4th World Youth U16 Chess Olympiad: Calicut 2004 |
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4th World Youth U16 Chess Olympiad (see all-time tournament summary) |
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Date: | 1st - 9th July 2004 |
City: | Calicut, (Kozhikode), Kerala, India |
Venue: | Taj Hotel |
Tournament Director: | N/A |
Chief Arbiter: | N/A |
Teams participating: | 20 (incl. 6 Indian and 5 Sri Lankian teams) |
Players participating: | 91 (incl. 1 IM, 1 WIM, 5 FMs and 1 WFM) |
Games played: | 360 |
Competition format: | Four board nine round Swiss. |
Final order decided by: | 1. Game points; 2. Match points |
Time control: | 90 minutes per game + 30 seconds per move |
Official logo: | |
Interesting Websites: | Reports from The Hindu: start, r1, r2&3, r4&5, idle, r6&7, r8, r9 |
Downloadable game file: | 04u16-ol.zip |
The tenth edition of the World Youth Olympiad took place in Calicut, India. There were 20 teams representing just 11 nations (Sri Lanka and India fielded as much as 9 teams overall!) in a nine round Swiss competition. This was perhaps not the best choice and 11 round all-play-all should be adopted instead. The event was heavily biased towards Asian countries (17, along with just 2 European sides and 1 African, no Americans at all). Two by far strongest teams were Hungary and China, next teams in Elo order were India "A" and "B". Top rated player was IM Gareev from Uzbekistan (Elo 2536). Hungary took early lead despite their leader FM Bánusz losing surprisingly to Prasanna of India "D", but were held by surprise Uzbekistani team on day three to be passed by the Chinese. On the fifth day a decisive encounter was paired: China and Hungary were at the top tied at 13 points both. The match went to a just 2-all draw. The Chinese earned decisive advantage on the next day, when Hungary barely halved with Iran in a morning session, and then dropped another 1½ point vs Kazakhstan in the evening. The Chinese easily carried their advantage through. Hungary came second, although they lost to India "A" on the last day, which let the Indians overtake Uzbekistan and grab bronze medals. Best individual result was obtained by China's leader Wang Hao (8/9 and Elo performed 2577). |
no. | name | code | pts | gms | % |
1. | Wang Hao | CHN | 8 | 9 | 88.9 |
2. | Arun, Prasad | IND | 7 | 9 | 77.8 |
3. | IM Gareev, Timur | UZB | 6½ | 9 | 72.2 |
no. | name | code | pts | gms | % |
1. | Zhou Jianchao | CHN | 6½ | 9 | 72.2 |
2. | FM Boros, Dénes | HUN | 6½ | 9 | 72.2 |
3. | Sriram, Sarja | IND3 | 6½ | 9 | 72.2 |
no. | name | code | pts | gms | % |
1. | Issabaev, Dias | KAZ | 6½ | 9 | 72.2 |
2. | Xiu Desun | CHN | 5½ | 8 | 68.8 |
3. | Kvon, Andrei | UZB | 6 | 9 | 66.7 |
no. | name | code | pts | gms | % |
1. | Li Chao | CHN | 7 | 9 | 77.8 |
2. | Szabó, Krisztián | HUN | 7 | 9 | 77.8 |
3. | Abdollahzadeh, Arash | IRI | 4 | 6 | 66.7 |
no. | name | code | pts | gms | % |
1. | Zullkafli, Nur Shazwani | MAS | 4½ | 5 | 90.0 |
2. | Khademi, Mohammad Miran | IRI | 4 | 5 | 80.0 |
3. | Baltabaev, Nursult | KAZ | 5½ | 8 | 68.8 |