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World Chess Championship 1993

The World Chess Championship 1993 was one of the most controversial matches in chess history, with incumbent World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov, and official challenger Nigel Short, splitting from FIDE, the official world governing body of chess, and playing their title match under the auspices of the Professional Chess Association. In response, FIDE stripped Kasparov of his title, and instead held a title match between Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman.

Defending champion Challenger
Garry Kasparov Nigel Short
12½
Born 13 April 1963
30 years old
Born 1 June 1965
28 years old
Winner of the 1990 World Chess Championship Winner of the 1993 Candidates Tournament
Rating: 2815 (World No. 1) Rating: 2685 (World No. 10)
1990 1995 (PCA)
Defending champion Challenger
Anatoly Karpov Jan Timman
12½
Born 23 May 1951
42 years old
Born 14 December 1951
41 years old
Runner-up of the 1990 World Chess Championship (replacement for Garry Kasparov) Runner-up of the 1993 Candidates Tournament (replacement for Nigel Short)
Rating: 2760 (World No. 2) Rating: 2620 (World No. 33)
1990 1996 (FIDE)

The matches were won by Kasparov and Karpov respectively. For the first time in history, there were two rival World Chess Champions, a situation which persisted until the World Chess Championship 2006.

1990 Interzonal Tournament

For the first time, the Interzonal was held as a Swiss system tournament in Manila in June and July 1990. 64 contestants played 13 rounds; the top 11 qualified for the Candidates Tournament.[1]

