Irish Chess Championship Explained

The Irish Chess Championship is the national Championship of Ireland, currently run by the Irish Chess Union (ICU), the FIDE-recognised governing body for the game.[1] Below is the list of champions. The first champion was J.A. Porterfield Rynd, who won the Dublin Chess Congress 1865 No. 3 Tournament, reserved for "amateurs, bona fide resident in Ireland for the 12 months prior to 1st September 1865".[2]

The Irish Chess Association was founded in 1885. Its congresses of 1886 and 1889 included provision for determining the Irish Championship, and the winners were Richard Whieldon Barnett (later Sir Richard Barnett) and George D. Soffe, respectively.[3]

The Hibernian Chess Association was established during the 1891–92 season, and held one Irish championship, in 1892, which was won by J.A. Porterfield Rynd.

Since its foundation in 1912 the Irish Chess Union has organised the Irish Chess Championships. The events ran sporadically at first, but have been held annually since 1924, except for suspension during 1941–45.

The Irish Chess Championship has run in various formats including a round robin competition, a match system, and a Swiss system competition. Since 2013, the championship has been organised as a 9-round Swiss event, open to players registered as IRL with FIDE, who meet a rating requirement.

Irish Champions

YearWinnerNotes
1865 James Alexander Porterfield Rynd[4] First winner
1886 Richard Whieldon Barnett[5]
1889 George D. Soffe
1892 James Alexander Porterfield RyndFirst person to win two championships
1913 John O'HanlonFirst person to win two consecutive championships
1915
1922 T.G. (Thomas George) Cranston
1924 Philip Baker
1925 John O'HanlonFirst person to win three championships
1926 First person to win four championships
1927Philip BakerFirst, and so far only, person to win three consecutive championships
1928
1929
1930 John O'HanlonFirst person to win five championships
1931 T.G. (Thomas George) Cranston
1932 John O'HanlonFirst person to win six championships
1933 James C. Creevey
1934
1935 John O'HanlonFirst person to win seven championships
1936 First person to win eight championships
1937 Thomas Cox
1938
1939Bartholomew O'Sullivan
1940 John O'HanlonFirst person to win nine championships
1946Bartholomew O'Sullivan
1947 Patrick A. Duignan
1948 Dónal J. O'Sullivan
1949 Patrick Brendan Kennedy
1950 T. Vincent Maher
1951 Patrick Martin Austin Bourke
1952 Michael Joseph Schuster
1953 Edmund Noel Mulcahy
1954 Terry Kelly
1955 T. Vincent Maher
1956 Dónal J. O'Sullivan
1957
1958 Wolfgang Heidenfeld
1959 Brian Reilly
1960
1961 John Reid
1962 John Reid / Michael F. LittletonShared title
First shared title
1963 Wolfgang Heidenfeld
1964
1965 Michael F. Littleton
1966 John L. Moles
1967 Wolfgang Heidenfeld
1968
1969 Nicholas James Patterson
1970 Paul Henry
1971 John L. Moles
1972 Wolfgang Heidenfeld
1973 Hugh MacGrillen
1974 Anthony Doyle
1975 Eamon Keogh / Alan Templeton LudgateShared title[6]
1976 Bernard Kernan
1977 Ray Devenney / Alan Templeton LudgateShared title
1978 Alan Templeton Ludgate
1979 David Dunne / Eamon KeoghShared title[7]
1980 Paul Delaney
1981 David Dunne / Philip ShortShared title
1982 John Delaney
1983 David Dunne
1984Eugene Curtin
1985Eugene Curtin / Mark OrrShared title
1986 John Delaney / Philip ShortShared title
1987John Delaney
1988 Philip Short
1989 Niall Carton
1990John Delaney
1991 Stephen Brady
1992
1993Niall Carton
1994 Mark Orr
1995 Brian Kelly
1996 Richard O'Donovan
1997Joseph Diarmuid Ryan
1998Colm Daly
1999
2000 Mark Heidenfeld
2001 Stephen Brady
2002 Sam Collins
2003 Stephen Brady
2004 Joseph Diarmuid Ryan
2005 Colm Daly
2006 Stephen Brady
2007 Brian Kelly / Stephen BradyShared title
2008Alexander Baburin
2009 Colm Daly
2010 Alex Lopez
2011 Stephen Brady
2012Stephen Brady / Colm Daly
2013Colm Daly
2014Sam Collins
2015Stephen Brady / Philip ShortShared title
2016Stephen Jessel
2017 Philip Short / Alex LopezShared title
2018 Alex Lopez
2019 Conor E. Murphy
2020 Tom O'Gorman
2021 Mark Heidenfeld
2022 Tarun Kanyamarala
2023Alexander Baburin

Irish Women's Champions

Source:[8]

Senior / Veteran winners

External links

includes history, scores, crosstables, bios, and interviews.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.fide.com/component/fidedirectory/?task=country&fid=68 FIDE Directory, Member Associations
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20160915082151/https://www.icu.ie/tournaments/136 "Irish Championship 1865", ICU web site
  3. Web site: History of the Early Championships . https://web.archive.org/web/19990302030232/http://www.cns.ed.ac.uk/tica/champs/history.html . dead . 1999-03-02 . David . McAlister . The Irish Chess Archive . 1999 . the Wayback Machine).
  4. Web site: Login. 2021-08-12. www.icu.ie.
  5. Web site: Login. 2021-08-12. www.icu.ie.
  6. Web site: Login.
  7. Web site: Login.
  8. https://irishchesshistory.wordpress.com/restricted/irish-womens-championship/, "Irish Women's Championship", Irish Chess History web site (David McAlister, ed.).
  9. Web site: Irish Veterans Championship. 2021-08-12. www.icu.ie.
  10. Web site: Irish Veterans 2012. 2021-08-12. ratings.icu.ie.
  11. Web site: Irish Veterans 2011. 2021-08-12. ratings.icu.ie.
  12. Web site: Irish Veterans 2013. 2021-08-12. ratings.icu.ie.
  13. Web site: Irish Veterans Championships 2015. 2021-08-12. ratings.icu.ie.
  14. Web site: The Irish Veterans Championships 2016. 2021-08-12. www.icu.ie.