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Harvard–Yale chess match

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The Harvard–Yale chess match is held annually around the time of the Harvard–Yale football game in November on the campus of the university hosting the football game. The tradition dates as far back as 1900.[1] It is a relatively informal match and the schools do not typically submit the games to the United States Chess Federation for rating. Nevertheless, it is one of the highlights of the year for each school's chess club. The match typically consists of four or five games, pitting the top current Harvard and Yale students (undergraduate or graduate). The team with the most game points is declared the winner of the match, with a win worth 1 point, a draw worth half a point, and a loss worth 0 points. In the case of a tie, either the match is declared a tie, or a tie-breaking procedure is applied. Tie-breaking procedures applied in the past included using the result of the strongest non-drawing board as the result of the match, or using results achieved by non-A-teams in the Open section. Match details vary each year depending on the preferences of current members of each school's chess club.

Those who play in the match are typically strong tournament players. The ratings usually range from around 800 to 2600 USCF. Players occasionally are FIDE International Masters or grandmasters.

As of 2024, Yale is the champion, holding an overall record of 10-4-9 against Harvard.

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Results

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Lineups

2011 [2]

  • Harvard: Jake Miller, Bram Louis, Josh Bakker, Naor Brown, Tony Blum
  • Yale: Robert Hess, Bogdan Vioreanu, Patrick O’Keefe, Adam Weser, Gordon Moseley

2008 [3]

  • Yale: Bogdan Vioreanu, Kurt Schneider, Pasha Kamyshev, Gordon Moseley, Rahil Esmail

2005 [4]

  • Yale: David Wang, Matthew Traldi, Pavel Kamyshev, Scott Caplan, David Lyons
  • Harvard: Arin Madenci, Dan Thomas, Danny Goodman, Albert Yeh, Annie Weiss

2004 [5]

  • Harvard: Geoffrey Gelman, Daniel H. Thomas, Arin Madenci, Annie Weiss
  • Yale: Akira Watanabe, Matthew Traldi, Haoyuan Wang, Scott Caplan

2001 [6]

  • Harvard: Daniel H. Thomas, Marc R. Esserman, Victor M. Lee, Yue Wu, Lu Yin, Jason Rihel, Noam Elkies

2000 [7]

  • Harvard: Yakov Chudnovsky, Jonathan A. Wolff, Charles R. Riordan, Lu Yin
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Notable players who have competed in the match

FIDE Grandmasters

FIDE International Masters

  • Richard Wang (Harvard: 2016)
  • Matthew Larson (Yale: 2015, IM title earned in 2018)
  • Bogdan Vioreanu (Yale: 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011)
  • Marc Esserman (Harvard: 2001, IM title earned in 2009)
  • Teddy Coleman (Harvard: 2008, 2009, 2010, IM title earned in 2012)

Other

Games

References

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