chessgames.com
Members · Prefs · Laboratory · Collections · Openings · Endgames · Sacrifices · History · Search Kibitzing · Kibitzer's Café · Chessforums · Tournament Index · Players · Kibitzing

Dmitry Jakovenko
Jakovenko 
 

Number of games in database: 1,632
Years covered: 1993 to 2021
Last FIDE rating: 2682 (2661 rapid, 2624 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2760
Overall record: +408 -160 =723 (59.6%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 341 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (192) 
    B90 B92 B33 B30 B47
 Ruy Lopez (97) 
    C78 C67 C84 C77 C92
 Sicilian Najdorf (56) 
    B90 B92 B96 B91 B97
 Caro-Kann (49) 
    B12 B18 B10 B17 B13
 French Defense (48) 
    C11 C18 C10 C12 C02
 Slav (41) 
    D11 D17 D12 D15 D10
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (142) 
    C67 C65 C92 C89 C78
 Sicilian (107) 
    B33 B47 B90 B30 B40
 Slav (62) 
    D16 D15 D10 D12 D11
 Nimzo Indian (61) 
    E32 E20 E46 E21 E52
 Queen's Gambit Declined (58) 
    D37 D31 D30 D38 D39
 Queen's Indian (45) 
    E15 E12 E17 E14 E16
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Jakovenko vs I Cheparinov, 2008 1-0
   Jakovenko vs Gelfand, 2015 1/2-1/2
   E Alekseev vs Jakovenko, 2009 0-1
   Morozevich vs Jakovenko, 2006 1/2-1/2
   Jakovenko vs Bacrot, 2009 1-0
   Jakovenko vs Nepomniachtchi, 2011 1-0
   Jakovenko vs E Alekseev, 2007 1-0
   Jakovenko vs Bologan, 2008 1-0
   Jakovenko vs Kramnik, 2009 1/2-1/2
   Jakovenko vs Y Wang, 2008 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Valle d'Aosta Open (2001)
   European Championship (2012)
   Russian Championship Superfinal (2006)
   European Championship (2007)
   Russian Championship Higher League Tomsk (2004)
   Komercni Banka Open (2002)
   Corus Group B (2007)
   World Cup (2009)
   World Junior Championship (2002)
   World Cup (2007)
   European Championship (2011)
   Russian Team Championship (2011)
   World Junior Championship (2000)
   European Championship (2002)
   Dresden Olympiad (2008)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Jakovenko! by Whitehat1963

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 World Cup
   Jakovenko vs T Gareyev (Jul-17-21) 0-1, rapid
   T Gareyev vs Jakovenko (Jul-17-21) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   Jakovenko vs T Gareyev (Jul-16-21) 1/2-1/2
   T Gareyev vs Jakovenko (Jul-15-21) 1/2-1/2
   M Perunovic vs Jakovenko (Dec-30-19) 1/2-1/2, blitz

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Dmitry Jakovenko
Search Google for Dmitry Jakovenko
FIDE player card for Dmitry Jakovenko

DMITRY JAKOVENKO
(born Jun-28-1983, 41 years old) Russia
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]
IM (1998); GM (2001); U18 World Champion (2001); Moscow Champion (2006); twice Olympiad individual gold medalist (2008 & 2012); European Champion (2012).

Background

Dmitry Olegovich Jakovenko was born in Omsk, but spent his childhood in the Northern Siberian town of Nizhnevartovsk, over 3000 kilometers from Moscow. He learned the game at the age of 3 and was competing with adults at the local chess club in Nizhnevartovsk by the time he was 5. He reached Russian 1st category at the age of 7 during the 1990 city championship, gained his candidate master title in 1994 at age 11, the International Master title in 1997 at the age of 14, and the Grandmaster title at age 18 in 2001. While competing for the U10 World Championship in Bratislava, he met Aleksander S Nikitin (Garry Kasparov ’s head trainer at the time), who then became his coach. Jakovenko went professional in 2004.

