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  1. Bobby Fischer

    Robert James "Bobby" Fischer is a United States-born chess Grandmaster who in 1972 became the only US-born chessplayer to become the official World Chess Champion. In 1974 he officially resigned the title when FIDE, the international chess federation, refused to accept his conditions for a title defense. He is a regular candidate in considerations of the greatest chess player of all time.

  2. Garry Kimovich Kasparov

    After long term friction with the international chess organisation, FIDE, Kasparov set up the rival organisation, the Professional Chess Association (PCA) and arranged a World Championship match in 1993 in which he beat British Grandmaster, Nigel Short. At the same time FIDE held their official Championship match between former World Champion, Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman which Karpov won. Both Kasparov and Karpov claim the title of World Champion.

  3. Susan Polgar

    Grandmaster Zsuzsa Polgar is a Hungarian-born American chess player. In 1984, at age 15, she became the top-ranked female player in the world and remained so for many years. She was the first woman to earn the title of International Grandmaster in regular competition. She was the Women's World Chess Champion from 1996 until 1999. In October 2005 Polgar had an Elo rating of 2577, making her still the second-ranked female player in the world, after her sister Judit Polgar.

  4. Vladimir Kramnik

    Vladimir Borisovich Kramnik (born June 25, 1975) is a Russian chess grandmaster and the current World Chess Champion. In October 2000, he beat Garry Kasparov in a sixteen game match played in London, and became the Classical World Chess Champion. In late 2004, Kramnik successfully defended his title against challenger Péter Lékó in a drawn fourteen game match played in Brissago, Switzerland. In October 2006, Kramnik, the Classical World Champion, …

  5. Anatoly Karpov

    Anatoly Yevgenyevich Karpov (born May 23, 1951) is a Russian chess grandmaster and former World Champion. He is the most successful tournament player of all time, and as of July 2005 he has 161 first-place finishes to his credit. From 1978 to 1998 he played in every FIDE World Championship match. His overall professional record is 1,118 wins, 287 losses, and 1,480 draws in 3,163 games. His peak Elo rating is 2780. The asteroid 90414 Karpov is named in his honour.

  6. Viswanathan Anand

    Viswanathan Anand (born December 11, 1969) is an Indian chess grandmaster and former FIDE world champion. Anand is one of only four players in history to break the 2800 mark on the FIDE rating list and he has been among the top three ranked players in classical time control chess in the world continuously since 1997. In the April 2007 FIDE Elo rating list, Anand was ranked first in the world for the first time, …

  7. Boris Spassky

    Boris Vasilievich Spassky (also Spasskij) (born January 30, 1937) is a Russian-French chess grandmaster. He was the tenth World Chess Champion, holding the title from 1969 to 1972. Spassky won the Soviet Championship twice outright (1961, 1973), and twice more lost in playoffs (1956, 1963), after tieing for the top during the event proper. He was a World Championship Candidate on seven occasions (1956, 1965, 1968, 1974, 1977, 1980, and 1985).

  8. Magnus Carlsen

    Magnus Øen Carlsen is a Norwegian chess Grandmaster who came to international attention after winning the C group of the Corus Chess Tournament in January 2004 at the age of thirteen, and winning the B group of the same tournament two years later at 15. <br>In the July 2007 FIDE list, he has an Elo rating of 2710, making him Norway's number 1, World Juniors' number 2 and World's number 17. On April 26, 2004 Carlsen became Grandmaster at the age of 13 years, 4 months, …

  9. Veselin Topalov

    Veselin Topalov (born 15 March 1975) is a Bulgarian chess grandmaster and former FIDE world champion. In the April 2007 FIDE rating list, he is ranked second in the world with an Elo rating of 2772. His current trainer and manager is International Master Silvio Danailov. Topalov became the FIDE World Chess Champion by winning the FIDE World Chess Championship 2005. Topalov was awarded the 2005 Chess Oscar.

  10. Nigel Short

    Nigel Short MBE (born June 1, 1965 in Leigh, Lancashire) is widely regarded as the strongest British chess player of the 20th century. He became a Grandmaster at age 19, and challenged for the World Championship against Garry Kasparov at London 1993. Still active, Short remains in the world's top 30 players, and continues to enjoy international success.

  11. Alexei Shirov

    Alexei Shirov (Aleksejs Širovs, Алексей Широв, a chess grandmaster. On the July 2007 FIDE rating list he was ranked number eleven in the world with an ELO rating of 2735.

  12. Yasser Seirawan

    Yasser Seirawan (born March 24, 1960) is a chess grandmaster and 4-time US-champion. He was winner of the World Junior Chess Championship in 1979. He was born in Damascus, Syria. His father was Arab and his mother an English nurse from Nottingham, where he spent some time in his early childhood. When he was seven, his family emigrated to Seattle (USA), where he attended McClure Middle School and Garfield High School, and honed his game at a (now-defunct) coffeehouse, …

  13. Alexandra Kosteniuk

    Alexandra Kosteniuk is a Russian chess player who became female European champion in 2004 by winning the tournament in Dresden, Germany. In August 2006 she became the first Chess960 (Fischer Random) women world champion after beating Germany's top female player Elisabeth Pähtz 5.5-2.5. In November 2004, she achieved the International Grandmaster title, becoming the tenth of the eleven women who have received the highest title awarded by the World Chess Federation (FIDE).

