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

Sergey Karjakin
Karjakin 
Source: AFP  

Number of games in database: 2,882
Years covered: 1998 to 2023
Highest rating achieved in database: 2788
Overall record: +384 -196 =792 (56.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 1510 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (391) 
    B90 B33 B42 B30 B48
 Ruy Lopez (292) 
    C67 C78 C65 C84 C95
 French Defense (112) 
    C11 C18 C10 C07 C16
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (103) 
    C84 C95 C92 C89 C93
 Sicilian Najdorf (100) 
    B90 B92 B97 B96 B98
 Caro-Kann (84) 
    B12 B18 B10 B15 B17
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (217) 
    C67 C65 C78 C84 C92
 Sicilian (198) 
    B90 B51 B22 B92 B52
 Sicilian Najdorf (114) 
    B90 B92 B97 B96 B91
 Nimzo Indian (108) 
    E34 E21 E20 E32 E46
 Queen's Indian (104) 
    E15 E12 E14
 Queen's Pawn Game (89) 
    E00 D02 A45 E10 A46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Karjakin vs V Malinin, 2002 1-0
   Karjakin vs Kosteniuk, 2003 1-0
   Karjakin vs Kramnik, 2010 1-0
   Karjakin vs Caruana, 2016 1-0
   Karjakin vs T Metsalu, 2001 1-0
   Carlsen vs Karjakin, 2016 0-1
   Karjakin vs Kramnik, 2004 1-0
   Karjakin vs Anand, 2016 1-0
   Karjakin vs Radjabov, 2005 1-0
   Karjakin vs E Alekseev, 2007 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Corus Group B (2005)
   World Youth Stars (2005)
   World Cup (2015)
   SportAccord World Mind Games (Men, Basque) (2013)
   China - Russia Challenge (2015)
   Cap d'Agde (2006)
   World Cup (2007)
   Chess.com Speed Chess Championship 2017/18 (2017)
   World Cup (2021)
   European Championship (2005)
   Gashimov Memorial (2021)
   World Cup (2009)
   Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010)
   Turin Olympiad (2006)
   Calvia Olympiad (2004)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Kar ja kin Cpn Phil U by fredthebear
   Match Karjakin! by amadeus
   Match Karjakin! by docjan
   Match Karjakin! by bjamin74
   agamerzoev by gostkhorzhevich
   Sergey Karjakin's Best Games by KingG
   Karjakin Best Games by hakkepof
   Karjakin! by larrewl
   B90 by woodstriker
   Karjakin in the World Chess Cup 2007 by Augalv

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Moscow Chess Stars 3.0 Blitz
   V Artemiev vs Karjakin (Dec-19-23) 1/2-1/2, blitz
   Karjakin vs E Najer (May-08-23) 1/2-1/2
   V Artemiev vs Karjakin (May-07-23) 0-1
   Karjakin vs Grischuk (Jul-20-22) 1/2-1/2, rapid
   Grischuk vs Karjakin (Jul-20-22) 1/2-1/2, rapid

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Sergey Karjakin
Search Google for Sergey Karjakin
FIDE player card for Sergey Karjakin

SERGEY KARJAKIN
(born Jan-12-1990, 35 years old) Ukraine (federation/nationality Russia)
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

IM (2001) & GM (2002) Sergey Aleksandrovich Karjakin was World Rapid Champion (2012-13); World Cup Champion (2015), Candidate (2014 & 2016) and World Championship Challenger (2016).

Karjakin was born in Simferopol in Ukraine and learned to play chess when he was five years old. On 20 August 2002, at the international tournament in Sudak, he allegedly achieved his third and final GM norm, making him the youngest grandmaster in chess history, at the age of 12 years and 7 months (a record that has since been broken by Abhimanyu Mishra). However, a 2021 New York Times article by Ivan Nechepurenko and Misha Friedman questioned the veracity of this achievement.

At 11 years and 11 months, he had been the youngest ever to acquire the IM title. While still 11 years old, Sergey Karjakin was one of the seconds for Ruslan Ponomariov during his world championship match against Vasyl Ivanchuk in 2002. At age fourteen he defeated then reigning world champion, Vladimir Kramnik during the 2004 Dortmund Sparkassen Chess Meeting, in a blitz game (ten minutes for the entire game, plus five seconds per move). Also in 2004, Karjakin was the only human to win against a computer in the Man vs Machine World Team Championship in Bilbao, Spain, where he was the youngest and lowest rated player. He won against the Deep Junior (Computer) program. On July 25, 2009 Karjakin took out Russian citizenship and now plays for the Russian team in the international arena.

