The German list of the team cadres of the German Chess League 2000/01 contains all players who were registered for the Chess League 2000/01 and their individual results.
The 16 clubs were allowed to register 8 regular players and a maximum of 6 substitute players. Not all of the registered players were used. SV Werder Bremen managed with 9 players, while SV Castrop-Rauxel, Schott Mainz and SC Gelsenkirchen used all of the registered players. A total of 198 players were used, 30 of whom played all the games.
The best player in points was Wladimir Georgiew (USC Magdeburg) with 12 points from 13 games, and Rafael Vaganian and Curt Hansen from Porzer won 11 points from 15 games . No player achieved 100%, and Georgiev was the most successful in terms of percentage. The closest to him came Erik van den Doel (SG Porz) with 8 points from 9 games and Alexander Naumann (SG 1868-Aljechin Solingen) with 8.5 points from 10 games.
The oldest player of the season was Vlastimil Hort (* 1944), who played for SG Porz , and Luke McShane (* 1984), who played for SV Werder Bremen, was the youngest player .
Legend
The tables below contain the following information:
No .: Ranking list number
Title: FIDE title at the beginning of the season (rating list from October 2000); GM = Grand Master , IM = International Master , FM = FIDE Master , WGM = Grand Master of Women, WIM = International Master of Women, WFM = FIDE Master of Women
Elo (DWZ): Elo number at the beginning of the season (rating list from October 2000); For players without an Elo rating, the DWZ (if available) is given in brackets
Nation: Nationality according to the rating list from October 2000; ARM = Armenia, AUS = Australia, BEL = Belgium, BIH = Bosnia and Herzegovina, BUL = Bulgaria, CZE = Czech Republic, DEN = Denmark, ENG = England, ESP = Spain, FRA = France, GER = Germany, HUN = Hungary , ISR = Israel, LAT = Latvia, LTU = Lithuania, LUX = Luxembourg, NED = Netherlands, NOR = Norway, POL = Poland, ROM = Romania, RUS = Russia, SCO = Scotland, SLO = Slovenia, SUI = Switzerland, SVK = Slovakia, SWE = Sweden, UKR = Ukraine, USA = United States, UZB = Uzbekistan
G: number of winning games
R: Number of draw games
V: number of losing games
Pkt .: Number of points achieved
Games: Number of games played
Elo performance: tournament performance of players with at least 5 games (calculated with Swiss Chess)
Ferenc Langheinrich's IM norm was achieved from 14 games.
Rüdiger Seger's IM norm was achieved from 9 games.
Luke McShane's GM norm was earned from 10 games.
Yannick Pelletier's GM norm was achieved from 9 games.
Alexander Naumann's Elo performance would have been enough to meet a GM standard, but there were no grandmasters among his opponents (4 GM would have been required for the GM standard).