The Pan American Team Chess Championship is an international team chess tournament open to national federations affiliated to FIDE in the Americas. It is organized by the Confederation of Chess for America (CCA), and the winner qualifies to participate at the next World Team Chess Championship.[1]

The tournament has been held at irregular intervals since 1971. Its most recent edition took place in 2013, which was won by the United States in its debut appearance at the event. Cuba has won five of the nine editions of the tournament, Argentina has won twice, and Brazil and the United States have each won once.[2]

Competition

Each member federation located in FIDE Zones 2.1 to 2.5 is entitled to enter a national team of four players and up to two reserve players. Matches are contested on four boards. The final standings in the tournament are determined by the number of game points scored by each team.[1] The tournament has been held as a single round-robin except in 1987 and 2013, when a double round-robin was played. Between four and eight teams have participated in each edition of the tournament.[3]

Results

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Participating
federations
[2]
1971 Argentina Tucumán  Argentina
Miguel Najdorf
Oscar Panno
Raúl Sanguineti
Miguel Quinteros
Samuel Schweber
 Cuba
Eleazar Jiménez
Silvino García Martínez
Eldis Cobo Arteaga
Jesús Rodríguez Gonzáles
Román Hernández Onna
 Brazil
Eduardo Asfora
Vitório Chemin
Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk
Hélder Câmara
Francisco Alves dos Santos
 Argentina
 Bolivia
 Brazil
 Chile
 Cuba
 Ecuador
 Paraguay
 Uruguay
1985 Argentina Villa Gesell  Argentina
Miguel Najdorf
Miguel Quinteros
Oscar Panno
Gerardo Barbero
Pablo Ricardi
Guillermo Soppe
 Brazil
Jaime Sunye Neto
Gilberto Milos
Rubens Filguth
Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk
Francisco Trois
 Chile
Iván Morovic
Roberto Cifuentes
Manuel Abarca Aguirre
Carlos Silva Sánchez
Marcelo Duarte
Christian Michel Yunis
 Argentina
 Bolivia
 Brazil
 Chile
 Paraguay
 Peru
 Uruguay
1987 Argentina Junín  Cuba
Jesús Nogueiras
Amador Rodríguez Céspedes
Guillermo García González
Reynaldo Vera
Joaquin Carlos Diaz
Walter Arencibia
 Chile
Roberto Cifuentes
Hernán Salazar Jacob
Manuel Abarca Aguirre
Carlos Silva Sánchez
Marcelo Duarte
Ricardo Araya
 Argentina
Marcelo Tempone
Guillermo Soppe
Jorge Gómez Baillo
Ariel Sorín
Alejandro Hoffman
Carlos Schwanek
 Argentina
 Chile
 Cuba
 Paraguay
 Peru
 Uruguay
1991 Brazil Guarapuava  Cuba
Jesús Nogueiras
Walter Arencibia
Amador Rodríguez Céspedes
Reynaldo Vera
Román Hernández Onna
Joaquin Carlos Diaz
 Brazil
Jaime Sunye Neto
Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk
Darcy Lima
Cícero Braga
Aron Corrêa
Everaldo Matsuura
 Colombia
Alonso Zapata
Gildardo García
Nelson Gamboa
Jorge Mario Clavijo
Ricardo Díaz
 Argentina
 Brazil
 Chile
 Colombia
 Cuba
 Mexico
 Paraguay
 Uruguay
1995 Brazil Cascavel  Cuba
Jesús Nogueiras
Walter Arencibia
Reynaldo Vera
Amador Rodríguez Céspedes
Julio Becerra Rivero
Juan Borges Mateos
 Argentina
Pablo Zarnicki
Pablo Ricardi
Sergio David Slipak
Ariel Sorín
Marcelo Tempone
Alejandro Hoffman
 Brazil
Gilberto Milos
Jaime Sunye Neto
Darcy Lima
Giovanni Vescovi
Everaldo Matsuura
Cícero Braga
 Argentina
 Bolivia
 Brazil
 Chile
 Cuba
 Paraguay
 Uruguay
2000 Venezuela Mérida  Cuba
Reynaldo Vera
Jesús Nogueiras
Walter Arencibia
Lázaro Bruzón
Leinier Domínguez
Rodney Pérez
 Brazil
Gilberto Milos
Rafael Leitão
Giovanni Vescovi
Darcy Lima
 Uruguay
Martín Crosa Coll
Guillermo Carvalho Fattoruso
Daniel Izquierdo Saravia
Mario Saralegui Cassan
Jaime Escofet Fernández
 Brazil
 Cuba
 Netherlands Antilles
 Venezuela (two teams)
 Uruguay
2003 Brazil Rio de Janeiro  Cuba
Leinier Domínguez
Lázaro Bruzón
Neuris Delgado Ramírez
Walter Arencibia
Reynaldo Vera
 Brazil
Henrique Mecking
Darcy Lima
Cícero Braga
Everaldo Matsuura
Eduardo Limp
Rodrigo Disconzi da Silva
 Ecuador
Carlos Matamoros Franco
Daniel Mieles Palau
Plinio Pazos Gambarrotti
Martha Fierro
 Brazil
 Cuba
 Ecuador
 Paraguay
2009 Brazil Mendes  Brazil
Giovanni Vescovi
Rafael Leitão
Alexandr Fier
Gilberto Milos
André Diamant
Darcy Lima
 Cuba
Leinier Domínguez
Lázaro Bruzón
Fidel Corrales Jiménez
Neuris Delgado Ramírez
Yuniesky Quesada
Holden Hernández Carmenates
 Venezuela
Rafael Prasca Sosa
Johann Álvarez Márquez
José Sequera Paolini
Wiston Boada
Julio Ostos
 Argentina
 Brazil
 Colombia
 Cuba
 Dominican Republic
 Venezuela
2013 Brazil Campinas  United States
Alexander Onischuk
Varuzhan Akobian
Ray Robson
Aleksandr Lenderman
Sam Shankland
 Cuba
Leinier Domínguez
Lázaro Bruzón
Yuniesky Quesada
Isan Reynaldo Ortiz Suárez
 Brazil
Henrique Mecking
Gilberto Milos
Felipe El Debs
Diego Di Berardino
Everaldo Matsuura
 Brazil
 Cuba
 United States
 Uruguay

