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Vladimir Kramnik
Kramnik 
Photograph copyright © 2007 Milan Kovacs (www.milankovacs.com)  

Number of games in database: 3,249
Years covered: 1984 to 2024
Highest rating achieved in database: 2817
Overall record: +549 -171 =959 (61.3%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 1570 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 English (154) 
    A15 A14 A17 A13 A16
 Sicilian (147) 
    B90 B33 B30 B92 B52
 Queen's Pawn Game (109) 
    D02 A46 E10 D05 D00
 King's Indian (106) 
    E97 E92 E94 E91 E81
 Reti System (101) 
    A04 A06 A05
 Slav (99) 
    D17 D15 D11 D18 D12
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (270) 
    B33 B30 B31 B62 B65
 Ruy Lopez (182) 
    C67 C65 C84 C78 C95
 Queen's Gambit Declined (123) 
    D37 D35 D38 D39 D31
 Semi-Slav (110) 
    D45 D43 D47 D44 D48
 Petrov (102) 
    C42 C43
 Nimzo Indian (81) 
    E32 E21 E34 E54 E46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Kramnik vs Leko, 2004 1-0
   Kasparov vs Kramnik, 1996 0-1
   Gelfand vs Kramnik, 1996 0-1
   Kramnik vs Kasparov, 1994 1-0
   Ivanchuk vs Kramnik, 1996 0-1
   Kramnik vs Kasparov, 2000 1-0
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004 0-1
   Kramnik vs Anand, 2001 1-0
   Topalov vs Kramnik, 1995 0-1
   Kramnik vs Morozevich, 2007 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999)
   Kasparov - Kramnik Classical World Championship Match (2000)
   Kramnik - Leko Classical World Championship Match (2004)
   Kramnik - Topalov World Championship Match (2006)
   World Championship Tournament (2007)
   Anand - Kramnik World Championship Match (2008)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   New York PCA/Intel-GP (1994)
   Belgrade Investbank (1995)
   Hoogovens Group A (1998)
   Amber Blindfold (2003)
   Dortmund Sparkassen (2004)
   16th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2007)
   Dortmund Open-A (1992)
   World Cup (2013)
   Qatar Masters (2014)
   Tata Steel Masters (2018)
   Sao Paulo Latin American Cup Open (1991)
   Legends of Chess (2020)
   World Youth U26 Team Championship (1991)
   Biel Interzonal (1993)
   Manila Olympiad (1992)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by JoseTigranTalFischer
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by Goatsrocknroll23
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by peckinpah
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by pacercina
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by jakaiden
   Kramnik - My Life and Games by Okavango
   Vladi Kramn'd Fredthebear Full of White Russian by fredthebear
   Match Kramnik! by amadeus
   Vladi Others by fredthebear
   My Life and Games (Kramnik/Damsky) by Qindarka
   Kramnik on a King Hunt & vs the World Champions by visayanbraindoctor
   0ZeR0's Favorite Games Volume 75 by 0ZeR0
   Vladimir, the Conqueror by Gottschalk
   Vladimir Kramnik's Best Games by KingG

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Titled Tuesday Early
   T Rendle vs Kramnik (Dec-10-24) 1-0, blitz
   Kramnik vs Carlsen (Dec-10-24) 1-0, blitz
   Nakamura vs Kramnik (Jul-16-24) 0-1, blitz
   Kramnik vs Carlsen (Jan-02-24) 0-1, blitz
   Svidler vs Kramnik (Sep-26-23) 1-0, rapid

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Vladimir Kramnik
Search Google for Vladimir Kramnik
FIDE player card for Vladimir Kramnik

VLADIMIR KRAMNIK
(born Jun-25-1975, 49 years old) Russia
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

Former World Champion - and former top ranked player in the world - Vladimir Borisovich Kramnik was born in Tuapse, on the shores of the Black Sea, on June 25, 1975. As a child, Vladimir Kramnik studied in the chess school established by Mikhail Botvinnik. In 2000, he won the Classical World Championship from Garry Kasparov, then won the unified title when he defeated Veselin Topalov in 2006 to become the 14th undisputed World Champion. Kramnik relinquished the title in 2007 to his successor, the 15th undisputed (and now former) World Champion, Viswanathan Anand.

Championships

<Age> In 1991, Kramnik won the World Under 18 Championship in Guarapuava, Brazil.

<National> Kramnik finished equal first in the 1990 RSFSR (Russian) Championship in Kuibyshev, Russia, but placed second on tiebreak, behind Andrei Kharlov. He came third ex aequo in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2013) after a last round battle with Ian Nepomniachtchi for a share of first and the possibility of the title for the first time. However, he lost the game and scored 5.5/9.

