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Cairns Chess Queens Award: $100,000 for women who get the GM title

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It is the program of choice for anyone who loves the game and wants to know more about it. Start your personal success story with ChessBase and enjoy the game even more.

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ONLINE SHOP

Understanding middlegame strategies vol.1 - 9.

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In this Video-Course we deal with different dynamic decisions involving pawns. The aim of this Course is to arm club/tournament players with fresh ideas which they can use in their own practice.

€239.90

How to exchange pieces

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Learn to master the right exchange! Let the German WGM Elisabeth Pähtz show you how to gain a strategic winning position by exchanging pieces of equal value or to safely convert material advantage into a win.

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Master Class Vol.16 - Judit Polgar

In this video course, experts (Pelletier, Marin, Müller and Reeh) examine the games of Judit Polgar. Let them show you which openings Polgar chose to play, where her strength in middlegames were, or how she outplayed her opponents in the endgame.

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Innovative educational chess event to take place in Saint Louis

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Grand Chess Tour final in St Louis

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60m English A solid scandinavian surprise

Fritz 19 & opening encyclopaedia 2024.

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The best combination for opening training: The big ChessBase opening encyclopaedia with thousands of opening articles plus Fritz19 at a special price!

€199.90

The surprising 3.d3 against the Caro-Kann

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We boldly confront the Caro-Kann Defense with the upcoming move 1.e4 c6 2.Nf3 d5 3.d3!? With this highly strategic choice, we disrupt Black’s typical patterns and comfort zones and enter an early endgame full of chances for you.

€32.90

How to play the Open Sicilian

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On this all-new ChessBase video course, IM Andrew Martin introduces you to this exciting world, so that you can begin playing the Sicilian in your own games. The main themes and ideas of the Open Sicilian are discussed.

ChessBase Magazine Extra 219

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Videos by Felix Blohberger: A new sacrifice idea against the French and “Mikhalchishin’s Miniatures” (Part 3). “Lucky bag” with 44 analyses by Emanuel Berg, Romain Edouard, Alexandr Fier, Michal Krasenkow, Yago Santiago, Vaibhav Suri and many others.

€14.90

Openings #1 The Open Games

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In 23 video lessons you will learn everything you need to know about the King's Gambit, the Vienna Game, the Italian, the Evans Gambit, the two-knight game, the Scottish, the Steinitz and Berlin defences, the Open Spanish or the exchange variation, Marsha

€29.90

Middlegame Secrets Vol.3 - The Career Paths of Bishops

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In this video course we will explore in depth some familiar concepts regarding the bishops. For example, everyone knows that a bishop-pair should grant him a positional edge.

€34.90

A weapon against the Grunfeld Defence (7.Qa4+)

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With the move 7.Qa4+, Kotyk presents a simplified variation that requires less theoretical knowledge, yet still offering strong attacking potential. You will learn how to respond effectively to your opponent's moves, and steer the game in your favour.

A practical repertoire for the positional player after 1.d4 Vol.1 – 3

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I give promising mainlines for white against all black’s main replies to 1.d4 d5 that are engine-proof, easy to learn and can be played almost instantly.

€89.90

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Bucharest is preparing for the opening of the second stage of the Grand Chess Tour 2024

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Ten of the world’s most valuable chess players (according to the FIDE ranking, at this moment), including one of Romania’s greatest chess players, Bogdan Deac, are preparing for the start of the Superbet Chess Classic Romania 2024 – the second stage of the international Grand Chess Tour (GCT), which will start at the end of June in Bucharest.

The 10 players who start the competition in Bucharest are:

  • Bogdan Daniel Deac: ranked 42nd in the world, number 2 in Romania
  • Fabiano Caruana: ranked 2nd in the world, winner of the Grand Chess Tour 2023
  • Ian Nepomniachtchi: ranked 4th in the world
  • Nodirbek Abdusattorov: ranked 5th in the world
  • Gukesh Dommaraju: ranked 6th in the world
  • Wesley So: ranked 9th in the world
  • Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu: 14th place in the world
  • Anish Giri: 15th in the world
  • Alireza Firouzja: world 16th place, winner of the Grand Chess Tour 2022
  • Maxime Vachier-Lagrave: ranked 20th in the world

grand tour chess

The prize money for the Bucharest leg is $350,000. Prizes for the entire circuit amount to $1.5 million, including $350,000 for the classical chess stage and $175,000 for each of the rapid and blitz chess stages. The 2024 edition will also benefit from a bonus prize pool of $275,000, which will be awarded to the top finishers at the end of the entire tournament.

