OLIMPBASE IS BACK

The good news is that olimpbase.org is back after months of struggle - hopefully now for good.
Please allow some time to fully recover all of its features.
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Posted on 16 Feb 2026 by Webmaster








Individual tournament finally available - a long expected feature is ON

Karpov-Kasparov WCh 1984Following numerous complaints and suggestions of our readers here it is - individual tournaments incorporated on to OlimpBase data!
A user-friendly and smart script allows adding results of individual tournaments in no time.

Due to limited resources we will not be able to create the most complete database - there are numerous commercial bases instead.

This is why we focus on championship tournaments, to provide most complete results and statistics from past years, where other databases failed.

Today we open access to the results of our two-year dilligent efforts: a unique and most complete database of most prestigious junior events:

History of World Junior U20 Championship (1951-2017): open | girls

History of European Junior U20 Championship (1963-2002): open | girls

 

Under construction a.o.:

Individual World Championship (including complete results of zonals)

Individual Continental Championship (Panamerican, Asian, African, European) - most complete!

National championships (USSR, Poland)

Major international tournaments (Linares, Tata Steel)

 

 

OlimpBase contributors interested in adding other series to our database (e.g. your local national championship) are kindly asked to contact us. It is easy and fast!

 

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Posted on 26 May 2018 by Webmaster








China and Russia win FIDE World Team Championship 2017

World Team Championship 2017 It was a remarkable finish to a remarkable event. Entering the final round of the FIDE World Team Championship, gold seemed a lock for the Chinese since the only way Russia could beat them was if they not only drew Poland, but Russia beat the US by 3.5-0.5. However, the Russians did even better as they swept the US 4-0. China, in danger of faltering, was saved by Li Chao who scored a powerful and crucial win. In the Women’s Russia beat Ukraine and took gold.

>> Final standings open <<
1. China 2. Russia 3. Poland

>> Final standings women<<
1. Russia 2. China 3. Georgia

All-time statistics: open | women
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Posted on 29 Jul 2017 by Webmaster








Test news

This is test news. Please apologize and allow time for recovery.
We will be back in September 2016.
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Posted on 06 Aug 2016 by Webmaster








European Club Cup 2015 concluded

European Club Cup 2015
The 31st European Club Cup and the 20th European Club Cup for Women finished in Skopje, FYR Macedonia, with the closing ceremony held in hotel Aleksandar Palace.

Russian team Siberia became the winner of the Men’s tournament after the equal score against one of the biggest rivals Obiettivo Risarcimento Padova in the last round.

The members of the winning team are:
GM Vladimir Kramnik (RUS 2777)
GM Levon Aronian (ARM 2784)
GM Alexander Grischuk (RUS 2774)
GM Li Chao (CHN 2750)
GM Wang Yue (CHN 2724)
GM Anton Korobov (RUS 2700)
GM Dmitry Kokarev (RUS 2603)
GM Dmitry Bocharov (RUS 2560)

Siberia scored 13 match points, with 6 won matches and 1 drawn. Last year’s champion SOCAR (AZE) took silver with 11 match points and better tie-break than Mednyi Vsadnik (RUS), who took bronze, and Padova, who eventually finished 4th.

In Women’s section Chess Club Nona from Georgia defended the title with all 7 victories and 14 match points. The first seed triumphed convincingly, without any surprises and took home another beautiful trophy.

The members of the winning team are:
GM Dzagnidze Nana (2573 GEO)
GM Khotenashvili Bela (2502 GEO)
IM Javakhishvili Lela (2463 GEO)
IM Batsiashvili Nino (2500 GEO)
WIM Mikadze Miranda (2245 GEO)

Second place went to the domestic team Gambit Asseko SEE with 11 match points, and the third lace went to Russian team Ugra with 10 match points.

The European Chess Club Cup was held in Skopje/FYR Macedonia, 17-25 October, 2015, in Hotel Aleksandar Palace. Both events were held in 7 rounds, played in the Swiss system in accordance with the ECU Tournament Rules. The organizer of the events were Municipality Karpos (Skopje) and Chess Club “Gambit Asseko SEE”, under the auspices of the European Chess Union. The Chief Arbiter was IA Ashot Vardapetyan (ARM).

/ taken from www.fide.com /

See detailed results of 2015 European Club Cup: open and women

See all-time statistics: open and women
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Posted on 08 Nov 2015 by Webmaster








China confirms domination, wins World Team Championship 2015

World Team Championship 2015The national team of China continued its global domination by securing the gold medal at the FIDE World Team Chess Championship in Tsakhkadzor, having previously won the 2014 Chess Olympiad in Tromso.

