2018 in chess

Major chess events that took place in 2018 included the Candidates Tournament, won by Fabiano Caruana, who earned the right to challenge Magnus Carlsen in the World Chess Championship 2018. Magnus Carlsen won the match on tiebreaks and retained the title of World Chess Champion. There were two Women's World Chess Championship events; the first a match held in May between Ju Wenjun and Tan Zhongyi, won by Ju Wenjun, and the second, held in November, a 64-player knockout tournament where Ju Wenjun defended her title.

2018 tournaments

This is a list of 15 significant 2018 chess tournaments:

Tournament System Dates Players (2700+) Winner Runner-up Third
Tata Steel Chess Tournament Round robin 12–28 Jan 14 (11) Magnus Carlsen Anish Giri Vladimir Kramnik
Gibraltar Chess Festival Swiss 23 Jan – 1 Feb 276 (12) Levon Aronian Maxime Vachier-Lagrave Hikaru Nakamura
Candidates Tournament 2018 Round robin 10–28 Mar 8 (8) Fabiano Caruana Shakhriyar Mamedyarov Sergey Karjakin
Grenke Chess Classic 2018 Round robin 31 Mar – 9 Apr 10 (7) Fabiano Caruana Magnus Carlsen Maxime Vachier-Lagrave
Nikita Vitiugov
Shamkir Chess 2018 Round robin 18–28 Apr 10 (10) Magnus Carlsen Ding Liren Sergey Karjakin
Women's World Chess Championship 2018 (match) Match 2–20 May 2 (0) Ju Wenjun Tan Zhongyi
Norway Chess 2018 Round robin 27 May – 7 Jun 10 (10) Fabiano Caruana Magnus Carlsen Hikaru Nakamura
Dortmund Sparkassen Chess Meeting 2018 Round robin 14–22 Jul 8 (5) Ian Nepomniachtchi Anish Giri Vladislav Kovalev
Biel Chess Festival 2018[1] Round robin 22 Jul – 1 Aug 6 (5) Shakhriyar Mamedyarov Magnus Carlsen Maxime Vachier-Lagrave
Sinquefield Cup 2018 Round robin 18–28 Aug 10 (10) Magnus Carlsen
Fabiano Caruana
Levon Aronian
43rd Chess Olympiad (open event) Swiss 23 Sep – 6 Oct teams  China  United States  Russia
43rd Chess Olympiad (women event) Swiss 23 Sep – 6 Oct teams  China  Ukraine  Georgia
Women's World Chess Championship 2018 (tournament) Knockout 2–23 Nov 64 Ju Wenjun Kateryna Lagno Mariya Muzychuk
Alexandra Kosteniuk
World Chess Championship 2018 Match 9–28 Nov 2 (2) Magnus Carlsen
Fabiano Caruana
London Chess Classic 2018 Knockout 11–17 Dec 4 (4) Hikaru Nakamura Maxime Vachier-Lagrave Fabiano Caruana

Transfer

Chessplayer From which Whither
José González García  Mexico  Spain
Boris Nikolov Chatalbashev  Bulgaria  Denmark
Alexei Shirov  Latvia  Spain

Deaths

References

  1. ^ Doggers (PeterDoggers), Peter. "Carlsen Finishes 2nd Behind Mamedyarov In Biel". Chess.com.
  2. ^ Brynjólfur Þór Guðmundsson (1 March 2018). "Stefán Kristjánsson látinn". ruv.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 24 March 2018.