Evgeny Ilgizovich Bareev (Russian: Евгений Ильгизович Бареев; born 21 November 1966) is a Russian-Canadian chess player, trainer, and writer.[1] Awarded the FIDEGrandmaster title in 1989, he was ranked fourth in the world in the international rankings in 1992 and again in 2003, with an Elo rating of 2739.[2][3]
Chess career
Bareev was world under 16 champion in 1982.[4] In 1992 he graduated from the chess faculty of the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture.[4]
Bareev was a three-time winner of the Premier Tournament at the annual Hastings Chess Congress in 1990/91,[6] 1991/92[7] and 1992/93, shared with Judit Polgár;[8] the event was then still staged as an invitational tournament in round-robin format. He also won the strong Enghien-les-Bains tournament held in France in 2003.[9][10] In a man versus machine contest in January 2003, Bareev took on the chess program HIARCS in a four game-match: all four games were drawn.[11]
He was a second to Vladimir Kramnik in the Classical World Chess Championship 2000 against Garry Kasparov. With Ilya Levitov, Bareev wrote From London to Elista, a book on the championship as well as Kramnik's subsequent championship matches against Peter Leko and Veselin Topalov; it received the Book of the Year award from the English Chess Federation in 2008.[12][13]
1996 Belgrade (terminated after first leg) – 1st place
1996 Vienna Open – 1st – 8th place
1997 Elista (Russian Ch.) – 2nd place
1999 Sarajevo Bosna – 2nd – 3rd place
2000 Montecatini Terme – 2nd place
2000 Shenyang, FIDE World Cup – 2nd place
2001 Cannes, World Cup (rapid) – 2nd place
2002 Dortmund (Einstein Candidates) – semifinals
2002 Moscow, Russia – The World (Rapid) – 1st-2nd result for Team Russia
2002 Wijk aan Zee – 1st place
2002 Warsaw (rapid) – 1st place
2003 Wijk-aan-Zee – 3rd place
2003 Enghien-les-Bains – 1st place
2003 Моnaco (rapid) – 1st place
2004 Monaco (rapid) – 2nd place
2005 Kazan (Russian Ch., Major League) – 1st – 2nd place
2006 Poikovsky – 2nd – 5th place
2006 Havana, Capablanca Memorial – 2nd place
2008 Leon (rapid) – 1st place
2009 Saint Petersburg (Russian Cup) – 1st place
2010 Moscow-open – 1st – 4th place
2019 Canadian Zonal Championship - 1st place
2021 Canadian Zonal Championship - 1st - 2nd place
Team competitions
Bareev was a member of the Soviet national team at the 1990 Chess Olympiad and of the Russian national team at the Chess Olympiads of 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2006.[24] He won the team gold medal in 1990, 1994, 1996 and 1998. He played on the Canadian team at the Olympiads in 2016 and 2018. Bareev is also a two-time winner of the World Team Chess Championship (1997, 2005) and a two-time winner of the European Team Chess Championship (1992, 2003).
Bareev is a four-time winner of the European Club Cup with three clubs: Lion of France (1994), Ladia of Russia (1997) and Bosna of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1999, 2000).
Trainer
In 2006, Bareev organized a grandmaster school for top Russian junior players and headed it until 2010.[4] In 2009 he worked with Lê Quang Liêm, who became World Blitz Champion in 2013.[25]
In 2010-11, Bareev was the head coach of the Russian men's chess team.[26] During that time the team won the silver medal at the 2010 Chess Olympiad.[27] Between 2010 and 2014, he was the head coach of Russia's junior, men's and women's national teams.[4]
In recent years, he has coached outstanding young Canadian players such as Razvan Preotu and Michael Song, as well as the Vietnamese grandmaster, Liem Le.[28]
Bareev, Evgeny; Levitov, Ilya (2007). From London to Elista: The Inside Story of the World Chess Championship Matches that Vladimir Kramnik Won Against Garry Kasparov, Peter Leko, and Veselin Topalov. New In Chess. ISBN978-90-5691-219-2. OCLC1105229665.
^Bareev, Evgeny; Levitov, Ilya (2007). From London to Elista: The Inside Story of the World Chess Championship Matches that Vladimir Kramnik Won Against Garry Kasparov, Peter Leko, and Veselin Topalov. New in Chess.