2011 in chess


Below is a list of events in chess during the year 2011:

Events

January

January 1Magnus Carlsen reclaims the top position in the FIDE world rankings with an Elo rating of 2814. Viswanathan Anand falls to second with a rating of 2810. Sergey Karjakin has the greatest rating change among the top 10, improving 16 points from 2760 to 2776. Hikaru Nakamura appears in the world top 10 for the first time with a rating of 2751, displacing Wang Yue.January 5

February

February 3

March

March 1Viswanathan Anand retakes the top spot in the FIDE World Rankings with an Elo rating of 2817. Hikaru Nakamura has the greatest rating increase, gaining 23 points to reach a rating of 2774. Alexander Grischuk has the greatest rating decline, losing 26 points and falling to 2747.March 5Humpy Koneru wins the 6th FIDE Women's Grand Prix tournament, qualifying for the Women's World Chess Championship match with Hou Yifan.March 6Jan Smeets wins the 71st Noteboom Memorial tournament.March 7Sergei Tiviakov wins the 19th Fajr Open in Iran.March 9Gregory Kaidanov wins the Saint Louis Invitational, qualifying for the 2011 US Championship. Ray Robson finishes second, also qualifying.March 11Levon Aronian wins the Amber chess tournament in Monaco.March 14Irina Chelushkina wins the 43rd Belgrade Women's International tournament.March 16Yuriy Kuzubov wins the Reykjavik Open.March 19 – The chess team from the University of Texas – Dallas competes against six invited Grandmasters. The GM team wins the match by a score of 42.5-29.5.March 27Tigran L. Petrosian wins the 5th George Agzamov Memorial tournament.

May

May 1Viswanathan Anand remains the world number one. Alexander Grischuk falls out of the top 10, and is replaced by Vugar Gashimov.

July

July 1Magnus Carlsen is again the world number one. Vugar Gashimov falls out of the top 10, and is replaced by Ruslan Ponomariov.

September

September 1Magnus Carlsen remains the world number one. Hikaru Nakamura and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov fall out of the top 10, and are replaced by Alexander Grischuk and Gata Kamsky.

November

November 1Magnus Carlsen is again the world number one. Teimour Radjabov surges from 13th to 5th with a ratings gain of 29 points. Alexander Morozevich also makes a big leap, going from 17th to 9th with a ratings gain of 25 points. Hikaru Nakamura reenters the top 10. Ruslan Ponomariov, Alexander Grischuk, and Gata Kamsky fall out of the top 10.

National champions

Armenia

Men'sRobert HovhannisyanWomen'sSiranush Andriasian

Azerbaijan

Men'sNidjat Mamedov

Belarus

Men'sAndrey ZhigalkoWomen'sAnna Sharevich

Bulgaria

Women's – Darena Sikova

Chile

Men's – Alvaro Valdes Escobar

Croatia

Men'sAnte BrkićWomen's – Borka Franciskovic

Georgia

Women'sMaia Lomineishvili

Poland

Men'sMateusz BartelWomen's – Jolante Zawadzka

Romania

Men'sConstantin LupulescuWomen'sCristina Adela Foișor

Serbia

Men'sIvan Ivanišević

Turkey

Men'sEmre Can

United States

Men'sGata KamskyWomen'sAnna Zatonskih

Deaths

February 12Mato Damjanović, Croatian and Yugoslav Grandmaster, dies at the age of 83.