Candidates Tournament 2016 Explained

Competition:Candidates Tournament 2016
Governing Body:FIDE
Venue:Central Telegraph Building
Location:Moscow, Russia
Dates:11–30 March 2016
Competitors:8
Nations:6
Champion: Sergey Karjakin
Win Score:8.5 points of 14
Previous:2014
Next:2018

The Candidates Tournament 2016 was an eight-player double round-robin chess tournament, held in Moscow, Russia, from 11 to 30 March 2016. The winner, Sergey Karjakin, earned the right to challenge the defending world champion, Magnus Carlsen of Norway, in the World Chess Championship 2016.[1] The result was decided in the final round when Karjakin defeated runner-up Fabiano Caruana.

FIDE's commercial partner Agon was the official organizer,[2] with support from the Russian Chess Federation.[3] The main sponsor was the Tashir Group, a Russian real estate company headed by Armenian-born businessman Samvel Karapetyan.[4] [5]

Organization

The tournament was contested as a double round-robin with each player playing 14 games. Four rest days took place after rounds 3, 6, 9, and 12. The winner of this 8-player candidates tournament would be the challenger of Magnus Carlsen at the 2016 World Chess Championship. At the DI Central Telegraph Building, Agon had designed and built a 20000 square-foot space near the Kremlin to woo more spectators to the sport, with 99% of the focus on online viewership.[6] As the official organizer, they owned live moves and video broadcasting rights.[7] [8] Legal actions were commenced against sites who had acted otherwise.[9]

The prize fund (Regulations 3.8.1) was 420,000 euros, with 95,000 to the winner, 88,000 to 2nd place, 75,000 to 3rd, 55,000 to 4th, 40,000 to 5th, 28,000 to 6th, 22,000 to 7th, 17,000 for 8th place. Prize money would be divided equally between players on the same score.

The FIDE supervisor was Zurab Azmaiparashvili and the chief arbiter was Werner Stubenvoll from Austria.[10]

Qualifiers

There were five different qualification paths to the Candidates Tournament.[11] In order of priority, these were: loser of the World Chess Championship 2014 match, the top two finishers in the Chess World Cup 2015, the top two finishers in the FIDE Grand Prix 2014–15, next two highest rated players (average FIDE rating on the 12 monthly lists from January to December 2015, with at least 30 games played) who played in Chess World Cup 2015 or FIDE Grand Prix 2014–15, and one player nominated by the organizers (Agon).

Qualification pathPlayerAgeRatingWorld Ranking
World Chess Championship 2014 runner-up Viswanathan Anand46276212
The top two finishers in the Chess World Cup 2015 Sergey Karjakin26276013
Peter Svidler39275716
The top two finishers in the FIDE Grand Prix 2014–15 Fabiano Caruana2327943
Hikaru Nakamura2827906
The top two players with highest average 2015 rating who played in World Cup or Grand Prix Veselin Topalov4127808
Anish Giri2127934
Wild card nomination of Organizers (Agon), with FIDE rating in July 2015 at least 2725 Levon Aronian3327867

FIDE gave the qualifiers until January 11 to decide upon participation and sign the contract,[12] and all accepted even though Veselin Topalov was open in his dislike of Moscow as a location.[13] [14] Topalov did not attend the opening ceremony,[15] leaving himself open to a forfeiture of 5% of his prize money to each of FIDE and the organizers, by 3.11.2 of the Regulations.

The ratings and rankings in this table are taken from the March 2016 FIDE list. They are provided for information purposes only, and were not used for seeding. Notable highly ranked players who did not qualify include Vladimir Kramnik, a former World Champion and the world number 2 as of March 2016, and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, the world number 5.[16] The age column is in years as of 15 March 2016. FIDE uses a country-diversion system, so that Svidler and Karjakin, similarly Nakamura and Caruana, are paired together in rounds 1 and 8, to avoid conflicts in late rounds, as seen in the pairings.[17]

Qualifiers by rating

The following were the final placings of players attempting to qualify by the 2015 rating lists.[18]

The list omits world champion Magnus Carlsen. Players who qualified for the Candidates Tournament by other means are shown with a shaded background. The two qualifiers by rating were Topalov and Giri (marked with a green background).

PlayerJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAverage
Veselin Topalov2800280027982798279827982816281628162813280328032804.92
Viswanathan Anand2797279727912791280428042816281628162803280327962802.83
Fabiano Caruana2820281128022802280328052797280828082796278727872802.17
Hikaru Nakamura2776277627982798279928022814281428142816279327932799.42
Anish Giri2784279727902790277627732791279327932798277827842787.25
Vladimir Kramnik2783278327832783277727832783277727772777279627962783.17
Alexander Grischuk2810281027942794278027812771277127712774275027472779.42
Levon Aronian2797277727702770277627802765276527652784278127882776.50

Schedule

DateDayEvent
10 MarchThursdayOpening ceremony
11 MarchFridayRound 1
12 MarchSaturdayRound 2
13 MarchSundayRound 3
14 MarchMondayFree day
15 MarchTuesdayRound 4
16 MarchWednesdayRound 5
17 MarchThursdayRound 6
18 MarchFridayFree day
19 MarchSaturdayRound 7
DateDayEvent
20 MarchSundayRound 8
21 MarchMondayRound 9
22 MarchTuesdayFree day
23 MarchWednesdayRound 10
24 MarchThursdayRound 11
25 MarchFridayRound 12
26 MarchSaturdayFree day
27 MarchSundayRound 13
28 MarchMondayRound 14
29 MarchTuesdayClosing ceremony

Standings

NotesTie-breaks are in order: 1) head-to-head score among tied players, 2) total number of wins, 3) Sonneborn–Berger score (SB), 4) tie-break games.

Results by round

Pairings and results[19] Numbers in parentheses indicate players' scores prior to the round.

