Women's World Chess Championship 2010
The Women's World Chess Championship 2010 took place in Antakya, Turkey from December 2 through 24, 2010.
The tournament, like the previous ones, was played in a 64-player knock-out format. Each pairing consisted of two games, one with white and one with black, from which the winner advanced. In case of a tie, tiebreaks were played the next day, consisting of two rapid games and—if still tied—an Armageddon match. The final consisted of four games at classical time control, if necessary followed by four rapid tiebreak games.
The title was won by Hou Yifan from China who beat her compatriot Ruan Lufei in the final by 5–3, at 16 years of age making her the youngest Women's World Chess Champion in history.[1]
Participants
Players were seeded by their Elo ratings (November 2010 list),[2] except that defending champion Alexandra Kosteniuk was the No. 1 seed.
- Alexandra Kosteniuk (RUS), 2507, GM (WC)
- Humpy Koneru (IND), 2600, GM (WC)
- Hou Yifan (CHN), 2591, GM (WC)
- Tatiana Kosintseva (RUS), 2581, GM (E09)
- Nana Dzagnidze (GEO), 2551, GM (E08)
- Antoaneta Stefanova (BUL), 2548, GM (R)
- Anna Muzychuk (SLO), 2530, IM (R)
- Pia Cramling (SWE), 2526, GM (WC)
- Dronavalli Harika (IND), 2525, IM (J08)
- Ju Wenjun (CHN), 2524, WGM (Z3.5)
- Kateryna Lahno (UKR), 2522, GM (E08)
- Viktorija Cmilyte (LTU), 2514, GM (E08)
- Maia Chiburdanidze (GEO), 2502, GM (R)
- Monika Socko (POL), 2495, GM (E08)
- Marie Sebag (FRA), 2494, GM (R)
- Ruan Lufei (CHN), 2480, WGM (Z3.5)
- Lilit Mkrtchian (ARM), 2479, IM (E08)
- Anna Zatonskih (USA), 2478, IM (Z2.1)
- Zhu Chen (QAT), 2477, GM (Z3.1)
- Elisabeth Paehtz (GER), 2474, IM (E09)
- Zhao Xue (CHN), 2474, GM (R)
- Hoang Thanh Trang (HUN), 2473, GM (E09)
- Natalija Pogonina (RUS), 2472, WGM (E08)
- Elina Danielian (ARM), 2466, GM (E08)
- Mariya Muzychuk (UKR), 2462, IM (E09)
- Shen Yang (CHN), 2461, WGM (Z3.5)
- Almira Skripchenko (FRA), 2460, IM (E08)
- Anna Ushenina (UKR), 2460, IM (E08)
- Yelena Dembo (GRE), 2454, IM (E08)
- Natalia Zhukova (UKR), 2447, GM (E08)
- Iweta Rajlich (POL), 2446, IM (E09)
- Irina Turova (RUS), 2439, IM (E09)
- Sopiko Khukhashvili (GEO), 2430, IM (E09)
- Jovanka Houska (ENG), 2421, IM (E08)
- Marina Romanko (RUS), 2414, IM (E09)
- Batkhuyag Munguntuul (MGL), 2409, IM (Z3.3)
- Cristina Adela Foisor (ROU), 2403, IM (E09)
- Huang Qian (CHN), 2402, WGM (Z3.5)
- Evgenija Ovod (RUS), 2387, IM (E09)
- Tatiana Shadrina (RUS), 2384, WGM (E09)
- Deysi Cori (PER), 2384, WGM (AM)
- Baira Kovanova (RUS), 2380, WGM (E09)
- Ding Yixin (CHN), 2370, WGM (AS)
- Jolanta Zawadzka (POL), 2368, WGM (E09)
- Martha Fierro Baquero (ECU), 2363, IM (AM)
- Nafisa Muminova (UZB), 2360, WIM (Z3.4)
- Maia Lomineishvili (GEO), 2347, IM (E08)
- Zhang Xiaowen (CHN), 2339, WGM (AS)
- Camilla Baginskaite (USA), 2336, WGM (Z2.1)
- Irina Vasilevich (RUS), 2333, IM (E09)
- Soumya Swaminathan (IND), 2332, WGM (J09)
- Meenakshi Subbaraman (IND), 2328, WGM (AS)
- Julia Demina (RUS), 2323, WGM (E08)
- Kubra Ozturk (TUR), 2264, WIM (PN)
- Arianne Caoili (AUS), 2242, WIM (Z3.6)
- Nadig Kruttika (IND), 2230, WGM (Z3.2)
- Betul Cemre Yildiz (TUR), 2252, WIM (PN)
- Marisa Zuriel (ARG), 2208, WIM (Z2.5)
- Ingrid Aliaga Fernandez (PER), 2154, WFM (Z2.4)
- Dina Kagramanov (CAN), 2101, WIM (Z2.2)
- Mona Khaled (EGY), 2093, WGM (AF)
- Carla Heredia Serrano (ECU), 2087, WIM (Z2.3)
- Melissa Greeff (RSA), 2082, WGM (AF)
- Amina Mezioud (ALG), 2029, WIM (AF)
Qualification paths
|
|
Notable absentees
The number one woman in the world, Judit Polgár, never competed for the women's title and did not enter this time either. World number five, Nadezhda Kosintseva, did not play either, although her sister Tatiana (ranked 4th) did. Other names missing from the top 20 were: Irina Krush (17th), former finalist Alisa Galliamova (19th) and ex-champion Xu Yuhua (20th).
Iweta Rajlich and Arianne Caoili were listed as participants but unable to attend; their scheduled opponents, Jovanka Houska and Ju Wenjun, were given byes through to the second round.
Results
Final match
Women's World Chess Championship Final 2010 1 2 3 4 R1 R2 R3 R4 Total Ruan Lufei (China) ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 3 Hou Yifan (China) ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 5
Bracket
References
- 2010 Women's World Championship – Hou Yifan is world champion! ChessBase; December 24, 2010
- FIDE November 2010 Top 100 Women