Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Chess Olympiad 2000 Istanbul, Turkey


The 34th Chess Olympiad, organized by the Fédération Internationale des Échecs and comprising an open[1] and women's tournament, took place between October 28 and November 12, 2000, in IstanbulTurkey.

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[edit]Chess competition

Both tournament sections were officiated by international arbiter Geurt Gijssen (NED). Teams were paired across the 14 rounds of competition according to the Swiss system; the open division was played over four boards per round, while the women's was played over three. The time control for each game permitted each player 100 minutes to make the first 40 of his or her moves, then additional 50 minutes to make the next 20 moves, then 10 minutes to finish the game, with an additional 30 seconds devolving on each player after each move, beginning with the first.

[edit]Open tournament

The open division was contested by 126 teams representing 124 nations and territoriesTurkey, as hosts, fielded two teams, while theInternational Braille Chess Association provided one squad.

[edit]Team results

The teams finishing first through third overall receive medals, as do those finishing in the top three amongst teams organized by seed; overall medal winners are not eligible to receive group prizes.
[edit]Top ten overall finishers
Place of finish[2]TeamPlayers[3][4]Seed[5]Average July2000 FIDErating[6]Matches wonMatches drawnMatches lostTotal score[7]
FirstRussia RussiaAlexander KhalifmanAlexander MorozevichPeter SvidlerSergei RublevskyKonstantin SakaevAlexander Grischuk1268584238
SecondGermany GermanyArtur YusupovRobert HübnerRustem Dautov,Christopher LutzKlaus BischoffThomas Luther122604102237
ThirdUkraine UkraineVasyl IvanchukRuslan PonomariovVladimir Baklan,Viacheslav EingornOleg RomanishinVadim Malakhatko6263885135½
FourthHungary HungaryPeter LekoZoltán AlmásiJudit PolgárLajos Portisch,Gyula SaxIM[8] Robert Ruck3266185135½
FifthIsrael IsraelBoris GelfandIlia SmirinBoris AvrukhLev Psakhis,Emil SutovskyAlexander Huzman4265276134½
SixthGeorgia (country) GeorgiaZurab AzmaiparashviliGiorgi GiorgadzeZurab Sturua,Giorgi KacheishviliTamaz GelashviliIM Baadur Jobava13260274334
SeventhEngland EnglandMichael AdamsNigel ShortJulian HodgsonJonathan SpeelmanAnthony MilesJohn Emms2267276133
EighthIndia IndiaKrishnan SasikiranAbhijit KunteIM Pentala HarikrishnaDibyendu BaruaIM Devaki PrasadNT[9]Surya Ganguly31253874333
NinthPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of ChinaYe JiangchuanXu JunPeng XiaominWu WenjinIMLiang ChongFM[10] Ni Hua5265175233
TenthSwitzerland SwitzerlandViktor KorchnoiVadim MilovJoseph GallagherIMYannick PelletierIM Florian JenniIM Werner Hug23256272533

[edit]Women's tournament

The women's division was contested by 86 teams representing 84 nations and territoriesTurkey, as hosts, fielded two teams, while theInternational Braille Chess Association provided one squad.

[edit]Team results

The teams finishing first through third overall receive medals, as do those finishing in the top three amongst teams organized by seed; overall medal winners are not eligible to receive group prizes.
[edit]Top ten overall finishers
Place of finish[11]TeamPlayers[12][13]Seed[14]Average July2000 FIDErating[15]Matches wonMatches drawnMatches lostTotal score[16]
FirstPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of ChinaGM[17] Xie JunWGM [18] Zhu ChenWIM[19] Xu YuhuaWGM Wang Lei12537104032
SecondGeorgia (country) GeorgiaGM Maia ChiburdanidzeIM [8] Nana IoselianiWGMNino KhurtsidzeIM Nino Gurieli22480112131
ThirdRussia RussiaIM Alisa GalliamovaWGM Ekaterina Kovalevskaya,WGM Svetlana MatveevaWGM Tatiana Dianchenko3248084228½
FourthUkraine UkraineWGM Natalia ZhukovaWGM Anna ZatonskihWGMTatjana VasilevichIM Elena Sedina4244275227
FifthSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YugoslaviaIM Alisa MarićWGM Natasa BojkovicWGM Svetlana PrudnikovaWGM Irina Chelushkina5243081526
SixthNetherlandsNetherlandsIM Zhao Qin PengWIM Erika SzivaTea Bosboom-LanchavaLinda Jap Tjoen San13232965325½
SeventhHungary HungaryIM Ildikó MádlWIM Nikoletta LakosWIM Monika GrabicsWIM Anita Gara8236965325
EighthGermany GermanyIM Ketino Kachiani-GersinskaWIM Elisabeth PaehtzWIM Anke KoglinWIM Bettina Trabert10236475225
NinthEngland EnglandWGM Harriet HuntIM Susan LalicWIM Jovanka HouskaWFM[20] Heather Richards12234981525
TenthArmenia ArmeniaWGM Elina DanielianWGM Lilit MkrtchianWIM Goar HlgatianNelly Aginian19230382424½

