Yu Yangyi

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Yu Yangyi 2012.jpg
Yu Yangyi, 2012
Association China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of China
Born June 8, 1994 in
Huangshi , Hubei Province
title Grandmaster (2009)
Current  Elo rating 2709 (August 2020)
Best Elo rating 2765 (September 2018)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Yu Yangyi ( Chinese  余 泱 漪 ; Yú Yāngyī, born June 8, 1994 in Huangshi , Hubei Province ) is a Chinese chess master .

Life

Yu Yangyi finished 2nd – 5th at the U-10 World Championship in Kallithea (Chalkidiki) 2003. Place, after the fine scoring he was fifth, a year later in Heraklion in 2004 he reached 1st – 4th. Place, after the fine evaluation he was first and thus U-10 world champion . At the 8th open Asian championship in Subic in May 2009, he finished fifth with an Elo performance of 2693. With that he fulfilled the first grandmaster norm and qualified for the World Chess Cup. At the 2nd International Subic Open, where he played after only a day's break, he finished ninth with an Elo performance of 2653 and fulfilled his second GM standard. In just under three weeks he achieved the grandmaster title, because with these results he also exceeded the Elo limit of 2500. During World Chess Cup 2009 in Khanty-Mansiysk , he switched in the first round Sergei Movsesian of a player of the narrower world's elite with an Elo rating of yesteryear 2718. In the second round was easier his task, Mateusz Bartel had then an Elo rating of 2618. Against him he won with 1.5: 0.5. In the third round he was eliminated against Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Elo 2718): Yu Yangyi lost with 0.5: 1.5. At the Aeroflot Open in Moscow in 2011 he was third out of 582 players in Group E. With a day off he played in Group A, where he reached fifth place with an Elo performance of 2762. In May 2011, he won a tournament in Danzhou , in which the entire Chinese top was at the start, with 7 points out of 9 Games and an Elo performance of 2880.

In 2013 he won the U20 World Junior Championship in İzmit with 11 points from 13 games . In 2014 he won the Chinese national championship in Xinghua with 7 points from 11 games thanks to a better ranking ahead of Ding Liren . He also won the Asian championship in blitz chess in Sharjah . At the Chess Olympiad 2014 he played for the victorious Chinese team and won the gold medal for the best performance on the third board with 9.5 points from 11 games. In December 2014 he won the Qatar Masters Open with 7.5 points from 9 games. At the Qatar Masters Open in December 2015, he shared the top spot with world champion Carlsen with 7 points from 9 games , and then lost 2-0 in the jump-off with a blitz.

Yu Yangyi has held the title of Grand Master since 2009 without having previously been an International Master .

Elo development

Elo development

National team

Yu Yangyi won the 2014 Chess Olympiad with the Chinese team , in which he also achieved the best individual result on the third board. With China he also reached second places in the team world championships in 2011 and 2013 and won the Asian team championships in 2012 and 2014. Yangyi was able to win the 2018 Chess Olympiad again as part of the Chinese national team.

societies

Yu Yangyi has been playing in the Chinese team championship since 2007 for Beijing , with whom he became champions in 2011 and 2015 .

Web links

Commons : Yu Yangyi  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. a b GM application to FIDE (English)
  2. ChessBase Megabase 2011
  3. TWIC 848 , accessed on March 1, 2011
  4. TWIC 850 Accessed March 1, 2011
  5. ^ 2nd Danzhou GM 2011 , The Week in Chess , accessed May 25, 2011.
  6. Chinese players claim Asian Blitz Chess Championships , Chessdom.com, April 20, 2014
  7. Numbers according to FIDE Elo lists. Data sources: fide.com (period since 2001), olimpbase.org (period 1971 to 2001)
  8. Yu Yangyi's results at the Chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  9. Yu Yangyi's results at the World Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  10. Yu Yangyi's results at the Asian team championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  11. Chess Olympiad: Two golds for China. October 5, 2018, accessed September 24, 2019 .