Jakovenko’s academic record was sparkling. He was a straight-5 student (the equivalent of straight As), won a zonal final of the all-Russian Mathematical Olympiad, graduated from Moscow State University after studying computing, math and cybernetics, and eventually received a PhD in economics.

Championships

<Youth> In 1991, Jakovenko won the U8 championship of Soviet Russia and in 1993, he won the Russian U10 championship with a perfect score of 9/9, a result which qualified him to compete in the World U10 Championship held in Bratislava, where he placed 6th. He also won the Russian U14 Championship in 1994 after being forced to withdraw from the U12 Russian Championship due to injury (the scar can still be seen under his right eye). Shortly afterwards, he competed in the World U14 Championship in Hungary, but finished 11th. In 1999, he was runner-up at the 1999 World U16 Chess championship and in 2001 he won the U18 World Championship with 9/11. The following year, he placed =11th with 8/13 at the 41st World Junior Championships (2002).

<City and National> Jakovenko won the 2006 Moscow Championship and has competed in most of the Russian championships since 2001. His best results have been to share first place in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2006) and the Russian Superfinals (2008). In the former event, he shared 1st with Evgeny Alekseev, but lost the two-game rapid playoff to take second on tiebreak while in the latter he was again relegated to runner-up when he came 2nd in the playoff between himself, Peter Svidler and Alekseev. He placed =4th in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2009). History repeated itself in 2012 when he again came =1st, this time in the Russian Superfinals (2012), but ultimately placed 4th following the round robin Russian Superfinals (Tiebreak) (2012) that was played between the six co-leaders to determine the final placements. He qualified for the 2013 Russian Superfinal by placing =3rd (5th on tiebreak) at the 66th Russian Championship Higher League (2013), but did not compete in the former event. In 2014, he came =1st at the 67th Russian Championship Higher League (2014), which qualified him to play in the Russian Superfinals (2014), where he placed outright second with 5/9 behind the winner Igor Lysyj. He was equal fourth with 5.5/11 at the Russian Superfinals (2015).

<European> Jakovenko’s first foray into the European Championship was in 2002 when he scored a respectable 7/13. Three years later, he improved by placing =10th with 8.5/13 at the 6th European Individual Championship (2005), this result qualifying him to play in the FIDE World Cup (2005). Then came =1st with 8/11 in the European Individual Championships (2007). He came =5th (12th on tiebreak) at the 12th European Individual Championship (2011), which would have qualified him to play in the World Cup (2011) if he had not already qualified through rating. In the following year he won the 13th European Individual Championship (2012) outright with 8.5/11 (+6 =5; TPR of 2832), after defeating the till-then tournament leader Laurent Fressinet in the last round, and qualifying him to again play in the World Cup, this time in 2013. He fared poorly in the European Individual Championships (2013), scoring only 6.5/11. However, this has not jeopardised his World Cup chances as he already qualified for this event in 2012, but his rating took a significant hit as a result, shedding 18 points. He scored 7.5/11 at the European Individual Championships (2014), and thereby qualified for the World Cup 2015.

<World> Jakovenko qualified for the 2005 World Cup via the 2005 European Championships, but lost his first round match in the rapid-play tiebreak to Brazilian GM Rafael Duailibe Leitao. He qualified for the World Chess Cup (2007) when he won the 2007 European Championship; on this occasion he defeated Bangladeshi GM Ziaur Rahman , compatriot GM Vladimir Belov, Hungarian GM Zoltan Almasi and Armenian GM Levon Aronian in the preliminary rounds before losing to then Spanish GM Alexey Shirov in the quarter final. At the World Chess Cup (2007), Jakovenko defeated Algerian GM Aimen Rizouk, Indian GM Chanda Sandipan, Ukrainian GM Alexander Areshchenko, before losing to compatriot GM Alexander Grischuk in the round of 16. In the 2011 World Cup, Jakovenko defeated UAE GM A R Saleh Salem, Indian GM Pentala Harikrishna and Georgian GM Baadur Jobava before being beaten by Azeri GM Teimour Radjabov in the fourth round. By virtue of his win in the 13th European Individual Championship (2012), he qualified to participate in the World Cup (2013) where he defeated Filipino GM Mark Paragua in the 1st round, but lost to Ukrainian GM Pavel Eljanov in the second round.

