Xtracon Chess Open
The Xtracon Chess Open (formerly the Politiken Cup) is an international chess tournament and the main feature event of the annual Copenhagen Chess Festival.
History
Organized by the Copenhagen Chess Federation (KSU), it was originally set up to give Danish players the opportunity of international experience and title norms. Starting from modest means in 1979, with just 22 contestants, it has grown to become one of the world's largest and most respected open chess tournaments, with numbers of participants rising to 200 in 2003, and nowadays reaching well in excess of 400.
The tournament has attracted many of the world's strongest grandmasters as well as promising youngsters. Former world champion Vassily Smyslov was among the winners in 1980[1] and 1986,[2] while other notable winners have included Viktor Korchnoi as clear first in 1996 at the age of 65 and Nigel Short in 2006.[3] At the Politiken Cup in 2003, Magnus Carlsen achieved his third and final IM norm.
The early editions were held in Copenhagen and its suburbs, before moving to Helsingør. The tournament has always taken the format of a large "Open", accessible to both titled and non-titled players, except in 1983, when there was an invite-only, all-play-all Grandmaster event and a subsidiary Open tournament aimed at International Master level.
In later years the tournament has taken place during July/August, over 10 rounds, at the Konventum, a convention centre and resort set in the scenic surroundings of Helsingør.
From 1979 to 2015, the main sponsor was the Danish daily newspaper Politiken, but new arrangements have been announced for 2016–2018. The main sponsor is now Xtracon A/S, a Danish IT company with a chess playing owner. Accordingly, the tournament has been renamed to reflect the change, although it is anticipated that the format will remain broadly the same.[4]
List of winners (Politiken Cup)
# | Year | Winners | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1979 | Carsten Høi | 7½ (10) |
2 | 1980 | Vassily Smyslov, Adrian Mikhalchishin | 7½ (10) |
3 | 1981 | Petar Velikov, Tom Wedberg, Shaun Taulbut | 7½ (10) |
4 | 1982 | Tom Wedberg | 7½ (10) |
5 | 1983 | István Csom, Sergey Kudrin | 5½ (9) |
6 | 1984 | Nick de Firmian, Aleksander Sznapik | 7½ (10) |
7 | 1985 | Karel Mokry | 7½ (10) |
8 | 1986 | Vassily Smyslov, Alexander Chernin, Evgeny Pigusov, Laszlo Cserna | 7 (10) |
9 | 1987 | Bjørn Brinck-Claussen | 7½ (10) |
10 | 1988 | Rafael Vaganian | 8 (10) |
11 | 1989 | Lars Karlsson, Aleksander Sznapik, Jens Kristiansen | 7½ (10) |
12 | 1990 | Konstantin Lerner | 7½ (10) |
13 | 1991 | Yuri Dokhoian, Yuri Piskov | 8 (10) |
14 | 1992 | Sergey Smagin, Matthew Sadler, John Emms, Avigdor Bykhovsky | 7½ (10) |
15 | 1993 | Igor Khenkin, John Emms, Henrik Danielsen | 7½ (10) |
16 | 1994 | Valery Neverov, Michail Brodsky | 7½ (10) |
17 | 1995 | Lars Bo Hansen | 8 (10) |
18 | 1996 | Viktor Korchnoi | 8½ (11) |
19 | 1997 | Helgi Grétarsson, Carsten Høi, Erling Mortensen, Lars Schandorff | 8½ (11) |
20 | 1998 | Hannes Stefánsson, Daniel Gormally, Tiger Hillarp Persson Lars Schandorff, Nikolaj Borge | 8½ (11) |
21 | 1999 | Alexander Baburin, Tiger Hillarp Persson | 8½ (11) |
22 | 2000 | Boris Gulko, Lars Bo Hansen, Jonny Hector | 8½ (11) |
23 | 2001 | Mikhail Gurevich, Alexander Rustemov, Peter Heine Nielsen Lev Psakhis, Nick de Firmian | 8½ (11) |
24 | 2002 | Sergei Tiviakov, Alexander Beliavsky, Rubén Felgaer | 8½ (11) |
25 | 2003 | Krishnan Sasikiran | 9 (11) |
26 | 2004 | Darmen Sadvakasov, Leif Johannessen, Nick de Firmian | 8 (10) |
27 | 2005 | Konstantin Sakaev | 8 (10) |
28 | 2006 | Vadim Malakhatko, Nigel Short, Jonny Hector | 7½ (9) |
29 | 2007 | Michal Krasenkov, Gabriel Sargissian, Emanuel Berg Nick de Firmian, Vladimir Malakhov | 8 (10) |
30 | 2008 | Sergei Tiviakov, Vladimir Malakhov, Yuriy Kuzubov Peter Heine Nielsen, Boris Savchenko, Jonny Hector | 8 (10) |
31 | 2009 | Parimarjan Negi, Boris Avrukh | 8½ (10) |
32 | 2010 | Pavel Eljanov | 8½ (10) |
33 | 2011 | Igor Kurnosov | 8½ (10) |
34 | 2012 | Ivan Cheparinov, Ivan Sokolov, Jonny Hector | 8 (10) |
35 | 2013[5] | Parimarjan Negi | 9 (10) |
36 | 2014[6] | Bu Xiangzhi | 9 (10) |
37 | 2015[7] | Markus Ragger, Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu, Jon Ludvig Hammer Laurent Fressinet, Tiger Hillarp Persson, Sam Shankland Sébastien Mazé, Mihail Marin, Sune Berg Hansen, Vitaly Kunin | 8 (10) |
List of winners (Xtracon Chess Open)
# | Year | Winners | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 2016 | Matthias Blübaum, Alexei Shirov, Bassem Amin, Jonathan Carlstedt Mihail Marin, Jon Ludvig Hammer, Jean-Marc Degraeve | 8 (10) |
2 | 2017 | Baadur Jobava | 8½ (10) |
3 | 2018 | Jon Ludvig Hammer, Dmitry Andreikin[8] | 8½ (10) |
4 | 2019 | R Praggnanandhaa | 8½ (10) |
References
- ^ British Chess Magazine 1980, p.473
- ^ British Chess Magazine 1986, p.392
- ^ Brief description and year by year tournament results in more detail
- ^ Xtracon sponsorship
- ^ Parimarjan Negi Wins Politiken Cup
- ^ Bu Xiangzhi convincing in Politiken Cup
- ^ Markus Ragger Wins Politiken Cup (on tie-break from 9 others)
- ^ Sjakk-Hammer slo vidunderbarn (13) og vant turnering
External links
- Xtracon Chess Open and Festival Website
- The Konventum Centre
- Chess Results: Politiken Cup 2015
- Chess Results: Xtracon Open 2016
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