Olympiad preview: so how are things in Khanty-Mansiysk?
Teams arrive in Khanty-Mansiysk - some still carrying a Chess Informant
GM Zahar Efimenko - board 4 (!) for Ukraine
Team captains Evgeny Bareev and Pavel Tregubov
Captains meeting
Before the opening ceremony last night the traditional Captains meeting took place. The most significant rules this year are:- the zero default rule is in operation again;
- there will be no restrictions on draw offers.
Russia: eight teams
The Captains meeting included one big surprise: the Russian Chess Federation will be represented in this Olympiad with no less than eight teams. The ladies play with three, the men with five.Russia in the Open section: Russia 1: GMs Vladimir Kramnik (2780), Alexander Grischuk (2760), Peter Svidler (2731), Sergey Karjakin (2747), Vladimir Malakhov (2725) Russia 2: GMs Ian Nepomniachtchi (2706), Evgeny Alekseev (2691), Nikita Vitiugov (2709), Evgeny Tomashevsky (2701), Artyom Timofeev (2690) Russia 3: GM Dmitry Jakovenko (2726), GM Alexandr Motylev (2694), GM Sergei Rublevsky (2683), IM Aleksei Pridorozhni (2556), GM Nikolai Kabanov (2500) Russia 4: GMs Sanan Sjugirov (2627), GM Alexei Bezgodov (2485) IM Vladimir Genba (2445), Ilia Iljiushenok (2412), IM Valeriy Yoshan (2408) Russia 5: IM Pavel Potapov (2464), FM Alexander Kopylov (2438) Sergey Savitskiy (2373), CM Daniil Yuffa 2235 and GM Evgeny Prokopchuk (2522).Russia in the Women section: Russia 1: GM Tatiana Kosintseva (2573), IM Nadezhda Kosintseva (2565), GM Alexandra Kosteniuk, (2524), IM Alisa Galliamova (2482), WGM Valentina Gunina (2465). Russia 2: WGM Natalija Pogonina (2491), WGM Olga Girya (2414), WGM Anastasia Savina (2404), IM Anastasia Bodnaruk (2399), WGM Alina Kashlinskaya (2358) Russia 3: WGM Baira Kovanova (2370), WFM Mariya Bezgodova (2170), Svetlana Bezgodova (2120), Yekaterina Kabanova (2177), Aysilu YakupovaSome captains protested to this strange situation, but to no avail. They received the remarkable answer: "FIDE has decided this and we can't do anything about it." This must have been a decision by the FIDE President himself, as there certainly hasn't been a meeting with the federations where it was decided.Normally an organizing federation gets two teams in the open section, and three with an odd number of countries. It seems that FIDE immediately gave Russia three, then a fourth when there appeared to be an odd number, and then a fifth when again there appeared to be an odd number!
The strong, young team Russia 2
World Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk is board 3 for Russia 1
The highest rated Russian: Vladimir Kramnik
Photos courtesy of FIDE, more at the official site
More info
The 39th Chess Olympiad takes place September 20th – October 3rd at the Tennis Sport Development Center in Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia. 148 teams (735 players) in the Open section and and 114 teams (559 players) in the Women section will participate in the biannual event.Each team consists four players and one reserve. The rate of play is 90 minutes for 40 moves and then 30 minutes to finish the game, with 30 seconds increment from move one. The pairings of round 1 are now up: the Open section here, the Women section here.The pairings system was explained by Shaun Press at the Chess Rules blog:Firstly, acceleration is out. So the pairings start with 1 v (N/2)+1 etc However Match points remain for pairing ordering and placing. The team ordering for pairings has been changed from the Olympiad SB system, to a simpler method. The ranking is now Match points, then game points and finally Team rating (as defined at the start of the tournament). Pairings will be done in the order of top down to just above middle, then bottom up to just below middle, then middle. Pairings with a pairing group will revert to top v (N/2)+1, rather than top v bottom. The pairings will also try and have top half v bottom half wherever possible. This is more achievable than under the normal swiss rules, as colurs in teams events is less important, and will not be an overriding criteria. For colours, not team can have a colour imbalance >2 or >2 colours in a row. However teams that both have a +1 (or -1) colour imbalance already can still play each other. Colour allocation will follow the equalisation, then alternation system.If you want to see a full description of the system then it is published here in the FIDE handbook.Below that is the official schedule for both the Olympiad and the FIDE Congress, which is held at the same time in Khanty-Mansiysk.