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Elmar Magerramov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elmar Magerramov
Country Azerbaijan
Born (1958-04-10) April 10, 1958 (age 66)
Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union
TitleGrandmaster (1992)
FIDE rating2515 (November 2024)
Peak rating2580 (July 1994)[1]
Peak rankingNo. 76 (July 1991)

Elmar Magerramov (Azerbaijani: Elmar Məhərrəmov; Russian: Эльмар Магеррамов; born April 10, 1958, in Baku, Azerbaijan) is an Azerbaijani chess grandmaster.

Career

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In 1991, he shared first place in the last USSR Chess Championship, with Artashes Minasian, losing the title on tiebreaks. In 1992, Magerramov became the first chess Grandmaster in the history of Azerbaijan.

He has played with Kasparov several training matches and tournament games, with an overall score of + 4–8 = 7.[2]

Along with his playing career, Elmar had an extensive coaching career as well. He has been National Team Coach of Tunis, coached Garry Kasparov during 1984 World Chess Championship and Maia Chiburdanidze during 1991 Women's Chess World Championship.[2]

Magerramov is currently living in UAE. He is married and has two sons. His main hobbies apart from chess are mathematics and music.[2] He plays on the Internet Chess Club (ICC) under the pseudonym "El-Marmalade".

The ninth chapter of Tibor Karolyi's 2009 book Genius in the Background is devoted to him.

References

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  1. ^ "FIDE rating history: Magerramov, Elmar". OlimpBase. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Karolyi, Tibor; Aplin, Nick (2009). "9". Genius in the Background. Quality Chess. pp. 279–318. ISBN 978-1-906552-37-4.

Further reading

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