1990 Interzonal Tournament
Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Total
1   GM Boris Gelfand (Soviet Union) 2680 =26 +42 +3 =14 +29 =5 =2 =11 +8 =12 =6 =9 +16 9
2   GM Vasyl Ivanchuk (Soviet Union) 2680 −54 +41 +43 +21 +8 +48 =1 =6 =12 =10 =5 +17 =3 9
3   GM Viswanathan Anand (India) 2610 =32 +44 −1 +49 −13 =54 +47 =18 =14 +29 +37 +12 =2
4   GM Nigel Short (England) 2610 +20 −21 −13 =46 +33 +24 +7 −8 +30 +18 =11 =6 +12
5   GM Gyula Sax (Hungary) 2600 =22 +64 +51 +8 =48 =1 =12 =9 =13 =11 =2 =10 =7 8
6   GM Viktor Korchnoi (Switzerland) 2630 =31 +33 =7 =15 +28 =30 +29 =2 =11 =13 =1 =4 =10 8
7   GM Robert Hübner (West Germany) 2585 =38 +62 =6 =16 =17 =18 −4 +19 +48 +21 =10 =11 =5 8
8   GM Predrag Nikolić (Yugoslavia) 2600 +13 +58 +12 −5 −2 =19 +40 +4 −1 =17 =21 =14 +25 8
9   GM Leonid Yudasin (Soviet Union) 2615 =45 +49 −29 +55 +25 =14 +48 =5 −21 +16 =12 =1 =11 8
10   GM Sergey Dolmatov (Soviet Union) 2615 =24 =23 +27 =11 +39 =29 +30 −12 +15 =2 =7 =5 =6 8
11   GM Alexey Dreev (Soviet Union) 2615 =44 =32 +22 =10 =21 +13 +14 =1 =6 =5 =4 =7 =9 8
12   GM Mikhail Gurevich (Soviet Union) 2640 +43 +36 −8 +37 =14 +34 =5 +10 =2 =1 =9 −3 −4
13   GM Branko Damljanovic (Yugoslavia) 2515 −8 +53 +4 =51 +3 −11 +34 +16 =5 =6 −17 =19 =15
14   GM Kiril Georgiev (Bulgaria) 2580 +57 =16 +17 =1 =12 =9 −11 =31 =3 =15 +28 =8 =20
15   GM Ljubomir Ljubojević (Yugoslavia) 2600 +40 =29 =16 =6 =18 =17 =21 +22 −10 =14 +36 =25 =13
16   GM Jaan Ehlvest (Soviet Union) 2655 +56 =14 =15 =7 =30 =23 +19 −13 +31 −9 +22 +21 −1
17   GM Alexander Khalifman (Soviet Union) 2615 =33 +31 −14 +24 =7 =15 +23 =21 =29 =8 +13 −2 =19
18   GM Yasser Seirawan (United States) 2635 =42 =26 =30 +56 =15 =7 =31 =3 +40 −4 =27 =24 +22
19   GM Alexei Shirov (Soviet Union) 2580 =55 =35 =23 =33 +42 =8 −16 −7 +32 +50 +29 =13 =17
20   GM Jóhann Hjartarson (Iceland) 2520 −4 +61 −37 −40 +38 −36 +45 =47 +54 =39 +42 +34 =14
21   GM Nick de Firmian (United States) 2560 +61 +4 =48 −2 =11 +37 =15 =17 +9 −7 =8 −16 =28 7
22   GM Gad Rechlis (Israel) 2505 =5 =28 −11 +27 =47 =25 +46 −15 +41 +48 −16 +37 −18 7
23   IM Vasil Spasov (Bulgaria) 2495 =34 =10 =19 +36 =51 =16 −17 =44 −39 +43 =35 =26 +49 7
24   IM Igor Štohl (Czechoslovakia) 2525 =10 −34 +45 −17 +58 −4 +43 +39 =50 −37 +44 =18 =27 7
25   GM Michael Adams (England) 2590 +46 =63 +50 −29 −9 =22 =39 =49 +44 =27 +30 =15 −8 7
26   GM Roman Dzindzichashvili (United States) 2560 =1 =18 +38 −30 =31 =46 =63 =34 =36 =42 =39 =23 +41 7
27   GM Ľubomír Ftáčnik (Czechoslovakia) 2550 −51 +59 −10 −22 +64 =32 +57 =37 +34 =25 =18 =36 =24 7
28   GM Boris Gulko (United States) 2600 =64 =22 =32 +58 −6 =47 =41 =36 =33 +31 −14 +45 =21 7
29   GM Joël Lautier (France) 2570 +60 =15 +9 +25 −1 =10 −6 +50 =17 −3 −19 =39 =35
30   GM Smbat Lputian (Soviet Union) 2575 +59 =51 =18 +26 =16 =6 −10 =48 −4 +33 −25 =41 =36
31   GM Miguel Illescas (Spain) 2535 =6 −17 =64 +38 =26 +51 =18 =14 −16 −28 =32 +44 =37
32   GM Božidar Ivanović (Yugoslavia) 2520 =3 =11 =28 −50 =36 =27 =53 =54 −19 +55 =31 =48 +56
