Stabroek News Sunday

World’s chess table tops line up for next year’s Candidates matches

-

Ever since the 1960s, the Candidates chess matches and subsequent­ly the chess tournament­s, have been recognized as definitive and contentiou­s battles. The ultimate prize: becoming the challenger for the World Chess Championsh­ip Match. The next Candidates Tournament is scheduled for March 2018, in Berlin and will be contested by eight players, the very best in the world as of 2017, with the exception of the current world champion. Six of the participan­ts have been identified so far: 1. Levon Aronian, Armenia, winner of the 2017 World Cup 2. Fabiano Caruana, USA, by way of superior FIDE rating 3. Wesley So, USA, by way of superior FIDE rating 4. Ding Liren, China, runner-up of the 2017 World Cup 5. Sergey Karjakin, Russia, by way of being the last challenger for the World Championsh­ip Match 6. Vladimir Kramnik, Russia, organizer wild card World Chess, the organizer of the 2018 FIDE World Chess Candidates Tournament, nominated grandmaste­r Vladimir Kramnik as its wild card choice. Kramnik defeated Garry Kasparov for the world championsh­ip title in London, 2000. He lost the title thereafter to India’s Viswanatha­n Anand. Kramnik is numbered among the top ten chess players of the world.

The final two qualifiers for the 2018 Candidates Tournament will come from the competitiv­e Grand Prix series. The Grand Prix consists of four chess tournament­s and each participan­t is required to contest three of them. Points are accumulate­d and added at the end of each According to the November 2017 FIDE Elo points rating list, chess grandmaste­r Bassem Amin, 29, of Egypt, has become the first African chess player to reach the significan­t 2700 number. Amin is numbered at 45 on the list of the top 100 chess players worldwide. His Elo rank skyrockete­d in August when he emerged victorious in the Abu Dhabi Masters Tournament. (Photo: adchessfes­tival.ae) of the three tournament­s. The leading contenders for the 2018 Candidates are: Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Alexander Grishchuk, Teimour Radjabov and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. The latter two are competing in this month’s Grand Prix tournament and are attempting to overtake Mamedyarov and Grishchuk who are the leaders in the overall points tally. The qualifiers will be named later this month at the conclusion of the Grand Prix tournament.

World chess champion Magnus Carlsen expressed his (Photo: Alina L’Ami)

domination in numbers over fellow grandmaste­rs according to the November 2017 FIDE rating list. He jumped to a 36-point lead following the tempestuou­s Isle of Man chess tournament which he won handsomely. The top ten chess players worldwide are: 1. Magnus Carlsen, 2837, Norway 2. Levon Aronian, 2801, Armenia 3. Fabiano Caruana, 2799, USA 4. Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, 2799, Azerbaijan 5. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, 2796, France 6. Wesley So, 2788, USA 7. Vladimir Kramnik, 2787, Russia 8. Viswanatha­n Anand, 2782, India 9. Alexander Grishchuk, 2782, Russia 10. Hikaru Nakamura, 2780, USA

 ??  ?? World chess champion and Norwegian grandmaste­r Magnus Carlsen, 26, sits at the pinnacle of the chess world in Elo points. In the November 2017 FIDE Elo list which ranks chess players according to numbers, Carlsen has a total of 2837 points, 36 more...
World chess champion and Norwegian grandmaste­r Magnus Carlsen, 26, sits at the pinnacle of the chess world in Elo points. In the November 2017 FIDE Elo list which ranks chess players according to numbers, Carlsen has a total of 2837 points, 36 more...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana