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Chess: Aronian: The World Championship Should Be Decided In A Match

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  • Chess: Aronian: The World Championship Should Be Decided In A Match

    ARONIAN: THE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP SHOULD BE DECIDED IN A MATCH

    Chessbase News, Germany
    http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?ne wsid=3978
    July 9 2007

    09.07.2007 - Levon Aronian is one of the hot favourites for the world
    championship in Mexico City this September. What does he think of
    his chances, what does he think about the format? In an article in
    the German broadsheet Neues Deutschland, born in Armenian and now
    living in Berlin, speaks about these and other subjects relating to
    the inclusion of Veselin Topalov in the FIDE cycle. Interview.

    More chess in school classes

    ND interview with Levon Aronian, candidate for the World Championship
    2007

    A Berliner by choice, Levon Aronan, 24, born in Armenia and playing
    for the Bundesliga team SC Kreuzberg, is one of the top favourites
    at the World Championship which is being held from September 11 to
    October 1st 2007 in Mexico City. ND author Rene Gralla spoke to the
    world championship candidate.

    World championship candidate Levon Aronian

    Neues Deutschland: At the Chess Olympiade 2006 you won Gold with the
    Armenian team. Do you want to crown this achievement with a world
    championship title in 2007?

    Levon Aronian: I will do my best and hope to be successful.

    During the recently ended Candidates Tournament in Elista you
    convincingly managed to qualify for the world championship. Is that
    a good sign?

    I don't think about it. I am in training to increase my form for the
    world championship. Then I will see how things proceed.

    You were able to beat world champion Vladimir Kramnik of Russia
    4:2 in a match played just two months ago in the Armenian capital
    of Yerevan. Does that make you feel optimistic about the world
    championship?

    That was rapid chess, 25 minutes per player and game. But I also lost
    to Kramnik before that. So it is difficult to make any prognosis for
    the world championship.

    After the loss in Yerevan shouldn't the world champion be afraid
    of you?

    You will have to ask him if that is the case. In addition I am not
    sure that fear is the right word. Kramnik knows that I can cause him
    some problems.

    The other big world championship favourite is Viswanathan Anand of
    India, who won the title in 2000 and is currently the number one in
    the world rankings. What do you think of your chances against him?

    Vladimir Kramnik and Levon Aronian in Yerevan in May 2007

    What I said about Kramnik also applies to Anand. I look forward to
    our encounter, it will be quite interesting.

    You have publicly wondered how you were able to reach the top of the
    world rankings in spite of what you call your "chaotic" style on the
    board. Do you still agree with this assessment?

    Yes, I love unclear positions in which nobody can predict the
    outcome precisely. In such positions I have the necessary scope for
    my creativity.

    Considering that around 800 million people in the world play chess,
    do you think that chess is receiving adaquate publicity?

    Naturally I would be glad if chess was more popular. The game should
    be used more intensively in the school curriculum, because it trains
    the faculty for reasoning. Studies in the USA and in Russia have
    proved that conclusively.

    In your home country of Armenia you are a superstar. What is the
    reason for this chess enthusiasm?

    It is not so much chess as the success of our national team. The
    country has gone through a difficult phase, and people long for a
    taste of glory. That explains the enthusiasm we saw when our team
    returned for the Chess Olympiade in Turin with the Gold medal.

    Tigran Petrosian, the world champion from 1963 to 1969, was from
    Armenia. Do you consider yourself a possible successor of Petrosian?

    Some people in Armenia confuse our first names and call me Tigran.

    But seriously: the question is premature. We must wait for the world
    championship to take place.

    If you win the title then the deposed world champion Kramnik gets a
    second chance. The World Chess Federation FIDE has given Kramnik the
    right to challenge the winner of the world championship. It this a
    fair privilege?

    The world championship 2007 in Mexico City is a round robin
    tournament. In my opinion the world championship should actually be
    decided in a match between the title holder and a challenger. That
    is the traditional way of deciding the world championship. We are
    returning to that when the winner of the world championship tournament
    has to play a match against the former world champion.

    The reunification world championship match in Elista in 2006 between
    the two world champions Vladimir Kramnik and the Bulgarian Veselin
    Topalov specified that the loser would be left out of this year's world
    championship tournament. Both sides agreed in advance to this article
    of the contract. Now the Bulgarian side is trying to get Topalov into
    the 2007 world championship cycle. What do you think of this?

    Both sides knew full well under what conditions the world championship
    in Elista was being staged, and what the consequences of defeat for
    one of them would be. They accepted these conditions. For this reason
    I do not like what the Topalov camp is doing.
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