laitimes

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

author:Chess amateur
4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

Luslan Bonomarev was born in November 1983 in Gorlovk, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine, to a mother of a primary school teacher and an engineer to an engineer. Outstanding prodigy. Graduated from the Faculty of Law of the Kramatorsk Institute of Economics and Management. The chess style is more solid, and the layout theory foundation is thicker. 4th World Chess Federation (FIDE) Chess Championship (title maintained from 2002-2004).

The World Chess Championship, also known as the World Chess Championship, is the highest level of individual chess competition organized by the World Chess Federation. Officially founded in 1886, the tournament is held roughly every two or three years, but it is not fixed, and it has been interrupted several times due to world wars and other reasons. From 1948 to 1990, it was held basically every three years. From 1993 to 2005, the Professional Chess Association (PCA) and the Fideso (FIDE) each hosted the World Chess Championship (World Chess Championship), during which the title of chess was controversial. The Unified World Chess Championship was held in 2006 and has been held roughly every two years since then.

Known as the "second of Karpov", the Ukrainian prodigy Bonomarev, before the Chinese prodigy Bu Xiangzhi, he was the youngest grandmaster in the world at that time. Bonomarev was not tall, looked weak, shy, and appeared younger than his own age; he was nervous in his conversation with the living, and he was a bit stuttering. Those who saw him soon remembered from his appearance the Kalpov of his youth. So someone gave him the nickname: "Karpov II". Looking at Bonomarev's upbringing, we can see that he is completely worthy of this nickname.

At the age of 7, his father taught him to play chess. At the age of 9, he became a first-class chess player. At the age of 10, he was recruited by the famous Coach Boris of Ukraine and won the third place in the 12-year-old group of the World Junior Championships; a year later, at the age of 11, he became the champion of the group and became the national master.

In 1996, at the age of 12, he won the European Junior Championship in the 18-year-old group, and in 1997 at the age of 13 he won the World Junior Championship 18-year-old group. In 1998, at the age of 14, he broke the record for the youngest age of international grandmasters set and held by Fischer in the United States, Yudit Polga in Hungary, Recco in France and Bakrot in France.

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

Runner-up in 2000 Olympiad and 2001 World Team Champion Ukraine team No. 2 main player, and won the best team and stage in the World Team Championship with 6 vs 5 points. In 2002, at the age of 18, at the 4th New Format World Championships in Moscow, he won the championship by defeating IvanChuk 4.5:2.5. In addition to Kasparov, Kramnik and other very few chess stars, all the masters of the world at that time (including Anand, Karpov, etc.) were gathered in this tournament. Ukrainian President Kuchma awarded the youngest champion in chess history the "Medal of Wisdom Yaroslav of the Fifth Degree".

Runner-up in the 2002 Linares Super Competition. The 2004 Olympiad champion Ukraine was the second team.

Runner-up in the 2005 and 2009 World Cups. In 2006, he tied for first place with Aronian and Recco at the Tar Commemorative Race.

In 2010 he won the Dortmund Invitational. In 2010, he represented the Ukrainian national team in the Olympiad and won the gold medal. In 2011 he won the National Championship in Ukraine with a performance rating of 2853.

2012 Dortmund Grand Third Place. The 2012-2013 Grand Prix Renova station tied for third place. Tied for third place at the 2014 Grand Slam at Bilbao.

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

Due to reading a large number of chess books, Bonomarev's theoretical foundation is very solid. His style of chess is very similar to that of the former world chess champion Karpov: he likes to fight in the middle of the game and rarely sacrifices his strength; there are no weaknesses, the start is stable, the mid-game is offensive, and the endgame technique is comprehensive. He rarely makes mistakes in defense and is tenacious. Even if the opponent has a small loophole, he can catch it. Bonomayov spends six hours a day studying chess, paying great attention to the opening moves in order to find out the problems and broaden the chess path. He also did a lot of chess practice every day, looking at the endgame, analyzing the typical mid-game situation; the computer was his good helper, and whenever he came up with a plan, he would use the computer to test it.

In addition, Bonomarev is a football fan, but rarely plays because of his chess playing; he does not lose sight of the importance of exercise, morning running, table tennis and tennis are his favorite exercise methods. Collecting medallions is another of Bonomarev's hobbies, and he now has more than 50 medallions. The prodigy also likes to read, in the past like to read detective novels, but also like to watch TV news, wonderful movies as far as possible, and newspapers only read sports.

The following is a transcript of The first interview after Bonomarev became a world champion at the time.

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

  His father was an enlightenment coach

  Q: Where were you born? Where does it grow?