  14. Joel Benjamin

    Joel Benjamin is a chess Grandmaster. As of April 2007, his Elo rating was 2576, making him the # 12 player in the US and the 214th-highest rated player in the world. Joel Benjamin is the top-rated active chess player who was born in the United States. He is a native of Brooklyn, New York, and grew up in the Marine Park neighborhood there. He graduated Yale University in 1985. At the age of 13 he broke Bobby Fischer’s record by becoming the youngest-ever U.S. Master.

  15. Rustam Kasimdzhanov

    Rustam Kasimdzhanov (born December 5, 1979) is a chess grandmaster from Uzbekistan. In the Uzbek language, which since 1992 has officially used Latin script, his name is written "Qosimjonov". He was the FIDE world champion during 2004-05. His best results include first in the 1998 Asian Championship, second in the World Junior Chess Championship in 1999, first at Essen 2001, …

  16. David Bronstein

    David Ionovich Bronstein was renowned as a leading chess grandmaster and writer. Described as a creative genius and master of tactics by pundits and plaudits the world over, Bronstein provided ample evidence that chess should be regarded as part science, part art.

  17. Vassily Ivanchuk

    Vassily Ivanchuk, also transliterated as Vasyl (born March 18 1969), is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster. Ivanchuk has an Elo rating of 2762 on the FIDE July 2007 ratings list, making him number four in the world and Ukraine's number one. Ivanchuk was born in Berezhany, Ukraine, and 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, …

  18. Koneru Humpy

    Koneru Humpy (born 31 March 1987 in Gudivada, Andhra Pradesh) is a chess grandmaster from India. Her April 2007 FIDE Elo rating is 2575, placing her at number two in the world for women (behind Judit Polgar), and almost equaling the record of 2577 set by Susan Polgar for the second-highest ranked female player in Chess history. Humpy was originally named "Hampi" by her parents but her father later changed it to Humpy, a more Russian-sounding name.

  19. Gata Kamsky

    The American Grandmaster Gata Kamsky is traveling to Elista, Russia on May 25th to play candidate matches in his second run for the world chess championship. The previous one ended with Anatoly Karpov defending his title in a match against Kamsky back in 1996 at the very same place of Elista. Maybe the Kalmyk steppe will bring him better luck this time. We'll keep you updated. In the meantime, here are few facts from his rich biography.

  20. Peter Svidler

    Peter Svidler is a Russian chess grandmaster. On the July 2007 FIDE rating list he has an ELO rating of 2735, making him the number twelve in the world. Peter Svidler learned to play chess when he was six years old. He became Grandmaster in 1994. He is four-time Russian champion (1994, 1995, 1997, 2003). In 2001, he reached the semi-finals of the FIDE World Championship. Andrei Lukin is his coach. Svidler is a noted exponent of Fischer Random Chess (also called Chess960).

  21. Maurice Ashley

    Maurice Ashley (born March 6, 1966 St. Andrew, Jamaica) is a chess grandmaster. He is the first and only African-American grandmaster. In the October 2006 rating lists, he had a FIDE rating of 2465, and a USCF rating of 2520 at standard chess, and 2536 at quick chess. Ashley is associated with "Chesswise". In 2005 he wrote the Book "Chess for Success", relating about his experiences and the positive aspects of chess.

  22. Loek van Wely

    Loek van Wely (born October 7 1972) is a chess Grandmaster from the Netherlands. He has been champion of the Netherlands six times. In 2002, in Maastricht, Netherlands, van Wely took on the computer program Rebel in a four game match. The computer won two games and van Wely won two games.

  23. Boris Gelfand

    Boris Gelfand (born 24 June 1968) is a chess grandmaster. Born in Minsk, Belarus, he made aliyah to Israel in 1998, and now lives in Rishon LeZion. He currently is a member of the Israeli national chess team. On the July 2007 FIDE list he had an Elo rating of 2733, making him number 13 in the world and Israel's number 1.

  24. Viktor Korchnoi

    Viktor Lvovich Korchnoi (Ви́ктор Льво́вич Корчно́й), born March 23, 1931, in Leningrad, USSR, is a professional Swiss chess player and currently the oldest active grandmaster on the world tournament circuit. Korchnoi is best known for playing three matches against Anatoly Karpov for the World Chess Championship. In 1974, he lost the Candidates final to Karpov, who went on to win the World championship by forfeit against Bobby Fischer).

  25. Emanuel Lasker

    Emanuel Lasker (December 24, 1868 - January 11, 1941) was a German chess World Chess Champion and grandmaster, mathematician, and philosopher born at Berlinchen in Brandenburg (now Barlinek in Poland).

