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Dmitry Andreikin
D Andreikin 
Photo courtesy of chessdom.com.  

Number of games in database: 1,606
Years covered: 1999 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2695 (2665 rapid, 2714 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2736
Overall record: +285 -105 =517 (59.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 699 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (122) 
    B23 B53 B32 B90 B25
 Queen's Pawn Game (101) 
    A45 D02 E10 A46 A40
 Queen's Gambit Declined (48) 
    D30 D37 D38 D31 D35
 English (48) 
    A15 A13 A16 A14 A19
 Reti System (47) 
    A04 A06 A05
 Ruy Lopez (37) 
    C67 C85 C69 C78 C76
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (154) 
    B46 B42 B40 B45 B43
 Queen's Pawn Game (62) 
    E10 A40 E00 A45 A46
 Ruy Lopez (55) 
    C67 C65 C60 C63 C70
 Sicilian Taimanov (48) 
    B46 B45 B47 B48
 French Defense (45) 
    C11 C07 C10 C18 C02
 Queen's Gambit Declined (39) 
    D37 D35 D31 D30 D36
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   D Andreikin vs Karjakin, 2010 1-0
   D Andreikin vs S Sjugirov, 2012 1-0
   Dominguez Perez vs D Andreikin, 2011 0-1
   Dreev vs D Andreikin, 2013 0-1
   D Andreikin vs Dreev, 2011 1-0
   D Andreikin vs Khenkin, 2013 1-0
   D Andreikin vs Caruana, 2014 1-0
   Predojevic vs D Andreikin, 2016 0-1
   D Andreikin vs Aronian, 2014 1-0
   D Andreikin vs Karjakin, 2014 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Inautomarket Open (2008)
   World Cup (2013)
   Abu Dhabi Masters (2016)
   Hasselbacken Open (2016)
   ICC Open (2016)
   World Junior Championship (2010)
   Reykjavik Open (2016)
   World Junior Championship (2007)
   Sunway Sitges Open (2018)
   48th World Junior Championship (2009)
   Bullet Chess Championship (2023)
   European Championship (2008)
   World Junior Championship (2008)
   PRO League Group Stage (2019)
   Pro Chess League (2018)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Mr. V's favorite Andreikin games by Mr. V
   Andreikin's Best Games by RKR25

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 39th ECC Open
   X Bu vs D Andreikin (Oct-26-24) 1-0
   D Andreikin vs Ivanchuk (Oct-25-24) 0-1
   A Erigaisi vs D Andreikin (Oct-24-24) 1-0
   D Andreikin vs D Gukesh (Oct-23-24) 1-0
   D Andreikin vs J Pechac (Oct-22-24) 1/2-1/2

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

DMITRY ANDREIKIN
(born Feb-05-1990, 35 years old) Russia
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

FM (2001); International Master (2003); Grandmaster (2007); Russian U10 Champion (1999); Russian Junior (U20) Champion (2009 and 2010); World Junior Champion (2010); World Cup finalist and runner-up (2013); Candidate (2014).

Preamble

Andreikin quickly developed as a strong player, competing in and consistently making the leader boards in youth and junior tournaments. His junior career culminated in winning the World Junior Championship in 2010. Three years later, he reached a new zenith in his career when he reached the final of the World Cup 2013 to qualify for the Candidates Tournament 2014.

Championships

<Youth> Andreikin won the 1999 U10 World Championship and was runner up in the same event in 2000. Subsequently he competed in a number of Russian and European Youth Championships without bothering the top of the leader board. However, his experience in these events started to give him traction in 2004, when he placed =1st at the World U14 Championship with 8.5/11 (losing on tiebreak to Ildar Khairullin), and in 2006, when he placed =3rd in the Russian U18 Higher League Championship, half a point behind Roman Nechepurenko and Pogos Nakhapetiane.

<Junior (U20)> He first competed in the World Junior Championship when he was 16 in the World Junior Championship (2006), scoring 7.5/13 (par rating). In 2008, he competed in the Russian Junior Championship and the World Junior Championship (2008). In 2009, he won the Russian Junior Championship ahead of Ivan Popov and Ian Nepomniachtchi, successfully defending his title in 2010 ahead of Nepomniachtchi and Khairullin. His crowning achievement as a Junior came in 2010, when he scored 10/13 to secure the World Junior Championship (2010), this victory qualifying him for the World Cup of 2011.

