Chess World Cup 2017 Explained

FIDE Chess World Cup 2017
Sport:Chess
Location:Tbilisi, Georgia
Start Date:2 September 2017
End Date:27 September 2017
Administrator:FIDE
Tournament Format:Single elimination tournament
Host:Chess Federation of Georgia
Teams:-->
Champion: Levon Aronian
Runners-Up1: Ding Liren
Runner-Up2:-->
Previous:2015
Next:2019

The Chess World Cup 2017 was a 128-player single-elimination chess tournament, held in Tbilisi, Georgia, from 2 to 27 September 2017. It was won by Armenian grandmaster Levon Aronian. This was the second time he had won the Chess World Cup, 12 years after his first win in 2005. It was the 7th edition of the Chess World Cup.

The top two finishers in the tournament, Aronian and Ding Liren, qualified for the Candidates Tournament 2018 for the World Chess Championship 2018.[1]

Bidding process

At the 85th FIDE Congress held during the 41st Chess Olympiad, FIDE received bids to host the World Cup 2017 and 2018 Olympiad from the national federations of Georgia and South Africa.[2] South Africa proposed Sun City and Durban as venues, while Georgia proposed Tbilisi and Batumi respectively.[3] Although Garry Kasparov expressed support for the South African bid during his FIDE presidential campaign,[4] Georgia's bid won, receiving 93 votes to South Africa's 58.[5]

Format

The tournament was a knock-out format, with the exception that there was a provision for the two semi-final losers to play off for third place if necessary (see

  1. Candidates qualification
).

Matches consist of two regular time limit games (except for the final, and playoff for third if required, which consist of four regular time limit games). For these two games, players have 90 minutes for the first 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of 30 seconds per move from the start of the game.

If a match is tied after the regular games, tie breaks will be played the next day. The format for the tie breaks is as follows:

Candidates qualification

The tournament qualified two players for the 2018 Candidates Tournament.

However Magnus Carlsen (world champion) and Sergey Karjakin (already seeded to the Candidates) had no need for qualification, and both participated in the tournament (even though it is highly unusual for the defending champion to do so). So the rules were actually that the top two finishers other than Carlsen and Karjakin would qualify for the Candidates. This meant there was provision for a match for third place, between the two semi-final losers, if necessary.[6]

As it turned out, both Carlsen and Karjakin were eliminated in the first three rounds, so the two Candidates qualifiers were simply the two finalists: Armenia's Levon Aronian and China's Ding Liren.

Schedule

Each of the first six rounds takes three days: one day each for the two regular time limit games, then a third day for tie breaks, if required. The final round has four days of regular time limit games, then a fifth day for tie breaks, if required.

All rounds begin at 15:00 local time (11:00 UTC).

Prize money

Round Prize Total
Round 1 64 × US $6,000 US $384,000
Round 2 32 × US $10,000 US $320,000
Round 3 16 × US $16,000 US $256,000
Round 4 8 × US $25,000 US $200,000
Round 5 4 × US $35,000 US $140,000
Round 6 2 × US $50,000 US $100,000
Runner-up US $80,000 US $80,000
Winner US $120,000 US $120,000
Total US $1,600,000

According to the regulations, all players have to pay their own expenses for travel, and 20% of each player's prize money goes to FIDE.[7]

Participants

The participants[8] are seeded by their FIDE rating of August 2017. All players are grandmasters unless indicated otherwise.

