Inna Janovskaya

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gaponenko, Inna Bad Wörishofen 2011.jpg
Inna Janowskaja, Bad Wörishofen 2011
Association UkraineUkraine Ukraine
Born June 22, 1976
Cherson , Soviet Union
title International Master of Women (1993)
Grand Master of Women (1995)
International Master (2002)
Current  Elo rating 2396 (December 2019)
Best Elo rating 2482 (April 2005)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Inna Janowskaja (born Gaponenko , Ukrainian Інна Яновська-Гапоненко ; born June 22, 1976 in Cherson ) is a Ukrainian chess player .

Single successes

Inna Janowskaja at the European Women's Team Championship in Heraklion , 2007

At the U14 World Cup for girls in 1990 in Fond du Lac , she took second place. At the International German Girls' Championship in Dresden in 1992 she was third behind Ilaha Kadimova from Azerbaijan and the Finn Johanna Paasiikangas . In 1992 she became European U16 champion in Rimavská Sobota . At the open German women's individual championship in 2000 in Rodewisch , she was second. In 2002 she won the 7th Münch-Bräu-Open in Leutersdorf, Saxony, and the 1st International Chess Weeks in Trier . In October 2002 she won the European Women's Championship in rapid chess , which was held in Antalya . In 2003 she won the 3rd Open in Schneeberg, Saxony (shared with Tetjana Wassylewytsch ) and the 2nd Comtoir Women's Masters in Belfort . In 2004 she won the Schleiden Whitsun Open in Schleiden-Gemünd . She won the Ukrainian women's championship in Mykolaiv in 2008 . In 2009 she won the 1st Panza Festival on the island of Ischia in front of the grandmasters Igor Naumkin and Viesturs Meijers .

At the Chess Festival Bad Wörishofen she achieved third place in 2011 ahead of twelve grandmasters such as Sebastian Siebrecht , Sergey Tiviakov and Romuald Mainka . Also in 2011 she won the anniversary speed chess tournament of the Nuremberg Chess Club in 1911, ahead of the grandmasters Michael Prusikin and Viesturs Meijers.

She took part in several women's world championships and qualifying tournaments for women's world championships: At the 1995 interzonal tournament in Chișinău , she was twelfth. At the Women's World Cup in 2001, she was eliminated in the second, in 2008 in the third round.

National team

She took part in ten chess Olympiads with the Ukrainian women's national team ( 1994 to 1998 and 2002 to 2014 with a total score of 63.5 points from 92 games). At the 2006 Olympics in Turin , she received an individual silver medal for her score of 7 out of 9 on the third board. The team won the gold medal. She won a silver medal with the team at the 2008 Chess Olympiad in Dresden , the Ukrainian team took third place with her in Istanbul in 2012 and Tromsø in 2014 . At the women's team championship in 2007 in Yekaterinburg , playing on the third board, she received a bronze medal for the team result and an individual gold medal for her result of 7 out of 8 ( Elo rating 2662). She again took third place with the Ukraine at the 2009 Women's World Championships in Ningbo , and she received an individual gold medal for her result of 5.5 out of 8 on the third board. She also took third place with Ukraine at the European Women's Team Championship in Novi Sad in 2009 . She won the 2013 World Team Championship with the Ukrainian women's national team, as well as the European Championship in the same year. At the 2015 European Women's Team Championships, she took second place with Ukraine. Overall, Janovskaya took part in all five team world championships for women from 2007 to 2015 and all eight team European championships for women from 2001 to 2015.

Club teams

In Germany Janowskaja has been playing for ESV Nickelhütte Aue since 2000 , initially in the Saxon team championship, from 2003 to 2005 in the Oberliga Ost, and since then (apart from the 2010/11 season in which Aue played in the 1st Bundesliga ), in the 2nd Bundesliga East . She also played in the women's Bundesliga as a guest player from 2000 to 2011 for the Rodewischer Schachmiezen , from 2011 to 2014 for SV Mülheim-Nord , from the 2015/16 season to the 2016/17 season for the Karlsruher Schachfreunde and since the 2017 / 18 for the SF Deizisau . She also plays team chess in the Ukraine (for the Kiev Grand Master School , later for Danko Donbass Donetsk ), Serbia (for the SK BAS Belgrade ), Bulgaria, Romania (for the CS Studențesc Medicină Timișoara ), Russia (for Ladya Kazan , with whom she won the Russian women's team championship in 2007 , ShSM Moscow and Turm ), France (from 2007 to 2010 for Clichy Echecs and since 2019 for Asnières - Le Grand Echiquier ) and Turkey (since 2010 for Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi SK ). At the women's European Club Cups she won four gold medals for BAS Belgrade : 2002 in Antalya with the team and for her result of 5 out of 7 on the third board, in 2003 in Rethymno with 6 out of 7 on the third board and in 2004 in Izmir with 5, 5 out of 7 on the second board. In total, she played 13 times in the women's European Club Cup.

Rating

She has held the title of Grand Master of Women (WGM) since 1995 and has been International Master (IM) since 2002 . In February 2015 she was 72nd in the women's world rankings. Her highest rating to date was 2482 in April 2005, when she was 11th in the world rankings.

Individual evidence

  1. Great success at the World Youth Championship in USA . JugendSchach issue 6/1990, pp. 19-23 (report, tables, photo and games)
  2. Azerbaijani wins in Dresden . JugendSchach issue March '92, p. 4–11 (report, photos, games and table)
  3. 27th ChessOrg Chess Festival from March 24th to April 1st, 2011 in Bad Wörishofen on TeleSchach
  4. Anniversary tournament 100 years of the Nuremberg Chess Club 1911 ( Memento from September 17, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )
  5. Inna Janowskaja's results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  6. 8th European Team Chess Championship (women): Novi Sad 2009 - Ukraine on Olimpbase (English)
  7. Inna Janowskaja's results at the women's team championships at olimpbase.org (English)
  8. Inna Janowskaja's results at the European Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  9. ^ Old DWZ index card Inna Janowskaja at the German Chess Federation
  10. Inna Janowskaja's results at the European Women's Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)
  11. ^ Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002 . Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 83

Web links

Commons : Inna Janowskaja  - collection of pictures