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Women's World Chess Championship 1993

The 1993 Women's World Chess Championship was won by Xie Jun, who successfully defended her title against challenger Nana Ioseliani in the title match.

1991 Interzonal Tournament edit

As part of the qualification process, an Interzonal tournament was held in Subotica in November 1991, featuring the best players from each FIDE zone. 35 players took part with the top six qualifying for the Candidates Tournament. For the first time, the women's Interzonal was played as a 13-round Swiss system tournament.[1]

1991 Women's Interzonal Tournament
Player 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Points Tie break
1   Nona Gaprindashvili (Soviet Union) +14 =28 +2 +17 +21 -9 =3 =5 =7 +12 =4 +6 =10 9 67.75
2   Peng Zhaoqin (China) =26 +33 -1 +20 +27 =5 =16 +9 +3 =4 =6 +7 =12 9 63.75
3   Nana Ioseliani (Soviet Union) +27 =17 +9 =5 =6 +21 =1 =7 -2 =8 +24 +11 =4 61.25
4   Irina Levitina (USA) -25 =24 -33 +34 +15 +10 =6 +14 +16 =2 =1 +9 =3 59.25
5   Wang Pin (China) =32 +12 +7 =3 =16 =2 +9 =1 +8 =18 =11 -10 =13 8 60.00
6   Qin Kanying (China) +13 =11 +32 =26 =3 -8 =4 +21 =17 +16 =2 -1 +9 8 55.50
7   Ketevan Arakhamia (Soviet Union) =18 =20 -5 +33 +32 +17 +8 =3 =1 -9 +14 -2 +19 8 52.75
8   Svetlana Matveeva (Soviet Union) =28 =14 +15 =9 +10 +6 -7 =16 -5 =3 =12 =18 +29 53.25
9   Alisa Galliamova (Soviet Union) +29 +16 -3 =8 +26 +1 -5 -2 +21 +7 +18 -4 -6 52.25
10   Ketino Kachiani (Soviet Union) =31 =26 +18 =16 -8 -4 -15 +33 +20 +25 =13 +5 =1 49.00
11   Marta Litinskaya-Shul (Soviet Union) +22 =6 -21 =32 +25 -16 =27 +20 =15 +17 =5 -3 +18 48.50
12   Aynur Sofiyeva (Soviet Union) =20 -5 -26 -29 +35 +34 +31 +27 +24 -1 =8 +14 =2 42.00
13   Ildikó Mádl (Hungary) -6 +29 =20 -21 +23 =25 -14 -22 +30 +28 =10 +25 =5 7 44.00
14   Cristina Adela Foișor (Romania) -1 =8 =29 =19 +31 =18 +13 -4 +32 +15 -7 -12 +22 7 43.75
15   Daniela Nuțu-Gajić (Romania) -16 +22 -8 +35 -4 =20 +10 +32 =11 -14 +33 -19 +26 7 39.00
16   Julia Demina (Soviet Union) +15 -9 +25 =10 =5 +11 =2 =8 -4 -6 =22 =29 =24 45.50
17   Margarita Voyska (Bulgaria) +30 =3 +23 -1 =18 -7 =25 =19 =6 -11 =27 +33 =20 41.00
18   Zsuzsa Verőci-Petronic (Hungary) =7 +34 -10 +28 =17 =14 =21 =24 +25 =5 -9 =8 -11 40.25
19   Tünde Csonkics (Hungary) =34 -23 =31 =14 =28 +33 =32 =17 =22 -24 +26 +15 -7 37.75
20   Vesna Basagić (Yugoslavia) =12 =7 =13 -2 =24 =15 +30 -11 -10 bye =23 +28 =17 36.00
21   Sanja Vuksanović (Yugoslavia) +24 =25 +11 +13 -1 -3 =18 -6 -9 -26 +34 =23 bye 33.25
22   Gordana Marković (Yugoslavia) -11 -15 +30 =31 =29 -32 +28 +13 =19 =23 =16 =27 -14 6 37.25
23   Mirjana Marić (Yugoslavia) =33 +19 -17 -27 -13 =28 +29 =31 =26 =22 =20 =21 =30 6 36.25
24   Irina Chelushkina (Soviet Union) -21 =4 +34 -25 =20 +29 +26 =18 -12 +19 -3 -13 =16 6 36.00
25   Anna-Maria Botsari (Greece) +4 =21 -16 +24 -11 =13 =17 +26 -18 -10 -28 +35 =27 6 36.00
26   Beatriz MacArthur (USA) =2 =10 +12 =6 -9 +27 -24 -25 =23 +21 -19 bye -15 6 35.25
27   Nataša Bojković (Yugoslavia) -3 +30 =28 +23 -2 -26 =11 -12 =31 +34 =17 =22 =25 6 34.25
28   Constanze Jahn (Germany) =8 =1 =27 -18 =19 =23 -22 =35 bye -13 +25 -20 +33 6 29.75
29   Suzana Maksimović (Yugoslavia) -9 -13 =14 +12 =22 -24 -23 bye =34 +35 +30 =16 -8 6 27.50
30   Johanna Paasikangas (Finland) -17 -27 -22 bye =33 +35 -20 +34 -13 +32 -29 +31 =23 6 22.00
31   Sheila Jackson (England) =10 -32 =19 =22 -14 bye -12 =23 =27 -33 +35 -30 +34
32   Claudia Amura (Argentina) =5 +31 -6 =11 -7 +22 =19 -15 -14 -30 bye =35 -34 5 24.25
33   Khương Thị Hồng Nhung (Vietnam)[2] =23 -2 +4 -7 =30 -19 bye -10 +35 +31 -15 -17 -28 5 22.50
34   Niina Koskela (Finland) =19 -18 -24 -4 bye -12 +35 -30 =29 -27 -21 =32 -31
35   Sylvia Chidi (Nigeria) FF* FF* bye -15 -12 -30 -34 =28 -33 -29 -31 -25 +32

