The top players in each Zonal tournament would meet in the Interzonal tournament, which would typically have between 20 and 24 players. The top finishers (e.g., the top six in 1958) would qualify for the
Candidates Tournament, which would take place the following year. They would be joined in the Candidates by the loser of the previous candidates' final and the loser of the previous world championship match. The winner of the Candidates tournament would play a 24-game match with the World Champion the following year, and need to win outright to gain the title. For instance, in the
World Chess Championship 1963 cycle, nine different Zonals were played. Each qualified between one and four players for the Interzonal, depending on the strength of the region, with 23 players qualifying for the Interzonal. The Interzonal was played in January to March 1962, with the top six players qualifying for the Candidates. They were joined by
Mikhail Tal (loser of the
1961 match for the championship with
Mikhail Botvinnik), and
Paul Keres, who had finished second at the 1959 Candidates tournament. Those eight played a quadruple
round-robin in the Candidates tournament in May and June 1962. The winner was
Tigran Petrosian, who then played Botvinnik in a match for the championship in 1963. Thus, Interzonal tournaments were held approximately every three years from 1948 until 1993 (1948, 1952, 1955, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1967, 1970, 1973, 1976, 1979, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990, and 1993). In
1973 the system was changed to two Interzonals (with the first three in each qualifying for the Candidates), to allow more players to qualify from the Zonals. In
1982 it changed again to three Interzonal tournaments, where the top two players qualified from each. Further increases in the number of qualifiers led to the Interzonal being staged as a single
Swiss system tournament in
1990 and
1993. The short-lived
Professional Chess Association also held a Swiss system Interzonal in
1993. ==Chess World Cup==