The Russian
Cup final is underway in Khanty-Mansiysk and is the culmination of the
Russia Cup circuit of tournaments held throughout the year. Over a
period of twelve months in different cities of Russia, stages of the
Russian Cup are held for both men and women. The players that qualified
from these tournaments are invited to the final. Beautiful pictorial
impressions of the tournament.
The Russian Cup final is currently underway in Khanty-Mansiysk
and is the culmination of the Russia Cup circuit of tournaments held
throughout the year in Russia. The Russian Cup final is a competition
that sums up a year of successful, or not, chess competition. Over a
period of twelve months in different cities of Russia, stages of the
Russian Cup are held for both men and women. The circuit is flexible and
allows players complete freedom to choose which stages they choose to
play in, and consequently where: if you want to play in Vladivostok, you
can, if you prefer Novokuznetsk, no problem, and of course, you can
even take part in all stages. The key is the point system that qualifies
a player to the final. According to a player’s result, a certain amount
of points are earned and they are all added up in the end. The players
who earn the most, sixteen men and eight women are entitled to play in
the final.
This year the players who made it are:
The men's section of the final phase is a knockout match system, with
matches of two games played at 40 moves for 90 minutes plus 30 minutes
and a 30-second increment per move. In the event of a draw, they proceed
to a playoff with a mini match of 15 minutes plus ten-second increment,
after which it is a sudden death of five minutes versus four, plus a
three-second increment after 60 moves, with a black draw worth a win.
The women's section has nearly identical conditions except the classical games are played at 90 minutes for the entire game plus a 30-second increment per move. Regulations for both stipulate the players cannot agree to a draw before move 40, must be present during the opening ceremony, and must agree to a post-game interview.
This year the players who made it are:
Men
Name
|
Rating
|
D. Jakovenko |
2721
|
D. Khismatullin |
2674
|
A. Korneev |
2645
|
I. Kovalenko |
2643
|
S. Sjugirov |
2641
|
P. Smirnov |
2641
|
D. Kokarev |
2631
|
P. Ponkratov |
2603
|
D. Bocharov |
2602
|
B. Savchenko |
2602
|
A. Fedoseev |
2601
|
P. Maletin |
2598
|
I. Onischuk |
2591
|
A. Alexandrov |
2586
|
A. Shariyazdanov |
2572
|
A. Roadside |
2517
|
Women
Name
|
Rating
|
A. Bodnaruk |
2448
|
O. Girya |
2443
|
M. Gusev |
2399
|
D. Charochkina |
2337
|
I. Tarasova |
2286
|
T. Cheremnova |
2264
|
M. Schepetkova |
2252
|
T. Klichkova |
2231
|
The women's section has nearly identical conditions except the classical games are played at 90 minutes for the entire game plus a 30-second increment per move. Regulations for both stipulate the players cannot agree to a draw before move 40, must be present during the opening ceremony, and must agree to a post-game interview.
To arrive to the area, one must cross vast white fields
A modern igloo
Covered up is the fountain "Ob and Irtysh"
The parks are full of banners for the event and promoting sports
Victory Park
In the city's main square, a Christams tree has already been erected and a multitude
of ice sculptures decorate the surroundings
of ice sculptures decorate the surroundings
On buildings one can see thematic mosaics
A closer look at the ice sculpture display
They also have various colored lights to make them stand out more
The city's greetings to athletes
The magnitude of the sculptures can be surprising to those expecting smaller examples
A work depicting a winner's podium
This large work is by the artist G. Raishev
Church of the Resurrection
Here is the Ugra Chess Academy with holiday decorations already visible
The women's section was dominated by both Elo-favorite Bodnaruk (2448
FIDE) and surprise finalist Schepetkova (2252 FIDE) who drew their
first game and will decide the title tomorrow. The men's section has yet
to determine the finalists, and four players are left with top seed
Dmitri Jakovenko facing Sanan Sjugirov, with whom he drew in their first
game, while Boris Savchenko has to figure out a way to stop Vladimir
Fedoseev, a runaway locomotive. Fedoseev recently moved to Moscow from
St. Petersburg for his university studies, yet has managed a scary 100%
thus far, beating both Pavel Smirnov (2641) and Alexander Alexandrov
(2586) by 2-0 in classical games. In his first semi-final game against
Boris Savchenko, he won game one, and the question is whether Boris can
derail his young opponent, or will be another whitewash victim.
Photographer Eteri Kublashvili (left) with tournament director Yusha Galina
Kovaleva displaying her recently earned FIDE title of international organizer
Kovaleva displaying her recently earned FIDE title of international organizer
RCF computer guru Yevgeny Vashenyak is also an excellent photographer
Chief Arbiter Stanislav Januszewski and Fedoseev. In the distance is Chief
Secretary Vladimir Fedorov
Secretary Vladimir Fedorov
Surprise finalist Margarita Schepetkova
Top seed in the women's section: Anastasia Bodnaruk
Vladimir Fedoseev AKA Runaway Train
Top seed Dmitri Jakovenko waiting for his opponent...
... Sanan Sjugirov, who arrives in a hurry.
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