
The IX European Individual Chess Championship took place in Plovdiv, Bulgaria,
from April 21st to May 3rd 2008, with one free day, on Monday, April 28. The
tournament halls were in the Novotel Plovdiv. The championship was an 11 round
Swiss, playing time 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.
The total prize fund in the men's section was 92,200 EUR (first 15,000, 2nd
10,000, third 8,000, fourth 6,500, fifth 5,500 etc.) and in the women's section
34,500 EUR (first 6,000, second 5,000, third 4,000, fourth 3,000, fifth 2,000,
etc.). According to Bulgarian law all prizes were taxable (10%).
Tiebreaks
The tiebreak system is not fully explained on the tournament pages. The rules
state that in the European Individual Chess Championship and European Individual
Women’s Chess Championship tie-breaks are organized only in the following
cases:
- to establish the Champion;
- to establish the medal winners;
- to establish qualifiers, for the World Chess Championship.
To do this additional matches of two games would be played, with 15 minutes
on the clock and addition of 10 seconds before each move. If this match is drawn
again, then two games will be played with five minutes plus two seconds per
move. If this match is again drawn, then the sudden-death game will be played
with white having 5 minutes on the clock and black having 4 minutes, without
any addition. White has to win the sudden-death game in order to win the match.
The rules also state that in case more than three tie-break rounds had to be
played, the chief arbiter was able to change the playing schedule in such a
way that the tie-break matches can be finished within one day.
We have tried to figure out exactly what transpired and give you our results
without a warrantee (except for the medals) that they are completely accurate
or what they mean for the World Championship/Cup qualifications.
At the end of the main tournament this was the final standings in the men's
section:
1 |
GM |
Tiviakov Sergei |
2634 |
NED |
8.5 |
2 |
GM |
Volkov Sergey |
2633 |
RUS |
8.0 |
3 |
GM |
Tregubov Pavel V |
2629 |
RUS |
8.0 |
4 |
GM |
Movsesian Sergei |
2695 |
SVK |
8.0 |
5 |
GM |
L'Ami Erwin |
2600 |
NED |
8.0 |
6 |
GM |
Vachier-Lagrave Maxime |
2632 |
FRA |
8.0 |
7 |
GM |
Grachev Boris |
2610 |
RUS |
8.0 |
8 |
GM |
Baklan Vladimir |
2647 |
UKR |
8.0 |
9 |
GM |
Kryvoruchko Yuriy |
2612 |
UKR |
8.0 |
10 |
GM |
Nyback Tomi |
2587 |
FIN |
8.0 |
Obviously Sergey Tiviakov had won the event alone and had the Gold Medal and
the title of European Championship. This is how the tiebreak games that were
necessary went.

So the final results were:
Gold |
GM |
Tiviakov Sergei |
2634 |
NED |
Silver |
GM |
Movsesian Sergei |
2695 |
SVK |
Bronze |
GM |
Volkov Sergey |
2633 |
RUS |
Further qualifiers for the World Cup by virtue of the tiebreaks were:
Pavasovic Dusko |
1.5:0.5 |
Gurevich Mikhail |
Efimenko Zahar |
2.0:1.0 |
Markowski Tomasz |
Papaioannou Ioannis |
2.0:1.0 |
Vajda Levente |
Khalifman Alexander |
2.0:1.0 |
Roiz Michael |
Najer Evgeniy |
2.0:0.0 |
Hracek Zbynek |
Mamedov Rauf |
1.0:2.0 |
Andreikin Dmitry |
Akopian Vladimir |
0.0:2.0 |
Sargissian Gabriel |
Areshchenko Alexander |
1.0:2.0 |
Gustafsson Jan |
Fressinet Laurent |
1.5:0.5 |
Galkin Alexander |
Smirin Ilia |
2.0:1.0 |
Khismatullin Denis |
Lupulescu Constantin |
1.0:2.0 |
Bologan Viktor |
Women's section
In the women's section the top standings were:
1 |
GM |
Lahno Kateryna |
2479 |
UKR |
8.5 |
2 |
IM |
Ushenina Anna |
2474 |
UKR |
8.0 |
3 |
WGM |
Zhukova Natalia |
2450 |
UKR |
8.0 |
4 |
IM |
Cmilyte Viktorija |
2466 |
LTU |
8.0 |
5 |
IM |
Mkrtchian Lilit |
2413 |
ARM |
8.0 |
6 |
IM |
Skripchenko Almira |
2443 |
FRA |
8.0 |
7 |
IM |
Dembo Yelena |
2429 |
GRE |
8.0 |
Kateryna Lahno had won the title and Gold, the rest went into the playoffs:
The final results were:
Gold |
GM |
Lahno Kateryna |
2479 |
UKR |
Silver |
IM |
Cmilyte Viktorija |
2466 |
LTU |
Bronze |
IM |
Ushenina Anna |
2474 |
UKR |
Further qualifiers for the World Cup by virtue of the tiebreaks were:
IM Danielian Elina |
1.5:0.5 |
IM Socko Monika |
IM Lomineishvili Maia |
2.0:1.0 |
WGM Demina Julia |
Pictorial Impressions
By Diana Mihajlova

