The inaugural 2009 edition was advertised as "the highest level chess tournament in London for 25 years", referring to the
Phillips & Drew Kings tournament held in 1984. It was held during the same time as the
Chess World Cup 2009. The field of eight grandmasters comprised the top four English players, and four international players, with top billing going to the former
World Champion Vladimir Kramnik, plus the future World Champion and then-current number one in the live world rankings,
Magnus Carlsen. The tournament was
FIDE Category 18, and had a prize fund of 100,000 Euros including daily best game prizes and a 10,000 Euro brilliancy prize for the game voted the best of the tournament. The games were broadcast live at a number of sites including
Playchess and the
Internet Chess Club (with live expert commentary provided by Chess.FM). A major feature of the tournament was the use of a different scoring system, sometimes referred to as "Bilbao Rules"; players earn three points for a win, one for a
draw and none for a loss. "Sofia Rules" also applied, whereby the players could not
agree a draw without the arbiter's permission, only to be given when there was deemed to be no purposeful play left in the position. With the added incentive of lucrative best game prizes, the intention was to maximise the potential for entertaining and decisive games. There were 17 draws and 11 decisive games. The tournament was won by Magnus Carlsen, a victory that meant he would be world number one in the January 2010 FIDE world rankings list. Second place was taken by
Vladimir Kramnik, and third place by
David Howell, on tie-break from
Michael Adams. The prizegiving took place at
Simpson's-in-the-Strand, where Carlsen received a trophy and a cheque for the first prize (25,000 Euros). A trophy and 10,000 Euros brilliancy prize was presented to
Luke McShane for his round five win against
Hikaru Nakamura. The organisers announced that there would be another tournament in London in 2010. The tournament organiser and director was
International Master Malcolm Pein, manager of the London Chess Centre and the executive editor of
CHESS magazine. The Festival Organiser was Adam Raoof, FIDE Organiser and Arbiter. The guest of honour was
Victor Korchnoi. The ceremonial opening move was made by
Evan Harris, MP. Tournament partners included
Chessbase and the
Internet Chess Club. The main pre-tournament public relations event comprised a
blindfold display at the
London Eye between
Nigel Short and Luke McShane. The tournament was simultaneous broadcast on London Chess Classic website, and the chess servers
ICC,
FICS and
Playchess, as well as on
Twitter.
Participants •
Magnus Carlsen, number one in the live world rankings •
Vladimir Kramnik, former world champion (2000–2007) •
Hikaru Nakamura, US champion •
Nigel Short, former world championship finalist and English number one •
Michael Adams, former world knock-out championship finalist and English number two •
Ni Hua, leading Chinese grandmaster •
Luke McShane, English number three •
David Howell, British champion and English number four
Tournament table :
Subsidiary events Other tournaments organised during the festival included the nine-round Women's Invitational competition and nine-round FIDE Rated Open, which were won by
Arianne Caoili of Australia and
Jon Ludvig Hammer of Norway respectively, both with scores of 8/9. Korchnoi gave two
simultaneous displays during the event. To raise money for charity, one ticket to play him was auctioned on
eBay for £410. ==2010 Classic: 8–15 December==