<World> Kramnik's early attempts at storming the citadel of the World Championship met with mixed results. In 1994, he lost a Candidates quarter finals match for the PCA championship to Gata Kamsky by 1½-4½, and a few months later he lost a Candidates semi-finals match for the FIDE championship to Boris Gelfand by 3½-4½. In 1998, Kramnik was defeated by Alexey Shirov by 3½-5½ in the Candidates match held in Cazorla to determine the right to play Garry Kasparov for the Classical World Chess Championship. In 1999, Kramnik lost in the quarterfinals of the FIDE knockout championship in Las Vegas to Michael Adams by 2-4, including the 4 game rapid play-off.

Although Shirov had defeated Kramnik for the right to challenge Kasparov, suitable sponsorship was not found for a Kasparov-Shirov match, and it never took place. In 2000, however, sponsorship became available for a Kasparov-Kramnik match instead. This meant that Kramnik was the first player since 1935 - when Alexander Alekhine selected Max Euwe as his challenger - to play a world championship match without qualifying. Kramnik reached the pinnacle by defeating long-time champion Kasparov in the Kasparov - Kramnik Classical World Championship Match (2000) in London by the score of 8½ to 6½ (+2 =13 -0) without losing a game, becoming the next Classical World Champion in the line that started from Wilhelm Steinitz. It was the first time since the Lasker - Capablanca World Championship Match (1921) that the defending champion had lost a match without winning a game and it was also the first time Kasparov had lost a World Championship match. Kasparov said of Kramnik that: <"He is the hardest player to beat in the world.">

In 2004, Kramnik successfully defended his title as Classical World Chess Champion against challenger Peter Leko at Brissago, Switzerland, by drawing the Kramnik - Leko Classical World Championship Match (2004) in the last game. Lékó was leading the 14-game match until the final game, which Kramnik won, thus forcing a 7 - 7 draw and ensuring that Kramnik remained world champion. Because of the drawn result, the prize fund of 1 million Swiss francs was split between the two players.

Kramnik refused to participate at the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005), but indicated his willingness to play a match against the winner to unify the world championship. His next title defence in 2006, therefore, was a reunification match with the new FIDE world title holder from the 2005 tournament, Veselin Topalov. The $1 million Kramnik - Topalov World Championship Match (2006) was played in Elista, Kalmykia from September 21 to October 13 and after controversially forfeiting the fifth game, Kramnik won the rapid game playoff by 2½ -1½ after the classical games were tied 6-6, thereby becoming the first undisputed unified World Chess Champion since the 1993 split. In the following year, Kramnik lost the unified world title when he finished second to Viswanathan Anand at the Mexico City World Championship Tournament (2007). In October 2008, Kramnik exercised his entitlement to a rematch as a challenger to World Champion Anand in Bonn, Germany, but lost the Anand - Kramnik World Championship Match (2008) match by 4½ to 6½ (+1 =7 -3).

Kramnik's tournament performances in 2009 (see below) raised his rating (average of July 2009 and January 2010 ratings) sufficiently to qualify him for the World Championship Candidates (2011). In the first round he beat Teimour Radjabov by the narrowest of margins*: after tieing the classical games 2-2 (+0 =4 -0), and the rapid games 2-2 (+0 =4 -0), he won the blitz playoff by 2.5-1.5 (+2 =1 -1) to move to the semi final match against Alexander Grischuk, which he lost 1.5-0.5 (=1 -1) in the blitz tiebreaker after he drew the classical games 2-2 (+0 -0 =4) and the rapid games 2-2 (+0 -0 =4), thereby eliminating him from the contest. Participating in the World Championship Candidates (2013) on the basis of his rating, Kramnik came =1st with Magnus Carlsen on 8.5/13 after both lost their last round games. As the first tiebreaker (individual score against the other player in the tournament) left them level, the second tiebreaker (greater number of wins in the tournament) relegated Kramnik to second place due to scoring four wins to Carlsen's five.

Kramnik was seeded directly into the World Championship Candidates (2014), as he met the pre-condition that he participate in the World Cup (2013). During the Cup, he defeated Zambian IM Gillan Bwalya in the first round, compatriot GM Mikhail Kobalia in the second round, Ukrainian GM Alexander Areshchenko in the third round, veteran Ukrainian GM and twice former Candidate Vasyl Ivanchuk in the Round of 16 (round four), his third Ukrainian opponent in the shape of GM Anton Korobov in the quarter final (round five), one of the wildcards of the event, French GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave match in the semi final (round 6) before defeating compatriot GM Dmitry Andreikin in the final by 2.5-1.5 (+1 =3). His win also guaranteed qualification in the World Cup 2015, although he would qualify by rating alone. At the Candidates in March 2014, he placed 3rd with 7/14 behind Anand and Karjakin.

He qualified by rating to play in the World Cup (2015) where he met and defeated Peruvian Deysi Estela Cori Tello and Cuban GM Lazaro Bruzon Batista in the first two rounds to advance to the third round where he lost to Dmitry Andreikin in the first set of rapid game tiebreakers, thereby bowing out of the event.

