bisguier,A 9.5  
17 Yanofsky,D 7.5 76.25
18 Bertok,M 7.5 73.5
19 German,E 7 66
20 Schweber,S 7 62.5
21 Teschner,R 6.5  
22 Cuellar,M 5.5  
23 Aaron,M 4  

The Candidates tournament in Curacao 1962 was to be the biggest disappointment of Fischer's career. He never really settled to the task, had fights with Benko over the use of the one US second there and there are even more strange stories in Brad Darrasch's "Bobby Fischer vs the Rest of the World" a book which annoyed Fischer greatly but in retrospect seemed to get closer to what it was like to be around him than Frank Brady's "Bobby Fischer Profile of a Prodigy" which generally presents a picture of Fischer that I would like to be true but probably never was.

Candidates Curacao v-vi 1962
1 Petrosian T 17.5
2 Keres P 17
3 Geller E 17
4 Fischer R 14
5 Korchnoi V 13.5
6 Benko P 12
7 Tal M 7
8 Filip M 7

Even though the result of 4th from 8 was in some ways an improvement Fischer didn't see things that way. He accused the Soviet players of throwing games against each other and playing hard against him. All this may have had some truth to it but he wasn't playing nearly well enough to be affected. However his upset led to him not playing an international event for three years outside of the Olympiad of the same year. It was around this time he joined the "Worldwide Church of God" a cult pretending to be a religion founded by Herbert Armstrong. It can't be said to have had a positive effect on Fischer.

He played very little in 1963 including missing out on the 1st Piatigorsky Cup in Santa Monica. In December 1963 over into January 1964 Fischer made a huge impact in the US with his 11/11 perfect score in the US Championships.

In 1965 Fischer returned to international chess by accepting an invitation to play in the Capablanca Memorial in Havana. Because of the Cuban Missile Crisis US - Cuban relations were at an all time low. He didn't receive permission to travel to Cuba. Instead he played by telegraph from the Frank Marshall Chess Club in New York. His games lasted much longer than everyone elses and his 3rd place finish was extremely creditable. It also paved the way for US participation in the Olympiad there in 1966. 1966 also saw Fischer finish 2nd half a point behind Spassky in the 2nd Piatigorsky Cup but only after a bad start where he was trying to find the perfect hotel room. It was only on the intervention of Spassky that he calmed down and just got on with playing.

1967 saw wins in Skopje and Monte Carlo before he went to the Sousse Interzonal where he started with 7/9 playing his most impressive chess of his career so far. However he had a backlog of games due to his religious observances and withdrew when they couldn't be resolved. He played a couple of events in 1968 winning in Netanya and Vinkovci. 1969 was a blank year, he also missed the US Championships which were also a Zonal for the World Championships. It seemed like he wouldn't be able to win the World Title until 1975 at the earliest.

However the US Chess Federation and executive director Edmund Edmondson decided to step in and try and get him into the 1970-2 cycle. He had an immediate effect in that Fischer returned to chess with a vengeance in 1970 starting with a 3-1 win in his mini-match against Tigran Petrosian in the USSR vs the Rest of the World in Belgrade. He followed this with a win in the Herceg Novi blitz a type of chess the Soviets didn't rate him at. Then he won the Rovinj Zagreb tournament ahead of Hort, Smyslov and Korchnoi. He then won a tournament in Buenos Aires with 15/17 before attending the Siegen Olympiad where a decision as to whether Fischer could play in the Interzonal was to be taken. Fischer lost a famous game to Spassky but won the decision. He was in to the Palma de Mallorca Interzonal where with an 18.5/23 score three and a half points clear of the field.

Interzonal Palma de Mallorca xi-xii 1970
1 Fischer,R 18.5  
2 Larsen,B 15 167.5
3 Geller,E 15 167
4 Huebner,R 15 155.25
5 Taimanov,M 14 146.5
6 Uhlmann,W 14 141.5
7 Portisch,L 13.5 149.75
8 Smyslov,V 13.5 141
9 Polugaevsky,L 13 146.75
10 Gligoric,S 13 135.5
11 Panno,O 12.5 130.75
12 Mecking,H 12.5 130
13 Hort,V 11.5  
14 Ivkov,B 10.5  
15 Suttles,D 10 105.75
16 Minic,D 10 96
17 Reshevsky,S 9.5  
18 Matulovic,M 9 98.5
19 Addison,W 9 95.25
20 Filip,M 8.5 91.5
21 Naranja,R 8.5 88.75
22 Ujtumen,T 8.5 85.25
23 Rubinetti,J 6  
24 Jimenez,E 5.5  

Thus Fischer was in the Candidates Matches series which attracted worldwide headlines as he beat Mark Taimanov 6-0, Bent Larsen 6-0 and then went 1-0 up against Tigran Petrosian in the final to make it 21 wins in a row a run starting with wins at the end of the Interzonal. Petrosian won the next game but after three draws lost four in a row and the match.