Round 1 – 11 March 2016
Viswanathan Anand Veselin Topalov align=center width="30px"1–0
Anish Giri Levon Aronian align=center ½–½
Sergey Karjakin Peter Svidler align=center ½–½ D16 Slav Defence, Soultanbéieff Variation
Hikaru Nakamura Fabiano Caruana align=center ½–½ A30 English Opening, Symmetrical Variation
Round 2 – 12 March 2016
Levon Aronian (½) Viswanathan Anand (1) align=center ½–½ D37 Queen's Gambit Declined
Fabiano Caruana (½) Anish Giri (½) align=center ½–½ B32 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Sergey Karjakin (½) Hikaru Nakamura (½) align=center 1–0 E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Check Variation, Intermezzo Line
Peter Svidler (½) Veselin Topalov (0) align=center ½–½ C67 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Round 3 – 13 March 2016
Viswanathan Anand (1½) Fabiano Caruana (1) align=center ½–½ C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Anish Giri (1) Sergey Karjakin (1½) align=center ½–½ E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Check Variation, Intermezzo Line
Hikaru Nakamura (½) Peter Svidler (1) align=center ½–½ D16 Slav Defence, Soultanbéieff Variation
Veselin Topalov (½) Levon Aronian (1) align=center 0–1 A29 English, Four Knights, Kingside Fianchetto
Round 4 – 15 March 2016
Fabiano Caruana (1½) Veselin Topalov (½) align=center ½–½ C50 Giuoco Piano
Sergey Karjakin (2) Viswanathan Anand (2) align=center 1–0 A06 Réti Opening
Hikaru Nakamura (1) Anish Giri (1½) align=center ½–½ D45 Semi-Slav, Stoltz Variation
Peter Svidler (1½) Levon Aronian (2) align=center ½–½ A22 English, Four Knights, Smyslov System
Round 5 – 16 March 2016
Viswanathan Anand (2) Hikaru Nakamura (1½) align=center ½–½ C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Levon Aronian (2½) Fabiano Caruana (2) align=center ½–½ A77 Benoni Defence, Classical, Czerniak Defence, Tal Line
Anish Giri (2) Peter Svidler (2) align=center ½–½ D73 Neo-Grünfeld Defence
Veselin Topalov (1) Sergey Karjakin (3) align=center ½–½ E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Check Variation, Intermezzo Line
Round 6 – 17 March 2016
Peter Svidler (2½) align=center 1–0 C88 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Anti-Marshall 8.a4
Veselin Topalov (1½) Anish Giri (2½) align=center ½–½ E61 Indian Game, West Indian Defence
Levon Aronian (3) Hikaru Nakamura (2) align=center 1–0 E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Nimzowistch Variation
Fabiano Caruana (2½) Sergey Karjakin (3½) align=center ½–½ E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Check Variation, Intermezzo Line
Round 7 – 19 March 2016
Peter Svidler (2½) Fabiano Caruana (3) align=center ½–½ A35 English, Symmetrical, Four Knights
Sergey Karjakin (4) Levon Aronian (4) align=center ½–½ A08 King's Indian Attack
Hikaru Nakamura (2) Veselin Topalov (2) align=center 1–0 D12 Slav Defence, Quiet Variation, Schallop Defence
Anish Giri (3) align=center ½–½ D37 Queen's Gambit Declined, Barmen Variation
Round 8 – 20 March 2016
Peter Svidler (3) Sergey Karjakin (4½) align=center width="30px" ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Fabiano Caruana (3½) Hikaru Nakamura (3) align=center 1–0 C65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Levon Aronian (4½) Anish Giri (3½) align=center ½–½ D43 Semi-Slav Defense
Veselin Topalov (2) Viswanathan Anand (4) align=center ½–½ A11 Queen's Gambit Declined, Barmen Variation
Round 9 – 21 March 2016
Veselin Topalov (2½) Peter Svidler (3½) align=center ½–½ C88 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Anti-Marshall 8.a4
Viswanathan Anand (4½) Levon Aronian (5) align=center 1–0 C50 Giuoco Piano
Anish Giri (4) Fabiano Caruana (4½) align=center ½–½ D70 Neo-Grünfeld Defence, Goglidze Attack
Hikaru Nakamura (3) Sergey Karjakin (5) align=center ½–½ E15 Queen's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation, Check Variation, Intermezzo Line
Round 10 – 23 March 2016
Peter Svidler (4) Hikaru Nakamura (3½) align=center ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Sergey Karjakin (5½) Anish Giri (4½) align=center ½–½ D45f Semi-Slav, Stoltz Variation
Fabiano Caruana (5) Viswanathan Anand (5½) align=center 1–0 A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Levon Aronian (5) Veselin Topalov (3) align=center ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Round 11 – 24 March 2016
Levon Aronian (5½) Peter Svidler (4½) align=center 0–1 D16 Slav Defence, Soultanbéieff Variation
Veselin Topalov (3½) Fabiano Caruana (6) align=center ½–½ A33 English, Symmetrical, Anti-Benoni
Viswanathan Anand (5½) Sergey Karjakin (6) align=center 1–0 A07 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defence
Anish Giri (5) Hikaru Nakamura (4) align=center ½–½ C50 Giuoco Piano
Round 12 – 25 March 2016
Peter Svidler (5½) Anish Giri (5½) align=center ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Hikaru Nakamura (4½) align=center 1–0 A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Sergey Karjakin (6) Veselin Topalov (4) align=center 1–0 B90 Sicilian Defence, Najdorf Variation, Adams Attack
Fabiano Caruana (6½) Levon Aronian (5½) align=center ½–½ C78 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Martinez Variation
Round 13 – 27 March 2016
Fabiano Caruana (7) Peter Svidler (6) align=center ½–½ C78 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Martinez Variation
Levon Aronian (6) Sergey Karjakin (7) align=center ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Veselin Topalov (4) Hikaru Nakamura (5½) align=center 0–1 D37 Queen's Gambit Declined
Anish Giri (6) align=center ½–½ C50 Giuoco Piano
Round 14 – 28 March 2016
Peter Svidler (6½) Viswanathan Anand (7) align=center ½–½ A29 English, Four Knights, Fianchetto Line
Anish Giri (6½) Veselin Topalov (4) align=center ½–½ E06 Catalan Opening, Closed Variation
Hikaru Nakamura (6½) Levon Aronian (6½) align=center ½–½ D38 Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation, Alekhine Variation
Sergey Karjakin (7½) Fabiano Caruana (7½) align=center 1–0 B67 Sicilian Defence, Richter-Rauzer Attack, Neo-Modern Variation

Points by round

For each player, the difference between wins and losses after each round is shown.The players with the highest difference for each round are marked with green background.