<National> He first competed in the Russian Higher League Championship, the qualifier for the Russian Superfinal, in 2004 at the age of 14, and scored 5/9 – and a GM norm - amongst a sea of grandmasters. He competed in the higher league championship regularly since then without any especially outstanding results until he came 1st on tiebreak in the Russian Chess Championships Higher League (2012), which advanced him to contest the Russian Superfinals (2012), where he placed =1st. He went on to win the round-robin Russian Superfinals (Tiebreak) (2012) by 4/5 (+3 =2) to take first place overall and to become the 2012 Russian Champion. This result qualified him for direct seeding to the Russian Superfinals (2013), where he placed =3rd on 5.5/9, a point behind the joint winners Ian Nepomniachtchi and Peter Svidler.

<Continental> Aged 15, he first contested the continental championship at the 6th European Individual Championship (2005) scoring 6.5/13. He scored 7.5/11 at the European Individual Championship (2008), qualifying for the World Cup 2009. He placed =2nd (4th on tiebreak) with 8/11 at the 13th European Individual Championship (2012), qualifying him for the World Cup 2013.

<World> At the World Cup (2009), he was eliminated by Finnish GM Tomi Nyback in the blitz tiebreaker of round 1. In the World Cup (2011) he defeated GM Murtas Kazhgaleyev of Kazakhstan in the first round before losing in the second round to Russian GM Evgeny Tomashevsky. In the World Cup (2013), he has defeated Iranian GM Pouria Darini in the first round, Vietnamese GM Ngoc Truongson Nguyen in the second round, compatriot GM Alexey Dreev in the third round and compatriot GM Sergey Karjakin in the Round of 16 (round 4), the winner of the previous World Cup and former Candidate, compatriot GM Peter Svidler in the quarter final (round 5) and his close friend and compatriot GM Evgeny Tomashevsky in the semi-final (round 6), thereby qualifying for both the World Chess Championship Candidates (2014) and for the World Cup (2015). He met former World Champion and compatriot GM Vladimir Kramnik in the final, losing the first game and drawing the remaining three to become the runner up of the 2013 World Cup. At the World Chess Championship Candidates (2014) held in March 2014 in Khanty-Mansiysk, he scored above expectations by placing =3rd (5th on tiebreak behind Kramnik and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov) with 7/14 behind Viswanathan Anand and Karjakin.

Apart from qualifying for the World Cup in 2015, Andreikin commenced his participation in the 2014-2016 World Championship cycle by participating in the Grand Prix series of 2014-15, commencing with the FIDE Grand Prix Baku (2014). There he placed 11th and scoring only 20 Grand Prix points to almost knock himself out of contention in the new reduced Grand Prix format. However, he bounced back by winning the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014) outright with 7/11, and 170 GP points to his tally, for a progressive total of 190. This placed him 3rd after the second leg of the Grand Prix, putting him into solid contention for one of the top two places that would have qualified him for the Candidates tournament of 2016. However, a poor result in the third leg of the series at FIDE Grand Prix Tbilisi (2015) eliminated him from top 2 contention.

At the World Cup of 2015, Andreikin defeated Zhou Jianchao, Anton Korobov and, in a minor upset, Vladimir Kramnik in the first three rounds to progress to the Round of Sixteen (round four) where he met Sergey Karjakin, in a match that guaranteed a Russian advances to the quarter final. In the event, Andreikin lost their encounter 1.5-2.5 in the first set of rapid game tiebreakers to be eliminated from the tournament.

Standard Tournaments

In 2001, aged 11 and already an FM rated over 2200, he scored 8/11 to place equal first in a category 3 round-robin Masters Tournament in Rjazan alongside Vladimir P Vasiliev and Tikhon Koshil. Before his 12th birthday he almost reached the 2400 rating mark. A few months later he was competing in open tournaments alongside international masters and grandmasters, eg: in the White Knights 2001 event, where he still gained significant ratings points even though he scored only 3/8 against rated players. In 2002, he won the International Festival Section D event, a category 2 round robin event, with 11/14. In 2003, he was =1st in the Ryazan Regional Championship with 9.5/13 alongside Stepavoj, Oleg Aleshin, and Alexander N Panchenko.

