Grand Chess Tour 2016

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Dates9 June–18 December 2016
ChampionUnited States Wesley So
Runner-upUnited States Hikaru Nakamura
Grand Chess Tour
2016
2016 Grand Chess Tour winner Wesley So.
Tournament information
Dates9 June–18 December 2016
Host(s)Paris
Leuven
St. Louis
London
Final positions
ChampionUnited States Wesley So
Runner-upUnited States Hikaru Nakamura
3rd placeUnited States Fabiano Caruana
Tournament statistics
Most tournament titlesUnited States Wesley So (2)
Prize money leaderUnited States Wesley So ($295,000)
Points leaderUnited States Wesley So (36)
 2015
2017 

Grand Chess Tour 2016 was a second edition of Grand Chess Tour, a series of chess tournaments, that took place from June to December 2016. It consisted of four tournaments and was won by Wesley So.[1]

On January 6, 2016, the Grand Chess Tour saw the withdrawal of Norway Chess, one of three tournaments that were parts of the tour, along with Sinquefield Cup and London Chess Classic. The reason was different views on the funding issue.[2] However, on February 11, Grand Chess Tour announced an inclusion of two fast chess events in Paris and Leuven.[3][4]

The tour consisted of four events, two fast chess and two classical chess events, with each tournament having one wildcard. Eegular tour players were scheduled to participate in every event, with the exception of Viswanathan Anand, with three best results going into account. The point system was as follows:

PlacePoints
1st12/13*
2nd10
3rd8
4th7
  5th6
  6th5
  7th4
8th3
  9th2
10th1

Lineup

2016 Grand Chess Tour included nine participants. Among notable absentees were incumbent World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen and World Chess Championship 2016 challenger Sergey Karjakin.[5] The roster was selected based on several criteria, including top-three finish in previous tour, average rating for 2015 and personal invitation.[6]

Player Country Rating (April 2016) Qualification
Anish Giri  Netherlands 2790 Runner-up of 2015 Grand Chess Tour
Levon Aronian  Armenia 2784 Third place in 2015 Grand Chess Tour
Veselin Topalov  Bulgaria 2754 Average rating for 2015
Viswanathan Anand  India 2770 Average rating for 2015
Fabiano Caruana  United States 2795 Average rating for 2015
Hikaru Nakamura  United States 2787 Average rating for 2015
Vladimir Kramnik  Russia 2801 Average rating for 2015
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave  France 2788 Wildcard
Wesley So  United States 2773 Replacement for Magnus Carlsen

Schedule and results

Dates Tournament Host city Winner
June 9-12 Paris Grand Chess Tour Paris Hikaru Nakamura
June 17-20 Your Next Move Leuven Magnus Carlsen (WC)
August 5-16 Sinquefield Cup St. Louis Wesley So
December 9-18 London Chess Classic London Wesley So

Tournaments

Standings

References

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