Batchimeg Tuvshintugs

Batchimeg Tuvshintugs ( born Tüwschintögsiin Battschimeg, Mongolian Түвшинтөгсийн Батчимэг; May 3, 1986 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia) is a Mongolian chess player. Between 13 September 2005, 9 June 2009, she played for the United States Chess Federation, before and after for Mongolia.

Life

The chess games she learned at the age of seven years from her father. Your trainer is Batsaikhan Tserendorj. In the U.S., she studied at the City College of San Francisco.

Achievements

From 1998 she regularly attended World Youth Championships of their respective age group. In the Mongolian Single Women's Championship in 2002 in Ulaanbaatar, it was split third parties. With the Mongolian women's national team, she participated in Bled at the Chess Olympiad 2002. With seven points from ten games ( 5, = 4, -1) where she had the fourth best result of all players on the third board. The Mongolian Individual Women's Championship in 2003 in Ulaanbaatar, she finished as an undivided third parties. In the U.S. championship in 2006, she defeated in the first five rounds of three Grand Masters (Alexander Fishbein, Boris Kreiman and Julio Becerra ) and drew against Grandmaster Boris Gulko. In the U.S. Women's Championship 2007 in Stillwater (Oklahoma), she finished fourth. In 2011 she was able to win in Ulaanbaatar, the Mongolian Single Women's Championship.

Since 2006, it bears the title of International Women's Champion (WIM). The standards for this purpose, it achieved at the Chess Olympiad in 2002, the Mark Pinto IM 2004 tournament in San Francisco and the U.S. Championship 2006. Norm in the U.S. championship in 2006 was the same one for the woman Grandmaster title ( WGM ). More WGM norms they scored at the World Open in 2006 in Philadelphia and the Global Chess tournament in Ulaanbaatar 2009. Norm in Ulaanbaatar than met with an Elo performance of 2534 at the same one for the title of International Master (IM). The WGM title was conferred in October 2009. Your Elo rating is 2311 (as of July 2012), so that it lies behind Batchujagiin Möngöntuul in second place of the Mongolian Elo ranking of women. Their highest ever Elo rating was 2363 March-June, 2012.

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