33   GM Eugenio Torre (Philippines) 2530 =17 −6 +62 =19 −4 =49 =42 +46 =28 −30 −45 +51 +48
34   GM Simen Agdestein (Norway) 2600 =23 +24 +63 −48 +50 −12 −13 =26 −27 +52 +40 −20 =39
35   IM Mihail Marin (Romania) 2485 =37 =19 =36 −39 =49 =42 −56 +55 +47 =40 =23 =50 =29
36   GM Mikhail Tal (Soviet Union) 2580 +52 −12 =35 −23 =32 +20 =37 =28 =26 +56 −15 =27 =30
37   GM Tony Miles (England) 2595 =35 =55 +20 −12 +43 −21 =36 =27 +49 +24 −3 −22 =31
38   GM Jaime Sunye Neto (Brazil) 2465 =7 =39 −26 −31 −20 =60 =59 +58 =53 +47 =48 =42 +50
39   GM Andrei Sokolov (Soviet Union) 2570 =62 =38 =54 +35 −10 =41 =25 −24 +23 =20 =26 =29 =34
40   GM Petar Popović (Yugoslavia) 2520 −15 =60 =42 +20 +63 =50 −8 +56 −18 =35 −34 =49 =45 6
41   IM Goran Čabrilo (Yugoslavia) 2485 −48 −2 =59 +60 +56 =39 =28 =42 −22 +49 =50 =30 −26 6
42   GM Kevin Spraggett (Canada) 2540 =18 −1 =40 +64 −19 =35 =33 =41 +51 =26 −20 =38 =46 6
43   GM Alonso Zapata (Colombia) 2545 −12 +52 −2 +53 −37 =57 −24 −51 +61 −23 +58 =54 +55 6
44   GM Ye Rongguang (China) 2525 =11 −3 −49 +62 −55 +58 +51 =23 −25 +57 −24 −31 +54 6
45   GM Eric Lobron (West Germany) 2535 =9 −50 −24 =59 +52 −56 −20 =57 +60 +54 +33 −28 =40 6
46   IM Stuart Rachels (United States) 2475 −25 +47 =58 =4 =54 =26 −22 −33 −57 +62 =56 +52 =42 6
47   GM Margeir Petursson (Iceland) 2550 −63 −46 +57 +52 =22 =28 −3 =20 −35 −38 +60 =56 +59 6
48   GM Lajos Portisch (Hungary) 2590 +41 +54 =21 +34 =5 −2 −9 =30 −7 −22 =38 =32 −33
49   GM Ian Rogers (Australia) 2535 =50 −9 +44 −3 =35 =33 +55 =25 −37 −41 +53 =40 −23
50   GM Rafael Vaganian (Soviet Union) 2630 =49 +45 −25 +32 −34 =40 +54 −29 =24 −19 =41 =35 −38
51   GM Gata Kamsky (United States) 2650 +27 =30 −5 =13 =23 −31 −44 +43 −42 =53 =52 −33 +60
52   IM Lin Ta (China) 2435 −36 −43 +61 −47 −45 +64 +62 =53 =56 −34 =51 −46 +58
53   GM Vasily Smyslov (Soviet Union) 2570 −58 −13 +60 −43 −57 +59 =32 =58 =38 =51 −49 =62 +61
54   GM Murray Chandler (New Zealand) 2560 +2 −48 =39 =63 =46 =3 −50 =32 −20 −45 +61 =43 −44 5
55   IM Rico Mascariñas (Philippines) 2465 =19 =37 =56 −9 +44 −63 −49 −35 +59 −32 +62 =61 −43 5
56   IM Walter Arencibia (Cuba) 2555 −16 +57 =55 −18 −41 +45 +35 −40 =52 −36 =46 =47 −32 5
57   IM Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk (Brazil) 2440 −14 −56 −47 +61 +53 =43 −27 =45 +46 −44 =59 −60 =62 5
58   IM Fouad El Taher (Egypt) 2375 +53 −8 =46 −28 −24 −44 =60 −38 =62 =61 −43 +59 −52 4
59   IM Carlos Armando Juárez Flores (Guatemala) 2425 −30 −27 =41 =45 =62 −53 =38 =61 −55 +60 =57 −58 −47 4
60   IM Leon David Piasetski (Canada) 2410 −29 =40 −53 −41 =61 =38 =58 =62 −45 −59 −47 +57 −51
61   IM Slaheddine Hmadi (Tunisia) 2335 −21 −20 −52 −57 =60 =62 +64 =59 −43 =58 −54 =55 −53
62   IM Assem Afifi (Egypt) 2400 =39 −7 −33 −44 =59 =61 −52 =60 =58 −46 −55 =53 =57
63   GM Valery Salov (Soviet Union) 2655 +47 =25 −34 =54 −40 +55 =26 - - - - - -
64   IM Praveen Thipsay (India) 2490 =28 −5 =31 −42 −27 −52 −61 - - - - - - 1

