Asian Chess Championship Explained

The Asian Chess Championship is a chess tournament open to all players from Asian chess federations (FIDE zones from 3.1 to 3.8). It's held with the Swiss system and consists in two divisions, Open and Women's, the latter of which is reserved to female players. Both sections determine the Asian champions and qualify a certain number of players for the FIDE World Cup and knockout Women's World Chess Championship respectively. The Championship is regulated by the Asian Chess Federation.

The 2007 championship was a FIDE Zone 3 qualification event for the 2007 Chess World Cup, the next stage in the 2010 World Chess Championship. Ten players qualified for the 2007 World Cup: Zhang Pengxiang (China), Wang Hao (China), Abhijit Kunte (India), Zhao Jun (China), Susanto Megaranto (Indonesia), Wen Yang (China), Darwin Laylo (Philippines), Zhou Jianchao (China), G. N. Gopal (India), Hossain Enamul (Bangladesh).[1]

Ten players qualified for the 2009 Chess World Cup: Ganguly Surya Shekhar (India), Zhou Weiqi (China), Yu Yangyi (China), Yu Shaoteng (China), Lê Quang Liêm (Vietnam), Rogelio Antonio Jr. (Philippines), Hou Yifan (China), Zhou Jianchao (China), Chanda Sandipan (India), and Sasikiran Krishnan (India).

Winners

Nr Year City Winner
1 1998
2 2000
3 2001
4 2003
5 2005
6 2007
7 2009
8 2010
9 2011
10 2012
11 2013
12 2014
13 2015
14 2016
15 2017
16 2018
17 2019
18 2022
19 2023

Women's winners

1 1981
2 1983
3 1985
4 1987
5 1991
6 1996
7 1998
8 2000
9 2001
10 2003
11 2004
12 2007
13 2009
14 2010
15 2011
16 2012
17 2013
18 2014
19 2015
20 2016
21 2017
22 2018
23 2019
24 2022
25 2023

See also

Notes

  1. http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/3-news/1653-144-list-of-qualifiers-for-the-world-cup-2007 List of Qualifiers for the World Cup 2007

References