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Bronstein Memorial Under Way in Minsk

Bronstein Memorial Under Way in Minsk

PeterDoggers
| 6 | Chess Event Coverage

Eltaj Safarli and Vasif Durarbayli face each other on board one today in round 4 of the Bronstein Memorial in Minsk, Belarus. The two Azerbaijani grandmasters are the only players left with a 100% score. The tournament is held in honor of David Bronstein, who was born 90 years ago this week.

Photo courtesy of the Bronstein Memorial

The Bronstein Memorial takes place 11-19 February in Minsk, Belarus. It is held on the occasion of Bronstein's 90th birthday this week: the great Soviet grandmaster was born on 19 February 1924 in Bila Tserkva, Ukraine. He passed away on 5 December 2006 in Minsk, where the tournament is held.

Special guest at the opening ceremony was Bronstein's widow Tatiana Boleslavskaya, the daughter of Isaac Boleslavsky. The tournament website posted the following statement by her:

“What was David like outside the chessboard? As in chess, he loved beauty. You know, he loved to buy beautiful things. People even said: what would a thing be like in order for Bronstein to buy it? Expensive and beautiful, useless and inefficient to carry. And he was incredibly generous. He always brought flowers, sweets and wine, and he tried to please everyone who stepped into his house or his hotel room. I recall how Smyslov, a very rich man by the way, once exclaimed: ‘Davik, you're so happy, you can do without all that!’

David Ionovich did not finish university, only high school, and after that the war began. His university was life itself. I studied science, but his knowledge was natural compared to mine. He had his very own opinion about everything. And here's another special trait he had. He could lift people to his level, in his presence everything became meaningful and necessary by itself. And he lifted me, too, to such heights that I'm still experiencing it today. I'm a very happy woman, and I am very lucky to have had such a great companion in my life.” (Translation by Arne Moll.)

World title challenger, Soviet team member, creative grandmaster, respected chess author — David Bronstein doesn't need any further introduction here and it suffices to say that a memorial in his honor is more than justified!

There are two separate tournaments, and both are 9-round Swisses. The first prize in the A group is US $10,000, while for the B group it's US $1,000 (although 12% tax will be deducted). There are special prizes for e.g. women and veterans. The time control is 90 minutes for the whole game, with 30 seconds increment per move.

The decent prize fund has attracted quite a few strong players. The line-up in Minsk, the birth place of GMs such as Boris Gelfand and Yuri Shulman, includes Baadur Jobava, Vladimir Akopian, Gabriel Sargissian, Boris Grachev, Sergei Zhigalko, Rauf Mamedov and Aleksandr Shimanov. A bit lower on the list we find e.g. Ilia Smirin, Sergei Tiviakov (who turns 41 today), Daniil Dubov, Jaan Ehlvest and Emanuel Berg.

At the time of writing the tournament has reached the third round. Only two players, both from Azerbaijan, won their first three games: Eltaj Safarli and Vasif Durarbayli. Safarli won a nice, technical game against Savchenko in round 3. It's not fun to play the French like this!


Vasif Durarbayli is a young Azeri GM (he'll turn 22 in ten days) who hasn't really been in the spotlight yet. His third round game against Sargissian was not bad at all; he completely refuted his opponent's risky play. It is fun to play the Grünfeld like that!

Vasif Durarbayli (photo courtesy of the Russian Chess Federation)

The day before Sargissian had given a nice endgame demonstration. It is said that a knight is better than bishop with pawns on one wing, because it can control squares of both colors while the long-range problem doesn't exist. This game supports that claim:


Top seed Baadur Jobava drew with Emanuel Berg in the second round. In a game between two sharp players you can expect an opening like the Dragadorf (a combination of the Dragon and the Najdof), but unfortunately play quickly led to a not so exciting endgame.

Baadur Jobava (photo courtesy of the Russian Chess Federation)

The following game cannot remain unmentioned either. 64-year-old Yuri Balashov, who won the veterans’ prize last week at the Moscow Open, defeated 17-year-old Daniil Dubov [Update: no, it was the other way around]:



Daniil Dubov (photo courtesy of the Russian Chess Federation)

Bronstein Memorial 2014 | Round 3 Standings (Top 40)

Rk. SNo Name FED RtgI Pts. TB1
1 11 GM Safarli Eltaj AZE 2649 3 2491
2 32 GM Durarbayli Vasif AZE 2580 3 2437
3 133 FM Igonin Temur UZB 2118 2,5 2527
4 72 IM Zenzera Alexey RUS 2419 2,5 2504
5 5 GM Zhigalko Sergei BLR 2661 2,5 2503
6 2 GM Akopian Vladimir ARM 2682 2,5 2497
7 1 GM Jobava Baadur GEO 2706 2,5 2496
8 7 GM Shimanov Aleksandr RUS 2658 2,5 2479
9 16 GM Tiviakov Sergei NED 2639 2,5 2462
10 24 GM Dubov Daniil RUS 2614 2,5 2453
11 28 GM Rakhmanov Aleksandr RUS 2606 2,5 2436
12 25 GM Khalifman Alexander RUS 2611 2,5 2410
13 33 GM Ter-Sahakyan Samvel ARM 2575 2,5 2406
14 36 IM Bernadskiy Vitaliy UKR 2565 2,5 2406
15 35 GM Ehlvest Jaan USA 2565 2,5 2392
16 30 GM Fier Alexandr BRA 2587 2,5 2271
17 39 GM Kovalev Vladislav BLR 2557 2,5 2172
18 101 Sarana Alexey RUS 2295 2 2532
19 43 GM Lintchevski Daniil RUS 2537 2 2527
20 3 GM Sargissian Gabriel ARM 2671 2 2513
21 47 GM Maiorov Nikita BLR 2529 2 2510
22 52 IM Hovhanisian Mher ARM 2516 2 2506
23 48 GM Kveinys Aloyzas LTU 2526 2 2504
24 124 Nikitenko Mihail BLR 2156 2 2500
25 49 GM Chatalbashev Boris BUL 2522 2 2496
26 6 GM Mamedov Rauf AZE 2659 2 2487
27 8 GM Popov Ivan RUS 2653 2 2485
28 12 GM Smirin Ilia ISR 2644 2 2478
29 57 GM Minasian Artashes ARM 2487 2 2473
30 59 GM Gasanov Eldar UKR 2480 2 2468
31 60 GM Hayrapetyan Hovik ARM 2469 2 2464
32 62 IM Bortnyk Olexandr UKR 2463 2 2456
33 61 FM Aghasaryan Robert ARM 2467 2 2454
34 17 GM Tkachiev Vladislav FRA 2637 2 2453

(Full standings here.)

The Bronstein Memorial takes place 11-19 February in Minsk, Belarus. You can follow the games live here.

PeterDoggers
Peter Doggers

Peter Doggers joined a chess club a month before turning 15 and still plays for it. He used to be an active tournament player and holds two IM norms. Peter has a Master of Arts degree in Dutch Language & Literature. He briefly worked at New in Chess, then as a Dutch teacher and then in a project for improving safety and security in Amsterdam schools. Between 2007 and 2013 Peter was running ChessVibes, a major source for chess news and videos acquired by Chess.com in October 2013. As our Director News & Events, Peter writes many of our news reports. In the summer of 2022, The Guardian’s Leonard Barden described him as “widely regarded as the world’s best chess journalist.”

Peter's first book The Chess Revolution is out now!

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