The Champions Chess Tour starts with the Skilling Open (November 22-30). The new tour is the successor to the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour and aims to be bigger and better, but also more compact. Instead of 5 events over 4 months there will be 10 over 10 months, with the prize fund rising from $1 million to $1.5 million. Each event will last 9 days, with all but the final featuring 3 days of prelims followed by an 8-player knockout tournament.

So far 7 players have been confirmed for the Skilling Open, the 16-player first event on the all-new Champions Chess Tour.

The action kicks off on Sunday 22nd and here we’re going to look at how the rules and regulations have changed (or stayed the same).

1. More events

The 2020 Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour consisted of five events: the Magnus Carlsen Invitational, the Lindores Abbey Rapid Challenge, the Chessable Masters, the chess24 Legends of Chess and the Finals benefiting Kiva. This time round there will be 10 events starting on November 22nd and ending in September 2021. There will be 6 Regular tournaments, 3 Majors and the Finals.

2. A bigger prize fund

The prize fund has increased by half from $1 million to $1.5 million, with $100,000 for each Regulartournament ($30,000 for 1st place), $200,000 for each Major ($60,000 for 1st place) and $300,000for the Finals ($100,000 for 1st place).

3. Shorter events

The Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour experimented with different formats, with the first event, the Magnus Carlsen Invitational, lasting a full 16 days. This time round all of the events will be held over 9 dayswith no rest days (though exact schedules could still change).

4. One unified tournament system

This time round all of the first 9 tournaments will have the same structure: a 3-day round-robin (16 players for each Regular event and 12 for each Major) after which the Top 8 players advance to a 6-day knockout, with two days each for the quarterfinals, semi-finals and final.

5. Shorter knockout matches

The time controls used in the Champions Chess Tour will be the same as for the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour:

  • Rapid15+10 – each player has 15 minutes for all moves, with a 10-second increment after each move
  • Blitz5+3
  • ArmageddonWhite has 5 minutes to Black’s 4, with no increments. If the game is drawn Black wins the match

The difference comes in the knockout stage, where instead of having best-of-3 (5 or 7) matches, each encounter will be decided over two days. On Day 1 there will be four rapid games, and if the match ends 2:2 it will simply be a draw (there doesn’t have to be a winner).

On Day 2 another 4-game match will be held. If both matches are drawn, or the players have traded wins, then shortly after the second match there will be a playofftwo blitz games followed, if needed, by Armageddon.

6. A new Tour points system

The Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour had a simple principle that anyone who won a Tour event qualified for the Finals. That still remains, as the winner of a Major qualifies for the Finals, while the winner of a Regular event qualifies for the next Major.

This time, however, Tour points will take on much more importance. The maximum available for a Regular event like the Skilling Open is 50 (10 for finishing 1st in the Prelims and 40 for winning the final).

For a Major event those numbers are doubled to 100 (20 points for finishing 1st in the Prelims and 80 for winning the final).

Tour points are important since the Top 8 players on the Tour will automatically be invited to the next tournament.

7. Innovative Finals

Tour points will also be used to determine the players in the Finals, which this time round will be a 10-player round-robin. Each clash in each round will be played as a 4-game mini-match, with two blitz games and Armageddon if the match ends 2:2. The winner of a match that doesn’t go to playoffs gets 3 points, while points are split 2:1 if a playoff is required.

The twist is that players start the tournament with a different number of points based on their performance over the course of the tour – a system similar to that used in the FedEx Cup in golf. The incentive will be much bigger to score the maximum points over the course of the Tour.

8. Refined Anti-Cheating and Disconnect policies

Anti-Cheating measures will build on those used for the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour. As well as the player stream viewers can watch there will be cameras filming the players from other angles, available only to the arbiters. The players’ screens will be shared with arbiters as they play.

One change, however, is that this time round, to avoid any appearance of impropriety, bathroom breaks or otherwise leaving the playing area will not be permitted during games (except with the Chief Arbiter’s approval).

Disconnects are always a tricky area for online chess, and the new policy is to give a player 30 seconds to reconnect, while their clock still runs. If they lose on time during those 30 seconds they lose the game. After 30 seconds, the clocks will be paused and then resumed as soon as possible after the player reconnects.

The aim is to ensure, as far as possible, that chess skills and not internet connections decide results, while also avoiding situations where a game is frozen for too long in a time scramble.

9. Your chance to choose a player

As well as eight players invited to each event being determined by current tour standings there will be some invites or wild cards. Tour Pass holders or chess24 Premium members will get to vote for some of the players to invite.

See also:

  • Champions Chess Tour website
  • The King’s Gambit: Magnus Carlsen launches $1.5 million Champions Chess Tour
  • Ding Liren plays the Skilling Open
  • Levon Aronian plays the Skilling Open
  • Teimour Radjabov plays the Skilling Open
  • Sergey Karjakin plays the Skilling Open
  • Liem Quang Le plays the Skilling Open
  • Wesley So plays the Skilling Open
May 08, 2019

Conclusions from 2019 GRENKE Chess Classic

World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen beat Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the final round to win the 2019 GRENKE Chess Classic with a spectacular 7.5/9 that took him to 2875.2 on the live rating list. Afterwards Magnus commented that a 2900 rating has become at least a “half-attainable” goal. Fabiano Caruana finished 1.5 points back in clear second place, while Arkadij Naiditsch took third with a last round victory over Georg Meier.