The match against Boris Spassky was at the height of the cold war and actually dominated the news. Fischer it seemed got cold feet and made demands over the venue and the prize fund. The venue was finally decided as Reykjavic and all seemed set. Then at the last minute Fischer refused to travel unless the prize fund was increased London financier Jim Slater added $125,000 to take the fund to a record $250,000. Fischer was still late, was defaulted game one, the default was reversed and then Fischer lost when grabbing a pawn he shouldn't have. Game two he did default when he claimed he could hear the cameras and that the audience was too close. Just when people thought the match was over there was a compromise, game three was in a table tennis room off the main venue with a close circuit camera. 2-0 down Fischer played the Modern Benoni as black and won a smashing game. Fischer was up and running and with wins in games 5,6, 8 and 10 had virtually secured the title. Spassky's only win came in game 11 but a win for Fischer in game 13 restored a lead that was never to be narrowed and the final score was 12.5 - 8.5. He had become the 11th World Chess Champion at the age of 29 and the possibilities seemed limitless.

An interesting postscript is that some of the games were filmed, maybe all of them, but certainly footage of games one and three (a video feed) exist and due to legal problems they've never seen the light of day. Perhaps it will be possible for them to be shown now.

In the aftermath he was a big celebrity promising to defend the title every year but the longer he spent not playing chess the harder it would be for him to live up to his achievements of the previous two years. He issued a series of demands including asking for the title to be defended with first to 10 wins. Negotiations for a 1975 match against Anatoly Karpov fell through and having not played for 3 years his chances would, in my view, have not been good. FIDE came to the opinion that Fischer wasn't going to play (and in retrospect they were almost certainly right on this point`) and so defaulted him and made his challenger Anatoly Karpov World Champion. Fischer disappeared apparently living on the streets or in reduced circumstances occasionally being seen distributing dubious pamphlets. He published a book in 1982 "I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse!" about a 1981 arrest but otherwise had a low profile living with people in the US, Germany and elsewhere.

Fischer was just about broke in 1992 and it was classically for him in a Yugoslavia that was tearing itself apart in civil war with many new countries appearing that he returned. There was sponsorship from a bank (Yugoskandic) that subsequently went bankrupt (Fischer earned and got paid at least $3m) and the match took place on the island of Sveti Stefan and then in Belgrade in Yugoslavia. His opponent was, as 20 years before, Boris Spassky. Fischer was warned by a fax from the US state department against playing the match because of US sanctions against Yugoslavia. The US government didn't seriously follow this up until much later. Fischer publically spat on the fax in a press conference and the match was on. The match was played first to 10 wins as he had always wanted and played with an electronic clock he had patented in 1988 which allowed increments to be added every time a move was made. As this kind of time limit became standard it was name after him even though others including David Bronstein had similar ideas. The first game was a logical Ruy Lopez which reminded people of his better days, game 9 was a win in an Exchange Ruy Lopez straight out of old preparation and Game 11 was a highly entertaining sacrificial win but neither Spassky nor Fischer were what they had been and some modern players were very critical of the over all quality. Fischer took the match +10 -5 =15. This match was covered on the fledgling internet and it was the first time I'd ever heard of such a thing. Its highly likely that I'd be doing something else without this match and its coverage.

Fischer then stayed in Hungary for a time both on his own, and with modern players such as Judit Polgar and Peter Leko. In 1996 he pitched up in Buenos Aires with the idea of Fischer Random Chess. Apparently he was a bit disturbed how much chess theory had come along since 1972 and realised he couldn't catch up.

Then for a while he disappeared again but in 1999 he started ringing radio stations, spouting all kind of anti-Jewish, anti-American and anti-modern chess thoughts most famously he was being interviewed live when the September 11th 2001 twin towers attack occurred he said "This is all wonderful news. What goes around comes around even for the United States". All his broadcasts are a stressful listen but if you're up for it they're online at: http://www.fischer.jp/

In 2003 Fischer's passport was revoked silently by the US for the breaking of the trade sanctions with Yugoslavia in 1992 (and most probably his 9/11 comments), in 2004 he was arrested at at Narita International Airport and detained until March 2005 when Iceland granted him a passport. The US were serious about getting him back to the states and tried everything in its power to get it done but in the end Japan decided to allow him to travel to Iceland.

See a late interview with Fischer at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/video/2008/jan/18/bobby.fischer

With so many problems worldwide the US spending so much time and trouble to get him back did seem a little pathetic on their part and any trial wouldn't have reflected well on anyone. Fischer travelled to and lived in Iceland until his death on 17th January 2007. Four months ago he went into hospital for treatment of long standing kidney problems but after a couple of months he was sent home to die as there was nothing more the doctors could do.

Fischer's greatness was the clarity, precision and beauty of his chess games, the battling uncompromising nature he took to every tournament and match he ever played and the sheer drama of his chess career. His personal demands and the way he raised the profile of chess led to improved conditions for a whole generation that followed him. He took on the Soviet Chess Machine virtually alone and won, at least over the board. It probably cost him everything else in his life. When I was younger he was my absolute hero.

His contributions to chess included his deep opening preparation (he completely changed the standard), certain endgames and in general his clear style popularised the game.