Classical Tournaments

In June 2001, Karjakin was =1st in the Alushta Summer tournament with 7.5/11. He gained his first two GM norms at Aeroflot in 2002, and at the category 8 Alushta-100 tournament in May 2002 when he scored 9.5/13 to share first equal in the tournament with GM Evgenij Miroshnichenko. At Hastings (2002/03), he came fifth in the category 12 Premier division with 5/9 and a 2590 TPR, immediately moving on for his first taste of Corus, in the B Division where he came 5th with 7/13, a point behind the winner Peter Heine Nielsen. In December 2004, he finished second to Boris Gelfand at the category 16 Pamplona Tournament (2004). In January 2005, he won the Corus Tournament: Group B (2005) in Wijk aan Zee with 9.5/13 (TPR 2735), a full point clear of the field, and in April 2005 he became the first player born in the 1990s to enter the FIDE World Top 100 in rankings. In May 2005, he also won the Young Stars of the World tournament, scoring 8.5 points out of 11 (TPR 2677), a full point clear of Ildar Khairullin. In 2006, Karjakin won the category 18 double round robin 10th Petr Izmailov Memorial (2006) in Tomsk, Russia with 7/10 (TPR 2834). In 2007, after leading for most of the tournament, Karjakin came second at the 2nd Aerosvit (2007) with 7/11 (+3 -0 =8; TPR 2791), half a point behind the winner Vassily Ivanchuk; he came third in Aerosvit (2008) behind Magnus Carlsen and Ivanchuk with 6/11 (TPR 2741). Immediately after his narrow World Rapid Cup victory in Odessa in May 2010, Karjakin won the Karpov Poikovsky tournament on tiebreak from Victor Bologan scoring 7/11 (+4 -1 =6; TPR 2787). In October 2011, he was =1st with Etienne Bacrot at the Poikovsky Karpov Poikovsky (2011) with 5.5/9 (+2 =7), but came 2nd on count back.

<Super tournaments>: Karjakin's first taste of a super tournament was the Dortmund Sparkassen (2004), where he finished last. He finished with a plus score in the A-group of Corus Group A (2006), came third in the double round robin quadrangular Grand Slam Chess Final (2009) and won his first super tournament with 8/13 (TPR 2798) in the category 19 Corus Group A (2009). He placed 6th in the Corus Group A (2010) with 7/13 (+2 -1 =10; TPR 2746) and narrowly came second on tiebreak with Shakhriyar Mamedyarov behind Levon Aronian at the Tal Memorial (2010) in November 2010, all three scoring 5.5/9 (Karjakin's TPR was 2835). In June 2011, Karjakin scored 6.5/10 at the Category 21 Bazna King's Tournament (2011), coming second on tiebreak to Carlsen. In November 2011, he came =3rd (4th on countback behind Ivanchuk) in the category 22 Tal Memorial (2011) with 5/9 (+1 =8 -0 and TPR of 2820), behind Aronian and Carlsen respectively. He scored 6.5/13 (+5 -5 =3; TPR 2754) at the category 21 Tata Steel Group A (2012) (formerly Corus) tournament at Wijk aan Zee, placing 8th out of 13, and in July 2012, he scored =1st (2nd on tiebreak behind Fabiano Caruana) at Dortmund Sparkassen (2012). In October 2012, he came 4th at the Grand Slam Chess Final (2012), and a few months later in January 2013 placed =3rd behind Carlsen and Aronian and alongside World Champion Viswanathan Anand at the category 20 Tata Steel Group A (2013) tournament. In May 2013, Karjakin won the inaugural Norway Chess (2013), a category 21 event held in the Stavanger region of Norway, with a score of 6/9, half a point ahead of world number 1 Magnus Carlsen and Hikaru Nakamura he also won the preliminary Norway Chess (Blitz) (2013) used to determine the draw with 6.5/9, earning the right to start with White in 5 games out of 9. Karjakin considers this the best tournament of his career so far. (1) Shortly afterwards, he scored a winless 4/9 in the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013).

He started 2014 with a promising 6.5/11 at the category 20 Tata Steel Masters (2014), placing =2nd behind Levon Aronian and 3rd on tiebreak behind Anish Giri. In April he participated in the inaugural Gashimov Memorial (2014), a category 22 6-player DRR event instituted to commemorate the late Azeri grandmaster, and finished =3rd with 5/10 behind Carlsen and Caruana, drawing all his games. He backed up his win at Stavanger in 2013 with another outright win at the next incarnation of that event in 2014, namely the Norway Chess (2014), scoring 6/9, again a half point ahead of Carlsen.

2015 did not start as promisingly as the previous year. His first event was the RR category 22 Zurich Chess Challenge (2015) (standard time section), where he scored 2/5 to place =4th behind Anand, Nakamura and Kramnik on points, behind Caruana on tiebreak but ahead of Aronian on tiebreak. His form did not improve in the second part of the event, namely the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2015), where he against finished 4th, for an overall placing of 6th and last. Gearing up for his world title challenge in 2016, Karjakin scored a solid 6.5/9 at the powerful Qatar Masters (2015), half a point behind the the winnder Carlsen and runner-up on tiebreak Yu Yangyi.

