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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
Karpov Poikovsky Tournament

Alexander Motylev7/9(+5 -0 =4)[games]
Vugar Gashimov6/9(+4 -1 =4)[games]
Emil Sutovsky5/9(+2 -1 =6)[games]
Ernesto Inarkiev5/9(+3 -2 =4)[games]
Sergei Rublevsky4.5/9(+2 -2 =5)[games]
Victor Bologan4.5/9(+2 -2 =5)[games]
Alexander Onischuk4.5/9(+2 -2 =5)[games]
Arkadij Naiditsch3.5/9(+3 -5 =1)[games]
Zahar Efimenko3/9(+1 -4 =4)[games]
Alexey Shirov2/9(+0 -5 =4)[games]
*

Chessgames.com Chess Event Description
Karpov Poikovsky (2009)

The 10th Karpov tournament took place in Poikovsky, Russia 3-12 June 2009. Rounds started at 3 pm local time. Rest day: June 8. Time controls: 100 minutes for the first 40 moves and 30 more minutes to the end of the game, with a 30-second increment from move one. The only undefeated player Alexander Motylev won with 7/9.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 Motylev 2677 * 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 7 2 Gashimov 2730 0 * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 6 3 Sutovsky 2660 0 ½ * 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 5 4 Inarkiev 2676 ½ ½ 0 * 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 5 5 Rublevsky 2702 0 ½ ½ 1 * ½ ½ 1 0 ½ 4½ 6 Bologan 2690 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ * ½ 1 1 ½ 4½ 7 Onischuk 2684 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * 0 1 1 4½ 8 Naiditsch 2700 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 * 1 1 3½ 9 Efimenko 2682 ½ ½ ½ 0 1 0 0 0 * ½ 3 10 Shirov 2745 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ * 2

Category: XVIII (2695). Chief arbiter: Yuri Lobanov

FIDE: https://ratings.fide.com/tournament...
FICS: http://freechess.org/Events/Relay/2...
TWIC: https://theweekinchess.com/html/twi...
ChessPro: https://chesspro.ru/_events/2009/po...
Chess.com: https://www.chess.com/news/view/mot...
Europe Echecs: https://www.europe-echecs.com/art/v...

Previous: Karpov Poikovsky (2008). Next: Karpov Poikovsky (2010)

 page 1 of 2; games 1-25 of 45  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Motylev vs Rublevsky 1-0612009Karpov PoikovskyB46 Sicilian, Taimanov Variation
2. E Inarkiev vs Shirov 1-0332009Karpov PoikovskyC78 Ruy Lopez
3. Sutovsky vs Efimenko  ½-½302009Karpov PoikovskyC67 Ruy Lopez
4. Naiditsch vs Onischuk 1-0232009Karpov PoikovskyC79 Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defense Deferred
5. V Gashimov vs Bologan 1-0272009Karpov PoikovskyC41 Philidor Defense
6. Shirov vs Naiditsch 0-1492009Karpov PoikovskyE04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
7. Onischuk vs Motylev  ½-½422009Karpov PoikovskyD45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
8. Sutovsky vs E Inarkiev 1-0222009Karpov PoikovskyC42 Petrov Defense
9. Efimenko vs Bologan 0-1642009Karpov PoikovskyC41 Philidor Defense
10. Rublevsky vs V Gashimov  ½-½262009Karpov PoikovskyB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
11. Bologan vs Rublevsky ½-½522009Karpov PoikovskyB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
12. Naiditsch vs Sutovsky ½-½122009Karpov PoikovskyB13 Caro-Kann, Exchange
13. E Inarkiev vs Efimenko 1-0672009Karpov PoikovskyC65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense
14. V Gashimov vs Onischuk 1-0282009Karpov PoikovskyC67 Ruy Lopez
15. Motylev vs Shirov 1-0242009Karpov PoikovskyC48 Four Knights
16. Sutovsky vs Motylev 0-1362009Karpov PoikovskyC43 Petrov, Modern Attack
17. Shirov vs V Gashimov 0-1552009Karpov PoikovskyC42 Petrov Defense
18. E Inarkiev vs Naiditsch 1-0392009Karpov PoikovskyE04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
19. Onischuk vs Bologan  ½-½232009Karpov PoikovskyE92 King's Indian
20. Efimenko vs Rublevsky 1-0642009Karpov PoikovskyB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
21. Naiditsch vs Efimenko 1-0392009Karpov PoikovskyC92 Ruy Lopez, Closed
22. Rublevsky vs Onischuk  ½-½422009Karpov PoikovskyC48 Four Knights
23. Bologan vs Shirov  ½-½242009Karpov PoikovskyC42 Petrov Defense
24. V Gashimov vs Sutovsky  ½-½322009Karpov PoikovskyC80 Ruy Lopez, Open
25. Motylev vs E Inarkiev  ½-½182009Karpov PoikovskyB01 Scandinavian
 page 1 of 2; games 1-25 of 45  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 10 OF 11 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jun-11-09  acirce: Yes! Motylev won! And the Petroff took revenge through Bologan too.
Jun-11-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  moronovich: <New Line> Lol !
Jun-11-09  mikejaqua: Shirov certainly has the most wildly fluctuating performances of any top player. He should be stomping his way through this group of players, at the very least pulling draws, yet there he is the the very bottom. Wonder what makes him so unstable.
Jun-11-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  plang: <Shirov - He should be stomping his way through this group of players,>