There followed:

• 2006: =1st alongside Konstantin Chernyshov and Alexei Kornev at the Lipetsk Open in 2006;

• 2007: 1st at the 7th Eseninskaya Open in Ryazan

• 2008: 1st the 4th Inautomarket Open in Minsk and = 3rd in the Chigorin Memorial Tournament

• 2009, =1st–3rd with Yuri Kuzubov and Rauf Mamedov in a category 16 tournament at Lubbock, Texas. He also came =1st with 7 others at the Voroznezh Open Master Tournament;

• 2010:, he tied for 2nd–7th with Dreev, Ivan Sokolov, Vladimir Fedoseev, Alexander Areshchenko and Konstantin Sakaev in the Chigorin Memorial, a half point behind Eltaj Safarli;

• 2011: 2nd on tiebreak ahead of Emil Sutovsky in the Baku Open (2011), and he was 3rd, a point behind the leaders Le Quang Liem and Vassily Ivanchuk, in the 46th Capablanca Memorial (2011);

• 2012: he tied for =4th with Alexander Khalifman, Maxim Rodshtein, Fabiano Caruana and Hrant Melkumyan in the Aeroflot Open (2012), half a point behind the leaders Pavel Eljanov, Mateusz Bartel and Anton Korobov;

• 2013: he achieved his best tournament result to date, placing an undefeated =3rd (5th on tiebreak) at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013) and

• 2015: he was second at the Capablanca Memorial (2015).

Team Events

<National representation> Andreikin represented Russia at the 2004 Russia-China summit match and at the European Team Championship (2013), where he helped his team to the bronze medal.

<National events and leagues> Andreikin participated in the 2003 Russian Young Olympiad and in the 2008 Russian Student Teams Championship. He has participated in the Russian Premier League since 2007, playing with Ekonomist SGSEU Saratov, helping them to a bronze medial in 2010 and earning an individual silver at the same time. He also participated in the 2009 Ukrainian League where he won gold playing board one for his team PGMB Kharkiv, with his team winning the silver medal, and in the 2012 Macedonian Team Championship. In 2015, he played board 2 for Universitet Belorechensk in the Russian Premier League, scoring 3.5/7 and helping his team to a team silver in the event.

He has played in the European Club Cup since 2008, also with Ekonomist SGSEU Saratov, helping his team to win gold in 2009 and 2010, on the latter occasion also winning individual gold for his performance on board 4. He also won individual silver in 2008 on board 5.

Match

Andreikin won the Razuvaev memorial match, Andreikin - Nepomniachtchi Match (2012), by 3.5/6 (+1 =5).

Rapid

In May 2012, he was =1st with 8.5/11 in the powerful Gran-pri Donskoj rapid. In July 2012, he was =2nd at the Kazakhstan-open, half a point behind Pavel Ponkratov. Several months later he came =3rd in another powerful rapid event, the Grand-prix Azovskiy rapid, half a point behind Dreev and Sjugirov. He won the Rector Cup Rapid (2012) outright in November 2012 to confirm his status as one of the world's best rapid players. In January 2013, he placed outright second behind Ernesto Inarkiev at the GP Volgograd 2013 rapid and in June scored 9/15 in the FIDE Rapid World Championship.

Blitz

In July 2012, he won the World Blitz Championship Semi Finals with 16.5/22, 2 points clear of Le Quang Liem, and then went on to score 17/30 to place =5th in the 2012 Blitz World Championship, behind Alexander Grischuk, Magnus Carlsen, Sergey Karjakin and Alexander Morozevich. He was 9th at the 2013 World Blitz Championship held in June 2013.

Ratings and Rankings

Andreikin was one of the world's top Juniors (U20) for some years, peaking at world #6 in July 2009, at which time he also entered the top 100 for the first time. He has remained in the top 100 since March 2010. He crossed the 2700 rating mark in May 2012 and has remained rated above 2700 since that time. His peak rating to date was 2737 for the three months December 2014 until the end of February 2015, during which period his ranking peaked at #18 in the world.

References

(i) Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/
(ii) Wikipedia article: Dmitry Andreikin