Final
place
Player \ Round1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
1 =0+1+1+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+1+2+2+3
2 =0=0=0=0=0=0=0+1+1+2+2+2+2+1
3 +1+1+1=0=0+1+1+1+2+1+2+1+1+1
4 =0=0=0=0=0–1–1–1–1–1=0=0=0=0
5 =0=0+1+1+1+2+2+2+1+1=0=0=0=0
6 =0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0
7 =0–1–1–1–1–2–1–2–2–2–2–1=0=0
8 –1–1–2–2–2–2–3–3–3–3–3–4–5–5

Summary

Rounds 1–3

The first round saw Anand beat Topalov after mutual blunders around move 20, then again around move 40, to get an early lead as all other games were drawn, two of them right at the (minimal) 30-move mark.[20] [21]

Similarly went Round 2, with two of the 3 draws occurring in 30 moves, while Nakamura missed a tactic against Karjakin and played a large unforced blunder on move 29 resulting in loss.[22] [23]

Round 3 saw both leaders draw, as Giri made two knight sacrifices before forcing an early draw by repetition against Karjakin, while Anand had a nagging edge against Caruana that eventually evaporated. Meanwhile, Aronian joined the leaders by beating a very off-form Topalov with Black, while Svidler as Black out-prepared Nakamura in a complicated Semi-Slav line to move 25, but failed to convert a pawn-up endgame in which Mark Dvoretsky questioned his lack of killer instinct.[24] [25]

Rounds 4–6

After a rest day, two of the leaders faced each other in Round 4, with Karjakin as White choosing a passive opening and coming up with an early novelty against Anand, and then saddling him with hanging pawns (see diagram). He then switched to a pressing endgame against Black's pawn weaknesses, and soon after the time control an Anand miscue led to his immediate resignation. This was Karjakin's first career victory over Anand at classical time controls.[26] [27]

Nakamura and Giri drew in just over an hour in 30 moves in a game that might have been completely pre-analyzed, while Svidler and Aronian drew a rook ending at the time control. The game between Caruana and Topalov saw a Giuoco Pianissimo opening, before Topalov opened up the position and later blundered in time pressure, but Caruana spoiled a large advantage right after the time control by miscounting the pieces, and in the end a double rook endgame was drawn.

In Round 5, all the games were drawn, three of them at move 30 and the other at move 40.[28] Unlike the previous round, here when Karjakin himself had hanging pawns it did not matter (see diagram) and he drew comfortably.[29]

Round 6 had Svidler losing out of opening against Anand, while Karjakin held a materially imbalanced position to a draw against Caruana. The Topalov-Giri game saw a practical novelty already at move 3, with a resulting drawn knight endgame after the 60-move mark. In the game Aronian-Nakamura, Aronian nurtured an advantage for some time, but the endgame appeared to be drawn. But on move 74, Nakamura made a fingerfehler and touched his king, forcing him to make a losing move (see diagram). The incident was controversial as Nakamura initially tried to claim j'adoube, the international term to convey that one intends to adjust the piece, not move it.[30] [31] This win brought Aronian into the lead with Karjakin, with Anand just behind, going into the second rest day.[32]

Round 14

The tournament winner was decided in the final round game between Karjakin (playing white) and Caruana. Before this round, these were the only two players who could win the tournament, having 7.5 points each. For Caruana to win the tournament, he needed to win the game, or draw and rely on Anand to win with black against Svidler.[33]

Caruana chose the Sicilian Defence, signalling his intention to play for a win. Karjakin continued with the Open Sicilian. Caruana took the initiative and it appeared as if a win for black could be possible. His pawns were attacking the white king that had castled on the queenside. However, his own king had not castled and became a requirement for the defense of three pawns on d, e, and f file. Eventually, this weakness (aided by an imprecise move 36...Re4?) led to the collapse of the black defense. Caruana resigned on move 44, making Karjakin the winner and challenger for the World Chess Championship 2016.

Broadcast restrictions

In a matter that dominated early discussion of the Candidates, Agon controversially tried to claim that only approved broadcasters were able to put forth the game moves in real time.[34] However, a similar restriction was attempted by Sofia organizers first for the Topalov-Kamsky match in 2009 and then the World Chess Championship 2010,[35] [36] [37] [38] with the end result that ChessBase was found non-culpable in a resulting lawsuit.[39] [40] [41] The judge in that case took only half an hour to reject all demands from the Bulgarian Chess Federation (BCF), while ChessBase relied on the legal definition of a database. The most important aspect was that the judge did not agree that a chess game can be seen as a database, and therefore the BCF could not refer to their rights as database producers. The president of the BCF, Silvio Danailov, estimated the loss at 1 million euros in a Forbes interview,[42] though they had only asked 15000 euros from ChessVibes for retransmission rights, and crucially only spent 8000 euros themselves, which the judge found insufficiently substantiated as a realistic amount toward a database endeavor.

