Lyudmila Georgievna Saizewa

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Lyudmila Georgijewna Saizewa ( Russian Людмила Георгиевна Зайцева , with the World Chess Federation FIDE Ludmila G. Zaitseva ; born February 10, 1956 in Voroshilov ) is a Russian chess player .

Life

Saizewa was trained by Vladimir Loischa in Ufa and celebrated her first successes there. She also attended the Botvinnik Chess School. In the 1970s, she began studying at the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture. Your new coach was Boris Persiz. With Trud she took part in the Soviet team cup of sports associations several times. 1976 in Tbilisi her team reached the second place, she showed the best result on her board with victories over Maia Tschiburdanidze , Anna Achscharumowa and Rachil Eidelson . In the same year she won the Moscow Women's Championship for the first time and shared third place with Nana Alexandria at the Soviet Women's Championship in Tbilisi. Due to her successes, she received the title of Master of Sports of the USSR in 1976. In 1980/81 she shared third place again, this time with Marta Litinskaja , at the Women's Championship of the USSR in Alma-Ata . She won the Soviet team championship in Moscow in 1983 with the Moscow selection. After two years she repeated her success with RSFSR-1 in Volgograd .

At the international women's tournament in Plovdiv Saizewa was split first in 1977, three years later she won at the same place before Margareta Teodorescu . In 1981 she came in second behind Nana Iosseliani at the Chigorin Memorial Tournament in Sochi . In the same year she won the 16th International Women's Tournament in Belgrade ahead of Nino Gurieli , thus fulfilling a WGM standard. She earned another WGM standard at the Chigorin Memorial Tournament in Sochi in 1985. In 1982 FIDE awarded her the title of International Women's Champion (WIM), and in 1986 she became the Women's Grand Master (WGM). She took part in two women's interzonal tournaments. In Zheleznovodsk it in 1985 announced Agnieszka Brustman third. After a match that ended 3: 3, Brustman was qualified for the candidates' tournament thanks to the better evaluation.

In the 1991/92 season she won the German Women's Chess League with Lasker Steglitz , and she also played in Yugoslavia and France . In 1993 she won the Bykowa Memorial in Vladimir . She remained undefeated and distanced the second-placed Maaja Ranniku by one point. In 1993 in Lipetsk and 1996 in Elista , she won the Russian women's individual championship . When Zone Tournament Women 1995 in Oryol Zaitseva finished second behind Tatjana Schumjakina. The next year she won the Rudenko Memorial in Saint Petersburg . She played with Russian teams at the women's chess Olympiads in 1994 and 1996 , with her team taking third place in Yerevan in 1996 , as well as at the women's European team championships in 1992. In the new century, Saizewa was hardly active as a chess player. Her last Elo-rated tournament was the women's competition of the St. Petersburg 300 Open in October 2003, in which she shared first place with Jekaterina Ubijennych and Anna Duschenok. In 2007 she played two games against Katarina Blagojević (1.5: 0.5) in the match between the USSR and Yugoslavia. Saizewa had her best Elo rating of 2399 in July 1999 and January 2000. She also works as a trainer in Moscow. Her students include Anastassija Sawina and Alina Kaschlinskaja .

Private

Her younger sister Margarita Aljautdinova won the Moscow Women's Chess Championship in 1980 and 1981.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lyudmila Saizewa's results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  2. Lyudmila Saizewa's results at the European Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  3. http://www.365chess.com/tournaments/URS-YUG_m_2007/37747