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Pavel Eljanov
Eljanov 
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons  

Number of games in database: 1,691
Years covered: 1995 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2658 (2614 rapid, 2605 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2765
Overall record: +479 -216 =637 (59.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 359 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Slav (109) 
    D12 D15 D11 D17 D10
 King's Indian (83) 
    E97 E94 E60 E71 E91
 Queen's Gambit Declined (59) 
    D37 D38 D31 D30 D35
 Queen's Pawn Game (54) 
    D02 E00 A41 E10 D00
 Queen's Indian (51) 
    E12 E15 E17 E16 E14
 English (49) 
    A15 A13 A16 A14 A10
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (136) 
    C67 C65 C78 C69 C92
 Sicilian (106) 
    B33 B30 B32 B45 B31
 Caro-Kann (83) 
    B12 B18 B10 B13 B11
 Grunfeld (52) 
    D85 D91 D78 D90 D87
 Queen's Indian (52) 
    E15 E17 E12 E14 E16
 Nimzo Indian (49) 
    E32 E20 E21 E46 E48
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Gelfand vs Eljanov, 2009 0-1
   Eljanov vs Jakovenko, 2013 1-0
   M Matlakov vs Eljanov, 2013 0-1
   Eljanov vs Karjakin, 2013 1-0
   Z Kozul vs Eljanov, 2005 0-1
   Eljanov vs Onischuk, 2006 1-0
   B Adhiban vs Eljanov, 2017 0-1
   Jakovenko vs Eljanov, 2010 0-1
   A Panchenko vs Eljanov, 1996 0-1
   Eljanov vs Y Vovk, 2011 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Ukrainian Team Championship (1999)
   8th Ukrainian Team Championship (2000)
   Corus Group B (2007)
   BIH Premier League (2009)
   Reykjavik Open (2013)
   Isle of Man Masters (2016)
   Reykjavik Open (2015)
   Ordix Open (2008)
   World Cup (2015)
   Rubinstein Memorial Open-A (2001)
   European Championship (2014)
   European Championship (2005)
   Ubeda Open (2001)
   MrDodgy Invitational 3 (2022)
   PRO League Group Stage (2019)

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Singapore Int Open
   A R Ilamparthi vs Eljanov (Dec-05-24) 0-1
   Eljanov vs A Ra Harikrishnan (Dec-04-24) 1-0
   Eljanov vs J E Garcia (Dec-02-24) 0-1
   S Aswath vs Eljanov (Dec-01-24) 1/2-1/2
   Eljanov vs P Andyka (Nov-30-24) 1-0

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Pavel Eljanov
Search Google for Pavel Eljanov
FIDE player card for Pavel Eljanov

PAVEL ELJANOV
(born May-10-1983, 41 years old) Ukraine
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

Pavel Eljanov was born in Kharkiv, USSR (now Ukraine) and was awarded the Grandmaster title in 2000.

Championships:

Eljanov was joint 3rd in 6th European Individual Championship (2005) and =11th in the European Individual Championship (2013), the latter qualifying him for the World Cup (2013), where he defeated Sabino Brunello in the first round and Russian GM Dmitry Jakovenko in the second round. However, he was eliminated in a grueling third round when he lost by 3.5-4.5 to former compatriot GM Sergey Karjakin in the blitz tiebreaker of the third round. He scored 8/11 and placed =2nd at the European Individual Championship (2014), thereby qualifying for the World Cup 2015. He was =1st (2nd on tiebreak) at the Ukrainian Championship (2014). His =5th with 7.5/11 in the European Individual Championship (2015) would have been enough to qualify for the World Cup had he not already qualified in the 2014 EICC. At the World Cup (2015), Eljanov defeated Rinat Jumabayev, Alexander Ipatov and Alexander Grischuk in successive rounds, each time winning both standard time games without resorting to tiebreakers, ie: a 6-0 result in the first three rounds. He defeated Dmitry Jakovenko in the Round of Sixteen (fourth round) to proceed to the quarter final where he defeated Hikaru Nakamura by 1.5-0.5. He met Sergey Karjakin in the semi final but lost in a tense see-sawing tiebreaker, the ultimate result of their match being 2.5-3.5.