Sylvia Chidi of Nigeria didn't enter the tournament until after the first two rounds were played, so her first two games are listed as forfeited.

1992–93 Candidates Tournament edit

The six qualifiers from the Interzonal Tournament were joined by Chiburdanidze, who had lost the last title match, and Marić, the runner-up from the previous Candidates Tournament. In addition to these eight, FIDE decided to give a wild card to Polgár, who the year before had been the first woman to achieve the grandmaster title through tournament play (world champions Gaprindashvili and Chiburdanidze had only been awarded the title through special judgment by FIDE).

Once again, the Candidates Tournament was contested as a double round-robin tournament in Shanghai in October and November 1992, but this time the top two would then play a short 8-game match to determine the challenger. As expected, Polgár dominated the tournament, finishing a full three points ahead of Ioseliani, who advanced on a better tie-break score than ex-champion Chiburdanidze.

Few observers expected the final to be more than a formality. At the start of the match in Monaco in February 1993, Polgár outrated her opponent by 100 points. After Polgár won the first two games and drew the next three, she needed only one point in the last three games to clinch the win. However, Ioseliani won the sixth game, drew the seventh, and won the eighth to take the match into a two-game tiebreak. Polgár won the first game, but Ioseliani won the second, forcing a second tiebreak. When the pattern repeated – Polgár winning first, then Ioselani – FIDE ruled that the match would be decided by a lottery. This time Ioseliani won, eliminating Polgar from the cycle.[3][4]

1992 Women's Candidates Tournament
Player Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Points Tie break
1   Zsuzsa Polgár (Hungary) 2540 1 2 2 12½
2   Nana Ioseliani (Georgia) 2445 ½ 1 2 0 2 1 70.75
3   Maia Chiburdanidze (Georgia) 2505 ½ 1 ½ 2 1 68.75
4   Alisa Marić (FR Yugoslavia) 2390 1 ½ 1 1 0 8 65.00
5   Qin Kanying (China) 2315 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 2 2 8 56.00
6   Irina Levitina (USA) 2415 ½ 0 0 1 1 1
7   Peng Zhaoqin (China) 2370 0 2 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 6 46.25
8   Nona Gaprindashvili (Georgia) 2435 ½ 0 1 1 ½ ½ 1 6 46.00
9   Wang Pin (China) 2370 0 1 ½ 2 0 1 ½ 1 6 45.75
Women's Candidates Final 1993
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 TB1 TB2 TB3 TB4 Total
  Zsuzsa Polgár (Hungary) 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 1 0 1 0 6
  Nana Ioseliani (Georgia) 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 0 1 0 1 6

1993 Championship Match edit

The championship match was played in Monaco from October 25 to November 17,[5] 1993 and was quite an anticlimax after the controversy of the Candidates Tournament. Ioseliani's luck had run out and defending champion Xie Jun defeated her decisively.[6]

Women's World Championship Match 1993
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Total
  Nana Ioseliani (Georgia) 0 0 ½ 0 0 1 0 ½ 0 ½ 0
  Xie Jun (China) 1 1 ½ 1 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1