Tournaments

Kramnik won Chalkidiki 1992 with 7.5/11, and in 1993, he played in Linares, finishing fifth and defeating the then world number three, Vasyl Ivanchuk. Following some solid results in the interim which resulted in him winning the 1994 PCA Intel Grand Prix, major tournament triumphs were soon to follow, such as Dortmund 1995, Horgen 1995, Belgrade 1995, =1st in Dos Hermanas in 1996 and 1997, =1st in Tilburg 1997 (8/11). Dortmund became a favourite stop, as Kramnik has gone on to win nine more times in 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, Dortmund Sparkassen (2006), Dortmund Sparkassen (2007), Dortmund Sparkassen (2009) and Dortmund Sparkassen (2011), as either equal or clear first; in the 2011 edition of the event he won by 1.5 points despite losing in the last round. In 2000, Kramnik won his first Linares tournament, completing his set of victories in all three of chess' "triple crown" events: Corus, Linares, and Dortmund. Kramnik later captured additional Linares victories in Linares (2003) (shared) and Linares (2004) (outright). He won the Tal Memorial (2007) with 6.5/9, 1.5 ahead of Shirov. Kramnik had exceptionally good results in 2009, winning once again in Dortmund and then winning the Category 21 (average ELO = 2763) Tal Memorial (2009) in Moscow with 6/9 and a TPR of 2883. At the time, the average ELO rating of the field made it the strongest tournament in history. He also participated in the London Chess Classic (2009) in December, finishing second to Magnus Carlsen. These magnificent results qualified him for the 2011 Candidates on the basis of his boosted ratings. Kramnik began 2010 at Corus Group A (2010) in the Netherlands, during which he defeated new world number-one Carlsen with the Black pieces in their head-to-head encounter, ending Carlsen's 36-match unbeaten streak. A late loss to Anand knocked him out of first place, and Kramnik finished with 8/13, tying for second place with Shirov behind Carlsen's 8½ points. He came 2nd in the preliminary Shanghai Masters (2010) to qualify for the Grand Slam Chess Final (2010) against Carlsen and Anand, who had pre-qualified. He then won at Bilbao with +2 -0 =4 over world champion Anand, then-world number one Magnus Carlsen, and Shirov. The 2009 Tal Memorial and the Grand Slam Final at Bilbao were the most powerful tournaments (in ratings terms) ever staged. In late 2011, he easily won the 15th Unive (Crown Group) (2011) with 4.5/6 and a TPR of 2903 and finished the year with outright first at the London Chess Classic (2011) with +4 -0 =4 and a TPR of 2934, recovering ground lost following a mediocre performance in the Tal Memorial (2011) where he failed to win a game. In June 2012, he placed =4th at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2012), with 4.5/9 and in July 2012, =3rd (4th on tiebreak) at the category 19 Dortmund Sparkassen (2012) tournament. Kramnik finished 2012 with a surge, placing 2nd at the London Chess Classic (2012) behind Magnus Carlsen, scoring 6/8 (16 points in the 3-1-0 scoring system used in the event) and a TPR of 2937 to Carlsen's 2994.

His final training preparation for the Candidates tournament in March at the category 21 Zurich Chess Challenge (2013), was less than completely successful in terms of results (2.5/6), drawing five and losing one to Anand, although it seemed to contribute to his game fitness at the Candidates as he placed second by the narrowest of margins, scoring equal to Carlsen who won the event and the right to challenge Anand for the World Championship. He placed =4th with 4.5/9, a point behind the winner, in a low scoring Alekhine Memorial (2013) and then had one of his worse ever results at the Tal Memorial (2013), coming last with 3/9 (+0 -3 =6). However, he returned to form in the Dortmund Sparkassen (2013), placing outright second behind Adams, scoring 6.5/9, jointly dominating the category 19 field to the extent that no other player scored better than 50%. In November 2014, Kramnik competed at the category 20 Petrosian Memorial (2014), and was outright second behind Alexander Grischuk with 4.5/7, signalling a mild return to form after a slump that saw him exit the world's top 10 for the first time since he entered the top 10 in January 1993. There followed 2nd at the powerful Qatar Masters (2014), with 7/9, and =1st at the London Chess Classic (2014).

2015 saw Kramnik starting his competitive year by placing outright 3rd behind the winner Anand and runner-up Hikaru Nakamura, ahead of Sergey Karjakin, Levon Aronian and Fabiano Caruana respectively, in the standard section of the RR category 22 Zurich Chess Challenge (2015). He won the final section of the Zurich event, namely the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2015), but the added points were insufficient to give him the overall lead and he finished with 3rd prize behind Nakamura and Anand respectively. A relatively poor performance at the Gashimov Memorial (2015) where he scored only 4/9 was followed by a solid performance at the Russian Premier League 2015 (see below) and a below average 3.5/7 for fourth place at the annual Dortmund Sparkassen (2015). He saw out the year with equal third, scoring 6.5/9 at the powerful Qatar Masters (2015), half a point behind the joint leaders Magnus Carlsen and the rising Chinese star Yangyi Yu. Kramnik started 2016 with equal third on 5/9 at the Norway Chess (2016) behind Carlsen and Aronian respectively after also coming third in the preliminary Norway Chess (Blitz) (2016) used to determine the draw. Several months later in July he placed =2nd (with 4/7) behind Vachier-Lagrave at Dortmund Sparkassen (2016). Kramnik's year in standard time chess finished with a reasonably efficacious equal third at the London Chess Classic (2016), a point behind the winner Wesley So.