Salov and Thipsay withdrew after seven rounds.

1991–93 Candidates Tournament

The final four players from the 1988–90 Candidates tournament—Karpov, Timman, Yusupov and Speelman—were seeded directly into the Candidates. They were joined by the top 11 finishers from the Interzonal. These 15 players played a series of Candidates matches.[2] If matches were tied after the allotted games, extra pairs of rapid chess games were played until one player had the lead.[3]

The preliminary matches were played in Sarajevo (Timman-Hübner and Gelfand-Nikolić), Wijk aan Zee (Korchnoi-Sax and Yusupov-Dolmatov), Riga (Ivanchuk-Yudasin), London (Short-Speelman), and Madras (Anand-Dreev) in January and February 1991. All four quarterfinals were played in Brussels in August 1991, both semifinals in Linares in April 1992, and the final in San Lorenzo del Escorial in January 1993.

1993 PCA match

Before the match could take place, both Kasparov and Short complained of corruption and a lack of professionalism within FIDE and split from FIDE to set up the Professional Chess Association (PCA), under whose auspices they held their match. The event was orchestrated largely by Raymond Keene. Keene brought the event to London (FIDE had planned it for Manchester), and England was whipped up into something of a chess fever: Channel 4 broadcast some 81 programmes on the match, the BBC also had coverage, and Short appeared in television beer commercials. The Kasparov–Short final was best of 24 games, played in London in September and October 1993.[4]

PCA World Chess Championship Match 1993
Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Total
  Garry Kasparov (Russia) 2815 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 12½
  Nigel Short (England) 2665 0 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ ½

After the actual match, the players filled out the last four days of the playing schedule by playing a series of seven exhibition games (with openings chosen by the arbiter) that Kasparov won 5–2 (+4−1=2). There was also a game in which Kasparov and Short teamed up to play against the commentary team (which lost). In the wake of the decisive victory by Kasparov, interest in chess in the UK soon died down.

1993 FIDE match

As a result of the unauthorized PCA match, FIDE stripped Kasparov of his title, removed him and Short from their rating lists, and arranged an "official" match between Timman and Karpov, whom Short had beaten in the Candidates final and semifinal respectively. The FIDE match was played in Zwolle, Arnhem, Amsterdam, and Jakarta in September to November 1993.

FIDE World Chess Championship Match 1993
Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Total
  Jan Timman (Netherlands) 2620 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½
  Anatoly Karpov (Russia) 2760 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 12½

Karpov won the best-of-24 match and thus regained the FIDE championship title that he had previously held from 1975 to 1985 before losing it to Kasparov.[5]

References

  1. ^ 1990 Manila Interzonal Tournament, Mark Weeks' Chess Pages
  2. ^ 1991–93 Candidates Matches, Mark Weeks' Chess Pages
  3. ^ World Championships 1/4-finals, round 8, Usenet rec.games.chess, August 24, 1991
  4. ^ 1993 Kasparov–Short PCA Title Match, Mark Weeks' Chess Pages
  5. ^ 1993 Karpov–Timman FIDE Title Match, Mark Weeks' Chess Pages