Qualifying for the Grand Prix series of 2014-15 as one of the organizer's nominees, Jakovenko scored a sole 10th at the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014), winning the 30 Grand Prix points that are awarded for that placement. At FIDE Grand Prix Tbilisi (2015), he placed outright second with 6.5/11, adding 140 GP points to his tally, and putting him back into contention for a top 2 finish in the series. He came close in the final leg of series, the FIDE Grand Prix Khanty-Mansiysk (2015), with =1st scoring 6.5/11. He needed to win the event outright to place in the top 2 overall. His shared first placed him 3rd overall in the series, and first alternate for the Candidates 2016.

He has another bite because of his result in the European Championship in 2014 that qualified him to play in the World Cup (2015). He needs to finish in the final to qualify for the Candidates Tournament of 2016. Alternatively, should either Nakamura or Caruana finish in the World Cup final, this will create a vacancy in one or both of the top two qualification spot in the Grand Prix series for 2014-16 thus enabling Jakovenko to move into the Candidates as first alternate. In the meantime, Jakovenko faced determined opposition in the first round of the World Cup when he was paired with the young and previously untitled Ilia Iljiushenok, with whom he drew the standard games, and the two sets of rapid tiebreakers before winning the blitz tiebreakers to advance to the second round where he defeated Egyptian and African #1 Bassem Amin. In the third round Vassily Ivanchuk to advance to the Round of Sixteen (round 4) where he meets the so far spectacularly successful Pavel Eljanov who has won every game in the first three rounds. Jakovenko stopped Eljanov's game-winning streak with draws in the standard games, but lost to Eljanov in the rapid game tiebreaker to bow out of the event.

Tournaments

In 2001 Jakovenko won the Saint-Vincent Open and Valle d’Aosta Open. In 2002, he was =1st at the Pardubice Open and the Aosta Open. Then came 1st at the Montreal World tournament in 2005, and =5th at the Aeroflot Open (2005), half point behind the 4 co-winners. He came 2nd at Ciudad de Pamplona (2006), at Corus Group B (2007), and at the 6th Aeroflot Festival (2007) , =3rd at the Tal Memorial (2007), then won the 8th Poikovsky Karpov Tournament (2007) by a full point, and came =1st in Poikovsky Tournament (2008). He tied for first in the Elista Grand Prix (2008), placed =2nd at Dortmund (2009) and scored a creditable 4/10 at Pearl Spring Chess Tournament (2009). There followed =2nd in the FIDE Grand Prix (2010), =3rd in Poikovsky Tournament (2010) and 5.5/9 at Aeroflot Open (2011). In October 2012, he came clear first in the category 18 13th Karpov International (2012), scoring 6/9 with a TPR of 2822. In December 2013, he emerged as the winner in the Final of the Russian Cup, a 4-round knockout tournament. In May 2014, he was runner up behind Alexander Morozevich at the category 19 15th Poikovsky Karpov Tournament (2014). In November 2014, he won the Russian Cup Final knockout tournament, winning the final round against Maxim Matlakov by 1.5-0.5.

Team

<Olympiad> Jakovenko won the reserve board gold medal at the Dresden Olympiad (2008). 1 In the Chess Olympiad (2010), he played for Russia C,2 scoring +8 =10 -1 for a playing percentage of 68.4%. In the Chess Olympiad (2012) held in Istanbul, he won team silver and scored 7/9 on board 5, winning him the individual gold medal for that board.

<European Team Championship> Jakovenko played on the Russian team in the European Team Chess Championships (2007) and the 17th European Team Championship (2009), winning individual and team gold as reserve in 2007, and winning team silver from board 3 in 2009.

