Candidates Tournament 2024
VenueThe Great Hall
LocationToronto, Canada
Dates2–25 April 2024
Competitors8 from 5 nations

The 2024 Candidates Tournament will be an eight-player chess tournament, held to determine the challenger for the World Chess Championship 2024. It is scheduled to take place at The Great Hall in Toronto, Canada, from April 2–25, 2024.[1] The event will be held alongside the Women's Candidates Tournament.[2][3]

As with every Candidates tournament since 2013, it will be a double round-robin tournament.[4][5] The winner of the tournament will earn the right to play the World Chess Championship 2024 against the current World Chess Champion Ding Liren.[6]

Qualification

The qualifiers for the Candidates Tournament are:[7][8][9]

Qualification method Player Age Rating World
ranking
(January 2024)
2023 World Championship runner-up FIDE Ian Nepomniachtchi[lower-alpha 1] 33 2769 5
The top three finishers in the Chess World Cup 2023[lower-alpha 2] Norway Magnus Carlsen (winner, withdrew) 33 2830 1
India R Praggnanandhaa (runner-up) 18 2743 13
United States Fabiano Caruana (third place) 31 2804 2
Azerbaijan Nijat Abasov (fourth place, replacement for Carlsen) 28 2641 102
The top two finishers in the FIDE Grand Swiss Tournament 2023 India Vidit Gujrathi (winner) 29 2742 14
United States Hikaru Nakamura (runner-up) 36 2788 3
The winner of the 2023 FIDE Circuit[lower-alpha 3] India Gukesh D (runner-up) 17 2725 25
Highest rating for January 2024[lower-alpha 4] France Alireza Firouzja 20 2759 6

Participation of Magnus Carlsen

Despite qualifying for the Candidates Tournament by winning the 2023 FIDE World Cup,[13][14] former World Champion Magnus Carlsen officially decided not to compete in Toronto.[15] He had previously stated his disinclination after reaching the semifinals of the World Cup, stating that "under the current format there is absolutely no chance" he will play the Candidates.[16] In January 2024, after official confirmation of candidates list, Magnus Carlsen formally confirmed his decision to decline FIDE's invitation to play in the Candidates Tournament by stating "I would say the main reason is that I don't enjoy it. It's as simple as that."[17] As a result, Nijat Abasov, who finished fourth at the World Cup, qualified to the Candidates Tournament 2024 as Carlsen's replacement.[18][19]

FIDE and Grand Chess Tour agreement

In April 2022, before announcing all the qualification methods, FIDE announced that the top two finishers in the 2023 Grand Chess Tour would qualify to the 2024 Candidates Tournament. FIDE promised that more details will follow, but later announced qualification paths excluding the Grand Chess Tour, without providing an explanation for the change.[20][21] However, the Grand Chess Tour tournaments counted toward the qualifying path of the FIDE Circuit.[8]

FIDE Rating qualifier

The highest rated player in the January 2024 rating list who has not yet qualified for the Candidates or World Championship, and has participated in at least four FIDE Circuit classical events, qualified for the Candidates.[22][23][24]

The rating qualifier turned out to be hotly contested. After a poor showing in the 2023 Sinquefield Cup, rating spot front-runner Alireza Firouzja lost nearly thirteen rating points, putting him behind Wesley So in the live ratings. In an attempt to surpass So, the Chartres Chess Club organized three two-game matches between Firouzja and grandmasters Alexandre Dgebuadze (52 years old, rated 2439), Andrei Shchekachev (51 years old, rated 2506), and Sergey Fedorchuk (42 years old, rated 2546). These matches, held in Chartres, France, were collectively referred to as "Alireza Firouzja's Race to Candidates". Firouzja needed to win all six games (or win the first five and not play the sixth) to overtake So in the live ratings. He indeed won the first five games after some controversy (such as Shchekachev resigning in a position that turned out to be equal in game 3), but decided to play the sixth game anyway. In what was effectively a must-win game, Firouzja overpushed and landed in a terrible endgame, but with both players in time trouble, Fedorchuk accepted Firouzja's draw offer. The 5.5/6 result still left Firouzja behind So in the live rating list.