Tournaments:

He was runner up to Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu at the Open Internacional D’Andorra 2003 and winner of the 2005 Canadian Open, the Amsterdam Chess Tournament (2005), the category 15 Montreal Empresa International (2006), the category 18 Bosnia (2009) tournament (with 7/10, ahead of Wang Hao and Borki Predojevic on 5.5/10), and Corus Group B (2007) with 9/13. Requiring a win in the last round to win the Aeroflot Open (2006) outright, Eljanov lost. His strongest results yet were at 2009 European Team Championship (see below) and at the Category 20 FIDE Grand Prix (2010) tournament in Astrakhan, Russia, in which he took outright first with 8/13 and a 2809 performance. He continued his good form at the 2010 Politiken Cup in Copenhagen, winning outright with 8.5/10, in the process lifting his ELO to 2761, and his ranking to number 6 behind Carlsen, Topalov, Anand, Aronian and Kramnik. He held his own as top board for his team in the 26th European Club Cup 2010 (his team coming in first), and in the Olympiad, but scored poorly in the Croatian Team Championships and in the Tal Memorial (2010), and posted mediocre to poor scores in the Bundesliga, the Russian Team Championships 2011, and the French Top 12 competition, losing nearly 70 ELO points. He temporarily arrested his decline in form at the Ukrainian Championship (2011) when he emerged undefeated to take outright second with 7.5/11 (TPR 2777), however he lost his first round contest at the World Cup (2011) to compatriot GM and prodigy Yaroslav Zherebukh in the 25 minute rapid game tiebreaker. His excellent result at Aeroflot Open (2012) where he scored 6.5/9 to come equal first (3rd on tiebreak) partially restored his fortunes.

2013 saw a boost in his stocks, starting the year with 1st place at the Reykjavik Open (2013) and following with outright first at the powerful (category 18) 14th Karpov International (2013) in September. In October, he won the Chigorin Memorial (2013) on tiebreak from 10 other players who also scored 7/10. In 2014, he participated in the newly inaugurated Gashimov Memorial (Group B) (2014), a category 17 event that is the 2nd tier of an event commemorating the late Azeri grandmaster, and won outright with a score of 6/9. The following month, in July, his results turned around at the 15th Poikovsky Karpov Tournament (2014) where he only scored 3.5/9. In December 2014, he scored 6/9 to place =7th at the powerful Qatar Masters (2014).

In March 2015, Eljanov placed =2nd at the Reykjavik Open (2015) with 8/10, half a point behind the winner Erwin L'Ami. The following month he was equal second at the Capablanca Memorial (2015). In July 2015, he suffered a mild lapse of form with .5/10 at Biel (2015).

Olympiads and Team matches:

In 1999, Eljanov was a member of the Ukrainian national youth team, which won the U-16 Chess Olympiad in Artek, Ukraine. He has represented Ukraine at the 2004 (1st reserve), 2006 (board 4), 2008 (board 3), 2010 (Board 3) and 2014 (board 3) Olympiads, winning two team golds as a result of Ukraine's wins in 2004 and 2010, and an individual bronze in 2014. His strongest result yet was at the 17th European Team Championship (2009), where he scored 6/8 with a 2823 performance rating. He held his own as top board for his team in the 26th European Club Cup 2010 (his team coming in first), but scored poorly in the 2010 Croatian Team Championships.

He plays for the Economist-SGSEU-1 club of Saratov, which was first in the European Club Cup (2009) and in the European Club Cup (2010). He also plays in the Israel Chess League where he helped his club Ashdod Elit to second place in March 2012. In the 2013 Ukrainian League, he helped his team - the Law Academy of Kharkiv - to first place with a perfect (team) score of 9/9. In the Macedonian League, he played top board to help his team Alkaloid, Skopje to a gold medal in the 2013 season, when it won 7/7 matches by an overwhelming margin in each round, never scoring less than 5/6. In 2013, Eljanov also played in the Icelandic league. In 2014 he played in Israel's national league. He also played board 2 for the Denizsu Aquamatch Satranç Gençlik Ve Spor Kulübü in the Turkish Super League, helping his team to 4th place out of 13. He played top board for USV Dresden in the 2014-15 Bundesliga, which came 8th in the 16 team competition. He is also playing in the 2015 Ukrainian League. He represented Ukraine on board 3 at the FIDE World Team Championship (2015), helping his team win silver.

Rapids:

Eljanov is also an excellent rapid player as exemplified in his equal first (second on tiebreak) with Ian Nepomniachtchi at the Ordix Open (2008) ahead of leading exponents in the rapid game like Hikaru Nakamura. He won the Rector Cup Rapid 2014 with 8.5/11. Also in 2014, he competed in the FIDE World Rapid Championship (2014) and in the FIDE World Blitz Championship (2014), scoring a rating neutral 9/15 in the former without unduly troubling the leader board, and a similarly effective 12.5/21 result in the latter.

Personal:

He married Ukrainian WIM Olena Dvoretska in April 2009, and is a qualified lawyer. An interview with him is at http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...

