Yulia Viktorovna Djomina

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Julija Wiktorowna Djomina ( Russian Юлия Викторовна Дёмина , with the World Chess Federation FIDE Julia Demina ; born February 3, 1969 in Sverdlovsk ) is a Russian chess player .

Life

Her father, a hardener at the Uralmash machine factory in Sverdlovsk, taught Djomina to play chess. As a child, she also trained figure skating and had the first category. In chess she was initially looked after by Valentin Melnikowski and later by Mikhail Solowjow and Alexander Chassin . In 1981 she won the Russian youth championship in Yelets . After three years she shared third place with Tamara Kogan at the qualifying tournament for the youth world championship in Ternopil . In 1985 she won ahead of Svetlana Prudnikova and Elena Sedina at the Soviet Championship of Female Youth in Sochi . At the Chigorin Memorial in Sochi in 1987 she was first ahead of Jelena Achmylowskaya . In the same year Djomina moved to Novosibirsk .

With the team of the Siberian Military District she won the championship of the Soviet armed forces in Sverdlovsk in 1987 and in Riga in 1988 . In 1988 she took part in the USSR Women's Championship for the first time as a substitute for Nona Gaprindashvili . She won the championship in Alma-Ata , which was held at the same time as a zone tournament , with 12 out of 17 points. At the International Chess Festival in Biel in 1989 she was first ahead of Marta Litinskaja and Alisa Marić in the women's open. In 1991 Djomina shared the first place with Litinskaja, Svetlana Matwejewa, soy Popova , Ainur Sofieva and Irina Tscheluschkina the zone tournament in Leningrad . In 1988 FIDE awarded her the title of International Women's Champion . In 1991 she became the Grand Master of Women . She has held the title of International Arbitrator since 2018.

In 1995 in Elista and 1999 in Moscow Oblast , she won gold in the Russian women's championship . Djomina, who now lives in Saint Petersburg, won the Russian women's team championship in Sochi with local teams : 2004 with FINEC, 2008 with FINEC-1 and 2010 with the Saint Petersburg Chess Federation. At the Rudenko Memorial 2008 in Saint Petersburg, she shared 1st – 3rd place with the winner Valentina Solovyova and Tatyana Moltschanowa.

Djomina took part in three interzonal tournaments for women. Her best result was a tied fifth place at the Genting Highlands Resort in 1990. At the World Chess Championship for women in New Delhi in 2000 , she failed in the third round to Peng Zhaoqin . In 1992 and 1998 (in the third team) she played with Russian teams in the women's chess Olympiads, in 1992 and 1999 in the European women's team championships . Between 1996 and 2008 she took part in the European Club Cup for women seven times . In 1996 she came third with Empils from Rostov-on-Don in Smederevska Palanka , and in 2004 with FINEC in Izmir she came second. Her highest rating was 2405 in July 1991.

Private

Djomina is married to the Grand Master Marat Makarov and has two sons with him.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002 . Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 81
  2. Julija Djomina's results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  3. Julija Djominas results at the European Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  4. Julija Djomina's results at the European Women's Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)