Evgeny Bareev

Yevgeny Ilgisowitsch Bareev (in Russian Евгений Ильгизович Бареев, scientific transliteration Evgenij Il'gizovič Bareev English spelling, which is used by the FIDE Evgeny Bareev; born November 21, 1966 in Jemanschelinsk, Chelyabinsk Oblast ) is a Russian world's elite chess players.

Career

Bareev won the 1982 Cadet World Championship U16. He developed schachlich a rapid pace, so he already qualified in 1985 with a victory in Kharkov ( inter alia Sergei Dolmatow ) in the USSR league for the USSR championship in 1986, when he 3 - 7th been. In the late 1980s rose Barejews star: he won in 1987 in Vrnjačka Banja, 1989 in Trnava, in Moscow in 1989 and Aosta, 1990 in Dortmund (Open), Moscow and shared in the same year at the USSR Championship in Leningrad Place 1-4. 1990/91 he won in Hastings, 1991/ 92 and 1992/93 again ( with Judit Polgár ). 1994 in Pardubice, the same year he was second in the discharged after knockout system tournament in Tilburg to a 0.5:1.5 defeat against Valeri Salow after former world champion Anatoly Karpov in the semi-final 1, was 5:0.5 off.

In 1995 he was a knockout tournament in Wijk aan Zee second after a final defeat ( 1,5-2,5 ) against Alexei Drejew. In the same year, together with Alexei Shirov won Bareev in Leon and was second in the Russian championship in Elista behind Alexander Khalifman. He finished second behind Garry Kasparov in Sarajevo, 2000 Vasyl Ivanchuk second behind in Montecatini Terme 1999. In the FIDE World Cup in Shenyang in 2000, he lost the final to the Indian Viswanathan Anand with 0.5:1.5. In the FIDE World Cup in rapid chess, 2001 in Cannes Bareev was beaten in the final by Garry Kasparov with 1.5:0.5.

In 2002 he won one of his greatest successes: he won in Wijk aan Zee. When Brain Games - 2002 Candidates Tournament in Dortmund Bareev Vesselin Topalov defeated in rapid chess and was eliminated in the semifinals, the same year he won a heavily occupied rapid chess tournament in Warsaw. In 2003, he played in a tournament in Maastricht 2:2 ( 0, -0 = 4) against the chess program HIARCS. In the same year he won in Enghien -les- Bains. In 2005 he won in Kazan the heavily occupied semi-final to the Russian Championship in Moscow, where he finished fourth. In the FIDE World Cup in Khanty-Mansiysk 2005 Bareev was for a placement victory over Boris Gelfand fifth and qualified for the re-introduced by the FIDE Candidates Tournament. There he won in the first round against Judit Polgár with 3,5:2,5, retired in the second round but against Péter Lékó with 1,5:3,5 from.

With several competitions, including the World Championship match Kasparov - Kramnik in London in 2000, was Bareev Sekundant by Vladimir Kramnik. He wrote about it together with the journalist Ilya Lewitow the book From London to Elista (2007, ISBN 9056912194 ). He was from 2010 to 2011 coach of the Russian national team. In 2011 he received the title of FIDE Senior Trainer.

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