Nepomniachtchi & Cramling European Champions
After many draws in the penultimate round, Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) defeated Vladimir Akopian (Armenia) in the last round and won the gold medal at the European Championship in Rijeka. The women's section was won by Swedish GM Pia Cramling, who beat Viktorija Cmilyte (Lithuania) in the last round.
The 11th European Individual Men and Women's Chess Championship is held from 5th to 19th of March 2010 in Rijeka, in new Zamet Centre sports hall. The event is organized by chess club "Rijeka", in agreement with the Croatian Chess Federation under the auspices of the City of Rijeka and the European Chess Union. It is open to all players representing the chess federations which comprise the European Chess Union (FIDE zones 1.1 to 1.9) regardless of their title or rating. There is also no limit of participants per federation.
The championship is an 11-round Swiss in accordance with the ECU Tournament Rules and FIDE Rules of Chess. The rate of play 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. As always, the European Championship is a qualification event for the next World Cup. According to FIDE regulations and the decision of the ECU Board, 22 players will qualify.
Rounds 10-11
With draws on the first seven boards in round 10, nothing changed in the top of the standings in Rijeka. Ian Nepomnaichtchi went into the final round in sole lead, and no less than seven GMs were chasing him with half a point less. Some GMs in Nice expected the last round's top game Nepomniachtchi-Akopian to quickly end in a draw (since both would be sure of a good prize and qualification for the World Cup) but that's not what happened.
Position after 23.Rec1

Black played the somewhat passive 23...Bf8?! (perhaps it was time for 23...f5!?) and after 24.b5 axb5 25.Qxb5 Rb8 26.Qa4 White's passed a-pawn became too strong.
Pia Cramling had a very strong finish, drawing with Socko and then beating Khurtsidze, Stefanova and Cmilyte in rounds 8-11. The decisive game went like this:
Position after 24.Ne4

The ending is about equal, but might become slightly more difficult for White when Black manages to activate her majority on the queenside. 24...Bd5?! Better was 24...Nd4 25.Nc5 Bc8. 25.Nc5 Bxg2 26.Nxg2 a5 27.Ne3 (27.Rxd8 Rxd8 28.a4! was perhaps even stronger) 27...a4

28.Nd7! Rh8 29.Rd6 and White's activity soon yielded a pawn, and eventually the game.
And so for the gold medals in both sections no tiebreak is needed. In the women's section the silver medal goes to Viktorija Cmilyte, who was the only one to score 8.5/11.
Thursday tiebreaks will be played to establish the silver and bronze medal in the open section, the bronze medal in the women's section and to establish the qualifiers for the World Cup.


Selection of games rounds 10-11
Game viewer by ChessTempo
Photo courtesy of the official website, more here
Links
- Official website
- All details and statistics
- Games in PGN: Men | Women via TWIC














Comments
Castro
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
* I mean... "her fan" heheh
Castro
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
And now, for something really impressive...
Name Ziaziulkina Nastassia
Title WFM
Starting rank 126
Rating national 0
Rating international 2188
Ratingperformance 2543
FIDE rtg +/- 75,3
Points 7,5
Rank 16
Federation BLR
Ident-Number 0
Fide-ID 13505211
Rd. SNo Name RtgI FED Pts. Res. we w-we K rtg+/-
1 47 WIM Severiukhina Zoja 2355 RUS 6,0 w 1 0,28 0,72 15 10,80
2 31 IM Romanko Marina 2409 RUS 7,0 s 0 0,22 -0,22 15 -3,30
3 82 WGM Mamedjarova Zeinab 2289 AZE 5,0 s 1 0,36 0,64 15 9,60
4 48 WGM Motoc Alina 2348 ROU 5,5 w 1 0,29 0,71 15 10,65
5 11 GM Hoang Thanh Trang 2487 HUN 7,0 s 0 0,15 -0,15 15 -2,25
6 59 WIM Paikidze Nazi 2322 GEO 5,0 w 1 0,32 0,68 15 10,20
7 32 WGM Zawadzka Jolanta 2404 POL 7,0 w ½ 0,22 0,28 15 4,20
8 7 IM Mkrtchian Lilit 2503 ARM 6,0 s 1 0,14 0,86 15 12,90
9 20 WFM Gunina Valentina 2457 RUS 7,0 s ½ 0,17 0,33 15 4,95
10 26 IM Kovalevskaya Ekaterina 2438 RUS 7,5 w ½ 0,19 0,31 15 4,65
11 8 IM Javakhishvili Lela 2500 GEO 6,0 s 1 0,14 0,86 15 12,90
Performance 355 points above his elo...
Number 126, but finishing in 16th...
75,3 points elo in 11 games...
This young lady was a BIT underrated before!
BTW, Does anyone knows about the title norms achieved on these championships?
Another matter: Was there any female playing the open section? If not, why could it be?
Castro
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
Go Go Pia!!!
I'm his fan for many years ;-)
Radical Caveman
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
Good thing Cramling beat Cmilyte...at least now I can pronounce ONE of the winners' names!
unknown
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
Congratulations to all winners and participants!
Remco G
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
A tiebreak is needed to get 13 qualifiers out of 28 contenders. Does anybody know how they do that?
Jarvis
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
"In the women’s section the silver medal goes to Viktorija Cmilyte, who was the only one to score 8.5/9."
Weird note. So she accumulated the most points until round 9. Well done, but, you know...
Jarvis
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
And it's not true either, according to the statistics:
http://chess-results.com/tnr29568.aspx?art=9&lan=1&fed=LTU&turdet=YES&fl...
Peter Doggers
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
That was simply a typo - corrected now.
ops
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
Nepomniachtchi the future worldchampion?!
Jarvis
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
Oh, ok!
vaughn
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
anyone knows Nepomniachtchi elo rating after this tournament?
Castro
1 year 10 months ago
Permalink
It must be about 2680 (virtual, until next list). A near-top GM now!
My questions... Anyone?
Your comment
Speak your mind
By posting a comment you are agreeing to abide our Terms & Conditions