But you cannot ignore the dark side of Fischer. His obsession with Jewish conspiracies in spite of both his parents being Jewish (his real father was recently revealed as being physicist Paul Nemenyi rather than Hans Gerhardt Fischer who was his sister's father), his hatred of the United States, in spite of being a proud representative of them for many years, his contempt for modern chess (Kasparov - Karpov matches being fixed move by move), his contempt for chess (lets change the rules) and finally his contempt for his own play by not competing since winning the title apart from the brief 1992 comeback are all black marks against his name. He couldn't organise his own life and his list of hates so close to home perhaps signify a deep self loathing. Many of the petty things he railed against are met day by day by people who work in the real world. He doesn't pay to keep things in storage they get sold off. The Swiss don't want his bank account anymore but he refuses to have the money transferred. Its hard not to see the problems with the US as being at least in part self inflicted. He was charasmatic and some of the press conferences in Yugoslavia were quite funny but he drove most of his friends away and most of all damaged himself and his own interests all the time. His life since 1972 was very sad and long endgame almost certainly due to untreated mental illness.

Above all Fischer left us with his games and in particular the book (composed with the help of Larry Evans) "My 60 Memorable Games". This is perhaps his greatest gift to the game and for which he should really be remembered and I will certainly try and hold on to that.

You can't pick a small number of Fischer games but I have to so I choose two I have a fondness for. The first is against a Mongolian player who is famous for losing this game. Its just a really nice example of how he beat weaker players, with simplicity and directness.

Fischer,Robert James - Myagmarsuren,Lhamsuren [C00]
Sousse Interzonal+ Sousse (3), 1967

1.e4 e6 2.d3 d5 3.Nd2 Nf6 4.g3 c5 5.Bg2 Nc6 6.Ngf3 Be7 7.0–0 0–0 8.e5 Nd7 9.Re1 b5 10.Nf1 b4 11.h4 a5 12.Bf4 a4 13.a3 bxa3 14.bxa3 Na5 15.Ne3 Ba6 16.Bh3 d4 17.Nf1 Nb6 18.Ng5 Nd5 19.Bd2 Bxg5 20.Bxg5 Qd7 21.Qh5 Rfc8 22.Nd2 Nc3 23.Bf6 Qe8 24.Ne4 g6 25.Qg5 Nxe4 26.Rxe4 c4 27.h5 cxd3 28.Rh4 Ra7 29.Bg2 dxc2 30.Qh6 Qf8 31.Qxh7+ 1–0

The second is from his triumph over Boris Spassky. An almost exclusively 1.e4 player for most of his career with just the occasional 1.c4 and b3 Fischer varied his openings with both black and white. Here he takes on Spassky, by transposition in one of his favourite defences to 1.d4 and blows him away, Fischer had never played the white side of a Queen's Gambit in his professional career before.

Fischer,Robert James (2785) - Spassky,Boris V (2660) [D59]
World Championship 28th Reykjavik (6), 23.07.1972

1.c4 e6 2.Nf3 d5 3.d4 Nf6 4.Nc3 Be7 5.Bg5 0–0 6.e3 h6 7.Bh4 b6 8.cxd5 Nxd5 9.Bxe7 Qxe7 10.Nxd5 exd5 11.Rc1 Be6 12.Qa4 c5 13.Qa3 Rc8 14.Bb5 a6 15.dxc5 bxc5 16.0–0 Ra7 17.Be2 Nd7 18.Nd4 Qf8 19.Nxe6 fxe6 20.e4 d4 21.f4 Qe7 22.e5 Rb8 23.Bc4 Kh8 24.Qh3 Nf8 25.b3 a5 26.f5 exf5 27.Rxf5 Nh7 28.Rcf1 Qd8 29.Qg3 Re7 30.h4 Rbb7

And now Fischer finishes things off with brutal efficiency.

31.e6! Rbc7 32.Qe5 Qe8 33.a4 Qd8 34.R1f2 Qe8 35.R2f3 Qd8 36.Bd3 Qe8 37.Qe4 Nf6 38.Rxf6 gxf6 39.Rxf6 Kg8 40.Bc4 Kh8 41.Qf4 1–0

Tributes and Obituaries

ChessVibes - Has tributes to Fischer

http://www.chessclub.com/ including a special John Watson Book Show on the subject

Canadian CBC Report, Windows Media file

Leonard Barden in the Guardian
Stephen Moss in the Guardian
Daily Telegraph

3) Corus Wijk aan Zee

The Corus Chess Tournament 2008 takes place 11th-27th January 2008 in Wijk aan Zee. The tournament venue is the De Moriaan Community Centre.

Dates Rd1-4 12th-15th, Rd5-8 17th-20th, Rd9-10 22nd-23rd, Rd11-13 25th-27th Jan 2008.