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Tickets to watch the competition now on sale

The opening ceremony will take place on June 25, at 3.00 PM, at the Grand Hotel Bucharest (Sala Ronda), and will consist of the presentation of the tournament and the players of this stage, the drawing of the competition numbers, followed by the first symbolic move, made by a special guest, as well as a series of moments made with guests, with the participation of the 10 chess grandmasters. The chess competition will take place at the same Grand Hotel Bucharest in the capital from 25 June to 6 July 2024.

Programme of the local stage

  • Monday 24 June: Arrival of the players in Bucharest
  • Tuesday, 25 June: Opening ceremony of the local stage.
  • Wednesday 26 June: Round 1
  • Thursday 27 June: Round 2
  • Friday 28 June: Round 3
  • Saturday 29 June: Round 4
  • Sunday 30 June: Round 5
  • Monday 1 July: Competitive day off
  • Tuesday, 2 July: Round 6
  • Wednesday 3 July: Round 7
  • Thursday, 4 July: Round 8
  • Friday 5 July: Round 9 and Awards Ceremony

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12 child-friendly restaraunts in Bucharest

6/2024

Issue 6/2024

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Download PDF: Business Review Magazine June 2024 Issue

Download PDF: Business Review Magazine June 2024 Issue

Stroke mortality rate in Romania, twice the European average

Nearly 1,000 students from Bucharest and Ilfov participated in the second edition of the “Nature between Waters” Olympiad

Nearly 1,000 students from Bucharest and Ilfov participated in the second edition of the “Nature between Waters” Olympiad

The power of rebranding in 2024

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Festivities Galore at American Continental Championship as Two Americans Qualify for 2025 World Cup!

Loud music and an extravagant traditional dance routine proved no distraction for former world number two GM Alexei Shirov and his 30 simul contestants. “Lightwork, no reaction” as some would say. Indeed, this extravagance was par for the course in Medell ín, Colombia, throughout the 2024 American Continental Championship . 

Video courtesy of Max Lu

This edition of the American Continental Championship was a particularly commemorative event: dedicated to the late FIDE Americas President Jorge Vega “In Memoriam,” and also part of the celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of FIDE. As part of the centennial world tour, FIDE arranged for the Olympic Torch to stop in Medellín: the only official stop in the Americas.

Torch

The Olympic Torch ceremony, of course, couldn’t be complete without a star lineup to headline the festivities and side events: former FIDE World Champion GM Veselin Topalov and the aforementioned Shirov.

With 387 players in the classical division, the tournament was the largest single-tournament turnout for an American Continental Championship! Among the participants were several rising stars including Argentinian ten-year-old prodigy FM Faustino Oro, World Junior Girls’ Champion WGM Candela Francisco (also from Argentina), and our very own former World Junior Champion GM Jeffery Xiong. The tournament also featured an impressive 149 DGT boards to provide a live broadcast of all the games, including for the 326 players in the blitz and 337 players in the rapid events. 

Pantoja

Colombian GM Roberto Pantoja Garcia captured the title this year on an outstanding 9½/11 performance, a full point ahead of the field, making him the first Colombian player to ever win this event. A true family man, he carried his young son with him as he received the first-place award, instantly becoming a fan favorite.

Americans

Ten players, including four Americans, tied for second with 8½/11, including last year’s World Cup qualifiers GM Fidel Corrales Jimenez and IM Kirk Ghazarian as well as GM Jeffery Xiong and IM Justin Wang. On tiebreaks, Xiong and Ghazarian secured the second and fourth qualification spots, respectively. The third qualification spot went to Chilean GM Cristobal Henriquez Villagra.

4

Undefeated with six wins and five draws, Ghazarian repeated his “stalwart” performance from last year. I’ll call him the “Ironman” this year.

In fact, Ghazarian achieved another nine-round GM norm, notching a 2617 performance counting rounds three through 11, as you are allowed to do in a tournament with more than nine rounds. However, after notching a GM norm at last year’s tournament, he already had earned all three GM norms and only needs to cross 2500 to get the title. After this result, his live rating is much closer to that benchmark. 