Earlier, China had three silver medals from the World Team Championships in 2005, 2011 and 2013. In 2005 they were on the brink of winning the gold, before being overtaken by Russia in the dramatic last round. The next generation of players took a leap ahead, with Bu Xiangzhi being the only member of the team both in 2005 and 2015.

Ukraine was in contention for the first place, but a couple of setbacks in the final rounds forced them to take consolation in the team silver medal. The host country Armenia had a shaky start, but they went on to win four matches in the last five rounds to claim the bronze medal.

/ taken from chessdom.com /

View the most bizarre game from the tournament:




World Team Championship 2015 full results
World Team Championship summary 1985-2015
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Posted on 01 May 2015 by Webmaster








Georgia Glorious Winner In Chengdu

With 17 match points out of nine games Georgia was the glorious winner at the 2015 Women's World Team Championship in Chengdu, China. Russia won the silver medals; China took bronze.

The Georgian team, fourth-seeded behind Russia, Ukraine and China, consisted of GM Bela Khotenashvili (2513), IM Lela Javakhishvili (2481), IM Salome Melia (2459), IM Nino Batsiashvili (2473) and the revelation of the recent World Women's Championship, IM Meri Arabidze (2374).

Especially the first and last board contributed strongly to the success. Khotenashvili scored a splendid 7½/9 (the best score of anyone in Chengdu) with three draws and six wins, good for a 2704 performance rating. Arabidze didn't lose either and scored 6/7 (a 2615 TPR).

Georgia started 2-2 against Russia, and then defeated Egypt 4-0 and Poland 2½-1½. This was all covered in FM Mike Klein's first report on the tournament. By now you will have figured out that Georgia finished with six more wins, and that Ukraine and China were among the victims!

Ukraine was beaten 2½-1½ in round five. With draws on boards two, three and four, the key game was GM Bela Khotenashvili versus GM Anna Muzychuk, where Black's opening wasn't great. In a slightly worse position, Muzychuk's 12...Ng4 just dropped a pawn. She would never see it back.



Unlike its male counterpart in Armenia, the Russian team still had a small chance to win gold before the last round. For that, Georgia needed to lose against host country China, but instead it won.

Also in this match three boards were drawn and this time it was IM Meri Arabidze who sealed the deal. We'll surely hear much more from this big talent in the future!



Russia remained unbeaten but after its 2-2 tie with Georgia on the first day, it also played 2-2 with Armenia in round two and against Kazakhstan, as well, in round seven. Russia beat bronze medal winners China in round three. Besides Khotenashvili, IM Lilit Mkrtchian (Armenia, 2443) and WGM Lei Tingjie (China, 2444) had excellent tournaments. Both scored 6.5/9, with 2562 and 2489 TPRs respectively.

The new world champion, IM Mariya Muzychuk, played a solid tournament with three wins and six draws. She was in trouble against USA's Katerina Nemcova but held the draw. The following win was quite interesting:



Team USA had a rough time in China. After its 3-1 win over Egypt (who lost nine times), the USA would play 2-2 with Poland, Kazakhstan and Armenia and lose five times, finishing ninth. However, without GM Irina Krush and IM Anna Zatonskih, the team was also ninth-seeded.

The tournament took place April 19-28 and was organized by the Chinese Chess Association, FIDE and the Chengdu Municipal Government. Alongside, FIDE's first Quarter Presidential Board Meeting was held.

/ Written by Peter Doggers for chess.com /

See full results of 2015 Women's World Team Championship
See all-time summary & statistics
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Posted on 30 Apr 2015 by Webmaster








Gold for Socar and Batumi at ECC, Anand wins Bilbao Masters

European Club CupBig favourite Socar from Azerbaijan confirmed this evening all the predictions, getting the overall European title this evening on the last day of Bilbao Chess 2014. Batumi from Georgia surprised those present by winning the women’s European title, even if they were not initially regarded as strong candidates.

Socar started out as favourite owing to the strong lineup with which they were participating in this year’s European Club Cup, including Topalov and Mamedyarov, two of the world’s top 10 players.

