Online conference in Elista
On Saturday, 27 December 2008, FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov held an online
conference with top grandmasters in Elista, Russia. The participants were World
Champion Anand Viswanathan, GMs Veselin Topalov, Vassily Ivanchuk, Magnus Carlsen
(represented by his father Henrik) and Levon Aronian. They explained their views
to the FIDE officials present, which included Ilyumzhinov, Deputy President
George Makropoulos, Vice President Zurab Azmaiparashvili, FIDE Commercial Director
& Global Chess CEO Geoffrey Borg and PA to FIDE President Berik Balgabaev.

Present in Elista were Balgabaev, Ilyumzhinov, Borg and Azmaijparashvili (pircture
above). The rest of the participants were online or patched in via Spiderphone
conference call. The meeting lasted more than an hour and different opinions,
suggestions, recommendations and constructive criticism was made by the players.
FIDE has promised to provide full details of the meeting, with transcripts of
everything that was said. Unfortunately, the sound quality of the recordings
is very poor, and so there is a delay in the transcription.
In the meantime we have obtained the opening speech of President Ilyumzhinov
and the statement of Henrik Carlsen on behalf of Magnus Carlsen. We also have
partial transcripts of the discussion, but have decided to delay their publication
until the audio files have been fully scanned.
Press announcement
on the conference by FIDE
Opening introduction by FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov
Dear World Champion, dear grandmasters, dear FIDE officials.
Thank you for accepting my invitation to share with us your opinions regarding
the World Chess Championship Cycle.

These last few months have been subject to great problems in the financial
world, and the chess world has not escaped these troubles. In Dresden, in the
FIDE Congress there was a long discussion on the options it had for the Cycle.
The General Assembly approved the decision to introduce a Candidates Tournament
or Matches, subject to final approval of the Presidential Board. This will be
in the middle of March 2009 in Budapest.
After Dresden, we received a number of important letters from the World’s leading
grandmasters regarding their opinions about the proposed changes to the Cycle.
I would like to thank everybody for this, as it shows a true interest in the
development of the chess world.
This is why I felt that we needed to have an open, transparent conference,
whereby everybody will have the chance to express their views honestly. All
views will be reflected in a press release on the FIDE website.
Address by Mr Henrik Carlsen on behalf of GM Magnus Carlsen
I’m representing my son Magnus Carlsen and would like to thank you for this
opportunity to express our views on the world championship cycle.

Speaking for his son: Henrik Carlsen
As communicated earlier we would like to see transparent decision processes
within FIDE, and predictability and fairness in the world championship cycles.
Transparent decision processes require a democratic and open dialogue with the
parties involved prior to making decisions. Important issues need to be raised
well in advance of major decision points and the decision process needs to be
well documented and communicated timely and widely. The process of proposing
to change the current cycle as brought forward at the FIDE General Assembly
in Dresden last month on short notice, does not meet these requirements.
Predictability is necessary to ensure the trust and commitment of chess players,
chess federations, sponsors, organisers and top players in contention for the
World Championship title.
We need to introduce mutually binding agreements in line with the practice
in other top chess tournaments. The current practice of having one-sided escape
clauses in the championship regulations and/or players undertaking, for instance
stating that the FIDE Presidential Board or the FIDE President may change this
or that, is simply unacceptable. The many examples from recent years of players
that has qualified or is in the process of qualifying for a subsequent step
in the championship cycle or for a match experiencing multiple delays or downright
removal of rights must come to an end.
Regarding priorities, the focus on money and privileges must be replaced by
fairness, reliability and predictability. As many businesses around the world
has experienced, if you want economics results you have to excel in what you
deliver to your customers and your audience. The results will follow suit.
Fairness; what does this imply? In addition to having predictability, there
should not be arbitrary granting of privileges, well, as few privileges as possible
really.
In a future Magnus would like to see a world championship cycle with a minimum
of privileges, or no privileges at all. If any it should be early in the cycle
and based on rating and not money. The transition to such a situation has been
difficult in the past due to the legacy of our history.
We strongly disagree with the way FIDE has tried to remedy this by handing
out further privileges. After the unification process from 2005 to 2008, we
may be in a unique situation to transcend historical problems and privileges,
and it was with disbelief and disappointment we received the news about the
proposal to introduce new privileges by creating four new spots in the next
step of the 2008-2011 championship cycle.
Next let me mention some features we would like to advocate related to a world
championship cycle. Firstly let’s talk about privileges.
What about privileges related to rating? Well, maybe some places in a knock-out
stage could be allocated to top rated players as done in the World Cup for many
years.
What about the privileges of players backed by strong managers, sponsors or
organisers? We don’t believe in these as it promotes cronyism and makes it possible
to buy your way to important rights.
What about the privileges of the reigning World Champion? This is a difficult
question but we see strong arguments for reducing the privileges drastically
or even abolishing them outright. In the past, with the right to a re-match,
a reigning world champion had about 75% chance of retaining the title against
an evenly strong opponent, leaving only 25% chance for all the remaining chess
players in the world. It was ridiculous. Even without rematches, the 50% chance
of today strongly favours the reigning champion. This may have made sense in
the past when there were few serious contenders for the title, but today, with
about 30 top players within 100 rating points of the top, this is no longer
fair.
Next, let’s discuss the cycle. The first step needs to be accessible to as
many players as possible world wide. Both zonal tournaments and the regional
qualifiers for the World Cup have worked well and one of these practices may
be continued in the future.
Next Magnus favours a knock-out system with for instance 64 or 128 players
mainly coming from the preceding step. When there are eight players left in
the knock-out stage, various alternatives are possible and we would like to
mention three viable options.
The first is to continue with the knock-out matches, and the final winner is
the new World Champion.
Another alternative is to proceed with candidate matches between the eight
remaining players at other venues and shifted in time. After two rounds of candidate
matches, the two remaining players would fight for the world championship title.
A third good alternative is to stage a double round robin World Championship
tournament between the eight remaining players from the knock-out cup.
The World Champion would retain his (or her) title for two years until the
next champion is decided.
Now, you may object and ask us: what is new? This is what has been tried for
more than ten years without much success, hasn’t it? Well, the main point is
that it did not work as long as Kasparov and later Kramnik were outside the
FIDE cycle. Currently this is no longer a problem.
The chess world has been united and the only privileges we need to care about
are those of World Champion Anand, who had to win both the 2007 world championship
tournament and the somewhat questionable 2008 match, and the other is the winner
of the 2007 World Cup Kamsky who was promised a semi-final match for the world
championship title based on the regulations prior to the World Cup.
A transition from the current situation to a future without significant privileges
must of course be organised in a way that is fair and preferably also fully
acceptable to these gentlemen. This obviously involves giving privileges to
Anand in the next one or two cycles, and privileges to Kamsky in first of the
ongoing cycles.
It is a bit difficult to comment categorically on the planned Kamsky-Topalov
match as we don’t understand the reason for organising such a match, but neither
do we really know what has been discussed or agreed between FIDE and the other
involved parties over the last one and a half years. The process has certainly
not met our requirement for transparency.
In summary, we want mutually binding agreements governing FIDE cycles, the
eventual abolition of privileges in general, and we want FIDE to focus on fairness
and predictability and not money and privileges.
Thank you for your attention.
Closing address by FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov
I thank everybody once again for sparing their time and I would like to state
clearly that I will take your views to the Presidential Board where we will
review them closely. A decision will be taken in Budapest which will represent
a fair and balanced view of the best way forward.