In April 2017, Kramnik was second on tiebreak ahead of co-runners up Wesley So and Veselin Topalov at the category 21 Gashimov Memorial (2017), scoring 5/9, half a point behind the winner Shakhriyar Mamedyarov. Two months later he again placed equal second, this time at the category 22 Norway Chess (2017), scoring 5/9 alongside Hikaru Nakamura, a point behind the winner Levon Aronian.

Team Events

<Olympiads> Kramnik has won three team and and individual gold medals at the Olympiads as well as two team silvers. He played in the gold medal winning Russian teams in the Manila 1992, Moscow 1994 and Yerevan 1996 Olympiads, his first gold medal being awarded to him as an untitled 16 year old in 1992 when he scored eight wins, one draw, and no losses to record a remarkable TPR of 2958. In 1994, he came fifth on the second board with 8/11 and a 2727 TPR. In 1996, he scored a relatively meagre 4.5/9 on the second board. He did not participate in any more Olympiads until Turin Olympiad (2006) in Turin, when he again won a gold medal with overall best performance on the top board with 6.5/9 (2847 TPR). In the Dresden Olympiad (2008) in Dresden, he scored 5/9 on top board and a 2735 TPR. Kramnik played board one for the silver medal winning Russian team in the Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010) in Khanty-Mansiysk, coming fifth with a scored of 5.5/9, winning 2 and drawing 7 with a TPR of 2794. At the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) held in Istanbul, he again played top board scoring 5/9 and coming 7th on that board, leading his team to another silver medal. At the Tromso Olympiad (2014), he again played board 1 for Russia. He played board two for Russia in the Baku Olympiad (2016), scoring individual gold for his board, and team bronze with his countrymen.

<National Team Events> In 1991, 2490-rated FM Kramnik represented Russia on board 2 at the World U26 Championship played at Maringá; with a perfect score of 6/6 he helped Russia to win gold, and won individual gold for his performance. He played in the European Team Championships on one occasion, in 1992, when the then FM was rated 2590. Again representing Russia, this time on board 3, he helped his team to win gold with a 6/7 effort, and won individual gold for board 3 as well as a gold medal for the best rating performance at the event, that being a 2863 performance, ahead of Kasparov's 2809 performance that won rating silver. That same year (1992), he also played on the USSR team against the Rest of the World. He played for Russia twice in the World Team Championship, in 1993 and 2013. On the first occasion, he lead his country to a bronze medal, and on the second occasion - at the World Team Championship (2013) - to a gold medal.

<European Club Cup> Kramnik participated in the European Club Cup between 1995 and 1999 inclusive, in 2005 and again in 2015 and 2016. He started off playing board one with SV Empor Berlin in 1992 and 1993, moved on to Sberbank-Tatarstan Kazan in 1994 where he helped the club to bronze, then played board one with the powerful Agrouniverzal Zemun team in 1998 and 1999, winning team silver in 1999. Since then, he played for NAO Paris in 2005, winning team bronze and for the Siberia Novosibirsk team in the European Club Cup (2015) and European Club Cup (2016) winning team gold in 2015 as well as an individual gold for board 1.

At the Russian Team Championship (2015), Kramnik played board 1 for Siberia Novosibirsk, winning gold for that board; his effort also helped his team to win gold. He repeated his individual effort in the Russian Team Championship (2016), this time helping his team to a bronze medal in the double round robin 5-team contest.

Matches

In 2004, he won a simul against the German National Team 2½:1½.

In October 2002, Kramnik played an eight game match against Deep Fritz (Computer) in the Brains in Bahrain (2002) match, drawing 4-4 after leading 3-1. In 2006 the German organization Universal Event Promotion (UEP) staged a return match of six games between Kramnik and Deep Fritz in Bonn, which Kramnik lost, +0 -2 =4.

In April 2012, Kramnik and Levon Aronian played, as part of their preparation for the 2012 Candidates Tournament, a six-game training match in Zurich. The Kramnik - Aronian (2012) match was drawn 3-3 (+1 -1 =4). From late November to early December 2016, he played a rapid and blitz match against Yifan Hou at the Kings Tournament in Romania, winning both by significant margins, the rapid by 4.5-0.5 and the latter by 6/9 (+5 -3 =2).

