Matthew Sadler
Matthew Sadler | |
---|---|
Sadler, 2012 at the Tata Chess Tournament | |
Country | England |
Born |
Chatham, England | 15 May 1974
Title | Grandmaster |
FIDE rating | 2687 (August 2017) |
Peak rating | 2680 (April 2017) |
Matthew Sadler (born 15 May 1974) is a chess grandmaster (1993) and a chess writer.
Sadler won the British Championship in 1995 at the age of 21 and again in 1997 (jointly with Michael Adams).[1] He represented England in the 1996 Chess Olympiad, scoring 10½/13 and winning a gold medal for the best score on board four (England finished fourth), and also played in 1998 scoring 7½/12. He made 7/9 on board four for England at the European Team Chess Championship in Pula in 1997.[2] His was the best individual score of the five-man English team and so contributed significantly to England's first (and to date only) gold medal in a major competition.
He was widely tipped to reach the heights scaled by such leading players as Michael Adams and Nigel Short but has since taken the decision to cease playing professionally, opting for a career in IT in the Netherlands.
For several years, he was the book reviewer for New in Chess magazine and also wrote books and articles for other chess magazines. In 2000, his book Queen's Gambit Declined (published by Everyman) was awarded the British Chess Federation's book of the year award.[3] Sadler has a French mother, speaks French perfectly and is also qualified to play in closed French events.
Latterly a resident of Amersfoort, Sadler returned to chess in 2010 to play in a rapidplay tournament held in nearby Wageningen. He won the event with a maximum score of 7/7, finishing ahead of strong grandmasters Jan Timman, Friso Nijboer and Daniel Fridman. In August 2011, Sadler continued his resurgence by winning the XIII Open Internacional D'Escacs de Sants, scoring 8½/10, ahead of several grandmasters including Jan Smeets. Right thereafter, in October 2011, he went on to win the Oslo Chess International in front of ten other grandmasters, amongst them Sergei Tiviakov, Jon Ludvig Hammer and Sergey Volkov, all being 2600+ players. Sadler won convincingly, with 8/9 points and a performance rating of 2849. Going into 2012, the gain in rating points elevated him to fourth rank amongst active English players and also lifted him back into the World Top 100.
In a January 2012 interview, Sadler stated that chess was now primarily a "hobby" for him.[4] While relishing his return to tournament play, Sadler noted that he was now an amateur, and would not be coming back as a professional. He contrasts his present lighthearted attitude with his demeanor during his time as a professional, when he was "working ten hours a day and incredibly intensively".
Bibliography
- Sadler, Matthew (1997). The Slav. Everyman. ISBN 978-1901259001.
- Sadler, Matthew (1998). The Semi-Slav. Everyman. ISBN 978-1901259087.
- Sadler, Matthew (1999). Tips For Young Players. Everyman. ISBN 978-1857442311.
- Sadler, Matthew (2000). Queen's Gambit Declined. Everyman. ISBN 978-1857442564.
- Sadler, Matthew (2012). Study Chess With Matthew Sadler. Everyman. ISBN 978-1857449907.
- Sadler, Matthew; Regan, Natasha (2016). Chess For Life. Gambit. ISBN 978-1910093832.
References
- ↑ List of British chess champions
- ↑ 11th European Chess Team Championship: Pula 1997, Individual statistics Olimpbase
- ↑ BCF Book of the Year award-2000 British Chess Federation
- ↑ Chessvibes Interview, "Matthew Sadler, Tata GM group C: "It's a hobby!" " (2012).
External links
- Matthew Sadler's website
- Matthew D Sadler chess games at 365Chess.com
- Matthew Sadler player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Biography of Matthew Sadler Everyman Chess