<European Club Cup> Playing board two or three with the successful Tomsk team in the 20th European Club Cup (2004), the 21st European Club Cup (2005), the European Club Cup (2006) and the European Club Cup (2007), he helped his team to 2 team golds and a team bronze. In the Euro Club Cup (2008), he played with PVK Kyiv (a Ukrainian based team), and helped the team to a team bronze. He did not compete in the Cup in 2009, but in the European Club Cup (2010) and European Club Cup (2011), he played top board with the Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk region team winning team silver and an individual bronze respectively. He also played top board for Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk in the European Club Cup (2013): on this occasion the team placed 6th and and he placed 5th on top board with 4.5/7 and a 2736 TPR.

<Russian Premier league> Jakovenko has competed every year since 2002. His best results came when he played top board for Tomsk between 2004 and 2009 inclusive. With Tomsk, he won both individual and team gold medals in the 2004 and 2005 team championships and also in the Russian Team Championship (2007). In total he has won 4 team golds (including in the Russian Team Championship (2009)), 3 individual golds, and individual silver, a team bronze and an individual bronze. His current team since 2010 is Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk region.

<Russia-China Summit> He played top board with the Russian team in the 2006 match between the two countries, with the men's team winning largely as a result of his excellent returns, although the aggregate score of the men's and women's teams was won by China. He also played in the Russia - China Match (2007) (won by China by 52.5-47.5), in the Russia - China Match (2008) (won by China 26-24) and was the best performing player in the Russia - China (2012), won by Russia.

<World team Championship> In 2010 he played board two on the gold medal winning Russian team in the World Team Championship (2010). He played board 3 in the FIDE World Team Championship (2015) and won individual silver.

<Other> Jakovenko has also played team championships in Spain, Greece and France and in the Bundesliga. His most recent success in the French competition was playing for Clichy, which came second in the French Team Championships (2011).

Rapid

Jakovenko participated in the Yaroslav Mudryj 2014 Tournament of Champions held in Russia in August 2014, and placed 2nd.

Rating and rankings

Jakovenko entered the world's top 100 in the July 2005 FIDE list, having crossed over the 2600 mark in the April 2005 list, and has remained there since. His rating rose above 2700 in April 2007 and peaked at 2760 in January 2009 and April 2009 when he reached his peak world rankings of 7th and 5th respectively (also Russian number 1).

Sources and references

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Interview with Chess Cafe in 2004: [http://www.chesscafe.com/text/misha...; http://www.chessplayersworld.com/dm...; Chesstempo profile: http://chesstempo.com/gamedb/player...; Echesspedia: [http://www.echesspedia.com/?page_id...; Facebook: [http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dmitr...; Wikipedia article: Dmitry Jakovenko

NOTES

1 http://www.olimpbase.org/2008/2008r...; http://www.olimpbase.org/2008/2008i...

2 http://www.olimpbase.org/2010/2010r...

