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Anna Ushenina

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Anna Ushenina
Ushenina in Baku in 2016
Full nameAnna Yuriyivna Ushenina
Country Ukraine
Born (1985-08-30) 30 August 1985 (age 39)
Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, USSR
TitleGrandmaster (2012)
Women's World Champion2012–2013
FIDE rating2420 (November 2024)
Peak rating2502 (July 2007)
Medal record
Representing  Ukraine
Chess Olympiad
Gold medal – first place 2006 Turin Team
Gold medal – first place 2022 Chennai Team
Silver medal – second place 2008 Dresden Team
Silver medal – second place 2018 Batumi Team
Bronze medal – third place 2012 Istanbul Team
Bronze medal – third place 2014 Tromsø Team
Bronze medal – third place 2016 Baku Team
World Team Championship
Gold medal – first place 2013 Astana Team
Bronze medal – third place 2007 Ekaterinburg Team
Bronze medal – third place 2009 Ningbo Team
Bronze medal – third place 2021 Sitges Team

Anna Yuriyivna Ushenina (Ukrainian: Анна Юріївна Ушеніна; born 30 August 1985) is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster who was Women's World Chess Champion from November 2012 to September 2013.

Personal life

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Ushenina lives in Kharkiv, where she was born. She is of Jewish ethnicity.[1] Determined that the young Ushenina should develop intellectual and creative talents, her mother introduced her to chess at the age of seven, along with painting and music.[2] She became the Ukrainian Girls' (under 20) champion at 15 years. Many of her chess skills have been self-taught, although in 2000–2002, she studied chess in the Kharkiv sports school of Olympic reserve. During this period, her coach was International Master Artiom Tsepotan.[3] Afterwards she received more coaching at a specialist facility in Kramatorsk.

National success

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At the national Ukrainian Women's Championship, her progress and achievements have been noteworthy. In 2003 (Mykolaiv) and 2004 (Alushta), she finished in fourth and sixth places respectively, thereafter becoming the champion at Alushta in 2005, and outperforming top seed Tatjana Vasilevich along the way. She almost repeated this success at Odesa in 2006, finishing second, but ahead of the higher rated Natalia Zhukova and Inna Gaponenko.[4] At these combined (men and women) events, she has defeated grandmasters of the calibre of Anton Korobov and Oleg Romanishin and in Ukraine was endowed with the title "Honored Master of Sports".

Team performances

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Her many successes in team chess reached an early pinnacle in 2006. At the Turin Women's Olympiad she was a part of the victorious Ukrainian team and remained undefeated throughout the contest. Ushenina and her compatriots Natalia Zhukova (also undefeated), Kateryna Lagno and Inna Gaponenko each scored between 70 and 80%, in what was a commanding performance, earning them team gold medals and much adulation in chess circles.[2] In 2008, at the Dresden Olympiad, Ukraine's ladies took home the team silver medals, after failing to oust the powerful Georgian team from the top spot.

For Ushenina, her earliest major medal-winning performance occurred in Balatonlelle, at the European Team Championship for Girls (under 18) in 2002, where she took team gold and individual silver on board 1. On another occasion at the 2007 Women's World Team Chess Championship in Yekaterinburg, she helped Ukraine to a bronze medal finish and added an individual bronze to her tally. She has also played twice at the European Team Chess Championship, in 2005 and 2007. The team finished outside of the medal places each time, but for her personal performance, Ushenina took individual gold at the latter event, held in Heraklion, with 5/7.[5] In 2022 she was part of the Ukraine team that won the gold medal at the Women's event at the 44th Chess Olympiad.[6]

A very active league chess player, she regularly plays in the national leagues of France, Russia, Serbia, Montenegro and Slovenia.