References edit

  1. ^ "World Chess Championship (women) : 1991 Subotica Interzonal Tournament". Mark-weeks.com. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  2. ^ Suomen Shakki 4/1992 (Finnish)
  3. ^ "World Chess Championship (women) : 1992 Shanghai Candidates Tournament". Mark-weeks.com. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  4. ^ "World Chess Championship for Women". Mark-weeks.com. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  5. ^ Xu, Jialiang; Xu, Jian (March 1994). "Xie Jun of China Retains Her World Crown" (PDF). Chess Life and Review. US Chess Federation. p. 45.
  6. ^ "World Chess Championship (women) : 1993 Ioseliani – Xie". Mark-weeks.com. Retrieved 2012-02-08.

women, world, chess, championship, 1993, 1993, women, world, chess, championship, successfully, defended, title, against, challenger, nana, ioseliani, title, match, contents, 1991, interzonal, tournament, 1992, candidates, tournament, 1993, championship, match. The 1993 Women s World Chess Championship was won by Xie Jun who successfully defended her title against challenger Nana Ioseliani in the title match Contents 1 1991 Interzonal Tournament 2 1992 93 Candidates Tournament 3 1993 Championship Match 4 References1991 Interzonal Tournament editAs part of the qualification process an Interzonal tournament was held in Subotica in November 1991 featuring the best players from each FIDE zone 35 players took part with the top six qualifying for the Candidates Tournament For the first time the women s Interzonal was played as a 13 round Swiss system tournament 1 1991 Women s Interzonal Tournament Player 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Points Tie break 1 nbsp Nona Gaprindashvili Soviet Union 14 28 2 17 21 9 3 5 7 12 4 6 10 9 67 75 2 nbsp Peng Zhaoqin China 26 33 1 20 27 5 16 9 3 4 6 7 12 9 63 75 3 nbsp Nana Ioseliani Soviet Union 27 17 9 5 6 21 1 7 2 8 24 11 4 8 61 25 4 nbsp Irina Levitina USA 25 24 33 34 15 10 6 14 16 2 1 9 3 8 59 25 5 nbsp Wang Pin China 32 12 7 3 16 2 9 1 8 18 11 10 13 8 60 00 6 nbsp Qin Kanying China 13 11 32 26 3 8 4 21 17 16 2 1 9 8 55 50 7 nbsp Ketevan Arakhamia Soviet Union 18 20 5 33 32 17 8 3 1 9 14 2 19 8 52 75 8 nbsp Svetlana Matveeva Soviet Union 28 14 15 9 10 6 7 16 5 3 12 18 29 7 53 25 9 nbsp Alisa Galliamova Soviet Union 29 16 3 8 26 1 5 2 21 7 18 4 6 7 52 25 10 nbsp Ketino Kachiani Soviet Union 31 26 18 16 8 4 15 33 20 25 13 5 1 7 49 00 11 nbsp Marta Litinskaya Shul Soviet Union 22 6 21 32 25 16 27 20 15 17 5 3 18 7 48 50 12 nbsp Aynur Sofiyeva Soviet Union 20 5 26 29 35 34 31 27 24 1 8 14 2 7 42 00 13 nbsp Ildiko Madl Hungary 6 29 20 21 23 25 14 22 30 28 10 25 5 7 44 00 14 nbsp Cristina Adela Foișor Romania 1 8 29 19 31 18 13 4 32 15 7 12 22 7 43 75 15 nbsp Daniela Nuțu Gajic Romania 16 22 8 35 4 20 10 32 11 14 33 19 26 7 39 00 16 nbsp Julia Demina Soviet Union 15 9 25 10 5 11 2 8 4 6 22 29 24 6 45 50 17 nbsp Margarita Voyska Bulgaria 30 3 23 1 18 7 25 19 6 11 27 33 20 6 41 00 18 nbsp Zsuzsa Veroci Petronic Hungary 7 34 10 28 17 14 21 24 25 5 9 8 11 6 40 25 19 nbsp Tunde Csonkics Hungary 34 23 31 14 28 33 32 17 22 24 26 15 7 6 37 75 20 nbsp Vesna Basagic Yugoslavia 12 7 13 2 24 15 30 11 10 bye 23 28 17 6 36 00 21 nbsp Sanja Vuksanovic Yugoslavia 24 25 11 13 1 3 18 6 9 26 34 23 bye 6 33 25 22 nbsp Gordana Markovic Yugoslavia 11 15 30 31 29 32 28 13 19 23 16 27 14 6 37 25 23 nbsp Mirjana Maric Yugoslavia 33 19 17 27 13 28 29 31 26 22 20 21 30 6 36 25 24 nbsp Irina Chelushkina Soviet Union 21 4 34 25 20 29 26 18 12 19 3 13 16 6 36 00 25 nbsp Anna Maria Botsari Greece 4 21 16 24 11 13 17 26 18 10 28 35 27 6 36 00 26 nbsp Beatriz MacArthur USA 2 10 12 6 9 27 24 25 23 21 19 bye 15 6 35 25 27 nbsp Natasa Bojkovic Yugoslavia 3 30 28 23 2 26 11 12 31 34 17 22 25 6 34 25 28 nbsp Constanze Jahn Germany 8 1 27 18 19 23 22 35 bye 13 25 20 33 6 29 75 29 nbsp Suzana Maksimovic Yugoslavia 9 13 14 12 22 24 23 bye 34 35 30 16 8 6 27 50 30 nbsp Johanna Paasikangas Finland 17 27 22 bye 33 35 20 34 13 32 29 31 23 6 22 00 31 nbsp Sheila Jackson England 10 32 19 22 14 bye 12 23 27 33 35 30 34 5 32 nbsp Claudia Amura Argentina 5 31 6 11 7 22 19 15 14 30 bye 35 34 5 