world, chess, championship, 1993, most, controversial, matches, chess, history, with, incumbent, world, chess, champion, garry, kasparov, official, challenger, nigel, short, splitting, from, fide, official, world, governing, body, chess, playing, their, title,. The World Chess Championship 1993 was one of the most controversial matches in chess history with incumbent World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov and official challenger Nigel Short splitting from FIDE the official world governing body of chess and playing their title match under the auspices of the Professional Chess Association In response FIDE stripped Kasparov of his title and instead held a title match between Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman Defending champion ChallengerGarry Kasparov Nigel Short12 7 Born 13 April 196330 years old Born 1 June 196528 years oldWinner of the 1990 World Chess Championship Winner of the 1993 Candidates TournamentRating 2815 World No 1 Rating 2685 World No 10 1990 1995 PCA Defending champion ChallengerAnatoly Karpov Jan Timman12 8 Born 23 May 195142 years old Born 14 December 195141 years oldRunner up of the 1990 World Chess Championship replacement for Garry Kasparov Runner up of the 1993 Candidates Tournament replacement for Nigel Short Rating 2760 World No 2 Rating 2620 World No 33 1990 1996 FIDE The matches were won by Kasparov and Karpov respectively For the first time in history there were two rival World Chess Champions a situation which persisted until the World Chess Championship 2006 Contents 1 1990 Interzonal Tournament 2 1991 93 Candidates Tournament 3 1993 PCA match 4 1993 FIDE match 5 References1990 Interzonal Tournament EditFor the first time the Interzonal was held as a Swiss system tournament in Manila in June and July 1990 64 contestants played 13 rounds the top 11 qualified for the Candidates Tournament 1 1990 Interzonal Tournament Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Total1 GM Boris Gelfand Soviet Union 2680 26 42 3 14 29 5 2 11 8 12 6 9 16 92 GM Vasyl Ivanchuk Soviet Union 2680 54 41 43 21 8 48 1 6 12 10 5 17 3 93 GM Viswanathan Anand India 2610 32 44 1 49 13 54 47 18 14 29 37 12 2 8 4 GM Nigel Short England 2610 20 21 13 46 33 24 7 8 30 18 11 6 12 8 5 GM Gyula Sax Hungary 2600 22 64 51 8 48 1 12 9 13 11 2 10 7 86 GM Viktor Korchnoi Switzerland 2630 31 33 7 15 28 30 29 2 11 13 1 4 10 87 GM Robert Hubner West Germany 2585 38 62 6 16 17 18 4 19 48 21 10 11 5 88 GM Predrag Nikolic Yugoslavia 2600 13 58 12 5 2 19 40 4 1 17 21 14 25 89 GM Leonid Yudasin Soviet Union 2615 45 49 29 55 25 14 48 5 21 16 12 1 11 810 GM Sergey Dolmatov Soviet Union 2615 24 23 27 11 39 29 30 12 15 2 7 5 6 811 GM Alexey Dreev Soviet Union 2615 44 32 22 10 21 13 14 1 6 5 4 7 9 812 GM Mikhail Gurevich Soviet Union 2640 43 36 8 37 14 34 5 10 2 1 9 3 4 7 13 GM Branko Damljanovic Yugoslavia 2515 8 53 4 51 3 11 34 16 5 6 17 19 15 7 14 GM Kiril Georgiev Bulgaria 2580 57 16 17 1 12 9 11 31 3 15 28 8 20 7 15 GM Ljubomir Ljubojevic Yugoslavia 2600 40 29 16 6 18 17 21 22 10 14 36 25 13 7 16 GM Jaan Ehlvest Soviet Union 2655 56 14 15 7 30 23 19 13 31 9 22 21 1 7 17 GM Alexander Khalifman Soviet Union 2615 33 31 14 24 7 15 23 21 29 8 13 2 19 7 18 GM Yasser Seirawan United States 2635 42 26 30 56 15 7 31 3 40 4 27 24 22 7 19 GM Alexei Shirov Soviet Union 2580 55 35 23 33 42 8 16 7 32 50 29 13 17 7 20 GM Johann Hjartarson Iceland 2520 4 61 37 40 38 36 45 47 54 39 42 34 14 7 21 GM Nick de Firmian United States 2560 61 4 48 2 11 37 15 17 9 7 8 16 28 722 GM Gad Rechlis Israel 2505 5 28 11 27 47 25 46 15 