Australian Chess Championship
The Australian Chess Championship is a tournament organised by the Australian Chess Federation and held every two years. The tournament is largely restricted to Australian chess players, although it is common to allow a small number of strong overseas players to compete. The highest-scoring eligible player (frequently the tournament winner) holds the title of Australian Chess Champion until the next tournament is held. The tournament format is normally a restricted Swiss system, and in case of a tie for first place, a playoff match or tournament is conducted.
Since 1971, the Australian Open has been held in the intervening years. This event is open to all players, regardless of nationality, and the winner holds the title of Australian Open Champion.
The Australian Junior Championship and Australian Girls Championship are held annually. The Australian Women's Championship was previously organised as a separate tournament but current regulations award the title of Australian Women's Champion to the highest placed Australian female player in the Australian Open (dependent on a minimum number of female entries).[1]
Australian Champions[]
Prior to 2008, the tournament usually began in late December (after Christmas) and finished in January. Since 2008, the tournament has usually been held entirely in January. In the table, the year refers to the date the tournament finished.
Year Location Winners 1885 Melbourne Frederick Karl Esling (won one match game before George Hatfeild Dingley Gossip defaulted) 1887 Adelaide Henry Charlick 1888 Melbourne 1893 Sydney 1895 Melbourne 1896 Sydney 1897(1) Warrnambool 1897(2) Sydney Julius Leigh Jacobsen 1906 Perth William Samuel Viner 1912 Sydney William Samuel Viner 1913 Bellingen William Samuel Viner 1922 Melbourne Charles Gilbert Marriott Watson 1924 Brisbane William Samuel Viner 1926 Sydney Spencer Crakanthorp 1927 Perth Spencer Crakanthorp 1931 Melbourne Charles Gilbert Marriott Watson 1933 Sydney Gary Koshnitsky 1935 Melbourne C.J.S. Purdy 1937 Perth C.J.S. Purdy 1939 Sydney Gary Koshnitsky 1945 Sydney Lajos Steiner 1947 Adelaide Lajos Steiner 1949 Melbourne C.J.S. Purdy 1951 Brisbane C.J.S. Purdy 1953 Hobart Lajos Steiner 1955 Perth John Purdy 1957 Melbourne Karlis Ozols / (Suchowolski emigrated to Israel before a playoff could be arranged) 1959 Hobart Lajos Steiner 1960 Adelaide Lucius Endzelins 1963 Perth John Purdy 1965 Hobart Douglas Hamilton 1967 Brisbane Douglas Hamilton 1969 Melbourne Walter Browne 1970 Sydney Alfred Flatow 1972 Melbourne Maxwell Fuller / Trevor Hay (playoff match tied 5–5)[2] 1974 Cooma Robert Murray Jamieson 1976 Sydney Serge Rubanraut 1978 Perth Robert Murray Jamieson 1980 Adelaide Ian Rogers 1982 Melbourne Douglas Hamilton 1984 Sydney Darryl Johansen 1986 Toowoomba Ian Rogers 1988 Gosford Darryl Johansen 1990 Sydney Darryl Johansen 1992 Melbourne Aleksandar Wohl 1994 Melbourne John-Paul Wallace 1996 Sydney Guy West 1998 Melbourne Ian Rogers 2000 Tumbi Umbi Darryl Johansen 2002 Melbourne Darryl Johansen 2004 Adelaide Gary Lane 2006 Brisbane Ian Rogers 2008 Parramatta Stephen Solomon 2010 North Sydney Zong-Yuan Zhao 2012 Geelong Darryl Johansen 2014 Springvale Max Illingworth 2016 Melbourne Bobby Cheng 2018 North Sydney Max Illingworth 2020 Sydney Temur Kuybokarov
Australian Women's Champions[]
- 1966 Marion Mott-McGrath
- 1969 Marion Mott-McGrath
- 1972 Narelle Kellner
- 1974 Narelle Kellner
- 1976 Marion Mott-McGrath
- 1978 Lynda Pope
- 1980 Marion Mott-McGrath
- 1982
- 1984
- 1986
- 1988
- 1990
- 1992 Katrin Aladjova
- 1994 , , and
- 1995 Dana Nutu-Gajic
- 1996 Biljana Dekic & Ngan Phan-Koshnitsky
- 1998 Ngan Phan-Koshnitsky
- 1999 Irina Feldman
- 2002
- 2003
- 2015
- 2017
- 2019 Julia Ryjanova
Australian Junior Champions[]
The Australian Junior Chess Championship is a tournament organised by the Australian Chess Federation and is held every year. It is restricted to junior players under 18 years of age. The Australian Girls Championship is held concurrently.