When I asked Kirk about his reflections on the tournament, he singled out his third-round game as a pivotal moment. Incredibly, he had suffered second-degree burns from an exploding tea-making machine prior to the game and came in with his hand wrapped in a makeshift cast with ice. He kindly provided his own commentary and annotations on the intensely complex battle.

Like Ghazarian, Xiong also gained early momentum with a clean technical victory over Uruguayan GM Andres Rodriguez Vila in round four.

Following their victories, both Xiong and Ghazarian played quite solidly for the next several rounds. Taking up the slack was Corrales, who sought to rebound after suffering his only defeat of the tournament against the author of this article. That game will be annotated for my article in Chess Life magazine, so stay tuned. To compensate for the setback, Corrales played energetic and precise chess, methodically grinding down his opponents. One of his smoothest victories displaying masterful technique came in round nine against Venezuelan Fabian Vivas Zamora. With this critical win, Corrales rejoined the tournament leaders heading into the final rounds.

This same round, I witnessed a peculiar ritual in the (cordoned-off) bathroom. From what I could tell, one of the arbiters was attempting to reach under a bathroom mirror looking for any suspicious devices, and then even got on his knees to check under the sink for cheating devices. “Okay,” I thought, “this is pretty routine given all the other anti-cheating measures taken so far, actually.”

Indeed, the anti-cheating measures were a hot topic of discussion among the players, and they were some of the most robust anti-cheating measures I’ve experienced in a tournament. Two single-file lines snaked across the first-floor playing area prior to each round with four arbiters scanning each player with a handheld metal detector all over their body: legs, arms, backside, shoes, and even checking inside items such as a water bottle! It felt more thorough than TSA security checkpoints ( Editor’s note : at least they didn’t confiscate the water bottles!). Two arbiters were also posted outside the bathrooms, and prior to reentering the tournament hall, every player had to be scanned again by the metal detector.

The measures didn’t stop there. During each round, an arbiter walked through each row of the tournament hall carrying an antennaed signal detector and camera detector. After the round, the arbiter confessed to me that his camera detector had a dual purpose: to check his hotel room for hidden surveillance devices!

But on my next visit to the bathroom, I couldn’t believe my eyes: the antenna-wielding arbiter was on his knees in the stall with the signal and camera detector to check the toilet tank, as well as the area beneath and around the toilet, for any devices. The absurdity! As I was curiously observing this spectacle, another player entered with a furrowed brow and shot me a very perplexed look. At that point, I couldn’t take it anymore; I burst out laughing and rushed out. Later, I felt slightly bad. In reflection, I should’ve been applauding him for ensuring the highest fair-play standards, and I certainly wouldn’t want to be assigned that job, although I’m grateful someone was doing it.

Nonetheless, it was a much-needed laugh after suffering a pair of painful defeats in rounds six and seven (to be elaborated on in print). I was determined to salvage my tournament and end on a high note. Thankfully, I achieved this goal with a decisive win in round ten. But it was Justin Wang’s game that was the most interesting of the round: his command of the initiative against Colombian IM Esteban Valderrama vaulted him to the top of the standings.

Heading into the final round, a win for Wang against Cuban GM Luis Quesada Perez would’ve clinched the GM title (Wang already has two GM norms and a 2500 rating) and a World Cup qualification spot. Such high stakes! When I asked Wang about his strategy and how he planned to prepare for the final round, he nonchalantly shrugged it off and instead divulged his analysis, including precise mathematical calculations, on the various permutations of how he could qualify for the World Cup with a draw; the possibility of becoming a grandmaster was merely a sideshow.

Lu Wang Xiong

On the heels of a dominant 4½/5 stretch to reach 8/10 after his loss to me, Corrales had also put himself in a position where a win would guarantee a World Cup qualification. Ghazarian and Xiong were close behind with the best tiebreaks of the group with 7½/10, setting the stage for an exciting and dramatic finish.

Unfortunately for them, neither Corrales nor Wang were able to convert their advantages into the full point, allowing Ghazarian and Xiong to leapfrog them on tiebreaks. Despite the disappointment, it was all smiles once it was over. Ever the photographic entrepreneur, Corrales was all thumbs up with Topalov, making for an even better photo than his shot with the President of the Dominican Republic last year!

