Russian chess grandmaster (born 1985)
Artyom Timofeev (Russian : Артём Тимофеев ; born January 6, 1985) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 2003. Timofeev was born in Kazan .[ 1] He, Zahar Efimenko and Andrei Volokitin tied for first place in the Under 14 section of the World Youth Chess Championships in 1999; Timofeev finished second on tiebreak.[ 2] The next year, he won the Under 18 division of the European Youth Chess Championships .
Biography
Timofeev tied for first with Evgeniy Najer , Kaido Külaots , Zoltan Gyimesi , Sergey Grigoriants and Oleg Korneev at the Cappelle-la-Grande Open of 2004, finishing third on tiebreak.[ 3]
In 2005 he won the Russian Junior Championship[ 4] and tied for 2nd-5th with Kamil Mitoń , Zhang Pengxiang and Lázaro Bruzón at the Samba Cup in Skanderborg , Denmark. In the latter event he also won the brilliancy prize for his game against Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu .[ 5] Timofeev participated in the FIDE World Cup 2005 , where he reached the second round and lost to Emil Sutovsky .
He won the Russian Cup[ 6] in 2007 by beating Vadim Zvjaginsev 1½-½ in the final.[ 7] The next year, he won the Moscow Open[ 8] and the Russian Championship Higher League.[ 9] Thanks to the latter victory, Timofeev qualified for the Superfinal of the Russian Chess Championship , held in October 2008, where he scored 6/11, finishing seventh out of twelve participants.[ 10] In 2009 Timofeev participated in the Elite group of the 44th Capablanca Memorial , a category 17 double round-robin tournament , where he scored 4 points out of 10.[ 11] In the FIDE World Cup 2009 he was eliminated in the second round by Sergey Karjakin .
In 2010, Timofeev won the bronze medal at the 11th European Individual Chess Championship held in Rijeka .[ 12] This result enabled him to qualify for the World Cup 2011 . Here he was knocked out in the first round by Sergei Azarov . In 2014, he won the Tikhookeansky Meridian rapid tournament in Vladivostok , edging out Vladimir Belous and Dmitry Bocharov on tiebreak.[ 13]
Timofeev played for the Russian national team at the 2005 European Team Chess Championship and at the China vs Russia matches of 2007, 2009[ 14] and 2010.[ 15] Also in 2010, at the 39th Chess Olympiad he was part of team Russia 2.[ 16]
References
^ Title application - 74th FIDE Congress, Halkidiki, Greece, 2003 . FIDE.
^ Adaucto Wanderley da Nóbrega. Oropesa del Mar - 15° World Championship u14 (boys) . BrasilBase.
^ Crowther, Mark (2004-03-08). "TWIC 487: Cappelle-le-Grande open" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .
^ Crowther, Mark (2005-03-14). "TWIC 540: Russian Under-20 Championships" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 2 October 2015 .
^ Agterdenbos, Frits (2005-10-29). "Jobava wins the Samba Cup in Denmark" . ChessBase. Retrieved 2 October 2015 .
^ Crowther, Mark (2007-11-12). "TWIC 679: Russia Cup" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .
^ Crowther, Mark (2007-11-19). "TWIC 680: Cup Russia" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .
^ "Artyom Timofeev wins Moscow Open 2008" . Chess News . ChessBase. 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2019-07-06 .
^ Polgar, Susan (2008-09-14). "Timofeev Wins Russian HL Championship" . Chess Daily News.
^ Crowther, Mark (2008-10-20). "TWIC 728: Russian Championship" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 2 October 2015 .
^ XLIV Capablanca in memoriam 2009 - Grupo Élite . chess-results.com .
^ "Rijeka: Medals, statistics and quotes" . ChessBase. 2010-03-20. Retrieved 3 October 2015 .
^ "Tikhookeansky Meridian in Vladivostok" . Chessdom. 2014-07-21. Retrieved 3 October 2015 .
^ Crowther, Mark. "Russia vs China Match 2009" . The Week in Chess . Retrieved 4 October 2015 .
^ "7th China-Russia match" . ChessBase. 2010-08-05. Retrieved 4 October 2015 .
^ 39th Olympiad Khanty-Mansiysk 2010 Open . chess-results.com .
External links