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World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli

2004 Tripoli
Knockout Matches



World Chess Championship
1990-2010 FIDE/PCA
World Chess Championship
1948-1990 FIDE
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Veselin Topalov    Andrei Kharlov
          Wikipedia - Veselin Topalov
          Wikipedia - Andrei Kharlov
          Wikipedia - World Chess Championship 2004
          Wikipedia - World Chess Championship
          View all games in full screen


               Site: Russia  Tripoli
               Event Date: 28.06.2004 - 29.06.2004

               ROUND FIVE - QUARTERFINAL - MATCH 01
FLAG FED FIDE  NAME S1 S2 R1 R1 R2 R2 6/5 TOTAL 
01 Bulgaria BUL 2737  GM Veselin Topalov 1 1           2.0/2 
02 Russia RUS 2593  GM Andrei Kharlov 0 0           0.0/2 





Leinier Domínguez Pérez    Teimour Radjabov

               Site: Russia  Tripoli
               Event Date: 28.06.2004 - 29.06.2004

               ROUND FIVE - QUARTERFINAL - MATCH 02
FLAG FED FIDE  NAME S1 S2 R1 R1 R2 R2 6/5 TOTAL 
01 Cuba CUB 2612  GM Leinier Domínguez Pérez 1 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 3.5/7 
02 Azerbaijan AZE 2670  GM Teimour Radjabov 0 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 3.5/7 





Michael Adams    Vladimir Akopian
          Wikipedia - Michael Adams
          Wikipedia - Vladimir Akopian
          Wikipedia - World Chess Championship 2004
          Wikipedia - World Chess Championship
          View all games in full screen


               Site: Russia  Tripoli
               Event Date: 28.06.2004 - 29.06.2004

               ROUND FIVE - QUARTERFINAL - MATCH 03
FLAG FED FIDE  NAME S1 S2 R1 R1 R2 R2 6/5 TOTAL 
01 United Kingdom ENG 2731  GM Michael Adams 1 ½           1.5/2 
02 Armenia ARM 2689  GM Vladimir Akopian 0 ½           0.5/2 





Rustam Kasimdzhanov    Alexander Grischuk

               Site: Russia  Tripoli
               Event Date: 28.06.2004 - 29.06.2004

               ROUND FIVE - QUARTERFINAL - MATCH 04
FLAG FED FIDE  NAME S1 S2 R1 R1 R2 R2 6/5 TOTAL 
01 Uzbekistan UZB 2652  GM Rustam Kasimdzhanov 1 0 1 1       3.0/4 
02 Russia RUS 2719  GM Alexander Grischuk 0 1 0 0       1.0/4 



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FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - External Links




     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - All Games
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 07 - Final
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 06 - Semifinals
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 05 - Quarterfinals
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 04
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 03
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 02
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 01

     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - All Games
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 07 - Final
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 06 - Semifinal
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 05 - Quartefinal
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 04
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 03
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 02
     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - Tripoli, Libya - Round 01

     Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 2004 FIDE Knockout Match - Complete pairing chart
     Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 2004 FIDE Knockout Match - Match crosstables
     Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 2004 FIDE Knockout Match - Zonals 2002-2004 (C21)
     Wikipedia - World Chess Championship

  Chessbase

  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: Short on Tripoli: a one-month blunderfest
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE World Championship closing ceremony
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-7: Rustam Kasimdzhanov is world champion
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-6: A tragedy of errors
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-5: Adams catches up in FIDE slugfest
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-4: Just call me Qosimjonov!
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-2: Kasim in the lead
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R7-1: The finals start with a draw
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R6-5: Kasimdzhanov KO's Topalov in rapids
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R6-4: Tiebreaks for Topalov and Kasimdzhanov
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R6-3: Then end is near for Radjabov
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R6-2: Slow day in Tripoli
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R6-1: Adams wins with black
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: World Championship statistics: Topalov poised to win
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R5-2: How cool is this kid?
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R5-1: Can anyone stop this man?
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: Postcards from Tripoli
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R4-2: Favorites march on
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R4-1: A black day in Tripoli
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE Championship odds after round three
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R3-2: Another favorite exits
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: A Grandmaster's impressions of Tripoli
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R3-1: Topalov wins five in a row
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R2-2: 14 games in four days
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R2-1: A Grecian tragedy
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: Madame Ojjeh blasts the FIDE championship
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: Revised statistics for FIDE championship
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCC R1: Youngest and oldest falter
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE WCCh: top seeds win through
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004: FIDE World Chess Championship starts today
  Chessbase   Chessbase - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 - All Reports
  Chessbase   Chessbase - Homepage

  Denmark   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - VM i skak 2004 (FIDE)
  Germany   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - FIDE-Schachweltmeisterschaft 2004
  Spain   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campeonato Mundial de Ajedrez 2004 (FIDE)
  Spain   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campionat del món d'escacs de 2004 (FIDE)
  United Kingdom   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - FIDE World Chess Championship 2004
  France   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Championnat du monde de la FIDE 2004
  Italy   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campionato del mondo di scacchi FIDE 2004
  The Netherlands   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Wereldkampioenschap schaken 2004 (FIDE)
  Poland   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Mistrzostwa swiata w szachach 2004
  Portugal   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campeonato Mundial de Xadrez de 2004 (FIDE)

FIDE World Chess Championship 2004


The FIDE World Chess Championship, 2004 was held at the Almahary Hotel in Tripoli, Libya, from June 18 to July 13.