  26. Krishnan Sasikiran

    Krishnan Sasikiran (born January 7 1981) is an Indian chess player. Among Indians, he is second only to Vishwanathan Anand in FIDE rating. "Sasi" as he is sometimes called, comes from Chennai in Tamil Nadu in south-eastern India. He became an International Chess Grandmaster at the 2000 Commonwealth Championship. In 2001, he won the prestigious Hastings International Chess tournament.

  27. Ruslan Ponomariov

    Ruslan Ponomariov (born October 11, 1983) is a Ukrainian chess player and former FIDE world champion. On the April 2007 FIDE Elo rating list Ponomariov had a rating of 2706, making him number twenty in the world and the Ukrainian number two, behind Vassily Ivanchuk. His highest ever rating was 2743 on the April 2002 FIDE list. Ponomariov was born in Horlivka in Ukraine. In 1994 he placed third in the World Under-12 Championship at the age of ten, …

  28. Sergey Karjakin

    Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine became the youngest chess grandmaster in history at the age of 12 years and 7 months. On the FIDE ranking list of July 2007, he has a rating of 2678, making him number 35 in the world, number 4 in the category of boys up to 20 years old and number 5 in the Ukraine. He was the official second of fellow Ukrainian Ruslan Ponomariov, during the 2002 FIDE World championship. In 2004, Karjakin finished second to Boris Gelfand at the Pamplona, …

  29. Max Euwe

    Machgielis (Max) Euwe (May 20, 1901 – November 26, 1981) was a Dutch chess Grandmaster and Mathematician. He was the fifth player to become World Chess Champion (1935–1937). Euwe also served as President of the World Chess Federation (FIDE) from 1970-1978.

  30. Alexander Khalifman

    Alexander Valeryevich Khalifman is a Russian chess grandmaster and former world champion. When he was 6 years old, he was taught chess by his father. He gained the International Grandmaster title in 1990 with one particularly good early result being his first place in the 1990 New York Open ahead of a host of strong players. His most notable achievement was winning the FIDE World Chess Championship in 1999, a title he held until the following year.

  31. Larry Christiansen

    Larry M. Christiansen is a chess grandmaster who grew up in Riverside, California. He was U.S. champion in 1980, 1983, and 2002. He describes his playing style as "aggressive, tactical" and lists his favorite opening as Sämisch King's Indian. Christiansen showed exceptional strength at an early age. In 1971, he became the first junior high school student to win the National High School Championship. He went on to win three invitational U.S. Junior Championships in 1973, …

  32. Wong Kiew Kit

    Wong Kiew Kit Wong Kiew Kit claims to be the fourth generation successor from the Shaolin Monastery of China, and a grandmaster of Shaolin Kung Fu and Chi Kung.

  33. Bu Xiangzhi

    Bu Xiangzhi (Simplified and Traditional Chinese: 卜祥志; pinyin: Bǔ Xiángzhì; born December 10 1985) is a Chinese chess player. He became a Grandmaster in 1999 at the age of 13 years, 10 months, 13 days, at the time the youngest person hold the title. He gave up status of the world's youngest Grandmaster to Sergey Karjakin in July 2002. On the July 2007 FIDE rating list he has an ELO rating of 2685, making him the number 25 player in the world and number 2 in China.

  34. Shakhriyar Mamedyarov

    Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (born April 12 1985 in Sumgayit, Azerbaijan) is an international chess Grandmaster. On the July 2007 FIDE rating list he is ranked number six in the world with an Elo rating of 2757. In 2003 he won World Junior Chess Championship, and did the same in 2005 achieving an incredible 2953 performance rating after eight rounds.

  35. Alexander Grischuk

    Alexander Grischuk (b. October 31 1983) is a chess grandmaster from Russia. His FIDE rating in July 2007 was 2726, making him the world's fourteenth-ranked player. In the FIDE World Chess Championship 2000 he made it to the semi finals. In the FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 he made it to the quarter finals, where he lost 3-1 to Rustam Kasimdzhanov. He finished in the top 10 in the 2005 FIDE World Cup, …

  36. Paul Keres

    Paul Keres was an Estonian chess grandmaster and one of the strongest chess players of all time. On four consecutive occasions he missed the chance of a World Championship match by being runner-up in the Candidates' Tournament. Many claim him to be the strongest player never to become World Chess Champion. He was dubbed "The Crown Prince of Chess".

  37. Victor Bologan

    Victor Viorel Bologan (born December 14, 1971) is a chess grandmaster. On the January 2006 FIDE list, he had an Elo rating of 2661, making him number 41 in the world and Moldova's best chess player. His major accomplishment has been winning the Dortmund Sparkassen 2003 Tournament, ahead of higher-rated and well-known players such as Vladimir Kramnik, Viswanathan Anand, and Peter Leko.

  38. Bent Larsen

    Jørgen Bent Larsen is a Danish chess Grandmaster.

  39. Raymond Keene

    Raymond Dennis Keene OBE (born 29 January 1948) is a chess grandmaster, but is better known as a chess organiser, columnist and author. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire (OBE), on Queen Elizabeth II's Honours' List, for services to chess in 1985.

  40. Larry Evans

    Larry Melvyn Evans (born March 23, 1932) is an American chess grandmaster and journalist. He has won the U.S. Chess Championship four times.

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