Mähri Geldiýewa

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Mähri Geldiýewa (birth name Mähri Öwezowa , with the World Chess Federation FIDE Mahri Geldiyeva , formerly Mekhri Geldyeva ; born April 4, 1973 ) is a Turkmen chess player .

Life

She is married to the FIDE master (FM) Kochmurad Geldiýew (* 1970). She has been playing under the name Geldiýewa since 2000. She comes from a chess-loving family: her brother Artek (* 1976) is a FIDE master and her sisters, Maisa and Maral (both * 1981), are FIDE champions (WFM). Mähri Geldiýewa is a professional chess player.

successes

In 1993 she received a bronze medal at the U20 World Cup for women in Kozhikode behind Nino Churzidze and Ilaha Kadimova . At the 1st Asian women's individual championship in Tehran in 1998 , she was also third behind Xu Yuhua and Eva Repková , who played for Lebanon at the time. In 2002 Mähri Geldiýewa won the Turkmen Women's Individual Championship in Ashgabat . At the 2nd International Fajr Women's Open 2009 in Sāri , she finished second behind Shadi Paridar . In the same year she won the Turkmen championship again in Ashgabat.

Between 1994 and 2018 she played for the Turkmen national women's team at eight chess Olympiad with an overall result of 65.5 points from 102 games (+55 = 21-26; 64.2 percent). She played on the top board in all of these Olympics. 1996 in Yerevan and 1998 in Elista she received an individual gold medal, 1996 for her result of 10.5 points from 14 games and 1998 for her result of 10.5 from 13. 2003 in Jodhpur for Turkmenistan she also took part in the Asian team championship of women took part in the Asian Games in 2006 and 2010 .

In the Turkish team championship she played for Konyaspor in the 2006/07 season .

In 1996 she received the title of International Women's Champion (WIM). She has been the Women's Grandmaster (WGM) since 1998, being the first and only female chess player in Turkmenistan to hold this title. Her Elo rating is 2139 (as of April 2020), which puts her in second place in the Turkmen Elo ranking that she had previously headed, but is listed as inactive as she has not had an Elo-rated chess game since the 2018 Chess Olympiad played more. Her highest rating was 2339 in 1999 and 2000. With her rating of 2339 she was 76th in the FIDE women's world rankings.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Boris Dolmatowski: Elista Meetings . Article of December 24, 1998 (Russian)
  2. Results of Mähri Geldiýewas at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  3. Mähri Geldiýewa at the Asian women's team championship on olimpbase.org (English)
  4. Mähri Geldiýewa at the Asian Games 2006 ( Memento from October 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on olimpbase.org (English)
  5. Mähri Geldiýewa at the Asian Women's Games 2010 on olimpbase.org (English)