Fidel

With another Continental in the books, I can say with some certainty that it is one of my favorite tournaments. Not only is it a chance to see old friends and make new ones, but there always are unique and fascinating stories to take home.

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The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international chess tournaments and events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best chess players. The Grand Chess Tour's mission is to foster national and international amateur competition in the sport of chess, to promote the educational value of the game of chess, and to popularize the game of chess around the world.

IMAGES

  1. Grand Chess Tour Finals 2019: Day 6

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  2. Grand Chess Tour

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  3. All the eyes of the chess world turn to the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis

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  4. 2019 Paris Grand Chess Tour: Day 2 Recap

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  5. Chess Grandmaster Richard Rapport at the Grand Chess Tour 2023

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  6. Grand Chess Tour 2019: Magnus Carlsen defeats Viswanathan Anand in

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  1. Magnus, Ding star in Aimchess Rapid Play-In! Elite of the Chess World Face-off for a seat in CCT!

  2. AI Cup 2023 Play-In Stage

  3. SUPERBET POLAND RAPID AND BLITZ DAY 1

  4. Alireza: "I was lucky that Magnus got so tilted after game 4"

  5. 2023 Grand Chess Tour

COMMENTS

  1. Home

    2024 Video Highlights: Enjoy key moments from the 2024 Grand Chess Tour . Carlsen's Amazing Comeback: I've Done This Before! Shevchenko Starts 3-0 in Strongest Tournament He Has Ever Played! | D1. Carlsen 'Did Well' vs. Wei Yi, Despite Suspicious Opening | D1.

  2. About

    About: The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The legendary Garry Kasparov, one of the world's greatest ambassadors for chess, inspired the Grand Chess Tour and helped solidify the partnership between the organizers. The History of GCT ...

  3. Grand Chess Tour

    The Grand Chess Tour was announced on April 24, 2015, at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis in St. Louis, Missouri prior to the Battle of the Legends: Garry Kasparov vs Nigel Short match. The tour was designed to promote competitive chess by including all of the top players and then-World Champion Magnus Carlsen in a single ...

  4. Tour News

    Grand Chess Tour Announces Wildcards for Superbet Chess Classic Romania, Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland and SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz Croatia. March 29, 2023 May 6, 2024. Press Release; Full Tour Participants Confirmed For The 2022 Grand Chess Tour And Total Prize Fund Increased To $1.4 Million Across All Five Tournaments.

  5. Grand Chess Tour Announces Wildcards and Full-Tour Line-up

    Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The legendary Garry Kasparov, one of the world's greatest ambassadors for chess, inspired the Grand Chess Tour and helped solidify the partnership between the organizers. All Grand Chess Tour 2024 events ...

  6. Tours

    The 2023 Grand Chess Tour is a series of elite tournaments in which the participating players are eligible to earn Grand Chess Tour Points in accordance with their final rank in each event. At the end of the regular 2023 GCT Season, bonus payments totaling $175,000 will be paid out to the top 3 finishers based on the accumulated GCT Tour Points ...

  7. Grand Chess Tour

    2024 Grand Chess Tour. Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland: ... Superbet Chess Classic Romania: June 24-July 6, 2024 in Bucharest, Romania SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz Croatia: July 8-15, 2024 in Zagreb, Croatia Saint Louis Rapid & Blitz: August 10-17, 2024 in Saint Louis, Missouri, USA

  8. Grand Chess Tour

    Grand Chess Tour, St. Louis, Missouri. 22,382 likes · 352 talking about this · 9 were here. The official Facebook page of the Grand Chess Tour.

  9. The Grand Chess Tour Returns In 2023

    The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The legendary Garry Kasparov, one of the world's greatest ambassadors for chess, inspired the Grand Chess Tour and helped solidify the partnership between the organizers. All Grand Chess Tour 2023 events ...

  10. Grand Chess Tour 2023

    The Grand Chess Tour 2023 was a series of chess tournaments, which was the eighth edition of the Grand Chess Tour. It consisted of five tournaments with a total prize pool of US$1.4 million, including two tournaments with classical time control and three tournaments with faster time controls.

