Chess Federation of Canada explained

Chess Federation of Canada
Formation:1872
Native Name:Fédération canadienne des échecs
Abbreviation:CFC (English)
FCE (French)
Formerly:Canadian Chess Association (1872–1932)
Headquarters:Burlington, Ontario
Region:Canada
Membership: 2,547[1]
Membership Year:2022
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Vlad Drkulec
Leader Title2:Vice President
Leader Name2:Olga Mushtaler
Leader Title3:Executive Director
Leader Name3:Robert Gillanders
Affiliations:FIDE, Confederation of Chess for America
Website:https://www.chess.ca/en/

The Chess Federation of Canada or CFC (French name: Fédération canadienne des échecs) is Canada's national chess organization. Canadian Chess Association, founded in 1872, was replaced in 1932 by the Canadian Chess Federation (CCF), which for the first time included representation from all major cities in Canada. In 1945 the name was changed to avoid confusion with the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. The CFC organizes tournaments and publishes national ratings. The highest rated player in Canada is Evgeny Bareev of Toronto.[2]

Activities

From 1974 to 2008 the CFC published a bi-monthly magazine called Chess Canada. Its former titles were En Passant and CFC Bulletin. The magazine reported on the latest important tournaments in Canada, especially those with Grandmaster-strength players, including many game scores. The magazine also printed the top ratings of several age groups and top overall in Canada. Chess Canada also posted notices of upcoming tournaments across Canada. It has since been replaced with an online magazine, which contains many of the same functions. The editor is John Upper.

The CFC organizes the Canadian Open every July. The first Canadian Open was held in Montreal in 1956 and saw the participation of Bobby Fischer. In recent years, the tournament has increased in prestige, becoming a part of the ACP Tour in 2007.http://canchess.blogspot.com/2007/07/association-of-chess-professionals.html Previous editions attracted Boris Spassky, Paul Keres, Bent Larsen, Ljubomir Ljubojević, Alexei Shirov, Vasily Ivanchuk and Nigel Short. The Canadian Youth Chess Championships are usually held just prior to the Canadian Open at the same location.

The CFC organizes a national championship every one or two years. As Canada is a FIDE Zone, many players earn their International Master or FIDE Master title in the Canadian Chess Championship. In addition, the CFC runs the Canadian Women's and Canadian Junior Championship. It also sends men's and women's teams to Chess Olympiads held every other year.

Ratings system

The CFC uses the Elo rating system. CFC ratings for a player tend to be around fifty points higher than United States Chess Federation ratings and ninety points higher than FIDE ratings.[3]

CFC Titles

The CFC awards National Master titles to players who perform at a high level.[4] They are awarded to players with a published, non-provisional CFC rating of 2200, and (at any point) three "norms", which are performances of 2300, comprising at least five games each. The other option is getting a non-provisional CFC rating of 2300 at any point.

List of CFC titled players

Current Champions

as of 2023

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.chess.ca/en/cfc/membership-statistics/
  2. http://chess.ca/players Rating List
  3. Web site: CFC Ratings vs FIDE Ratings . 2014-01-20 . 2013-10-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131023024258/http://chess.ca/cfc-vs-fide-rating-comparison . dead .
  4. Web site: CFC Titles . Chess.ca . 12 April 2021 .
  5. Web site: International Chess Federation - FIDE. 2019-08-31. 2019-06-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20190617234543/https://www.fide.com/component/content/article/4-tournaments/11560-bareev-wins-the-american-zonal-22.html. dead.
  6. Web site: Maili-Jade Ouellet championne d'échecs du Canada. 2018-01-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20180104192456/http://fqechecs.qc.ca/article/maili-jade-ouellet-championne-dechecs-du-canada. 2018-01-04. dead.