Nils Grandelius

Nils Grandelius

Altibox Norway Chess 2016
Country Sweden
Born (1993-06-03) June 3, 1993
Lund, Sweden
Title Grandmaster
FIDE rating 2643 (December 2016)
Peak rating 2649 (April 2016)

Nils Grandelius (born June 3, 1993 in Lund)[1] is a Swedish chess grandmaster.

He became a FIDE master in 2007, an International Master in 2008 and a Grandmaster (GM) in 2010.

In 2008, Grandelius tied for second place, placing fourth on countback, in the Under-16 European Youth Championship.[2] In the same year, he took clear first place in the Olomouc Open in Czech Republic with a score of 6.5 points out of 9 games;[3] thanks to this result, he also achieved his first GM norm. In the following year's edition, he placed equal first with the same score, placing second on tiebreak, and gained the second GM norm.[4] He achieved the GM title by earning the third and final norm in the 40th Bosna International Tournament[5] in Sarajevo, in which he finished fifteenth, the first among juniors.[6]

He won the bronze medal at the 2010 World Under-18 Championship.[7]

Grandelius won the 2011 European Under-18 Championship in Albena, Bulgaria.[8]

In May 2012, he placed third in the 20th Sigeman & Co Chess Tournament in Malmö, behind the winner Fabiano Caruana and the runner-up Peter Leko.[9] Later that year, in August 2012, he placed equal third (fourth on tiebreak) in the World Junior Championship in Athens.[10]

In July 2015, he won the Swedish Chess Championship by defeating Emanuel Berg in a playoff match, after they both tied for first on 6.5/9.[11]

In August 2015, Grandelius won the 22nd Abu Dhabi Masters tournament, edging out on tiebreak Martyn Kravtsiv, Baadur Jobava, Alexander Areshchenko and Richard Rapport.[12][13]

In March 2016, Grandelius won a four-player tournament for the last place in the Norway Chess 2016 field, against the norwegian grandmasters Jon Ludvig Hammer and Aryan Tari, and the Women's World Champion GM Hou Yifan. It was a double round robin with the first leg being standard time control and scored 3-1-0 and the second leg scored 2-1-0 with rapid time control (25+10). This will be his first appearance at a major chess event.[14]

Grandelius has been playing for the Swedish national team at the Chess Olympiads since 2010 and at the European Team Chess Championships since 2011.

He has been trained by Evgenij Agrest since 2013.[15]

He was second for Magnus Carlsen for World Chess Championship 2016. [16]

Notes


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.