Rapids

Kramnik has been an excellent and consistent performer at rapid and blindfold play. He won or shared the overall lead at Amber in 1996 (outright overall 1st), 1998 (=1st with Shirov with 15/22), 1999 Monaco (14½/22), 2001 (=1st with Topalov with 15/22), 2004 (=1st with Morozevich with 14.5/22), and 2007 (outright overall first with 15½/22). He also won the 2001 rapid play match against Lékó by 7-5, drew the 2001 rapid play Botvinnik Memorial match with Kasparov 3:3 and the 2001 rapid play match against Anand 5:5, lost the 2002 Match Advanced Chess Kramnik vs. Anand (Leon) 3½:2½, was runner up to Anand in the Cap D'Agde FRA (2003), won the 2009 Zurich Champions Rapid (2009) with 5/7 and shared 1st in the 2010 President's Cup in Baku with 5/7. In tandem with the London Classic 2014, Kramnik came =1st in the blitz event and =3rd in the rapid play open.

Kramnik came in equal 5th with 10/15 in the World Rapid Championship (2015), 1.5 points behind the winner Carlsen, and half a point behind the joint runners up Nepomniachtchi, Radjabov and Leinier Dominguez Perez. He followed up the next day with equal second alongside Vachier-Lagrave scoring 15/21, half a point behind the outright winner Alexander Grischuk at the World Blitz Championship (2015).

Ratings

Kramnik entered the top 100 in January 1992 and has remained there since that time. He rose rapidly in the rankings such that a year later in January 1993, he entered the top 10 where he has been ensconced since, apart from a few months in 2014. Yet during that time he made it to world #1 in only two rating periods.

In January 1996, Kramnik became the world top rated player. Although he had the same FIDE rating as Kasparov (2775), He became number one by having played more games during the rating period in question. He became the youngest ever to reach world number-one, breaking Kasparov's record; this record would stand for 14 years until being broken by Magnus Carlsen in January 2010.

Ironically, during his reign as world champion, Kramnik never regained the world number-one ranking, doing so only in January 2008 after he had lost the title to Viswanathan Anand. As in 1996, Kramnik had the same FIDE rating as Anand (2799) but became number-one due to more games played within the rating period. Kramnik's 12 years between world-number one rankings is the longest since the inception of the FIDE ranking system in 1971.

In July 1993 soon after his 18th birthday, he crossed 2700 for the first time and has remained in the 2700+ rating ever since. In April 2001, he became the second of only eight chess players to have reached a rating of 2800 (the first being Kasparov, followed by Anand, Topalov, Carlsen, Aronian, Caruana and Grischuk). Kramnik's highest standard rating to date is 2811 achieved in May 2013 when he was ranked #3 in the world.

Other

In 1995, Kramnik served as a second for Kasparov during the latter's successful defence of his Classical World Chess Championship against Anand, and in an ironic counter point in 2010 he served as a second for Anand during the World Champion's successful defence against Topalov.

Kramnik has a form of arthritis called ankylosing spondylitis. In January 2006, Kramnik announced that he would miss the Corus Group A (2006) to seek treatment for this condition. He returned from treatment in June 2006, playing in the 37th Chess Olympiad, winning gold by top scoring on the top board. Kramnik's performance in winning the Classical World Championship in 2000 won him the Chess Oscar for 2000, while his 2006 victory in the reunification match earned him the Chess Oscar for 2006.

On 30 December 2006 he married French journalist Marie-Laure Germon and they have a daughter, Daria, who was born 28 December 2008, and a son, Vadim, born 28 January 2013.

Sources and references Website: http://www.kramnik.com/; Biography: http://www.kramnik.com/eng/biograph...; Extended and candid interview with Kramnik by Vladislav Tkachiev in August 2011: http://whychess.org/node/1605; Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; * http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...; Wikipedia article: Kramnik