The start to 2016 was again inauspicious, starting with a mediocre 6/13 at the annual Tata Steel Masters (2016) at Wijk aan Zee.

Championships

<Age championships>: Karjakin won the U10 European Championship in 1999 and placed =2nd in the U10 World Championship in 2000. In 2001 the 11-year old FM won the U12 World Championship, the Ukrainian U14 championship, competed in the Ukrainian U20 championship, scoring 5/10 and coming =5th and in the 2001 European U14 championship he came =1st (2nd on count back) behind Borki Predojevic.

<National> The then 13 year old Grandmaster came =2nd-9th in the 2003 Ukrainian Men's Championship with 6.5/9. He lost an Armageddon blitz tiebreak to Nepomniachtchi at the Russian Championship Superfinal (2010) to place 2nd and then came =3rd with 4/7 in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2011). In 2012, he came =1st in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2012), but came 2nd in the round robin Russian Superfinals (Tiebreak) (2012) to place 2nd in the championship behind the winner, and therefore the 2012 Russian Champion, Dmitry Andreikin. He scored 4.5/9 to place =6th at the Russian Championship Superfinal (2013). He scored 4/9 in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2014) to place =8th. He was runner up in the Russian Championship Superfinal (2015) with 7/11, a half point behind the winner Evgeny Tomashevsky.

<Continental>: Karjakin came 4th in the European Championship (2005).

<World championships 2004-2014>: Karjakin played in the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004) but was eliminated in the first round by Mikhail Kobalia. He has reached the semi-finals in two subsequent World Cups, losing to Alexey Shirov in the World Cup (2007) and to Boris Gelfand in the World Cup (2009). His results in the latter qualified him for participation in the World Cup (2011), where he defeated Mejdi Kaabi and Wesley So in the first two rounds, but was eliminated from the Cup when he lost to Judit Polgar in the third round. He qualified by rating to play in the World Cup (2013) and defeated Moroccan IM Sebbar Ali in the first round, Indian GM Krishnan Sasikiran in the second round, and Ukrainian GM Pavel Eljanov in the third round. However he was eliminated in the Round of 16 (round 4) by compatriot GM Dmitry Andreikin. Nevertheless, the qualification of Vladimir Kramnik for the World Championship Candidates (2014) by reason of reaching the final of the Cup, allowed Karjakin's qualification as a rating reserve into that Candidates event. There, he placed outright second behind Anand with 7.5/14, and with Anand was the only player to score more than 50%.

<2008-2010 FIDE Grand Prix series>: Karjakin's performance in the Grand Prix series 2008-10 was mediocre by his standards. He was 10th at the Baku Grand Prix (2008), 7th at FIDE Grand Prix (2008) in Sochi, 10th at the 4th FIDE Grand Prix (2009) in Nalchik and 7th at the FIDE Jermuk Grand Prix (2009). The combined points from these results were insufficient for him to be seeded into the 2011 Candidates.

<2012-2013 FIDE Grand Prix series>: Karjakin started off the cycle in auspicious style be coming =1st (winning on tiebreak) alongside Hao Wang and Alexander Morozevich with 6.5/11 in the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2012), kicking off his Grand Prix tally with 140 points. His next Grand Prix event, the FIDE Grand Prix Zug (2013), was less successful, his 5/11 earning him only 50 points. In the third GP event in which he participated, the FIDE Grand Prix Beijing (2013), he placed =5th adding only 65 GP points to his tally. This eliminated him from contention from the top 2 in the series and would have eliminated him from qualification in the Candidates Tournament of 2014 had he not qualified as as a ratings reserve on Kramnik's win at the World Cup.

<2014-2015 FIDE Grand Prix series> Karjakin played the requisite three legs of this series, the first two being at the FIDE Grand Prix Baku (2014) and at the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014). In the former, he scored 6/11 to place 3rd-7th to earn 82 Grand Prix points. He followed up with a similar result at the Tashkent event, scoring 6/11 to place 4th-7th, again splitting the points for these places to add another 75 GP points to his tally. In the final event of the series, namely FIDE Grand Prix Khanty-Mansiysk (2015), held in May 2015, he finished in the middle of the field to finish out of the top 2 needed to qualify for the Candidates Tournament 2016.

