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Boris Avrukh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boris Avrukh
CountryUnited States
Born (1978-02-10) February 10, 1978 (age 47)
TitleGrandmaster (1997)
FIDE rating2567 (June 2025)
Peak rating2668 (September 2009)
Peak rankingNo. 50 (July 2005)

Boris Leonidovich Avrukh (Russian: Борис Леонидович Аврух; born 10 February 1978 in Ukraine, Soviet Union) is a chess grandmaster, author, and buinessman. Avrukh has published several books, including The Classical Slav. He was the World Under-12 champion in 1990.

Books Published

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  1. Grandmaster Repertoire: 1.d4 Volume 1A – The Catalan
  2. Grandmaster Repertoire: 1.d4 Volume 1B – The Queen’s Gambit
  3. Grandmaster Repertoire: 1.d4 Volume 2
  4. Grandmaster Repertoire 2B: 1.d4 Dynamic Systems
  5. Grandmaster Repertoire 11: Beating 1.d4 Sidelines
  6. Grandmaster Repertoire 17: The Classical Slav
  7. Grandmaster Repertoire 8: The Grünfeld Defence Volume 1
  8. Grandmaster Repertoire 9: The Grünfeld Defence Volume 2
  9. 1.d4: King’s Indian & Grünfeld – Volume 2A
  10. 1.d4: Dynamic Defences

Chess career

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Boris Avrukh has played six times in Chess Olympiads.[1]

He won individual gold medal at Elista 1998 and bronze medal at Turin 2006. He won a team silver medal at Dresden 2008.

In 1999, he tied for 5–6th with Alexander Huzman in Tel Aviv (Boris Gelfand, Ilia Smirin, and Lev Psakhis won). In 2000, he tied for 1st-2nd with Huzman in Biel and took 6th in Haifa (Wydra Tournament; Viswanathan Anand won). In 2001, he won in Biel. In 2004, he tied for 8–9th in Beer Sheva Rapid (Viktor Korchnoi won). In 2009 he tied for first with Alexander Areshchenko in the Zurich Jubilee Open tournament.[2]

Avrukh has twice won the Israeli Chess Championship; in 2000 (tied with Alik Gershon) and 2008. He took part in the FIDE World Chess Championship 2002, but was knocked out in the first round by Bartłomiej Macieja.[3]

He cites Garry Kasparov as his favourite player of all time "for his powerful style and killer instinct."[4]

References

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  1. ^ Avrukh, Boris team chess record at olimpbase.org
  2. ^ "Areshchenko wins Zurich Jubilee on tiebreak". ChessVibes. 2009-08-16. Archived from the original on 20 August 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  3. ^ "World Chess Championship 2001-02 FIDE Knockout Matches". Mark-Weeks.com. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
  4. ^ "Grandmaster Interview with Boris Avrukh". Chess Videos, Chess DVDs, Chess Software and more. 2012-01-18. Retrieved 2017-12-04.
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