Chess queens battle for king’s ransom

€500,000 prize fund is the biggest in the history of the Women’s World Championship

January 08, 2020 09:49 pm | Updated 09:51 pm IST - Shanghai

Top rivalry:  Aleksandra Goryachkina of Russia, left, and  Ju Wenjun of China will be involved in an intense clash.

Top rivalry: Aleksandra Goryachkina of Russia, left, and Ju Wenjun of China will be involved in an intense clash.

Two of the sharpest minds in women’s chess are involved in a battle here this week with a World champion title on the line and a record prize fund as the game seeks to close the gender gap.

The €500,000 on the table in the showdown between holder Ju Wenjun and challenger Aleksandra Goryachkina is the largest prize fund in the nearly 100-year history of the Women’s World Championship.

Significant moment

The International Chess Federation (FIDE) says it is a significant moment for women’s chess, which has long lagged behind the publicity, pay packets and participation of men.

The winner between the GMs from China and Russia — which will be determined over 12 game days in Shanghai and Vladivostok — takes home €300,000.

The total purse is a 150% hike on the previous women’s championship match, according to FIDE, and the format of the competition has been changed to mirror the World Chess Championship, which is theoretically open to all but has been dominated by men.

“We are trying to increase the prestige of the women’s game and also close the pay gap with the men,” said Nigel Short, once one of the top-ranked players in the world and now FIDE vice-president.

“It’s something that we are concerned about and we are trying to do our best to improve the conditions in particular for women’s chess,” the 54-year-old Briton said.

Moves to boost women’s chess came with the election of Arkady Dvorkovich as FIDE president in October 2018. He is a former Deputy Prime Minister of Russia.

Speaking on the eve of Sunday’s opening game, rising star Goryachkina, 21, called the changes “very positive” but said she was motivated by winning the title, not the cash.

Shohreh Bayat, chief arbiter for the match between Goryachkina and the 28-year-old Ju, laughed off the notion that this is chess’s #MeToo moment.

But the Iranian said: “There were many complaints from women players about the format of tournaments, such as this one, and the prize money.”

Bayat hopes that one day women will earn the same as the likes of Magnus Carlsen, the world champion and best-known name in chess.

“In chess right now, if you compare their ratings, men are better players than women, there’s a big difference,” said Bayat.

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