Last updated 22 September 2015


Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 66; games 1-25 of 1,632  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Jakovenko vs Ganguly  0-1211993Wch U10C70 Ruy Lopez
2. V Akobian vs Jakovenko 0-1281993Wch U10D55 Queen's Gambit Declined
3. Jakovenko vs F Felecan  1-0531994Wch U14B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
4. Jakovenko vs R Wiemer  1-0381994St. Ingbert OpenB10 Caro-Kann
5. F Berend vs Jakovenko  ½-½591994St. Ingbert OpenC85 Ruy Lopez, Exchange Variation Doubly Deferred (DERLD)
6. P Carrasco vs Jakovenko  0-1621994St. Ingbert OpenD55 Queen's Gambit Declined
7. G Gross vs Jakovenko  1-0301994St. Ingbert OpenE07 Catalan, Closed
8. Jakovenko vs U Osieka  0-1451994St. Ingbert OpenB10 Caro-Kann
9. Jakovenko vs I Blechzin  1-0541994St. Ingbert OpenB41 Sicilian, Kan
10. Jakovenko vs H Passeyer  1-0521994St. Ingbert OpenB09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
11. R Watfe vs Jakovenko  ½-½501994Wch U14C25 Vienna
12. J P Weatherlake vs Jakovenko  0-1411994Wch U14A07 King's Indian Attack
13. Jakovenko vs O Touzane 1-0601995First Saturday IM Dec.C11 French
14. A Turzo vs Jakovenko  0-1421995First Saturday IM Dec.C45 Scotch Game
15. O Kozlov vs Jakovenko  1-0331995Chigorin MemorialD02 Queen's Pawn Game
16. Jakovenko vs V Karasev  1-0461995Chigorin MemorialB32 Sicilian
17. Jakovenko vs N M Mishuchkov ½-½591995Chigorin MemorialC41 Philidor Defense
18. M Kobalia vs Jakovenko  ½-½321995Chigorin MemorialC49 Four Knights
19. Jakovenko vs V Faibisovich  ½-½531995Chigorin MemorialB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
20. Jakovenko vs A Kochyev  ½-½251995Chigorin MemorialB32 Sicilian
21. V Popov vs Jakovenko  ½-½461995Chigorin MemorialD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
22. R Bigaliev vs Jakovenko  1-0331995Chigorin MemorialC49 Four Knights
23. S Guliev vs Jakovenko  ½-½401995Chigorin MemorialD50 Queen's Gambit Declined
24. D Kolbus vs Jakovenko  0-1671996Budapest FS04 GME15 Queen's Indian
25. J Stocek vs Jakovenko  ½-½411996Budapest FS04 GMA13 English
 page 1 of 66; games 1-25 of 1,632  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Jakovenko wins | Jakovenko loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 5 OF 12 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Apr-15-07  capablancakarpov: Kramnik didn´t won last year match against Topalov. He tied it. So far, Kramnik lost a match against Shirov, stole the match money and later Shirov´s place in Kasparov´s match. Then won his only important match of his life and since then, he has tied both matchs against Leko and against Topalov. What is really funny is how the Kramnik followers manipulate histoy. This is the real list of Chess World Champions in the last years:

1985-1993 Garri Kasparov
1993-1999 Anatoli Karpov
1999-2000 Aleksander Khalifman
2000-2002 Viswanathan Anand
2002-2004 Ruslan Ponomariov
2004-2006 Rustam Kasimdzhanov
2006-2007 Veselin Topalov
2007- ? Vladimir Kramnik

And in your dreams, this is your manipulate list:

1985-2000 Garri Kasparov
2000-2007 Vladimir Kramnik

I haven´t any problem recognizing that the actual official champion is V.Kramnik. I only believe that the conditions for the Topalov-Kramnik match were unfair for Topalov, so the moral winner of the match was Topalov without doubt.

<Did Kramnik not beat Topalov in a World Championship sponsored by FIDE? So how can Topalov in any way be <the real and authentic World Champion>?>

The same argument can be say about Fide World Champions of the 2000s, so why over the years i had to hear that Kramnik was the real World Champion? Because he defeated Kasparov? Shirov defeated Kramnik in a match, so then Shirov is the real World Champion?

Kramnik defeated Kasparov in a friendly match, so why you should call Kramnik the real world champion from 2000 to 2007? Did he ever gave a rematch to Shirov to prove that was the real World Champion? Or to Kasparov? Kramnik is the John Ruiz of Chess. He achieves the ficticious title against one old legend like Kasparov-Holyfield, then made some easy defenses against people like Leko-Golota and only draws! Then refuses to play in St.Louis tournament because he knew he would lose, and achieves a match against Topalov in unfair conditions, in which if there is a tie he wouldn´t lose! Then knowing that the only way to score a win is the psychological way, he uses the same old tricks that Spassky used against Korchnoi and manages to score a draw, and then wins in the rapid matches. Unbelievable. A man that lost the final match against Shirov (+2-0=7) for the fictitous World Chess Championship, caughts all the prize fund (200.000$) with the promise that Shirov would obtain at least the 35% of 1.900.000$, then usurpes Shirov´s place and wins 1.300.000 $, then ties a match against Leko and he is the champion, then ties a match against the official champion and because he is so special tiebreaks must be played... this man is an impostor. Shirov is still waiting to recover at least their 200.000$ match prize fund... He won´t never recover it. Impostors don´t made such things.