The winner: GM Tiviakov Sergei (NED) secured a clear first and Gold

Silver for Sergei Movsesian (SVK)

Bronze to Sergey Volkov of Russia [Photo Dusan Bojkov]
The beaming GM Lahno Kateryna (UKR), the European Women's Champion

IM Cmilyte Viktorija (LTU), who took Silver

Bronze for IM Ushenina Anna (UKR)

GM Cramling Pia (SWE), with Diana Mihajlova. Pia, the the highest ranked
player in the ladies’ tournament, did not make it among the top seven,
but followed the leaders with 7.5.
Over a late night ice-cream in the near-by bar we chatted, among other things,
about the effects of long tournaments. The ever gentle Pia Cramling admitted
how hard she found to be away from her young daughter for such a long time.
It is the first time she has travelled to a tournament alone, without the support
of her husband, Spanish GM Juan Bellon and their little daughter, who this time
had to stay home because of her school. She thought that if a chess tournament
could be played like a tennis tournament would be much better: where when you
lose in the first two or three rounds you simply go home; two weeks is too long.
When I suggested that the absence of her family might have contributed to her
somewhat poorer performance, she denied it in her ever sporting manner, but
added contemplatively: ‘I know what my problems are.’ I did not
want this time to delve into the secret of ‘her problems’. A slightly
worst performance every now and then it is only understandable. Independently
of that Pia has already secured her place in the history of women’s chess.

At the Plovdiv Championships new type of winners were introduced. Throughout
the tournament the public was requested to vote for ‘Queen’ and
‘King’ of the Championships. Faithful to their home stars the public
chose GM Stefanova Antoaneta (BUL) for their Queen and IM Kresimir Rusev (BUL)
for their King.
Some pictures from the tournament site

42nd: FM Samvel Ter-Sahakyan, 2449, ARM, 7.0 points. We are told that 14-year-old
Samvel has secured his GM title with this result.

Cool picture, cool name: IM Ciprian-Costica Nanu, 2515, ROU, 5.5 points

168th: GM Alin Berescu, 2481, ROU, 5.5 points, twice National Champion, in 2004
and 2005

72nd: 15-year-old GM Fabiano Caruana 2620, ITA, 6.5 points

257th: 12-year-old Alexander Monev, 2038, BUL, 4.5 points

305th: GM Kiril Georgiev, 2665, BUL, 3.0 points

11th: Photographers' favourite GM Antoaneta Stefanova, 2538, Bulgaria, 7.5
points

14th: IM Maia Lomineishvili, 2400, GEO, 7.5 points

60th: WIM Joanna Worek, 2244, POL, 6.0 points

63rd: WIM Lilit Galojan, 2324, ARM, 6.0 points

65th: WGM Velcheva Maria, 2262, Bulgaria, 6.0 points
Operation operation – emergency at St. George Hospital
The tournament bulleting tells us the following harrowing tale:
There is a popular saying that “life is what happens to us, while we
make plans about it”. In the early hours of April 29, when the Spanish
chess player Albert Muratet was preparing his game against the Bulgarian Dimitar
Marholev, a sharp pain in the area of the kidneys made him forget chess variations
and seek medical help. He was taken to the Saint George University Hospital
– one of the best in Plovdiv. The physicians had no doubt – the
patient had to undergo immediate appendicitis surgery.
Unfortunately the language barrier posed a problem. Albert initially did not
consent to a surgical intervention. The Spaniard was convinced that it was some
kind of kidney trouble, since he felt pain behind in the waist, while the appendix
is normally in the front. The physicians however felt that Albert's appendicitis
was located at the back and the pain was atypically localised.
Lucky for the patient that Dr. Assen Zlatarev appeared – a physician
who has worked in Mexico for years. In perfect Spanish he not only soothed Albert,
but also explained to him how serious the situation actually was. The chess
player understood that he had no choice but to trust our doctors, and he underwent
surgery in the afternoon of the same day. After the operation Muratet was provided
a VIP room in the hospital recovery wing. Logically the attending physician
was Dr. Zlatarev.

A few days after this crisis we visited Albert Muratet at the “St. George”
University Hospital. We found him slightly weak, but in good spirit.