The Bilbao Chess 2014 honour roll was completed at the Grand Slam Masters Final with five-times world champion Viswanathan Anand’s victory. As well as getting the title, the Indian player did his personal best ever in the five times he took part in the Bilbao competition. However, he lost his last game against Aronian, the reigning champion until this evening. With this victory at the Masters Final, Anand, who is also preparing for the World Championship rematch against Magnus Carlsen, who took the title away from him a few months ago, adds to his résumé the one title that was missing so far. The Bilbao Grand Slam Masters Final is one of the most prestigious tournaments in the world, as well as one of the few in reaching level 22, the highest in terms of competitive quality in the chess sphere. Vallejo got his first victory today, this time over Ponomariov.

During the Bilbao Chess 2014 closing ceremony, Bilbao mayor Ibon Areso handed over the trophy and medals to the new European champion. Socar thus replaces Czech G-Team Novy Bor, who surprisingly won the title last year in Rhodess. Gabino Martínez de Arenaza, Provincial Director of Tourism and Foreign Trade, proclaimed Anand winner of the Bilbao Masters Final 2014.

The Indian Grandmaster succeeds his opponent today, Levon Aronian, in the Masters Final title. Aronian has won the title twice, the last one in 2013, just like number 1 in the world ranking and reigning world champion Magnus Carlsen. The list of winners includes Veselin Topalov from Bulgary, who won the first edition back in 2008 (and was also proclaimed winner with Socar in the teams tournament), and his great rival and “worst enemy” Vladimir Kramnik from Russia, who won in 2010.

Players with the best performances on individual boards were also awarded. In the women’s section, the prizes went to Hou Yifan (board 1), Alexandra Kosteniuk (board 2), Anastasia Savina (board 3) and Marina Guseva (board 4). In the Open section, the prizes went to Fabiano Caruana (board 1), Veselin Topalov (board 2), Harikrishna Pentala (board 3), Anish Giri (board 4), Teimour Radjabov (board 5) and Mateusz Bartel (board 6).

The Bilbao Chess 2014 gathered the world chess elite in Bilbao between 14 and 20 September. Participating were 9 of today’s top 10 players in the world and most of the world’s best grandmasters, divided in 60 teams coming from 30 European countries.

/ taken from www.ecuonline.net /

See detailed results of 2014 European Club Cup: men and women

See all-time statistics: men and women
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Posted on 29 Sep 2014 by Webmaster








Czech Team Championship

Czech Rep. Chess UnionChess life in Czechoslovakia was substantial to the development of the game in Central Europe from the very beginning. During the Mid-War period (1919-1939) the Czechoslovak team was one of World's strongest to win no less than two Olympiad medals, led by phenomenal Salo Flohr, who later sought asylum in the Soviet Union. There was no national team championship and the Czechoslovak series commenced only in 1947. Vítkovické železárny (Vitkovice Steel Factory) won the 8 team round robin. There were 46 editions all in all until the ultimate disintegration of the state in 1993. Most wins were recorded by Slavoj Vyšehrad (7x) and Dynamo Prague (6x). Only three titles of 46 were taken by Slovak sides (Slovan Bratislava in 1963 and 1970; Lokomotiva Trnava in 1986). Major successes in team competitions include bronze medal at the European Team Championship in 1957 and silver medal at the Chess Olympiad in Lucerne in 1982.

Once the country split into Czech Republic and Slovakia the leagues part their was too. Of 14 sides from last Czechoslovak league the Czech teams were dominant at 10 to 4. The newly created Czech Extraliga (Česká šachová extraliga) was a 10-team round robin and this format has been kept until today (in 1995 the league was enlarged to 12 teams). The league is usually played in six weekend sessions from late autumn until April. Two bottom teams are relegated to respective second level divisions. Interestingly, much weaker women's league is open for Czech and Slovak teams.

This strong competition saw variety of top players, including grandmasters Dreev, Harikrishna, Wojtaszek, Ponomariov, Rogers, Sasikiran, Shirov and more. Most successful teams are Rapid Pardubice, Lokomotiva Brno, earlier DA Prague and A64 Grygov. Least but not last, Novy Bor team, scoring six league wins to have dominated the league from 2007. Under the flag of their sponsor, the G-Team company, they won bronze medal at the 2011 European Club Cup and finally rallied to a sensational win in Greece in 2013, ahead of a peleton of extremaly strong Russian teams.

Statistics 1992-2013:


See Czech Extraliga summary 1992-2013

See all-time Czech Extraliga statistics
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Posted on 03 Sep 2014 by Webmaster








Tromsø Chess Olympiad: China and Russia claim gold!

