English Chess Federation
Abbreviation | ECF |
---|---|
Predecessor | British Chess Federation |
Established | 2005 |
Purpose | Sport administration |
Location | |
Region served | England |
Leader | Mike Truran |
Main organ | Chess Moves |
Affiliations | FIDE, European Chess Union |
Website | www |
The English Chess Federation (ECF) is the governing
History
From 1904 until 2005, the British Chess Federation (BCF) was the governing body of chess in England. The BCF itself replaced the British Chess Association (BCA) and initially governed chess, its pre-eminent ratings, and rules in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Over time, Scotland, Wales, Ireland and the Channel Islands were governed by their own chess federations. Only England came under BCF jurisdiction, and it also administered the British Chess Championship. In 2004, English chess administrators agreed that it would be factual to replace the BCF with the ECF, a change effective from the start of the 2005/6 season.
From the 1990s there has been a movement to incorporate the federation into a
At the start of the 2005/06 season the English Chess Federation was created. It inherited the BCF's assets and personnel. The BCF persisted for
Activities
The
The ECF publishes ratings for those players that compete in affiliated competitions in England as part of the ECF grading system.[1] There are currently two ways to qualify for an ECF rating. For a yearly flat fee players may become a member of the ECF directly or, since 2005, through a local Membership Organisation (MO). Where in England MOs are lacking or are not mandatory (much of the south) non-members pay a Game Fee for each ECF game they play.
All officials of the ECF are elected annually or tri-annually, without limits on re-election. The current CEO is Mike Truran, current president: journalist and keen chess player Dominic Lawson.[2]
The ECF selects and finances the English teams for international competitions such as the Chess Olympiad and European Team Chess Championship. By invitation, players may also receive support when competing overseas in events of national importance, such as the World Junior Chess Championships.
The ECF sent paper newsletter Chess Moves, free to members. From mid-2016, this was replaced with a monthly e-Newsletter, plus online articles, event reviews and selected members' submissions. In December 2022 the name of the newsletter reverted to ChessMoves.
See also
References
- ^ a b c Watson, Leon (2 October 2020). "English chess facing 'hour of need'". Chess24. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
- ^ ECF Officials from EnglishChess.org.uk, retrieved 19 December 2021
Bibliography
- Stephen Moss, Grandmaster crash: the inside story of how English chess pawned its future, The Guardian, 20 November 2015, retrieved 19 December 2021