- 1949 W. Levick
- 1951 John Purdy
- 1952 J. Hortovanyi
- 1953 Malcolm Broun
- 1954 D. Robson
- 1955 J. Hortovanyi
- 1956 A. Irving
- 1957 J. Ferguson
- 1958 D. Rudd
- 1959 Ron Klinger
- 1960
- 1961 Trevor Hay
- 1962 N. Alexander
- 1963 Maxwell Fuller
- 1964 William Kerr
- 1965 William Kerr
- 1966
- 1967 Arthur Pope
- 1968
- 1969 John Hendry
- 1970
- 1971
- 1972
- 1973 Robert Bartnik
- 1974 William Jordan
- 1975 David Dick (finished third behind Murray Chandler and Kai Jensen who were ineligible for title because they were New Zealand residents [3])
- 1976 Ian Rogers
- 1977 Darryl Johansen / D. Fardell
- 1978 Murray Smith
- 1979 Stephen Kerr
- 1980 Stephen Solomon (tied with Donald MacFarlane who was ineligible for title because he was a South African resident)
- 1981 Rey Casse (tied with Jonathan Sarfati who was ineligible for title because he was a New Zealand resident)
- 1982 Paul Broekhuyse
- 1983 Konrad Hornung
- 1984 Peter Evans
- 1985 Timothy Reilly
- 1986 Shane Hill
- 1987
- 1988 Lee Jones
- 1989 Peter Cotton
- 1990
- 1991 Lee Jones
- 1992
- 1993 John Paul Wallace
- 1994
- 1995
- 1996
- 1997
- 1998
- 1999 David Smerdon
- 2000 Justin Tan
- 2001 Zong-Yuan Zhao
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005 Moulthun Ly
- 2006
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
- 2010 Bobby Cheng
- 2011 Bobby Cheng
- 2012 Alistair Cameron
- 2013
- 2014 Anton Smirnov
- 2015
- 2016
- 2017
- 2018 David Cannon
- 2019
- 2020
Australian Girls Champions[]
- 1960 Irene Tannenthal
- 1964
- 1965
- 1966
- 1967 Marilyn Urlick
- 1968
- 1969
- 1970 Linda Maddern
- 1971 Linda Maddern
- 1972
- 1973 Irena Duluk
- 1974
- 1975 / Cathy Depasquale / Karen Hancock
- 1976 Kate Marshall
- 1977 Anne Martin
- 1978
- 1979
- 1980
- 1981
- 1982
- 1983
- 1984
- 1985
- 1986 / J. Rees / / Nga Phan
- 1987 Tam Nguyen
- 1988 Nancy Jones
- 1989 Nancy Jones
- 1990 / J. King & /
- 1991
- 1992
- 1993 / /
- 1994
- 1995
- 1996 Laura Moylan
- 1997
- 1998
- 1999 / /
- 2000
- 2001
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007 Emma Guo
- 2008
- 2009
- 2010
- 2011
- 2012
- 2013
- 2014
- 2015
- 2016
- 2017
- 2018
- 2019
- 2020
Australian Open[]
- 1971 Lajos Portisch (Hungary)
- 1973 Maxwell Fuller
- 1975 Maxwell Fuller
- 1977 Trevor Hay / /
- 1979 Maxwell Fuller
- 1981 Robert Murray Jamieson
- 1983 Darryl Johansen
- 1985 Guy West
- 1987 Gyula Sax (Hungary)
- 1989 Aleksandar Wohl /
- 1991 Lembit Oll (Estonia) / Edvins Kengis (Latvia) / (Yugoslavia) / Darryl Johansen / Tony Miles (England)
- 1993 Ian Rogers
- 1995 (Vietnam)
- 1997 Darryl Johansen
- 1999 Vadim Milov (Switzerland)
- 2001
- 2003 John-Paul Wallace
- 2005 Elena Sedina (Italy)
- 2007 Zong-Yuan Zhao
- 2009 Aleksandar Wohl / George Xie
- 2011 George Xie / Zong-Yuan Zhao / Moulthun Ly
- 2013 Bobby Cheng
- 2015 Ni Hua
- 2017 Max Illingworth / Temur Kuybokarov (Uzbekistan) / (Azerbaijan) /
- 2019 Temur Kuybokarov / (Azerbaijan)
Australian Grand Prix[]
Since 1989 a system has been in place with points accumulated in different Australian weekend tournaments. The winners have been:[4]
- 1989 Ian Rogers
- 1990 Stephen Solomon
- 1991 Darryl Johansen
- 1992 Darryl Johansen
- 1993 Darryl Johansen
- 1994 Ian Rogers
- 1995 Darryl Johansen
- 1996 Darryl Johansen
- 1997 Stephen Solomon
- 1998 Ian Rogers
- 1999 Stephen Solomon
- 2000 Ian Rogers
- 2001 Stephen Solomon
- 2002 Ian Rogers
- 2003 Ian Rogers
- 2004 Ian Rogers
- 2005 Igor Bjelobrk
- 2006 George Xie
- 2007 Dejan Antic
- 2008 Stephen Solomon
- 2009 David Smerdon
- 2010 Zhao Zong Yuan
- 2011 Stephen Solomon
- 2012 George Xie
- 2013
- 2014 Moulthun Ly
- 2015 Anton Smirnov
- 2016
- 2017 Stephen Solomon
- 2018 Stephen Solomon
- 2019 Stephen Solomon
- 2020 Grand Prix not held
References[]
- ^ "Australian Chess Federation Constitution and By-laws". Archived from the original on 2017-02-17. Retrieved 2007-07-08.
- ^ Australian Chess Championship 1974 – 100 Best Games, Edited by W. MacLean, published by Chess Mates of Australia, October 1974
- ^ Chess in Australia, February 1975
- ^ 2007 Myer Tan Australian Chess Grand Prix – History Archived March 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- Australian Chess Federation. "ACF Records". Archived from the original on 19 May 2007. Retrieved 2007-05-29.
- Whyld, Kenneth (1986), Guinness Chess, The Records, Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Superlatives, ISBN 0-85112-455-0. (Men's champions through 1986)
- Rogers, Ian (1981), Australian Chess – Into the Eighties, Melbourne: Sun Books, ISBN 0-7251-0384-1. (Men's champions through 1980)
- http://www.ozbase.com.au/ – an incomplete list, including games in PGN format.
External links[]
- https://web.archive.org/web/20150624114332/http://2016.chesschampionship.org.au/
- http://auschesschamps.com/
- http://www.ajcc.org.au/ Archived 2016-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
- Chess national championships
- Women's chess national championships
- Chess in Australia
- National championships in Australia