The 17th edition of the Gibraltar Masters begins today in the Caleta Hotel in Gibraltar, with Levon Aronian looking to defend the title he won in 2018. Those trying to stop him include 4-time Champion Hikaru Nakamura, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Wesley So, while we’ll also get to see the world’s youngest grandmaster, 12-year-old Gukesh from Indian. The £15,000 women’s top prize has attracted World Champion Ju Wenjun, defending Champion Pia Cramling and all but three of the female players rated over 2500.

Round 1 of the 2019 Gibraltar Masters starts at 15:00 CET on Tuesday January 22nd and continues without a rest day until Round 10 starts at 11:00 on Thursday 31st.



It’s no longer the “Tradewise” Gibraltar Chess Festival, but the organisers have managed to find sufficient sponsorship from multiple sources to keep the prize funds unchanged, with £25,000 for the 1st place. The field is as impressive as usual, as you can see from the pairings:

The tournament features 14 2700 players, with some of the favourites Gibraltar regulars like Hikaru Nakamura and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, while Levon Aronian is back to defend the title he won in 2018 (he also won in 2005, before spending 10 of the next 12 years in Tata Steel instead).



Wesley So’s appearance this year is noticeable, though, since for the last five years he’s played in the Tata Steel Masters instead. He got into the spirit early on by playing in the Sunday night simultaneous display alongside Kateryna Lagno.

Kateryna is on the rise after reaching the final of the Women’s World Championship in Khanty-Mansiysk and then claiming the Women’s World Blitz Championship title in St. Petersburg, but the fight for the top women’s prize in Gibraltar is going to be fierce. It’s enough to name the other 2500+ female players in the event: Women’s World Champion Ju Wenjun, the Muzychuk sisters, Humpy Koneru, Aleksandra Goryachkina, Tan Zhongyi and Valentina Gunina. And there are more stars in action...

Among the other players to watch out for are previous winners Nikita Vitiugov, Vassily Ivanchuk, Mickey Adams, Ivan Cheparinov and Nigel Short, while our Spanish chess24 community will in particular be following the progress of David Anton, David Martinez, Pepe Cuenca and Sabrina Vega.



We can see if 20-year-old Russian Vladislav Artemiev can push his case to be a member of the elite (where many people expected him to be by now) and we’ll get to watch the world’s youngest grandmaster and the 2nd youngest of all time, Gukesh:



He would have beaten Karjakin’s record if he’d scored a GM norm in the Sunway Chess Festival in December, but there wasn’t long to wait for the title, which he earned in real style in the Delhi Open:







20.Ng7+!! Bxg7 21.Rxe6+! and he crashed home against Dinesh Sharma for 7/9 and the grandmaster title.

Gukesh starts in Gibraltar against Eugenio Crespo from Argentina. Although most of the Round 1 ties should be relatively easy for the favourites due to the rating differences, there are lots of attractive "battle of the sexes" pairings, including Vega-Naiditsch, Vitiugov-Shvayger (Yuliya was one board away from facing her husband Arkadij Naiditsch), Ivanchuk-Guichard, Cheparinov-Arakhamia-Grant (a match-up between two previous Gibraltar winners) and in particular Adams-Zhukova.

Tune in for all the action live here on chess24 from 15:00 CET!

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