Last updated: 2023-11-23 11:45:25

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 130; games 1-25 of 3,249  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Kramnik vs Serdyukov 1-0311984BelorechenskB78 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long
2. A Oganyan vs Kramnik 0-1311984BelorechenskB89 Sicilian
3. Remezov vs Kramnik  0-1521985KrasnodarB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
4. Kramnik vs Zhukov 1-0381986BelorechenskB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
5. Zaitsev vs Kramnik 0-1491986Team TournamentB83 Sicilian
6. Kramnik vs Otsarev 1-0181987Baku TrainingB21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
7. Shilov vs Kramnik 0-1371987USSR Boys' ChampionshipB33 Sicilian
8. Kramnik vs A Chjumachenko 1-0321987GelendzhikB21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
9. Kramnik vs Mayorov 1-0341987GelendzhikC12 French, McCutcheon
10. I Odesskij vs Kramnik 0-1251987URS-chT U14A52 Budapest Gambit
11. Yakubovsky vs Kramnik  0-1511987URS-chT U14B23 Sicilian, Closed
12. Yakovich vs Kramnik 1-0421988URSB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
13. Kramnik vs Danislian ½-½601988URS-chT U18B15 Caro-Kann
14. M Golubev vs Kramnik 0-1381988URS-chT U18B33 Sicilian
15. Kramnik vs Yakovich ½-½141989Chigorin Memorial-BB33 Sicilian
16. Kramnik vs R Shcherbakov ½-½351989Chigorin Memorial-BB58 Sicilian
17. A V Filipenko vs Kramnik 0-1401989Chigorin Memorial-BB00 Uncommon King's Pawn Opening
18. Kramnik vs A Panchenko ½-½601989Chigorin Memorial-BB58 Sicilian
19. Khenkin vs Kramnik ½-½171989Chigorin Memorial-BD39 Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin, Vienna Variation
20. J Ivanov vs Kramnik ½-½121989Chigorin Memorial-BA85 Dutch, with c4 & Nc3
21. Kramnik vs B Podlesnik 1-0371989Chigorin Memorial-BB33 Sicilian
22. M Sorokin vs Kramnik ½-½521989Chigorin Memorial-BA81 Dutch
23. G Kallai vs Kramnik ½-½221989Chigorin Memorial-BA81 Dutch
24. Kramnik vs G Tunik 0-1381989Chigorin Memorial-BB46 Sicilian, Taimanov Variation
25. Kramnik vs A Grosar ½-½471989Chigorin Memorial-BB58 Sicilian
 page 1 of 130; games 1-25 of 3,249  PGN Download
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Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 37 OF 40 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-19-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ron: <HeMateMe: Is Vlad angling to be the curmudgeon that replaces Viktor Korchnoi? More curmudgeon than Viktor the Terrible?>

I heard a story, don't know if it's true, that in the 1990s, a person was in the elevator with Kramnik, and that person wished Kramnik good luck. Kramnik replied I don't need luck.

Jul-20-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: ...And when Kramnik left the lift he pressed <all> the buttons.
Jul-20-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: Would that be the equivalent of the lift boy at Nottingham 1936 who called off all the floors at the hotel, with Salo Flohr mistakenly believing he was going to win all the prizes?
Jul-21-24  theagenbiteofinwit: <HeMateMe: Is Vlad angling to be the curmudgeon that replaces Viktor Korchnoi? More curmudgeon than Viktor the Terrible?>

Kramnik's arc is profoundly interesting. He went from being a legendary player who actually defeated Kasparov when it was assumed such a feat was impossible, to a gregarious elder statesman of chess, investing his time in educating young Indian players with excellent results. It's a pity now he is most known for reporting opponents for cheating before even bothering to analyze their games.

Jul-26-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Carlsen crushes Tuan Minh Le 20.5 - 3.5 in today's Round of 16 match in <chess.com>'s Speed Championship. Vlad weighs in:

<Tuang Minh Le knew better times, winning TT 12 games in a row against 2700+ FIDE rating players, should have been a favorite today> https://twitter.com/VBkramnik/statu...

Aug-16-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I really like Vladimir Kramnik, he is a totally great player, one of the very best... but he is paranoid.

ALL chess players are paranoid, but RUSSIAN chess players are tin-foil hatters...and Kramnik is totally radio rental.

Oct-06-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Kudos on entering the HOF young man!
Oct-24-24  metatron2: Kramnik has done a very serious job lately, analyzing suspicions about Daniel Naroditsky's possible cheating.

Its no longer the superficial "he had accuracy level of 92% so he must have been cheating" analysis that Kramnik used to have. But a very serious work from various different aspects, including eye movement analysis from Naroditsky streaming, spread over 5 long videos that Kramnik published, with a few more follow-up videos.

I have to say that to me Kramnik was very convincing, and Naroditsky's lame, unconvincing, and avoid-by-crying responses, convinced me even further about that.

Naroditsky is one of chesscom's <Major Icons>, so if it turns out that he was cheating regulary, it will be a <Huge Blow> for them, that will probably force them to change their anti-cheating methods, make them more transparent and open for questions (like those that Kramnik is asking).

So they are doing everything within their power now, to hide it, and send the "Kramnik lost his mind" message over the board, using the big chess streamers that work with them (who are also friends with Naroditsky), like Naka, Levy, and others: They are all either attack Kramnik or just don't mention that big elephant in the room, as if it didn't exist. I just can't stand chesscom..

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Naroditzky is a bullet brawler. How do you cheat in 1+0?
Oct-24-24  metatron2: <Check It Out: Naroditzky is a bullet brawler. How do you cheat in 1+0?>

The thing is that bullet is not really chess. The quickness of the mouse, and coming up with reasonable plan quickly enough has too much weight there. You can be a top bullet player without being even remotely close to the chess top, as we could see with Andrew Tang for example (who is fide rated around 2500).

However that is not the case at all in Blitz.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Can you supply a link so I can see this serious Kramnik and cry baby Naroditzky?
Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: I remember playing a live session of bullet in 1988 with Ben Finegold at Harvard Square, and speed of thought and hand reign supreme.