Tromsø Chess Olympiad logoThe leaders in both divisions turned up looking confident, the Russian women in particular, who were dressed for success, giving off a celebratory air.

The Chinese men's team was energetic on the board, and they looked intent on guaranteeing themselves the long coveted gold medal, Liren Ding and Yangyi Yu hitting fast and hard on boards two and three. Ding put China ahead in the third hour, and a 3-1 win and Olympiad gold at last seemed just a matter of time.
And so it proved! China could settle their nerves as Ding Liren's board two win over Grzegorz Gajewski was followed by draws on top and bottom boards. The one remaining game was an absolutely unloseable bishops of opposite colors ending where hot man Yangyi Yu had all the chances and eventually brought home the bacon to give the majestic Chinese men's team a first Olympiad gold.

'Blocker' Yue Wang neutralized every tough first board player he met but Peter Leko - and this was the team's only individual loss of the event. The rest of the team was in magnificent form. Rumor had it that a win by Yu in the last round would put him over the magic 2700 barrier - after 10 rounds he had 8.5/10 and a 2902 performance.

Hungary's hopes for silver looked to be dimming, after drawing both White games - they had uphill battles against the Ukraine on the remaining two boards.
All of the matches between medal candidates were open, but the USA had some setbacks - first board Nakamura appeared to be losing against Azerbaijan, and their 'bottom gun', Sam Shankland, could not convert an advantage against Eltaj Safarli on board four - this result means that the US GM had to 'settle' for a final personal score of 9/10.


India supporters noted that the not completely outlandish combination of a China win, draws in the Russia-France and Azerbaijan-USA matches, and an Indian win over Uzbekistan would bring them a medal. The first part quickly looked plausible, and the other matches were predictably close and tense.
Armenia-Czech Republic was a tough last round match with a heavyweight battle on first board. Both teams had hopes for a better result in Tromsø, and although Levon Aronian ended the event with a powerful win over David Navara he was far from satisfied.

The Russian women did not open as strongly as the Chinese men, and the matches in the women's section were still up for grabs in the third hour of play, with Bulgaria definitely having chances to produce the most dramatic of last round upsets against the leaders.


Alexandra Kosteniuk always looked like delivering a full point for the leaders, but the Bulgarians had good winning chances on the top two boards. GM Valentina Gunina conjured up a winning attack from a not completely convincing position on board two to seize control of the match for Russia, and when the bottom board was drawn the first official team medals of the event were recorded.

The chasing Chinese had their hands full with the third seeds, Ukraine, but gradually took over the initiative on the middle boards in a match that’s still too close to call.


Elsewhere the Germans were locked in a sharp battle with 4th seeds Georgia, but their chances to leap into the medals list looked grim as they had uphill climbs on several boards, and Georgia drew first blood with a win on second board from IM Lela Javakhishvili.

Chess Olympiad official Website

Photo gallery

Full OlimpBase data and stats coming soon...
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Posted on 15 Aug 2014 by Webmaster








33rd Mitropa Cup in Slovakia

Mitropa Cup 2014Ružomberok, the city in central Slovakia, hosted the 33rd games of the annual Mitropa Cup: the chess tournament for Central European nations. While most federations decided to focus on promoting promising young players, the tournament enjoys wide interest and participation of many strong GMs. The permanent member of the cycle are Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Slovakia, Slovenia and Switzerland. Poland are reserves and receive invitation in case somebody is missing.

In Open division Hungary, top seeds, took final win beating Germany by 2.5 to 1.5 in the decisive match of last round. GM Acs sealed his team's win in a nice ending vs IM Heimann to conclude with excellent 8/9. While Germany took silver, the home side Slovakia came in third (GM Michalik 7.5/9). Newcomers Poland led by 16-year old prodigy GM Duda finished in 7th.

Italy comfortably won (as usual) women's contest even though they lost to runners-up Germany 0.5-1.5 in round 8. While Austria were third, Hungary's 4th place was taken with 7 draws out of 9 rounds! Hungary's second board Melinda Varga scored 7.5/9 only to see her team-mate struggling at 1.5/9.

WIM Osmandoja of Germany in Women's tournament and GM Acs of Hungary scored 8/9 - top individual results.