  11. Full Tour Participants confirmed for the 2022 Grand Chess Tour

    The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The legendary Garry Kasparov, one of the world's greatest ambassadors for chess, inspired the Grand Chess Tour and helped solidify the partnership between the organizers. All Grand Chess Tour 2022 events ...

  12. Grand Chess Tour (@GrandChessTour)

    The latest tweets from @GrandChessTour

  13. Grand Chess Tour 2021

    The Grand Chess Tour 2021 was a series of chess tournaments, which was sixth edition of Grand Chess Tour. It consisted five tournaments, including two tournaments with classical time control and three tournaments with faster time controls. It was won by American grandmaster Wesley So.

  14. 2023 Superbet Chess Classic: Round 4

    Live from the Grand Hotel Bucharest, the 4th Superbet Chess Classic is the first of five legs of the Grand Chess Tour. The nine Tour players are joined by a ...

  15. 2021 Grand Chess Tour

    2021 Grand Chess Tour. 2021 Paris Rapid & Blitz - Day 4 Recap. The first day of blitz was a rollercoaster day for many of the players, but the clear storyline was the surge of Alireza Firouzja - from finishing win-less and in last place after the rapid portion of the 2021 Paris Grand Chess Tour to being tied for fourth after today's 6.5/9 ...

  16. The Grand Chess Tour Returns In 2023

    The Grand Chess Tour (GCT), a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players, will return again in 2023. Tour participants will compete for a total prize fund of $1.4 million over the course of the 2023 season. The prize money for each of the two classical tournaments will be ...

  17. Who We Are

    The Grand Chess Tour was created with one goal in mind: a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The 2016 Tour was created in partnership between the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis (Sinquefield Cup) and Chess Promotions, Ltd. (London Chess Classic).

  18. Cairns Chess Queens Award: $100,000 for women who get the GM title

    Grand Chess Tour final in St Louis 11/10/2023 - The first round of the Saint Louis Rapid & Blitz will take place on 14 November. This will be followed by three days of rapid chess and two days of blitz. After a short break, the Sinquefield Cup, a ten-player round-robin with classical time control, begins on 21 November. ...

  19. Bucharest is preparing for the opening of the second stage of the Grand

    Ten of the world's most valuable chess players (according to the FIDE ranking, at this moment), including one of Romania's greatest chess players, Bogdan Deac, are preparing for the start of the Superbet Chess Classic Romania 2024 - the second stage of the international Grand Chess Tour (GCT), which will start at the end of June in Bucharest.

  20. Super United Croatian Grand Chess Tour 2024 ...

    Chess-Results.com is a powerful and dedicated server only for chess-results. The tournament archive of chess-results.com contains more than 40.000 tournaments from around the world. Chess-Results Server Chess-results.com - Super United Croatian Grand Chess Tour 2024 ===

  21. Festivities Galore at American Continental ...

    Loud music and an extravagant traditional dance routine proved no distraction for former world number two GM Alexei Shirov and his 30 simul contestants. "Lightwork, no reaction" as some would say. Indeed, this extravagance was par for the course in Medellín, Colombia, throughout the 2024 American Continental Championship.

  22. World Chess Championship 2024

    The challenger, Gukesh D, qualified by winning the Candidates Tournament 2024 in Toronto, Canada, which was an eight-player double round-robin tournament. It took place from April 3 to April 22, 2024. Fabiano Caruana won the 2023 FIDE Circuit, albeit Caruana became ineligible to qualify via the FIDE Circuit, having already qualified for the Candidates through the Chess World Cup 2023.

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    The paradox of thrift: Understanding economic behavior in recessions. Individually great; collectively painful. Find all you need to know about retirement, investing, and household finance, without the jargon or agenda. Get guidance, insight, and easy-to-understand explanations, verified to Britannica's standards.

  24. 2022 Grand Chess Tour

    Saint Louis, MO, February 16, 2022 - The Grand Chess Tour is pleased to confirm the nine players that will compete as full 2022 tour participants. Read more about Full Tour Participants confirmed for the 2022 Grand Chess Tour and Total Prize Fund Increased to $1.4 million across all five tournaments

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  26. About Us

    The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international chess tournaments and events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best chess players. The Grand Chess Tour's mission is to foster national and international amateur competition in the sport of chess, to promote the educational value of the game of chess, and to ...