Last updated: 2016-09-01 06:34:51

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 65; games 1-25 of 1,606  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. D Andreikin vs S Zhigalko  1-0311999Wch U10B32 Sicilian
2. D Andreikin vs Vachier-Lagrave 1-0491999Wch U10B27 Sicilian
3. D Andreikin vs Vachier-Lagrave  ½-½292000Wch U10B32 Sicilian
4. D Andreikin vs M Arabatzis  1-0262000Ano Liosia Open 2000/01E54 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Gligoric System
5. G Mastrokoukos vs D Andreikin  0-1362001Ano Liosia Open 2000/01B40 Sicilian
6. D Andreikin vs V Bogdanovski  1-0372001Ano Liosia Open 2000/01B06 Robatsch
7. Dvoirys vs D Andreikin  1-0372001Ano Liosia Open 2000/01C42 Petrov Defense
8. D Andreikin vs A Chilov  1-0312001Ano Liosia Open 2000/01B32 Sicilian
9. D Andreikin vs J Meister  0-1502001White NightsB41 Sicilian, Kan
10. K Shiripov vs D Andreikin  0-1672001White NightsA45 Queen's Pawn Game
11. D Andreikin vs Kharitonov  ½-½652001White NightsE54 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Gligoric System
12. V M Kozlov vs D Andreikin 0-1332001White NightsC24 Bishop's Opening
13. D Andreikin vs A Anjuhin  ½-½582001White NightsB13 Caro-Kann, Exchange
14. S Klimov vs D Andreikin  1-0352001White NightsC42 Petrov Defense
15. D Andreikin vs Tseshkovsky  0-1352001White NightsB07 Pirc
16. A Gusev vs D Andreikin  ½-½192001White NightsA15 English
17. D Andreikin vs I Kurnosov  ½-½802001White NightsB32 Sicilian
18. D Andreikin vs E Karlsson 1-0152001EYCC B12C79 Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defense Deferred
19. Andrejs Dzalbo vs D Andreikin  0-1222001EYCC B12E60 King's Indian Defense
20. D Andreikin vs T Banusz  ½-½382001EYCC B12B13 Caro-Kann, Exchange
21. T Warakomski vs D Andreikin  0-1412001EYCC B12A07 King's Indian Attack
22. D Andreikin vs I Enchev  1-0452001EYCC B12B90 Sicilian, Najdorf
23. J Mihailovs vs D Andreikin 1-0292001EYCC B12A68 Benoni, Four Pawns Attack
24. D Andreikin vs D Jojua  1-0482001EYCC B12B86 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack
25. Nepomniachtchi vs D Andreikin  ½-½302001EYCC B12B22 Sicilian, Alapin
 page 1 of 65; games 1-25 of 1,606  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Andreikin wins | Andreikin loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 3 OF 5 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Aug-29-13  twinlark: <Conrad>

It's the nature of the competition. He has won one and drawn all the rest of his classical games, the games which are subject to live rating and eventually in the official monthly list of standard ratings, and won in the unrated tiebreaker games.

The loss of rating comes from the number of players of lower rating with whom he drew on his way to the final.

The tiebreakers are not rated as standard games for obvious reasons, although they may be subject to the separate ratings for rapid and blitz games that FIDE recently restarted.

Here's the breakdown:

Round 1: Darini 2 draws - lost 4.8 points (2 x -2.4)

Round 2: Nguyen 1 win one draw - gained 2.6 points

Round 3: Dreev 2 draws - lost 1.4 points

Round 4: Karjakin 2 draws - gained 1.6 points

Round 5: Svidler 2 draws - gained 0,8 points

Round 6: Tomashevsky 2 draws - lost 0.2 points

Net result = -4.8 + 2.6 - 1.4 + 1.6 +0.8 - 0.2 = -1.4 standard rating points lost.

Aug-29-13  twinlark: He could be knocked out of the 2700 club altogether if he loses heavily to Kramnik, and yet still qualify for the Candidates.
Aug-29-13  notyetagm: <twinlark: He could be knocked out of the 2700 club altogether if he loses heavily to Kramnik, and yet still qualify for the Candidates.>

HE. EARNED. IT.

Grischuk, Caruana, Nakamura, Kamsky, Morozevich, Le Quang Liem, Svidler, etc. all had their chance and they blew it.

ANDREIKIN. DIDN'T.

Aug-29-13  notyetagm: <twinlark: He could be knocked out of the 2700 club altogether if he loses heavily to Kramnik, and yet still qualify for the Candidates.>

Just look at the way Nakamura choked against Korobov, when everything was on the line and it mattered most.

A Korobov vs Nakamura, 2013

This wasn't some ICC bullet game, this game was to determine who would qualify for the next Candidates Tournament.

And Nakamura blew it. Andreikin didn't.

Aug-29-13  twinlark: <notyetagm>

No need to yell. I completely agree that Andreikin earned it. I was merely explaining the anomaly of losing rating points at the same time as winning a place in the Candidates.

Aug-29-13  Everett: <twinlark: <notyetagm> No need to yell. I completely agree that Andreikin earned it. I was merely explaining the anomaly of losing rating points at the same time as winning a place in the Candidates.>

Yet another lesson that we shouldn't cleave too closely to ratings to make decisions regarding who belongs where.

Aug-29-13  notyetagm: <twinlark: <notyetagm> No need to yell.>

Not yelling. EMPHASIS.