See tournament website: http://mitropa.sachrbk.sk

Detailed results of 2014 Mitropa Cup: open and women
Mitropa Cup all-time summary: open and women
Mitropa Cup all-time statistics: open and women
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Posted on 02 Jun 2014 by Webmaster








China grabs Asian Nations double

Irani Chess FederationThe Asian Nations Cup for men and women took place from 20th to 30th May, 2014 in the city of Tabriz, Iran. The event was open to all chess federations in FIDE zones 3.1 to 3.7.

The Asian Nations Cup for men was a 10 team round-robin Team Championship, where each team consisted of 4 players plus 1 reserve. China and India shared first place with 16 points each, but China emerged winner on superior tie-break score. Vietnam, with the 2013 World blitz champion GM Le Quang Liem at the head, took the bronze with 14 points, leaving the nearest contender Kazakhstan 2 points behind.

The Asian Nations Cup for women was played in 5 rounds. The teams consisted of the same number of players (4+1), as the Men’s Section. The last round of the event was crucial. The top seeded team of China crushed Kazakhstan 4:0 to claim the gold with total 15 points. Meanwhile, India couldn’t overplay the local team of Iran and finished equal 2:2 after the more experienced IM Eesha Karavade lost against the young talented Iranian WIM Mitra Hejazipour. Thus India remained second with 13 points, while the team of Iran deservedly grabbed the bronze with 10.5 points.

As blitz championship was introduced back in 2012, this time six sets of medals were prepare: 2 for standard time control, 2 for rapid (new!) and two for blitz. In open section Kazakshtan beat China in the final (!) while China grabbed blitz honours ahead of India. Mighty Chinese female squad easily took gold medals in rapid competition, yet were eliminated in the semifinal of the blitz. India then beat Vietnam in the final.

See tournament website: http://an2014.ircf.ir

Detailed results of 2014 Asian Team Championship: open and women
Asian Team Chess Championship all-time summary: open and women
Asian Team Chess Championship all-time statistics: open and women

Details from rapid and blitz competition taken from chess-results.com
Open - rapid: preliminaries and play-offs
Open - blitz: preliminaries and play-offs
Women - rapid: preliminaries and play-offs
Women - blitz: preliminaries and play-offs

Asian Team Championship 2014 medal table:
1. China        4 gold - 1 silver - 1 bronze
2. India 1 gold - 4 silver - 0 bronze
3. Kazakhstan 1 gold - 0 silver - 1 bronze
4. Vietnam 0 gold - 1 silver - 4 bronze
5. Iran A 0 gold - 0 silver - 3 bronze
6. Iran B 0 gold - 0 silver - 1 bronze


/ based on news from chessdom.com /
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Posted on 01 Jun 2014 by Webmaster








Chinese Chess League (中国国际象棋联赛)

Chinese Chess League European variant of chess (国际象棋 in Chinese) has never been as popular in China as xiangqi, the chess-related game derived from ancient chaturanga. Even though Chinese players had international contacts as early as in 1950s (see "Four unknown international matches China-USSR" for details), the game was banned during the first eight years of the Cultural Revolution. The political thaw allowed chess be played freely in late 1970s. China participated in the 1978 Olympiad and finished in impressive 20th. A memorable Chinese immortal was played then, when obscure Chinese player Liu Wenzhe steamrolled over GM Donner in 20 moves. Chess in China became more and more popular since then, a lot of extremely players appeared, and China women's team won gold Olympic medal as much as four times, while men's selection took silver in 2006. Four Chinese became women's World Champions: Xie Jun, Zhu Chen, Xu Yuhua and Hou Yifan. Ye Rongguang became China's first grandmaster in 1990, and Bu Xiangzhi became World's youngest GM at 13 years back in 1999.

The all-China team competition was established in 2005 and is played on yearly basis. It is called the National Chess League (中国国际象棋联赛) administered by Chinese Chess Association. The format is simple yet powerful: 12 (formerly 10) city/province teams compete in the double round robin tournament. Each match is played on five boards, of which two are women's duels. One selected game per match is rapid. The league usually takes off in late March and lasts until December. Teams are usually named after their primary commercial sponsors.

Though little attention is paid to the ChCL in Europe, it is actually extremely strong and fascinating event. It features many 2700+ grandmasters on regular basis including domestic stars Wang Hao, Wang Yue, Ding Liren, Bu Xiangzhi as well as a bunch of foreign players: Ivanchuk, Ponomariov, Malakhov, Short, Jobava, Motylev, Humpy, Yakovenko, Bologan and many, many more. Strongest teams come from Beijing, Shanghai and Shandong. ChCL is broadly covered live by its governing body, unfortunately only in Chinese: http://www.qipai.org.cn. Badly enough, ChCL managers have not yet discovered that putting together PGN files helps the games be saved for future generations, so ca. 45% games are missing, even from recent years.