Agon's legal position on move retransmission

Agon produced a legal position white paper (Shekhovtsov & Partners), asserting that chess fans should have to agree to terms and conditions that include not re-transmitting the moves elsewhere, before being allowed access.[43] This is in line with a 2011 European Chess Union memo that produced a legal opinion from Morten Sand, indicating that contract law formed a superior basis for exploiting the chess audiences, with the expectation that viewers could be made to bear 75 euros (each) for the world championships, so that "the financial upside is huge" to generate 750000 euros.[44]

Commentary from affected parties

The Bulgarian website Chessdom had the strongest editorial on the matter (from CEO Anton Mihailov), calling Agon's decision a multi-level blunder, even pointing out that Agon's decision actually violates Section 4.7.3.6.4.1 of the Candidates Regulations ("All live images, live broadcasting (Internet TV) pictures and all the other content for the full event details will be carried on the official domain [moscow2016.fide.com]. The organizer shall not develop any other website.").[45] However, this item is enforceable only between Agon and FIDE. Their main thrust though, was:

Millions of fans will not learn about this year’s Candidates matches because of AGON’s policy. Many will miss the live coverage and only learn about the games after the tournament is over, when Carlsen’s challenger is known. What is the commercial value of that? Can you calculate how much are the lost benefits for the sponsors of the event? And for the hosts? And for the players? And for the sponsors of the players?
Additionally, Mihailov noted the lack of equality of arms in Agon's legal salvo: "With lawyer white paper threats you have cut any journalist’s right to properly cover the Candidates. While being with the law on their side, no sane journalist will risk losing time and/or money arguing with an organization." Two more articles were swiftly published, including a polemic against AGON's monopolistic agenda.[46] Chessdom in the end did not broadcast live moves. Chess.com had an article on the matter, couching their Candidates preview with "a remarkable decision by the organizers might well be the biggest story here", while noting that it personally "lacks the technology [for automated PGN relay] and always relies on volunteers to bring grandmaster games in Live Chess."[47] In the Norwegian press, Magnus Carlsen was nonchalant toward the kerfuffle, saying that everyone could just watch the Agon broadcast, with their comments and computer evaluations.[48] However, NRK will also have move-by-move coverage on NRK.no, according to their own interview with him.[49] ChessBomb published that it would not use the Agon site due to non-agreement with terms and conditions,[50] and asked for volunteers to seed their Tor setup (though later dropped this initiative).[51] Implicitly, this relied on the fact that the clickwrap license presented by Agon (or World Chess Events Limited) may not in fact be valid in every viewer locale, so by allowing information to be obtained and retransmitted without contractual obligation. However, after a successful Round 1 broadcast, during Round 2 their live move transmissions were essentially halted, with looming legal threats.

Resulting effect

ChessBase ended up taking the threats seriously, which could have been to the dismay of Agon, as the official commentators (Alexandra Kosteniuk and Evgeny Miroshnichenko) were trying to use their software in Round 1. Instead, they had to switch to manual entry from ChessBomb.[52] Alleged violators included not only ChessBomb and Chessdom, but also ICC, Chess24, and Der Spiegel. Although the Terms and Conditions (#10) mention New York state law as applicable to those who signed up, Merenzon sent a cease and desist letter that invoked 10 years imprisonment under Russian law. The specifying of choice of venue and choice of law in a contract of adhesion can also be in dispute.[53] Agon also impeded the credentials of Salim Fazulyanov, allegedly as retaliation against his website Kavkaz-Chess.ru for being the first Russian site to publish Chessdom's open letter.[54] Eventually Agon's own worldchess.com editorial staff broke ranks, declaring that an embargo was not the way to go, but a show.[55] The main argument is: holding all the trumps like live video and exclusive interviews with players (and other VIPs) should be enough, without resorting to legal blusterings. Before Round 2, Agon partially relented, dispensing with its presumptory 2-hour PGN embargo, designating the game's end instead.[56] In round 1, the moves were carried live without restriction by official partner NRK.[57] [58] About 45 minutes into second round, the NRK live move transmission became suspended, causing other sites to also experience confusion. According to reporter Tarjei Svensen on Twitter, Agon was actively pursuing lawsuits against ChessBomb, Chess24, ICC, and ChessGames.com,[59] with the chilling effect of causing them to essentially suspend activity.[60] The Norwegian online newspaper site VG Direkte (also an official partner) initially stayed active (with the browsewrap language: "By viewing this page you expressly agree not to publish any information concerning the chess moves of the candidates tournament 2016 chess games until the end of such game"),[61] but then also suspended activity. Der Spiegel continued its live ticker of Aronian-Anand analysis throughout.[62]