In those days, I was likely roughly 2400 in blitz, but got whupped by Finegold; believe the result was something on the lines of 8-1.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: <metatron2: So they are doing everything within their power now, to hide it, and send the "Kramnik lost his mind" message over the board, using the big chess streamers that work with them (who are also friends with Naroditsky), like Naka, Levy, and others: >

That's some conspiracy theory you are spreading.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Here are Kramnik's videos on Danya:

https://www.youtube.com/@VBKramnik/...

I will have a look.

Oct-24-24  metatron2: <Check It Out>

Look in Kramnik's YT channel: https://www.youtube.com/@VBKramnik/...

I was refering to his 5 parts "NEW INVESTIGATION" videos. Especially interesting (to me) were <part-2> and part-3 there (I only saw some parts of the other 3 since I got their idea).

He also uploaded this short video a few days ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlP... and I wonder what <you think> about that ?!

There are also 2 videos that Kramnik responds to Naroditzky's responses, but I didn't really see those yet (I saw some of Naroditzky's lame responses in other places):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bil...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1lb...

<Check It Out: That's some conspiracy theory you are spreading> If you knew this issue better and its participating actors, you wouldn't have said that, since it is very obvious that that is the case.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: Kramnik's YouTube channel features endless videos with his cheating investigations. The vast majority look at online play.

Only very rarely does he mention or advocate for the use of an additional camera behind the players while he's obsessively analyzing.

"Where is he looking?" "What is he looking at?" "Very unusual behavior." We get a lot of these comments, and yet exceedingly rarely a simple, "If there was a camera behind the player..."

During the pandemic, when CCA (the USA's primary OTB tournament organizer) hosted online, rated play with cash prizes, they had a specific two-camera requirement, and I believe an audio microphone also was required to prevent vocal assistance, too.

To my knowledge, no accusations of cheating arose from these events.

Kramnik is trying to carve out a new career as a Cheater Hunter, using a combination of methods that he wishes to call his own, possibly even intellectual property if he can get away with it. He is not interested in preventing cheating, let's be clear about this.

I believe that Chess.com is doing the same. They do not wish to stop cheating on their platform - it is in fact valuable data for use with their software which, ideally, has commercial applications outside of chess. They pay out cash prizes for Titled Tuesdays where players have more privacy than we would ever tolerate in OTB events.

These people are selling us stuff, they are not looking for remedies to online cheating.
Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: To <metatron>, and following up from my prior post,
I do not think it's fair to single out any player like Danya for such 'investigations' while Chess.com clearly allows the same latitude and privacy for all players (including Kramnik himself).

In other words, Kramnik could probably mount the same attack against any player.

I don't usually watch players streaming Titled Tuesdays, but from what I have seen, nobody is offering a 2-camera view. Has anyone seen different?

I'd feel better about the whole world of online chess if all players just agreed to more cameras and clear sound in their private spaces. It is not asking too much, if they are expecting to maintain credibility as fair competitors at the top level.

This whole business reeks of dishonesty to me.
Oct-24-24  metatron2: <Williebob: Kramnik could probably mount the same attack against any player>

You can be sure that if Kramnik could mount something like that on another famous: streamer + commentator + top-online-blitz-player, then he would have.

I guess he found Danya suspicious from the beginning, because of the huge difference between his online and OTB levels. That is always an obvious trigger for that.

Oct-24-24  metatron2: <Check It Out> You can also find textual information in Kramnik's twitter account, for example this: https://x.com/VBkramnik/status/1848...

I didn't read there, but he seems to write quite a lot lately.

And the main things I found lame about Naroditsky's responses (that I happened to see) were:

1. Kramnik offered him a match where he can win easy 50K$ (or play for free if he likes just to clear his name), and he refused, even though according to his rating and h2h score vs Kramnik, it should have been easy (lots of) money for him (if he isn't a cheater of course..). When pressed to the wall, Danya said he didn't like the match location Kramnik offered (yeah right..)

2. Kramnik asked him to put camera behind his back (apparently already long ago) to show his setup, and Danya said something like: "I don't mind adding camera, I'll add even 10 cameras, but I don't like the way Kramnik asked me to do it", and that was his excuse not to put it... (I mean yeah..)

3. As a response to his repeated glances up and to the side, he showed video with Kramnik looking to the side as well while he was thinking. I mean that wasn't even remotely close to his case. Kramnik just turned his head to think, while Danya was having repeated, quick and very focused glances on specific spots (that are not his chess board), and he also mentioned weird moves without explaining them after that.

4. His answer to the <totally engine move> Bc8 was like "so now I have to explain some candidate move from 2 years ago?", or "how can I explain my intuition?". Sorry but that didn't work for me

5. In general his responses are mainly crybaby like: "Why does he do that to me? what did I ever do to him?" (well he thinks u are cheating da?), or: "It's like a monster with multiple heads, when I chop off one head new heads appear" (well, I didn't see you chop off any head yet), "He doesn't respect me..", etc

6. It took Naroditzky a lot of time to come up with response about his streaming setup, and where could he possibly looked at with all those glances (that was still unconvincing). Why didn't he present it right away after Kramnik's video?