Ratings and rankings:

Eljanov made it to the world's top 100 in October 2004 when he was rated 2613, and has remained in the top 100 since then. He first made it to the 2700 rating mark in July 2007, and has rated above 2700 continuously since April 2013. His highest rating and ranking to date were in September 2010 when he was rated 2761 and ranked #6 in the world.

Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/Eljanov

Wikipedia article: Pavel Eljanov; Live ratings: http://www.2700chess.com/

Last updated: 2018-05-10 06:25:32

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 68; games 1-25 of 1,698  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. N Kushch vs Eljanov  1-0391995Yalta opA30 English, Symmetrical
2. Ponomariov vs Eljanov  ½-½521995Ukrainian Ch U-12 FinalB43 Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3
3. Eljanov vs S Kislov  0-1681996Polanica Zdroj opA31 English, Symmetrical, Benoni Formation
4. R Shcherbakov vs Eljanov  1-0461996Polanica Zdroj opD85 Grunfeld
5. A Panchenko vs Eljanov 0-1251996Yalta opB20 Sicilian
6. G Tunik vs Eljanov  1-0551996Yalta opD79 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.O-O, Main line
7. I Varitski vs Eljanov  1-0241996Yalta opB42 Sicilian, Kan
8. Eljanov vs S Perun  0-1711996Yalta opD18 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch
9. Eljanov vs D Stets  1-0561996Yalta opE91 King's Indian
10. Eljanov vs A Pirozhkov  1-0341996Yalta opE97 King's Indian
11. Eljanov vs T Vasilevich  0-1671996Yalta opA16 English
12. Timoshenko vs Eljanov  ½-½481996Yalta opB32 Sicilian
13. A Czerwonski vs Eljanov  0-1601997Polanica Zdroj opD85 Grunfeld
14. Eljanov vs A Kogan  0-1491997EUCup Gr7A04 Reti Opening
15. Eljanov vs Fedorchuk  1-0541998UKR-ch U20A04 Reti Opening
16. Eljanov vs M Manojlo  0-1321998UKR-ch U20A28 English
17. A Tsepotan vs Eljanov  ½-½551998UKR-ch U20D85 Grunfeld
18. A Korobov vs Eljanov  1-0351998UKR-ch U20D85 Grunfeld
19. Eljanov vs N Belichev  0-1401998UKR-ch U20A04 Reti Opening
20. N Cherkasov vs Eljanov  0-1271998Polanica Zdroj opB30 Sicilian
21. O Kalinin vs Eljanov  1-0371998Polanica Zdroj opA14 English
22. Eljanov vs R Khaetsky  1-0391998UKR-ch U20A30 English, Symmetrical
23. O Budnikov vs Eljanov  0-1631998UKR-ch U20B22 Sicilian, Alapin
24. J Zezulkin vs Eljanov  1-0401998Polanica Zdroj opB30 Sicilian
25. Miroshnichenko vs Eljanov  1-0321998Polanica Zdroj opB30 Sicilian
 page 1 of 68; games 1-25 of 1,698  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Eljanov wins | Eljanov loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 4 OF 5 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-12-10  Whitehat1963: He's getting his butt kicked now with the big boys. Perhaps like Jakovenko, he's proving he can't hang with the likes of Carlsen, Anand, Kramnik, Topalov, and Aronian. That, to me, seems like the consistently best five for the last three years or so. Ivanchuk sneaks in every now and then, but he's not quite consistent enough. But Eljanov seems just blatantly unworthy of the top-flight competition.
Nov-14-10  ycbaywtb: not much commentary on Pavel lately, guess that's what happens when you're losing 5 of 8
Dec-10-10  nummerzwei: <The analyses of some opening variation, not only by leading players, but also by ordinary amateurs [...] extend deep into the endgame, by-passing the middlegame.>

Pavel Eljanov (NiC, 7/2010)

It's intiguing to speculate what rating an 'ordinary amateur' has according to Eljanov. I think something like 2450.

Feb-13-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Penguincw: ♔ STANDINGS ♔

Aeroflot 2012, After Rd.7

M. Bartel 5.5/7 (+4 =3 -0)
Eljanov 5.5/7 (+4 =3 -0)
H. Melkumyan 5/7 (+5 =0 -2)
V.Iordachescu 5/7 (+3 =4 -0)
A. Korobov 5/7 (+4 =2 -1)

Pretty close. A win boasted him to the top, with Bartel, who he will have advantage against him tomorrow.

Feb-14-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  Penguincw: Eljanov in a 3 way tie for first, with 4 half a point back and like 11 one full point behind. Tomorrow, he plays an important game with the black pieces against Anderikin, while the other co-leaders, Korobov and Bartel, play the white and black pieces in that order. :)
Jul-11-12  wordfunph: "Well, I never like to make quick draws. When I sign a score sheet with only twenty moves noted, I have a feeling of incompleteness and guilt, not only in front of the audience, but in myself. It's not a good feeling so I try to fight until the end and usually only take draws in empty positions."