<World Championship 2015-2016> He took advantage of another chance to qualify for the Candidates when he qualified to play in the World Cup (2015). He won early round matches against Ermes Espinosa Veloz, Alexander Onischuk, Yangyi Yu, Dmitry Andreikin, Azeri GM Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and Pavel Eljanov to proceed to the final where he met Peter Svidler. Both he and Svidler thereby qualified for the Candidates Tournament of 2016 and gain automatic qualification to the World Cup in 2017 should that be required. In the final, the standard match of four games was tied 2-2 after Svidler lead 2-0 in the first two games. The final was decided in Karjakin's favor in the blitz tiebreakers after the two sets of rapid game tiebreakers were tied 1-1 each, with Karjakin taking out the blitz games 2-0. He made the most of his qualification to the World Championship Candidates (2016) by winning with 8.5/14, a point ahead of his main rival in the final round, Caruana, against whom he won the dramatic last round game.

Karjakin contested the world title in New York. He drew the 12 game match of the Carlsen - Karjakin World Championship Match (2016) 6-6, only to go down in the 4-game rapid tiebreaker by 3-1 to cede his challenge.

Karjakin, as the runner-up in the 2021 World Cup, qualified for the FIDE Candidates (2022). However, in March 2022, the FIDE Ethics and Disciplinary Commission ruled that Karjakin had breached the FIDE Code of Ethics by making a series of public statements supporting Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. It barred him from playing in FIDE-related tournaments, including the 2022 Candidates tournament, for a period of six months. This opened up a qualifying spot that was awarded to Ding Liren for being the highest-rated player not already in the Candidates. Ding finished second in the Candidates behind Ian Nepomniachtchi. After Magnus Carlsen declined to defend his title, Ding went on to win the Nepomniachtchi - Ding World Championship Match (2023) and become champion.

Olympiads (2)

Karjakin's first taste of the Olympiads was playing for Ukraine in the 2002 U16 Olympiad in Kuala Lumpur, at which time he scored both a team and an individual silver medal playing on board 2.

Karjakin has played in the Olympiads in 2004, 2006 and 2008 (for Ukraine) and in 2010, 2012 and 2014 for Russia. His debut in the Calvia Olympiad (2004) in Calvia was stunning, one team gold and one individual gold for best performance on 2nd reserve, where he scored 6.5/7 (TPR 2929). Although there were no medals forthcoming in 2006 in Turin Olympiad (2006) in Turin, he scored 8.5/11 (TPR 2798) on Board 3 (coming 4th) for Ukraine. The Dresden Olympiad (2008) in Dresden saw Ukraine place 4th and Karjakin 6th on Board 2 with 5/9 (TPR 2714). The Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010) in Elista saw Karjakin back in the medals with his new team Russia 1 taking the silver, ironically behind Ukraine, while Karjakin took individual gold for best performance on board 4 with 8/10 and a TPR 2859. His second stint with the Russian team at the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) on board 3 earned him a team silver and an individual bronze medal, scoring 7/10. His most recent stint in the Olympiad for Russia was playing board 4 at the Tromso Olympiad (2014), where he scored 7/10, and just missed out on a team medal on tiebreak (Russia placed 4th).

Other Team Events (2)

In 2006, Karjakin helped the Youth team win the Youth - Experience (2006) by 28-22. In 2007, he was the top scorer in the NH Chess Tournament (2007) Rising Stars vs Experience contest with 7/10 (TPR 2759), won 26.5-23.5 by the Rising Stars.

Karjakin has participated in Ukrainian, Spanish, Russian, European and World Team championships, as well as in Asian Club Cup and the Rising Stars vs Experience teams. Karjakin started playing in Ukrainian Club Championships since he was at least 11, and has been an outstanding team player in the European Club Cup. In his first experience in the ECC in 2002, 12 year old Karjakin played for the Momot Regional Donetsk; while the club finished midway down the table, Karjakin scored 5.5/7, including 2.5/3 against his GM opponents. In the 2005 ECC, he played for the powerful NAO Chess Club which came third, Karjakin scoring 6/7 (TPR 2798). Playing for Tomsk, which won silver, Karjakin scored 5.5/7 (TPR 2743) and won individual gold in the Russian Team Championship (2007). In 2008, he played for PVK Kiev, and while the club came third, Karjakin had a poor tournament. After moving to Russia in 2009, he has played for ShSM-64 Moscow. Thriving in the Russian environment, in April 2010, he helped ShSM-64 win the Russian Team Championship (2010) with 16 points from 9 rounds, and in so doing turned out a TPR for the tournament of 2889. His participation in the World Team Championship (2011) saw a rare lapse of form when he only scored 2/6 (TPR 2624). However, in November he played board 3 for his adopted team Russia in the European Team Championship (2011), scoring 4.5/7 and winning individual silver, improving on his bronze medal he won for his native Ukraine on board 2 during the 2007 edition of the event. He won individual and team gold playing board 1, leading his team Tomsk to win the Russian Team Championship (2012) his TPR for the competition was 2896. Karjakin played for the Malachite team in the European Club Cup (2013), and playing board two he helped his team to win silver and picked up individual bronze in the process.

