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Trotzky Augusto Yepez Obando

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Trotzky Augusto Yepez Obando
CountryEcuador
Born(1940-01-17)17 January 1940
San Gabriel, Carchi, Ecuador
Died2 August 2010(2010-08-02) (aged 70)
Quito, Ecuador
TitleNational Master
Peak rating2250 (January 1979)

Trotzky Augusto Yepez Obando (January 17, 1940 – August 2, 2010) was an Ecuadorian chess player.

Yepez was born in San Gabriel, Carchi, on January 17, 1940. Second son of Rodolfo Yepez and Otilia Obando, he was an outstanding student in his classrooms. Together with his two brothers he moved to Quito in 1954, where he first attended "Instituto Nacional Mejía" High School, and later the Central University of Ecuador, where he gained his engineer degree in 1964. The University Council awarded him with a gold medal for his achievements and distinguished him with the title of "the best student of all times". Married with Genoveva Navarrete, he had two daughters, Vivian and Yarka.

Since childhood and throughout his life, chess was his great passion. His father taught him the first lessons using an antique chess game inherited from his grandmother Amada Guerrero Paez. His passion grew bigger through the time while studying by himself the Grand Masters Games and the FIDE Informants, which eventually led him to achieve the National Chess Championship twice, in September 1968,[1] and 1982, as well as the second place in the National Championship of November 1983. He was granted with the FIDE's title of National Master with a registered score of 2180.[2] Yepez was part of the Ecuadorian delegation in several international Championships and Tournaments: 16th Chess Olympiad of Tel Aviv 1964, 17th Chess Olympiad of Havana 1966, 18th Chess Olympiad of Lugano 1968, Open Tournament of Nice - 1974 (Capitan), Panamerican Tournament of Havana, 1968, II Tournament "Apertura" - Bogotá, 1970, Tournament "Ecopetrol - El Tiempo" - Bogotá, 1970, VIII Caribbean and Central America Zone Tournament FIDE, Bogotá – 1972.[3] He was also an active participant in local tournaments, the most important: National Tournament of "Secretaria de Integracion Colombo - Ecuatoriana", First Place - April 11, 1970; International Tournament "Ciudad de Quito" - Concentración Deportiva de Pichincha,[4] November 1975 ; Tournament "Simón Bolívar" - Club de Ajedrez "El Nacional", First Place - 1975; International Tournament Yacht Club Guayas - Federación Deportiva del Guayas, 1977; Open Tournament - "Comité de Ajedrez de Pichincha", Second Place - First Category, Azoguez, July 1987; Open Tournament - Filanbanco, First Place - Portoviejo, June 1993.

Notable achievements

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Yepez has contributed to the Ecuadorian chess history with remarkable distinctions and particular style. His first national Championship, was held after a nine-hour match, when he defeated Francisco Aguirre with a final score of 2½–½, using the Grünfeld Defence.[5] Another outstanding fact, was registered in the Tournament "Ecopetrol - El Tiempo", where Yepez recorded a historic draw by agreement with Henrique Costa Mecking. This match was one of the most memorable of his career.[according to whom?][6] In the same event, he gained remarkable victories over Carlos Cuartas "El Mago" (National Colombian Champion), and Miguel Cuéllar in the well remembered 84-movement and nine-hour match, which was the longest of the contest.[7][8]

In an effort to promote chess locally, Yepez and friends founded the "Club de Ajedrez Quito". During its existence, the Club organized some local tournaments with the best national chess players at the time, but finally it was closed due to lack of financial support.

In his last days, while struggling against the hardships of his illness, he managed to play his last matches in bed, leaving a chess book on his night table marked in a certain page with a little chess horse just a few days before his death on August 2, 2010.

The "Concentracion Deportiva de Pichincha" paid him homage "In Memoriam" with the 2010 Quito tournament "XV Prix Nacional de Ajedrez - Cuarta Parada Ing. Trotzky Yepez",[9] and by naming the Chess School Audiovisual room after him.

References

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  1. ^ "Costa Rica en el centroamericano y del Caribe de ajedrez en Bogotá". La Nación. February 22, 1972. p. 50. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  2. ^ "International Chess Federation".
  3. ^ Diario El Tiempo – Colombia, February 27, 1972. Diario El Tiempo – Colombia, March 1, 1972. Diario El Tiempo – Colombia, March 7, 1972. Diario El Espectador - Colombia, March 2, 1972. Diario El Espectador - Colombia, March 4, 1972. Diario El Comercio – Ecuador, 1972
  4. ^ Diario El Comercio – Ecuador, November 22, 1975.
  5. ^ Diario El Telégrafo - Ecuador, September 29, 1968. Diario El Tiempo – Colombia, 1968. Revista Estadio, Ecuador, October 1968.
  6. ^ Diario El Comercio, Ecuador, February 2, 1970. Diario El Tiempo, Colombia, February 5, 1970.
  7. ^ Diario El Tiempo, Colombia, February 6, 1970.
  8. ^ Diario El Espectador, Colombia, February 1, 1970. Diario El Tiempo, Colombia, February 10, 1970. Diario El Comercio, Ecuador, February 2, 1970.
  9. ^ "La cuarta parada fue en Quito". La Hora. August 23, 2010. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
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