Alexander Vladimirovich Ryazantsev (chess player)

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Alexander Riazantsev World Rapid Chess Championship.jpg
Alexander Ryazantsev, 2015
Association RussiaRussia Russia
Born September 12, 1985
Moscow
title International Master (1999)
Grand Master (2001)
Current  Elo rating 2638 (August 2020)
Best Elo rating 2720 ​​(July 2012)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Alexander Vladimirovich Ryazantsev ( Russian Александр Владимирович Рязанцев ; born September 12, 1985 in Moscow ) is a Russian chess master .

Ryazantsev learned to play chess from his father when he was six. He was later trained by Mark Dworezki . Ryazantsev graduated from the Moscow Russian State University of Physical Culture, Sports, Youth and Tourism with a degree in chess . He won the U12 World Youth Championship in Cannes (1997) and the U14 European Youth Championship in Mureck (1998). Ryazantsev won or occupied top places in several tournaments: 1st place at the Open Stork Young Masters in Hengelo (2005), 1st place at the Moscow Championship (2006) and 2nd - 4th place at the 62nd Russian Championship (2009 ). He won the masters tournament in Biel (2010).

Ryazantsev received the title of International Master in 1999 and the title of Grand Master in 2001. He has been the coach of the Russian national team since 2011. In September 2016, he was named the Honored Coach of Russia . In October 2016, Ryazantsev won the Russian individual championship in Novosibirsk .

societies

At the Russian team championship , Ryazantsev played for Politekhnik Nizhny Tagil from 2004 to 2006 , from 2006 to 2008 for Southern Ural Chelyabinsky , from 2009 to 2012 for SchSM-64 Moscow , with whom he became champions in 2010 and 2011, in 2013 for SK Malachit Yekaterinburg and in 2014 for Ugra Khanty-Mansiysk . In France he has played for Metz Fischer since 2006 , in the Belgian interclubs he played for KSK Rochade Eupen-Kelmis in the 2005/06 season , in the Chinese team championship in the 2012 season for Wuxi Huafang Construction and in 2019 for Guangdong Shenzhen Longgang .

Individual evidence

  1. Interview by Misha Savinov with Ryazantsev ( memento of December 24, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (English; PDF; 246 kB)
  2. ChessBase Megabase 2010
  3. Past Winners - Master Open Tournaments , accessed on August 29, 2018
  4. Alexander Riazantsev appointed Russia's head coach , chessdom.com, September 20, 2011 (English)
  5. Alexander Ryazanzew's results at Russian team championships on olimpbase.org (English)

Web links