Aug-30-13  fisayo123: <Everett> Some posters unfortunately live or die by the rating list. <notyetagm> <Not yelling. EMPHASIS.> Could never understand why people mistake ALL CAPS with yelling. EMPHASIS INDEED.
Aug-30-13  notyetagm: <fisayo123: ... Could never understand why people mistake ALL CAPS with yelling. EMPHASIS INDEED.>

THIS IS YELLING!!!!!!!!

:-)

Aug-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  JointheArmy: <Not yelling. EMPHASIS.>

That's how I interpret your posts as well.

I love your enthusiasm, btw.

Aug-30-13  twinlark: <notyetagm>

Whatever. Just saying you were preaching to the choir, and surprised you seemed to consider I was arguing Andreikin was undeserving.

I would have preferred Tomashevsky, to be honest, as he had a far higher win ratio in the standard games, but Andreikin was the better man in the format and absolutely deserved to win.

Can't help that think, however, that Andreikin's rapid and blitz prowess won't be as much use to him in the Candidates, though. The winner of that event will have to do +2 or +3 in the standard games at the very least.

Aug-30-13  SimonWebbsTiger: the trouble is it isn't possible to use italics, the Classic way of showing emphasis. However!

< > around a Word is an ok way at cg.com!?

Caps has "always" been equated with shouting on the Net, so using caps is deemed bad netiquette.

Aug-30-13  csmath: <SimonWebbsTiger: the trouble is it isn't possible to use italics, the Classic way of showing emphasis. However! < > around a Word is an ok way at cg.com!?

Caps has "always" been equated with shouting on the Net, so using caps is deemed bad netiquette.>

Find something smarter to discuss. His posts are the way he wants unless cg.com administrators find something offensive there. You are no cg.com administrator thus is really no business of yours.

Aug-30-13  SimonWebbsTiger: @<twinlark>

Did you see when Vlad (and VML) were in after their game? He was smiling and joking away that he hoped Tomashevsky would win because he didn't fancy rapids!

I don't think Andreikin will be as conservative come the Candidates. Or am I mistaken; he is as solid as that and this wasn't "the Grischuk strategem"?

Aug-30-13  SimonWebbsTiger: @<csmath>

sure -- I will discuss the millions of mistakes you invariably make commenting on Gruenfeld games. :)

Aug-30-13  csmath: <sure -- I will discuss the millions of mistakes you invariably make commenting on Gruenfeld games. :)>

Make sure you post that on Wesley So page like those other intelligent comments you made there so that I know where to find it.

Aug-30-13  twinlark: <SimonWebbsTiger>

I'm not sure whether he's that solid or whether he was engaging in a Grischuk strategy either. Frankly I don't know enough about Andreikin, except that Carlsen has great respect for him as a future adversary.

Kramnik obviously doesn't want to face him in rapid either, so my guess is he'll do his best to make sure it doesn't get to that.

We'll know soon enough!

Aug-30-13  Everett: I do find it fascinating how players can sense each other's strength at the board (Carlsen on Andreikin) and how we simply cannot grasp what they sense/feel/see, even with all the computers in the world.

It takes mastery to fully understand mastery. For people like me, I get merely the faintist glimpse of insight, then *poof*, it's gone. And then, only when I'm lucky.

Aug-30-13  Everett: BTW, why not simply <bracket> for emphasis, instead of CAPS? It is more discrete and takes up less space. So, basically, I'm with TWINLARK, umm... <twinlark> on this one.
Aug-30-13  micartouse: <Everett: I do find it fascinating how players can sense each other's strength at the board (Carlsen on Andreikin) and how we simply cannot grasp what they sense/feel/see, even with all the computers in the world. It takes mastery to fully understand mastery.>

I think even at a low level it is possible to gauge how comparatively strong a player is if you play in person. No, I can't tell the difference between an IM and a GM, but it only takes a few moves for a B to sense A or C level regardless of the what the moves are.

My experience is that a weak player can never act strong. But strong players can sometimes act weak.

Aug-30-13  RedShield: Can't recall who first pointed it out, but this guy's name is enough to give Edward Winter kittens: <And Ray Keene defeats Dreev....and Ray Keene beats Karjakin....and Ray Keene knocks out Svidler....and Ray Keene qualifies for the Candidates.>
Aug-30-13  Conrad93: His rating has dropped?
Aug-30-13  twinlark: <Conrad93>: Please pay attention - Dmitry Andreikin
Aug-30-13  notyetagm: <Everett: BTW, why not simply <bracket> for emphasis, instead of CAPS?>

I use <> for <CHESS CONCEPTS> or to quote someone, like above.

Aug-30-13  refutor: using <these> to quote someone was started by me in 2003 ;) hope all are well....go kramnik!
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