Maybe 10-12 years ago - certainly not now. Of course, he was under par here but, by the same token, Sofia was a surprise in the other direction.

Jun-11-09  frogbert: <Shirov certainly has the most wildly fluctuating performances of any top player>

in many ways, ivanchuk is just as inconsistent - he's merely more consistently inconsistent ;o) ivanchuk goes 6 months with 2800-2850 and then 6 months with 2600-2700 performances (or worse) and then gets back to 2800-ish performances, maybe averaging 2740-2750 over time...

anyone who wants to guess what ivanchuk will be up to in bazna?! :o)

Jun-11-09  adair10: Motylev was Russian team captain in Dresden Olympiad. One must be very good at chess, but also must have attractive personality in order to be respected by stars like Kramnik, Moro Grischuk and Svidler.
Jun-12-09  malthrope: Note: The 9th and last round will start 2 hours earlier at 13:00 or 3 AM EDT. ;)
Jun-12-09  M.D. Wilson: Talk about one extreme to the other.
Jun-12-09  kspiteri: At least Shirov has his priorities right. It is better to win MTel and lose Poikovsky than to win Poikovsky and finish MTel in the middle of the field.
Jun-12-09  DCP23: <kspiteri: At least Shirov has his priorities right. It is better to win MTel and lose Poikovsky than to win Poikovsky and finish MTel in the middle of the field.>

Not really. Like <frogbert> correctly pointed out, at M-tel it's the appearance fees and not the prize money that constitutes the biggest payload. At Poikovsky it's the other way around.

So winning Poikovsky and finishing last at M-tel will leave one much better off financially than winning Mtel and finishing last at Poikovsky.

This is particularly true for Shirov who did not get the best deal at Mtel.

Jun-12-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  Troller: <malthrope: Note: The 9th and last round will start 2 hours earlier at 13:00 or 3 AM EDT. ;)> Yes, they're already at it.

Onischuk-Inarkiev is some weird line in the KID. Bologan-Motylev is obviously Petroff, Gashi-Efimenko is Berlin, Rublevsky rolls out the Scotch against Naiditsch & finally Shirov-Sutovsky is a French that has led to this position after 16.Na7+ Kc7 17.Bf4+:


click for larger view

Jun-12-09  kspiteri: <DCP23> I was not thinking about the prize money. However, winning MTel got Shirov an invitation to the Grand Slam final, which is one of the best paying tournaments.
Jun-12-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  Troller: As usual Naiditsch is playing extremely fast. He is leading Rublevsky by 45 minutes now. I wonder if he is always well prepared or if he simply believes in himself.
Jun-12-09  kspiteri: The tournament draw rate will be less than 50%, and the Petroff draw rate will be even lower.
Jun-12-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  Troller: Shirov-Sutovsky continues 17..e5 18.Be3 Bxd3 19.cxd3 Kb8 from the diagram. It seems 18.Bxe5+ Qxe5 19.Rxd8 Bd6 would have left White a piece down, as the Na7 was doomed. And 20.Rxh8 Qxh2 in that line looks suicidal. I'm afraid Shirov has to struggle again today.

