Kazakhstani Chess Championship
The Kazakhstani Chess Championship is currently organized by the Kazakhstan Chess Federation. Chess was one of the sports contested at the second Kazakhstan Spartakiad held in Alma-Ata in 1933: Gubaydula Mendeshev was the winner.[1] The first official Kazakhstani championships for men, women and juniors were held in Alma-Ata in 1934.[2] Anatoly Ufimtsev holds the record for the most titles won with eleven.
List of national championship winners
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Year | Open[3][4][5][6][7] | Women | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1934 | Isidor Lopatnikov | ||
1935 | Sergey Freiman | ||
1937 | Aleksey Shapovalov | ||
1938 | Shamshidov Murzagaliev | ||
1939 | Shamshidov Murzagaliev | Murzagaliev defeated Konstantin Kokhanov in a match after they tied for first in the round robin. | |
1940 | Shamshidov Murzagaliev | ||
1947 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1948 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1949 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1950 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | Vitaly Tarasov and Ratmir Kholmov participated as non-Kazakhstani invitees. Tarasov won the overall tournament; Ufimtsev tied for second with Kholmov and received the national title as a result. | |
1951 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1952 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1953 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1954 | Anatoly Ufimtsev, K. Kurkleitis | Ufimtsev and Kurkleitis were declared co-champions. | |
1955 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1956 | Yury Nikolaevich Yakovlev | Yakovlev defeated Anatoly Ufimtsev in a match after they tied for first in the round robin. | |
1957 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | Evgeny Vasiukov participated as a non-Kazakhstani invitee and won the overall tournament; Ufimtsev tied for second with V. Marantsman and defeated him in a playoff match. | |
1958 | Boris Katalimov, Isay Goliak | Katalimov and Goliak were declared co-champions. | |
1959 | Vladimir Muratov | ||
1960 | Boris Katalimov | ||
1961 | Boris Katalimov | ||
1962 | Gennady Movshovich | ||
1963 | Valentin Konstantinov | ||
1964 | Alexander Noskov | Noskov won a playoff over Yuri Nikitin and Nikolai Gusev after all three players tied for first in the round robin. | |
1965 | Valentin Konstantinov | ||
1966 | Vladimir Seredenko | Vladimir Antoshin participated as a non-Kazakhstani invitee and won the overall tournament; Seredenko finished second overall and received the national title. | |
1967 | Alexander Noskov | ||
1968 | Yuri Nikitin | ||
1969 | Yuri Nikitin | ||
1970 | Anatoly Ufimtsev | ||
1971 | Vladimir Muratov | ||
1972 | Mikhail Mukhin | ||
1973 | Vladimir Liavdansky | Liavdansky was from Leningrad, not Kazakhstan, but was nonetheless recognized as the winner; Eduard Bukhman, also from Leningrad, placed second; Oleg Dzuban finished third and was the highest-placed Kazakhstani player.[8] | |
1974 | Boris Katalimov | ||
1975 | ? | ||
1976 | Boris Katalimov | ||
1977 | Boris Katalimov, Vladimir Seredenko | Katalimov and Seredenko were declared co-champions. | |
1978 | Oleg Dzuban | ||
1980 | Boris Katalimov | ||
1981 | Oleg Dzuban | ||
1982 | Oleg Dzuban, Bolat Asanov | Dzuban and Asanov were declared co-champions. | |
1983 | Oleg Dzuban | ||
1984 | Nukhim Rashkovsky | ||
1985 | Serikbay Temirbayev | ||
1986 | Serikbay Temirbayev | ||
1987 | Yevgeniy Vladimirov | ||
1988 | Yevgeniy Vladimirov | ||
1989 | Vladimir Seredenko | ||
1990 | Oleg Dzuban | ||
1991 | Vladislav Tkachiev | ||
1992 | Vladislav Tkachiev | The first national championship of independent Kazakhstan. | |
1993 | Serikbay Temirbayev | ||
1994 | Pavel Kotsur | ||
1995 | Serikbay Temirbayev | ||
1996 | Serikbay Temirbayev | ||
1997 | Pavel Kotsur | ||
1998 | Petr Kostenko | ||
2000 | Petr Kostenko | ||
2001 | Darmen Sadvakasov | ||
2002 | Petr Kostenko | Kostenko defeated Pavel Kotsur in a playoff match after they tied for first in the main tournament.[9] | |
2003 | Darmen Sadvakasov | ||
2004 | Darmen Sadvakasov | ||
2005 | Ospan Omarov | ||
2006 | Darmen Sadvakasov | ||
2007 | Darmen Sadvakasov | ||
2008 | Anuar Ismagambetov | ||
2009 | Yevgeniy Pak | ||
2010 | Kirill Kuderinov | ||
2011 | Pavel Kotsur | Kotsur finished ahead of Rinat Jumabayev on tiebreaks. | |
2012 | Anuar Ismagambetov | ||
2013 | Kirill Kuderinov | ||
2014 | Rinat Jumabayev | ||
2015 | Murtas Kazhgaleyev | ||
2016 | Petr Kostenko | Kostenko finished ahead of Rinat Jumabayev and Murtas Kazhgaleyev on tiebreaks.[10] | |
2017 | Rinat Jumabayev | ||
2018 | Murtas Kazhgaleyev | Kazhgaleyev finished ahead of Denis Makhnev on tiebreaks. | |
2019 | Nurlan Ibrayev | ||
2020 | Murtas Kazhgaleyev | ||
2021 | Denis Makhnev | ||
2022 | Ramazan Zhalmakhanov | ||
2023 | Aldiyar Ansat | ||
2024 | Denis Makhnev | ||
2025 | Kazybek Nogerbek | Elnaz Kaliakhmet[11] | Aged 14, Kaliakhmet became the youngest Kazakhstani champion |
References
[edit]- ^ "ВВЕДЕНИЕ" [INTRODUCTION]. Региональный сайт Костанайской области. Retrieved 2015-06-02.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "ОНИ БЫЛИ ПЕРВЫМИ". Региональный сайт Костанайской области. Archived from the original on 2021-02-05. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ "Региональный сайт Костанайской области" [Kostanay regional website] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2013-07-13. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ "Championships of Republics". RUSBASE 1913-1994. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ "Organizations: Kazakhstan". E-ChessPedia. Chess Network Company. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ Lyakhov, Alexander. "Чемпионаты Казахстана по классическим шахматам (мужчины)" [Championships of Kazakhstan in classical chess (men)] (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-06-20.
- ^ "Шахматы Казахстана" [Chess in Kazakhstan] (in Russian). Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ "НА ВЫСШЕМ УРОВНЕ". Региональный сайт Костанайской области (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2021-02-04. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
- ^ "Kostenko - on the Throne". Kazinform. 2002-03-13. Archived from the original on 2015-06-02. Retrieved 2015-06-01.
- ^ "Abdumalik and Kostenko are champions of Kazakhstan". Chessdom. 2016-05-16. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
- ^ "Elnaz Kaliakhmet and Kazybek Nogerbek become new chess champions of Kazakhstan". Qazinform.com. 2025-06-02. Retrieved 2025-07-11.