The Zurich Christmas Open (German: Weihnachtsopen Zürich) is an annual chess tournament that takes place in Zurich, Switzerland. The tournament began in 1977 and has been held 38 consecutive times.[1] In 2013, Polish Grandmaster Radosław Wojtaszek won the tournament.[2][3] In 2014, German grandmaster Arkadij Naiditsch won the tournament.[1]
The tournament has been won four times by Vladimir Tukmakov and Josef Klinger.[4]
Winners
- # - Year - Master Tournament - Main Tournament - 1 - 1977 - Radovan Govedarica YUG - only one Category - 2 - 1978 - Werner Hug SUI - only one Category - 3 - 1979 - Petar Popovic YUG - Trauth M. GER - 4 - 1980 - Radoslav Simic YUG - Koronghy J. HUN - 5 - 1981 - Dragutin Sahovic YUG - Payrits H. AUT - 6 - 1982 - Gyula Sax HUN - Baldauf M. GER - 7 - 1983 - Jaime Sunye Neto BRA - Maillard SUI - 8 - 1984 - Stefan Kindermann GER - Bellamaric S. YUG - 9 - 1985 - Josef Klinger AUT - Frick R. LIE - 10 - 1986 - Josef Klinger AUT - Zaja I. YUG - 11 - 1987 - Lubomir Neckar CSR - Potterat M. SUI - 12 - 1988 - Josef Klinger AUT - Mella L. SUI - 13 - 1989 - Heinz Wirthensohn SUI - Ribic K. YUG - 14 - 1990 - Josef Klinger AUT - Kozarcanin S. YUG - 15 - 1991 - Jacob Murey FRA - Fischer L. SUI - 16 - 1992 - Reinhard Lendwai AUT - Fehr D. SUI - 17 - 1993 - Vadim Milov ISR - Rosing H. GER - 18 - 1994 - Vladimir Tukmakov UKR - Kajtez M. YUG - 19 - 1995 - Vladimir Tukmakov UKR - Cruceli S. SUI - 20 - 1996 - Georg Siegel GER - Gojani G. SUI - 21 - 1997 - Nedeljko Kelecevic BIH - Bütler M. SUI - 22 - 1998 - Vladimir Tukmakov[5] UKR - Wittwer M. SUI - 23 - 1999 - Vladimir Tukmakov[5] UKR - Agushi A. SUI - 24 - 2000 - Vladimir Epishin[5] GER - Jashari E. SUI - 25 - 2001 - Yannick Pelletier[5] SUI - Hana A. GER - 26 - 2002 - Yannick Pelletier[5] SUI - Tikvic N. SUI - 27 - 2003 - Stanislav Savchenko[5] UKR - Remata V. SUI - 28 - 2004 - Aloyzas Kveinys[5] LIT - Hirt M. SUI - 29 - 2005 - Zoltán Varga[5] HUN - Pfau M. GER - 30 - 2006 - Yannick Pelletier[5] SUI - Joller H. SUI - 31 - 2007 - Florian Jenni[5] SUI - Gabersek A. SUI - 32 - 2008 - Héra Imre[5] HUN - Wegelin R. SUI - 33 - 2009 - Leonid Milov[5] GER - Ristevski S. SUI - 34 - 2010 - Georg Meier[5] GER - Stucki R. SUI - 35 - 2011 - Igor Kurnosov[5] RUS - Künzli T. SUI - 36 - 2012 - Levente Vajda[6] ROM - Boskovic M. SRB - 37 - 2013 - Radosław Wojtaszek[2][3] POL - Schweighoffer M. SUI - 38 - 2014 - Arkadij Naiditsch[1] GER - Grünberger M. SRB - 39 - 2015 - Arkadij Naiditsch[7] GER - Mansoor S. SUI - 40 - 2016 - Nijat Abasov AZE - Bhunjun R. SUI - 41 - 2017 - GM Nisipeanu Liviu-Dieter GER - Hauser R. SUI - 42 - 2018 - Haik M. Martirosyan ARM[8] - Mesut Altok GER 
References
- 1 2 3 Ramirez, Alejandro (2 January 2015). "Naiditsch tops Zurich Christmas Open". ChessBase. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- 1 2 McClain, Dylan Loeb (12 January 2014). "Playing Second Fiddle for a Chance at First Place". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- 1 2 "38th Zurich Christmas Open". Chessdom. 20 October 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- ↑ "Ehrentafel". www.weihnachtsopen.ch. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "Archiv Zürcher Weihnachtsopen". Weihnachtsopen Zürich. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- ↑ "GM Levente Vajda grabs the trophy in Zurich Weihnachtsopen". Chessdom. 31 December 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- ↑ "Arkadij Naiditsch repeats success in Zurich Christmas Open". Chessdom. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
- ↑ Schulz, André (2 January 2019). "Zürich: Haik Martirosyan vor Rasmus Svane" (in German). ChessBase.
External links
- Official website (in German)
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
