U.S. Chess Championships Begin In St. Louis
The U.S. Championship and U.S. Women's Championship both return to St. Louis tonight through April 30. The events are being hosted by the Saint Louis Chess Club, now for the 10th straight year. The opening ceremony is tonight, and round-one games start tomorrow.
Much is new, yet so much is the same.
The club has a new name (gone is the clunky "Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis"). After a few experimental and creative organizational efforts in the early years, the format is now fairly static: two simple, 12-player round robins, with one rest day.
The $64,000 Fischer Prize is back for anyone able to score a perfect 11-0, but no one has gotten even more than halfway there, so Rex Sinquefield's money seems safe.
For the first time in this decade-long run, GM Gata Kamsky declined his invitation (with no reason given to the club). The world-record-setting chess piece outside the club has grown though.
Checkmate: #STL reclaims title as home of world's largest chess piece https://t.co/a8QquPHMtc via @stltoday
— SaintLouis ChessClub (@STLChessClub) April 14, 2018
And the big stars keep showing up. Returning this year will be America's "big three"—GM Fabiano Caruana, GM Hikaru Nakamura, and GM Wesley So, themselves the last three winners of the event.
Caruana is also going for a "big three" of his own, having just come off tournament wins at the Candidates' and at Grenke. So has not played a classical event since Berlin, while for Nakamura you have to go all the way back to February at the Gibraltar Chess Festival.
Before another preview this writer penned about the U.S. Championship, a poll was conducted asking fans: In a bet, would they prefer the three highest-rated GMs, or the "field" if given the collective choice of those nine players to win the title. A lopsided 87 percent would take the big three.
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Here's the full field. Note that players are invited based on USCF rating but we've posted their FIDE rating below.
2018 U.S. Championship (Open) | Participants
No. | U.S. | Fed | Name | Rating | B-Year |
1 | 1 | GM Caruana, Fabiano | 2804 | 1992 | |
2 | 2 | GM Nakamura, Hikaru | 2787 | 1987 | |
3 | 3 | GM So, Wesley | 2786 | 1993 | |
4 | 4 | GM Onischuk, Alexander | 2672 | 1975 | |
5 | 5 | GM Shankland, Samuel | 2671 | 1991 | |
6 | 7 | GM Xiong, Jeffery | 2665 | 2000 | |
7 | 8 | GM Robson, Ray | 2660 | 1994 | |
8 | 9 | GM Akobian, Varuzhan | 2647 | 1983 | |
9 | 10 | GM Zherebukh, Yaroslav | 2640 | 1993 | |
10 | 13 | GM Lenderman, Aleksandr | 2599 | 1989 | |
11 | 13 | GM Izoria, Zviad | 2599 | 1984 | |
12 | 23 | GM Liang, Awonder | 2552 | 2003 |
For the field, So qualifies as the returning champion. The rest qualify based on rating, except for GM Alex Lenderman, who got the automatic spot from the 2017 U.S. Open, and GM Yaroslav Zherebukh, the lone wildcard, and GM Awonder Liang, the 2017 U.S. Junior Champion.
There's another subplot to the event: qualification for the Olympiad team, which will be trying to defend its gold medal in Batumi, Georgia in September. Traditionally the winner of the U.S. championship in an Olympiad year earns an automatic spot. If one of the big three wins, that will be a moot point since he would qualify by rating anyway.
Outside of the automatic berth, this is the last event usually counted for rating qualification. Nakamura, So, and Caruana are of course safe. But several others are in a tight battle:
About to fly to Saint Louis to do live audience commentary for the @STLChessClub at the US Championships. Essential question: has anyone calculated how Shankland/Xiong/Robson/Onischuk need to perform in order to qualify for the Olympiad? They’re all so close! @USChess @ChessMike
— Robert L. Hess II (@GM_Hess) April 17, 2018
On the ladies' side, the "big two" return: GM Irina Krush and IM Anna Zatonskih, although they haven't protected their hegemony like the men have. After combining to win nine straight titles from 2007-2015, in the last two years a few newcomers have pushed them aside (IM Nazi Paikidze in 2016 and WGM Sabina Foisor in 2017).
Krush is still stuck on seven. She needs three more to set the all-time record for most U.S. women's championships.
A similar poll was conducted on Twitter asking if fans would prefer to take Krush+Zatonskih or the 10-player field. This time, a reversal, as about two-thirds wanted the masses.
Identifying a third leading lady is not so easy since there are several contenders. Paikidze has one title under her belt and has never had a bad U.S. championship. Foisor is the returning champion of course, while WGM Tatev Abrahamyan is more overdue than your car for an oil change.
FM Jennifer Yu leads the crop of young stars; she's actually third highest-rated in FIDE. With GM Larry Christiansen as her coach (himself a three-time winner of the U.S. championship), all Yu did was go 3-0 against Krush, Zatonskih and Paikidze last year, who were the three previous winners of the event.
2018 U.S. Women's Championship | Participants
No. | U.S. | Fed | Name | Rating | B-Year |
1 | 1 | IM Zatonskih, Anna | 2444 | 1978 | |
2 | 2 | GM Krush, Irina | 2422 | 1983 | |
3 | 3 | FM Yu, Jennifer | 2367 | 2002 | |
4 | 4 | WGM Abrahamyan, Tatev | 2366 | 1988 | |
5 | 5 | IM Paikidze, Nazi | 2352 | 1993 | |
6 | 6 | FM Wang, Annie | 2321 | 2002 | |
7 | 8 | WGM Foisor, Sabina-Francesca | 2308 | 1989 | |
8 | 9 | IM Derakhshani, Dorsa | 2306 | 1998 | |
9 | 9 | IM Goletiani, Rusudan | 2306 | 1980 | |
10 | 12 | WGM Sharevich, Anna | 2281 | 1985 | |
11 | 13 | FM Gorti, Akshita | 2252 | 2002 | |
12 | 14 | FM Feng, Maggie | 2243 | 2000 |
You can follow all the action at the official website, on www.Chess.com/TV, or at www.twitch.tv/chess. Games will be daily at 1 p.m. Central Time (11 a.m. Pacific, 2 p.m. Eastern, 6 p.m. UTC) from April 18-30, with April 24 the lone rest day.
Chess.com is on site and will be bringing you daily reports and video interviews.
The stalwart commentary team of GM Yasser Seirawan, WGM Jennifer Shahade, and GM Maurice Ashley, returns. If you look closely at the picture, it seems a mystery guest from Poland might even be joining the team!
GM @MauriceAshley doing some #USChessChamps promotion at the #WorldChessHOF this morning. Tune in to his commentary tomorrow at 12:50 PM on https://t.co/o8w71ZPMbV! pic.twitter.com/UhAOkZDFnK
— SaintLouis ChessClub (@STLChessClub) April 17, 2018
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