Sergei Rublevsky | |
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Sergei Rublevsky (at right) with Alexander Motylev at the Turin 2006 Olympiad |
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Full name | Сергей Владимирович Рублевский |
Country | Russia |
Born | October 15, 1974 Kurgan, Russian SFSR, USSR |
Title | Grandmaster |
FIDE rating | 2704 (No. 34 on the May 2010 FIDE ratings list) |
Peak rating | 2704 (May 2010) |
Sergei Rublevsky (born 15 October 1974) is a Russian chess grandmaster (1994). He has won four team gold medals and one individual bronze medal at Chess Olympiads.[1] He won the prestigious Aeroflot Open in 2004, and became the 58th Russian chess champion after winning the Russian Superfinal in Moscow (18–30 December 2005), one point clear from Dmitry Jakovenko and Alexander Morozevich.[2]
He finished in the top 10 in the 2005 FIDE World Cup, which qualified him for the Candidates Tournament for the FIDE World Chess Championship 2007, played in May–June 2007. He defeated Ruslan Ponomariov 3½-2½ in the first round. In the second round he played Alexander Grischuk. The match was tied 3-3, but Grischuk won the rapid playoff 2½-½, eliminating Rublevsky from the championship.
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This section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves. |
GM Nigel Short said of Rublevsky, "Rublevsky is not a sexy player. There are younger and more gifted individuals around and he knows it. Yet he has canniness, which the greenhorns don't. He does not engage the teenagers on the sharp end of opening theory, testing his ailing memory against the freshness of their computer-assisted analysis. Instead he heads a little off the beaten track - not exactly to the jungle, but to lesser-travelled byways where his experience counts."[3]
GM Alexander Morozevich has said, "... my opening repertoire is not any ‘weirder’ than, say, that of Rublevsky."[4]
With White, Rublevsky plays 1.e4 the overwhelming percentage of the time.[5]
Against 1...e5, which is Anand's usual but not exclusive first move, Rublevsky plays the Scotch. Against 1...c5, Rublevsky sometimes goes for Open Sicilians, but he has a couple of non-Open pet lines: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.Bb5+ and 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 e6 3.c4. Against the French and Caro-Kann, he plays 2.d4 followed by 3.Nd2.
With Black, he meets 1.e4 with Kan/Paulsen/Taimanov Sicilians; against 1.d4 he generally plays the QGA and the occasional Slav.[6]
Preceded by Garry Kasparov |
Russian Chess Champion 2005 |
Succeeded by Evgeny Alekseev |