7. After I first saw Kramnik's videos (about 7-8 days ago), I looked for response from Danya but couldn't find any, so I looked at his twitch channel (didn't know he has one before that..), and he seemed very very tense there (Naka for example seemed extremely relaxed after Kramnik's accusations/questions towards him, like someone who has nothing to hide). I also noticed that the he was no longer glancing there, but also played very weak chess..

8. Well, I didn't see yet Danya's response to Kramnik's short video..

Oct-24-24  fabelhaft: Kramnik has been a conspiracy theorist for a long time, which is one of the reasons his videos are so embarrassing to watch. Anyone that beats him is a cheater, and the ”methods” used to support this ever changing.

It goes from watching post game produced videos with Nakamura where the eval bar was added, where Kramnik thought Nakamura could look at the eval bar when playing, to the ones where he goes two years back to find a Naroditsky stream where he mentions one candidate move that he doesn’t even play, and Kramnik concludes he is cheating since he wouldn’t suggest that move otherwise.

It should be added that Naroditsky is World #23 in OTB blitz, which is considerably higher than Kramnik. A very strong blitz player like Grischuk is #35. Naroditsky has gained 75 Elo in OTB blitz the last year. So he is doing kind of well OTB, even if he is doing better online, as many other younger players tend to do.

Oct-24-24  MrMelad: Kramnik was always a sore, whiny presence in chess, a disgrace to the game’s spirit. Barely scraping his way to the match with Kasparov, he conveniently dodged any rematch. He perfected the art of “saving prep”, a cowardly strategy where you don’t play your best chess. Short draws? He was their poster boy. And his endless rematch clause? Turned chess into a joke. Against Topalov, he ran to the bathroom over 20 times per match, and when (unsurprisingly) accused of cheating, he cried foul like a victim. Now, he’s on some absurd witch hunt, everyone’s a cheater, especially those who beat him. Proof that talent and character don’t always mix.

Forever a loser, and it’s all by his own doing - that will be his legacy.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: <I believe that Chess.com is doing the same. They do not wish to stop cheating on their platform - it is in fact valuable data for use with their software which, ideally, has commercial applications outside of chess. They pay out cash prizes for Titled Tuesdays where players have more privacy than we would ever tolerate in OTB events.>

Titled Tuesdays attract several hundred players (799 seems to be the record). I suggest it's practically infeasible for <chess.com> to insist all players to have decent quality video and sound (i.e. not your bog standard laptop webcam) and to employ dozens if not hundreds of invigilators to monitor them in real time.

The CCA example you mention (I think Dlugy talked about this, too) would, I imagine, have been on a significantly smaller scale.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <fabelhaft: Kramnik has been a conspiracy theorist for a long time, which is one of the reasons his videos are so embarrassing to watch. Anyone that beats him is a cheater, and the ”methods” used to support this ever changing....>

This has become more than slightly tiresome.

<MrMelad: Kramnik was always a sore, whiny presence in chess, a disgrace to the game’s spirit. Barely scraping his way to the match with Kasparov, he conveniently dodged any rematch....>

Here is America, we would say:

<That's <Mister> Alekhine to you>

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: <meta>,\ I'll try to be brief.
I stand by my assertion that Kramnik is being selective for obscure reasons: How many Titled Tuesday players set up additional cameras while streaming for the viewing public?

Could be that a second camera angle is simply unattractive for the streaming presentation. There is only so much screen real estate for viewers to enjoy watching; this could rub against the desire for greater accountability.

On the "difference in level": Pick any Top 200 FIDE Blitz player, and see if they have a Chess.com account. You will quickly find that FIDE Blitz ratings rise and fall by relatively large margins, while Chess.com Blitz ratings seem much more stable - and quite high; 3000 is a typical Blitz rating at Chess.com for many notable GMs. Not a surprise, is it, when considering the infrequency of FIDE rated OTB Blitz events versus Chess.com activity, and the fact that you can play many short games in a day?

Kramnik made his point about Danya's "rating farming" in Charlotte, NC, but I don't see why we should care. FIDE Blitz rating is *not* the 'calling card' figure for any serious professional today, so I doubt that Danya even cares much about the rating so much as the occasional need to prove his overall credentials as a top player.

The rest of Kramnik's accusations and insinuations flow like water from the initial supposition that something isn't right, but the initial supposition has many flaws. We should not speculate about the rejected 50K challenge; there could be personal reasons for rejecting that offer.

Oct-24-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: <Miss Scarlett> makes a good point about the scale of 2-camera setups in a huge online event.

Still, of course, the relative silence on this as the preferred or most obvious solution to a real problem is deafening to me.

All I am seeing are attempts to claim a proprietary method of catching cheaters. The demand for cheaters must be high.
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