So that is why Topalov is for me the real and authentic World Champion. Here is your answer.

Apr-15-07  Ziggurat: < I only believe that the conditions for the Topalov-Kramnik match were unfair for Topalov, so the moral winner of the match was Topalov without doubt.>

Classic.

Apr-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  TheAlchemist: What is another Topalov-Kramnik debate doing on Jakovenko's page anyway?
Apr-15-07  Mameluk: <TheAlchemist> He is their successor.
Apr-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: <Kramnik didn´t won last year match against Topalov. He tied it.>

Actually, Kramnik won the match in the format that he and Topalov had agreed to. Twelve classic games, and if tied after those, it would be decided by the rapid games. If Topalov had won the deciding rapid game, you probably would be singing a different tune.

Apr-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: Maybe you were too quick to rule out cannabis, <chancho>?
Apr-15-07  notyetagm: <sapfy: ... <I am guessing that his effective rating is now over 2720.>

His effective rating is obviously still 2708.>

You knew what I meant. And 2708 is not his "effective" rating, it is his actual or current rating. By effective, I meant "effectively", that is, taking into account his current tournament performances that have yet to be included in his actual rating.

Apr-15-07  esticles: <Kramnik defeated Kasparov in a friendly match, so why you should call Kramnik the real world champion from 2000 to 2007?> ROFL. Maybe because that "friendly match" was the World Championship?
Apr-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ron: O man, do I have to add another person on my ignore list?
Apr-15-07  Plato: <Kramnik didn´t won last year match against Topalov. He tied it.>

This statement in itself is enough to realize that you are living in a fantasy world as far as this is concerned. Let's review what happened:

1. Kramnik played five White's and Topalov played six, but OTB, Kramnik still managed to win three games to Topalov's two.

2. Kramnik won the rapid tiebreakers, conditions that were agreed upon *before* the start of the match (and not because Kramnik is <"so special "> ------------------

3) Kramnik is the official, real and authentic world champion, and no matter how much someone prefers Topalov it cannot change this fact.

Apr-15-07  Plato: <I only believe that the conditions for the Topalov-Kramnik match were unfair for Topalov, so the moral winner of the match was Topalov without doubt.>

I have one word for you: Toiletgate. Calling Topalov a "moral winner" after what transpired during that match is absurd. He and Danailov behaved despicably from round four onward, and the FIDE judges were even willing to violate rules in order to accomodate and substantiate his groundless accusations. If anything, the conditions were biased against Kramnik.

<Shirov is still waiting to recover at least their 200.000$ match prize fund... He won´t never recover it. Impostors don´t made such things.>

I agree that what happened to Shirov was unfair but it was not Kramnik's fault in the least. Your insinuation that Kramnik is partly to blame for it is insulting and untrue. Shirov himself was at least partly to blame because he turned down one match offer in search of more money, only to realize that he had overestimated the interest of sponsors in seeing such a match (given his head-to-head record against Kasparov this was hardly surprising).

<This is the real list of Chess World Champions in the last years:

1985-1993 Garri Kasparov
1993-1999 Anatoli Karpov...>

Ok buddy.

Apr-15-07  square dance: <What is another Topalov-Kramnik debate doing on Jakovenko's page anyway?> i must agree with <TheAlchemist> 100%, but i cant help pointing out that <capablancakarpov> is either completely clueless or hopelessly biased. ive honestly never heard the story told that way before. anyway, any further discussion should probably be moved to the kramnik-topalov match page. :-D
Apr-15-07  Plato: <thealchemist, square dance> Agreed.

Back to DJ -- he went down against the rapid specialist Tkachiev who completely outplayed him on the White side of a closed Catalan... but it was a rapid game after all. It cannot come as a surprise that Tkachiev steamrolled his competition in the playoffs.

