Kasparov, Garry vs Kramnik, Vladimir, Kosmos m 5'
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Round 14 of the 1998 Kosmos blitz match was won by Kramnik as Black. The Kasparov-Kramnik blitz exhibition had reached the midway point of its 28-game format; both players had been playing seriously and the score had remained close throughout.
Kramnik’s win was a Black opening preparation — the Berlin Defense in the Ruy Lopez, perhaps used here for the first time in serious preparation between the two players. The Berlin produced an endgame in which Kasparov’s attack was insufficient to overcome Black’s defensive resources. Kramnik converted his small endgame edge in roughly 45 moves.
The win was significant. Kramnik had demonstrated that the Berlin Defense could neutralise Kasparov’s white repertoire even at blitz time controls. The theoretical implication — that the Berlin provided a reliable defensive weapon against Kasparov’s specific opening preferences — would become central to the 2000 World Championship match. Kramnik used the Berlin throughout that match and Kasparov never won a single classical game.
The 1998 Kosmos Game 14 has been retrospectively analyzed as one of the early demonstrations of the Berlin Defense’s anti-Kasparov potential. The opening’s theoretical state in 1998 was already known — the Berlin had appeared in Soviet chess literature since the 1980s — but its successful application against Kasparov’s specific style was a 1998 contribution by Kramnik.