Yuri Fyodorowitsch Schabanow

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Yuri Shabanov, 1995
Yuri Shabanov, 1995
Surname Yuri Fyodorowitsch Schabanow
Association Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union (until 1991) Russia (from 1992)
RussiaRussia 
Born November 11, 1937
Khabarovsk
Died March 30, 2010
Moscow , Russia
title International Master (1991)
Grand Master (2003)
Best Elo rating 2505 (January 2001)

Yuri Fjodorowitsch Schabanow ( Russian Юрий Фёдорович Шабанов ; November 11, 1937 in Khabarovsk - March 30, 2010 in Moscow ) was a Soviet, later Russian chess player .

biography

Yuri Fyodorowitsch Schabanow was born in 1937 in the family of the editor-in-chief of a Far Eastern publishing house. He grew up practically without a father as his father died in World War II . His family moved from Khabarovsk after the war, first to Nizhneudinsk near Irkutsk , and later to Lemberg . Shabanov began to learn chess in 1951.

In 1954 he took part with the Ukrainian team in the All-Union Youth Olympiad in Kiev. He scored 7 out of 9 points and finished second in the semi-finals, and third in the final with 8.5 out of 12 points.

In the same year the Soviet youth team championship took place in Leningrad . Shabanov played for the Ukraine team on the third board. The team shared places 4 and 5 with the Leningrad team. Boris Spasski , Michail Tal and Eduard Gufeld , among others , took part in this tournament, but did not play against Schabanow.

He also won the Khabarovsk regional chess championship. In 1957 there was a regional championship of several Far Eastern regions in Blagoveschensk , which Schabanow won with 12 points from 17 games. He qualified for the semifinals of the 17th USSR Individual Championship in Chelyabinsk , where he finished 6th – 9th with 10.5 points from 19 games. Took place. At that time, Yuri Shabanov was a student at the Magadan Mining College . From 1960 he was multiple champion of the Madagan region. Shabanov graduated with a degree in geology and focused on working in his field, so he didn't have much time to play chess. Only after the Trud championship in 1964, in which Juri took first place and received the title of Soviet master, did the game of chess move into the foreground of his life.

In 1978 he again won the final of the Trud Championship. Shabanov regularly took part in the semifinals of the USSR championship, but could never qualify for the final. He later moved to Yaroslavl and worked as a teacher at the children's and youth sports school.

Shabanov was named International Master by FIDE in 1991 . He lived in Moscow since the 2000s, where he was active in senior chess. He took part in the Moscow team championships from 2004 to 2008. As part of the Russian senior team, he took part in six European championships in 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2008, in the Russian senior championships of Russia from 1999 to 2007 and also in the Moscow senior chess championship from 2003 to 2007. Shabanov took part in the traditional Moscow – St. Petersburg. In the Russian team championship Schabanow played in 1996 and 1998 for Severstal Tscherepowez , in 2000 for Phoenix Moscow .

For the victory at the 13th World Seniors Championships in 2003, he was awarded the title of Grand Master . At the 14th Senior World Championship in 2004 he was able to defend his title. From 2008 he stopped taking part in major chess competitions due to a serious illness. Shabanov died on March 30, 2010 in Moscow.

Close people and comrades of Yuri Fyodorowitsch Shabanov described him as an extraordinarily humble, conflict-free, learned and principled person.

successes

  • Two-time senior world champion : Bad Zwischenahn (2003) and Halle (2004)
  • Three-time European champion in the Russian senior team: 2001, 2002 and 2006
  • Three-time Moscow senior champion: 2005, 2006 and 2007
  • Russian senior champion: 1999

Web links

Commons : Juri Fjodorowitsch Schabanow  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. Gaige, Jeremy: Chess Personalia, A Biobibliography . McFarland, Jefferson, NC 1987, ISBN 0-7864-2353-6 , pp. 386 .
  2. ^ Dagobert Kohlmeyer : Two deaths in Moscow In: de.chessbase.com. April 7, 2010, accessed January 22, 2020.
  3. Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002, Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 103.
  4. OlimpBase :: Russian Chess Premier League :: Yury Shabanov. In: OlimpBase. Retrieved April 2, 2019 .
  5. 13th Senior World Chess Championship 2003 in Bad Zwischenahn on TeleSchach
  6. 14th Senior World Chess Championship 2004 in Halle an der Saale on TeleSchach