Classical World Chess Championship 2004

The Classical World Chess Championship 2004 was held from September 25, 2004, to October 18, 2004, in Brissago, Switzerland. Vladimir Kramnik, the defending champion, played Peter Leko, the challenger, in a fourteen-game match.

Defending champion Challenger
Vladimir Kramnik
Peter Leko
Vladimir Kramnik Peter Leko
7 7
Born 25 June 1975
29 years old
Born 8 September 1979
25 years old
Winner of the 2000 Classical World Chess Championship Winner of the 2002 Candidates Tournament
Rating: 2770 (World No. 3)[1] Rating: 2741 (World No. 5)[1]
2000 2006

The match ended 7–7, each player scoring two wins. Kramnik retained his title under the rules of the match.[2]

Background

Garry Kasparov's split from FIDE in 1993 resulted in two lines of world chess champions. There was the "Classical" world champion, the title that passes on to a player only when he beats the previous world champion. This was held by Kasparov, until he was defeated by Kramnik in the Classical World Chess Championship 2000. There was also the "Official" FIDE world champion who, at the time of this match, was Rustam Kasimdzhanov.

The split World Champion title led to calls for a reunification. After negotiations all parties agreed to the "Prague Agreement", whereby the winner of this match (the "Classical" World Champion) would play the winner of a match between Kasparov and the FIDE World Champion, and the winner would be the World Champion. These other matches never took place, but the titles were later unified at the FIDE World Chess Championship 2006.

The Candidates Tournament was held in July 2002, and was won by Peter Leko. However there were many delays in finding a sponsor for the Kramnik–Leko match,[3] and it was not played until September and October of 2004.

2002 Candidates Tournament

The July 2002 Dortmund Sparkassen Chess Meeting acted as the Candidates Tournament to determine the challenger to Kramnik's title. However, not all other top-ranked players were present. World number 1 Garry Kasparov declined his invitation, instead insisting that he deserved a rematch with Kramnik based on his tournament results in 2001.[4] Two others top 10 players — world number 3 and 2000 FIDE World Champion Viswanathan Anand, and world number 8 Vassily Ivanchuk — declined their invitations out of loyalty to the rival FIDE world championship.[5] FIDE World Champion Ruslan Ponomariov (and world number 7) also did not participate. Apart from these four players and Kramnik, the competitors were the 7 highest rated players in the world,[6][7] plus Christopher Lutz (44th in the world in the January 2002 list) as a player from the host country.

Leko won the Candidates Tournament:[8][9][10]

Group 1
Rating1234Total
1 Alexei Shirov (Spain)2697-½ ½1 ½1 ½4
2 Veselin Topalov (Bulgaria)2745½ ½-½ 1½ 14
3 Boris Gelfand (Israel)27100 ½½ 0-1 ½
4 Christopher Lutz (Germany)26550 ½½ 00 ½-

Shirov won a two-game playoff 1½-½ to be placed first ahead of Topalov.

Group 2
Rating1234Total
1 Evgeny Bareev (Russia)2726-1 0½ ½1 14
2 Peter Leko (Hungary)27220 1-½ 1½ ½
3 Michael Adams (England)2752½ ½½ 0-½ ½
4 Alexander Morozevich (Russia)27160 0½ ½½ ½-2

The top two from each group advanced to the knock-out stage where mini-matches (best of 4) were played, with a 2-game rapid chess playoff in the event of a tie.

  Semifinals
Final
                 
 
    Peter Leko  
    Alexei Shirov ½    
      Peter Leko
      Veselin Topalov
    Veselin Topalov
    Evgeny Bareev  

Topalov–Bareev was tied 2–2; Topalov won the rapid playoff 1½–½.

2004 Championship Match

Classical World Chess Championship Match 2004
Rating1234567891011121314Total
 Peter Leko (Hungary)2741 (+21) 0½½½1½½1½½½½½07
 Vladimir Kramnik (Russia)2770 (−29) 1½½½0½½0½½ ½½½17

Highlights

  • Game 1 – as black, Kramnik sacrifices his queen for rook and bishop, and outplays Leko in the ending to take the lead.[11]
  • Game 5 – Leko, as white, goes into an ending a pawn up with some winning chances, and outplays Kramnik to win, and level the match.[12]
  • Game 8 – Leko, as black in the Marshall Attack, plays into a line prepared by Kramnik's team, and finds the refutation over the board, to take a one-point lead. Chessbase wrote, "Many questions were answered by today's eighth match game. Does Leko have what it takes to beat Kramnik in a match? Is Kramnik's preparation simply unbeatable? Why don't many top players allow the Marshall Gambit with white? (That's 'yes', 'no', and 'because no matter how well prepared you are you may get killed'.)"[13]
  • Game 12 – Leko switches to the Caro–Kann Defence. Kramnik has winning chances, but Leko defends well and, with both players short on time, Leko offers a draw on move 34.[14]
  • Game 13 – Kramnik plays the Benoni, in a surprise attempt to win with black, but the game is drawn.[15] Kramnik must now win the final game.
  • Game 14 – Kramnik wins the final game to tie the match and retain his title.[16][17]

References

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