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Yasser Seirawan

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Yasser Seirawan
Seirawan at the 2003 United States Chess Championship
CountryUnited States
Born (1960-03-24) March 24, 1960 (age 64)
Damascus, Syria
TitleGrandmaster (1980)
FIDE rating2620 (November 2024)
Peak rating2658 (November 2011)

Yasser Seirawan (Template:Lang-ar; born March 24, 1960) is an American chess grandmaster and four-time United States champion. He won the World Junior Chess Championship in 1979. Seirawan is also a published chess author and commentator.

Biography and career

Seirawan was born in Damascus, Syria. His father was Syrian and his mother an English nurse from Nottingham, where he spent some time in his early childhood. When he was seven, his family immigrated to Seattle (United States), where he attended Queen Anne Elementary School, Meany Middle School and Garfield High School, and honed his game at a (now-defunct) coffeehouse, the Last Exit on Brooklyn,[1] playing against the likes of Latvian-born master Viktors Pupols and six-time Washington State Champion James Harley McCormick.

He is married to Woman FIDE Master Yvette Nagel, daughter of Dutch politician Jan Nagel.[2]

Seirawan began playing chess at 12; at 13 he became Washington junior champion. At 19 he won the World Junior Chess Championship. He also won a game against Viktor Korchnoi, who had two years before narrowly lost a match for the world championship. Impressed, Viktor then invited Seirawan to Switzerland, where Korchnoi was training for his 1981 world title match against Anatoly Karpov.[3]

Seirawan qualified for the 1985 and 1988-1990 Candidates Tournaments. In the 1985 tournament in Montpellier he scored 7/15 placing joint 10th,[4] and in the 1988-1990 tournament in St John, a knockout tournament, he was knocked out by Jon Speelman in the preliminary round.

For twelve years he was the chief editor of the Inside Chess magazine.[5] The magazine was sold to the ChessCafe.com website on which old articles were featured.

In 1999, Seirawan played a ten-game match against Michael Adams in Bermuda. The match was drawn +2–2=6.[6]

In 2001, Seirawan released a plan called "Fresh Start" to reunite the chess world, which at that time had two world champions: Ruslan Ponomariov had gained the title under the auspices of FIDE, while Vladimir Kramnik had beaten Garry Kasparov to take the Classical title. It called for one match between Ponomariov and Kasparov (the world number one), and another between Kramnik and the winner of the 2002 Einstein tournament in Dortmund (who turned out to be Péter Lékó).[7] The winners of these matches would then play each other to become undisputed World Champion. This plan was signed by all parties on May 6, 2002, in the so-called "Prague Agreement". The Kramnik-Leko match took place (the match was drawn, with Kramnik retaining his title); the Kasparov-Ponomariov match was canceled in 2003, and this particular plan became moot when Kasparov retired in 2005. In the end the FIDE World Chess Championship 2006 between Kramnik and Veselin Topalov reunited the world championship title.

Following a series of events Seirawan participated in China during September 2003, there were reports that he would be retiring as a professional player. In the July 2007 FIDE list, Seirawan had an Elo rating of 2634, placing him in the top 100 chess players in the world, and America's number four (behind Hikaru Nakamura, Gata Kamsky and Alexander Onischuk). He played six games in the July 2007 FIDE update.[citation needed]

In 2007, Seirawan unveiled his enhanced chess game called Seirawan chess. The first ever event was a 12-board simultaneous exhibition held March 31, 2007 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[8]

In May 2011, Seirawan returned from hiatus to competitive chess, playing for the U.S. team in the world team championship in China, where he won silver in first alternate. He had wins versus top GMs Judit Polgar and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov.[9] He only lost one game.

Seirawan won the 2011 and 2012 Dutch Open Blitz championship.[10]

Seirawan is widely known for his expert commentary in live broadcasts on the Internet during important events. He has been named by the chess historian Edward Winter as one of the top five Internet broadcasters.[11] In 2019, he joined the Chessbrahs (headed by Eric Hansen and Aman Hambleton), and provided coverage for the 2019 World Cup along with Hansen and Hambleton.

Books

Seirawan has written several books.

The "Winning Chess" series (with co-author IM Jeremy Silman):

  • Play Winning Chess - Introduction to chess and some basic strategies
  • Winning Chess Tactics - Introduction to tactics with puzzles
  • Winning Chess Strategies - How to use small advantages and use strategies to gain them
  • Winning Chess Openings - Brief descriptions of the most popular openings, and opening strategies
  • Winning Chess Endings - Introduction to the endgame
  • Winning Chess Brilliancies - Notable games analyzed by the author
  • Winning Chess Combinations - How to recognize the main combination patterns; somewhat of a follow up to Winning Chess Tactics

The "Winning Chess" series was originally published by Microsoft Press; it is now published by Everyman Chess.

  • Five Crowns: Kasparov-Karpov World Chess Championship 1990 New York - Lyon (with Johathan Tisdall), International chess Enterprises, 1991. ISBN 978-1879479029
  • Take My Rooks (with Nikolay Minev), International Chess Enterprises, 1991. ISBN 978-1879479012
  • No Regrets • Fischer–Spassky 1992 (with George Stefanovic), International Chess Enterprises, 1992, ISBN 1-879479-09-5
  • Chess on the Edge (with Bruce Harper) - collected games of Grandmaster Duncan Suttles, published by Chess'n Math Association in March 2008.
  • Chess Duels: My Games with the World Champions, Everyman Chess, 2010, ISBN 978-1857445879

References

  1. ^ Nack, William (December 21, 1981). "Yasser, That's My Baby". Sports Illustrated. p. 3.
  2. ^ Matnadze, Anna (October 28, 2011). "Interview with Yasser Seirawan". Chessdom.
  3. ^ Tracy, William (March–April 1990). "The Right Moves". Saudi Aramco World. 41 (2).
  4. ^ http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess.pl?tid=83304
  5. ^ "GM Yasser Seirawan Lecture Series". World Chess Hall of Fame. April 9, 2013.
  6. ^ Crowther, Mark (February 8, 1999). "TWIC 222: Adams-Seirawan in Bermuda". The Week in Chess. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  7. ^ Seirawan, Yasser (March 2, 2002). "A Fresh Start for chess". ChessBase. Retrieved January 23, 2015.
  8. ^ "GM Yasser Seirawan Gives Seirawan Chess Simultaneous". Chessmastery.com.
  9. ^ "Yinzhou Cup 2011 World ChessTeam Championship – Player Info: Seirawan Yasser". Chess-Results.com. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  10. ^ "Hall of fame (list of winners Dutch Open Blitzchess championship)". Snelschaakmarathon.nl.
  11. ^ Winter, Edward. "9085. Live chess broadcasts on the Internet". Chess Notes.

Further reading

Preceded by United States Chess Champion
1981–1983 (with Walter Browne)
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Chess Champion
1986
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Chess Champion
1989 (with Roman Dzindzichashvili and Stuart Rachels)
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Chess Champion
2000–2001 (with Joel Benjamin and Alexander Shabalov)
Succeeded by

Template:American Chess Masters