Opening ceremony The opening ceremony was held on 23 September in the
Black Sea Arena under the name "CHESS Stories" coined by Georgian writer
Aka Morchiladze and was broadcast live on
1TV, the official website of the event and the social media. The first act was a play dedicated to the legend of the invention of chess and featured the famous
wheat and chessboard problem. Then, video messages were presented by the Goodwill Ambassadors of the 43rd Chess Olympiad and speeches were delivered by the Minister of Education and Science of Georgia Mikheil Batiashvili, the Chairman of the Government of Adjara
Tornike Rizhvadze, FIDE Deputy President Georgios Makropoulos and the
President of Georgia Giorgi Margvelashvili. FIDE Deputy President Makropoulos welcomed all participants at the Olympiad, stressed the need for a new era of politically and financially independent FIDE and presenting a very positive vision in his speech, and later declared the Chess Olympiad open. Next, the
national anthem of Georgia and the anthem of FIDE before the flag-bearers paraded on the stage. The ceremony continued with stage performances that united the representatives of classical and modern cultures. Georgian conductor
Nikoloz Memanishvili directed a concert performed by the Evgeni Mikeladze State Symphony Orchestra, ballerina
Nina Ananiashvili choreographed a ballet performance, and
Sukhieshvili ensemble presented a new dance. Among others who made appearance on the stage were famous Georgian singers
Nino Katamadze,
Liza Bagrationi and Giorgi Ushikishvili, baritone Lado Ataneli, violist Giorgi Tsagareli, the
indie rock band
Nika Kocharov & Young Georgian Lolitaz, the folklore ensemble Lashari and the Batumi cappella. The last part of the ceremony was marked with the drawing of colours and was assisted by the batumi Chess Olympiad Goodwill Ambassador
Vishwanathan Anand and Georgian chess player
Nana Dzagnidze who joined Chief Arbiter Takis Nikolopoulos on the stage. The colours had to be decided in a unique way by white and black
pearls hidden inside two
seashells. Anand picked the white pearl that decided that United States as top seeds in the open event would play with the white pieces on the top board of the first round and Dzagnidze picked the black one that determined Russia as top seeds in the women's event to play with black on board one of the same round. ;Notes • Countries in
italics denote those fielding teams in the open event only. • Pakistan were unable to compete after the team were denied exit visas by their government.
Competition format and calendar The tournament was played in a
Swiss system format. The
time control for all games was 90 minutes for the first 40 moves, after which an additional 30 minutes were granted and increment of 30 seconds per move was applied. Players were permitted to
offer a draw at any time. A total of 11 rounds were played, with all teams playing in every round. In each round, four players from each team faced four players from another team; teams were permitted one reserve player who could be substituted between rounds. The four games were played simultaneously on four boards,
scoring 1 game point for a win and ½ game point for a draw. The scores from each game were summed together to determine which team won the round. Winning a round was worth 2 match points, regardless of the game point margin, while drawing a round was worth 1 match point. Teams were ranked in a table based on match points. Tie-breakers for the table were i) the
Sonneborn-Berger system; ii) total game points scored; iii) the sum of the match points of the opponents, excluding the lowest one. :
All dates are GET (UTC+4) Open event The open section of the tournament was contested by a record number of 185 teams, representing 180 nations. The tournament featured nine out of the top ten players from the
FIDE rating list published in September 2018 with only then-World Champion
Magnus Carlsen being absent. Former World Champion
Vishwanathan Anand returned to the Chess Olympiads on board one for
India following a break of twelve years. Other players who played in the open section include the former World Chess Champion
Vladimir Kramnik, the challenger in the
World Chess Championship 2018 Fabiano Caruana, as well as the former challengers
Sergey Karjakin and
Boris Gelfand. Grandmaster
Eugenio Torre, who was in the line-up of the
Philippines for a record twenty-three times between 1970 and 2016 and was the highest-scoring player at the
42nd Chess Olympiad, decided not to play and was named coach of the Philippines national team in the open section. Former FIDE World Champion
Veselin Topalov did not play because a dispute between chess officials caused de-recognition of the
Bulgarian Chess Federation by FIDE. This was the first time
Russia had not been the top-ranked team before the start of a Chess Olympiad since their first entry in 1992 following the dissolution of the
Soviet Union, conceding the top spot to the
United States, who were defending the title won at the previous Olympiad. The
United States were playing with the same line-up that won the gold medal with Fabiano Caruana,
Hikaru Nakamura,
Wesley So,
Samuel Shankland and
Ray Robson, whose average rating was 2772. Russia as the second strongest team made changes in the line-up compared to the Baku Chess Olympiad, where
Dmitry Jakovenko and
Nikita Vitiugov replaced
Alexander Grischuk and
Evgeny Tomashevsky alongside Vladimir Kramnik, Sergey Karjakin and
Ian Nepomniachtchi.
China had the third highest pre-tournament rating of 2756 and four players from Baku on the team, including
Ding Liren,
Li Chao,
Wei Yi and
Yu Yangyi, while
Wang Yue was replaced by
Bu Xiangzhi. Other teams among the top seeds with average ratings above 2700 were
Azerbaijan led by
FIDE Grand Prix 2017 winner
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and India was strengthened with Vishwanathan Anand on the team. United States were on track to defending the title and were the sole leader after eight rounds, but their loss to
Poland in the ninth round set them back from winning the gold. Despite the slow start and implausible play, Russia finished the tournament with four consecutive victories to catch China and the United States, which was only enough for the third place because of the relatively weaker schedule. Poland were the biggest surprise of the tournament. They scored minimal match victories against the two top seeds, Russia in the fourth and the United States in the ninth round, and topped the table as sole leader after nine rounds. Their loss to China in the penultimate and tie with India in the ultimate round, however, placed them on the fourth place overall with 17 match points, which was only equaled by
England who came in the fifth place at the end. Teams that disappointed the most were Azerbaijan (the fourth seeds) who finished in 15th place,
Israel in 39th place, and the
Netherlands in 40th place.
Jorge Cori of
Peru, playing on board three, was the best individual player in the open event by scoring 7½ out of 8 points (seven wins and one draw) with a rating performance of 2925. ;Notes • Average ratings calculated by chess-results.com based in September 2018 ratings. All board prizes were given out according to
performance ratings for players who played at least eight games at the tournament. Jorge Cori on the third board had the best performance of all players in the tournament. The women's section featured most of the top players according to the FIDE rating list published in September 2018 with the highest rated female player
Hou Yifan and the former Women's World Champion
Tan Zhongyi not playing for China.
Women’s summary of China was the best individual player in the Women's event. China successfully defended the gold medal won in
2016 and claimed their sixth title overall. The team scored seven wins and four draws for a total of 18 match points. This exact achievement was matched only by Ukraine, who had inferior tie-breaker and won the silver medal. These two teams were also the only unbeaten in the Women's event. Host nation Georgia finished solely in the third place and won the bronze medal with seven wins, three draws and one loss for a total of 17 match points. They scored 16 match points and had the highest tie-breaker among the nine teams with the same number of points. Armenia, who were the sole leader after seven rounds, occupied the seventh place at the end. Georgia's second team did also earn spot in the top ten, finishing on the ninth place overall. Teams that disappointed include Poland who finished in 16th place and Germany who finished in 28th place. ;Notes • Average ratings calculated by chess-results.com based in September 2018 ratings. All board prizes were given out according to
performance ratings for players who have played at least eight games at the tournament. Ju Wenjun on the first board had the best performance of all players in the tournament. == FIDE Congress ==