Please note: We did our best to provide best quality data and struggled to finally recover every game, every match from the very beginning. However, since there are virtually no credible non-Chinese sources, there may be minor discrepancies; some translations may be awkward or even nonsence. If you are familiar with Chinese chess or you are native Chinese speaker please consider supporting our project. Thank you.

Chinese Chess League 2013 results

Chinese Chess League 2005-2013 summary

Chinese Chess League all-time statistics
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Posted on 24 Feb 2014 by Webmaster








Four Nations Chess League

4NCL The Four Nations Chess League is the three-level event and the only all-national chess team championship held in United Kingdom. Established in 1993, it soon became major event in the UK, attracting top British players as well as dozens of European leading grandmasters. Although nominally all-British, the 4NCL is predominantly English, with participation of few Welsh teams. Scotland and N.Ireland have their own (relatively weak) championships.

The 4NCL gained huge popularity in early 2000s and quickly became one of major chess leagues in Europe. Sadly, due to unstable financial conditions and inadequate funding, the league is not as strong as it could be. 4NCL Champions had problems reaching top positions in the European Club Cup, peaking at 20th in 2003 and 2012.

4NCL featured many top players, including Korchnoi, Shirov, Morozevich, Wojtaszek, Gurevich, Tiviakov, Cramling, Lautier (frankly some of these played very few games) and a bunch of domestic stars: Adams, Nunn, Short, Miles and the likes.

Matches in Division 1 are played on 8 boards and there has to be a woman in the line-up. 16 teams are divided onto two groups of 8, with top 4 from each group forming the Championship Pool. Bottom four from the Relegation Poll are relegated to Division 2. The league is usually played over five weekends, from October until May.

It took a lot of time and cost a lot of effort, but we made it possible to recover every detail from all 20 editions and the full history is now available at one mouse click. Please note that most games from seasons 1994-95 and 1995-96 are not available.

Some 4NCL Division 1 trivia:
All 20 seasons in 4NCL Div/1 - IM Andy Ledger
Most points scored - GM Johny Emms (118)
Most games played - IM Simon Ansell (194)
Most game wins - GM Mark Hebden (87)
Most games drawn - GM John Parker (85)
Least games lost - GM Michael Adams (2/59)
Best percentage (min.30 games) - GM Adams (85.6)
Most 4NCL titles - GM Mark Hebden (11)
Every time on 4NCL podium - GM Glenn Flear (16 times)

4NCL Website - http://www.4ncl.co.uk

4NCL summary 1993-2013 (link: http://www.olimpbase.org/leagueUK/4ncl.html)

4NCL all-time statistics
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Posted on 03 Feb 2014 by Webmaster








Russia are World Champions :: China sprint to silver :: Ukraine in despair

World Team Championship Weeks after conclusion of European Team Championship World's ten leading chess nations met in Antalya, Turkey in the run for World's most prestiguous trophy - The World Team Chess Championship. Eligible to participate were a.o. continental champions and top teams from Istanbul Olympiad. Sadly, Norway, India, Israel and the likes did not qualify so we could not see the magic of Carlsen, Anand, Gelfand, Caruana and others. There were still 18 players rated 2700+.

As Ukraine had a perfect take-off of 5/5, beating USA, China, Azerbaijan on their way, Russia - top seeds - struggled from the very beginning scoring 0.5/2 (Nakamura beat Kramnik and so US beat Russia 3-1). China were no better - 1/3. Newly crowned European Champions Azerbaijan were missing top two boards Radjabov and Mamedyarov, literally reducing their chances to the minimum.

Ukraine's chances broke on day 6 when they unexpectedly lost to the Netherlands. Meanwhile third seeds Armenia lost to Germany to the surprise of many 3-1 and were out of the game. The hit clash occured on penultimate day: Ukraine were in one point lead yet were defeated by the Russians 2.5-1.5 and so the title went to Russia - at last (no gold in Warsaw, no gold at Istanbul Olympiad in 2012, no gold in WTCh in 2011), China spurted to silver reaching sixth consecutive win, while Ukraine won bronze.