41 48 16 37 18 723 IM Vasil Spasov Bulgaria 2495 34 10 19 36 51 16 17 44 39 43 35 26 49 724 IM Igor Stohl Czechoslovakia 2525 10 34 45 17 58 4 43 39 50 37 44 18 27 725 GM Michael Adams England 2590 46 63 50 29 9 22 39 49 44 27 30 15 8 726 GM Roman Dzindzichashvili United States 2560 1 18 38 30 31 46 63 34 36 42 39 23 41 727 GM Ľubomir Ftacnik Czechoslovakia 2550 51 59 10 22 64 32 57 37 34 25 18 36 24 728 GM Boris Gulko United States 2600 64 22 32 58 6 47 41 36 33 31 14 45 21 729 GM Joel Lautier France 2570 60 15 9 25 1 10 6 50 17 3 19 39 35 6 30 GM Smbat Lputian Soviet Union 2575 59 51 18 26 16 6 10 48 4 33 25 41 36 6 31 GM Miguel Illescas Spain 2535 6 17 64 38 26 51 18 14 16 28 32 44 37 6 32 GM Bozidar Ivanovic Yugoslavia 2520 3 11 28 50 36 27 53 54 19 55 31 48 56 6 33 GM Eugenio Torre Philippines 2530 17 6 62 19 4 49 42 46 28 30 45 51 48 6 34 GM Simen Agdestein Norway 2600 23 24 63 48 50 12 13 26 27 52 40 20 39 6 35 IM Mihail Marin Romania 2485 37 19 36 39 49 42 56 55 47 40 23 50 29 6 36 GM Mikhail Tal Soviet Union 2580 52 12 35 23 32 20 37 28 26 56 15 27 30 6 37 GM Tony Miles England 2595 35 55 20 12 43 21 36 27 49 24 3 22 31 6 38 GM Jaime Sunye Neto Brazil 2465 7 39 26 31 20 60 59 58 53 47 48 42 50 6 39 GM Andrei Sokolov Soviet Union 2570 62 38 54 35 10 41 25 24 23 20 26 29 34 6 40 GM Petar Popovic Yugoslavia 2520 15 60 42 20 63 50 8 56 18 35 34 49 45 641 IM Goran Cabrilo Yugoslavia 2485 48 2 59 60 56 39 28 42 22 49 50 30 26 642 GM Kevin Spraggett Canada 2540 18 1 40 64 19 35 33 41 51 26 20 38 46 643 GM Alonso Zapata Colombia 2545 12 52 2 53 37 57 24 51 61 23 58 54 55 644 GM Ye Rongguang China 2525 11 3 49 62 55 58 51 23 25 57 24 31 54 645 GM Eric Lobron West Germany 2535 9 50 24 59 52 56 20 57 60 54 33 28 40 646 IM Stuart Rachels United States 2475 25 47 58 4 54 26 22 33 57 62 56 52 42 647 GM Margeir Petursson Iceland 2550 63 46 57 52 22 28 3 20 35 38 60 56 59 648 GM Lajos Portisch Hungary 2590 41 54 21 34 5 2 9 30 7 22 38 32 33 5 49 GM Ian Rogers Australia 2535 50 9 44 3 35 33 55 25 37 41 53 40 23 5 50 GM Rafael Vaganian Soviet Union 2630 49 45 25 32 34 40 54 29 24 19 41 35 38 5 51 GM Gata Kamsky United States 2650 27 30 5 13 23 31 44 43 42 53 52 33 60 5 52 IM Lin Ta China 2435 36 43 61 47 45 64 62 53 56 34 51 46 58 5 53 GM Vasily Smyslov Soviet Union 2570 58 13 60 43 57 59 32 58 38 51 49 62 61 5 54 GM Murray Chandler New Zealand 2560 2 48 39 63 46 3 50 32 20 45 61 43 44 555 IM Rico Mascarinas Philippines 2465 19 37 56 9 44 63 49 35 59 32 62 61 43 556 IM Walter Arencibia Cuba 2555 16 57 55 18 41 45 35 40 52 36 46 47 32 557 IM Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk Brazil 2440 14 56 47 61 53 43 27 45 46 44 59 60 62 558 IM Fouad El Taher Egypt 2375 53 8 46 28 24 44 60 38 62 61 43 59 52 459 IM Carlos Armando Juarez Flores Guatemala 2425 30 27 41 45 62 53 38 61 55 60 57 58 47 460 IM Leon David Piasetski Canada 2410 29 40 53 41 61 38 58 62 45 59 47 57 51 3 61 IM Slaheddine Hmadi Tunisia 2335 21 20 52 57 60 62 64 59 43 58 54 55 53 3 62 IM Assem Afifi Egypt 2400 39 7 33 44 59 61 52 60 58 46 55 53 57 3 63 GM Valery Salov Soviet Union 2655 47 25 34 54 40 55 26 3 64 IM Praveen Thipsay India 2490 28 5 31 42 27 52 61 1Salov and Thipsay withdrew after seven rounds 1991 93 Candidates Tournament EditThe final four players from the 1988 90 Candidates tournament Karpov Timman Yusupov and Speelman were seeded directly into the Candidates They were joined by the top 11 finishers from the Interzonal These 15 players played a series of Candidates matches 2 If matches were tied after the allotted games extra pairs of rapid chess