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Nils Grandelius

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Nils Grandelius
Altibox Norway Chess 2016
CountrySweden
Born (1993-06-03) 3 June 1993 (age 31)
Lund, Sweden
TitleGrandmaster (2010)
FIDE rating2645 (November 2024)
Peak rating2694 (March 2019)
RankingNo. 92 (November 2024)

Nils Grandelius (born 3 June 1993)[1] is a Swedish chess grandmaster. He is the top ranked player of Sweden.[2]

Chess career

FIDE awarded him the titles FIDE Master, in 2007, International Master, in 2008, and Grandmaster in 2010.

In 2008, Grandelius tied for second place, placing fourth on countback, in the Under 16 section of the European Youth Chess Championships.[3] In the same year, he took clear first place in the Olomouc Open in Czech Republic with a score of 6½ points from 9 games;[4] thanks to this result, he also achieved his first norm required for the title Grandmaster (GM). In the following year's edition, he placed tied for first place with the same score, placing second on tiebreak. He also achieved the second GM norm.[5] Grandelius achieved the GM title by earning the third and final norm in the 40th Bosna International Tournament[6] in Sarajevo, in which he finished fifteenth, the first among juniors.[7]

He took the bronze medal at the 2010 World Youth Chess Championships in the Under 18 category.[8] The next year, Grandelius won the gold medal in the same age category at the European Youth Championships in Albena, Bulgaria.[9]

In May 2012, he placed third in the 20th Sigeman & Co Chess Tournament in Malmö, behind the winner, Fabiano Caruana, and the runner-up, Peter Leko.[10] Later that year, in August 2012, he ended in a tie for third in the World Junior Championship in Athens, placing fourth on tiebreak.[11]

He has been trained by Evgenij Agrest since 2013.[12]

In July 2015, he won the Swedish Chess Championship by defeating Emanuel Berg in a playoff match, after they both tied for first scoring 6½/9 points.[13] The following month, Grandelius won the 22nd Abu Dhabi Masters tournament, edging out on tiebreak Martyn Kravtsiv, Baadur Jobava, Alexander Areshchenko and Richárd Rapport.[14][15]

In March 2016, Grandelius won a four-player tournament for the last place in the Norway Chess 2016 field, against Norwegian grandmasters Jon Ludvig Hammer and Aryan Tari, and Women's World Champion Hou Yifan. It was a double round-robin tournament, with the first leg being standard time control and the second leg with rapid time control (25 minutes+10 second-increment).[16]

Grandelius was one of the seconds of Magnus Carlsen during the World Chess Championship match 2018.[17]

In March 2019, Grandelius tied for first place with Vladislav Artemiev in the European Individual Championship, held in Skopje, scoring 8½/11 points. He took the silver medal on tiebreak.[18]

Grandelius has been playing for the Swedish national team at the Chess Olympiads since 2010 and at the European Team Chess Championships since 2011. In 2019 he also took part in the World Team Chess Championship.

References

  1. ^ IM title application
  2. ^ Country Top chess players. Sweden. FIDE.
  3. ^ European Youth Chess Championship 2008 - Boys U16. chess-results.com.
  4. ^ Olomoucke sachove leto 2008 Chess-Results
  5. ^ Olomouc Chess Summer 2009. chess-results.com.
  6. ^ GM title application (PDF). FIDE.
  7. ^ 40th International Tournament Bosna 2010 Chess-Results
  8. ^ World Youth Chess Championships 2010 Open Under 18. chess-results.com.
  9. ^ European Youth Chess Championship Albena 2011 - Boys Under 18. chess-results.com.
  10. ^ "Sigeman: Caruana wins Sigeman with 2852 performance". ChessBase. 16 May 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  11. ^ World Junior Chess Championship 2012 Boys. chess-results.com.
  12. ^ "Interview with Evgenij Agrest". Chessdom. 31 August 2015.
  13. ^ "GM Nils Grandelius is 2015 Swedish champion". Chessdom. 19 July 2015. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  14. ^ Doggers, Peter (31 August 2015). "Grandelius wins Abu Dhabi Masters on tiebreak". chess.com. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  15. ^ 22nd Abu Dhabi Int. Chess Festival Masters Tournament: final standings. . chess-results.com.
  16. ^ "Grandelius gains entry to Norway Chess". Chess News. 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  17. ^ "Kasimdzhanov: "The work of seconds usually remains invisible"". Chess News. 2018-12-09. Retrieved 2019-09-28.
  18. ^ "Vladislav Artemiev became the European Champion". www.fide.com. 2019-03-30. Retrieved 2019-04-04.