2023 in chess

The main events in the 2023 chess calendar are the World Chess Championship 2023[1][2] and Women's World Chess Championship 2023.[3]

Years in chess

2023 in sports

2023 tournaments

TournamentCitySystemDatesPlayers (2700+)WinnerRunner-upThird
Tata Steel MastersNetherlands Wijk aan ZeeRound robin13–29 Jan14 (11)Netherlands Anish GiriUzbekistan Nodirbek AbdusattorovNorway Magnus Carlsen
Tata Steel ChallengersNetherlands Wijk aan ZeeRound robin13–29 Jan14 (0)Germany Alexander DonchenkoTurkey Mustafa YılmazUzbekistan Javokhir Sindarov
WR Chess Masters Germany Dusseldorf Round robin 15–26 Feb 10 (7) Levon Aronian India Gukesh D FIDE Ian Nepomniachtchi
European Individual Chess Championship Serbia Vrnjacka Banja Swiss 3–13 Mar 484 (0) FIDE Alexey Sarana Romania Kirill Shevchenko Belgium Daniel Dardha
American Cup United States St. Louis Double-elimination 17–26 Mar 8 (7) United States Hikaru Nakamura United States Wesley So Levon Aronian
Reykjavik Open Iceland Reykjavik Swiss 29 Mar – 4 Apr 401 (0) Sweden Nils Grandelius Turkey Mustafa Yılmaz India Abhijeet Gupta
Spring Chess Classic United States St. Louis Round robin 5–12 Apr 10 (0) Netherlands Benjamin Bok United States Samuel Sevian Cuba Yasser Quesada
World Chess Championship 2023 Kazakhstan Astana Match 9–30 Apr 2 (2) China Ding Liren FIDE Ian Nepomniachtchi
Menorca Open Spain Menorca Swiss 11–16 Apr 200 (2) India Gukesh D India Pranav V Netherlands Jorden van Foreest
TePe Sigeman & Co Sweden Malmö Round robin 4–10 May 8 (3) FIDE Peter Svidler India Gukesh D United States Abhimanyu Mishra
Superbet Chess Classic Romania Bucharest Round robin 6–15 May 10 (10) United States Fabiano Caruana France Alireza Firouzja United States Wesley So

Women's tournaments

TournamentCitySystemDatesPlayers (2500+)WinnerRunner-upThird
FIDE Women's Grand Prix MunichGermany MunichRound robin1–14 Feb12 (7)Switzerland Alexandra KosteniukIndia Koneru HumpyGeorgia (country) Nana Dzagnidze
European Women's Chess Championship Montenegro Petrovac Swiss 18–29 Mar 136 (0) Georgia (country) Meri Arabidze Poland Oliwia Kiołbasa Poland Aleksandra Maltsevskaya
FIDE Women's Grand Prix New Delhi India Chennai Round robin 24 Mar  6 Apr 10 (5) FIDE Aleksandra Goryachkina Kazakhstan Bibisara Assaubayeva China Zhu Jiner
Women's Candidates Tournament Final China Chongqing Match 27 Mar – 6 Apr 2 (2) China Lei Tingjie China Tan Zhongyi

Rapid & Blitz tournaments

TournamentCitySystemDatesPlayers (2700+)WinnerRunner-upThird
Armageddon Asia & Oceania Germany Berlin Double-elimination 3–9 Apr 8 (7) India Gukesh D Uzbekistan Nodirbek Abdusattorov Russia Vladimir Kramnik
Satty Zhuldyz Rapid & Blitz Kazakhstan Astana Round robin 20–25 Apr 12 (5) Levon Aronian India Arjun Erigaisi Armenia Haik Martirosyan
Salamanca Chess Festival Spain Salamanca Round robin 26–29 Apr 8 (1) FIDE Kirill Alekseenko Spain Jaime Santos Latasa Ukraine Vasyl Ivanchuk
Bucharest Grand Prix Rapid Romania Bucharest Swiss 29–30 Apr 317 (2) FIDE Maksim Chigaev Romania Bogdan-Daniel Deac India Pentala Harikrishna

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.