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Chinese grandmaster Ju Wenjun is the reigning Women's Speed Chess Champion, [5] and Indian grandmaster Gukesh D is the reigning Junior Speed Chess Champion. [6] In 2020, the Youth Speed Chess Championship and IM Not A GM Speed Chess Championship were introduced as further spin-off events. [7] [8] The 2024 Finals, for the first time, were held ...
The World Chess Federation (FIDE) divides time controls for chess into "classical" time controls, and the fast chess time controls.As of July 2014, for master-level players (with an Elo of 2400 or higher) the regulations state that at least 120 minutes per player (based on a 60-move game) must be allocated for a game to be rated on the "classical" list; [3] for lower-rated players, this can be ...
The 2024 World Blitz Chess Championship was the 4th edition of the annual chess tournament held by FIDE to determine the world champion in chess played under blitz time controls. Since 2012, FIDE has held the World Rapid and Blitz Championships at a joint tournament. The tournament was held in New York City, United States, from 30 to 31 ...
The World Rapid Chess Championship 2024 was the 2024 edition of the annual World Rapid Chess Championship held by FIDE to determine the world champions in chess played under rapid time controls. The tournament was held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City from 26 to 28 December 2024, using a Swiss system with 13 rounds for the open ...
4 Shredder [3] 21 2015 Leiden, Netherlands: 8 Komodo [4] 22 2016 Leiden, Netherlands: 6 Jonny 23 2017 Leiden, Netherlands: 5 Komodo 24 2018 Stockholm, Sweden: 5 Komodo 25 2019 Macau, China: 5 Jonny 26 [a] 2022 Vienna, Austria: 4 Ginkgo and LCZero [5] 27 2023 Valencia, Spain: 4 Fritz: 28 2024 Santiago, Spain: 8 Raptor
On December 08, 2020, Murzin won the 2020 Russian Championship (Juniors). This was his first National Championship title. [4]In the Chess World Cup 2021, where he was seeded 151st, he reached the second round shortly before his 15th birthday, [1] [5] losing to 23rd-seeded Vladislav Artemiev by one point in a tiebreaker. [6]
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Prior to 2012, FIDE sporadically sanctioned a world rapid chess championship. The first official high-profile rapid match took place in 1987, when then-world champion Garry Kasparov defeated Nigel Short in the "London Docklands Speed Chess Challenge" at the London Hippodrome. Kasparov won the match with 4 wins, two losses, and no draws in six ...