Mirosław Grabarczyk
Mirosław Grabarczyk | |
---|---|
Grabarczyk in 2021 | |
Country | Poland |
Born | (1971-01-03) 3 January 1971 (age 53) Płock, Poland |
Title | Grandmaster (2002) |
Peak rating | 2525 (July 1996) |
Mirosław Grabarczyk (born 3 January 1971) is a Polish chess grandmaster.
Chess career
Grabarczyk has been one of the leading Polish chess players since the 1990s. In 1993 and 1995 he finished second in the Polish Chess Championship.[1] He won the Polish Blitz Chess Championship in 1994 and finished third in this event in 1993 and 2013. He finished second in the Polish Rapid Chess championship in 1995. He has also competed successfully in several Polish Team Chess Championships.[2]
In 1996 Grabarczyk won two international tournaments in Polanica-Zdrój and Police. In 2009 he shared third place in the Scandinavian Open in Copenhagen.[3] In 2014 he won the International Chess Championship Malopolska seniors and juniors in Kraków.[4]
Grabarczyk played for Poland in the European Team Chess Championship:[5]
- In 1997, at fourth board in the 11th European Team Chess Championship in Pula (+2, =5, -2),
- In 2001, at reserve board in the 13th European Team Chess Championship in León (+0, =3, -0).
Personal life
Grabarczyk's brother Bogdan is also a well-known chess player who holds the FIDE International Master title (1998).[6] In 1994, Bogdan finished second in the Polish Championship.
References
- ^ Medaliści Mistrzostw Polski w Szachach
- ^ OlimpBase :: Polish Team Chess Championship :: Mirosław Grabarczyk
- ^ "Scandinavian Open 2009". Archived from the original on 5 May 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- ^ Międzynarodowe Szachowe Mistrzostwa Małopolski Seniorów i Juniorów, Grupa A, 2014
- ^ OlimpBase :: European Men's Team Chess Championship :: Mirosław Grabarczyk
- ^ FIDE: Grabarczyk, Bogdan
External links
- Miroslaw Grabarczyk rating card at FIDE
- Miroslaw Grabarczyk player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Miroslaw Grabarczyk chess games at 365Chess.com
- v
- t
- e
- Rafał Antoniewski
- Mateusz Bartel
- Paweł Blehm
- Piotr Bobras
- Krzysztof Bulski
- Łukasz Cyborowski
- Paweł Czarnota
- Kamil Dragun
- Jan-Krzysztof Duda
- Marcin Dziuba
- Grzegorz Gajewski
- Jacek Gdański
- Mirosław Grabarczyk
- Szymon Gumularz
- Bartłomiej Heberla
- Artur Jakubiec
- Krzysztof Jakubowski
- Igor Janik
- Paweł Jaracz
- Łukasz Jarmuła
- Radosław Jedynak
- Marcin Kamiński
- Marcel Kanarek
- Robert Kempiński
- Maciej Klekowski
- Michał Krasenkow
- Marcin Krzyżanowski
- Robert Kuczyński
- Adam Kuligowski
- Arkadiusz Leniart
- Bartłomiej Macieja
- Mieczysław Najdorf
- Tomasz Markowski
- Michał Matuszewski
- Aleksander Miśta
- Kamil Mitoń
- Wojciech Moranda
- Grzegorz Nasuta
- Michał Olszewski
- Zbigniew Pakleza
- Kacper Piorun
- Akiba Rubinstein
- Daniel Sadzikowski
- Włodzimierz Schmidt
- Bartosz Soćko
- Monika Soćko
- Jacek Stopa
- Bogdan Śliwa
- Dariusz Świercz
- Ksawery Tartakower
- Marcin Tazbir
- Paweł Teclaf
- Jacek Tomczak
- Tomasz Warakomski
- Oskar Wieczorek
- Radosław Wojtaszek
- Jurij Zezulkin
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- List of Polish chess masters
- Category:Polish chess players