Reggio Emilia chess tournament



The Reggio Emilia chess tournament was an annual chess tournament held in Reggio Emilia, Italy. In Italian the tournament is called Torneo di Capodanno (New Year's tournament), as it used to start just after Christmas and end on the day of Epiphany (6 January). It was established as an annual event in 1958 by grandmaster Enrico Paoli.
In 1982/83 the tournament attracted a new sponsor and by the 1990s the tournament had gained significant international reputation, climaxing in the 1991/1992 edition. This was the first Category 18 tournament ever played; it was won by the 22-year-old Viswanathan Anand ahead of Garry Kasparov, Anatoly Karpov and Vassily Ivanchuk.[1]


It was Italy's oldest and most renowned chess tournament. The tournament was usually played as a 10 to 16 player round-robin tournament. The announced 55th edition had to be canceled due to economic reasons.




Contents





  • 1 Winners


  • 2 See also


  • 3 References


  • 4 External links




Winners













































































































































































#YearWinner
1947
 Esteban Canal (PER)
-1951
 Moshe Czerniak (ISR)
  11958-59
 Otto Marthaler (SUI)
  21959-60
 Cveto Trampuz (YUG)
  31960-61
 Péter Dely (HUN)
  41961-62
 Alberto Giustolisi (ITA)
  51962-63
 Győző Forintos (HUN)
  61963-64
 Rudolf Teschner (GER)
  71964-65
 Mario Bertok (YUG)
  81965-66
 Bruno Parma (YUG)
  91966-67
 Victor Ciocâltea (ROM)
101967-68
 Milan Matulović (YUG)
111968-69
 Ladislav Mista (CZE)
121969-70
 Sergio Mariotti (ITA)
131970-71
 Bruno Parma (YUG)
141971-72
 Andrew Soltis (USA)
151972-73
 Levente Lengyel (HUN)
161973-74
 Luben Popov (BUL)
171974-75
 Orestes Rodriguez (PER)
181975-76
 Ludek Pachman (GER)
191976-77
 Gennadi Kuzmin (RUS)
201977-78
 László M. Kovács (HUN)
211978-79
 Ralf Hess (GER)
221979-80
 Alexander Kochyev (RUS)
231980-81
 Nils Renman (SWE)
241981-82
 Arne Duer (AUT)
251982-83
 Nona Gaprindashvili (URS)
261983-84
 Karel Mokry (TCH)
271984-85
 Lajos Portisch (HUN)
281985-86
 Ulf Andersson (SWE)
291986-87
 Zoltán Ribli (HUN)
301987-88
 Vladimir Tukmakov (URS)
311988-89
 Mikhail Gurevich (URS)
321989-90
 Jaan Ehlvest (URS)
331990-91
 Anatoly Karpov (URS)
341991-92
 Viswanathan Anand (IND)
351992-93
 Rafael Vaganian (ARM)
361993-94
 Lajos Portisch (HUN)
371994-95
 Rafael Vaganian (ARM)
381995-96
 Yuri Razuvayev (RUS)
391996-97
 Michał Krasenkow (POL)
401997-98
 Dimitri Komarov (UKR)
411998-99
 Evgeniy Solozhenkin (RUS)
421999-00
 Leonid Yudasin (ISR)
432000-01
 Oleg Romanishin (UKR)
442001-02
 Vladimir Georgiev (BUL)
452002-03
 Jean-Luc Chabanon (FRA)
462003-04
 Igor Miladinović (GRE)
472004-05
 Aleksander Delchev (BUL)
482005-06
 Konstantin Landa (RUS)
492006-07
 Viorel Iordachescu (MDA)
502007-08
 Zoltán Almási (HUN)
512008-09
 Ni Hua (CHN)
522009-10
 Gata Kamsky (USA)
532010-11
 Vugar Gashimov (AZE)[2]
542011-12
 Anish Giri (NED)


See also


  • Hastings International Chess Congress


References




  1. ^ Cross table for Category 18 1991-92 tournament


  2. ^ Gashimov wins Reggio on tie-break from Vallejo. The Week in Chess. Mark Crowther. Thursday 6 January 2011 Archived 30 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine.




External links


  • Results, games and crosstables of all editions


  • 2006 edition from chessbase.com

  • The 2007 edition from chessbase.com [1], [2]

  • Introduction to the 2007 edition

  • History of the tournament 1958–1985

  • 2010/11 edition








Popular posts from this blog

How to check contact read email or not when send email to Individual?

Displaying single band from multi-band raster using QGIS

How many registers does an x86_64 CPU actually have?