Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu

Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu (born 1 January 1981) is a Turkish chess Grandmaster and a FIDE trainer. As of the July 2013 FIDE rating list, he is ranked among active players number 1,798 in the world and number twelve in Turkey. He earned the title Grand Master (GM) on 18 October 2009.[1] He studied Hydrogeology at Hacettepe University in Ankara.[2][3][4]

Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu
Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu at the 38th Chess Olympiad, Dresden, Germany in 2008
CountryTurkey
Born (1981-01-01) January 1, 1981
Ankara, Turkey
TitleGrandmaster (2009)
FIDE rating2437 (August 2020)
Peak rating2510 (May 2017)

Haznedaroğlu was born on 1 January 1981 in Ankara as the youngest of three boys.[2] At the age of five or six, he got interested in chess playing as his uncle, a mathematics teacher, was training Kıvanç's older brothers. His father introduced then Kıvanç in chess.[5] Already in 1987, he became champion in the national intra primary school tournament. He repeated his first place in the 1989-90 Turkish championship. During his high school years, he became always Turkish champion in his age category. His first international experience was at 1999 Balkan Chess Championship in Varna, Bulgaria. Even though he won his first game against an International Master from Yugoslavia, he lost the following games and had to realize that there was a remarkable level difference between the Turkish and foreign chess players.[3] In 2003, he became Turkish champion.[2]

The turning point for him came when he took part at the FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 held in Tripoli, Libya. He played against Russian Vladimir Malakhov, lost with ½ to 1½. He was very happy to get ½ points from a high-level chess player.[3] In 2008, he participated at the 38th Chess Olympiad held in Dresden, Germany, where he reached a score of 6½/9 by winning against Stuart Conquest (ENG), Sami Laouini (TUN), Luis Pan Zhang (PAN), Rinat Jumabayev (KAZ), Mohamed Amine Haddouche (ALG), Roger I. Nokes (NZL) and tying with Viesturs Meijers (LAT) but losing to Jakob Vang Glud (DEN) and Niclas Huschenbeth (GER).[2]

After winning the third game at Izmir Chess Open in August 2009, he qualified for the Grand Master title.[6]

Achievements

Turkish Chess Championship
  • 2003 – champion
  • 2006 – 4th place
gollark: I fear that some sort of computer troubleshooting class may just end up teaching people to blindly try one specific thing they learned instead of... actually problem-solving. Which would admittedly be better than now.
gollark: People just see an error of some sort, and immediately their brain shuts down, even if it specifies what to do about it.
gollark: A useful skill people seem to lack is any ability whatsoever to solve basic problems with computers, but that's hard to teach.
gollark: You can argue about physics being useful and english literature not or whatever, but it's outweighted by how much anyone involved actually cares.
gollark: Generally, things the students in question actually want to learn, instead of whatever random junk they don't.

References

  1. "FIDE Chess Profile - Haznedaroglu, Kivanc". FIDE. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  2. "Kivanc Haznedaroglu". Chess Games. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  3. "Temelden İyi Başlasak Çoktan Büyük Usta Olurduk" (in Turkish). Turkiye Satranç Federasyonu. 2006-10-03. Archived from the original on 2013-09-13. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  4. Akman, Özgür (2009-08-30). "Büyükusta Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu!". Sabah (in Turkish). Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  5. "Satrancın yeni 'Kıvanç'ı Haznedaroğlu". Sabah (in Turkish). 2009-10-30. Retrieved 2013-07-16.
  6. "Büyükusta Kıvanç Haznedaroğlu ile İlk Röportaj" (in Turkish). Satranç Okulu. 2009-08-25. Archived from the original on 2012-10-29. Retrieved 2013-07-15.


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