The last-minute nature of the event as well as the hand-selecting of opponents drew criticism, including from So, who revealed he turned down similar opportunities because he disagreed with the morality of such events. Shortly after these matches were announced, FIDE affirmed that it had the right to not rate any specific event, and the United States Chess Federation called on FIDE to not rate Firouzja's games. FIDE's response drew criticism from many, including Ian Nepomniachtchi, who pointed out that Ding Liren had also played last-minute games to qualify for the Candidates Tournament 2022, to no reaction from FIDE.[25]

On December 25, FIDE announced new rules, effective immediately, requiring events with at least one player rated over 2700 (or at least one woman player rated over 2500) to be registered at least one month in advance; however, the rule would not be applied retroactively for Alireza Firouzja's Race to Candidates tournament. Such requirement could be waived with the approval of the FIDE president or QC Chairman. That same day, Alireza Firouzja's matches (as well as another match in Chartres in which Firouzja did not play) were removed from FIDE's website.[26][27]

Having fallen short, Firouzja withdrew from the World Rapid and Blitz championship to participate in the Open de Rouen tournament,[28] which was a minor Swiss tournament with a top prize of €700, a relatively paltry sum for a super-GM. Firouzja won all 7 games, including a win against former world championship challenger Gata Kamsky. This gained Firouzja enough rating to surpass So on the January 2024 rating list even if the Chartres event was not rated, which turned out to be the case.[29] Firouzja was officially confirmed as the rating qualifier in the January ratings list.[30]

Top ten in the January 2024 rating list
Ranking Player Rating Candidates FIDE Circuit Eligible for rating qualification
1 Norway Magnus Carlsen 2830 Qualified[31] 4+ No
2 United States Fabiano Caruana 2804 Qualified[32] 4+ No
3 United States Hikaru Nakamura 2788 Qualified[33] 4+ No
4 China Ding Liren 2780 World Champion[23] 2 No
5 FIDE Ian Nepomniachtchi 2769 Qualified[23] 4+ No
6 France Alireza Firouzja 2759 Qualified 4+ Yes
7 United States Wesley So 2757 - 4+ Yes
8 United States Leinier Domínguez 2752 - 4 Yes
9 FIDE Sergey Karjakin 2750 - 0 No
10 Netherlands Anish Giri 2749 - 4+ Yes
  Qualified to Candidates by rating
  Qualified to Candidates by another path
  Not qualified to Candidates (already World Champion)
  Not qualified to Candidates

Organization

The tournament is an eight-player, double round-robin tournament, meaning there are 14 rounds with each player facing the others twice: once with the black pieces and once with the white pieces. The tournament winner will qualify to play Ding Liren for the World Championship in 2024.

Players from the same federation are required to play each other in the first rounds of each half[5] to avoid collusion. The players affected in the 2024 Candidates are R Praggnanandhaa, Vidit Gujrathi and Gukesh D from India; they will face one another in rounds 1–3 and 8–10.

Regulations

The time control is 120 minutes for the first 40 moves, then 30 minutes for the rest of the game, plus a 30-second increment per move starting from move 61. Players get 1 point for a win, ½ point for a draw and 0 points for a loss.

Tiebreaks are addressed as follows:[5]

  • Players would play two rapid chess games at 15 minutes plus 10 seconds per move. If a three- to six-way tie had occurred, a single round-robin would be played. If seven or eight players had been tied, a single round-robin would be played with a time limit of 10 minutes plus 5 seconds per move.
  • If any players had still been tied for first after the rapid chess games, they would play two blitz chess games at 3 minutes plus 2 seconds per move. In the case of more than two players being tied, a single round-robin would be played.
  • If any players were still tied for first after these blitz chess games, the remaining players would play a knock-out blitz tournament at the same time control. In each mini-match of the proposed knock-out tournament, the first player to win a game would win the mini-match.

Ties for places other than first were broken by, in order: (1) Sonneborn–Berger score; (2) total number of wins; (3) head-to-head score among tied players; (4) drawing of lots.

