Mikhail Golubev (born 30 May 1970, Odessa) is a Ukrainian chess Grandmaster (1996), journalist and author.
Mikhail Golubev | |
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Full name | Михаил Голубев |
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Born | (1970-05-30) May 30, 1970 (age 52) Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
Title | Grandmaster |
FIDE rating | 2461 (November 2022) |
Peak rating | 2570 (January 1995) |
Golubev began playing chess at the age of six and played his first tournament a year later in 1977.[1] He played several times in Ukrainian Chess Championship, and shared first place (with Valery Neverov) at Yalta 1996 (declared winner on better tie-breaks). In 2008, he won the Odessa Region Open Championship.[2]
Other successful performances include first place at Karviná 1992-93, first at Bucharest 2002, and first at Béthune 2002.[3]
According to the website Chessmetrics, at his peak in January 1995 Golubev's play was equivalent to a rating of 2598, and he was ranked number 151 in the world. His best single performance was at Biel open, 1995, where he scored 4 of 6 possible points (67%) against 2605-rated opposition, for a performance rating of 2643.[4]
According to the database Mega Database 2009, his best performances were Bethune 2002 (6,5 points on 7 possible and a 2768 performance), Karvina 1992–93 (8 points on 9 possible and a 2691 performance), Yalta 1996 (8,5 points on 11 possible and a 2663 performance) and Berlin 1993 (7 points on 9 possible and a 2662 performance).
In the November 2009 FIDE list, he has an Elo rating of 2492, making him Ukraine's number 71.
Golubev is as much a chess journalist as an author.[citation needed] In addition to being chess observer for the Ukrainian newspaper Komanda and making contributions to ChessBase.com, Chesspro and Chess-News.ru, he has contributed to over a 1000 editions of the online daily chess newspaper Chess Today.[5][6]
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