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Vassily Ivanchuk

Vassily Ivanchuk, is a Ukrainian Grandmaster. His an ELO of 2787 on the FIDE January 2008 list, making him number 9 in the World and Ukraine's number one. He played board one on the victorious Ukraine team at the 2004 Calvia Olympiad. As of November 2007 he is the World Blitz Chess champion.

Career

He first achieved international notice by winning the 1988 New York Open with 7.5/9, ahead of a field filled with Grandmasters. He tied for first place in the 1988 World Junior Championship at Adelaide, but lost the title on tiebreak to Joel Lautier. He was awarded the Grandmaster title in 1988.

Ivanchuk reached chess world fame at the age of 21 when he won the Linares tournament in 1991. Fourteen players participated, eight of them rated top-ten of the world, including World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov, while the rest were all among the world's top 50 players. It was a close call between Ivanchuk and Kasparov, but Ivanchuk won by half a point, and Ivanchuk defeated Kasparov in their individual game.

It was believed that Ivanchuk would become World Champion, but this has not yet happened, although he came close in 2002 when he reached the finals of the FIDE World Championship Knockout. Even though he has been consistently among the top 10 since 1989, ranked as high as number 2 on a few occasions, he has played poorly in matches which require a different approach than tournament play. Most chess fans blame this on his weak nerves and his tendency to blunder in critical positions.

Major tournament wins include New York Open 1988, Corus 1996, Linares 1989, 1991 and 1995, Foros (Aerosvit) 2006 and 2007, Montreal International 2007. Ivanchuk lost to compatriot Ruslan Ponomariov in the final match of the 2002 FIDE World Chess Championship. In 2004 he won the European Championship, and in 2006 he finished second in that Championship. He won the 2005 Canadian Open Championship at Edmonton. In November 2007, Ivanchuk won the World Blitz Chess Championship in Moscow beating classical World Champion Anand in the last decider game.

Ivanchuk has often been at his best in international team competitions. He has played in ten chess Olympiads, twice for the Soviet Union (1988 and 1990), and eight times for Ukraine, after the Soviet Union split up in 1991. He has won a total of ten medals, and has been on three gold-medal winning teams (USSR in 1988 and 1990, Ukraine in 2004). In 122 games, Ivanchuk has scored (+47 =71 -4), for 67.6 per cent. 

 

Ivanchuk vs the other participants (classic chess)

 Name
Total
Win
Loss
Draw
View
Download
Topalov
29
7
8
14
Aronian
13
7
2
4
Radjabov
10
1
2
7
 
Cheparinov
3
1
1
 1
Bu Xiangzhi
1
0
1
0

 

 

Best Results

Place
Category
Score
Rank
Lvov USSR 1987 11 11,5/17 1
Debrecen HUN 1988 10 8/11 1
Linares ESP 1989 16 7/10 1
Yerevan USSR 1989 12 8,5/11 1
Biel SUI 1989 14 9/14 1-2
Tilburg NED 1990 16 8,5/14 1-2
Linares ESP 1991 17 9,5/13 1
Reykjavik ISL 16 10,5/15 1-2
Muenchen GER 1994 16 7,5/11 1
Linares ESP 1995 17 10/13 1
Horgen GER 1995 17 7/10 1-2
Wijk aan Zee NED 1996 17 9/13 1
Belgrade SRB 1997 18 6/9 1-2
Talin EST 2000 14 6/7 1
Montecatini Terme ITA 2000 17 5/7 1
Malmoe SWE 2003 13 7/9 1
La Habana CUB 2005 15 9,5/12 1
Barcelona ESP 2005 15 4/5 1-2
Talin EST 2006 14 7/9 1-3
Odessa UKR 2006 12 7/9 1
Merida MEX 2006     1
Odessa UKR 2007 17 7/9 1
La Habana CUB 2007 16 7,5/9 1
Foros UKR 2007 18 7,5/11 1
World Blitz Cup 2007     1

 

 

 


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