[edit]Overall title

The Nona Gaprindashvili Trophy is awarded to the entity the average place of finish of which in the open and women's division is the best (where two or more teams are tied, they are ordered by single-best finish in either division and then by total points scored); with an average finish of two, the Russia won the 2000 trophy.
Top ten finishers
TeamOpen division placingWomen's division placingAverage placing
Russia Russia132
Ukraine Ukraine34
Georgia (country) Georgia624
People's Republic of China People's Republic of China915
Germany Germany285
Hungary Hungary47
England England798
India India81310½
Israel Israel52012½
Armenia Armenia171013½

[edit]Notes

  1. ^ Although commonly referred to as the men's division, this section is open to both male and female players.
  2. ^ Where teams share the same total score, they are ordered by Buchholz tiebreak scores, calculated by summing the final scores of each opponent played by a given team. It was on the basis of a superior sum of opponents' scores, 457½ to 455½, that Ukraine claimed third place over Hungary.
  3. ^ Players are ordered by board, from first to last, in the same fashion in which they principally played; the fifth and sixth players of each team may have played on higher boards during the Olympiad but played fewer games than the players who primarily occupied the positions.
  4. ^ All players are Grandmasters except where a note to the contrary is present.
  5. ^ Teams were initially seeded into the Olympiad on the basis of the average Elo rating of the top four players expected to compose each team; for example, the highest-seeded team, Russia, entered the tournament with an average FIDE rating of 2685, while the lowest-seeded team,Djibouti, fielded no players with international ratings (and was therefore assessed an average rating of 1500).
  6. ^ The ratings averaged are those of the top four players expected to compose each team.
  7. ^ In as much as the tournament consisted of 14 rounds, with four games played by each team per round, the maximum number of points one team could accumulate was 56.
  8. a b IM denotes International Master.
  9. ^ NT denotes No FIDE title.
  10. ^ FM denotes FIDE Master.
  11. ^ Where teams share the same total overall score, they are ordered by Buchholz tiebreak scores, calculated by adding up the final scores of each opponent played by a given team. Hungary, for example, was placed ahead of the Germany because Hungary's opponents finished the tournament having scored 342 points, however those of the Germany scored 333½.
  12. ^ Players are ordered by board, from first to last, in the same fashion in which they principally played; the fourth player on each team will have played on a higher board during the Olympiad but will have played fewer games than the players who primarily occupied the positions.
  13. ^ Titles for all FIDE-titled players are provided.
  14. ^ Teams were initially seeded into the Olympiad on the basis of the average Elo rating of their expected players; for example, the highest-seeded team, People's Republic of China, entered the tournament with an average FIDE rating of 2537, while the lowest-seeded team,Zambia, fielded no players with international ratings (and was therefore assessed an average rating of 2000).
  15. ^ The ratings averaged are those of the top three players expected to compose each team.
  16. ^ In as much as the tournament consisted of 14 rounds, with three games played by each team per round, the maximum number of points one team could accumulate was 42.
  17. ^ GM denotes Grandmaster.
  18. ^ WGM denotes Woman Grandmaster.
  19. ^ WIM denotes Woman International Master.
  20. ^ WFM denotes Woman FIDE Master.

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