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Open Letter: Women's World Championship Conditions

  • SonofPearl
  • on Mon, 1/17/2011 10:08am.

Womens_World_Championships_LOGO_2010.jpgOpen letter regarding the Women's World Chess Championship 2010

We, the players of the Women’s World Chess Championship 2010 in Antakya/Hatay who have signed this document below, would like to share with the chess community and FIDE our thoughts about the level of the organization of the recent women's world championship.

The reason for this letter is to make the governing chess body, FIDE, aware of the problems that exist. We are chess professionals and would like to see the women’s chess world championship as the ultimate chess event which should be organized at the highest level. After qualifying for this prestigious event, we have to pay our own expenses to come and play in this championship. As such we would like to feel that we are the participants of a world chess tournament rather than are being overcharged, starting from the transfer and ending with the hotel.

There are certain points we neither understand nor accept, and to avoid disappointments in the future, we would like to express them now, so that next time around, the same problems do not occur.

Hotel and location

Full board in the Hotel Anemon Antakya for the participants of the championship cost 130 Euros. The regular price for the same hotel with no food is 60 Euro per day. The hotel was located far away from the center of Antakya on a noisy, dirty road with nowhere towalk around.

Some players tried to book their rooms through the official website of the hotel, where the room price per day was about 65-75 €, including breakfast. Obviously the remaining 60 € could be spent for a very adequate lunch and dinner. But they were informed that the hotel was booked out, and it was impossible to book a room without going through the organising committee.

Even though normally only the players are forced to stay in the official hotels, in Turkey everybody who came with a player needed to stay in the same official hotel. Which made the participation in the world championship even more expensive for players who decided to come with their trainers. 's an easy way for the organizers to force the players to pay more than they should.

The participants were given rooms in a four-star hotel, overlooking a dirty and very noisy highway, with unhealthy air conditions and nowhere to go walking at all! The walls between the rooms were so thin, the players could hear what was going on in the rooms next to theirs. Due to to all these conditions, the level of rest and preparation needed for players for such an important event was lower than usual.

Comparing to Nalchik 2008, where the players were obliged to pay only for accomodation and could buy lunch and dinner either in the hotel or in restaurants nearby, in Antakaya we didn’t have a choice. We had to pay for the food, but in the first few days the players were left starving, since the size of the portions offered were quite small and there was no buffet to choose from. In such important events as the world championships, since participants from all over the world are taking part in the event, we believe that some variety of food has to be proposed.

The price of 130 €, given the location and market conditions, was unreasonably high, and players and their families had no choice but pay for poor service at prices far above market value to the organizers.

Considering all of the above, we would like to ask FIDE that even though the prize fund hasn’t changed or improved since 2001, at least the venue of the championship shouldn’t become more expensive, and the event should not be located in places where conditions seem bad and unhealthy for the participants.

Transfer & Registration Fee

The participants were charged 40 € for a ten-minute trip from the airport to the hotel. A local taxi would have been DRASTICALLY cheaper, and these taxis had room for at least three players. So basically we were being overcharged!

The players were also asked to pay a "registration fee" or deposit of 100 Euros, which is something new for the World Championship, and not convenient for the players.

Organisation

Even though, this time, there were no politically interfering circumstances as in Nalchik, most players seemed disappointed when comparing this World Championship to previous editions. There we were no guides or warm welcomes for the participants in Turkey.

The first game of the first round was played in the Archeological Museum of Antakya which is a very beautiful place but was absolutely unacceptable for a serious chess tournament. All the noise of the road was heard inside the Museum and was disturbing to the players. A decision to move even a single round from the regular hall to another location is absolutely unacceptable for such high profile events.

There were also not enough qualified arbiters for the first rounds, especially for the tie-breaks. From the coverage of the championship, you could learn that coaches and other players who didn’t play helped the organizers to monitor the rapid games during the tie-breaks.This should be absolutely avoided.

Next Steps

The 2010 Women’s World Championship was a real disappointment for most of us. The impression we got was that the organizers wanted to spend the least amount of money, while earning as much as possible from the players, which is unacceptable for such high profile events.

Therefore, in order to avoid such unpleasant situations in the future, we ask FIDE to take more serious steps for choosing a city-candidate for such important events. A FIDE representative, preferably a female player, should visit a site which is bidding for such an important event before it is accepted as the venue by FIDE.

Before being accepted, the organizer of a future world championship should sign a special contract with FIDE, guaranteeing minimum quality of organization. the points we discussed in this letter (quality of hotel, food, opening and closing ceremonies, hall of play, payments from players, etc.) should be specified in this contract and none of these should be changed before the event or without notifying FIDE.

We are also asking FIDE to improve the contract that all the participants sign before the world championship, as some points are not acceptable such as the requirements for the players to wear any clothes or brands that FIDE proposes (point 4.4).

The contract between FIDE and the players for the upcoming world championship should include the name of the hotel and the exact price the player will need to pay and exactly for what services. That price should be reasonably close to market prices for those accommodations.

