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The World Chess Championship Separating Pros from the Amateurs
History Of Chess Words: 588
The World Chess Championship: Separating Pros from the Amateurs

The World Chess Championship is an event used to
determine the world champion in chess games. The event
allows both eligible men and women to compete for the
title. There is also a separate event for women, where
players vie for the title of Women�s Chess Champion.
For several years, the World Chess Championship has
produced a number of World Champions.

Birth of the Championship

Although it was believed that the official world
championship was held in the year 1886, where two
leading players of chess played a match, those events
were held in an informal basis. It was not until the
year 1943 when the FIDE, an international chess
organization, started administering world
championships.

Going back in 1886, there were several unofficial
champions that started with Wilhelm Steinitz; Wilhelm
competed against Johannes Zukertort. However, there
were other several players who were regarded as the
strongest and most famous in the world that extends
back hundreds of years beyond the two. More so, these
players were also considered as the world champions
during their time and include Ruy Lopez de Segura,
Paolo Boi, Leonardo da Cutri, Alessandro Salvio and
Gioachino Greco.

In the remainder of the nineteenth century, world
championships were held in an informal basis. The
matches were initiated by players who would look for
financial backing for a match purse and challenge the
reigning world champion; whoever beat the reigning
champion would be the new world champion. The systems
had no formal qualification procedures. Still, this
old tournament system produced several world champions
who were the strongest of their day.

FIDE-controlled events started during the year 1948,
where the reigning champion, Alexander Alekhine died
and threw the chess world into chaos. Because of his
death, the informal system was not suitable enough to
find for methods of producing a new world champion
since there was no one to challenge with.

During that time, the Soviet Union, regarded then as
the most powerful chess nation, joined the FIDE to
become a part in the process of selecting a new world
champion. The FIDE organized matches in the year 1948
between five of the world�s strongest players, namely
Vaisly Smyslov, Mikhail Botvinnik, Paul Keres, Max
Euwe, and Samuel Reshevsky. Mikhail won the tournament
and was declared the new world champion. FIDE then
continued to organize world championships thereafter.

The System for the World Championship

Because the informal system was not suitable enough to
be used for untimely events, like the player�s death,
a new system was introduced to determine how a player
can qualify for the world champion title. The new
system starts with the world�s strongest players being
seeded into Interzonal tournaments. Eventually, the
players would be joined by other players who qualified
from several Zonal tournaments. The leading finishers
of the Interzonal tournaments would qualify for the
Candidates event, which was originally a tournament
and later transformed into a series of knock-out
competitions. The player who won the Candidates
tournament would qualify for a match with the reigning
champion for the championship title.

If the reigning champion loses the matches, he will be
given the chance to play in a three-way event three
years later. The event would include the former
champion, his new successor, and the next challenger,
who is qualified to challenge the new world champion.
Currently, the world champion title is being held by a
player named Viswanathan Anand, who won the World
Chess Championship in 2007.