Us Chess Championship

The US Chess Championship is an invitational tournament organized by the United States Chess Federation to determine the country's chess champion.

It is the oldest national chess tournament. The event originated as a challenge match in 1845, but the champion has been decided by tournament play under the auspices of the USCF since 1936. The tournament has fluctuated between a round-robin tournament and a Swiss system. From 1999 to 2006, the championship was sponsored and organized by the Seattle Chess Foundation (later renamed America's Foundation for Chess) and featured a larger body of competitors, made possible by the change to a Swiss-style format. After the Foundation withdrew its sponsorship, the 2007 and 2008 events were held in Stillwater, Oklahoma, still as a Swiss system, under tournament director Frank K. Berry. Rex Sinquefield's Saint Louis Chess Club has hosted the championship since 2009. Since 2014, the championship has used a round-robin format.

US Chess Championship
Us Chess Championship
Fabiano Caruana, the current US champion
Awarded forWinner of the US Championship
CountryUnited States
Presented byUnited States Chess Federation
History
First award1891
Most recentFabiano Caruana (2023)

As of 2023, twelve players are invited to compete: the reigning US champion, as well as the respective winners of the US Open Chess Championship, the US Junior Championship, and the US Senior Open Championship, with the remaining players chosen by highest invitational rating, in addition to wildcards chosen by the organizer. Fabiano Caruana is the current US chess champion.

By acclamation (1845–1891)

Match format (1891–1935)

George Henry Mackenzie died in April 1891 and, later that year, Max Judd proposed he, Jackson Showalter and S. Lipschütz contest a triangular match for the championship. Lipschütz withdrew so Judd and Showalter played a match which the latter won. A claim by Walter Penn Shipley that S. Lipschütz became US Champion as a result of being the top-scoring American at the Sixth American Chess Congress, New York 1889, is refuted in a biography of Lipschütz. The following US Champions until 1909 were decided by matches.

Round-robin format (1936–1998)

Swiss format (1999–2013)

Round-robin format (2014–present)

Players by number of championships

Name Total Victories Tournament Victories Match Victories Years
Bobby Fischer 8 8 0 1957/8 1958/9 1959/0 1960/1 1962/3 1963/4 1965/6 1966/7
Samuel Reshevsky 8 8 0 1936 1938 1940 1941 1942 1946 1957 1969
Walter Browne 6 6 0 1974 1975 1977 1980 1981 1983
Larry Evans 5 5 0 1951 1952 1961/2 1968 1980
Gata Kamsky 5 5 0 1991 2010 2011 2013 2014
Hikaru Nakamura 5 5 0 2005 2009 2012 2015 2019
Jackson Showalter 5 0 5 1891–92 1894 1895 1896 1896
Yasser Seirawan 4 4 0 1981 1986 1989 2000
Alexander Shabalov 4 4 0 1993 2000 2003 2007
Lev Alburt 3 3 0 1984 1985 1990
Joel Benjamin 3 3 0 1987 1997 2000
Larry Christiansen 3 3 0 1980 1983 2002
Nick de Firmian 3 3 0 1987 1995 1998
Wesley So 3 3 0 2017 2020 2021
Fabiano Caruana 3 3 0 2016 2022 2023
Arnold Denker 2 2 0 1944 1946
Roman Dzindzichashvili 2 2 0 1983 1989
Boris Gulko 2 2 0 1994 1999
Lubomir Kavalek 2 2 0 1973 1978
Frank Marshall 2 0 2 1909 1923
Harry Pillsbury 2 0 2 1897 1898
Patrick Wolff 2 2 0 1992 1995
Alex Yermolinsky 2 2 0 1993 1996
Arthur Bisguier 1 1 0 1954
Robert Byrne 1 1 0 1972
John Grefe 1 1 0 1973
Albert Hodges 1 0 1 1894
Alexander Ivanov 1 1 0 1995
Samuel Lipschütz 1 0 1 1892
Alexander Onischuk 1 1 0 2006
Stuart Rachels 1 1 0 1989
Samuel Shankland 1 1 0 2018
Yury Shulman 1 1 0 2008
Herman Steiner 1 1 0 1948
Michael Wilder 1 1 0 1988

See also

Notes

References

  • Soltis, Andy; McCormick, Gene H. (1997). The United States Chess Championship 1845–1996 (2nd ed.). McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0248-2.
  • 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 0-671-61986-1.

Tags:

Us Chess Championship By acclamation (1845–1891)Us Chess Championship Match format (1891–1935)Us Chess Championship Round-robin format (1936–1998)Us Chess Championship Swiss format (1999–2013)Us Chess Championship Round-robin format (2014–present)Us Chess Championship Players by number of championshipsUs Chess ChampionshipAmerica's Foundation for ChessFrank K. BerryRound-robin tournamentSaint Louis Chess ClubStillwater, OklahomaSwiss systemUnited States Chess Federation

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