Oceania Chess Championship
Leading chess players from the FIDE Oceania Zone 3.6 are allowed to play in the Oceania Chess Championships.[1][2] The tournament is conducted by the FIDE Oceania Zone President and Oceania Chess Confederation under the auspices of the world chess federation, FIDE.[3]
History
Before January 2012, the Oceania Chess Championship was scheduled as part of the FIDE World Chess Championship cycle, and winners qualified to represent the FIDE Oceania Zone at the Chess World Cup. Since 2012 the Oceania Chess Championship has been held every year, with only each alternate (odd numbered) year acting as the Oceania Zone Championship and Chess World Cup qualifier. In these years, the title of International Master (IM) is awarded to the winner(s) of the Oceania Zone Championship event, as per the FIDE title regulations.[4]
The first Oceania Chess Championship was organised by the inaugural Oceania Zone President, Graeme Gardiner, on the Gold Coast, Australia in 1999. Vladimir Feldman of Australia won the event, undefeated, with a score of 7/9. In May 2000, an additional Oceania Zonal Chess Championship was held to coincide with changes in the schedule of the FIDE World Chess Championship cycle. Only an open event was held that year, without a separate women's championship, and was won by Aleksandar Wohl with a score of 7.5/9.
In 2001, Mikhail Gluzman and Mark Chapman shared first place with a score of 7/9, but the former won a rapid chess play-off match and the title. In 2011 the Women's event resulted in a tie between Irina Berezina and Emma Guo. A playoff match was held later in the year in Sydney, and was won by Berezina with a score of 2.5/3. The 2013 Women's event again resulted in a tie between Irina Berezina and Emma Guo. Berezina won the playoff match, at the end of the tournament, with a score of 2/2. In 2015, untitled player Brodie McClymont beat IM Max Illingworth in the last round to catch him for 1st= with scores of 7.5/9, which means an automatic IM title. Illingworth beat McClymont 1.5–0.5 in the rapid chess playoff match for Zonal Champion.
Oceania Chess Champions
Oceania Senior Chess Champions
Year City Senior Champion Senior Women's Champion 2010[30] Christchurch Brian Jones (Australia) Vivian Smith (New Zealand) 2011[31] Melbourne Mirko Rujevic (Australia) Vivian Smith (New Zealand) 2012[32][33] Parramatta Anthonie Luchtmeijer (Australia) Helen Milligan (New Zealand) 2013[34] Christchurch David Lovejoy (Australia) Helen Milligan (New Zealand) 2014 Sydney Gary Lane (Australia) Vivian Smith (New Zealand) 2015 Auckland Leonard McLaren (New Zealand) Helen Milligan (New Zealand) 2016 Nadi Gary Lane (Australia) 2019[35] Auckland Michael Steadman (New Zealand) 2021 Noosa Cancelled due to COVID Cancelled due to COVID
Oceania Youth Chess Champions
Year City Youth Champion Youth Girls Champion 2023[36] Canberra Cameron McGowan (Australia) Lillian Lu (Australia)
Oceania Presidents
Year | President |
---|---|
1998-2002 | Graeme Gardiner (Australia) |
2002-2010 | Gary Bekker (Australia) |
2010-2014 | Brian Jones (Australia) |
2014-2022 | Paul Spiller (New Zealand) |
2022- | Shaun Press (Papua New Guinea) |
See also
References
- ^ World Chess Championship Regulations FIDE Handbook
- ^ Zonal Chess Championship Regulations FIDE Handbook
- ^ FIDE Zone 3.6 Draft Regulations[permanent dead link ] Oceania Chess Confederation
- ^ FIDE International Title Regulations from www.fide.com
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 1998-99 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 233, 26 April 1999 Archived 2 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mark Crowther
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 2000-2001 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 290, 29 May 2000 Mark Crowther
- ^ ACF Bulletin No. 67, 28 May 2000 Archived 7 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Australian Chess Federation
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 2001-2002 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 338, 30 April 2001 Archived 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine Mark Crowther
- ^ ACF Bulletin No. 114 – 29 April 2001 Archived 21 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Australian Chess Federation
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 2002-2004 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 392, 13 May 2002 Archived 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine Mark Crowther
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 2004-2005 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 535, 7 Feb 2005 Mark Crowther
- ^ Oceania Zonal 2007 ChessChat forum
- ^ The World Chess Championship Zonals 2008-2009 Mark Weeks
- ^ The Week in Chess 764, 29 Jun 2009 Archived 2012-06-12 at the Wayback Machine Mark Crowther
- ^ 2009 Oceania Zonal Championship report from www.fide.com
- ^ 2009 Oceania Women's Zonal Championship report from www.fide.com
- ^ 2011 Oceania Zonal Championship Archived 2016-01-29 at the Wayback Machine official web page
- ^ 2012 Queenstown Chess Classic Archived 4 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine official web page
- ^ 2013 Oceania Zonal Championship results from www.chessdom.com
- ^ 2013 Oceania Zonal Championship results from www.chess-results.com
- ^ 2013 Oceania Womens Zonal results from www.chess-results.com
- ^ Temur Kuybokarov wins 3.6 Zonal FIDE News, www.fide.com
- ^ [1] Open www.chess-results.com, [2]
- ^ [3] Womens www.chess-results.com, [4]
- ^ 2010 NZ Senior Championship report from www.fide.com
- ^ 2011 Oceania Senior Championship report from www.fide.com
- ^ 2012 Asian Senior Championship report from www.fide.com
- ^ Luchtmeijer wins Asian Seniors Archived 14 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine from www.fide.com
- ^ 2013 Oceania Senior Championship final standings from www.chesschat.org
- ^ 2019 NZ and Oceania Seniors tournament report from www.fide.com
- ^ "Chess-Results Server Chess-results.com - 2023 Oceania Junior Championship Under 20". chess-results.com. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
External links
- Oceania Chess Confederation website