<kspiteri> Yes this is a combative tournament. Naiditsch has played only 1 draw!

Jun-12-09  virginmind: 22ply

Bologan,V - Motylev,A, 10th Karpov Int'l tourney 2009


click for larger view

Analysis by Fritz 11:

1. (1.07): 32.Be2 Kxc5 33.Bd3 Be4 34.Rg7 Be1 35.Rxc7+ Kd6 36.Rxb7 Bxg3 37.Bxe4 dxe4 38.Rb6+ Ke7 39.Rxa6 Bxh4 40.Ra4 f5 41.Ra7+ Ke6 42.Ra6+ Kf7 43.c4 e3 2. (0.88): 32.Rg7 Be4 33.Be2 Be1 34.Bd3 Kxc5 35.Rxc7+ Kd6 36.Rxb7 Bxg3 37.Bxe4 dxe4 38.Rb6+ Ke7 39.Rxa6 Bxh4 40.Ra4 f5 41.Ra7+ Ke6 42.Ra6+ Kf7 43.a4

(me, Iasi 12.06.2009)

Jun-12-09  jamesmaskell: So with Gashimov getting a draw, Motylev wins Poikovsky outright.
Jun-12-09  wordfunph II: <jamesmaskell: So with Gashimov getting a draw, Motylev wins Poikovsky outright.>

That's right and Motylev with black still pummeling Bologan for a win!

Jun-12-09  paavoh: Great win by Rublevsky, he had a bit difficult position around moves 20-25 against Naiditsch, but played the end game very well.
Jun-12-09  virginmind: something nasty happened to bologan, as now fritz has reversed the eval: 19ply

Bologan,V - Motylev,A, 10th Karpov Int'l tourney 2009


click for larger view

Analysis by Fritz 11:

1. (-1.12): 48...Be6 49.Bxe6 g2 50.Rg8 h2 51.Rg4+ Ke5 52.Rxg2 h1Q 53.Re2+ Kf4 54.Rc2 Qa1+ 55.Ba2 Qd1 56.Bb3 Qf1 57.Bc4 Qd1 58.Bb3 2. (-0.43): 48...g2 49.Rg8 Bg4 50.Rxg4+ Kxg4 51.a7 g1Q 52.a8Q h2 53.Qg8+ Kf4 54.Qh7 Be5 55.Qh4+ Ke3 56.Qe4+ Kd2 57.c6 Qa1+ 58.Kb3 Qc3+ 59.Ka4 Bd6 60.Kb5 f5 61.Qc4

(me, Iasi 12.06.2009)

Jun-12-09  DCP23: <paavoh: Great win by Rublevsky, he had a bit difficult position around moves 20-25 against Naiditsch, but played the end game very well.>

Yes my thoughts too! Rublevsky's position looked very uncomfortable but somehow he managed to turn it around and obtain a better endgame, which he won.

Jun-12-09  paavoh: <virginmind> I guess Fritz did not see as far as Motylev did. I believe that he saw the advantages of the exchange sac and the vulnerability of the pawns on dark squares quire early. A fascinating game!
Jun-12-09  NewLine: ..Be6 is ridiculous for a human brain
Jun-12-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  tamar: Motylev has the advantage, but took the repetition.

Not sure if it is winnable.

Jun-12-09  DCP23: Congrats to Alexander Motylev on a very convincing tournament victory! And on entering the 2700+ club!
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