Navalmoral
de la Mata Open 2013
The 19th International Open Tournament "Villa de Navalmoral"
took place from December 5th to 8th in Hotel Moya in Navalmoral de la Mata,
a municipality located in the province of Cáceres in western Spain.

The tournament was a seven round Swiss, with 91 players from 16 countries,
including twelve grandmasters and eight IMs. The total prize fund was €12,300,
with €3,000 going to the winner. That was Azeri GM Namig Guliyev, who
shared first with IM Vitali Koziak of Ukraine, both having scored 6.0/7
points, but Guliyev with the higher tiebreak scores.

The winner: GM Namig Guliyev of Azerbaijan
Final Ranking after seven rounds
Ivanov strikes again

The chess blog Play
Chess Murcia is reporting that after a fine start our friend Borislav
Ivanov was excluded from the tournament in round s. The details are quite
delectable: Ivanov had scored 4.5 points in the first five rounds –
against two untitled players and three GMs – and was leading the event,
together with GM Namig Guliyev. The two were paired for round six, and Guliyev
asked to have Ivanov's shoes examined, to see if he was hiding a sophisticated
device ("GM Guliyev le solicitó al árbitro que Ivanov
debía quitarse los zapatos, para ver si escondía algún
dispositivo sofisticado"). Ivanov refused and the game was awarded
to Guliyev. In addition Ivanov was disqualified from participating in the
final round. This is how the tournament progressed for him:
As you can see Ivanov beat two GMs and drew against the third. Below are
the the three games he played against the GMs, which you can peruse, learn
from or check with the computer (suggestion: try Stockfish running on an
iPhone or quad core Android). Take a look especially at the game against
Campora, which Leonard Barden, respected chess columnist of The Guardian,
calls "a smooth, controlled win where the GM looks outclassed".
Replay all Ivanov games from Navalmoral
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As our readers probably recall this is the second time Borislav Ivanov
has refused to allow his shoes to be checked, in spite of the fact that
this would cost him the game and even mean the forfeit of the tournament.