Best individual results were achieved by Armenia's top board GM Aronian: 6/8 and the Russian reserve Nepomnyaschy (or Nepomnatchtchi as he is commonly known) 5.5/7.

For more information you can visit the official website of the Championship http://wctc2013.tsf.org.tr/

See results of 2013 World Team Championship

See all-time summary
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Posted on 07 Dec 2013 by Webmaster








European Team Championship: who was and who wasn't there

European Team Championship The Poland-hosted European Team Championship is over, and it is good time for a short statistical review. When it comes to the open section there were 38 teams present out of 56 E.C.U. members, on par with 2009 and 2011 editions, and three under record of 41 from Debrecen, Hungary in 1992. None of 10 European micro-nations arrived (Luxembourg, Faroe Islands, Liechtenstein, Andorra, San Marino, Malta, Cyprus, Monaco, Guernsey and Jersey) as they were set for 4th Small Nations tournament in Monte Carlo. Yet there were some prominent chess nations missing too: Bosnia and Herzegovina (Nikolic, Predojevic), Latvia (Shirov!), Moldova (Bologan), Slovakia who suffer deep structural crisis (Ftacnik, Stohl), Portugal, Estonia, Albania, Ireland. Most of the absentees suffered serious financial constraints and were unable to get enough funds for completing the team.

There were even less teams in the women's section. With 32 teams in the pool the counter may reach its 21st century peak, but it is still far from Debrecen 1992 record of thirty-eight. The following six federations did not send women's team: Sweden (!!), Denmark (!), Scotland, Wales, Montenegro, FYROM. No nation was represented solely by women's selection.


European Team Championship 2013
Teams in orange participated in both open and women's competition,
teams in yellow took part only in open event, teams in white were absent in Warsaw.
Note! Northern Ireland (in grey) are not member of E.C.U.
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Posted on 03 Dec 2013 by Webmaster








European Team Championship: Azerbaijan and Ukraine victorious

European Team Championship The teams of Azerbaijan in the Open section and Ukraine in Women's section are the new winners of the European Team Chess Championship, which was held in Warsaw/Poland 7-18 November, 2013.
Azerbaijan tied with Armenia in the last round, but Russia defeated the leader France in the last round, thanks to the victory of Andreikin, which helped Azerbaijan to win the gold. Silver went to France, and bronze went to Russia.

In the Women's section the leading Ukraine lost to Russia in the last 9th round, but since they were leading by 3 points, they became the winners afterall. Silver medal went to Russia, and bronze to Poland.

The Championship was held under the under the auspices of Bronisaw Komorowski, the President of the Republic of Poland. The organizer was The Polish Chess Federation under the auspices of the European Chess Union. The tournament was played according to the Swiss system in 9 rounds, with the time control 90 minutes for 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game + 30 seconds increment per move starting from move one.

For more information you can visit the official website of the Championship http://etcc2013.com


/ taken from www.europechess.net /

See results of 2013 European Team Championship: men and women

See all-time summary: men and women


Azerbaijani team
Azerbaijan - the winners of open championship
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Posted on 28 Nov 2013 by Webmaster








European Team Championship starts in Warsaw

European Team Championship Shadowed by the World Championship match, yet still important, the 19th European Team Championship commenced on Friday, November 8th in Warsaw, Poland in Novotel Hotel. The biennial event is held under patronage of Polish President Bronisław Komorowski and attracted 38 men's (no Latvia and no Slovakia) and 32 women's teams. As in previous years, the event is nine round Swiss, and the final order is decided by match points.

There is no Carlsen, of course, and Poland, the home side are missing their top board Wojtaszek, Anand's second. Russia have no Kramnik nor Karjakin, but Grischuk and Svidler are there. Ponomariov and Ivanchuk are missing for Ukraine, while Aronian (2801) leads extremely strong Armenian team. Other top rated players to arrive to Warsaw are Caruana (2782), Topalov (2774 - played Aronian in round 1 - these two are the strongest players ever to play a game of chess on Polish soil), Mamedyarov (2757), Adams (2752).

As the games took off, Russia sensationally lost to Turkey by 2.5-1.5 while second seeds Armenia went to a disappointing draw vs Bulgaria. Mighty France seem to be the strongest in the pool. In round 3 they scored thumping 3-1 win over Ukraine. England lost badly to Greece 3-1 on day two, but held Russia on the consecutive day. Czech Republic are in the lead, but this seems rather be lucky pairing so far, and challenges are yet to come.