Official site: http://www.coruschess.com

Fred Lucas takes many photos at the event: http://www.fredlucas.eu. Frits Agterdenbos has daily photo reports: http://www.chessvista.com/. Commentary: http://www.chessdom.com/. Chess Videos: http://www.chessvibes.com/. http://www.chessclub.com/ has daily live coverage and also John Watson interviews Wijk tournament director Jeroen van den Berg on his Book show. Direct link - Etienne Bacrot annotates his own games: http://www.chess22.fr/ - Ian Rogers blogging from Wijk: http://main.uschess.org/ - John Lee Shaw on the spot: http://www.chessgateway.com/ - Europe Echecs has videos: http://www.europe-echecs.com/

Corus Wijk aan Zee 2008 A-Group 11th-27th January 2008
Round 4 (January 15, 2008)
Carlsen, Magnus - Aronian, Levon ½-½ 36 C84 Ruy Lopez Centre Attack
Kramnik, Vladimir - Eljanov, Pavel 1-0 68 A16 English Opening
Radjabov, Teimour - Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar ½-½ 28 D97 Gruenfeld Russian
Anand, Viswanathan - Adams, Michael ½-½ 56 E15 Queens Indian
Van Wely, Loek - Topalov, Veselin 1-0 81 A43 Old Benoni
Lékó, Peter - Ivanchuk, Vassily ½-½ 42 B17 Caro Kann
Gelfand, Boris - Polgar, Judit 0-1 40 E01 Catalan
Round 5 (January 17, 2008)
Aronian, Levon - Anand, Viswanathan ½-½ 20 D43 Anti-Meran Gambit
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar - Van Wely, Loek 1-0 41 B20 Sicilian Wing Gambit
Ivanchuk, Vassily - Carlsen, Magnus ½-½ 20 C69 Ruy Lopez Exchange
Adams, Michael - Kramnik, Vladimir ½-½ 25 C42 Petroff's Defence
Topalov, Veselin - Gelfand, Boris 1-0 28 C42 Petroff's Defence
Polgar, Judit - Lékó, Peter ½-½ 35 C89 Ruy Lopez Marshall
Eljanov, Pavel - Radjabov, Teimour 0-1 33 E70 King's Indian Fianchetto
Round 6 (January 18, 2008)
Carlsen, Magnus - Polgar, Judit 1-0 52 E37 Nimzo Indian 4.Qc2
Kramnik, Vladimir - Aronian, Levon 1-0 110 D43 Anti-Meran Gambit
Radjabov, Teimour - Adams, Michael ½-½ 25 C69 Ruy Lopez Exchange
Anand, Viswanathan - Ivanchuk, Vassily ½-½ 18 B18 Caro Kann
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar - Eljanov, Pavel ½-½ 66 C53 Giuoco Piano
Van Wely, Loek - Gelfand, Boris ½-½ 16 E15 Queens Indian
Lékó, Peter - Topalov, Veselin 0-1 66 B90 Sicilian Najdorf Variation
Round 7 (January 19, 2008)
Aronian, Levon - Radjabov, Teimour 1-0 48 E61 King's Indian Defence
Ivanchuk, Vassily - Kramnik, Vladimir ½-½ 37 C42 Petroff's Defence
Adams, Michael - Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar ½-½ 62 C76 Ruy Lopez Modern Steinitz
Topalov, Veselin - Carlsen, Magnus ½-½ 56 C88 Ruy Lopez Closed
Polgar, Judit - Anand, Viswanathan 0-1 53 B90 Sicilian Najdorf Variation
Gelfand, Boris - Lékó, Peter ½-½ 49 E01 Catalan
Eljanov, Pavel - Van Wely, Loek ½-½ 72 D11 Slav Defence
Round 8 (January 20, 2008)
Carlsen, Magnus - Gelfand, Boris ½-½ 67 D45 Anti-Meran Variations
Kramnik, Vladimir - Polgar, Judit ½-½ 49 A15 English counter King's Fianchetto
Radjabov, Teimour - Ivanchuk, Vassily ½-½ 28 B19 Caro Kann
Anand, Viswanathan - Topalov, Veselin 1-0 40 B90 Sicilian Najdorf Variation
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar - Aronian, Levon ½-½ 27 D47 Queens Gambit Meran
Van Wely, Loek - Lékó, Peter ½-½ 27 E32 Nimzo Indian 4.Qc2
Eljanov, Pavel - Adams, Michael ½-½ 20 E04 Catalan

Corus A Wijk aan Zee (NED), 12-27 i 2008 cat. XX (2742)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4
1. Carlsen, Magnus g NOR 2733 * . ½ . . 1 ½ ½ . . ½ 1 ½ 1 2877
2. Kramnik, Vladimir g RUS 2799 . * 1 ½ . ½ ½ ½ ½ . . ½ . 1 5 2818
3. Aronian, Levon g ARM 2739 ½ 0 * 1 ½ ½ . . . ½ 1 . 1 . 5 2857
4. Radjabov, Teimour g AZE 2735 . ½ 0 * 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ . . . . 1 2786
5. Anand, Viswanathan g IND 2799 . . ½ 0 * ½ ½ ½ . . 1 1 . ½ 2779
6. Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar g AZE 2760 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * . ½ 1 . . . . ½ 4 2738
7. Ivanchuk, Vassily g UKR 2751 ½ ½ . ½ ½ . * . . ½ ½ ½ ½ . 4 2755
8. Adams, Michael g ENG 2726 ½ ½ . ½ ½ ½ . * . ½ . . ½ ½ 4 2751
9. Van Wely, Loek g NED 2681 . ½ . ½ . 0 . . * ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 4 2745
10. Lékó, Peter g HUN 2753 . . ½ . . . ½ ½ ½ * 0 ½ ½ ½ 2683
11. Topalov, Veselin g BUL 2780 ½ . 0 . 0 . ½ . 0 1 * ½ 1 . 2694
12. Polgar, Judit g HUN 2707 0 ½ . . 0 . ½ . ½ ½ ½ * 1 . 2711
13. Gelfand, Boris g ISR 2737 ½ . 0 . . . ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 0 * . 2592
14. Eljanov, Pavel g UKR 2692 0 0 . 0 ½ ½ . ½ ½ ½ . . . * 2607

Corus Wijk aan Zee 2008 B-Group 11th-27th January 2008
Round 4 (January 15, 2008)
Bacrot, Etienne - Movsesian, Sergei ½-½ 61 D38 QGD Ragozin
Short, Nigel D - Koneru, Humpy ½-½ 40 C43 Petroff's Defence
Harikrishna, P - Spoelman, Wouter 1-0 80 A46 Queen's Pawn Opening
Krasenkow, Michal - Smeets, Jan ½-½ 34 D11 Slav Defence
Hou Yifan - Stellwagen, Daniël ½-½ 48 B85 Sicilian Scheveningen
Cheparinov, Ivan - Nepomniachtchi, Ian 1-0 29 D43 Anti-Meran Gambit
Sargissian, Gabriel - L'Ami, Erwin ½-½ 48 A29 English Four Knights
Round 5 (January 17, 2008)
Movsesian, Sergei - Harikrishna, P ½-½ 48 C50 Giuoco Piano
Smeets, Jan - Bacrot, Etienne 0-1 38 C89 Ruy Lopez Marshall
Stellwagen, Daniël - Short, Nigel D ½-½ 36 C72 Ruy Lopez Modern Steinitz
L'Ami, Erwin - Cheparinov, Ivan 1-0 29 D43 Anti-Meran Gambit
Nepomniachtchi, Ian - Krasenkow, Michal ½-½ 61 C65 Ruy Lopez Berlin
Koneru, Humpy - Sargissian, Gabriel ½-½ 59 D47 Queens Gambit Meran
Spoelman, Wouter - Hou Yifan ½-½ 33 C18 French Winawer
Round 6 (January 18, 2008)
Bacrot, Etienne - Nepomniachtchi, Ian ½-½ 16 B90 Sicilian Najdorf Variation
Short, Nigel D - Sargissian, Gabriel 1-0 34 C52 Evans Gambit
Stellwagen, Daniël - Spoelman, Wouter 1-0 34 C96 Ruy Lopez
Harikrishna, P - Smeets, Jan 0-1 65 A07 Barcza System
Krasenkow, Michal - L'Ami, Erwin 1-0 54 D02 Queen's Pawn Game
Hou Yifan - Movsesian, Sergei 0-1 66 B28 Sicilian Early a7-a6
Cheparinov, Ivan - Koneru, Humpy ½-½ 57 C96 Ruy Lopez
Round 7 (January 19, 2008)
Movsesian, Sergei - Stellwagen, Daniël 1-0 58 B47 Sicilian Paulsen
Smeets, Jan - Hou Yifan 0-1 58 C13 French Classical
L'Ami, Erwin - Bacrot, Etienne ½-½ 22 D45 Anti-Meran Variations
Nepomniachtchi, Ian - Harikrishna, P ½-½ 122 C72 Ruy Lopez Modern Steinitz
Koneru, Humpy - Krasenkow, Michal 1-0 94 A41 Modern Defence
Sargissian, Gabriel - Cheparinov, Ivan ½-½ 43 D77 Gruenfeld 3.g3
Spoelman, Wouter - Short, Nigel D ½-½ 20 C91 Ruy Lopez
Round 8 (January 20, 2008)
Bacrot, Etienne - Koneru, Humpy ½-½ 123 D38 QGD Ragozin
Short, Nigel D - Cheparinov, Ivan 1-0 72 B92 Sicilian Najdorf with 6.Be2
Stellwagen, Daniël - Smeets, Jan ½-½ 33 B23 Sicilian Closed
Harikrishna, P - L'Ami, Erwin ½-½ 66 C46 Four Knights
Krasenkow, Michal - Sargissian, Gabriel 1-0 45 D47 Queens Gambit Meran
Hou Yifan - Nepomniachtchi, Ian ½-½ 69 C11 French Defence
Spoelman, Wouter - Movsesian, Sergei 0-1 29 B46 Sicilian Paulsen

