Bayan monchiin Anchtschimeg
Bayanmönchiin Anchtschimeg ( Mongolian Баянмөнхийн Анхчимэг ; born January 30, 1983 in Mongolia ) is a Mongolian chess player .
Her nickname is Anchtschimeg. Bayan monk is a patronymic , namely the genitive form of her father's name, bayan monk. The spelling of her name was at the World Chess Federation FIDE to 2000 Bayanmukh Ankhchimer , 2000-2008 Bayanmonh Anhchimeg and since 2009 Bayanmunh Ankhchimeg .
successes
Single successes
In 2001 she won the Mongolian women's individual championship in Ulaanbaatar by one and a half points. A year later she was again Mongolian champion, this time after a tie-break decision in front of Batchujagiin Möngöntuul . In 2003 she won the Mongolian women's title for the third time in a row. In 2004 she won the women's ranking at the Unicorn Open in Berlin . Again she was Mongolian champion in 2005 and split in 2009.
Team chess
With the Mongolian women's national team, she took part in six chess Olympiads : 2000 , 2002 , 2004 , 2006 , 2010 and 2012 ( she played on the top board in Bled in 2002 ) and in the Asian women's team championship in 1999 in Shenyang .
In the seasons 2003/04 and 2004/05 she played in the Thuringian League for SV Jenapharm Jena and took part in the 2004 German women's championship for the Thuringian Chess Federation, playing on board 1 .
Title and rating
Since September 2006 she has held the title of International Women's Champion (WIM). She achieved the norms for this by overachieving it at the women's university world championship in Ulaanbaatar in September 2002, where she defeated Cristina Moșin and Ksenia Rybenko , among others , at the 2002 Chess Olympiad almost two months later and at an international women's tournament in Novokuznetsk in March 2005. Her Elo rating is 2157 (as of October 2017), her highest to date was 2252 from October 2005 to June 2006.
Web links
- Bayan monchiin Anchtschimeg at the World Chess Federation FIDE (English)
- Replayable chess games by Bajanmönchiin Anchtschimeg on 365Chess.com (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ 34th Mongolian Women's Championship in The Week in Chess on April 29, 2002 (English)
- ^ Unicorn Open 2004
- ↑ Your Chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
- ↑ Bayan Monchiin Anchtschimeg Results at Asian Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
- ^ German women's team championship of the regional associations 2004
- ↑ Title application to FIDE (English)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Anchtschimeg, bayan monchiin |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Ankhchimeg, Bayanmunh (FIDE from 2009); Anhchimeg, Bayanmonh (FIDE 2000 to 2008); Ankhchimer, Bayanmukh (FIDE 1999 to 2000); Анхчимэг, Баянмөнхийн (Mongolian); Анхчимег, Баянмун (Russian); Ankhchimeg, Bayanmunkh (Chess Olympiad 2012) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Mongolian chess player |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 30, 1983 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Mongolia |