Chess tournament in Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia
TheChess World Cup 2019 was a 128-playersingle-eliminationchess tournament that took place inKhanty-Mansiysk, Russia, from 9 September to 4 October 2019.[1] It was won by Azerbaijani grandmasterTeimour Radjabov. He and the runner-up,Ding Liren, both qualified for theCandidates Tournament for theWorld Chess Championship 2021. It was the 8th edition of theChess World Cup.
Levon Aronian, the winner of theChess World Cup 2017, advanced to the quarterfinals before being eliminated byMaxime Vachier-Lagrave on tiebreaks. Vachier-Lagrave was eliminated by Radjabov in the semi-finals, but defeatedYu Yangyi to claim 3rd place.
There was only one bid received for the combinedFIDE World Cup and Olympiad events, which was done by theYugra Chess Federation.[2]
The tournament was a 7-roundknockout event. The matches from round 1 to round 6 consisted of two classical games with a time control of 90 minutes per 40 moves plus 30 minutes for the rest of the game, with anincrement of 30 seconds per move. The finals and the match for the third place consisted of four classical games.[3]
If the score is tied after the classical games,rapid and, if necessary,blitz tiebreaks are played the next day. Two games are played with a time control of 25 minutes per game plus 10 seconds increment. In the case of a tie, they are followed by two games with a time control of 10 minutes per game plus 10 seconds increment. If the score is still tied, two blitz games follow (5 minutes plus 3 seconds increment). If the score is tied 4–4 after all these games, a single"Armageddon" game is played: the player who wins the drawing of lots may choose the colour; White has 5 minutes per game and Black has 4 minutes, with an increment of 2 seconds per move starting from move 61, and White needs a win to advance to the next round; Black advances if they win or the game is drawn.[3]
The two top finishers qualified for the 2020Candidates Tournament.[4] The rules in fact specified that it would be the top two finishers other thanMagnus Carlsen andFabiano Caruana, because Carlsen as World Champion did not play in the Candidates, and Caruana had already qualified for the Candidates. The rule was introduced because the World Champion and the previous challenger unexpectedly signed up for the previous editionChess World Cup 2017. This time, though, Carlsen and Caruana both declined their invitations to the World Cup, so the qualifiers are simply the two finalists.
Each of the first six rounds took three days: one day each for the two regular time limit games and then a third day for tiebreaks, if required. The final round has four days of regular time limit games and then a fifth day for tiebreaks, if required.[3]
- Round 1: 10 September – 12 September
- Round 2: 13 September – 15 September
- Round 3: 16 September – 18 September
- Rest day: 19 September
- Round 4: 20 September – 22 September
- Round 5: 23 September – 25 September
- Round 6: 26 September – 28 September
- Rest day: 29 September
- Final and play-off for third place: 30 September – 4 October
The total prize fund was US$1,600,000, with the first prize of US$110,000.[3]
| Round | (US$) Prize received | (US$)Total |
|---|
| Round 1 | 64 × 6,000 | 384,000 |
| Round 2 | 32 × 10,000 | 320,000 |
| Round 3 | 16 × 16,000 | 256,000 |
| Round 4 | 8 × 25,000 | 200,000 |
| Round 5 | 4 × 35,000 | 140,000 |
| 4-th place | 50,000 | 50,000 |
| 3-rd place | 60,000 | 60,000 |
| Runner-up | 80,000 | 80,000 |
| Winner | 110,000 | 110,000 |
| Total (US$) | | 1,600,000 |
|---|
The participants[5] were seeded by their FIDE rating of August 2019. All players aregrandmasters unless indicated otherwise.
Qualification paths
[edit] | - AF:African Chess Championship 2019 (2)
- Z2.1 (5),Z2.2 (1), Z2.3 (2), Z2.4 (2), Z2.5 (2), Z3.1 (1), Z3.2 (1), Z3.3 (2), Z3.4 (2), Z3.5 (2),Z3.6 (1),Z3.7 (1), Z4.1 (1), Z4.2 (1), Z4.3 (1), Z4.4 (1): Zonal tournaments
- R: Rating (average of all published ratings from August 2018 to July 2019 is used) (18)
- ACP: highest-placed participant of theACP Tour who has not qualified with the previous criteria (1)
- PN: FIDE President nominee (5)
- ON: Organizer nominee (4)
|
- Players from the list of qualifiers[6] who declined to play:
- Their replacements, all from the ratings list, were:
- Other replacements:
Results, rounds 1–4
[edit]Results, rounds 5–7
[edit]