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Vadim Zvjaginsev (Zviagintsev) (born August 18, 1976 in Moscow) is a Russian chess grandmaster. He graduated from Moscow State University (Faculty of Economics) in 1996. ==Tournament results== A mostly consistent performer with a growing reputation, Zvjaginsev is less conspicuous than some of his compatriots, not having yet managed to break into the elite tournament circuit. Nevertheless, he has thus far shown a great propensity for effective, attacking chess. In 1997, at the Groningen (FIDE) World Championship, he gave early notice of his chess talent by single-handedly knocking out most of the U.S. contingent. In consecutive rounds, he dispatched Benjamin, Kaidanov and Seirawan, before losing to fellow Russian GM Alexey Dreev in round 4. In 2000, he was first at Essen (ahead of Dreev and Bischoff) and triumphed there again in 2002 (this time ahead of Leko). At the Mainz Chess Classic in 2003, he finished joint 2nd behind Aronian, repeating his placing the following year. At the Russian Championships of 2005, he took 3rd place at the Kazan qualifier and finished (joint) 4th at the Superfinal. In 2006, he had an impressive joint 2nd finish at the Poikovsky (Karpov) Tournament (behind a rejuvenated Shirov). One blemish to his record occurred in 2002, when he registered the overall worst performance of the Russia vs Rest of the World match, held in Moscow. In team chess, he took team and individual silver medals at the 1997 European Team Chess Championship. At the 1994 Chess Olympiad, while still only an International Master, he helped the Russian second team obtain a team bronze medal. With the full Russian side, in 1998 and 2004, he contributed respectively to team gold and team silver medals. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Vadim Zvjaginsev」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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