Paris Leuven GCT 2017
June 15, 2017
From St. Louis Public Radio
http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/...ayers#stream/0
The first leg of the GCT will be the Paris Grand Chess Tour from June 21-25. The second will be in Brussels-Leuven, June 28-July 2, with Your Next Move. The third stop on the tour is the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis August 2-12. That is followed by the newest event, the St. Louis Rapid and Blitz August 13-19. The tour will once again end with the London Chess Classic, from November 30-December 11.
The three blitz and rapid events (Paris, Leuven and St. Louis) will each have a $150,000 prize fund, whereas the classical events (Sinquefield Cup and London Classic), will offer $300,000 each. Once again, the winner of the tour will be awarded with a $100,000 bonus and the second place finisher will receive a $50,000 bonus. The total prize fund is $1,200,000, a $150,000 increase from 2016.
The 2017 tour will consist of nine players, who will compete in both classical and two rapid and blitz events of their choice. Unlike last year, however, the lowest score will not be dropped and all the scores will count towards the overall Grand Chess Tour standings. Each classical event will have one wild card, while the rapid and blitz events will have four wild cards. However, only the nine players who will compete in four events can fight for the title of the overall tour winner.
The tour has also altered its invitational guidelines as follows: three top finishers of the Grand Chess Tour 2016, top three players by average 2016 rating and three tour wild cards as determined by the Grand Chess Tour advisory board. Tour wild cards are different from event wild cards and will compete in four events.
The top three finishers in 2016 were:
Wesley So (U.S.A.) – No. 2 in the world, winner of Grand Chess Tour 2016 and the 2017 U.S. Champion
Fabiano Caruana (U.S.A.) – No. 4 in the world, 2016 U.S. Champion
Hikaru Nakamura (U.S.A.) – No. 9 in the world, 4 time U.S. Champion
The top three qualifiers by rating are:
Magnus Carlsen (Norway) – No.1 in the world and current World Champion
Sergey Karjakin (Russia) – No. 11 in the world, 2016 World Champion Challenger
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France) – No. 6 in the world
The tour wild cards are:
Viswanathan Anand (India) – No. 8 in the world and 5-time World Champion
Levon Aronian (Armenia) – No. 7 in the world, former Olympiad gold medalist
Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) – No. 23 in the world, bronze and silver Olympiad medalist
The wild cards for Paris are Grand Masters
Alexander Grischuk (Russia), Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan), Veselin Topalov (Bulgaria) and Etienne Bacrot (France).
The wild cards for Leuven are Grand Masters
Vladimir Kramnik (Russia) Anish Giri (Netherlands), Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukraine) and Baadur Jobava (Georgia).
Many of these players are big fan favorites due to their fierce playing style. Their appearance will only make the event even more exciting.
http://grandchesstour.org/press-rele...ris-and-leuven
June 15, 2017
From St. Louis Public Radio
http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/...ayers#stream/0
The first leg of the GCT will be the Paris Grand Chess Tour from June 21-25. The second will be in Brussels-Leuven, June 28-July 2, with Your Next Move. The third stop on the tour is the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis August 2-12. That is followed by the newest event, the St. Louis Rapid and Blitz August 13-19. The tour will once again end with the London Chess Classic, from November 30-December 11.
The three blitz and rapid events (Paris, Leuven and St. Louis) will each have a $150,000 prize fund, whereas the classical events (Sinquefield Cup and London Classic), will offer $300,000 each. Once again, the winner of the tour will be awarded with a $100,000 bonus and the second place finisher will receive a $50,000 bonus. The total prize fund is $1,200,000, a $150,000 increase from 2016.
The 2017 tour will consist of nine players, who will compete in both classical and two rapid and blitz events of their choice. Unlike last year, however, the lowest score will not be dropped and all the scores will count towards the overall Grand Chess Tour standings. Each classical event will have one wild card, while the rapid and blitz events will have four wild cards. However, only the nine players who will compete in four events can fight for the title of the overall tour winner.
The tour has also altered its invitational guidelines as follows: three top finishers of the Grand Chess Tour 2016, top three players by average 2016 rating and three tour wild cards as determined by the Grand Chess Tour advisory board. Tour wild cards are different from event wild cards and will compete in four events.
The top three finishers in 2016 were:
Wesley So (U.S.A.) – No. 2 in the world, winner of Grand Chess Tour 2016 and the 2017 U.S. Champion
Fabiano Caruana (U.S.A.) – No. 4 in the world, 2016 U.S. Champion
Hikaru Nakamura (U.S.A.) – No. 9 in the world, 4 time U.S. Champion
The top three qualifiers by rating are:
Magnus Carlsen (Norway) – No.1 in the world and current World Champion
Sergey Karjakin (Russia) – No. 11 in the world, 2016 World Champion Challenger
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France) – No. 6 in the world
The tour wild cards are:
Viswanathan Anand (India) – No. 8 in the world and 5-time World Champion
Levon Aronian (Armenia) – No. 7 in the world, former Olympiad gold medalist
Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) – No. 23 in the world, bronze and silver Olympiad medalist
The wild cards for Paris are Grand Masters
Alexander Grischuk (Russia), Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan), Veselin Topalov (Bulgaria) and Etienne Bacrot (France).
The wild cards for Leuven are Grand Masters
Vladimir Kramnik (Russia) Anish Giri (Netherlands), Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukraine) and Baadur Jobava (Georgia).
Many of these players are big fan favorites due to their fierce playing style. Their appearance will only make the event even more exciting.
http://grandchesstour.org/press-rele...ris-and-leuven
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