Julian Radulski

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Julian Radulski 2010.JPG
Julian Radulski, Warsaw 2010
Association BulgariaBulgaria Bulgaria
Born May 24, 1972
Plovdiv
Died February 16, 2013
title International Master (2001)
Grand Master (2004)
Best Elo rating 2606 (November 2010)

Julian Radulski ( Bulgarian Юлиян Радулски ; born May 24, 1972 in Plovdiv ; † February 16, 2013 ) was a Bulgarian chess player .

Radulski took part in two chess Olympiads for the Bulgarian national team, in 2002 on the fourth board and in 2004 on the second reserve board. He got a total of 10.5 points from 16 games at the Olympics. At the 2003 European team championship he played on the third board of the Bulgarian team, and at the 2011 European team championship he was a reserve player. At the Bulgarian individual championship in 2004 he was third. In 2010 he won the Najdorf Memorial Tournament (Mieczsława Najdorfa) in Warsaw ahead of Aleksander Miśta . The following year he was able to win the Bulgarian individual championship in Sofia - Bankja .

Radulski played club chess in the Bulgarian (for Lokomotiv 2000 Plovdiv ), Greek (for Heliopolis ) and Italian (for ASD Scacchi Latina ) 1st division and for Sloga Kraljevo in the Serbian 1st and 2nd division. He last played in a German team in the 2005/06 season for SV Turm Bergheim in the 2nd Bundesliga West.

In 2001 Radulski became International Master , and since 2004 he has held the title of Chess Grandmaster . He achieved the standards for the GM title at the Ivan Zanic Memorial in Stara Pazova in March 2001, at the IX. Anibal Open in Linares in March 2002 and at the Open International in Gien in February 2004.

Julian Radulski died on February 16, 2013 after a long illness.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Obituary on chessbg.com ( Memento from November 18, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Bulgarian)
  2. Julian Radulski's results at the Chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  3. Julian Radulski's results at the European Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  4. Najdorf memorial tournament 2010 in the ChessBase news
  5. GM application to FIDE (English)
  6. Obituary on chessdom.com from February 17, 2013 (English)