Corus B Wijk aan Zee (NED), 12-27 i 2008 cat. XV (2618)
1. Movsesian, Sergei g SVK 2677 * ½ . . 1 ½ . . 1 . 1 ½ ½ 1 6 2813
2. Bacrot, Etienne g FRA 2700 ½ * . 1 ½ . ½ ½ . ½ 1 . . 1 2718
3. Short, Nigel D g ENG 2645 . . * . ½ ½ 1 . . ½ 0 1 1 ½ 5 2697
4. Smeets, Jan g NED 2573 . 0 . * ½ 1 . . ½ 1 0 1 ½ . 2687
5. Stellwagen, Daniël g NED 2625 0 ½ ½ ½ * ½ . . 1 . ½ . . 1 2648
6. Harikrishna, P g IND 2664 ½ . ½ 0 ½ * ½ ½ . . 1 . . 1 2624
7. L'Ami, Erwin g NED 2581 . ½ 0 . . ½ * ½ 0 1 . 1 ½ . 4 2655
8. Nepomniachtchi, Ian g RUS 2600 . ½ . . . ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ 0 1 . 4 2638
9. Krasenkow, Michal g POL 2636 0 . . ½ 0 . 1 ½ * 0 . . 1 1 4 2596
10. Koneru, Humpy g IND 2612 . ½ ½ 0 . . 0 ½ 1 * . ½ ½ . 2597
11. Hou Yifan wg CHN 2527 0 0 1 1 ½ 0 . ½ . . * . . ½ 2570
12. Cheparinov, Ivan g BUL 2713 ½ . 0 0 . . 0 1 . ½ . * ½ 1 2555
13. Sargissian, Gabriel g ARM 2676 ½ . 0 ½ . . ½ 0 0 ½ . ½ * . 2488
14. Spoelman, Wouter m NED 2424 0 0 ½ . 0 0 . . 0 . ½ 0 . * 1 2326

Corus Wijk aan Zee 2008 C-Group 11th-27th January 2008
Round 4 (January 15, 2008)
Caruana, Fabiano - Reinderman, Dimitri ½-½ 39 B28 Sicilian Early a7-a6
Braun, Arik - Van der Werf, Mark 1-0 22 D31 Semi-Slav Defence
Van der Wiel, John - Peng Zhaoqin ½-½ 15 B48 Sicilian Paulsen
Carlsson, Pontus - Ruijgrok, Dennis 1-0 28 C95 Ruy Lopez Breyer
Ushenina, Anna - Nijboer, Friso 0-1 63 B22 Sicilian Alapin
Krush, Irina - Grivas, Efstratios 0-1 70 A83 Dutch Staunton Gambit
Li Shilong - Negi, Parimarjan 0-1 48 D53 Queens Gambit
Round 5 (January 17, 2008)
Reinderman, Dimitri - Carlsson, Pontus 1-0 67 B70 Sicilian Dragon
Negi, Parimarjan - Ushenina, Anna 1-0 28 D21 QGA
Grivas, Efstratios - Caruana, Fabiano ½-½ 36 D11 Slav Defence
Nijboer, Friso - Krush, Irina 1-0 29 B63 Sicilian Rauzer
Van der Werf, Mark - Van der Wiel, John ½-½ 20 A15 English counter King's Fianchetto
Peng Zhaoqin - Li Shilong ½-½ 37 E97 King's Indian Classical
Ruijgrok, Dennis - Braun, Arik ½-½ 58 B19 Caro Kann
Round 6 (January 18, 2008)
Braun, Arik - Reinderman, Dimitri ½-½ 60 E81 King's Indian Saemisch
Van der Wiel, John - Ruijgrok, Dennis ½-½ 47 C45 Scotch Game
Nijboer, Friso - Negi, Parimarjan 1-0 52 C89 Ruy Lopez Marshall
Carlsson, Pontus - Grivas, Efstratios ½-½ 22 C80 Ruy Lopez Open
Ushenina, Anna - Peng Zhaoqin 1-0 69 D22 QGA
Krush, Irina - Caruana, Fabiano 1-0 57 D19 Slav Defence
Li Shilong - Van der Werf, Mark 0-1 55 D30 Queen's Gambit (without Nc3)
Round 7 (January 19, 2008)
Caruana, Fabiano - Carlsson, Pontus 1-0 36 B90 Sicilian Najdorf Variation
Reinderman, Dimitri - Van der Wiel, John ½-½ 16 B56 Sicilian Defence
Negi, Parimarjan - Krush, Irina 1-0 39 B66 Sicilian Rauzer
Grivas, Efstratios - Braun, Arik 1-0 24 D11 Slav Defence
Van der Werf, Mark - Ushenina, Anna 0-1 77 D39 QGD Ragozin
Peng Zhaoqin - Nijboer, Friso ½-½ 29 A88 Dutch Leningrad
Ruijgrok, Dennis - Li Shilong ½-½ 49 B56 Sicilian Defence
Round 8 (January 20, 2008)
Braun, Arik - Caruana, Fabiano 0-1 52 D19 Slav Defence
Van der Wiel, John - Grivas, Efstratios 1-0 29 B32 Sicilian Labourdonnais
Negi, Parimarjan - Peng Zhaoqin 1-0 63 B48 Sicilian Paulsen
Nijboer, Friso - Van der Werf, Mark 0-1 60 C92 Ruy Lopez Chigorin
Ushenina, Anna - Ruijgrok, Dennis 1-0 38 D83 Gruenfeld 4.Bf4
Krush, Irina - Carlsson, Pontus 1-0 33 E55 Nimzo Indian
Li Shilong - Reinderman, Dimitri 0-1 48 A87 Dutch Leningrad