The prize money is 48,000 for first place, €36,000 for second place, and €24,000 for third place (with players on the same number of points sharing prize money, irrespective of tie-breaks), plus €3,500 per half-point for every player, for a total prize pool of €500,000.[5]

Schedule

Notes

  1. Russian players' flags are displayed as the FIDE flag, as Russian and Belarusian flags have been banned from FIDE-rated events in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[10]
  2. The regulations stated that it would be the top three finishers other than Ding and Nepomniachtchi. (And that if both finished in the top four of the World Cup, then the World Cup qualifiers would be the other two players in the top four; and two players with the highest rating in the January 2024 ranking list would qualify for the event instead of one). However neither of these players reached the World Cup semifinals: Ding elected not to play, and Nepomniachtchi lost in the fifth round.
  3. Fabiano Caruana finished first in the 2023 FIDE Circuit, but had already qualified for the Candidates through a third place finish at the Chess World Cup 2023. As a result, the qualifying spot was awarded to the highest finisher of the FIDE Circuit who had not already qualified for the event (Gukesh D).[11][12]
  4. Provided the player has played at least 4 classical time control tournaments eligible for the 2023 FIDE Circuit.

References

  1. "FIDE publishes the regulations for 2024 Candidates Tournaments".
  2. "Toronto will host the 2024 FIDE Candidates Tournaments".
  3. "Toronto to host the 2024 Open and Women's Candidates Tournaments". ChessBase.
  4. FIDE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Cycle 2023-2024
  5. 1 2 3 4 Regulations for the FIDE Candidates Tournament 2024, (PDF) FIDE
  6. Tarjei Svensen (5 November 2023). "Ding Reveals Reason For Absence, Expects Comeback In 2024". Chess.com.
  7. "FIDE reforms qualifications paths to Candidates Tournament".
  8. 1 2 "FIDE Announces 2024 Candidates Tournament Qualification Paths". Chess.com.
  9. "FIDE revamp Candidates qualification system". chess24.
  10. FIDE Condemns Military Action; Takes Measures Against Russia, Belarus, chess.com, 28 February 2022
  11. Tarjei Svensen (13 December 2023). "FIDE Clarification On Candidates Race Draws Reactions". Chess.com.
  12. "FIDE Circuit 2023". FIDE.
  13. Aaditya Narayan (24 August 2023). "Magnus Carlsen wins 2023 Chess World Cup after beating R Praggnanandhaa in tie-breaks". ESPN.
  14. "Chess: Magnus Carlsen beats India's Praggnanandhaa to win FIDE World Cup". Al Jazeera English. 24 August 2023.
  15. "Carlsen On Lack Of Motivation, Classical Chess, New WC Formats & Family Life". chess.com. 2 May 2023. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
  16. "Under the current format there is absolutely no chance. I think everybody should operate under the assumption that I will not play at the Candidates and that everybody else who's in the semifinals is qualified for the Candidates," says Magnus Carlsen. Before the official decision, twitter.com, 16 August 2023
  17. "Exclusive: Carlsen Confirms He Will Formally Decline Candidates Invitation". Chess.com. 6 January 2024.
  18. FIDE Candidates Tournament 2024: Qualification paths
  19. FIDE (14 January 2024). "Magnus Carlsen withdraws from Candidates 2024, the spot goes to Nijat Abasov". fide.com. FIDE. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  20. "Grand Chess Tour becomes part of the World Championship Cycle". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  21. "FIDE revamp Candidates qualification system". chess24.com. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  22. "FIDE World Championship Cycle". International Chess Federation (FIDE). Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  23. 1 2 3 "FIDE reforms the qualifications paths to the Candidates Tournament". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  24. "FIDE World Championship Cycle". International Chess Federation (FIDE). Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  25. Colin McGourty (22 December 2023). "Firouzja Falls At Final Candidates Hurdle, Wins Only 5.5/6, Drops Below So". chess.com. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  26. "FIDE Council approves changes in tournament registration procedure". FIDE. 25 December 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  27. @MChoiz (December 25, 2023). "And Chartres vanished" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  28. @FIDE_chess (December 23, 2023). "GM Alireza Firouzja has withdrawn from the FIDE World Rapid and Blitz Championships due to personal reasons. #RapidBlitz" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  29. Colin McGourty (29 December 2023). "Firouzja Overtakes Wesley So To Grab Candidates Rating Spot". Chess.com. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  30. "FIDE rating January 2024". Chessbase. 1 January 2024.
  31. Ben Morse (24 August 2023). "Magnus Carlsen defeats Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa to become Chess World Cup champion". CNN.
  32. "Magnus Carlsen secures first World Cup victory, Prag finishes second, Caruana third". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  33. Jack Rodgers (6 November 2023). "Vidit Wins FIDE Grand Swiss, Nakamura Secures Candidates Spot". Chess.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2023.
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