Commonwealth Chess Championship

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File:Commonwealth Chess.jpg
Commonwealth Chess Championships logo

The Commonwealth Chess Championship is a gathering of chess players from Commonwealth countries.

Winners[edit]

# Year City Winner
(1) 1950 Oxford  William Fairhurst (SCO)
1 1983 Melbourne  Ian Rogers (AUS) &  Gregory Hjorth (AUS)
2 1984 Hong Kong  Kevin Spraggett (CAN) &  Murray Chandler (ENG)
3 1985 London  Praveen Thipsay (IND)
4 1986 London  Devaki V. Prasad (IND)
5 1987 London  Murray Chandler (ENG)
6 1988 London  Gary Lane (ENG) &  Michael Adams (ENG)
7 1989 London  Ian Rogers (AUS)
8 1991 London  Michael Adams (ENG)
9 1992 Kuala Lumpur  Colin McNab (SCO)
10 1993 London  Jonathan Speelman (ENG)
11 1996 Calcutta  Poorna Sharma Mithrakanth (IND)
12 1999 Bikaner  Alexander Baburin (IRL) (off contest)
 Atanu Lahiri (IND)
13 2000 Sangli  Krishnan Sasikiran (IND)
14 2001 London  Pentala Harikrishna (IND)
15 2003 Mumbai  Nguyen Anh Dung (VIE) (off contest)
 Dibyendu Barua (IND)
16 2004 Mumbai  Nigel Short (ENG)
17 2006 Mumbai  Nigel Short (ENG)
18 2007 New Delhi  Ramachandran Ramesh (IND)
19 2008 Nagpur  Nigel Short (ENG)
20 2009 Singapore  Enrique Paciencia (SIN)
21 2010 New Delhi  Rajaram Laxman (IND)
22 2011 Ekurhuleni  Gawain Jones (ENG)
23 2012 Chennai  Babu M.R. Lalith (IND)
24 2013 Port Elizabeth  Abhijeet Gupta (IND)
25 2014 Glasgow  Deep Sengupta (IND)
26 2015 New Delhi  Abhijeet Gupta (IND)
27 2016 Kalutara  Abhijeet Gupta (IND)
28 2017 New Delhi  Abhijeet Gupta (IND)
29 2018 New Delhi  Karthikeyan P (IND)
30 2019 New Delhi  Abhijeet Gupta (IND)[1]

History[edit]

A championship was planned for New Zealand in 1949, but it was canceled because the British Chess Federation was unable to attend.

Oxford 1950[edit]

In 1950 an informal all-play-all championship was held as the strongest players of Canada (Daniel Yanofsky), New Zealand (Robert Wade), and South Africa (Wolfgang Heidenfeld) were all in England. The field was rounded out with a player from England, Scotland, and a promising Australian. William Fairhurst (Scotland) won the unofficial championship held in Oxford.[2]

Melbourne 1983[edit]

The Commonwealth Chess Association (formed in 1981) planned a 1982 championship in Nigeria, but it was not held. The 1983 Swiss system tournament was held in Melbourne, and won by Ian Rogers and Gregory Hjorth, both of Australia.

Hong Kong 1984[edit]

The winners of the 1984 Hong Kong tournament were Kevin Spraggett (Canada) and Murray Chandler (England).

London 1985[edit]

The winners of the 1985 London tournament were Praveen Thipsay (India) and Kevin Spraggett.

London 1987[edit]

The winner of the 1987 London tournament was Murray Chandler (England). The title was awarded to the highest eligible player in the 11th Lloyds Bank Masters, played at the Park Lane Hotel, London, 22–31 August 1987. Chandler tied for first place on 8/10 with Michael Wilder (USA), who was not eligible for the Commonwealth title.[3]

London 1988[edit]

In 1988 the championship title was shared by Gary Lane and Michael Adams. It was awarded to the highest eligible player(s) in the 12th Lloyds Bank Masters, played at the Ramada Inn, London, 20–29 August 1988. At the time Gary Lane was registered as an English player. Scores: 1-2 Gary Lane, Michael Adams 8/10.[4]

London 1989[edit]

In 1989 the championship was won by Ian Rogers (Australia). It was awarded to the highest eligible player(s) in the 13th Lloyds Bank Masters, played at the Cumberland Hotel, Marble Arch, London, August 1989. Ian Rogers scored 8/10, behind the ineligible Zurab Azmaiparashvili (Georgia) on 8½.[5]

Calcutta 1996[edit]

Mithrakanth of India won with 7.5/10. Gokhale, Sriram, Praven Thipsay and McNab tied for second place on 7.0. Seventeen-year-old S. Vijaylakshmi won the women's title and earned an IM norm.[6]

Bikaner 1999[edit]

Grandmaster Alexander Baburin of Ireland remained undefeated throughout with 8.5/10 but since Ireland is outside the Commonwealth federation the title went to Atanu Lahiri.

