Rustam Kasimdzhanov

From Chesspedia, the Free Chess Encyclopedia.

Rustam Kasimdzhanov (Rustam Qosimjonov in Uzbek, born December 5, 1979) is a chess grandmaster from Uzbekistan. In the Uzbek language, which since 1992 has officially used Latin script, his name is written "Qosimjonov". He was the FIDE world champion during 2004-05.

His best results include first in the 1998 Asian Championship, second in the World Junior Chess Championship in 1999, first at Essen 2001, first at Pamplona 2002 (winning a blitz playoff against Viktor Bologan after both had finished the main tournament on 3.5/6), first with 8/9 at the Vlissingen Open 2003, joint first with Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu with 6/9 at Pune 2005, a bronze-medal winning 9.5/12 performance on board one for his country at the 2000 Chess Olympiad and runner-up in the FIDE World Cup in 2002 (losing to Viswanathan Anand in the final). He has played in the prestigious Wijk aan Zee tournament twice, but did not perform well either time: in 1999 he finished 11th of 14 with 5/13, in 2002 he finished 13th of 14 with 4.5/13. He made his first appearance at Linares in 2005, finishing tied last with 4/12.

In the FIDE World Chess Championship 2004, Kasimdzhanov unexpectedly made his way through to the final, winning mini-matches against Alejandro Ramirez, Ehsan Ghaem Maghami, Vasily Ivanchuk, Zoltan Almasi, Alexander Grischuk and Veselin Topalov to meet Michael Adams to play for the title and the right to face world number one Garry Kasparov in a match.

In the final six-game match of the Championship, both players won two games, making a tie-break of rapid games necessary. Kasimdzhanov won the first game with black, after having been in a difficult position. By drawing the second game he became the new FIDE champion.

In the April 2005 FIDE list, Kasimdzhanov had an Elo rating of 2670, making him number 33 in the world and Uzbekistan's number one. He has been rated as high as 2706 (in the October 2001 list). On June 23, 2005, in the ABC Times Square studios, the AI Accoona Toolbar driven by a Fritz 9 prototype, drew against him.

In September-October 2005 Kasimdzhanov played in the FIDE World Chess Championship 2005 (San Luis 2005), where he tied with Michael Adams for 6-7 place.

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Preceded by:
Ruslan Ponomariov
FIDE World Chess Champion
2004–2005
Succeeded by:
Veselin Topalov
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