Conspicuous by their absence
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
How was the board order decided? It seems a little bit odd... http://www.chessolympiadistanbul.com...dian-team.html
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
I don't think I've ever seen Kramnik (6'6") the smaller man in a chess picture:
http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=8434
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Originally posted by Felix Dumont View PostHow was the board order decided? It seems a little bit odd... http://www.chessolympiadistanbul.com...dian-team.html
Despite having the lowest FIDE rating, Jackie Peng has the much higher CFC rating and fully warrants, imho, board 2 status on the women's team.
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Re: Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Originally posted by Felix Dumont View PostHow was the board order decided? It seems a little bit odd... http://www.chessolympiadistanbul.com...dian-team.htmlChristopher Mallon
FIDE Arbiter
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Wikipedia lists the top 15 lifetime Olympiad performances as:
1.Tigran Petrosian 81.4 %
2. Mikhail Tal 81.2
3. Anatoly Karpov 80.1
4. Isaac Kashan 79.7%
5. Vassily Smyslov 79.6
6. David Bronstein 79.6
7. Garry Kasparov 78.7
8. Alexander Alekhine 78.5
9. Milan Matulovic 76.9
10. Paul Keres 75.9
11. Effim Geller 75.6
12. James Tarjan 75.5
13. Bobby Fischer 75.4%
14. Mikhail Botvinik 74.7
15. Thomas Roussel-Roozmon 73.2
Just kidding on that last entry. Thomas doesn't quite meet Wiki's minimum 4 Olympiad requirement. They've got Salo Flohr listed in the 15 spot with the same 73.2 figure that Thomas has with his 20.5/28 (slightly higher than Salo's 73.2 to a 2nd decimal place).
It's really too bad Thomas didn't have a 4th Olympiad in him and perhaps find his name on this list of chess greats.
You can find the full particulars (Petrosian only lost 1 single game in 129 matches and Tal 2 in 101 compared to Fischer's 7 losses in 65 opportunities) but no mention of Thomas at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_Olympiad
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Re: Conspicuous by their absence
If Mr. Eric Hansen does not play board two I will launch a protest.
Take a look at his most recent result. A 2651 performance and a GM norm. Finishing tied for first in a very strong international tournament.
If Eric Hansen is on second board, Canada has a real chance to make some noise and put in a memorable performance.
Norm
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Kevin Spraggett won with Black on Board 3 today while Nisipeanus lost on board 1 and Gajewski drew on board 2 so heading into tomorrow's final round there's a 4 way tie for 1st with 7.5/9 between the 3 (Spraggett), 4 (Rakhmadov), 5 (Shankland), and 6 (Cordova) seeds. Kevin is clearly back over 2600 again.
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Re: Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Originally posted by Jordan S. Berson View PostAman,
The saying goes: ""Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana." - Groucho Marx
Jordan
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Re : Conspicuous by their absence
Spraggett drew his game with Cordova on board 1 while Shankland and Rakhmanov got the same 1/2 point result on board 2. Gajewski, the 2 seed, won his game to join the 4 co-leaders, all 5 at 8/10. Kevin's TPR was 2658 and he'll evidently pick up 7.2 FIDE points.
Quite the weekend for Canadian chess with Eric Hansen sharing first in Greece yesterday and picking up a GM norm while Keven Spraggett shares 1st in Spain today and regains 2600 status.
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