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Morozevich Wins Vladimir Petrov Memorial

  • SonofPearl
  • on Tue, 2/21/2012 12:26pm.

Vladimir Petrov.pngThe Vladimir Petrov Memorial took place from 15-20 February in Jurmala, Latvia.

Vladimir Petrov (pictured) was a talented Grandmaster from Latvia, who achieved great success in the 1930's. He won the Latvian national championships twice (1935 and 1937) and tied for first place with Sammy Reshevsky and Salo Flohr at the Kemeri 1937 tournament, finishing ahead of Alexander Alekine, Paul Keres, Reuben Fine and Saviely Tartakower.

Petrov's life ended much to early when he sadly died in a Soviet labour camp in 1943, aged just 35.

The memorial competition opened with a 9-round rapid Swiss event from which the top 4 finishers qualified to compete in a rapid round-robin final with 4 invited star GMs - Vassily Ivanchuk, Alexander Morozevich, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and Alexei Shirov.

Alexander Morozevich emerged victorious with a score of 5/7, half a point clear of Alexei Shirov and Igor Kovalenko.  All games were played at 15 minutes plus 6 second increment.

The final standings and a selection of games are below, but first a game from Petrov himself...

 

 Morozevich, Alexander  RUS 2763 * 0 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 5
 Shirov, Alexei  LAT 2710 1 * ½ 0 ½ 1 1 ½
 Kovalenko, Igor  UKR 2587 0 ½ * ½ ½ 1 1 1
 Khairullin, Ildar  RUS 2638 0 1 ½ * 0 ½ 1 ½
 Fridman, Daniel  GER 2660 0 ½ ½ 1 * 0 0 1 3
 Ivanchuk, Vassily  UKR 2766 ½ 0 0 ½ 1 * ½ ½ 3
 Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar  AZE 2747 0 0 0 0 1 ½ * 1
 Krasenkow, Michal  POL 2607 ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 * 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5030 reads 19 comments
3 votes

Comments


  • 3 months ago

    luisalcuadrado

    Soviet crimes knows no boundaries...

  • 3 months ago

    macrosgambit

    Ivanchuck v Kovalenko = great game!

  • 3 months ago

    Stella_Woo

    nope, Petrov Defence isn't named by him.

    But still, V Petrov is one of the most talented player in his time

  • 3 months ago

    fabelhaft

    "Is chucky on a long term decline?"

    Last month he performed 2800+ in Wijk (0.5 behind Carlsen) and a rapid event like this one means little.

  • 3 months ago

    Candypants

    Tartakower played like a patzer that game. Why on earth would you give up 3 pieces and a pawn for a queen? Very bad play.

  • 3 months ago

    kevinkin

    Is chucky on a long term decline?

  • 3 months ago

    johnwarner2

    Great to see two of the greatest creative players of the modern era doing so well.

  • 3 months ago

    AlexiShirov

    Shirov! Woow!, great games!.. welcome back "fire on board":D

  • 3 months ago

    Beginnerkhan

    great

  • 3 months ago

    Pavrey

    Neat game by Petrov - Tartakower got blasted in his own trap.

  • 3 months ago

    WGM Natalia_Pogonina

    Congrats to Moro!

  • 3 months ago

    skewer2000

    Moro is a chess beast.

     

  • 3 months ago

    Twobit

    Moro rocks. He just un-retired and now he is coming through.

  • 3 months ago

    bigdoug

    Nope the Petrov Defense person was;

    Alexander Dmitrievich Petrov (RussianАлександр Дмитриевич Петров) (February 12, 1794 in Biserovo, near Pskov – April 22, 1867 in Warsaw) was a Russian chess player, chess composer, and chess writer.

  • 3 months ago

    ali250

    very nice game by vladimir petrov

    petrov opening is in his name?

  • 3 months ago

    Lawdoginator

    Sadly, of course, a Cartoon Crazy Cow would come in last place. 

  • 3 months ago

    Lawdoginator

    I love the name Krasenkow, it makes me think of a Crazy Cow playing Chess. 

  • 3 months ago

    FM VPA

    Congrats-Thrilling gamesKiss

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