Corus C Wijk aan Zee (NED), 12-27 i 2008 cat. X (2494)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4
1. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2598 * ½ 1 . . ½ . 1 1 . 0 . 1 1 6 2659
2. Reinderman, Dimitri g NED 2533 ½ * ½ ½ . ½ . . 1 . ½ 1 . 1 2633
3. Braun, Arik m GER 2536 0 ½ * . 1 0 1 1 . . . . 1 ½ 5 2585
4. Van der Wiel, John g NED 2490 . ½ . * 0 1 1 ½ . 1 . . ½ ½ 5 2571
5. Negi, Parimarjan g IND 2526 . . 0 1 * . 0 . 0 1 1 1 1 . 5 2598
6. Grivas, Efstratios g GRE 2509 ½ ½ 1 0 . * . 0 ½ . 1 . . 1 2524
7. Nijboer, Friso g NED 2578 . . 0 0 1 . * 0 . 1 1 1 ½ . 2525
8. Van der Werf, Mark m NED 2389 0 . 0 ½ . 1 1 * ½ 0 . 1 . . 4 2524
9. Carlsson, Pontus m SWE 2501 0 0 . . 1 ½ . ½ * . 0 . ½ 1 2434
10. Ushenina, Anna m UKR 2484 . . . 0 0 . 0 1 . * ½ 0 1 1 2425
11. Krush, Irina m USA 2473 1 ½ . . 0 0 0 . 1 ½ * 0 . . 3 2441
12. Li Shilong g CHN 2502 . 0 . . 0 . 0 0 . 1 1 * ½ ½ 3 2384
13. Peng Zhaoqin g NED 2461 0 . 0 ½ 0 . ½ . ½ 0 . ½ * . 2 2333
14. Ruijgrok, Dennis NED 2329 0 0 ½ ½ . 0 . . 0 0 . ½ . * 2268

Corus Honorary Wijk aan Zee (NED), 19-26 i 2008 cat. XIII (2560)
Round 1 (January 19, 2008)
Korchnoi, Viktor - Portisch, Lajos 1-0 66 D37 QGD 5.Bf4
Ljubojevic, Ljubomir - Timman, Jan H 0-1 45 E00 Catalan
Round 2 (January 20, 2008)
Korchnoi, Viktor - Timman, Jan H ½-½ 53 E34 Nimzo Indian 4.Qc2
Portisch, Lajos - Ljubojevic, Ljubomir ½-½ 14 D45 Anti-Meran Variations

Corus Honorary Wijk aan Zee (NED), 19-26 i 2008 cat. XIII (2560)
1 2 3 4
1. Timman, Jan H g NED 2561 * * ½ . . . 1 . 2767
2. Korchnoi, Viktor g SUI 2605 ½ . * * 1 . . . 2738
3. Portisch, Lajos g HUN 2530 . . 0 . * * ½ . ½ 2381
4. Ljubojevic, Ljubomir g SRB 2543 0 . . . ½ . * * ½ 2352

4) Maalot-Tarshiha

There was an international tournament in Maalot-Tarshiha, Israel 7th-15th January 2008.Ilia Smirin and Evgeny Postny finished on 6/9.

Official site: http://www.chess.org.il/sitefiles/1/30/3667.asp

It Maalot-Tarshiha (ISR), 7-15 i 2008 cat. XV (2620)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
1. Smirin, Ilia g ISR 2616 * 1 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 6 2745
2. Postny, Evgeny g ISR 2627 0 * 0 ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 6 2744
3. Khenkin, Igor g GER 2602 ½ 1 * ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 5 2665
4. Roiz, Michael g ISR 2659 ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 5 2658
5. Avrukh, Boris g ISR 2628 0 0 ½ ½ * ½ ½ 1 1 1 5 2662
6. Gyimesi, Zoltan g HUN 2605 1 0 ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ 2621
7. Rodshtein, Maxim m ISR 2614 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ 1 2620
8. Moiseenko, Alexander g UKR 2643 ½ ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ ½ * ½ 0 4 2574
9. Macieja, Bartlomiej g POL 2617 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ * 1 3 2495
10. Kogan, Artur g ISR 2591 0 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 0 * 2 2403

5) 68th Armenian Championship

The 68th Armenian Championship takes place 7th-21st January 2008 in Yerevan. There is a three way tie between Karen Asrian, Artashes Minasian and Tigran L Petrosian on 7.5 points going into the final round. Ashot Anastasian withdrew after 8 rounds. . The women's championship has also got under way. I'm hopeful I've identified the players correctly but there isn't a definitive list on the website.