- GM Pavel Eljanov

Feb-27-13  geniokov: <Fiona Macleod: <breakbad: I hope tournament organizers think twice about inviting a person who draws in three moves. Shameful!> tournament organizers would not think twice inviting a player who does this amazing feat of drawing a game in 3 moves and then after the game emerges as the champion of the tournament (or co-champion).> LOL!
Feb-27-13  geniokov: <Fiona Macleod: for if a player can afford to relax like that on the last round and still be champ then that means he performed EXTREMELY WELL during the rounds previous to that--the stuff of dreams for tournament organizers> LOL!
Feb-27-13  Fiona Macleod: I am glad Eljanov earned more money than So because he has a family to feed. God is wise and good.
Feb-27-13  geniokov: Don´t wash your hands!<FionaMacleod> Show your balls about what you´ve said!
Feb-27-13  geniokov: <FSR: Somehow I'm thinking that most chess players don't have trucks that they shovel bales of money into. Like Susan Polgar, I'm mystified as to why people who get free entertainment watching the games of chess professionals have the right to criticize them for sometimes taking quick draws in order to ensure that they make money.> LOL!
Feb-27-13  geniokov: <FSR: <perfidious> Amen to that. If they'd played a 15-move draw in, say, an Exchange Slav, or played the "Recidivist Variation," Opening Explorer, apparently <that> would have been OK, but a 3-move draw is unconscionable.> LOL!
Feb-27-13  geniokov: <FSR> He is a USCF Chessmaster and contributed some numerous articles!...GREAT! I just want to introduce him to you Sir!
Feb-28-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: I think people would have had fewer objections to the three-move draw if the game had gone 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Be2! That line is a well-known draw. http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp... There's no point wasting your time playing it out.
Feb-28-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: So much for Fischer's statement 'The King's Gambit is busted. It loses by force.'
Feb-28-13  geniokov: <FSR and perfidious> Is there something to explain?
Feb-28-13  geniokov: <FamilyTree: A complete shame. The organizer invests money to keep supporting chess, even in these hard times... for this?> LOL!
Feb-28-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <geniokov> Bobby Fischer wrote a famous article, "A Bust to the King's Gambit," in which he claimed, "In my opinion the King's Gambit is busted. It loses by force." http://www.academicchess.org/images... It was published in the first issue (Summer 1961) of the <American Chess Quarterly>, edited by Larry Melvyn Evans. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americ...

Doubtless to Evans' surprise, Fischer proceeded to play the King's Gambit against him, winning crushingly, en route to a historic 11-0 win in the US Championship 1963/64 (1963). Fischer vs Larry Evans, 1963 That was Fischer's first win ever against Evans; their three prior games had been drawn. http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches...

Fischer also played the King's Gambit twice at the Vincovci 1968 tournament, winning both of those games. http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches... Fischer in his tournament games as White played the Bishop's Gambit (3.Bc4) rather than the King's Knight's Gambit (3.Nf3). (However, his claim that the King's Gambit is "busted" and "loses by force" had not been limited to 3.Nf3. The conclusion of Fischer's article was, "Of course White can always play differently, in which case he merely loses differently. (Thank you, Weaver Adams!)") http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's...

The ChessBase article, later revealed to be an April Fool's Day joke, claimed that Rybka (Computer) had proven that the main lines of the King's Gambit were a forced loss for White, but that 3.Be2 (the Lesser Bishop's Gambit) was a draw. http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...

Apr-19-13  Conrad93: <I think people would have had fewer objections to the three-move draw if the game had gone 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Be2! That line is a well-known draw. http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp... There's no point wasting your time playing it out.>

Dear God! People still believe that sham article?

It was an April Fool's joke.

May-10-13  brankat: Happy Birthday GM Eljanov!
Sep-06-13  twinlark: Congratulations to GM Eljanov for winning the 14th Karpov International (2013).
Sep-06-13  nok: After losing to said man earlier in the year: Karpov vs Eljanov, 2013. Is it a first?
Sep-06-13  twinlark: Dunno, but Karpov must be one of the very few players that has played in his own memorial tournament!
Sep-06-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <twinlark>: In 1988, a friend organised a round robin dubbed the John Fanning Memorial, in which said player participated. We played at Boston College, a game or two per week-fun stuff.
Oct-16-13  The Last Straw: Eljanov has the highest live rating of all players of Ukraine. Congratulations!!
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