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1 References  





2 External links  














Konstantin Aseev






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Konstantin Aseev (October 20, 1960 – August 22, 2004) was a Russian chess Grandmaster and trainer.

Among his tournament successes were first at Leningrad 1989 with 9/13 (beating Leonid Yudasin and Alexander Khalifman among others) and second to Sergei Tiviakov in the 1992 Alekhine Memorial in Moscow with 6/9 (ahead of Vladimir Kramnik (whom he beat), Mikhail Gurevich, Vladimir Akopian and many others). He participated in many Soviet and Russian Championships, and played in the FIDE World Championship in 2001 (but was knocked out by Mikhail Kobalia in the first round). His last tournament was in St Petersburg in October 2003 where he scored 5.5/9. His final FIDE Elo rating was 2511; his peak Elo rating was 2591 in July 2001.

Among the players Aseev trained are Maya Chiburdanidze, Andrei Kharlov and Evgeny Alekseev.

Aseev died in St Petersburg after a long battle with cancer on August 22, 2004, a rapid tournament in memory of Aseev was held in St. Petersburg, won by Evgeny Alekseev on tie break from Peter Svidler. All proceeds from the event went to Aseev's family. Aseev's wife was also a master-level chess player.[1]

Here is Aseev's victory with Black over Khalifman at Leningrad 1989 (moves given in Algebraic chess notation):

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Aseeva, Marina".
[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Konstantin_Aseev&oldid=1212211987"

Categories: 
1960 births
2004 deaths
Chess Grandmasters
Russian chess players
Soviet chess players
Chess coaches
Burials at Serafimovskoe Cemetery
20th-century chess players
Russian State University of Physical Education, Sport, Youth and Tourism, Department of Chess alumni
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