Team squad of the German Federal Chess League 2003/04 (women)
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The list of the team cadres of the German national chess league 2003/04 (women) contains all players who were registered for the German national chess league of women 2003/04 with their individual results.
The 12 clubs were allowed to register 6 regular players and a maximum of 8 substitute players. Not all clubs exhausted the registration quota completely, the Dresdner SC registered 13 players, the SC Baden-Oos and the Torgelower SV Greif 12 each and Rotation Berlin only 10. Not all the registered players were also used. Rotation Berlin got by with 8 players, most of the players used the Hamburger SK, Karlsruher SF, Meerbauer Kiel and Chaos Mannheim, namely 12. A total of 125 players were used, 14 of whom did not miss a match.
The best player in points was Zoya Lelchuk (SK Turm Emsdetten) with 8.5 points from 10 games, Cristina-Adela Foişor (Meerbauer Kiel), Jessica Nill (SC Baden-Oos) and Claudia Steinbacher (Rodewischer Schachmiezen), with Foişor and Nill each played 10 games, Steinbacher 11. With Petra Movsesjanová , Elena Winkelmann (both Dresdner SC) and Tina Schulz (Karlsruher SF) three players achieved 100%, but they only played a few games. Movsesjanová and Schulz were used twice, Winkelmann once.
The oldest player of the season was Christina Domsgen (* 1951), who played for SK Großlehna , and Lara Stock (* 1992), who played for Chaos Mannheim, 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 2003); 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 2003); For players without an Elo rating, the DWZ (if available) is given in brackets.
Nation: Nationality according to the rating list from October 2003; AUT = Austria, BUL = Bulgaria, CRO = Croatia, CZE = Czech Republic, DEN = Denmark, ENG = England, ESP = Spain, FRA = France, GEO = Georgia, GER = Germany, GRE = Greece, HUN = Hungary, ITA = Italy, LUX = Luxembourg, MDA = Moldova, NED = Netherlands, POL = Poland, ROU = Romania, RUS = Russia, SCG = Serbia and Montenegro, SUI = Switzerland, SVK = Slovakia, SWE = Sweden, UKR = Ukraine.
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 the players with at least 5 games (calculated with Swiss-Chess)
Victories without a fight are taken into account in the individual balance sheets, defeats without a fight are not taken into account.
The results in the DWZ evaluation and in the Elo evaluation partly contradict, after a comparison with the results service and the Big Database 2011 from Chessbase, the Elo evaluation data are assumed to be correct.
Isabel Delemarre's name was Isabel Werner until the 2002/03 season.
Christina Domsgen was called Christina Hölzlein until 1975 and Christina Lehmann since the 2005/06 season.
Petra Movsesjanová was called Petra Mazakova until the 2002/03 season.
Anna Onischuk has been called Anna Rudolph since the 2004/05 season.
The playoff for the title is not taken into account, the individual results of which are: