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Vladimir Burmakin | |
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![]() Burmakin in 2010 | |
Country | Soviet Union → Russia |
Born | Murmansk, Soviet Union | 6 June 1967
Title | Grandmaster (1994) |
FIDE rating | 2483 (July 2024) |
Peak rating | 2627 (July 2009) |
Vladimir Burmakin (born 6 June 1967) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 1994.
In 1994 he tied for 3rd-5th places in the Russian championship at Elista, with Sergei Rublevsky and Vasily Yemelin ( Peter Svidler won, Mikhail Ulibin was second).
Burmakin won or shared first place in several tournaments:
Burmakin played for Russia in the European Senior Team Chess Championship 2019 in the 50+ division. His team won the gold medal. [1]
Burmakin is an expert of the Caro-Kann defence, playing it almost invariably in his games against 1. e4; against 1. d4 he usually adopts the Chebanenko Variation of the Slav defence.
![]() |
Vladimir Burmakin | |
---|---|
![]() Burmakin in 2010 | |
Country | Soviet Union → Russia |
Born | Murmansk, Soviet Union | 6 June 1967
Title | Grandmaster (1994) |
FIDE rating | 2483 (July 2024) |
Peak rating | 2627 (July 2009) |
Vladimir Burmakin (born 6 June 1967) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 1994.
In 1994 he tied for 3rd-5th places in the Russian championship at Elista, with Sergei Rublevsky and Vasily Yemelin ( Peter Svidler won, Mikhail Ulibin was second).
Burmakin won or shared first place in several tournaments:
Burmakin played for Russia in the European Senior Team Chess Championship 2019 in the 50+ division. His team won the gold medal. [1]
Burmakin is an expert of the Caro-Kann defence, playing it almost invariably in his games against 1. e4; against 1. d4 he usually adopts the Chebanenko Variation of the Slav defence.