Australasian Masters
Annual chess tournament held in Melbourne
The Australian Masters is a chess tournament that has been held in Melbourne, Australia, annually since 1987. The tournament is an invitational event, normally run as a 10-player round-robin tournament. Since 2013 the tournament has become Australia's only round-robin Grandmaster tournament. A major sponsor of the tournament since its inception has been Eddy Levi (or his company Hallsten).
Winners
- 1987 Darryl Johansen
- 1989 Stephen Solomon Guy West
- 1990 Stephen Solomon
- 1991 Stephen Solomon
- 1992 Tony Miles
- 1993 Michael Gluzman
- 1994 Leonid Sandler
- 1995 Tu Hoang Thong
- 1996 Nguyen Anh Dung
- 1997 Stephen Solomon
- 1998 Chris Depasquale
- 1999 Gary Lane
- 2000 Adam Hunt
- 2001 Guy West Darryl Johansen[1]
- 2002 Guy West Michael Gluzman[2]
- 2003 Stephen Solomon[3]
- 2004 David Smerdon Darryl Johansen
- 2005 Jesse Noel Sales[4]
- 2006 George Xie[5]
- 2008 Vladimir Smirnov[6]
- 2009 Stephen Solomon[7]
- 2010 Stephen Solomon[8]
- 2011 James Morris[9][10]
- 2012 Anton Smirnov, Bobby Cheng, James Morris[11][12]
- 2013 Normunds Miezis and Vasily Papin
- 2014 Vasily Papin, Rustam Khuznutdinov and Murtas Kazhgaleyev
- 2015 Kanan Izzat
- 2016 Anton Smirnov
- 2017 Vasily Papin, Adrien Demuth
- 2018 Anton Smirnov
IM and GM norms
Since 2013, Grandmaster norms for performances above the 2600 level, have been available at the Australian Masters Championship thanks to the participation of foreign Grandmasters. International Master norms are also available at the Australian Masters tournament.
See also
References
- ^ 2001 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2002 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2003 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2005 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2006 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2008 Australian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2009 Australasian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2010 Australasian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2011 Australasian Masters Results Archived April 10, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Chess Victoria, retrieved Dec 2012
- ^ 2011 Australasian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- ^ 2012 Australasian Masters Box Hill Chess Club, retrieved Dec 2012
- ^ 2012 Australasian Masters FIDE Tournament Report
- Ozbase - Australian Chess Games Archive
- v
- t
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Major recurring international chess tournaments
(average rating > 2700;
round-robin system generally)
- Dortmund Sparkassen Chess Meeting (since 1973)
- Grand Chess Tour (since 2015)
- Grenke Chess Classic (since 2013)
- London Chess Classic (since 2009)
- Norway Chess (since 2013)
- Shamkir Chess (since 2014)
- Shenzhen Masters (since 2017)
- Sinquefield Cup (since 2013)
- Tata Steel Chess Tournament (since 1938)
- UzChess Cup (since 2024)
(Swiss system generally)
- Aeroflot Open (since 2002)
- Australasian Masters (since 1987)
- Biel Chess Festival (since 1968)
- Canadian Open (since 1956)
- Capablanca Memorial (since 1962)
- Cappelle-la-Grande Open (since 1985)
- Carlos Torre Repetto Memorial (since 1987)
- Chigorin Memorial (since 1909)
- Doeberl Cup (since 1963)
- Dubai Open (since 1999)
- Gibraltar Chess Festival (since 2003)
- Hastings International Chess Congress (since 1920)
- Hogeschool Zeeland Tournament (since 1995)
- Lublin Grandmaster Tournament (since 2009)
- Paul Keres Memorials (Tallinn, since 1969) (Vancouver, since 1975)
- Prague Chess Festival (since 2019)
- Qatar Masters Open (2014–2015, since 2023)
- Reykjavik Open (since 1964)
- Riga Technical University Open (since 2011)
- Rilton Cup (since 1971)
- Rubinstein Memorial (since 1963)
- South African Open (since 1962)
- U.S. Open (since 1900)
- TePe Sigeman & Co chess tournament (since 1993)
- Vidmar Memorial (since 1969)
- World Open (since 1973)
- Xtracon Chess Open (since 1979)
- Zurich Christmas Open (since 1977)
(after 2000)
- Alekhine Memorial (1956–2013, irregular)
- Acropolis (1968–2009)
- Aerosvit (2006–2008)
- Amber (1992–2011)
- Bilbao Chess Masters Final (2008–2016)
- Howard Staunton Memorial (2003–2009)
- Linares (1978–2010)
- Mar del Plata (1928–2001)
- Millionaire Chess (2014–2016)
- M-Tel Masters (2005–2009)
- North Sea Cup (1976–2008)
- Pearl Spring (2008–2010)
- Reggio Emilia (1947–2012)
- Tal Memorial (2006–2018)
- Zurich Chess Challenge (2012–2017)
(19th–20th century)
- American Chess Congress (1857–1923)
- Carl Schlechter Memorial (1923–1996)
- DSB Congress (1879–1932)
- General Government (1940–1944)
- IBM international (1961–1981)
- Konex (1977–1994)
- Leopold Trebitsch Memorial (1907–1938)
- Lone Pine International (1971–1981)
- Max Euwe Memorial (1987–1996)
- Monte Carlo (1901–1904; 1967–1969)
- Netanya (1961–1983)
- Palma de Mallorca (1965–1972)
- Phillips & Drew Kings (1980–1986)
- Piatigorsky Cup (1963–1966)
- San Sebastián (1911–1912)
- Silesian Chess Congress (1922–1939)
- Tilburg (1977–1998)
- Triberg (1914–1917)
- Chess competitions
- National championships
- Supranational championships