Karjakin's return to the World Team Championship redeemed his poor performance in his inaugural appearance two years earlier. Playing board 2 for Russia, he helped his team to win the gold medal at the World Team Championship (2013), winning individual silver for his efforts on board 2, narrowly missing the individual gold by the narrowest margin, viz the 3rd tiebreaker (in this case a small TPR difference less than the winner). In April 2014, he played top board for the Malachite team in the Russian Premier League, and helped his team to win every round and to gain the gold medal for the contest. He returned to international team chess once more when he played board 2 for Russia, winning individual bronze, with the team placing 4th. Karjakin returned the Russian Premier League in 2016 playing board one, but only for three games. Nevertheless, his team ShSM Moscow won silver.

In late July and early August 2015, Karjakin was a member of the Russian team that played the first half of the innovatively formatted China - Russia Challenge (2015), which involves a series of one-on-one sets between the teams with the winner of each match defending the stage against the next contestant in the opposing team. Drawn standard games are decided by rapid and Armageddon tiebreakers. In this format, Karjakin successfully defeated wunderkind Wei Yi, multiple Chinese national champion Ding Liren, Hua Ni and Yangyi Yu to virtually wrap up the challenge match by the end of the first half of the event, which will be completed in late 2015.

Matches

In the February 2003 Dannemann Match (2003), the then 13 year old Karjakin defeated the 18 year old vice-Women's World Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk in a six game match by 4-2 (+2 -0 =4). In December 2004, Karjakin played a best of six game match against 2004 US Champion 17 year old GM Hikaru Nakamura in the Karjakin - Nakamura Match (2004) aka "Duelo de los Jovenes Prodigios" (the Duel of the Wonder Boys) in Cuernavaca, Estado de Morelos, Mexico, losing 1.5 - 4.5 (+1 -4 =1).

Rapids and Blindfold

A keen and deadly rapid player, Karjakin was 13 when played in the 2003 Ciudad de León tournament, making it to the semi final before being eliminated in the four game match by Veselin Topalov 1.5-2.5 (+1-2=1). He reached the final of the 2006 Cap d'Agde (2006), which he lost to Teimour Radjabov by 0.5-1.5. In 2007, he won the EURO Blitz tournament and was runner up in the Bilbao Blindfold Chess World Cup (2007) behind Bu Xiangzhi and ahead of Magnus Carlsen, Judit Polgar, Veselin Topalov and Pentala Harikrishna respectively. In July 2008 he won the ten game Karjakin - Short Rapid match (2008) by 7.5-2.5. In May 2009, he scored 5/8 playing for the FIDE World team which defeated the Azerbaijani team in the Azerbaijan vs the World (2009) rapid tournament, the President's Cup. Also in 2009, he came equal second with Alexander Morozevich and behind Alexander Grischuk in the Moscow Blitz Championship, won the Aeroflot Blitz Qualifier for the World Blitz Championships with 15/18; in November 2009 he placed third in the World Blitz Championship (2009) behind Carlsen and Anand scoring 25/42. In 2010, he made it to the 8th round of the combined Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2010) / Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2010) before being eliminated by Grischuk. In the fourth ACP World Rapid Cup (2010) which took place from in May in Odessa, Karjakin won the final against Dmitry Jakovenko in the Armageddon blitz game. In January 2011, the Russian State Social University staged a rapid game match between him and Nepomniachtchi, a reprise of the blitz tiebreak between the two that enabled Nepomniachtchi to win the 2010 Russian Superfinal; the two rapid games were drawn, and four subsequent blitz games were drawn with a win and a draw each. Karjakin won by drawing the Armageddon game as Black. Videos of the 5 blitz games can be seen at http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp.... On 16 February 2012, Karjakin played in the Moscow blitz tournament that was held after Aeroflot, and won the contest outright with 15/18 ahead of a galaxy of GMs and other masters. (3) In July 2012, Karjakin won clear first place in the World Rapid Championship (2012) held in Astana with 11.5/15 and followed up by scoring 18.5/30 to take 3rd place behind Grischuk and Carlsen at the World Blitz Championship (2012). He then won the Aeroflot Open (Rapid Qualifier) (2013), a restructured version of the traditional Aeroflot Open, defeating Grischuk in the Armageddon final with 2 seconds left on his clock. (4) In June 2013, Karjakin won the Sberbank GM Rapid (2013) with 6.5/9, a half point clear of Veselin Topalov. In September 2013, he took clear first in the powerful 67th Moscow Blitz Championship (2013) with 14.5/19.

