2008 in chess

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Below is a list of events in chess during the year 2008, and a list of the top ten players during that year:

January

(Top events in bold)

FIDE January 2008 Top Ten
RankPrevPlayerRatingChng
13 Vladimir Kramnik (RUS)2799+14
21 Viswanathan Anand (IND)2799–2
34 Veselin Topalov (BUL)2780+11
46 Alexander Morozevich (RUS)2765+10
512 Peter Svidler (RUS)2763+31
67 Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (AZE)2760+8
710 Alexei Shirov (ESP)2755+16
85 Peter Leko (HUN)2753−2
92 Vassily Ivanchuk (UKR)2753−36
109 Levon Aronian (ARM)2739−2

February

  • February 2 – "To Gligorić with Love", a rapid chess tournament in Pančevo honors Svetozar Gligorić (Serbia) on his 85th birthday. The 85 player field includes 23 GMs, 21 IMs, 12 FMs, 4 WGMs, and 1 WIM. Five players tie for first place, with GM Ivan Ivanišević (Serbia) winning the trophy.[11]
  • February 10 – 4th International Chess Festival Moscow Open held at the Russian State Social University won by GM Artyom Timofeev 7.5/9, overtaking the tournament leader GM Ernesto Inarkiev (7/9) by beating him in the final round in a 117-move game. IM Anna Muzychuk wins the women's section with 8/9. The tournament has a 5 million ruble prize fund (about US$205,760).[12][13]
  • February 15 – 45th Indian Championship in Chennai won by GM Surya Shekhar Ganguly on tie-break over IM K Rathnakaran after both scored 9/11.[14]
  • February 16 – British Chess Solving Championship has a field of 33, including all title British solvers and two overseas guests. Former world solving champion Piotr Murdzia scores 59/65 to lead the field by 712 points. Dolf Wissmann (Netherlands) and Jonathan Mestel share second place with 5112, a half-point ahead of John Nunn, alone in fourth. Mestel wins his 15th championship as the highest British scorer.[15]
  • February 17 – Four Nations Chess Challenge in Oslo won by Sweden. England finishes second, followed by Latvia and Norway.[14]
  • February 19 – European Senior Team Championship in Dresden won by the Czech Republic team headed by Vlastimil Jansa.[15]
  • February 22 – Aeroflot Open in Moscow won by 17-year-old GM Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) with the score 7/9. Regarded as the strongest open tournament in the world, the prize fund is US$200,000 with $30,000 for the winner.[15][16]
  • February 23 – 79th German Championship in Bad Woerishofen won by GM Daniel Fridman.[15]
  • February 24 – 60th Polish Women's Championship in Kraków won by IM Monika Soćko.[15]

March

April

FIDE April 2008 Top Ten
RankPrevPlayerRatingChng
12 Viswanathan Anand (IND)2803+4
21 Vladimir Kramnik (RUS)2788−11
34 Alexander Morozevich (RUS)2774+9
43 Veselin Topalov (BUL)2767−13
513 Magnus Carlsen (NOR)2765+32
610 Levon Aronian (ARM)2763+24
76 Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (AZE)2752−8
812 Teimour Radjabov (AZE)2751+16
95 Peter Svidler (RUS)2746−17
108 Peter Leko (HUN)2741−12

May

August

October

Titles awarded

Deaths

References

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