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Cuba5308
2 Argentina2114
3 Brazil1438
4 United States1001
5 Chile0112
6 Colombia0011
 Ecuador0011
 Uruguay0011
 Venezuela0011
Totals (9 entries)99927

Other international team tournaments in the Americas

Team chess events are currently part of the program at the Central American Games, and have sometimes been part of the Bolivarian Games, most recently in 2013.

Mar del Plata hosted a South American Team Chess Championship in 1989 won by Argentina,[4] and a Mercosur Olympiad in 2009 won by Brazil.[5]

A Central American and Caribbean Team Chess Championship was held annually from 1963 to 1975.[6] Previously, the same name had been given to a team chess tournament held as a side event at the 1938 Central American and Caribbean Games in Panama City, which was won by Cuba.[7]

A Central American Team Chess Championship has been held annually since 2011.[8] A tournament by the same name had previously been contested four times from 1946 to 1953.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Regulations for the Panamerican Team Championship". FIDE Handbook. FIDE. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  2. 1 2 Bartelski, Wojciech. "Panamerican Team Chess Championship's Overall Statistics: 1971-2013". OlimpBase. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  3. Nóbrega Jr., Adaucto Wanderley. "Campeonato Panamericano por Equipes". BrasilBase (in Portuguese). Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  4. Bartelski, Wojciech. "1st South American Team Chess Championship: Mar del Plata 1989". OlimpBase. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  5. Bartelski, Wojciech. "1st Mercosur Chess Olympiad: Mar del Plata 2009". OlimpBase. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  6. Bartelski, Wojciech. "CACAC Team Chess Championship's Overall Statistics: 1963-1975". OlimpBase. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  7. Corzo, Juan (27 February 1938). "Conquista Cuba el campeonato de Centroamérica y del Caribe". Carteles (in Spanish). p. 13. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  8. Bartelski, Wojciech. "1st Mercosur Chess Olympiad: Mar del Plata 2009". OlimpBase. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  9. Sotela Montagné, Rogelio (23 November 1946). "Del primer campeonato centroamericano de ajedrez". La Nación (in Spanish). p. 10. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  10. Tsijli, Alexis Murillo; Tsijli, Manuel Murillo (2003). El ajedrez en Costa Rica [Chess in Costa Rica] (in Spanish). Editorial Universidad de Costa Rica. p. 127. ISBN 9789977677187. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
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