See also:

  • GRENKE Chess Classic website
  • GRENKE Chess Open website
  • All the games with computer analysis on chess24: GRENKE Chess Classic | GRENKE Chess Open
  • Keymer to face Carlsen in GRENKE Chess Classic
  • Keymer vs. Carlsen in GRENKE Classic Round 1
  • GRENKE Chess 1: Carlsen “outlasts” Keymer
  • GRENKE Chess 2: Carlsen’s “once in a lifetime” win
  • GRENKE Chess 3: Svidler catches Carlsen
  • GRENKE Chess 4: Vishy joins Magnus
  • GRENKE Chess 5: 14-year-old Keymer grabs first win
  • GRENKE Chess 6: Carlsen opens up a 1-point lead
  • GRENKE Chess 7: Carlsen crushes Aronian
  • GRENKE Chess 8: Magnus leaves trail of destruction
Dec 25, 2016

Naomi Bashkansky wins 2016 World School Chess Championship for girls under 13′

Her family home in Bellevue is lined with chess trophies. Meet Naomi Bashkansky, 13, who recently won the World School Chess Championship in Sochi, Russia, for her age group. Naomi is a very aggressive player.

So here is how Naomi Bashkansky, 13, explains her opening moves in a chess game. She is sitting in the dining room of her family home in Bellevue. Down the hall is her bedroom, which along one wall has a whole bunch of chess tournament trophies.

Along another wall is shelving containing toys from when she was much, much younger. Barbie dolls. Little horses. That’s in the past. “You try to get in a better position,” Naomi says about the opening moves, “so that you keep crushing the opponent, and squeezing them.” Crushing and squeezing your opponent. Such descriptions from an eighth-grader.

But that’s chess.

And that’s how Naomi won first place in Girls Under 13 at the weeklong World School Chess Championship that ended this month in Sochi, Russia. And that’s how you compete in a game in which there are no women currently in the Top 100 in the World Chess Federation rankings. Only a handful of women have cracked that elite list.

These days, chess in the U.S. doesn’t command anywhere near the coverage it had when Bobby Fischer in 1972 mesmerized the world with his brilliance and dramatic flair in beating Boris Spassky for the world title.

Still, the U.S. Chess Federation does have 85,000 members and sponsors 10,000 tournaments a year. A girl like Naomi represents the future of chess here.

Sometimes Naomi gets too aggressive.

Her coach is Gregory Serper, a grandmaster, the highest title attainable other than world champion, and held for life. At the heart of earning that title is winning, and winning a lot, against strong opponents. There are currently 1,598 male and 33 female grandmasters. The explanations for this disparity have created considerable controversy in the chess world.

Serper meets with Naomi weekly for two hours, and also uses Skype to give her advice when she’s at international tournaments. In Sochi, Naomi drew her first three of nine games, and the coach had to quiet down her game. In nine games, Naomi earned first place with four draws and five wins. Serper writes a column for chess.com. Last year he wrote about girls and chess:

“Now tell me, who is going to succeed in the cutthroat world of business and chess? Wasn’t Bobby Fischer talking about ‘the killer instinct’ you need to have in order to thrive in chess?

“So girls, you want to beat the competition in chess (or business)? Listen carefully, it is very simple, just be as aggressive as possible!” But Skyping with Naomi at the Sochi tournament, Serper told her that there is aggressive and there is aggressive.

“She’s very determined,” he says. “I told her, ‘Young lady, hold your horses. You’re too aggressive. You cannot attack from any position just to attack. You need to prepare your attack.”

Private coaching

It’s not unusual for striving young chess players to have a private coach. If you know of kids in AAU basketball programs or select club soccer, you have an idea of the effort and expense in getting them to an elite level.

Naomi’s dad, Guy Bashkansky, a software engineer, figures that twice a year for the past five years, the family of four (although their older son sometimes stays home) has spent $4,000 to $8,000 each time to travel to not only Sochi but to Brazil, Mexico, Greece for Naomi’s tournaments.

“What else can we do with the money?” says the dad. “We make it our vacation. We go about town. We feel a vacation without chess is not interesting.” The dad blogs all their chess travels, obviously proud of Naomi’s accomplishments. Naomi’s mom, Ludmila Bashkansky, a civil engineer who stays at home, is the one who finds local chess tournaments for the daughter, and drives her to them.

She’s also the one who researches future opponents and finds online games that they’ve played so that Naomi can prepare for them. That’s how it is in the chess world. “Everybody is preparing against you,” says Ludmila.

Because it was held in Sochi, players from Russia or the former Soviet Union were heavily represented at the tournament. But chess has been a passion in that region since the tsarist days. Then, for the Soviets, it was a way to show off the country’s intellectual talents. Passionate chess players included Lenin and Stalin.

