Semen Dvoirys | |
---|---|
Full name | Semyon Isaakovich Dvoirys |
Country | Soviet Union → Russia |
Born | Zhmerynka, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union [1] | 2 November 1958
Title | Grandmaster (1990) |
FIDE rating | 2469 (June 2024) |
Peak rating | 2615 (July 1997) |
Peak ranking | No. 51 (July 1997) |
Semen Isaakovich Dvoirys [1] ( Russian: Семён Исаакович Двойрис, romanized: Semyon Isaakovich Dvoyris; born 2 November 1958) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title Grandmaster by FIDE in 1990.
Dvoirys competed in the 1993 Interzonal tournament, held in Biel. [2] In 2000, he took part in the inaugural Anatoly Karpov International tournament, a category 14 round-robin tournament in Poikovsky, Russia: he scored 3½ points from 9 games, tying for 7th-8th places. [3]
In 2001, he tied for 1st–2nd places with Alexey Korotylev at Geneva Open. [4] In 2010, he won the Izmailov Memorial tournament in Tomsk, [5] tied for 1st-5th places in the A2 group of the Aeroflot Open with Aleksei Pridorozhni, Igor Glek, Sergey Pavlov and Mikhail Panarin, [6] [7] and tied for 1st–4th with Sergei Yudin, Pavel Smirnov and Sergei Iskusnyh at Pavlodar. [8] In 2011 he came first in the Lev Polugaevsky Memorial tournament in Chelyabinsk. [9]
Dvoirys played for the victorious team Russia 1 at the 2014 European Senior Team Chess Championship in Šibenik. He scored 6½/9 playing on the first board. [10] [11]
He competed at the 2017 Maccabiah Games. [12]
Semen Dvoirys | |
---|---|
Full name | Semyon Isaakovich Dvoirys |
Country | Soviet Union → Russia |
Born | Zhmerynka, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union [1] | 2 November 1958
Title | Grandmaster (1990) |
FIDE rating | 2469 (June 2024) |
Peak rating | 2615 (July 1997) |
Peak ranking | No. 51 (July 1997) |
Semen Isaakovich Dvoirys [1] ( Russian: Семён Исаакович Двойрис, romanized: Semyon Isaakovich Dvoyris; born 2 November 1958) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title Grandmaster by FIDE in 1990.
Dvoirys competed in the 1993 Interzonal tournament, held in Biel. [2] In 2000, he took part in the inaugural Anatoly Karpov International tournament, a category 14 round-robin tournament in Poikovsky, Russia: he scored 3½ points from 9 games, tying for 7th-8th places. [3]
In 2001, he tied for 1st–2nd places with Alexey Korotylev at Geneva Open. [4] In 2010, he won the Izmailov Memorial tournament in Tomsk, [5] tied for 1st-5th places in the A2 group of the Aeroflot Open with Aleksei Pridorozhni, Igor Glek, Sergey Pavlov and Mikhail Panarin, [6] [7] and tied for 1st–4th with Sergei Yudin, Pavel Smirnov and Sergei Iskusnyh at Pavlodar. [8] In 2011 he came first in the Lev Polugaevsky Memorial tournament in Chelyabinsk. [9]
Dvoirys played for the victorious team Russia 1 at the 2014 European Senior Team Chess Championship in Šibenik. He scored 6½/9 playing on the first board. [10] [11]
He competed at the 2017 Maccabiah Games. [12]