Étienne Bacrot

Étienne Bacrot
Full name Étienne Bacrot
Born January 22, 1983 (1983-01-22) (age 29)
Lille, France
Title Grandmaster
FIDE rating 2705
(No. 43 in the September 2011 FIDE World Rankings)
Peak rating 2731 (April 2005)

Étienne Bacrot (French pronunciation: [etjɛn baˈkʁo]) (born January 22, 1983 in Lille, Nord) is a French chess grandmaster and currently ranked number one in France.

He started playing at 4; by 10 young Bacrot was already winning junior competitions and in 1996, at 13 years of age, he won against Vasily Smyslov. He became a Grandmaster in March 1997 at the age of 14 years and 2 months, making him the youngest person to that date to have held the title (later in December, Ruslan Ponomariov took his record).

He has won several competition and notable games. He first passed the mark of 2700 in Elo rating in 2004. In January 2005, he became the first French player to enter the top 10. His highest Elo rating ever was 2731 in April 2005. On the January 2009 FIDE list, Bacrot had an Elo rating of 2721, making him number 21 in the world and France's number 1.

Bacrot scored 6/8 in the 37th Chess Olympiad in 2006 against opponents averaging 2640, gaining 13 Elo points. This earned him the bronze medal for the third best individual performance in the Olympiad. One of his notable wins was against top American grandmaster Gata Kamsky.[1]

Bacrot served as one of the four advisors to the world team in the 1999 Kasparov versus the World event.

He has a son, Alexandre, with Nathalie Bonnafous.

Contents

Annual hometown game

As well as playing in tournaments and team competitions, Bacrot has since 1995 played an annual six-game match against a prominent player in his home town of Albert. In 1996 he beat Vasily Smyslov 5-1, in 1997 lost to Viktor Korchnoi 4-2, in 1998 defeated Robert Hübner 3.5-2.5, in 1999 lost to Alexander Beliavsky 3.5-2.5, in 2000 lost to Nigel Short 4-2, in 2001 tied 3-3 with Emil Sutovsky, in 2002 beat Boris Gelfand 3.5-2.5, and in 2004 won against Ivan Sokolov 3.5-2.5 (there was no match in 2003).

Notable results

Team results

Youth results

Rankings

Notes

  1. ^ Schachserver Der Wiener Zeitung (Austria), "37th Chess Olympiad 2006"
  2. ^ Chessvine Article, "GM Etienne Bacrot wins French Championship"
  3. ^ "Nanjing R10 Magnus wins with 2900+ performance". ChessBase. 2010-10-30. http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=6778. Retrieved 20 March 2011. 

External links

Achievements
Preceded by
Peter Leko
Youngest chess grandmaster ever
March - December 1997
Succeeded by
Ruslan Ponomariov