Legal action and media coverage

After Round 2, Agon officially announced its rumored legal action against the above four broadcasters.[63] The Guardian newspaper covered an exposé of the ruckus,[64] noting that Agon's tactics may be hoping to at least scare off its rivals and keep the big prize (coverage of the World Championship match with Carlsen) to itself.[65] Vladimir Kramnik was quoted from an ensuing interview as saying: "If you want to make chess professional, if you want to help chess to grow, you have to understand very clearly that the organiser of any chess tournament has full transmission rights. Because the organiser has invested a lot of money and effort to organise the tournament, morally and legally they have full rights over the live transmission."[66] Kramnik contended such control was the way football, tennis and other sports had become successful, and by doing the same, chess could jump to a totally different level. He also imposed his own view upon any end user's opinion of the coverage, declaring that "no one is suffering" from Agon's decision. Top organizer Stuart Conquest was also quoted: "However you look at it, pretty clear that start of Candidates has been a PR [press relations] disaster for organisers / Agon / FIDE."[67]

Round 3 and beyond

ChessBomb's whole site went down (due to a component upgrade gone wrong) 10 minutes into Round 3 without any moves having been shown, while Chess24 intermittently carried the moves of two of the four games (Giri–Karjakin and Nakamura–Svidler) in the early going. Chessgames.com similarly had Giri–Karjakin, while Der Spiegel had the Anand–Caruana game on their live ticker.[68] After rectification 10 minutes later, ChessBomb had all three of the above-mentioned games, and Chess24 quickly added Anand–Caruana also. By round 4 the immediate frenzy appeared to have dissipated, as Grandmaster David Smerdon was given an all-clear from Agon (or World Chess Events Limited) to run a live blog.[69] However, the main sites were still lagging in their relays by about 20–25 minutes during the opening moves. The (Agon affiliated) sites NRK and VG Direkte relayed the games with a delay of about 20 minutes.[70] Later, at approximately an hour into the games, the alternative feeds were nearly keeping pace with Agon's site, though some slowdown sporadically remained. Agon boasted that PGNs were now going to be available as Flash Reports within minutes of the finish of each game.[71] Their own onsite live commentators were still having problems getting the moves to the games at some junctures.[72] Renowned trainer Mark Dvoretsky was deeply unsympathetic to Agon's position, particularly as the official site was so inconvenient to use, and he also mentioned the privacy issues with the necessity of registering there.[73]