It was won by Rustam Kasimdzhanov, who beat Michael Adams in the final by a score of 4.5-3.5. He won prize money of around US$100,000 (US$80,000 after organiser FIDE had taken its cut), and the title of FIDE World Chess Champion.

The intention was that the tournament winner played world number one Garry Kasparov in a step towards the reunification of the World Chess Championship. However that match never took place.

Reunification of the title

Pre-Tournament

Ever since 1993, when Garry Kasparov and Nigel Short broke away from chess governing body FIDE to play their world championship match under the auspices of the newly-formed Professional Chess Association, there had been two chess world championships: one organised by FIDE (which used the knock-out format from 1998 to 2004) and one by a variety of other bodies (in the form of a long match between champion and challenger). The 2004 FIDE Championship was a part of what was, at the time, the most serious attempt yet to reunify the title, the so-called Prague Agreement.

The plan under this agreement when it was drawn up in 2002 was that reigning FIDE world champion Ruslan Ponomariov and world number one on the FIDE Elo rating list Garry Kasparov played a match, and that the so-called "classical" world champion Vladimir Kramnik and winner of the 2002 Dortmund tournament (which turned out to be Péter Lékó) played each other. The winners of these two matches would then play one another to produce a unified champion.

The match between Ponomariov and Kasparov, however, fell through after FIDE refused to alter various things in the contract on Ponomariov's request, and he refused to sign. FIDE announced that instead the winner of the next FIDE knock-out championship played against Kasparov in a match to be held not later than July 2005 (Kramnik and Lékó played their match in September-October 2004). Therefore, as well as the championship determining who was to be the next FIDE world champion, it would also determine who played Kasparov in what was effectively a semifinal match for the unified championship.

Post-Tournament

After Kasimdzhanov's victory, FIDE opened the bidding for the Kasimdzhanov-Kasparov match in August 2004, bids to be received by September 15. This deadline was later extended to September 25. The organiser was to be chosen at the FIDE Presidential Board meeting in October 2004, but in fact, FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov announced ahead of this time that the match had been awarded to the United Arab Emirates.

The plan did not come to fruition: the promised funding for the match never arrived, and plans to hold the match instead in Turkey also came to nothing. The whole question of how and when the Kasparov-Kasimdzhanov match would take place, or what would occur in its stead, was made irrelevant by Kasparov's announcement in March 2005 that he was retiring from serious chess.

Kasimdzhanov's victory did, however, earn him (and runner-up Michael Adams) an invitation to the FIDE World Chess Championship 2005. Kasimdzhanov also gained automatic entry to the Candidates Tournament for the FIDE World Chess Championship 2007.

The world championship was eventually reunified in 2006, when classical champion Kramnik defeated the winner of the FIDE World Chess Championship 2005, Veselin Topalov.

Controversies

The event has attracted a good deal of controversy in a number of areas.

Format

One source of criticism, in common with when it has been used for previous FIDE championships, has been the event's format. In particular, the relatively quick time controls have been controversial. (90 minutes for the first 40 moves, followed by 15 minutes till the end of the game and an incremental time of 30 seconds per move from move one.) Zhang Zhong, for example, was quoted as saying "the time limit is too fast for such a world championship. We should call it a World Cup ... a world championship needs more classic time controls" and Nigel Short claimed that "If you took the top 100 players and survey their opinion you would probably find around 75% are against this time control".

Another criticism centered around the knockout format of the tournament. Although knockout matches had been used prior to the introduction of this tournament format, the brevity of these matches (Best of 2 elimination matches with a Best of 6 Championship Match, as opposed to the Best of 10 elimination matches and Best of 24 Championship Match seen in earlier cycles) led many to consider them to be of little value in determining the better player.

Location

Perhaps the greatest criticism has concerned the choice of Libya as venue. Claims of human rights abuses, and state sponsored terrorism have caused some consternation, but on a more practical level the country's history of not allowing entry to citizens of Israel has been of some concern, as three Israeli players (Boris Gelfand, Emil Sutovsky and Ilia Smirin) had either qualified for the championships or were high on the list of reserves (in the event of qualifiers choosing not to play). Additionally, a number of players have joint Israeli and American citizenship, and so were also expected to be disallowed entry.