In 2014, he participated in the World Rapid Championship (2014), scoring 10/15, a point behind the leader Magnus Carlsen, and enhancing his rapid rating by 25 points to over 2800. The outcome of his efforts in the companion event, the World Blitz Championship (2014), was very poor by his standards as he scored only 10.5/21 losing 127 blitz rating points in that event alone. His poor form in this form of the game continued at the Moscow Championship Final A Blitz in September 2014, when he scored only 10.5/19, shedding another 31 blitz rating points. He regained some form in the 2014 Tal Memorial blitz tournament, scoring 12.5/22 and placing =3rd, gaining 50 blitz rating points.

Ratings and rankings

Karjakin entered the world's top 100 in the April 2005 FIDE list, where he was number 64 in the world with an Elo rating of 2635, the first time it rose above 2600. On the January 2008 FIDE rating list, published just before Karjakin's eighteenth birthday, he passed the 2700 mark for the first time. In the FIDE ratings list for 1 July 2011, Karjakin's rating reached an all time high of 2788 (and an all time high in the world ranking of number 4).

Personal

He married WIM Kateryna Dolzhykova in 2009, but they divorced. Karjakin is now married to Galia Kamalova.

Sources and references:

(1) https://twitter.com/SergeyKaryakin; (2) http://www.olimpbase.org/players/is...; (3) http://www.chessarbiter.com/turniej...; (4) http://chessbase.com/Home/TabId/211....

Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; Wikipedia article: Sergey Karjakin; Article on becoming the world's youngest grandmaster: http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail...; Article and list of chess power couples: http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp....

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/13/...

Last updated: 2023-05-29 21:48:15

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 116; games 1-25 of 2,882  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. M Ragger vs Karjakin  ½-½351998Wch U10B03 Alekhine's Defense
2. Karjakin vs Z Andriasian  0-1761998Wch U10B22 Sicilian, Alapin
3. E Romanov vs Karjakin  1-0501998Wch U10C41 Philidor Defense
4. Karjakin vs I Smirnov  ½-½462000Ukrainian ChampionshipB05 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
5. V Troshchenko vs Karjakin  0-1422000Ukrainian ChampionshipB22 Sicilian, Alapin
6. Karjakin vs A Zozulia  0-1502000Ukrainian ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
7. Karjakin vs S Baranjuk 1-0332000UKR-ch U12B40 Sicilian
8. V Vinogradnik vs Karjakin  0-1662000Ukrainian ChampionshipB51 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
9. Karjakin vs A Grekh 0-1332000UKR-ch U12B40 Sicilian
10. Karjakin vs D Novenko  0-1532000Ukrainian ChampionshipB05 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
11. F Myshakov vs Karjakin  ½-½222000Ukrainian ChampionshipD85 Grunfeld
12. V Murashko vs Karjakin  1-0552000Ukrainian ChampionshipA16 English
13. Karjakin vs A Rakhmangulov  0-1382000Ukrainian ChampionshipB09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
14. Karjakin vs V Klimanski  1-0762000Ukrainian ChampionshipB15 Caro-Kann
15. G Kuzmin vs Karjakin 1-03920008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB20 Sicilian
16. N Khomenko vs Karjakin 0-14520008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
17. Karjakin vs A Tamilin 1-04020008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB01 Scandinavian
18. N Zdebskaja vs Karjakin 1-03820008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB03 Alekhine's Defense
19. A Mukomilov vs Karjakin 0-14220008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipD70 Neo-Grunfeld Defense
20. Karjakin vs A Kulikovsky 1-03520008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
21. Karjakin vs K Gaynutdinov 0-16120008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipB32 Sicilian
22. P Sinzhuk vs Karjakin 0-12120008th Ukrainian Team ChampionshipD85 Grunfeld
23. Karjakin vs Vachier-Lagrave 0-1272000Wch U10B39 Sicilian, Accelerated Fianchetto, Breyer Variation
24. Karjakin vs V Nazarevich  ½-½642001UKR-ch U14B32 Sicilian
25. Karjakin vs Areshchenko 1-0642001UKR-ch U20B22 Sicilian, Alapin
 page 1 of 116; games 1-25 of 2,882  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Karjakin wins | Karjakin loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 122 OF 128 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ron: This is from the news publication The Hindu:

The Azov began as a military infantry unit made up of civilian volunteers drawn from far-right, neo-Nazi groups that were active in Ukraine, such as the Patriot of Ukraine gang and the Social National Assembly (SNA). With its highly motivated band of fighters, the Azov unit recaptured the strategic port city of Mariupol from the separatists. Following this crucial military triumph — which had eluded the official forces of Kyiv — the Azov unit was integrated into the National Guard of Ukraine in November 2014.