We hope that FIDE will take into serious consideration this open letter and will make sure all these very important questions are addressed in order to ensure all future events are held with fair conditions for the players.

Elina Danielian
Nana Dzagnidze
Jovanka Houska
Tatiana Kosintseva
Alexandra Kosteniuk
Maia Lomineishvili
Evgenia Ovod
Amina Mezioud
Lilit Mkrtchian
Elisabeth Paehtz
Anna Muzychuk
Maria Muzhychuk
Natalia Pogonina
Marina Romanko
Irina Slavina
Soumya Swaminathan
Anna Zatonskih
Natalia Zhukova

2888 reads 27 comments
6 votes

Comments


  • 16 months ago

    LionHeart319

    This is a very serious matter. Organizers making money in a major tournament!?.. What a shame! But whatever the problems are, I believe there is a better (professional) way of sending this to FIDE, not in an open letter like this. Such act will defenitely affect both sides reputation. I hope it will be settled professionally. Nonetheless, chess lovers like me will also be distressed to know that such things happen in events at any level.

  • 16 months ago

    dave_9990

    Points I would make:

    Such a shame that the hotel failed to impress, I'd include Ear plugs in my travel set, and I'd carry vitamins, take more money than it cost last time etc.

  • 16 months ago

    elpinesky

    WHAT A SHAME!! FIDE SHOULD HAVE INVESTIGATE AND ACT ABOUT THE COMPLAIN ACCORDINGLY. 

    FIDE in HOT WATER AGAIN !!!


  • 16 months ago

    MrDurdan

    There needs to be a players association so they can keep the organizers in check, just like in other professional sports.  Have the players elect a person(s) to represent the whole and sort out this ridiculousness.  Funny how money is the focus of EVERYTHING!

  • 16 months ago

    narayanansri

     i wish and hope these players boycot FIDE and start their own association, head quarters at a country where they respect  women.

  • 16 months ago

    MeAko

    More shameful than the organizers making a mess of things and making money off the players is the other players who choose to suffer in silence.  They didn't even have to write the letter, only sign their names.

    I guess it is just the Asian/Oriental way to keep quiet less we be construed as trouble makers.

    We (Asians) get knocked over and stepped on, and we stand up and bow before the same people who did that.

    Look at us in the Philippines, our President steals us blind and we then elect her to Congress.

    Shameful how Asians never complain...a lack of courage, a lack of principles...a shame...Embarassed

  • 16 months ago

    sleprithslayer5

    nakamura for the title????

  • 16 months ago

    NrthrnKnght

    NOW do you understand why I have been against FIDE for a very long time.This was a travesty.A complete shame and SCAM.To profit from the players on such a scale as that, it baffles me, how chess players from all over the world take this crap.Rise up and overthrown these baffoons.All it takes is a voice and a movement.You women are professionals.You should not be treated in this way.

  • 16 months ago

    gmeillonc

    Learning those things from the letter, looks like a terror movie. How are possible those outrage conditions? We are talking about the Women World Championship event. Such talent should be treated in accordance to the event. Charge the participants? Incredible! They should be paid for their assistance. First class accommodations and services and not being charge at all.

  • 16 months ago

    Sasa132

    Shame.
  • 16 months ago

    fritzel

    Let the voices of these players be heard.Surprised

  • 16 months ago

    dashkee94

    This is just pathetic.  FIDE is only concerned with corporate sponsership, and to hell with the players.  The next event should be boycotted by the players, who will then form their own tournament at a site of THEIR choosing.  Let FIDE chew on that one for a while--what if you threw a World Championship and no one came?

  • 16 months ago

    amitprabhale

    Let  us all checkmate FIDE

  • 16 months ago

    GeoffreyBernardo

    Who will lead the charge for a new international organisation? Kasparov, Karpov, Anand and Magnus?

  • 16 months ago

    rubensrocha

    it´s a ridiculous role that Fide plays among professional chess players.

  • 16 months ago

    GeoffreyBernardo

    Of course, FIDE probably did not even read the letter.

    What happened to the Grandmasters Association?

    Everyone should just subscribe to a new organisation and forget FIDE.

  • 16 months ago

    amitprabhale

    I support them. By the way; wht abt Open World C'shp.. are they all sponsored ?
  • 16 months ago

    Melchizedek10

    I think we need a new non-profit organization to replace this badly FIDE organization...Either by a coliation of international countries and government to help make this happen...It's sad these how these players is not treated well...

  • 16 months ago

    _valentin_

    I wonder what prevented the remaining 46 players from signing this (otherwise reasonably sounding and polite) letter, signed by 18...

    Was it perhaps considered inappropriate/unacceptable in their respective cultures to "complain", no matter what the circumstances, without permission from their country's official chess federation's permission (e.g., China)? 

    I notice that most players who signed are from republics in the former Soviet Union (though there are some players from this region who didn't sign, e.g., Maia Chiburdanidze among several others).

    Were the remaining players less worried about, and more accepting of, those conditions?

    Did they know of, and take advantage of, ways to avoid those conditions?

  • 17 months ago

    alaa78

    its a shame !

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