Sangli 2000[edit]

The championship with 72 players was played as an 11-round Swiss event. Four players ended with 8.5/11: Max Sorokin, Krishnan Sasikiran, Evegeny Vladimirov and Aleksander Fominih. Sorokin won the championship on tie-break points but the title went to Krishnan Sasikiran.

London 2001[edit]

The commonwealth chess championships was incorporated into the main Mind Sports Olympiad chess event, "The Ron Banwell Masters" at the Southbank University. [7] India sent a strong contingent of GMs [8] and the event was won for India by Pentalyu Harikrishna.[9]

Mumbai 2003[edit]

Nguyen Anh Dung from Vietnam finished first with 8.5/10, the title went to 4th placed Dibyendu Barua.

Mumbai 2004[edit]

The 2004 Championships were held in Mumbai, India. The winner was Nigel Short. In 2005 the event was scheduled to be played, but was in the end cancelled.

Mumbai 2006[edit]

The event was won by Nigel Short with the emphatic score of 9/10. Indians Chanda Sandipan and M R Venkatesh scored 8/10 for 2nd-3rd places.[10]

New Delhi 2007[edit]

Sponsored by Parvnath Developers Ltd., the 2007 tournament was held at the Sirifort Sports Complex, Khel, New Delhi. The Delhi Chess Association organized the event on behalf of the All India Chess Federation and Commonwealth Chess Association and the ten-round Swiss system tournament boasted a record field of 282 players included entries from eleven Commonwealth countries: Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, Malaysia, Maldives, Pakistan, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Trinidad and Tobago, with 13 Grandmasters, 35 International Masters, 5 Woman Grandmasters and 7 Woman International Masters. The prize fund totaled US$20,000, with $4000 for the winner.

Former British Champion GM R. B. Ramesh won the final three rounds to tie with top seed GM Surya Shekhar Ganguly at 8½/10 points. Ramesh won the title on tie-break, with Ramesh and Ganguly splitting the top two prizes equally for Rs 137,500 (approximately 2400). IM Abhijeet Gupta finished third with 8, completing the requirements for the Grandmaster title to become India's 17th Grandmaster. He also won the Under-20 prize and received Rs 75,000. IM Dronavalli Harika won Rs 40,000 by taking the women's title for the second consecutive year with an overall finish in seventh place. There were three medals (gold, silver, and bronze) awarded in each fifteen categories: Overall, Women, Seniors, Under-20, Girls Under-20, and boys and girls U-18, U-16, U-14, U-12, and U-10. Players from India won 44 of the 45 medals, with English GM Gawain Jones preventing the sweep by winning the U-20 bronze.[11]

Nagpur 2008[edit]

The 2008 tournament was held in the orange city of Nagpur at the navedhyam celebration center. The tournament was won by two time previous champion Nigel Short and won the prize money of 1,80,000 INR.

Singapore 2009[edit]

The 2009 tournament was originally scheduled to be held in Ipoh, Malaysia,[12] but eventually moved to Singapore, where it was held along the 6th Singapore International Chess Festival.[13] It was won by Singapore IM Enrique Paciencia with a score of 7.5/9. Indian IM Jayaram Ashwin finished second with 6.5/9, and Australian master Max Illingworth finished in third place with 6/9.

New Delhi 2019[edit]

The 2019 edition was hosted in the capital city of India, New Delhi which had hosted the 2010,2015,2017,2018 editions. It was the third time in a row that New Delhi hosted the event. It was held  at The Leela Ambience Convention Hotel from 29 June 2019 to 7 July 2019. The tournament was won by Abhijeet Gupta of India. It was his fifth Commonwealth Chess Championship victory and the 8th time in a row an Indian has won the event.[14]

References[edit]

  1. Rao, Rakesh (2019-07-07). "Commonwealth chess championship: Fantastic fifth for Abhijeet Gupta". The Hindu. Retrieved 2019-09-13.
  2. Whyld, Ken (1986), Chess: The Records, Guinness Books, pp. 82–83, ISBN 0-85112-455-0
  3. British Chess Magazine, October 1987, page 448.
  4. British Chess Magazine, November 1988, pages 465-469.
  5. British Chess Magazine, October 1989, pages 434-436.
  6. Crowther, Mark (1996-12-16). "THE WEEK IN CHESS 110". Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  7. Chess by Malcolm Pein http://www.chess.co.uk/dt010814.html
  8. Chess The Independent, Jon Speelman, 29 August 2001 archived abstract retrieved 15 July 2012
  9. "MSO results page for 2001". Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  10. Chessbase article
  11. Zaveri, Praful (2 January 2008), "Ramesh is the Commonwealth Chess Champion", Chessbase News
  12. Commonwealth Chess Championship 2009 in Malaysia. FIDE. 2009-03-06.
  13. Commonwealth Chess Championship 2009. FIDE. 2009-05-07
  14. "India to host the 2019 Commonwealth Championship – All India Chess Federation". aicf.in. Retrieved 2021-07-24.

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