In early October during the Blagoevgrad Open in Bulgaria, he was confronted
by GM Max Dlugy, who asked for a body check before their encounter in round
seven. After the metal detector found nothing Dlugy asked for the shoes
to be checked – his own and Ivanov's. What then happened he described
in the
harrowing interview we conducted with Max:
Without a word I take off my shoes, I take off my socks and throw them
to the floor – just ba-doom, there, I’m done, now show me
your shoes, please. What happened next was completely unexpected. The
guy just goes “I categorically will not take off my shoes. My socks
smell.” At this point my friend [a security expert] says: “I
guess that would be forfeit, right?” and Borislav says: “if
you have to forfeit me, forfeit me. But I will not take off my shoes.”
The arbiter said: “You realise that you will lose, but I will also
have to disqualify you from continuing to play in the tournament, and
no one will play you ever again. All you have to do is to take off your
shoes.” He actually tried to convince him for another couple of
minutes, but Borislav was categorical about it: “No way I’m
taking off my shoes. No way!” So the director shrugs and says “Okay,
I’m putting in a zero.”
At the time we did a little research and found that, unfortunately, there
is a very low-tech way to cheat in chess: a modern Android or Apple smartphone
easily fits into a shoe, and you can use your toes to send signals to the
motion detector in the phone. Little wiggles will do it. Or the toe can
be used to tap on the LED screen. The response of the phone would be short
bursts of vibration. An app could handle the interface to a chess engine
running on the device. So it is not really necessary to work out a very
complicated communication system to explain how a player may be using computer
assistance during a chess tournament.
Subsequently we
reported that Borislav Ivanov had announced that he was retiring from
chess, a decision that he has clearly revoked. We were also informed that
he had registered for the XXIV
International Chess Festival Cracovia 2013, to be held from December
27 to January 4th in Hotel Galaxy in the Polish city of Kraków, though
we do not find his name anymore on the current
starting list.
Previous articles on Borislav Ivanov
10/5/2013 – Ivanov
ends his chess career
On Thursday we reported that FM Borislav Ivanov had forfeited his round
seven game after he refused to take off his shoes and allow the arbiter
to check for hidden devices. His opponent in that round, GM Maxim Dlugy,
provided all the details. Ivanov was permitted to continue in rounds eight
and nine, but now has announced that he will retire from chess, as the Bulgarian
new outlet Blitz reports.
3.10.2013 - The
shoe assistant – Ivanov forfeits at Blagoevgrad
Everyone has heard about Borislav Ivanov, a lowly FM from Bulgaria, who
since late 2012 has wowed the chess world with super-GM performances. Ivanov
was suspected of computer cheating, and forty GMs are boycotting tournaments
in which he plays. GM Max Dlugy is not one of them, but he insisted on a
thorough check of his opponent before their game. You'll never believe what
happened next.
08.1.2013 - Cheating
scandal in Croatia – feedback and analysis
Recently we reported that the incredibly brilliant play by a 25-year-old
untitled Bulgarian player at the Zadar Open in Croatia had raised suspicion
that he might have been using illicit electronic assistance during his games.
A number of readers criticised us – for linking to the mainstream
Croatian media reports?! One of them, an expert in the field, actually analysed
all the games in question.
17.1.2013 - Cheating
scandal – Borislav Ivanov speaks out
Recently a 25-year-old untitled Bulgarian player scored 6.0/9 points in
a strong GM tournament, with a 2697 performance. His opponents complained,
he was searched, and no electronic equipment was found. Still, the case
put chess on the front pages of the mainstream media, and led to intense
discussions on the Internet. Now Ivanov has given the Russian news portal
WhyChess an exclusive interview.
23.3.2013 - A
Game of Chicken: Ivanov rides again
In the last weeks of 2012 he wowed the chess world with a 2700 performance.
Two months later the new Bulgarian star FM Borislav Ivanov finished 88th
in the Plovdiv, this time with a performance of 1970. Then came another
enviable achievement, a clear win at the Villava rapid (again with a 2700
performance). What is going on? Alex Karaivanov speculates, with new video
analysis by Valeri Lilov.
3.6.2013 - The
show goes on: Ivanov in Kustendil
Borislav Ivanov is an FM who in the past months has been crushing GM hundreds
of points stronger than himself. Bulgarian GMs, who suspect computer cheating,
are now boycotting tournaments in which he appears, or chosing not to play
their games against him. Ivanov has called them antisocial buttheads in
newspaper interviews. Alex Karaivanov reports, with new video analysis by
Valeri Lilov.
5.6.2013 - Experts
weigh in on Ivanov's performance
Two days ago we reported on the crushing victories of a Bulgarian FM against
top grandmasters and the suspicion that he was secretly using computer assistance
to achieve his success. Extensive analysis of the games by Valeri Lilov
made this seem quite plausible. In part two of our series we present the
opinions of international experts and one of the GM victims, plus initial
reader feeback.
19.6.2013 - Rombaldoni:
"He never calculated moves"
The very talented Italian IM Axel Rombaldoni, aiming for a final GM norm,
recently travelled to Bulgaria to play in a GM tournament. First he discovered
that most of the grandmasters had cancelled their participation, and then
in round seven he faced the reason for the cancellation: FM Borislav Ivanov,
who has been accused of computer cheating. Alex tells us what it is like
to play Ivanov.
11.7.2013 - Ivanov
misses BCF anti-cheating test
The Borislav Ivanov saga continues. Recently the wonder chess player agreed
to take part in a test, conducted by the Bulgarian Chess Federation, to
prove the authenticity of his amazing new-found chess skills. In the end
Ivanov simply did not appear at the appointed time. Meanwhile a 12-year-old
player, student of a famous coach, was caught cheating, and FIDE is at last
stirring into action.