FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2019–2021

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The 2019–2021 edition of the

Women's World Chess Championship 2022.[1]

This is the fifth cycle of the tournament series. The number one woman player,

Oxford University
.

Players

16 players were published by FIDE in July 2019.[2]

Invitee Country Elo (July 2019)
Ju Wenjun  China 2595
Aleksandra Goryachkina  Russia 2564
Humpy Koneru
 India 2558
Mariya Muzychuk  Ukraine 2551
Kateryna Lagno  Russia 2549
Anna Muzychuk  Ukraine 2547
Alexandra Kosteniuk  Russia 2517
Nana Dzagnidze  Georgia 2511
Valentina Gunina  Russia 2497
Dronavalli Harika
 India 2492
Alina Kashlinskaya  Russia 2492
Zhao Xue  China 2485
Pia Cramling  Sweden 2479
Antoaneta Stefanova  Bulgaria 2474
Elisabeth Paehtz
 Germany 2473
Marie Sebag  France 2451
Zhansaya AbdumalikR  Kazakhstan 2458
Dinara SaduakassovaR  Kazakhstan 2474
Irina BulmagaR  Romania 2435
Gunay MammadzadaR  Azerbaijan 2427

R Due to travel restrictions on Chinese citizens due to the

Coronavirus outbreak , Zhao Xue was unable to participate in the Lausanne leg of the Grand Prix. She was replaced by Zhansaya Abdumalik.[3]
For the Gibraltar WGP, Koneru, Ju, Zhao and Sebag were replaced by Zhansaya Abdumalik, Dinara Saduakassova, Irina Bulmaga and Gunay Mammadzada.[4] These replacement players were not eligible for the Candidates spots.

Schedule and results

No. Host city Date Winner Points (Win/draw/loss)
1 Skolkovo, Russia 10–23 September 2019
Humpy Koneru
8/11 (+5=6-0)
2 Monaco 2–15 December 2019 7/11 (+5=4-2)
7/11 (+4=6-1)
7/11 (+5=4-2)
3 Lausanne, Switzerland 1–14 March 2020 Georgia (country) Nana Dzagnidze
Russia Aleksandra Goryachkina
7/11 (+4=6-1)
7/11 (+3=8-0)
4 Gibraltar 22 May – 2 June 2021 Kazakhstan Zhansaya Abdumalik 8.5/11 (+6=5-0)

The fourth stage of the Grand Prix, initially planned from 2 to 15 May 2020 in

Coronavirus pandemic. FIDE announced that the fourth stop of the Women Grand Prix was to be held in Gibraltar on January 17–29, 2021,[5] but it was then postponed again[6] to 22 May to 2 June 2021.[7]

Events crosstables

Grand Prix standings

160 Grand Prix points were awarded for 1st, 130 for 2nd, 110 for 3rd and then in steps of 10 from 90 for 4th to 10 for 12th place. If players ended up tied on points, points for those places were shared equally.

As Goryachkina was already qualified for the Candidates Tournament, the third place qualified instead of her. The replacements (in italics) were not eligible to qualify for the Candidates.

Rank Player Skolkovo Monaco Lausanne Gibraltar Total
1  Aleksandra Goryachkina (RUS) 120 133⅓ 145 398⅓
2  
Humpy Koneru
 (IND)
160 133⅓ 293⅓
3  Kateryna Lagno (RUS) 90 90 100 280
4  Zhansaya Abdumalik (KAZ) 110 160 270
5  Nana Dzagnidze (GEO) 35 145 75 255
6  Mariya Muzychuk (UKR) 60 60 130 250
7  Anna Muzychuk (UKR) 80 85 60 225
8  Alexandra Kosteniuk (RUS) 45 133⅓ 15 193⅓
9  
Dronavalli Harika
 (IND)
60 60 60 180
9  Alina Kashlinskaya (RUS) 45 85 50 180
11  
Elisabeth Paehtz
 (GER)
75 20 75 170
12  Ju Wenjun (CHN) 120 35 155
13  Valentina Gunina (RUS) 75 10 35 120
13  Antoaneta Stefanova (BUL) 25 60 35 120
15  Pia Cramling (SWE) 10 60 35 105
16  Gunay Mammadzada (AZE) 100 100
17  Marie Sebag (FRA) 25 15 40
18  Zhao Xue (CHN) 35 35
19  Dinara Saduakassova (KAZ) 20 20
20  Irina Bulmaga (ROU) 10 10

References

  1. ^ https://www.fide.com/FIDE/handbook/regulations_WGP_2019_20.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ IDE Women's Grand Prix Series 2019-2020
  3. ^ "Zhansaya Abdumalik will replace Zhao Xue at WGP in Lausanne". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  4. ^ "Women's Grand Prix Gibraltar: Pairings announced". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
  5. ^ "Gibraltar to host the final stage of the Women's FIDE Grand Prix". www.fide.com. Retrieved 2020-10-22.
  6. ^ "FIDE Women's FIDE Grand Prix rescheduled".
  7. ^ "FIDE Women's Grand Prix Gibraltar: New dates announced".

External links