In Armenia, President Serzh Sargsyan is also head of the nation’s chess federation. Chess is compulsory in schools; grandmasters are salaried and top players get the same adulation as pop stars. Serper is originally from what is now Uzbekistan and he lives in Bellevue.

Immigrant family

The Bashkasnkys themselves migrated from Russia to Israel (where Naomi and her brother, Ethan, 18, were born) and then to the United States. A good number of kids playing chess competitively in the U.S. are from recent immigrant families.

It is a family of very, very smart people. At age 18, Ethan already is a senior at the University of Washington, majoring in math. Naomi is in the gifted program at Bellevue’s Odle Middle School.

The parents say that they themselves aren’t particularly good chess players. Naomi Bashkansky was 4 or 5 years old when she began playing chess. Now 13, she won the 2016 World School Chess Championship in her age category on Dec. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
Naomi Bashkansky was 4 or 5 years old when she began playing chess…. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times) More

It was Ethan who first began playing chess ate age 5, back when the family lived in Israel. He saw older kids at a chess club and thought they were playing checkers, with which he was familiar.

At home, the then-kindergartner used a basic chess manual to teach himself.  In first grade he joined the chess club; “Pretty soon I was beating everyone,” he says. Then, when Naomi was 4 or 5, she began playing chess, sometimes with her brother. Ethan remembers the emotions the game carried for some kids. “For me that was not the case, but I’ve seen kids burst into tears over losing a game,” he says. Naomi says that she has shed tears after a loss. The British journalist Dominic Lawson, an avid chess player, wrote in 2010 in Standpoint Magazine: “There is no game of wits at which losing is more unpleasant than chess. Any game involving cards or dice involves chance … Not so with chess. Everything is visible …

“One reason why many strong players give up the game they love is that they increasingly find that the agony of losing so much outweighs the ecstasy of winning that they almost dread sitting down at the board to play.” Ethan dropped chess when he entered college at a young age.

It’s not uncommon for young players to quit competitive chess when college takes up their time, says Serper. Naomi says that also may happen with her.

Disparity controversy

The chess world has many titles, and there are also categories just for women. It’s an acknowledgment of disparity in how, using the same criteria, women rank considerably lower. It is a topic of controversy.

In 2015, Nigel Short, an English grandmaster, wrote in the magazine New in Chess, “Men and women’s brains are hard-wired very differently, so why should they function in the same way?”

He concluded, “It would be wonderful to see more girls playing chess, and at a higher level, but rather than fretting about inequality, perhaps we should just gracefully accept it as a fact.” That resulted in Short being described as “sexist” and a “Neanderthal.”

Maybe, says Naomi, the points difference is because women play less aggressively than men. Although with Serper’s influence, that’s certainly not the case with Naomi. Her goal, she says, is to earn a Woman Grandmaster title (there are so few women in the general grandmaster category open to all that one was created just for women) or International Master (a lesser title than grandmaster) by the end of high school.

That’ll be a big leap from being ranked No. 24 in the U.S. for girls and boys age 13. “It takes time. It’s all about opportunity,” says Serper.

She has literally spent thousands of hours on the game. She says, “I just love playing it. I mean, it is a game. It’s a game that requires strategy and calculations and precision. I’m good at it. I can play near-perfectly in my better games. What’s not to like?”

Scroll through or select moves to see the step-by-step progress of Naomi Bashkansky’s world-championship victory over Nazerke Nurgali of Kazakhstan on Dec. 11 in Sochi, Russia. Naomi played as the black chess pieces.

article By Erik Lacitis Seattle Times staff reporter source

Jul 16, 2021

FIDE World Cup round 2

Magnus Carlsen looked sharp as he got off to a winning start against birthday boy Sasa Martinovic on Thursday when the big guns joined the FIDE World Cup, but the chess was overshadowed by turmoil caused by COVID-19. Levon Aronian was forced to forfeit against Bobby Cheng, while Fabiano Caruana’s game against Indonesian GM Susanto Megaranto was suddenly stopped midway when test results came back showing Susanto was infected. Fabiano got a win by default, but faces more tests himself.

Round 2 marked the point at which the top 50 seeds in the Open and the top 25 seeds in the Women’s event joined the action, and, given the complexity of travel during the pandemic, it was impressive that there was just one game out of 96 that didn’t start on Thursday. It was a big one, however, with world no. 5 and 2-time World Cup winner Levon Aronian forced to forfeit a game against 24-year-old 2552-rated Australian GM Bobby Cheng. The official communication from FIDE was oddly worded.

See also:

  • Official website
  • All the games with computer analysis and commentary on chess24: Open | Women
  • Magnus Carlsen plays the 2021 World Cup
  • FIDE World Cup 2021 pairings are out
  • FIDE World Cup 1.1: The battle begins
  • FIDE World Cup 1.2: 80 players out, 28 tiebreaks
  • FIDE World Cup 1.3: 14-year-old Volodar Murzin scores upset win