After the tournament

Agon, through a company called Turnir Pretendentov LLC (the name meaning 'Candidates Tournament' in Russian) attempted to sue eLearning Ltd. for 20 million roubles, for the live broadcasting of the moves of the Candidates Tournament on chess24.com. Agon's legal claim was rejected in its entirety on 25 October 2016. Agon are also suing ChessGames and ChessBomb; the final hearings in these cases are due to take place on 17 January 2017 and 28 February 2017 respectively.[74]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/9200-serzh-sargsyan-is-invited-to-open-the-candidates-tournament.html Serzh Sargsyan invited to open Candidates Tournament
  2. https://www.fide.com/images/stories/NEWS_2012/Congress/Annex_11_-_Agreement_between_FIDE_and_Agon.pdf FIDE-Agon agreement
  3. https://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/9179-2016-fide-world-chess-candidates-tournament.html World Chess Candidates Tournament
  4. Web site: Fischer. Johannes. Candidates will take place in March in Moscow. ChessBase. 23 March 2016. 2015-11-05.
  5. Web site: McGourty. Colin. Aronian gets wild card for Moscow Candidates. chess24. 23 March 2016. 2015-11-05.
  6. https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-york-city-to-host-2016-world-chess-championship-1456796982 NYC to host 2016 WCC
  7. http://www.agonlimited.com/news/2016/3/4/live-moves-and-video-from-candidates-tournament-to-be-shown-exclusively-by-worldchesscom-and-approved-broadcast-partners Live moves and video from Candidates exclusively on WorldChess
  8. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/14/kramnik-the-organizer-has-full-transmission-rights The organizer has full transmission rights
  9. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/12/official-agon-statement-on-ddos-attack-and-legal-action Official Agon statement on DDOS attack and legal action
  10. http://moscow2016.fide.com/officials Officials
  11. Web site: Rules & regulations for the Candidates Tournament of the FIDE World Championship cycle 2014–2016 . FIDE . 17 February 2015.
  12. http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/9266-2016-candidates-tournament-announcement-.html 2016 Candidates Tournament
  13. http://www.newsbg.ru/sport/105-sport/13568-bolgarskij-grossmejster-nedovolen-vyborom-moskvy-dlja-provedenija-turnira-pretendentov.html Bulgarian grandmaster unhappy with choice of Moscow for the Candidates Tournament
  14. http://chess-news.ru/en/node/20415 Danailov Says Choosing Moscow for the Candidates is "Outrageous"
  15. https://www.chess.com/news/second-loss-for-topalov-aronian-joins-leaders-at-candidates-tournament-2992 Second Loss For Topalov, Aronian Joins Leaders At Candidates' Tournament
  16. https://ratings.fide.com/toparc.phtml?cod=393 Top 100 Players March 2015
  17. http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/9421-candidates-tournament-2016-pairings.html Candidates Tournament Pairings (2016)
  18. FIDE Top 100 lists for 2015:January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August,September,October,November,December
  19. Web site: World Chess Championship Candidates (2016). chessgames.com.
  20. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/11/candidates-results-anand-wins-three-other-games-are-draws Anand wins, three other games are draws
  21. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/11/d%C3%A9j%C3%A0-vu-anand-takes-early-lead-at-candidates Deja Vu: Anand takes early lead
  22. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/12/karjakin-joins-anand-as-co-leader-of-candidates Karjakin joins Anand as co-leader
  23. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/12/flash-report-karjakin-wins-after-nakamura-blunders-other-games-drawn Karjakin wins after Nakamura blunders
  24. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/13/flash-report-round-3-aronian-wins-to-join-leaders-other-games-drawn Aronian wins to join leaders
  25. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/13/three-lead-candidates-after-three-rounds Three lead after three rounds
  26. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/15/flash-report-round-4-karjakin-wins-and-is-sole-leader Karjakin Wins and is Sole Leader
  27. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/15/karjakin-takes-charge-of-candidates Karjakin takes charge
  28. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/16/flash-report-all-games-are-drawn-in-round-5 All games drawn in Round 5
  29. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/16/a-day-of-draws-leaves-karjakin-in-the-lead Day of draws leaves Karjakin in the lead
  30. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puRR65UUKAs Touch Move in Aronian-Nakamura
  31. Mark Crowther, Nakamura in touch move drama at the end of Candidates Round 6, The Week in Chess, 17 March 2016
  32. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/17/flash-report-rd.-6-anand-and-aronian-win-aronian-leads-with-karjakin Anand and Aronian win, Aronian leads with Karjakin
  33. http://en.chessbase.com/post/candidates-r13-it-s-karjakin-or-caruana Candidates R13: It's Karjakin or Caruana!