games were played until one player had the lead 3 The preliminary matches were played in Sarajevo Timman Hubner and Gelfand Nikolic Wijk aan Zee Korchnoi Sax and Yusupov Dolmatov Riga Ivanchuk Yudasin London Short Speelman and Madras Anand Dreev in January and February 1991 All four quarterfinals were played in Brussels in August 1991 both semifinals in Linares in April 1992 and the final in San Lorenzo del Escorial in January 1993 Round of 16 best of 8 Quarterfinals best of 8 Semifinals best of 10 Final best of 14 Jan Timman4 Robert Hubner2 Jan Timman4 Victor Korchnoi2 Victor Korchnoi5 Gyula Sax4 Jan Timman6 Artur Yusupov4 Artur Yusupov6 Sergey Dolmatov5 Artur Yusupov5 Vasyl Ivanchuk4 Vasyl Ivanchuk4 Leonid Yudasin Jan Timman5 Nigel Short7 Nigel Short5 Jon Speelman4 Nigel Short5 Boris Gelfand3 Boris Gelfand5 Predrag Nikolic4 Nigel Short6 Anatoly Karpov4 Viswanathan Anand4 Alexei Dreev1 Viswanathan Anand3 Anatoly Karpov4 no opponent Anatoly Karpov1993 PCA match EditBefore the match could take place both Kasparov and Short complained of corruption and a lack of professionalism within FIDE and split from FIDE to set up the Professional Chess Association PCA under whose auspices they held their match The event was orchestrated largely by Raymond Keene Keene brought the event to London FIDE had planned it for Manchester and England was whipped up into something of a chess fever Channel 4 broadcast some 81 programmes on the match the BBC also had coverage and Short appeared in television beer commercials The Kasparov Short final was best of 24 games played in London in September and October 1993 4 PCA World Chess Championship Match 1993 Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Total Garry Kasparov Russia 2815 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 12 Nigel Short England 2665 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 After the actual match the players filled out the last four days of the playing schedule by playing a series of seven exhibition games with openings chosen by the arbiter that Kasparov won 5 2 4 1 2 There was also a game in which Kasparov and Short teamed up to play against the commentary team which lost In the wake of the decisive victory by Kasparov interest in chess in the UK soon died down 1993 FIDE match EditAs a result of the unauthorized PCA match FIDE stripped Kasparov of his title removed him and Short from their rating lists and arranged an official match between Timman and Karpov whom Short had beaten in the Candidates final and semifinal respectively The FIDE match was played in Zwolle Arnhem Amsterdam and Jakarta in September to November 1993 FIDE World Chess Championship Match 1993 Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Total Jan Timman Netherlands 2620 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 Anatoly Karpov Russia 2760 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 12 Karpov won the best of 24 match and thus regained the FIDE championship title that he had previously held from 1975 to 1985 before losing it to Kasparov 5 References Edit 1990 Manila Interzonal Tournament Mark Weeks Chess Pages 1991 93 Candidates Matches Mark Weeks Chess Pages World Championships 1 4 finals round 8 Usenet rec games chess August 24 1991 1993 Kasparov Short PCA Title Match Mark Weeks Chess Pages 1993 Karpov Timman FIDE Title Match Mark Weeks Chess Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title World Chess Championship 1993 amp oldid 1124513160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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