Alexander Andreevich Rachmanov

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexander Andreevich Rachmanov

Alexander Andrejewitsch Rachmanow ( Russian Александр Андреевич Рахманов ; FIDE Aleksandr Rakhmanov ; born August 28, 1989 in Tscherepowez ) is a Russian chess player .

Life

Rachmanov learned to play chess when he was seven. As a ten-year-old he won the Cherepovets city championship. When Rachmanov was 15 years old, Vladimir Kazakov was his coach, then Rachmanov belonged to the youth selection of the Russian Federation and took part in international tournaments for the first time.

In 2006 he became International Master , in 2007 he was awarded the title of Grand Master of Chess . In the same year he came third at the Russian U18 Youth Championship, the U18 European Youth Championship (in Šibenik ) and the U18 World Youth Championship (in Kemer ). That year he also won the Dubna Grand Masters tournament and the 2008 Athens Open .

In 2009 and 2010 he won in Voronezh , in 2012 he won in Barcelona in front of Kevin Spraggett and Grzegorz Gajewski and in Guarenas . In 2013 he won the strong Dubai Open ahead of Viktor Láznička , Andrei Istrățescu , Ivan Sokolov and others, and the Panama Open (ahead of Lázaro Bruzón and Alexander Ipatov and others), which took place in Panama City . In the same year he took part as a guest player in the championship of Costa Rica , which he won with 11 points from 12 games.

In 2014 he won in Caracas and the Bosna Open in Sarajevo . In the same year he achieved a remarkable shared second place with 7.5 / 11 at the MTO-Open in Biel , which the Indian B. Adhiban won. In 2015 he shared first place with Ivan Bukavshin and Yuri Yelissejew at the “Governors Cup” in Khanty-Mansiysk . In the Spanish División de Honor, Rachmanov played on the top board of CE Escola d'Escacs de Barcelona in 2014 and 2015, and on the second board of this team in 2017. In the Hungarian team championship he has been playing for DVTK Sport Korlátolt Felelősségű Társaság since 2017 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Марина Чернова: Чемпион , accessed November 30, 2016 (Russian)