  1. , 2822 (World Champion)
  2. , 2810 (R)
  3. , 2807 (R)
  4. , 2803 (R)
  5. , 2799 (R)
  6. , 2797 (R)
  7. , 2792 (R)
  8. , 2789 (R)
  9. , 2783 (R)
  10. , 2783 (R)
  11. , 2777 (R)
  12. , 2773 (WC)
  13. , 2772 (WC)
  14. , 2753 (AS16)
  15. , 2751 (R)
  16. , 2751 (WC)
  17. , 2745 (E16)
  18. , 2744 (R)
  19. , 2744 (R)
  20. , 2743 (R)
  21. , 2742 (ON)
  22. , 2739 (AS16)
  23. , 2738 (R)
  24. , 2737 (E16)
  25. , 2734 (WC)
  26. , 2731 (E17)
  27. , 2729 (R)
  28. , 2728 (E17)
  29. , 2728 (ACP)
  30. , 2724 (E16)
  31. , 2717 (E16)
  32. , 2715 (E17)
  33. , 2710 (AS17)
  34. , 2710 (R)
  35. , 2707 (E16)
  36. , 2707 (E17)
  37. , 2706 (R)
  38. , 2702 (AS17)
  39. , 2702 (E16)
  40. , 2702 (E17)
  41. , 2696 (E16)
  42. , 2695 (E17)
  43. , 2693 (AS17)
  44. , 2692 (E17)
  45. , 2692 (PN)
  46. , 2687 (E16)
  47. , 2687 (E16)
  48. , 2682 (Z2.1)
  49. , 2680 (AF)
  50. , 2677 (PN)
  51. , 2675 (R)
  52. , 2675 (E17)
  53. , 2666 (E16)
  54. , 2665 (E17)
  55. , 2662 (Z2.1)
  56. , 2660 (E17)
  57. , 2654 (E17)
  58. , 2654 (E16)
  59. , 2652 (E17)
  60. , 2652 (PN)
  61. , 2652 (E17)
  62. , 2650 (E16)
  63. , 2650 (Z2.5)
  64. , 2648 (E16)
  65. , 2648 (AM17)
  66. , 2646 (E17)
  67. , 2646 (E17)
  68. , 2645 (E16)
  69. , 2644 (E16)
  70. , 2644 (E16)
  71. , 2643 (AM17)
  72. , 2642 (E17)
  73. , 2641 (Z2.4)
  74. , 2641 (AM16)
  75. , 2640 (E16)
  76. , 2640 (E17)
  77. , 2633 (J16)
  78. , 2629 (AM16)
  79. , 2629 (Z3.3)
  80. , 2628 (E17)
  81. , 2627 (Z2.1)
  82. , 2627 (E16)
  83. , 2620 (AM17)
  84. , 2618 (AS16)
  85. , 2615 (E17)
  86. , 2614 (AM17)
  87. , 2606 (E16)
  88. , 2596 (E17)
  89. , 2591 (E16)
  90. , 2590 (ON)
  91. , 2589 (AS16)
  92. , 2586 (E16)
  93. , 2585 (ON)
  94. , 2580 (E17)
  95. , 2580 (J15)
  96. , 2580 (AM16)
  97. , 2579 (AM17)
  98. , 2579 (Z3.7)
  99. , 2577 (PN)
  100. , 2576 (AS16)
  101. , 2575 (AS17)
  102. , 2573 (E16)
  103. , 2573 (AM17)
  104. , 2565 (AM16)
  105. , 2556 (N)
  106. , 2555 (AS17)
  107. , 2551 (E17)
  108. , 2545 (PN)
  109. , 2543 (Z2.3)
  110. , 2537 (Z2.5)
  111. , 2533 (Z3.1)
  112. , 2531 (Z2.4)
  113. , 2529 (Z3.4)
  114. , 2525 (E16)
  115. , 2522 (Z2.2)
  116. , 2519 (ON)
  117. , 2508 (Z3.6)
  118. , 2487 (Z4.1)
  119. , 2478 (Z3.3)
  120. , 2455 (Z4.2)
  121. , 2455 (Z3.4)
  122. , 2454 (Z3.2)
  123. , 2451 (Z3.5)
  124. , 2449 (AF)
  125. , 2427 (Z3.5)
  126. , 2398 (Z4.3)
  127. , 2377 (Z2.3)
  128. , 2255 (Z4.4)

Qualification paths

Results, rounds 1–4

Section 8

Results, rounds 5–7

Finals

SeedNameAug 2017 rating1234R1R2Total
5align=left 2799½ ½½½114
11align=left 2777½½½½002

Dress code controversy

Shortly before the third-round game between Anton Kovalyov and Maxim Rodshtein was due to start, Kovalyov was questioned by the arbiter about the knee-length Bermuda shorts he was wearing, the same pair he wore in the first two rounds. Tournament organizer Zurab Azmaiparashvili then approached Kovalyov, stating that his attire violated the FIDE dress code and that he would be punished financially if he did not change what he was wearing.[10] Kovalyov explained that he also wore shorts in the 2015 World Cup without incident, but Azmaiparashvili objected and said that Kovalyov's clothing made him "look like a gypsy."[11] Kovalyov interpreted this as a racial slur.[12] Kovalyov then left the tournament hall and did not return, thus forfeiting the game. He also checked out of his hotel and booked a flight for Dallas, where he is studying for a master's degree in Computer Science technology at the University of Texas.[11] The Chess Federation of Canada filed a formal complaint about the incident.[10] [13] FIDE issued a report on the incident on October 1.[14]

Notes

  1. https://www.fide.com/FIDE/handbook/regscandidates2018.pdf Rules & regulations for the Candidates Tournament of the FIDE World Championship cycle 2016-2018
  2. Web site: 85th FIDE Congress: General Assembly Minutes and Annexes . 27 October 2014 . FIDE . 16 September 2016.
  3. Web site: FIDE Congress Tromso, Norway General Assembly 11- 14 August 2014 . 17 September 2016.
  4. Web site: Kasparov Replies: "Whom Will You Support?" . 8 June 2014 . 16 September 2016.
  5. Web site: Batumi to Host Olympiad-2018 . 14 August 2014 . Chess-News.ru . 16 September 2016.
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMJQ4r_N-J4 Video of players' meeting
  7. http://fide.com/FIDE/handbook/WorldCup2017Regulations.pdf "Regulations for the FIDE World Chess Cup 2017"
  8. http://www.fide.com/images/stories/NEWS_2017/FIDE_News/World_Cup_2017/World_Cup_Participants.pdf "Participants of the World Cup 2017"
  9. Guadalupe, Franc (2017-06-19). "GM Samuel Sevian wins Continental Championship". US Chess.
  10. https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2017/09/11/chess-federation-fuming-over-treatment-of-canadian-grandmaster-who-was-berated-over-wearing-shorts-at-tournament.html "Chess federation fuming over treatment of Canadian grandmaster who was berated over wearing shorts at tournament"
  11. https://www.chess.com/news/view/dress-code-incident-at-world-cup-kovalyov-forfeits "Dress Code Incident At World Cup: Kovalyov Forfeits"
  12. Web site: The shorts episode at the FIDE World Cup 2017 . Shah . Sagar . 2017-09-09. Chess News. ChessBase.
  13. http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/10413-letter-from-chess-federation-of-canada.html "Letter from Chess Federation of Canada"
  14. http://en.chessbase.com/post/the-kovalyov-report The Kovalyov Report

[15] [16] [17] [18]

External links