European Club Cup Jam-Packed With Stars
Many chess stars gathered Sunday in the Serbian city of Novi Sad for the 32nd European Chess Club Cup and the 21st European Chess Club Cup for Women.
Photo Lennart Ootes.
Novi Sad certainly is a chess-minded city. In 1990, while still part of Yugoslavia, it hosted the 29th chess olympiad. Gold was won by the Soviet Union, despite the absence of both Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov—They were playing their fifth and last world championship match.
The team consisted of Vassily Ivanchuk, Boris Gelfand, Alexander Beliavsky, Leonid Yudasin and Evgeny Bareev. (The women's olympiad was won by Hungary, who played with the three Polgar sisters and—a tough trivia question—who played Hungary's fourth board? Answer: WGM Ildikó Mádl.)
26 years later, the top two boards of the Soviet Olympic team are back in Novi Sad. Ivanchuk is playing for seventh-seeded Ashdod from Ukraine, whereas Gelfand plays for the strong Italian club OR Padova, who are seeded third.
The top favorite in Novi Sad is Siberia, the reigning champions. They play with e.g. Vladimir Kramnik, Anish Giri, Alexander Grischuk, Evgeny Tomashevsky, and Li Chao. Second-seeded Alkaloid have six 2700+ players, one more than Siberia. Their top guns are Ding Liren, Dmitry Andreikin, Pavel Eljanov, Dmitry Jakovenko and Yu Yangyi.
Many more famous grandmasters are playing (although not all of them played in the first round), such as Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Levon Aronian (both Padova), Peter Svidler, Leinier Dominguez (both Mednyi Vsadnik), Pentala Harikrishna, (Ave Novy Bor), and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (VSK Sveti Nikolaj Srpski). The full list of players, in order of rating, can be found here.
2016 European Club Cup | Top 8 Teams
Bd | Title | SIBERIA | Rtg | Fed | Bd | Title | ALKALOID | Rtg | Fed | |
1 | GM | Kramnik, Vladimir | 2810 | 1 | GM | Ding Liren | 2764 | |||
2 | GM | Giri, Anish | 2767 | 2 | GM | Andreikin, Dmitry | 2736 | |||
3 | GM | Grischuk, Alexander | 2751 | 3 | GM | Eljanov, Pavel | 2757 | |||
4 | GM | Tomashevsky, Evgeny | 2722 | 4 | GM | Jakovenko, Dmitry | 2709 | |||
5 | GM | Li Chao B | 2730 | 5 | GM | Yu Yangyi | 2721 | |||
6 | GM | Korobov, Anton | 2689 | 6 | GM | Kryvoruchko, Yuriy | 2702 | |||
7 | GM | Rublevsky, Sergei | 2689 | 7 | GM | Nedev, Trajko | 2480 | |||
8 | GM | Bocharov, Dmitry | 2593 | 8 | IM | Pancevski, Filip | 2503 | |||
Bs | Title | OR PADOVA | Rtg | Fed | Bd | Title | MEDNYI VSADNIK | Rtg | Fed | |
1 | GM | Vachier-Lagrave, M. | 2811 | 1 | GM | Svidler, Peter | 2742 | |||
2 | GM | Aronian, Levon | 2795 | 2 | GM | Dominguez Perez, Leinier | 2752 | |||
3 | GM | Gelfand, Boris | 2720 | 3 | GM | Vitiugov, Nikita | 2718 | |||
4 | GM | Leko, Peter | 2693 | 4 | GM | Bu Xiangzhi | 2698 | |||
5 | GM | Bacrot, Etienne | 2691 | 5 | GM | Matlakov, Maxim | 2691 | |||
6 | GM | Vocaturo, Daniele | 2599 | 6 | GM | Rodshtein, Maxim | 2696 | |||
7 | GM | David, Alberto | 2574 | 7 | GM | Fedoseev, Vladimir | 2673 | |||
8 | GM | Dvirnyy, Danyyil | 2552 | 8 | GM | Khairullin, Ildar | 2630 | |||
Bd | Title | AVE NOVY BOR | Rtg | Fed | Bd | Title | VSK SVETI NIKOLAJ SRPSKI | Rtg | Fed | |
1 | GM | Harikrishna P. | 2768 | 1 | GM | Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar | 2762 | |||
2 | GM | Wojtaszek, Radoslaw | 2744 | 2 | GM | Rapport, Richard | 2730 | |||
3 | GM | Navara, David | 2725 | 3 | GM | Morozevich, Alexander | 2683 | |||
4 | GM | Shirov, Alexei | 2677 | 4 | GM | Ivanisevic, Ivan | 2645 | |||
5 | GM | Wang Hao | 2680 | 5 | GM | Markus, Robert | 2652 | |||