  34. http://www.agonlimited.com/news/2016/3/4/live-moves-and-video-from-candidates-tournament-to-be-shown-exclusively-by-worldchesscom-and-approved-broadcast-partners Moves from Candidates Tournament exclusively shown by approved broadcast partners
  35. http://www.chessvibes.com/?q=columns/bulgarian-organizers-take-chessbase-to-court Bulgarian organizers take ChessBase to court
  36. http://interviews.chessdom.com/chessbase-copyright-danailov ChessBase copyright, Danailov interview
  37. http://gambit.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/07/a-fight-over-relaying-chess-moves/?_r=0 A fight over relaying chess moves
  38. https://web.archive.org/web/20100605121529/http://www.dnevnik.bg/sport/2010/05/31/909514_organizatorite_na_macha_topalov_-_anand_ochakvat_pone The organizers of the match Topalov - Anand expect at least 500 thousand. Euros if ChessBase site convicted
  39. http://www.chessvibes.com/?q=reports/bulgarian-chess-federation-vs-chessbase-0-1 Bulgarian Chess Federation versus ChessBase 0-1
  40. http://www.berlin.de/imperia/md/content/senatsverwaltungen/justiz/kammergericht/presse/16_o_270_10_urteil_vom_29.03.2010_landgericht_berlin_anonymisiert.pdf?download.html Landgericht Berlin decision 16 O 270/10
  41. http://medienrecht-blog.com/2011/04/13/uebertragungsrechte_weltmeisterschaft_schach Internet Law Blogpost
  42. http://www.europechess.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/ECU-NEWSLETTER-102.pdf Danailov profile
  43. http://www.agonlimited.com/s/white_paper_position.pdf Agon Limited, White Paper Position
  44. http://www.chess.sk/files/subory/1320353998ECUCommissionforCopyrightontheuseofchessgamesfromtheECUcompetitionsreport.pdf Memo Re: Copyrights of chess games – internet transmission of chess games
  45. http://www.chessdom.com/agons-new-policy-puts-the-candidates-tournament-idea-in-jeopardy Agon's new policy puts the Candidates tournament idea in jeopardy
  46. http://www.chessdom.com/agons-new-controversial-policy-is-a-step-towards-monopoly/ Agon's new controversial policy is a step towards monopoly
  47. https://www.chess.com/news/candidates-to-start-friday-agon-blocks-games-transmission-by-chess-sites-5161 Candidates' To Start Friday; Agon Blocks Game Transmission By Chess Sites
  48. http://www.dagbladet.no/2016/03/10/sport/sjakk/magnus_carlsen/43467627 Magnus Carlsen interview
  49. http://www.nrk.no/sport/carlsen-fortsatt-skuffet-over-konkurrentene-1.12846681 NRK Interview with Magnus Carlsen
  50. http://blog.chessbomb.com/2016/03/candidates-2016-to-start-with.html Candidates 2016 to start with a controversy
  51. http://blog.chessbomb.com/2016/03/candidates-2016-how-to-help-us.html Candidates 2016, How to Help Us
  52. https://www.chess.com/news/anand-beats-topalov-in-first-round-candidates-tournament-6638 Anand beats Topalov in the first round
  53. http://uakron.edu/dotAsset/728194.pdf Contractual choice of law in contracts of adhesion and party autonomy
  54. http://www.chessdom.com/candidates-chess-2016-round-1-live Candidates Live
  55. http://worldchess.com/2016/03/11/win-audiences-and-sponsors-with-a-show-not-an-embargo Win Audiences and Sponsors with a Show, not an Embargo
  56. http://www.agonlimited.com/news/2016/3/12/zvwkqafbxzlo38pzozsa310zzcvi5s Change in the timing of the release of PGN files
  57. http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/9281-fide-and-agon-sign-historic-media-rights-with-nrk.html FIDE and Agon sign historic media rights with NRK
  58. http://www.nrk.no/sport/sjakk NRK.no access to games
  59. https://twitter.com/TarjeiJS/status/708632720302338048 Tweet
  60. https://twitter.com/ChessBomb/status/708676377701183488 Tweet
  61. http://direkte.vg.no VG Direkte game access
  62. http://www.spiegel.de/sport/sonst/schach-kandidatenturnier-anand-gegen-aronjan-a-1081811.html Live Aronian-Anand Ticker Round 2
  63. http://www.agonlimited.com/news/2016/3/12/agon-ltd-commences-legal-action-against-chess24-internetchessclub-chessgames-and-chessbomb-for-breaching-broadcast-restrictions Agon Limited commences legal action
  64. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/mar/13/world-chess-champion-magnus-carlsen-candidates-tournament-moscow-agon World's chess fans await next move in battle over tournament broadcasts
  65. http://www.ecforum.org.uk/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=8218&start=60#p175859 Re: Agon ban of live move transmissions
  66. http://www.agonlimited.com/news/2016/3/14/former-world-champion-vladimir-kramnik-supports-agon-over-live-broadcast-rights Kramnik supports Agon
  67. https://twitter.com/stuthefox/status/708287882738401280 Tweet
  68. http://www.spiegel.de/sport/sonst/schach-kandidatenturnier-die-dritte-runde-im-blog-a-1081816.html 3rd round live ticker
  69. https://www.chess.com/blog/smurfo/live-blog---2016-world-chess-candidates-round-4 Live Blog
  70. https://twitter.com/TarjeiJS/status/709719598866767872 Tweet
  71. https://twitter.com/theworldchess/status/709762641896579073 Tweet
  72. https://twitter.com/ChessVibes/status/709713144512442368 Tweet
  73. http://chess-news.ru/node/21179 Interview, Mark Dvoretsky
  74. https://chess24.com/en/read/news/chess24-win-moscow-case-announce-new-york-line-up chess24 win Moscow case, announce New York line-up