U.S. Chess Championship
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. Please help improve the article with a good introductory style. |
The U.S. Chess Championship is an invitational tournament held to determine the national champion. Since 1936, it has been held under the auspices of the U.S. Chess Federation. Until 1999, the event consisted of a round-robin tournament of varying size. From 1999 to 2006, the Championship was sponsored and organized by the Seattle Chess Foundation (later renamed America's Foundation for Chess) as a large Swiss system tournament. AF4C withdrew its sponsorship in 2007. The 2007 event was held (again under the Swiss system) in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Contents |
[edit] Champions by acclamation 1845-1889
-
Years Champion Notes 1845-1857 Charles Stanley Defeated Eugène Rousseau in a match in 1845 1857-1871 Paul Morphy Won the first American Chess Congress in 1857 1871-1889 George Henry Mackenzie Won the 2nd, 3rd and 5th American Chess Congress
[edit] Match champions 1889-1935
First "Official" US Champion, as a result of being the top scoring American at New York 1889.
- 1889 - 1890 Solomon Lipschutz
- 1890 - 1890 Jackson Showalter
- 1890 - 1892 Max Judd
- 1892 - 1892 Jackson Showalter
- 1892 - 1892 Solomon Lipschutz
- 1892 - 1894 Jackson Showalter
- 1894 - 1895 Albert Hodges
- 1895 - 1898 Jackson Showalter
- 1898 - 1906 Harry Nelson Pillsbury
- 1906 - 1909 Jackson Showalter
- 1909 - 1935 Frank Marshall
[edit] Tournament champions 1936-
-
# Year Winner Notes 1 1936 Samuel Reshevsky 2 1938 Samuel Reshevsky 3 1940 Samuel Reshevsky - 1941 Samuel Reshevsky Match victory over I.A. Horowitz 4 1942 Samuel Reshevsky An uncorrected scoring error by the director allowed Reshevsky to tie for first with
Isaac Kashdan. Reshevsky won a playoff match against Kashdan 6 months later.5 1944 Arnold Denker - 1946 Arnold Denker Match victory over Herman Steiner 6 1946 Samuel Reshevsky 7 1948 Herman Steiner 8 1951 Larry Evans - 1952 Larry Evans Match victory over Herman Steiner 9 1954 Arthur Bisguier - 1957 Samuel Reshevsky Match victory over Arthur Bisguier 10 1957/8 Bobby Fischer 11 1958/9 Bobby Fischer 12 1959/0 Bobby Fischer 13 1960/1 Bobby Fischer 14 1961/2 Larry Evans 15 1962/3 Bobby Fischer 16 1963/4 Bobby Fischer 17 1965/6 Bobby Fischer 18 1966/7 Bobby Fischer 19 1968 Larry Evans 20 1969 Samuel Reshevsky 21 1972 Robert Byrne After playoff 9 months later against Samuel Reshevsky and Lubomir Kavalek 22 1973 Lubomir Kavalek
John Grefe23 1974 Walter Browne 24 1975 Walter Browne 25 1977 Walter Browne 26 1978 Lubomir Kavalek 27 1980 Walter Browne
Larry Christiansen
Larry Evans28 1981 Walter Browne 29 1983 Walter Browne
Larry Christiansen
Roman Dzindzichashvili30 1984 Lev Alburt 31 1985 Lev Alburt 32 1986 Yasser Seirawan 33 1987 Joel Benjamin
Nick de Firmian34 1988 Michael Wilder 35 1989 Roman Dzindzichashvili
Stuart Rachels
Yasser Seirawan36 1990 Lev Alburt Knockout tournament 37 1991 Gata Kamsky Knockout tournament 38 1992 Patrick Wolff 39 1993 Alexander Shabalov
Alex Yermolinsky40 1994 Boris Gulko The only person to have held both the US and Soviet championships 41 1995 Nick de Firmian
Patrick Wolff
Alexander Ivanov42 1996 Alex Yermolinsky 43 1997 Joel Benjamin 44 1998 Nick de Firmian 45 1999 Boris Gulko 46 2000 Joel Benjamin
Alexander Shabalov
Yasser Seirawan47 2002 Larry Christiansen 48 2003 Alexander Shabalov 49 2005 Hikaru Nakamura Tournament was played in 2004, but called the 2005 Championship, for legal reasons 50 2006 Alexander Onischuk 51 2007 Alexander Shabalov 52 2008 Yury Shulman
[edit] See also
- U.S. Women's Chess Championship
- U.S. Open Chess Championship
- U.S. Women's Open Chess Championship
- American Chess Congress
[edit] References
- Soltis, Andy & McCormick, Gene H. (1997), The United States Chess Championship 1845–1996 (Second Edition ed.), McFarland, ISBN 0-7864-0258-2
- Past US Champions. Retrieved on 2007-04-27.
- Graeme Cree's US Chess Championship Page.
- Isaac Kashdan (1933). History of the United States Chess Championship. Chess Review, November-December, 1933, reprinted in The Best of Chess Life & Review 1933-1960. ISBN 0671619861.
[edit] External links
- 1998 Interplay US Championship official USCF site