Jakovenko can be pleased with his overall performance; his recent performances in general have been consistently impressive.

Apr-15-07  capablancakarpov: <Ron: O man, do I have to add another person on my ignore list?> Yes, if you feel better only listening what you think.

Anyway, congratulations to Jakovenko, his European Championship score so far is really impressive +9-0=15.

Apr-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: <keypusher:Maybe you were too quick to rule out cannabis, <chancho>?>

Maybe, lol.

Apr-23-07  s4life: <Plato: <slomarko: <penultimate> ?> That's right, <slomarko>, "penultimate." Look it up>

Heheh, that was an O'Reilly moment :). And yes, Jakovenko is the best card the russians have for a WC champion 5 or 10 years from now. His games are almost Karpovian in conception and execution.

Apr-23-07  Plato: <Mar-24-07 Plato: Jakovenko's style is reminiscent of Karpov. It won't be long now before he's one of the top ten in the world and climbing...>
May-09-07  Plato: Jakovenko beat Volokitin for the second time in three weeks with an impressive victory in the fifth round of the European Championships. The game features an exchange sacrifice in a queenless position followed by a demonsration of why Jakovenko is highly regarded for his endgame technique:

Volokitin-Jakovenko, Russian Team Championships 2007

1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 g6 5. c4 Nf6 6. Nc3 d6 7. Be2 Nxd4 8. Qxd4 Bg7 9. Be3 O-O 10. Qd2 a5 11. f3 a4 12. O-O Be6 13. Rab1 Qa5 14. Rfc1 Rfc8 15. b4 axb3 16. axb3 Qb4 17. Rc2 Nd7 18. Nd5 Qxd2 19. Rxd2 Kf8 20. b4 Ra3 21. Kf2 f5 22. exf5 Bxf5 23. Rbd1 Nf6 24. Nb6 Rc6 25. c5


click for larger view

25...Rxe3 26. Kxe3 Bh6+ 27. f4 dxc5 28. Rd8+ Kg7 29. bxc5 Re6+ 30. Kf2 Bxf4 31. Nd5 Nxd5 32. R1xd5 Be3+ 33. Kf1 Be4 34. R5d7 Bc6 35. Bf3 Bb5+ 36. Be2 Rf6+ 37. Ke1 Bf2+ 38. Kd1 Ba4+ 39. Kc1 Bxc5 40. Rxb7 Bc6 41. Rdd7 Ba3+ 42. Kd1 Ba4+ 43. Ke1 Bb4+ 44. Rxb4 Bxd7


click for larger view

45. g3 Bc6 46. Rf4 Rd6 47. Rb4 g5 48. h4 h6 49. Kf2 Rd2 50. Rb6 Bd5 51. Ke3 Ra2 52. hxg5 hxg5 53. Rb1 Ra3+ 54. Kf2 Kf6 55. Rd1 e6 56. Rd2 Rc3 57. Rd1 Ke5 58. Re1 Kd4 59. Rd1+ Kc5 60. Ra1 e5 61. Ra5+ Kd4 62. Ra4+ Bc4 63. Bxc4 Rxc4 64. Ra2 Kd3 65. Ra3+ Rc3 66. Ra5 Rc2+ 67. Kf3 e4+ 68. Kg4 e3 69. Re5 Rc1 70. Kxg5 e2 71. g4 e1=Q 72. Rxe1 Rxe1 73. Kf6 Rf1+ 74. Ke6 Rg1 75. Kf5 Kd4 76. g5 Kd5 77. Kf6 Kd6 78. g6 Rf1+ 79. Kg7 Ke7 80. Kh7 Rg1 0-1

May-12-07  notyetagm: <Plato: Jakovenko beat Volokitin for the second time in three weeks with an impressive victory in the fifth round of the European Championships. The game features an exchange sacrifice in a queenless position followed by a demonsration of why Jakovenko is highly regarded for his endgame technique:>

Jakovenko has an ideal skill set: aggressive 1 e4 player, great tactical alertness, superb endgame technique. He is the complete chess player, much like Keres was.