In the women's section Armenia and Poland are in joint lead at 6 points, both to play each other on Monday. 15th seeds Israel step from one surprise to another: on day two the beat 2nd seeds Russia and then held 3rd seeds Georgia to a draw. Today they must face top seeded Ukraine - what a demanding roll!

Tournament website :: http://etcc2013.com
European Team Championship 1957-2011 summary :: men and women


Wojciech Bartelski makes first move in Svidler-Ivanisevic /RUS-SRB/ game

Wojciech Bartelski, Mayor of Warszawa-Śródmieście district, member of honorary committee,
(and yes! - owner of olimpbase.org) starts game GM Svidler-GM Ivanisević,
Russia-Serbia, round 1, board 1.

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Posted on 11 Nov 2013 by Webmaster








Czech underdogs G-Team are European Champions

European Club CupG-Team Novy Bor from Czech Republic defeated Minsk 4,5-1,5 in the final round in the Open section of the European Club Cup to take a clear first place and win the prestigious trophy.

G-Team Novy Bor won six matches, including the clash with the previous champion and top-seeded SOCAR, and tied only Malachite to conclude the event with 13 match points, one point ahead of the chasing pack.

Malachite took the silver medal thanks to the 4-2 win against PGMB-Rostov. Top two players Alexander Grischuk and Sergey Karjakin decided the match.

SOCAR split the points with Saint-Petersburg (six draws) which was enough for the bronze medal on best tie-break: Olympiad-Sonneborn-Berger.

Also on 11 points but with weaker tie-break are Clichy Echecs 92 and Saint-Petersburg.


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Cercle d’Echecs de Monte-Carlo won all matches in the first six rounds in Women section of the European Club Cup to secure the title of European Champion with one round to spare.

Monte-Carlo proceeded to beat Fischer Chieti 4-0 in the final round. Chess Club BAS and Ugra played 2-2 in the match of many missed chances on both sides. Ugra confirmed their second place and silver medal. On the shared third place are SHSM Nashe Nasledie and Mika Chess Club with 9 points each. SHSM Nashe Nasledie claimed the bronze thanks to the superior tie-break.

This is the fifth title for CE Monte Carlo, after previously winning in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2012.

The club is represented by the reigning World Champion GM Hou Yifan 2609 CHN, former World Championship challenger GM Koneru Humpy 2607 IND, GM Muzychuk Anna 2585 SLO, GM Cramling Pia 2515 SWE and IM Skripchenko Almira 2441 FRA.

/ taken from www.fide.com /

See detailed results of 2013 European Club Cup: men and women

See all-time statistics: men and women
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Posted on 05 Nov 2013 by Webmaster








Tagaytay City win The Dubai Cup on home soil

Asian Cities - Dubai CupTagaytay-Philippines whipped Shah Alam, Malaysia 2.5-1.5 in the ninth and final round to capture the title of the 2013 Asian Cities Chess Team Championship also known as Dubai Cup on Saturday.

Grandmaster Oliver Barbosa downed FM Nicolas Chan after 39 moves of Slav defense on Board 1 while GM Darwin Laylo crushed Mohd Nabi Azman Hisham after 28 moves of Gruenfeld defense on Board 4. GM John Paul Gomez drew with Fong Yit San after 60 moves of Queen's Gambit Declined on board 3 to lead his team to victory.

Li Tian Yeoh upset GM Mark Paragua after 55 moves of Caro-Kann defense on Board 2 to provided full point for Shah Alam, Malaysia.

The win gave Tagaytay finished 17 total match points in the event hosted by NCFP secretary-general Rep. Abraham "Bambol" Tolentino, the Fide Asian Zone 3.3 president in close cooperation with the Tagaytay City government, headed by his wife and mayor, Dr. Agnes Tolentino.

Tagaytay pocketed top prize $3,000 plus Dubai Cup trophy.
Shanghai and Wuxi, China came second to third place with 15 points apiece.
Shanghai crushed Sharjah, UAE, 2.5-1.5, while Wuxi nipped Singapore, 4-0.
Both, Shanghai and Wuxi split the combined prizes of $3,000 for 2nd and 3rd placers.
Tournament director is IA Casto Abundo, while supervising arbiter is IA Gene Poliarco.

See detailed results :: 2013 Asian Cities - Dubai Cup ::

Read more at www.fide.com

/ Taken from National Chess Federation of The Philippines /
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Posted on 03 Nov 2013 by Webmaster






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