  A: I was born in Gorovska, a mining area where I grew up to be 10 years old, and that year I went to Kramatorsk, and a year later, my parents moved to Kramatorsk.

  Q: I heard that your father taught you to learn chess, is he a high-level chess player?

  A: No, just a chess fan. In the former Soviet Union, many people liked chess, and every family had chess boards, chess pieces, and chess books.

  Q: Remember the first chess book you read?

  A: "To give up is to get," by Zach and Drago Maletzky.

  Q: When did you start winning your father's?

  A: I can't remember exactly. I just remember that once he won me, I was so angry that I cried and danced with my fists against him. In his second year, chess coach Shmekov came to our school to enroll and asked who wanted to join his class. My homeroom teacher, a female teacher, pointed at me and said, "Ruslan can play chess." So I signed up and started learning to play chess with him.

  Q: How did you learn chess from Coach Bonomarev later?

  A: At the age of 10, I became a first-class chess player, Kramatorsk held a state competition, I participated, and the results were not bad. Coach Bonomarev approached my dad and said that I was playing very well and that I should find a regular coach, and he suggested that I go to his house and train for a week, and if I didn't like it, I could go home at any time. I went to his house, and although I was homesick, I was reluctant to give up chess, so I stayed, and this stay was 7 years. At My House in Bonomarev, it was Always Bonomalyev's son who trained me until two years ago, when my International Grade score reached 2600, that he stopped training me.

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

  Ukrainian is not well learned

  Q: When you graduated from elementary school, you only got a silver medal, which course was four points?

  A: Ukrainian. Maybe because I've always lived in a Russian-speaking environment, Ukrainian is not spoken well.

  Q: I heard that you were able to play blind chess when you were 11 years old, and you have a good record, do you still play blind chess now?

  A: When I was 10 years old, I played a blind chess wheel battle with four people. But the adults said that it was not good to play blind chess so small, so I would not play anymore. But the next game of blind chess is not difficult for me at all.

  Q: When did you understand that playing chess would become your profession?

  A: When I was 16 years old, I spent a lot of my time playing chess.

  Q: Why did you choose to attend university in Kramatorsk?

  A: Because it is convenient, going to college in other cities will affect chess.

  Q: Former world chess champion Alyo Xin once received a Doctor of Laws degree, and now that you are studying law at university, do you think it is possible for you to become a professional lawyer?

  A: There is such a possibility.

  Q: When did you start learning computers?

  A: Two years ago.

4th Chess Champion of the World Chess Federation Championship: Bonomarev

  Ask Topalov as an assistant

  Q: In the final of this World Championship, Bulgarian super chess player Topalov acted as your assistant, how did you think of asking him?

  A: It was the idea of my coach, Bonomarev. When we studied Ivanchuk's game, we found that in addition to Kasparov and Kramnik, the chess player with the highest winning percentage against Ivanchuk was Topalov. After we called his coach and agent, Topalov agreed.

  Q: Did his help work?

  A: Of course. And I was able to invite Topalov by surprise to Ivanchuk.

  Q: Ivanchuk said that although you won him in the game, you did not surpass him in chess, what do you think of his statement?

  A: Ivanchuk always believed that kasparov was the only player who could surpass him in chess.

  Q: What do you think of Kasparov?

  A: I also think he's the most powerful chess player in the world today.

  Q: Faced with the current situation that there are two world chess kings in the world, don't you want to play the unification game?

  A: The fiat world does need a unified tournament, but I can only play a unified tournament under the premise of the FIDE organization. I am the champion of the World Championships organized by FIDE and I have an obligation to FIDE.

  Q: Do you like to be compared to former world chess champion Karpov?

  A: Maybe I have something in common with Karpov in terms of chess style, but I think that every player has his own characteristics, and two people can't be exactly the same.

  Q: You appreciate the new hours, don't you like the 7-hour clock?

  A: The new use is more energetic and competitive.

  Q: Chess is science, art, and sports, do you just like its competitive characteristics?

  A: I think that the science and artistry of chess is not very prominent, when chess players talk about chess, they always say, who wins, who loses, chess fans are more concerned about winning or losing.

  Q: After becoming a world champion, you suddenly got $500,000, how are you going to spend that money?

  A: After paying the tax, the money is no longer 500,000. I'm not going to spend the money, I want to save it first and use it when I need it in the future.

  Q: Which city do you prefer?

  A: I love Moscow because I became a world champion here, Moscow is my lucky city, but Kramatorsk is still my favorite city.

Organize from the network

Friends who like or accompany the baby to learn chess, welcome to pay attention to my WeChat public account: chess amateurs, you can receive some chess articles published by me in time

Read on