6 | GM | Laznicka, Viktor | 2664 | 6 | GM | Perunovic, Milos | 2616 | |||
7 | GM | Sasikiran, Krishnan | 2654 | 7 | GM | Milanovic, Danilo | 2507 | |||
8 | GM | Bartel, Mateusz | 2646 | 8 | IM | Bozic, Milan | 2398 | |||
Bd | Title | ASHDOD | Rtg | Fed | Bd | Title | SHSM L.S. MOSCOW | Rtg | Fed | |
1 | GM | Ivanchuk, Vassily | 2733 | 1 | GM | Inarkiev, Ernesto | 2714 | |||
2 | GM | Vallejo Pons, Francisco | 2716 | 2 | GM | Dubov, Daniil | 2648 | |||
3 | GM | Smirin, Ilia | 2674 | 3 | GM | Malakhov, Vladimir | 2698 | |||
4 | GM | Volokitin, Andrei | 2668 | 4 | GM | Zvjaginsev, Vadim | 2675 | |||
5 | GM | Moiseenko, Alexander | 2650 | 5 | GM | Grachev, Boris | 2632 | |||
6 | GM | Georgiev, Kiril | 2621 | 6 | GM | Najer, Evgeniy | 2683 | |||
7 | GM | Kogan, Arthur | 2522 | 7 | GM | Popov, Ivan | 2596 | |||
8 | GM | Golod, Vitali | 2545 |
A total of 62 teams are playing, including 145 grandmasters, representing 47 chess federations in Europe. They play seven rounds with teams of six players, using the Swiss pairing system. The time control is 90 minutes for 40 moves plus 30 minutes for the rest of the game with an increment of 30 seconds per move starting from move one.
The venue is the Hotel Park in Novi Sad; the players are playing in two not-very-spacious ballrooms. It is so crowded that 30 minutes into the first round, the organizers had to send away the spectators.
(It's possible that this was also an anti-cheating measure. Besides security badges, there doesn't seem to be any other anti-cheating policy.)
A rather crowded playing hall during the first round. | Photo Lennart Ootes.
Jam-packed with international stars, the tournament was officially opened on Saturday, and the first round was played on Sunday. With strong teams paired against (much) weaker ones, there wasn't a single team upset.
On the individual boards there were a few surprising results. Quite a few IMs held their GM opponents to a draw, including Oslo Schakselskap's Nicolai Getz and Lars Oskar Hauge who played Siberia's top boards Alexander Grischuk and Evgeny Tomashevsky.
IM Lars Oskar Hauge (r.) held Evgeny Tomashevsky to a draw. | Photo Lennart Ootes.
JSV SISSA's second board Lucas van Foreest, who scored an IM norm two weeks ago in Hoogeveen, started with a win against Ashdod's Andrei Volokitin. The Ukrainian player wasn't on top of the latest Marshall theory and got outplayed the endgame.
Lucas van Foreest (l.) scored a GM scalp in round one. | Photo Lennart Ootes.
Lucas's older brother Jorden, the reigning Dutch Champion, played the mighty Ivanchuk on board one. Having skipped the Olympiad for a draughts tournament, Chuky played his first chess game since August and had an enjoyable "comeback."
Playing for Ezerelio Vaivorykste, IM Valeriy Kazakovskiy defeated Cheddleton's GM David Howell. That game, however, is not (yet) available because only the top 15 matches are played on electronic boards.
En Passant, another Dutch team, was close to an upset on board one. Retired grandmaster Friso Nijboer, who doesn't play much chess these days, got a winning position against Gelfand but spoiled it in time trouble. Nijboer has always been a time-trouble junkie and thinking for 40 minutes on move 12, and another 16 on move 13, didn't exactly help.
The remaining six rounds will be played Monday through Saturday, with no rest day. Draws may not be agreed before move 30. The winning team gets 8,000 EUR although that is only a fraction of the sponsor's fees received by the top players.
GM Heikki Westerinen played board 2 for Finland in 1990. | Photo Lennart Ootes.
The European Club Cup for women will be covered in a separate news post.