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Norway Chess 2024 Returns With Women's Tournament Leveling Up Intrigue

Norway Chess 2024 Returns With Women's Tournament Leveling Up Intrigue

CHESScom
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Norway Chess always charms the year as one of the most compelling events to look out for, and 2024 is no different. Five-time winner and world number-one GM Magnus Carlsen, last year's winner GM Hikaru Nakamura, and the 17th World Champion GM Ding Liren elevate the stakes.

This prestigious event has added features such as the Women's Tournament where the prize fund will be MATCHED with the Open section. Additionally, the "side event" is a world-record-breaking blitz match that can literally keep us at the edge of our seats from sunrise to sunset. Everything will be covered live by Chess24's YouTube channel.

The field of the Norway Chess Open and Women's tournaments.

Let's dive in.

Format!

In its 12th edition, Norway Chess is a six player double round-robin known for its format's exciting variety. The scoring, unique as ever, inspires motivated gameplay from the participants. 

Norway Chess' exciting format.

Classical draws won't be enough to coast toward the end-zone. Armageddon matches determine once and for all who wins a given showdown. If they make a draw in the classical game, worth three points, players are immediately tasked with duking it out over the board in rapid fashion. Ten minutes for the player with White, and seven minutes for Black and draw-odds. The person who wins this match receives another precious half-point. These definitive tiebreakers have had a tremendous influence on the tournament's winner, as we have seen in past editions.

Last year, Nakamura won on demand in the final round to overtake Caruana. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

In 2023, Hikaru Nakamura trailed Fabiano Caruana by 2.5 points in the final round but then won on demand to win the tournament by just a half-point—the difference of a single armageddon win. Had Caruana won an additional armegeddon—Nakamura scored three armageddon wins and Caruana two—he would've had more chances for the title even if he lost that game.

Schedule and Players!

The first round begins on May 29. We're due for more than a week of mental melee mashes, featuring 10 rounds of classical games and potential armageddons to decide the overall victor. 

Round Date Time (PT) Time (ET) Time (CEST)
Rds 1-3 May 29-31 5 am 8 am 17:00
Rds 4-7 June 2-4 5 am 8 am 17:00
Rds 8-10; tiebreaks June 6-7 5 am 8 am 17:00

Each day will be packed with powerhouse play and the players themselves will reveal their hidden insight at the end of their rounds. Having the players report to the commentator's room is a transparent gift. The discussion allows us to peek into the sharp minds of the elite few. We have some of the most relevant players sharing their detailed thoughts with us. 

We have a slammin' slew of super-grandmasters to look forward to:

Players Federation World Ranking Rating
Magnus Carlsen   1 2830
Fabiano Caruana  2 2804
Hikaru Nakamura   3 2788
Ding Liren  4 2776
Alireza Firouzja  6 2765
Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu  11 2748

With this immaculate roster, it's hard to guess a "favorite." But Magnus Carlsen is most likely looking to reclaim the crown on his home turf in what is expected to be his first classical (non-960) tournament this year! GM Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu and GM Alireza Firouzja, confirmed participants in Candidates Tournament in April, might have some unused ideas in store from home preparation.

We know Carlsen, Nakamura, and Ding are the star players, but Norway Chess doesn't stop there...

Norway Chess Women's Tournament, The New Addition

What makes this event even more spectacular is the fact that, for the first time, Norway Chess will also feature a Women's Tournament with a field led by current World Champion GM Ju Wenjun and last year's challenger to the throne, GM Lei Tingjie! GM Anna Muzychuk, a former world rapid and blitz champion, will not be one to gloss over if the armageddon matches are reached. GM Humpy Koneru just missed out on the women's world rapid crown last year, 2023, but I think this list of quick-minded players shows that the armageddons will definitely be full of fire. Not to mention the fifth woman ever to achieve the grandmaster title, Pia Cramling. The Women's Tournament will consist of the strongest ladies on the chess world's leaderboard. 

Just look at this lineup of established and up-and-coming players:

Players Federation World Ranking Rating
Humpy Koneru 2 2554
Lei Tingjie  4 2550
Ju Wenjun  5 2547
Anna Muzychuk  7 2525
Vaishali Rameshbabu  14 2481
Pia Cramling  31 2437

The fresh element, however, is the fairness being displayed OFF the board. Norway Chess are matching the prize fund for both the Open and Women's tournament respectively. You can read about this anticipated addition in last year's report by Chess.com's Events Correspondent NM Vanessa West. In their most recent press release, the organizers acknowledge that "The scarcity of women in top-level privately held competitions is a complex issue, with limited invitations and unequal prize money being contributing factors." Up-and-coming phenoms like GM-elect Vaishali Rameshbabu are clearly making magnificent strides in the chess world. This initiative by event organizers can be the turning point for many young women and girls and "...serve as an inspiration for young female chess players to pursue a professional career," as stated by Norway Chess' Benedicte Westre Skog & Kjell Madland. This move will hopefully not only set a precedent but set a norm.

Our aspiration is for the tournament to serve as an inspiration for young female chess players to pursue a professional career.

GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS® Attempt For The Longest Blitz Match

What do Usain Bolt, Beyonce, and Carlsen all have in common? They know that records are made to be broken. Two courageous chess players will be present at the legendary Norway Chess site hoping to add their names to the history books by playing a record 60 hours of chess! 

Will we see history made in the Longest Blitz Match?

How long can the brain blitz through endless endgames? 

  • Olympic Speed! 

Askild Bryn and Odin Blikra Vea will take Kasparov's debut title "The Test of Time" to heart as they play nearly non-stop for 60 hours. They are allowed five minutes of rest after every hour of play but also have the possibility to add rest depending on their play's duration. As in, blitzing for four hours would allow them to accumulate 20 minutes of rests, and so on. Back to back, they'll bolt through games like Usain, betting their melatonin on breaking the record that was previously set at 56 hours! We've seen attempts like this before.

  • "You Won't Break My..." Sleep Schedule 

Bring out the popcorn and keep it coming. Starting on June 2, 10 am (CEST) to June 4 10 pm (CEST) we will follow Askild and Odin on an odyssey of blitz. The time control is five minutes for each side. Each game will be displayed on a professional DGT board and we might be able to read through Beyonce's extensive resume by the time they conclude the match! Here's a piece on chess-related world records!

Watch the blitz marathon on Chess24 and observe how two humans bear through fatigue. Will they make it through the waking hours? Will they endure two and a half days of mental play? 

Mark your calendars for May 27 and get ready for a series of events you won't be able to forget. 

SKOL!

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