Vasif Durarbayli

Vasif Durarbayli (Azerbaijani: Vasif Durarbəyli; born February 24, 1992) is an Azerbaijan chess Grandmaster. He received the International Master title in 2007 and the International Grandmaster Title in 2010.

Vasif Durarbayli
Full nameVasif Durarbayli
Country Azerbaijan
Born (1992-02-24) February 24, 1992
Sumqayit, Azerbaijan
TitleGrandmaster
FIDE rating2606 (August 2020)
(No. 151 in the FIDE World Rankings)
Peak rating2635 (January 2015)

Academic career

Vasif received his high school degree in Sumqait, Azerbaijan and graduated from Azerbaijan State of Physical Culture and Sports Academy in Baku, Azerbaijan with a degree in sports instruction. He currently studies Economics at Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri, and serves as the President of the Student Government Association.[1]

Chess career

He started his chess career in 1999. He has won many national titles. He was second in the European Youth Chess Championship under 14 years old (Budva, Serbia) in 2006 and he won the World Youth Chess Championship under 14 years old (Batumi, Georgia). He won the European Youth Chess Championship under 18 years old (Batumi, Georgia) in 2010. In 2013 he lost to Anton Korobov at the World Cup in the first round. In 2015 he entered the World Cup as an organizer nominee, but was eliminated in the first round by Lê Quang Liêm.[2]

In 2018 he has become the winner of the Summer Chess Classic - Group A held in St. Louis.[3] In 2019, he won 2nd place in the Sunway Sitges Festival after winning the tiebreaks with Rasmus Svane.[4]

gollark: Well, I need a monitoring thing for osmarks.net.
gollark: 506 palaiologoseseses are networked together into a vast hive mind.
gollark: We use emulated-palaiologos neural networks for this.
gollark: Bees are just special.
gollark: Besides, we tried that with other stuff and it failed.

References

  1. "SPICE Profiles: Vasif Durarbayli". websterjournal.com.
  2. "Vasif Durarbayli". Chess Games. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  3. "2018 SUMMER CHESS CLASSIC". uschesschamps.com.
  4. "The Week in Chess 1311". theweekinchess.com. Retrieved 2020-07-09.


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