In 2016, the Azov set up its political wing, the National Corps Party, under the leadership of Andriy Biletsky, an ultra-Nationalist who was a Member of Parliament from 2014 to 2019 and has said on record it is Ukraine’s mission to “lead the white races of the world in a final crusade… against Semite-led Untermenschen [inferior humans]

The military uniforms of the Azov feature Nazi insignia and its fighters have been photographed with tattoos of Nazi symbols such as the swastika. On the eve of the launch of National Corps, its members took out a Nazi-style raised-fist, torch-lit march through the streets of Kyiv. Members of the Azov militia also do street patrols where, in the name of enforcing what it calls ‘Ukrainian order’, they have been known to attack Roma and other ethnic minorities, and LBGT events. The Ukrainian National Guard has released videos of Azov fighters greasing bullets with pig fat, apparently for use against the Muslim Chechens fighting among the Russian forces.

Rights violations

Different human rights bodies, including the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and Amnesty International, have accused Azov fighters, along with those form other volunteer battalions, of human rights violations, including torture, kidnappings, and extra-judicial executions.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.th...

Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: The Nazis are like Michael Myers in Halloween. More comebacks than a yo-yo!
Mar-23-22  diceman: <MissScarlett: The Nazis are like Michael Myers in Halloween. More comebacks than a yo-yo!>

Mine never left.

Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

This needs putin to bed. Loike

Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

JACKSON

I'm gonna go to JACKSON

JACKSON ere I cum loike

Looooook Oooooooot Jackson town !

Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood - Jackson

https://youtu.be/rnkuRQ8tjIE

Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

CAR JACK's page is the

Nooooooooooooooooooooooooo KAFF lol lol

PRESSURE !!

UNDER !

PRESSURE !!

FREDDIE MERCURY AND DAVID BOWIE

UNDER PRESSURE

https://youtu.be/H2eQGgvapA4

Mar-23-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

UKRAINE

HEROES

WE CAN BE

HEROES

UKRAINE PEOPLE xxx

David Bowie - Heroes (1977)

https://youtu.be/qN1kBbNDXD4

Mar-24-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  sakredkow: Has Karjakin made any attempt to overturn the FIDE ruling? Has he made any attempt to defend himself?
Mar-24-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

<<sakredkow: Has Karjakin made any attempt to overturn the FIDE ruling? Has he made any attempt to defend himself?>>

You mean his Putin Love Affair ??

Mar-24-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime: <<sakredkow: Has Karjakin made any attempt to overturn the FIDE ruling? Has he made any attempt to defend himself?>>

Google SPECIAL MILITARY OPERATION. xx

Mar-24-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Troller: <I count one way.>

Another is that Quinteros was not representing the country being sanctioned against as opposed to Karjakin.

<What laws and what countries?>

As already mentioned, I am not familiar with Argentinian law but in Denmark it became illegal somewhere in the 1980s to do business (generate turnover) in South Africa. I belive something similar was in effect in a number of Western countries although some global companies, notably Dutch Shell, continued their business regardless. In some African countries it had already from the 1960s been illegal to pick up work in South Africa.

My main point is that FIDE sanctions against chess-related activities in South Africa were basically following the rest of society. The ban on chess players expressing support for the Russian regime - is that a general trend against athletes? I'm not sure but maybe it has not been relevant.

Of course, South African athletes had long been banned from foreign events in the late 1980s. I suppose in principle Russian athletes are that as well now but in present times that is apparently just a matter of not displaying the name of the country or showing the flag...

Mar-24-22  Petrosianic: <harrydavidchapman:> <You mean his Putin Love Affair ??>

You tell 'em, Killer. Use your stupidity for niceness instead of evil for once.

Mar-24-22  Petrosianic: <sakredkow: Has Karjakin made any attempt to overturn the FIDE ruling? Has he made any attempt to defend himself?>

He said he wasn't going to, but the President of the Russian Chess Federation says he is. I think he has 3 weeks from Monday if he's going to do it at all.

Mar-24-22  Petrosianic: <MissScarlett>: <Moral preening aside, <Petrosianic> does appear to be suggesting that the mass murder of German women and children during WW2 was justified.>

If we're going to make stuff up, then hey, presto! It "seems" that you're doing the same thing, and I'm not. (That was easy).

I honestly don't mind your trolling, I just wish you were better at it. Try to be witty at least. If you want to reach some nonsensical conclusion, at least offer some tortured reasoning to show how you got there.

Mar-24-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: The <divine miss s> implying that wholesale deaths could have been wrong, after all these years of espousing Aryan superiority in his role as point man for the BNP under various nommes des guerre?

He does appear to possess a curious sense of morality.

Mar-25-22  metatron2: I don't see how Karjakin statements damaged fide's reputation. Karjakin is not representing fide in any way. When I read about his statements, I only thought of how stupid and insensitive <he> seems (and especially when he was referring to the country he grew in).

