Niederrohrdorf got by with 10 players, the Club d'échecs de la Chaux-de-Fonds had 17 players contest at least one competition. A total of 118 players were used, 13 of whom took part in all competitions.
Players from 10 nations were used, with the majority of the foreigners coming from Germany.
The best individual result was achieved by Dorian Jäggi (Basel BVB) with 5.5 points from 7 games; Roland Ekström , Stanislav Budisin (both SV Birsfelden / Beider Basel), Heinz Wirthensohn (Niederrohrdorf) and Andreas Huss (ASK Winterthur) won half a point less. , Ekström and Budisin each played 6 games, Wirthensohn and Huss 7 games each. With Martin Albisetti, Michael Prusikin , Patrick Kupper (all SV Wollishofen), Georg Siegel , Roland Schmid (both Basel BVB), Paul Rickli, Kambez (both ASK Winterthur), Yvan Masserey (Club d'échecs de la Chaux-de-Fonds ) and René Valdivia (Niederrohrdorf), nine players achieved 100% of the possible points, but they only played one game each (with the exception of Albisetti, who played twice), and Schmid won without a fight.
The oldest players of the season were Charles Partos (SV Birsfelden / Beider Basel) and Victor Manievich (Nimzowitsch Zurich), born in 1936, and the youngest player was Kambez Nuri (* 1992), who played for ASK Winterthur.
Legend
The tables below contain the following information:
No .: Ranking list number
Title: FIDE title at the beginning of the season (rating list from January 2004); GM = Grand Master , IM = International Master , FM = FIDE Master , WGM = Women's Grand Master, WIM = International Women's Master, WFM = Women's FIDE Master, CM = Candidate Master, WCM = Women's Candidate Master
Elo: Elo number at the beginning of the season (rating list from January 2004), for players without an Elo number the rating from the leadership list 5/2003 (published in November 2003) is shown in brackets
Nation: Nationality according to the rating list from January 2004; BUL = Bulgaria, CRO = Croatia, FRA = France, GER = Germany, ISR = Israel, NAM = Namibia, POL = Poland, SCG = Serbia and Montenegro, SUI = Switzerland, SWE = Sweden
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