Official site: http://www.armchess.am/

68th ch-ARM Yerevan (ARM), 8-21 i 2008 cat. XII (2531)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
1. Asrian, Karen g ARM 2621 * ½ 1 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ + 1 . 2658
2. Minasian, Artashes g ARM 2578 ½ * ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ . 1 + 1 1 2657
3. Petrosian, Tigran L g ARM 2606 0 ½ * 0 1 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 2620
4. Ter-Sahakyan, Samvel f ARM 2369 1 1 1 * 0 0 ½ 0 1 ½ . 1 ½ 2608
5. Minasian, Ara g ARM 2466 ½ ½ 0 1 * 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 + . 1 2610
6. Kotanjian, Tigran g ARM 2545 0 0 0 1 1 * 1 . ½ 0 1 1 1 2587
7. Andriasian, Zaven g ARM 2532 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 * ½ ½ . + 0 1 6 2569
8. Lputian, Smbat G g ARM 2616 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ . ½ * 0 ½ 1 1 0 6 2558
9. Pashikian, Arman g ARM 2556 0 . ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 * 1 0 ½ 1 2524
10. Yegiazarian, Arsen g ARM 2512 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 . ½ 0 * 0 ½ ½ 2400
11. Anastasian, Ashot g ARM 2562 0 - - . - 0 - 0 1 1 * 1 ½ 2410
12. Babujian, Levon m ARM 2439 0 0 0 0 . 0 1 0 ½ ½ 0 * 1 3 2370
13. Nalbandian, Tigran g ARM 2505 . 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 0 ½ ½ 0 * 2314

62nd ch-ARM w Yerevan (ARM), 13-21 i 2008
1. Galojan, Lilit wm ARM 2307 * 1 0 1 1 . 1 ½ 0 1 2295
2. Andriasian, Siranush wm ARM 2228 0 * ½ ½ . 1 1 1 ½ 1 2299
3. Gasparian, Narine wm ARM 2172 1 ½ * . 0 0 ½ 1 1 1 5 2236
4. Aginian, Nelly wg ARM 2308 0 ½ . * 1 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 2184
5. Kharatyan, Anahit ARM 2115 0 . 1 0 * 1 0 ½ 1 ½ 4 2158
6. Gasparian, Mariana ARM 2070 . 0 1 0 0 * 1 1 1 0 4 2154
7. Movsisian, Naira wg ARM 2152 0 0 ½ ½ 1 0 * 1 ½ . 2115
8. Karapetyan, Lusine ARM 1957 ½ 0 0 1 ½ 0 0 * . 1 3 2105
9. Martirosyan, Lia ARM 2111 1 ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ . * ½ 2051
10. Aghabekian, Liana ARM 2191 0 0 0 ½ ½ 1 . 0 ½ * 2017

6) ASEAN Masters Tarakan City

The 1st Leg ASEAN Chess Circuit Closed Tournaments took place in Tarakan, East Kalimantan, Indonesia 8th-19th January 2008. The event was organised by the Indonesian Chess Federation (Percasi) together with ASEAN Chess Confederation (http://www.aseanchess.com/). There were GMA, GMB and WIM groups. Zhang Zhong won the GM group. News: Kristianus Liem.

Official site: http://www.indochess.com/

ASEAN Masters Circuit GMA Tarakan (INA), 8-19 i 2008 cat. VIII (2450)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2
1. Zhang Zhong g SIN 2617 * ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 9 2696
2. Tirto m INA 2413 ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 8 2628
3. Megaranto, Susanto g INA 2563 ½ ½ * 0 ½ 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 2572
4. So, Wesley m PHI 2526 0 ½ 1 * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 7 2545
5. Torre, Eugenio g PHI 2519 ½ ½ ½ ½ * 1 0 0 1 ½ 1 1 2508
6. Purnama, Tirta Chandra INA 2383 0 0 1 ½ 0 * ½ 1 1 1 0 1 6 2492
7. Mas, Hafizulhelmi m MAS 2382 0 0 0 ½ 1 ½ * 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 2391
8. Ginting, Nasib m INA 2393 0 ½ 0 0 1 0 1 * 0 1 ½ ½ 2390
9. Nouri, Hamed PHI 2404 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 * 1 1 ½ 4 2352
10. Kosasih, Cecep f INA 2408 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 0 0 0 * 1 1 2320
11. Situru, Nathanael m INA 2375 0 0 0 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 0 0 * 1 2323
12. Nadera, Barlo A m PHI 2417 ½ 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 * 2 2191

ASEAN Masters Circuit GMB Tarakan (INA), 8-19 i 2008 cat. VI (2400)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2
1. Paragua, Mark g PHI 2521 * 1 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 9 2651
2. Nadanian, Ashot m ARM 2436 0 * 1 1 ½ 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 2529
3. Gonzales, Jayson m PHI 2455 0 0 * ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 2528
4. Nolte, Rolando PHI 2412 ½ 0 ½ * 0 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 7 2500
5. Mahmud, Syarif f INA 2344 0 ½ ½ 1 * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 0 1 2470
6. Prayitno, Sugeng INA 2312 0 0 0 0 ½ * 1 1 1 1 1 1 2473
7. Barbosa, Oliver PHI PHI 2410 ½ 1 0 0 ½ 0 * ½ 0 ½ 1 1 5 2363
8. Sitanggang, Salor m INA 2410 ½ 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ * 1 ½ 1 1 5 2363
9. Barus, Cerdas g INA 2479 ½ 0 ½ ½ 0