But bad publicity for fide (or to chess for that matter) didn't even cross my mind. Most people don't even know what fide is, and those who know fide, already have an opinion about it, so surely a bunch of crappy tweets won't change their mind about fide. This whole idea is just absurd.

So the accusation is baseless. It is one thing to ban Karjakin from private tournaments (because they invite whoever they want anyway), but fide can't ban chess players just because they don't like something about them. What next? they will ban transgender because they think they don't fit the chess scene they want to see?

Karjakin has caused enough damage to himself without this ban. Fide should revert the decision. Karjakin trained and played chess all his life in order to fight for the title. He fully qualified for the candidates, and chess fans want to see him play there. Fide just took another absurd decision, but they still have time to fix it.

Mar-25-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime: <<MissScarlett: The Nazis are like Michael Myers in Halloween. More comebacks than a yo-yo!>>

Just foook off Mister

Get your GENDER sorted then learn chess

Mar-26-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  sakredkow: It *may* have been sufficient to simply disallow the Russian flag at FIDE events instead of banning players, including Karjakin. I'm still open to arguments personally.

Putin gave a speech yesterday whining that Russians are victims of western "cancel culture" ideology. Coverage is linked on the front page of NYTimes...it doesn't mention Karjakin or even chess but it's an interesting read for anyone following how this plays out for Karjakin and for FIDE.

Mar-26-22  Z free or die: <<metatron2> Karjakin is not representing fide in any way. >

For the record, and cribbing from chessbase, here is FIDE's statement about the suspension:

<“The statements by Sergey Karjakin on the ongoing military conflict in Ukraine has led to a considerable number of reactions on social media and elsewhere, to a large extent negative towards the opinions expressed by Sergey Karjakin”, ...

“A necessary condition for the establishment of guilt is that the statements have reached the public domain. This concept, with respect to disrepute clauses in sport, is not the world at large but the sport in which the accused engages, such as chess. Information concerning the accused's conduct which is not published in the media, but which can be learnt without a great deal of labour by persons engaged in the chess world or a relevant part of it, will be in the public domain and satisfy the public exposure element. The EDC Chamber is comfortably satisfied that this condition is fulfilled in this case.”>

Of course, FIDE has to apply pretzel legal logic to not impose a similar ban on Shipov.

https://en.chessbase.com/post/fide-...

Now, how K's actions connect is explained here:

<The EDC [FIDE Ethics and Disciplinary Commission] Chamber finds, against the background given above, on the standard of comfortable satisfaction that the statements of Sergey Karjakin, which, by his own choice and presentation, can be connected to the game of chess, damage the reputation of the game of chess and/or FIDE. The likelihood that these statements will damage the reputation of Sergey Karjakin personally is also considerable”, it concludes.>

https://www.fide.com/news/1650

Mar-26-22  metatron2: <Z free or die> I know what fide said about the suspension, but they didn't explain why Karjakin tweets represented anyone but himself.

They even wrote in their own words, that the negative reactions were towards <Karjakin's opinions>, without making any (necessary) link to fide.

Do you (or anyone else here), know about suspension in <any kind of sport> taken due to opinions expressed by a sportsman ? and I'm not talking about local country suspensions, but suspension by a world organization like FIFA, Olympic committee, FIBA, ITF, etc.

Mar-26-22  Z free or die: <metatron2> I'm not necessarily defending FIDE's actions - but presenting their framework. Again, they assert a connection between his statements and FIDE here:

< the statements of Sergey Karjakin, which, by his own choice and presentation, can be connected to the game of chess, damage the reputation of the game of chess and/or FIDE. >

If he choose to use an alternative account then the one he used to discuss/present chess related topics, I believe the connection would be far more tenuous.

Do we agree that he used an account closely associated with chess to make his political comments? That seems to have been enough of a connection for FIDE.

As to other examples, I'm not sure of such a direct outright connection. But sports research isn't my focus.

Mar-26-22  Z free or die: <metatron> Would this qualify for another sports example?

https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/s...

.

Mar-27-22  fabelhaft: Ban or no ban, I think few other top players ever were so invested in an ongoing conflict as Karjakin is in this war. Also his latest posts and retweets are all about <horrific war crimes perpetrated exclusively by Ukrainians>, <Putin was right about these people>, <almost all captured soldiers are brutally tortured and killed>, <people are calling for destruction of Ukraine and hoisting the red flag in Kiev>, <Ukraine = ISIS> etc etc.
Mar-27-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  harrylime:

<<Z free or die>>

WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE to this site ... huh ???

lol lol lol

xxx

Mar-27-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: I saw a full translation of his open letter to Putin, but am struggling to lay hands on it again. His investment, as you put it, was indeed personal, having family links to the Donbas area. But don't quote me - let's find the translation.
Jump to page #   (enter # from 1 to 128)
search thread:   
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 122 OF 128 ·  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