FIDE 2000

Published: 8 December 2000 y., Friday
In Round Three of the FIDE World Championships, Alexander Khalifman took a big step forward in his attempt at a successful defense of his title, with a grueling tiebreak win over #5 seed Peter Leko. According to statistical model, there is now slightly more than a 50% chance that either Khalifman or Viswanathan Anand will win the tournament, so their likely matchup in Round Five will be pivotal. Of course, they still have to get through their Round Four games, but they are facing the two lowest-seeded players remaining, so it seems 95% likely that Anand and Khalifman will face each other this weekend. With sixteen players left, here are the tournament-winning chances for each participant: #21 Alexander Khalifman (26% chance) #1 Viswanathan Anand (25% chance) #4 Alexei Shirov (21% chance) #7 Veselin Topalov (9% chance) #2 Alexander Morozevich (5% chance) #12 Boris Gelfand (Odds are 23 to 1 against) #26 Vladislav Tkachiev (Odds are 40 to 1 against) #11 Peter Svidler (Odds are 46 to 1 against) #8 Evgeny Bareev (Odds are 56 to 1 against) #38 Jaan Ehlvest (Odds are 62 to 1 against) #3 Michael Adams (Odds are 83 to 1 against) #15 Alexei Dreev (Odds are 171 to 1 against) #32 Boris Gulko (Odds are 176 to 1 against) #46 Alexander Grischuk (Odds are 3,040 to 1 against) #66 Rafael Leitao (Odds are 127,000 to 1 against) #78 Bartlomiej Macieja (Odds are 411,000 to 1 against) Other than Khalifman, who was already one of the statistical frontrunners, the player who moved up furthest on the list of favorites was Vladislav Tkachiev, who eliminated Rustam Kasimdzhanov in the rapid tiebreak, tripling his own chances to win the tournament. Nevertheless, Alexei Shirov is still the favorite to reach the finals in their half of the bracket, most likely facing Khalifman, Anand, or Topalov. The biggest upset of the round, of course, was Khalifman defeating Leko. Despite Leko being the #5 seed, my statistical model had actually given Khalifman a 71% chance to win the match. His skill at rapid chess, his strength with White, and his extreme conservatism with the black pieces, along with Leko’s very conservative style, all pointed to a likelihood of a long stretch of draws (with an incredibly high 66% chance of reaching a tiebreak), followed eventually by a Khalifman win with the white pieces in a rapid game, and that’s exactly what we saw. You can go back to my Round 3 predictions and follow the link to the in-depth individual predictions, if you want to read more about the details of the Leko-Khalifman prediction.
Šaltinis: clubkasparov.com/
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Olympic Success

The Baltic states have won more medals per capita than virtually any other nations taking part in the Olympics more »

Latvia gets first gymnastics medal, Nemov wins silver

Latvia has its first gymnastics medal -- a gold, no less -- while Alexei Nemov now has one of every color. more »

Romanians sweep all-around amid vault controversy

With bright eyes and a captivating smile reminiscent of another Romanian darling, tiny Andreea Raducan captured the Olympic women's gymnastics all-around gold medal Thursday. more »

Malchow wins 200 fly; Thorpe, Aussies win relay gold

Spurred by rousing cheers of "Thorpey! Thorpey!" Ian Thorpe gave the Australians a huge lead as they set the world record in winning the Olympic 4x200-meter freestyle relay Tuesday. more »

Golden gun

Nancy Johnson of the United States wins the first gold medal of the 2000 Games more »

Let the Games begin

"The most beautiful Opening Ceremony" more »

Sydney stays positive as football kicks off

With the opening ceremony just two days away and the football competition kicking into gear, the Olympic Games should be drowning in unbridled optimism and competitive spirit. more »

Sydney declares 'We're ready'

Sydney has declared it is ready to get the Olympics underway after a rehearsal of the opening ceremony - despite a hairy moment when fireworks caused grass fires close to the stadium. more »

Acrobatic Pilot Did Incredible, but Not Impossible

Recently the most famous Lithuanian acrobatic pilot Jurgis Kairys has performed incredible thing: the flight of Su-26 under the pedestrian bridge with wheels up. In official history of civil aviation this trick was performed for the first time. more »

Olympics Site Discriminates Against The Blind

An accessibility battle between a blind Sydney man and the organizers of the 2000 Olympic Games (SOCOG) came to a head. more »