With this in mind, FIDE originally announced that a parallel event in Malta would be held alongside the one in Tripoli to ensure that Israeli players could take part-Sutovsky sent his entry form back on the condition he played in Malta. This parallel event was cancelled, however, following a press release from the Libyan authorities that "The Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya will pleasantly provide entry visas to all the qualified participants of this great Championship", which was taken by most (including FIDE) to mean that all players, including Israelis, would be welcome to take part. This appeared to be contradicated by a statement from Mohammed Qadhafi, chairman of the Libyan Olympic Committee (FIDE is affiliated with the IOC) and son of Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi, that "We [the Libyans] did not and will not invite the Zionist enemy to this championship."

Several prominent figures have criticized FIDE over this matter, with both Grandmaster Boris Gulko, a Jew with joint American and Israeli citizenship, and Beatriz Marinello, president of the United States Chess Federation writing open letters to FIDE criticizing their handling of the issue.

On May 13, the Anti-Defamation League wrote to FIDE, saying it was "troubling" that Libya should be hosting the championships, and urging FIDE to ensure that Israeli players were treated equally. The letter raises concerns over the Libyans not allowing the coaches and families of Israeli players into the country. Similar concerns were expressed in an Association of Chess Professionals (ACP) open letter of May 26 (the ACP have also criticized several other aspects of the tournament's organization).

FIDE has maintained throughout that Israeli players would have been issued with visas upon their arrival in Libya. This assurance was never put to the test, however: none of the qualified players took part in the championship and Boris Gulko, who has joint American and Israeli citizenship, withdrew from the event after initially indicating he played (fellow Americans Alexander Shabalov and Alexander Onischuk also withdrew in sympathy with the concerns of Gulko and others). The only player in the final list of participants with an Israeli passport-Vadim Milov, representing Switzerland-never travelled to Libya: he complained that his official invitation to the event had arrived so late (on the day of the opening ceremony, one day before the first game) that it was physically impossible for him to get to Libya with it in time. Milov claims that this constituted a deliberate attempt by FIDE to exclude him. In response, FIDE said that the delay in sending Milov's invitation was due to Milov not sending them his passport details until a deadline had passed, and that even with this delay, Milov could still have arrived in Tripoli in time for his first game, which they had offered to postpone if necessary. Milov took his case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Tribunal Arbitral de Sport) in Lausanne which found that FIDE "undertook extraordinary efforts to make sure that Claimant [Milov] could participate in the WCC 2004 although such efforts could and should have been made earlier" and ultimately cleared FIDE of any ill-intentioned effort to exclude Milov, concluding "there is no ground for Claimant to claim damages from Respondent.". Milov later responded to this decision in an open letter.

It was also reported (on June 17) that the Israeli chess federation was considering suing FIDE "for compensation for the damages incurred by our exclusion from this tournament".

Strength

As a result of these and other factors, many of the players who were invited to take part in the tournament - including world number two Viswanathan Anand, and number six Peter Svidler - declined. In combination with Kasparov, Kramnik and Lékó not taking part owing to them being involved at a later stage of the reunification process, this led to a somewhat weaker lineup than previous championships, with only three of the world's top ten accepting the invitation to play, and only two of those actually turning up to the event. This weakness has itself been a cause of controversy, with claims that any tournament with so many top players missing should not be considered a World Championship at all.

List of participants

On May 28, FIDE published a list of participants in the championship which was billed as "final". However, changes were made following the withdrawal of Gulko, Shabalov and Onischuk. A later "final" list included players of a range of skills from Veselin Topalov (rated 2737 and number five in the world on the FIDE Elo rating list) down to Tarik Abulhul (rated just 2076). It included only three of the world's top ten.

The following are the 128 players included in this list in order of seeding (from highest ranked to lowest), with the country they represent and their FIDE Elo rating on the April 2004 list:



It should be noted that four of these players — Morozevich, Milov, Shulman and Hjartarson — did not appear for their first round matches and were defaulted.

The games

The tournament is in the knock-out format which has become standard for FIDE championships in recent years. Early rounds each consist of two-game mini-matches; round six (the semi-finals) consists of four-game matches, and the final consists of a six game match. These games are all played at the time control of 1 hour 30 minutes, plus an extra 15 minutes at move forty, and an increment of 30 seconds per move from move one.

If the score at the end of the matches is tied, tie-break games will be played. First, two games will be played at a time control of 25 minutes for the whole game plus 10 seconds increment per move. If the score is still tied after these, then two games will be played at the time control of 5 minutes with a 10 second increment per move. If the score is still tied after these, then a single game will be played where White has 6 minutes and Black has 5, with no increment: White must win the game to progress to the next round; a win for Black or a draw will see Black progress.

All standard time control games begin at 2:30pm local time. Tie breaks begin at 8:30pm on the day of the last standard game, apart from tie-breaks for the semifinals which will be 2:30pm the day after the last standard game, and the final which will be at 12:30pm the day after the last standard game.

The Chief Arbiter for the tournament is to be Panagiotis Nikolopoulos.

...

 

     FIDE World Chess Championship 2004. (15 August 2011 at 17:37). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 05 November 2011, at 17:05, from
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIDE_World_Chess_Championship_2004







    
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