Tournaments and titles

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Anna Ushenina in 2011

Tournament successes at Kyiv in 2001 and Odesa in 2003, earned her the title Woman Grandmaster (WGM), awarded in 2003. Her performance at the 2006 Women's Chess Olympiad and subsequent results in Pardubice and Abu Dhabi in the same year then qualified her for the International Master (IM) title, awarded in January 2007.

In the 'A2' section of the prestigious Aeroflot Open in Moscow 2007, she scored 5 points from the first 7 rounds, defeating three male grandmasters for a part performance rating of 2672. In January 2008, she played in the Group C of the Corus Chess Tournament in Wijk aan Zee scoring 4+12/13 points.[7] Soon after, at the women's section of the Moscow Open, she took second place, behind Anna Muzychuk, and ahead of Natalia Zhukova and Kateryna Lagno.[8][9] Later that year, at the Women's European Individual Chess Championship, held in Plovdiv, she took the bronze medal, losing out 1–2 to Viktorija Čmilytė in the playoffs for silver.[10] In 2010, she won the Rector Cup in Kharkiv with a performance rating of 2649.[11]

In 2016, she won the European Women's Championship in Mamaia, edging out on tie-break score Sabrina Vega, after both players had scored 8.5/11 points.[12]

She won the silver medal in the second GM group at the 2017 Maccabiah Games in Israel.[13]

Ushenina was a member of the Ukrainian team that won gold medal in the women's championship at the 44th Chess Olympiad in Chennai. In addition, she also won an individual silver medal on board three in the same event.[14][15]

Women's World Champion

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In the final of the Women's World Chess Championship 2012 she achieved a tiebreak victory over Antoaneta Stefanova to become the 14th Women's World Chess Champion. This automatically entitled her to the title of grandmaster and also qualified her to the 2013 Chess World Cup. She is Ukraine's first women's world chess champion[16] and thanks to this victory Ushenina was voted Ukraine's best female chess player of 2012.[17]

She lost her title against Hou Yifan in the Women's World Chess Championship 2013.[18]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "В Москве состоялась презентация "Шахматной еврейской энциклопедии"". 22 April 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Interview (in Russian)". Archived from the original on 23 September 2007. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  3. ^ "Best Chess Lessons online, International Master Artiom Tsepotan". ChessStudy.com. Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  4. ^ Ukrainian Chess Federation records
  5. ^ Olimpbase – Olympiads and other Team event information
  6. ^ "Ukraine victorious at the Women's Chess Olympiad". FIDE. 9 August 2022. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  7. ^ "Wijk R13: Aronian, Carlsen win Wijk aan Zee 2008". ChessBase. 27 January 2008. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  8. ^ CHESS magazine – May 2008 pp. 9, 10
  9. ^ Moscow Open 2008 Archived 11 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine. FIDE.
  10. ^ "Plovdiv: Playoffs of the European Individual Championships". ChessBase. 4 May 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  11. ^ Karlovich, Anastasiya (7 April 2010). "Ushenina wins strongest ever Rector Cup in Kharkov". ChessBase. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  12. ^ "Anna Ushenina wins European Women's Championship". Chessdom. 9 June 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  13. ^ "Georg Meier wins 20th Maccabiah". 21 July 2017.
  14. ^ "Chess Olympiad gold for Ukraine: 'But medal can't stop a war'". The Indian Express. 9 August 2022. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  15. ^ "Chess-Results Server Chess-results.com - 44th Olympiad Chennai 2022". chess-results.com. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  16. ^ Mark Rachkevych (1 December 2012). "Kharkiv's Anna Ushenina becomes Ukraine's first women's world chess champion". Kyivpost.com. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  17. ^ "Anton Korobov and Anna Ushenina Became the Best Chess Players of Ukraine in 2012". Chess-News.ru. 26 March 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  18. ^ "ChessBase News | Taizhou 07: Hou Yifan is World Champion". Chessbase.com. 20 September 2013. Retrieved 20 October 2013.

References

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Preceded by Women's World Chess Champion
2012–2013
Succeeded by