24 25 33 nbsp Khương Thị Hồng Nhung Vietnam 2 23 2 4 7 30 19 bye 10 35 31 15 17 28 5 22 50 34 nbsp Niina Koskela Finland 19 18 24 4 bye 12 35 30 29 27 21 32 31 3 35 nbsp Sylvia Chidi Nigeria FF FF bye 15 12 30 34 28 33 29 31 25 32 2 Sylvia Chidi of Nigeria didn t enter the tournament until after the first two rounds were played so her first two games are listed as forfeited 1992 93 Candidates Tournament editThe six qualifiers from the Interzonal Tournament were joined by Chiburdanidze who had lost the last title match and Maric the runner up from the previous Candidates Tournament In addition to these eight FIDE decided to give a wild card to Polgar who the year before had been the first woman to achieve the grandmaster title through tournament play world champions Gaprindashvili and Chiburdanidze had only been awarded the title through special judgment by FIDE Once again the Candidates Tournament was contested as a double round robin tournament in Shanghai in October and November 1992 but this time the top two would then play a short 8 game match to determine the challenger As expected Polgar dominated the tournament finishing a full three points ahead of Ioseliani who advanced on a better tie break score than ex champion Chiburdanidze Few observers expected the final to be more than a formality At the start of the match in Monaco in February 1993 Polgar outrated her opponent by 100 points After Polgar won the first two games and drew the next three she needed only one point in the last three games to clinch the win However Ioseliani won the sixth game drew the seventh and won the eighth to take the match into a two game tiebreak Polgar won the first game but Ioseliani won the second forcing a second tiebreak When the pattern repeated Polgar winning first then Ioselani FIDE ruled that the match would be decided by a lottery This time Ioseliani won eliminating Polgar from the cycle 3 4 1992 Women s Candidates Tournament Player Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Points Tie break 1 nbsp Zsuzsa Polgar Hungary 2540 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 12 2 nbsp Nana Ioseliani Georgia 2445 1 1 1 2 0 2 1 9 70 75 3 nbsp Maia Chiburdanidze Georgia 2505 1 1 2 1 1 1 9 68 75 4 nbsp Alisa Maric FR Yugoslavia 2390 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 8 65 00 5 nbsp Qin Kanying China 2315 2 1 2 8 56 00 6 nbsp Irina Levitina USA 2415 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 6 7 nbsp Peng Zhaoqin China 2370 0 2 0 1 1 6 46 25 8 nbsp Nona Gaprindashvili Georgia 2435 0 1 1 1 1 6 46 00 9 nbsp Wang Pin China 2370 0 1 2 0 1 1 6 45 75 Women s Candidates Final 1993 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 TB1 TB2 TB3 TB4 Total nbsp Zsuzsa Polgar Hungary 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 6 nbsp Nana Ioseliani Georgia 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 61993 Championship Match editThe championship match was played in Monaco from October 25 to November 17 5 1993 and was quite an anticlimax after the controversy of the Candidates Tournament Ioseliani s luck had run out and defending champion Xie Jun defeated her decisively 6 Women s World Championship Match 1993 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Total nbsp Nana Ioseliani Georgia 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 nbsp Xie Jun China 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 8 References edit World Chess Championship women 1991 Subotica Interzonal Tournament Mark weeks com Retrieved 2012 02 09 Suomen Shakki 4 1992 Finnish World Chess Championship women 1992 Shanghai Candidates Tournament Mark weeks com Retrieved 2012 02 09 World Chess Championship for Women Mark weeks com Retrieved 2012 02 09 Xu Jialiang Xu Jian March 1994 Xie Jun of China Retains Her World Crown PDF Chess Life and Review US Chess Federation p 45 World Chess Championship women 1993 Ioseliani Xie Mark weeks com Retrieved 2012 02 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women 27s World Chess Championship 1993 amp oldid 1167061008, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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