Svetlana Alexandrovna Prudnikova

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Svetlana Prudnikova.jpg
Svetlana Prudnikova, 2006
Association Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union (until 1991) Russia (1992 to 1998) Yugoslavia (1999 to 2003) Serbia and Montenegro (2003 to 2006) Serbia (since 2006)
RussiaRussia 
Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia 
Serbia and MontenegroSerbia and Montenegro 
SerbiaSerbia 
Born March 18, 1967
Balakovo
title International Master of Women (1987)
Grand Master of Women (1992)
Current  Elo rating 2216 (April 2020)
Best Elo rating 2428 (July 2000)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Svetlana Alexandrovna Prudnikowa ( Russian Светлана Александровна Прудникова * 18th March 1967 in Balakovo ) is a Russian chess player , the first for the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia since the late 1990s or Serbia and Montenegro played and after the dissolution of the State Union of Serbia plays.

Life

Like Alissa Galljamowa and Jekaterina Kowalewskaja, Svetlana Prudnikowa was taught chess at the All-Russia Chess Grandmasters School (ACGS). She has held the title of International Master of Women (WIM) since 1987, and became Grand Master of Women (WGM) in 1992. She is married to a Yugoslav and lives in Belgrade .

In February 2015, she ranks fifth in the Serbian women's ranking. She was last in the top 25 of the FIDE world rankings for women in 2000.

Chess successes

Individual championships

At the Russian girls' championships in 1982, 1983 and 1984 she was second. At the Junior World Championships for girls U20 in Vilnius in 1986 she finished second together with Camilla Baginskaite , and at the U20 World Junior Championships in 1987 in Baguio City she was second, this time behind the winner Camilla Baginskaite. In 1992 and 1998 she was able to win the Russian women's individual championship, in 1996 and 1997 she was second. In 1994 in Wuppertal she was second behind Ekaterina Borulya at the open German women's individual championship. In 2000 in Herceg Novi , when she first participated, she won the Yugoslav women's individual championship with a score of 12 out of 13. In 2002 in Kotor she won the championship again. In 2003 she won the 36th International Women's Tournament in Belgrade .

National team

Prudnikowa took part in five women's chess Olympiads , 1992 in Manila and 1996 in Yerevan with Russia, 2000 in Istanbul , 2002 in Bled and 2004 in Calvià with Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro. She reached third place with the team in 1996 and achieved the best result on the second board in the individual ratings in 1992 and 2002. At team European Championships women she took in 1992 with Russia, in 2001, 2003 and 2005 with Yugoslavia or Serbia and Montenegro in part, reaching 2003 in Plovdiv , the second-highest individual score of the reserve players.

Club chess

In Serbia, Prudnikowa played for Partizan Belgrade , with which she took part in the European Women's Club Cup in 1997, 1998 and 1999 , for Agrouniversal Zemun , with which she won the European Club Cup for women in 2000 and 2001, and for SK BAS Belgrade , with which she took part in the women's European Club Cup in 2003, 2004 and 2005. She also played in the Slovenian women's league. In the German women's league she played from 1996 to 1998 for the Essen club SK Holsterhausen .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Interview with Alexander Panchenko ( Memento from August 23, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) (English)
  2. 12th Open German Women's Championship 1994 in Wuppertal on TeleSchach
  3. Swetlana Prudnikowa's results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  4. Swetlana Prudnikowa's results at the European Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  5. Swetlana Prudnikowa's results at the European Women's Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)