Alyaksey Fjodarau

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Fedorow alexej 20081120 olympics dresden.jpg
Aljaksej Fjodarau at the
38th Chess Olympiad in Dresden 2008
Association BelarusBelarus Belarus
Born September 27, 1972
Mahiljou
title International Master (1992)
Grand Master (1996)
Current  Elo rating 2529 (August 2020)
Best Elo rating 2684 (January 2000)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Alexei Fedorov ( Belarusian Аляксей Дзмітрыевіч Фёдараў , Russian Алексей Дмитриевич Фёдоров , transcription Alexei Dmitrievich Fedorov, FIDE notation Alexei Fedorov * 27. September 1972 in Mogilev ) is a Belarusian chess players . He played for the Soviet chess federation until 1992, then briefly for the Russian and from 1993 for the Belarusian chess federation.

successes

He became the Belarusian individual champion several times: in 1993, 1995, 2005 (in Minsk ) and again in 2008 in the Belarusian capital with half a point ahead of Sjarhej Schyhalka . He won his fifth title in Minsk in January 2017. At the Aeroflot Open 2003 in Moscow , he finished third in the tie-break. In January 2006 he won the 4th Pavarsnath International Open in New Delhi . In October 2008 he won the 2nd Romgaz Open in Bucharest , the most highly endowed chess tournament that had previously taken place on Romanian soil.

At the age of 19 (1992) he became an international master , at 23 years (1996) a grandmaster . His highest rating to date was 2684 in January 2000. At that time he was 14th in the FIDE world rankings. Fjodarau is considered to be the opening specialist for the King's Gambit and the Dragon variant in the Sicilian Defense .

Team chess

He took part in the Chess Olympiads eight times with the Belarusian national team (1994, 1998 to 2008 and 2018 ) with a positive overall result of 41.5 points from 77 games. Of more than 70,000 games played in the history of the Chess Olympiad, Fjodarau was involved in the shortest. In round 11 of the 2004 Chess Olympiad in Calvià , he drew against the Georgian grandmaster Giorgi Katscheishvili in three half-moves (1. e2 – e4 c7 – c6 2. d2 – d4). He also played for Belarus in four European team championships (1997 to 2003). In 34 games he scored 19 points here.

In the Russian team championship he played for the Maykop University club in 1998 and 2002 , for TsEM Smolensk in 2000 and for Yunilain Samara in 2005 , in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2003 and 2004 for ŠK Kiseljak , with whom he was runner-up in both years and also at European Club Cup 2003 in Rethymno took third place. He also received an individual silver medal at the European Club Cup for his result of 5.5 out of 7 on the fifth board. In Belarus he played for Wesnjanka Minsk , with whom he also took part in the European Club Cup in 2006 and 2007, later for Wesnjanka Gran and in the Czech Republic since 2011 for BŠŠ Frýdek-Místek . He also had missions in the French (for Orcher la Tour Gonfreville ), Croatian and Romanian 1st league.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Elo Top 100 from January 2000
  2. Aljakseij Fjodarau's results at the Chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  3. Chess Olympiad Trivia on olimpbase.org (English)
  4. Aljakseij Fjodarau's results at European team championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  5. Aljakseij Fjodarau's results at Russian team championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  6. Aljakseij Fjodarau's results in the Bosnian Premijer League on olimpbase.org (English)
  7. a b Aljakseij Fjodarau's results at European Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)
  8. Aljakseij Fjodarau's results in the Czech Extraliga on olimpbase.org (English)