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It had to have happened in the 90s, but I can't remember either the tournament or Karpov's opponent (probably some Spanish tournament, like Linares or Dos Hermanas). Karpov was upset with the organization for some reason, and he complained by playing 1. e4 and offered a draw that was accepted by his rival. As Karpov would say: "What would he do? Play for a win?"

I've tried some simple Googling via "shortest karpov game" and similar stuff, but I've gotte nothing at all. I have no idea how to use databases for a search like this, but I suspect that-for obvious reasons-this game probably isn't in any of them.

Rewan Demontay
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emdio
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1 Answers1

25

Not sure if this is it but this is the shortest Karpov game I found in the database.
Anatoly Karpov vs Peter Leko, Groningen 1995 where Karpov played 1.d4 and that's it.

The first comment there says

karpov and leko did this quick draw to protest the abnormally early start of the round (9am if my memory is correct)

cmgchess
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    I would do the same. 9am is way too early! – stupidstudent Sep 21 '22 at 22:23
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    So what's the _usual_ start time? (Asking as someone who doesn't know chess tournaments at all.) – davidbak Sep 22 '22 at 17:09
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    @davidbak tbh most of the tournaments i played had 9am rounds and 3pm rounds per day but im just a casual player. i guess GM tournaments mostly have 1 evening round where they use mornings for preparation – cmgchess Sep 23 '22 at 02:47
  • That's hilarious... competitive TCG tournaments start quite a bit earlier and last all day (7:30am start time often, and 9 hour-plus long rounds taking you through 8pm or later with only one break...) – Joe Sep 23 '22 at 18:20