The Champions Chess Tour (CCT) 2023 was an online fast
chess tournament circuit that was organised in 2023 by
Chess.com
Chess.com is an internet chess server, news website and social networking website. The site has a freemium model in which some features are available for free, and others are available for accounts with subscriptions. Live online chess can be pla ...
. The tour started on 6 February 2023 and ended on 16 December 2023. It involved eight online chess tournaments featuring some of the world's top players, who played for a prize money pool of US$2 million.
Organisation and format
With
Chess.com
Chess.com is an internet chess server, news website and social networking website. The site has a freemium model in which some features are available for free, and others are available for accounts with subscriptions. Live online chess can be pla ...
's purchase of
Play Magnus Group
Play Magnus Group is a Norwegian chess company co-founded by chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen in 2013. The company released the mobile app ''Play Magnus (mobile app), Play Magnus'' in 2014, before merging with chess24 in 2019 and being acquired by ...
, the 2023 Champions Chess Tour took its format components from previous seasons of the
Champions Chess Tour and Chess.com tournaments, such as the Chess.com World Championship. Some of these enhancements to the contest included open qualifications and a division structure to accommodate more players. There are also several inventive format tweaks that were created to increase excitement and make every match matter.
The new concept included six tournaments over the course of an entire online chess season, beginning with the Airthings Masters and continuing with playoffs and a knockout final. The qualifying tournaments of the Champions Chess Tour 2023 were open to all top 500 players in the rapid chess ranking.
The tournaments consisted of six $235,000 tournaments. The top ten finishers in the overall standings got a share of $100,000 prize money. The top finishers on the leaderboard filled the remaining seats in the $500,000 end-of-year finals in December, leaving the event champions with a golden ticket, with eight players playing a semi finals and four playing the final in December 2023.
All titled players were allowed to compete in the qualifying rounds, with the exception of grandmasters, who were automatically entered into the play-in rounds. There were nine rounds of a
Swiss-system tournament during qualifiers. The
time limit was 10 minutes plus 2 seconds. The top three competitors in each competition had the chance to take part in the forthcoming Play-In.
Tour points and prize money
Regular
The total prize pool for a Regular tournament is $235,000 for each tournament was distributed as follows:
Points
Prize Money
Playoffs and Finals
The Playoffs and Finals have a $500,000 purse.
Leaderboard prizes
After the end of the sixth event, players also earn their share of the $100,000 prize fund according to their CCT Tour Point standings.
Tournament schedule and results
Standings
Prize money is shown in US dollars. Bold number denotes a win in that division.
Tournaments details
Airthings Masters
This initial tournament started on 6 February and ended on 10 February. Both a Play-in stage that is open to all grandmasters and a Knockout stage with three categories are available at the Airthings Masters. The prize pools for each category are distinct, and players can gain Tour Points according on the division they competed in and their finish. The players who have earned the most Tour Points by the tour's sixth event qualify for the CCT Playoff.
Magnus Carlsen won the tournament after defeating
Hikaru Nakamura in Division I finals.
Fabiano Caruana won Division II after defeating
Yu Yangyi.
Division I Play-off
Chessable Masters
Division I Play-off
ChessKid Cup
Division I Play-off
Aimchess Rapid
Division I Play-off
Julius Baer Generation Cup
Division I Play-off
AI Cup
Division I Play-off
Notes
References
{{Reflist
Chess competitions
2023 in chess