May-12-07  russep: I would be interested to see how he fairs against some of the other players rated over 2700. For example Morozevich, Anand, Kramnik, Aronian etc.
May-12-07  Karpova: Draw against (the ill) Kramnik:
D Jakovenko vs Kramnik, 2005

50% against Morozevich:
D Jakovenko vs Morozevich, 2003
D Jakovenko vs Morozevich, 2005 (okay, this was the game where Moro overslept) Morozevich vs D Jakovenko, 2006

Bad results against Aronian when he was younger:
Aronian vs D Jakovenko, 2002
Aronian vs D Jakovenko, 2002
Aronian vs D Jakovenko, 2005

only draws against Svidler:
Svidler vs D Jakovenko, 2003
D Jakovenko vs Svidler, 2005
D Jakovenko vs Svidler, 2006

Loss:
Mamedyarov vs D Jakovenko, 2006

1-2 versus Shirov:
Shirov vs D Jakovenko, 2006
D Jakovenko vs Shirov, 2006
Shirov vs D Jakovenko, 2006

An early draw:
Radjabov vs D Jakovenko, 2001

May-13-07  notyetagm: Anyone know what Jakovenko's next event is?

Thanks.

May-13-07  Raskolnikov: < notyetagm: Anyone know what Jakovenko's next event is? Thanks> In his interview for http://sportcom.ru/news/interview/4... (in Russian) he said that he is going to play a round-robin tournament in Ukraine ( dont know what ) and in August he will participate in China vs Russia match.
May-13-07  sapfy: Probably the Aerosvit tournament in the second half of June, with Radjabov, Svidler, Shirov, Nisipeanu, Karjakin, Rublevsky, Dominguez, van Wely and three more.
May-13-07  notyetagm: <sapfy: Probably the Aerosvit tournament in the second half of June, with Radjabov, Svidler, Shirov, Nisipeanu, Karjakin, Rublevsky, Dominguez, van Wely and three more.>

Wow, Aerosvit is going to be one strong tournament again like last year.

Jump to page #   (enter # from 1 to 12)
search thread:   
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 5 OF 12 ·  Later Kibitzing>

NOTE: Create an account today to post replies and access other powerful features which are available only to registered users. Becoming a member is free, anonymous, and takes less than 1 minute! If you already have a username, then simply login login under your username now to join the discussion.

Please observe our posting guidelines:

  1. No obscene, racist, sexist, or profane language.
  2. No spamming, advertising, duplicate, or gibberish posts.
  3. No vitriolic or systematic personal attacks against other members.
  4. Nothing in violation of United States law.
  5. No cyberstalking or malicious posting of negative or private information (doxing/doxxing) of members.
  6. No trolling.
  7. The use of "sock puppet" accounts to circumvent disciplinary action taken by moderators, create a false impression of consensus or support, or stage conversations, is prohibited.
  8. Do not degrade Chessgames or any of it's staff/volunteers.

Please try to maintain a semblance of civility at all times.

Blow the Whistle

See something that violates our rules? Blow the whistle and inform a moderator.


NOTE: Please keep all discussion on-topic. This forum is for this specific player only. To discuss chess or this site in general, visit the Kibitzer's Café.

Messages posted by Chessgames members do not necessarily represent the views of Chessgames.com, its employees, or sponsors.
All moderator actions taken are ultimately at the sole discretion of the administration.

Spot an error? Please suggest your correction and help us eliminate database mistakes!
Home | About | Login | Logout | F.A.Q. | Profile | Preferences | Premium Membership | Kibitzer's Café | Biographer's Bistro | New Kibitzing | Chessforums | Tournament Index | Player Directory | Notable Games | World Chess Championships | Opening Explorer | Guess the Move | Game Collections | ChessBookie Game | Chessgames Challenge | Store | Privacy Notice | Contact Us

Copyright 2001-2025, Chessgames Services LLC