Both official and unofficial FIDE-sponsored world championships for fast chess have been held since the 1970s.
World Rapid championships before 2012 In 1987,
Garry Kasparov (the World Champion of classical chess at the time) and
Nigel Short played a 6-game exhibition Rapid match ("Speed Chess Challenge") at the London Hippodrome, won by Kasparov 4–2. The 1988 victory by
Anatoly Karpov in
Mazatlán was officially called the
World Active Championship, but FIDE changed the word 'active' to 'rapid' soon after. In 1992, FIDE held the Women's World Rapid and Blitz Championship in Budapest, Hungary. Both Rapid and Blitz Championships were won by
Susan Polgar. and it is sometimes considered to be official, although it was never named as a "championship" but rather a "world cup".
Viswanathan Anand won the official FIDE 2003 Rapid Championship at the 6th Cap d'Agde event.
Teimour Radjabov won the 2006
7th Cap d’Agde Rapid Chess Tournament, but this had no FIDE status. The yearly
Frankfurt or
Mainz events hosted by the
Chess Tigers (2001–2010) were considered as the traditional rapid chess championship, and it often received world championship billing in the absence of an annual FIDE-recognized championship. In its last two years, the 2009
Grenkeleasing World Rapid Chess Championship in Mainz was won by
Levon Aronian, and the 2010
Open GRENKE Rapid World Championship in Mainz was won by
Gata Kamsky. The
Association of Chess Professionals (ACP) also held a World Rapid Cup in some of these years, and the annual
Amber chess tournament (1992 to 2011) also had a rapid segment. There was also occasionally a Eurotel Trophy or Intel Grand Prix event, each of which would be of high stature.
World Blitz championships before 2012 The first unofficial
Speed Chess Championship of the World (or World Blitz Championship) was held in
Herceg Novi on 8 April 1970. This was shortly after the first
USSR versus the rest of the world match (in Belgrade), in which ten of these players also competed. Eleven
Grandmasters and one
International Master played a double
round-robin tournament.
Bobby Fischer won first place, with a score of 19 points out of a possible 22. Fischer scored seventeen wins, four
draws, and one loss (to
Viktor Korchnoi).
Mikhail Tal was a distant second, 4½ points behind. Fischer won both games against each of Tal,
Tigran Petrosian, and
Vasily Smyslov; all of them were past
World Champions. By 1971, the Russian and Moscow five-minute championships had been going several years, with Tal,
Bronstein, and Petrosian all having success. That year, Fischer played in a blitz tournament organised by the
Manhattan Chess Club, and scored 21½/22. There were also strong tournaments in Bugojno (in 1978), which was won by Karpov; and Nikšić (in 1983), which was won by Kasparov. In 1987, the S.W.I.F.T. super-tournament was held in Brussels, Belgium; first prize was shared by
Garry Kasparov and
Ljubomir Ljubojević. The first FIDE-sponsored World Blitz Championship was won by
Mikhail Tal in 1988. which has since been referred to as a world championship, albeit inconsistently. The second FIDE-recognized World Blitz Championship was won by
Alexander Grischuk in 2006 in
Rishon Lezion, Israel; however, the October 2009 FIDE Congress discussed whether it should be a "proper" Championship (given the qualification scheme), and it left the decision to the corresponding internal Commission. For 2010, it was organized in conjunction with FIDE from the beginning. However, in neither case was an arbiter's report presented to the next FIDE Congress or General Assembly, as would be expected for a World Championship, and indeed occurred previously with the 2008 Blitz Championship. The 2012 Arbiter's report refers to
7th World Blitz Championship thus seeming to imply that 2009 and 2010 events were indeed Championships; although this report can be faulted for referring to the rapid championship of 2012 as being the
1st World Rapid Championship, which at the very least forgets Anand's official Rapid Championship in 2003. The balance of the evidence favors these Blitz Championships as being counted as official. In 2011, there was no official blitz championship held, but FIDE was involved with the Sport Accord Mind Games blitz won by
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, with
Hou Yifan winning the women's division.
World Championships since 2012 (left) playing GM
Dennis Wagner (right) at the 2015 FIDE World Chess Rapid and Blitz Championship in Berlin, at which Carlsen retained the title World Rapid Chess Champion (right) in Berlin, 2015, with runners-up
Vladimir Kramnik (center) and
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (left) Since 2012, FIDE have held joint World Rapid and Blitz Championships most years, with some years Women's World Rapid and Blitz Championships also being held. In 2012, the World Rapid and Blitz Championships were held at Batumi, Georgia and Astana, Kazakhstan (Women's Championships)
Magnus Carlsen won both Rapid and Blitz Championships. After his first-round draw, he should not have been on Board 1 until Round 8 when he caught the leaders. Carlsen himself later called this "weird" that Board 1 would be reserved for him.
Alexander Grischuk won the Blitz Championship. It was later announced that approximately 200,000 euros were lost on the event. In 2016, the World Rapid Championships were held at the
Ali Bin Hamad Al Attiya Arena in Doha, Qatar.
Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine won the 2016 World Rapid Championship, while Carlsen, after defending his title with difficulty in 2015, came in third place. In the Blitz Championship,
Sergey Karjakin of Russia and contender in the recently held
World Chess Championship 2016 won the championship title albeit due to a better tiebreak over the second place Carlsen. Karjakin defeated Carlsen in their individual encounter. Carlsen was once again reserved board 1 for both championships.
Anna Muzychuk also from Ukraine, won both the 2016 Women World Rapid and Blitz Championshipship. At the FIDE Presidential Board meeting at the end of March 2016, they gave Agon six months to find an organizer for the 2017 event. At the Baku General Assembly in September, it was announced they had extended this deadline until the end of 2016. The issue of the non-payment of the players for the IMSA Mind Games was also brought up.
Champions tables for official events == Views on fast chess ==