Igor Miladinović (chess player)
Igor Miladinović Игор Миладиновић | |
---|---|
Country | Yugoslavia (until 1995) Greece (1995–2006) Serbia (since 2006) |
Born | (1974-01-25) January 25, 1974 (age 50) Niš, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia |
Title | Grandmaster (1993) |
FIDE rating | 2502 (September 2024) |
Peak rating | 2630 (July 2004) |
Peak ranking | No. 65 (July 2004) |
Igor Miladinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Игор Миладиновић; born 25 January 1974) is a Serbian chess grandmaster.[1]
Chess career
Miladinović won the 1993 World Junior Chess Championship and at the end of the year was declared athlete of the Year in FR Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro). In 1994 he played for FR Yugoslavia in the Moscow Olympiad, winning a bronze medal on 4th board. Around 1995 he moved to Greece, playing for that country in four Olympiads from 1996 to 2002. His request to again represent Serbia & Montenegro was granted by FIDE on 5 October 2005.[2]
Miladinović was co-winner along with Joël Lautier, winning his individual game against the latter in the 6th edition of the strong invitation tournament Sigeman & Co. at Malmö 1998.
He won the 46th edition of the traditional Reggio Emilia chess tournament 2003/04 outright.
Miladinović later returned to Serbia and is affiliated with the Serbian Chess Federation.
He once was married to Woman Grandmaster Anna-Maria Botsari.
References
External links
- Igor Miladinovic player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Igor Miladinović Chess Olympiad record at OlimpBase.org
- Rating data at chess.vrsac.com at the Wayback Machine (archived 2006-10-17)
Awards | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Slobodan Branković | The Best Athlete of FR Yugoslavia 1993 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- Dejan Antić
- Suat Atalık
- Dragan Barlov
- Boban Bogosavljević
- Slaviša Brenjo
- Luka Budisavljević
- Goran Čabrilo
- Branko Damljanović
- Aleksander Delchev
- Stefan Đurić
- Siniša Dražić
- Zlatko Ilinčić
- Aleksandar Inđić
- Ivan Ivanišević
- Mikhail Ivanov
- Velimir Ivić
- Veljko Jeremić
- Goran A. Kosanović
- Vladimir G. Kostić
- Aleksandar Kovačević
- Borko Lajthajm
- Miroljub Lazić
- Ljubomir Ljubojević
- Slavoljub Marjanović
- Miroslav Marković
- Robert Markuš
- Igor Miladinović
- Danilo Milanović
- Miroslav D. Miljković
- Nikola Nestorović
- Stanimir Nikolić
- Miša Pap
- Miloš Pavlović
- Miloš Perunović
- Dejan Pikula
- Dušan Popović
- Petar Popović
- Alexandr Predke
- Dušan Rajković
- Miloje Ratković
- Nenad Ristić
- Miloš Roganović
- Alexey Sarana
- Miodrag R. Savić
- Nikola Sedlak
- Dragan Šolak
- Mihajlo Stojanović
- Aleksa Striković
- Branko Tadić
- Viacheslav Tilicheev
- Goran M. Todorović
- Bojan Vučković
- Milan Zajić
- Boško Abramović
- Dragoljub M. Ćirić
- Svetozar Gligorić
- Slobodan Martinović
- Aleksandar Matanović
- Milan Matulović
- Dragan Paunović
- Vladimir Raičević
- Radoslav Simić
- Miroslav Tošić
- Dragoljub Velimirović
- Borislav Ivkov
- See also: Category:Serbian chess players
- Category:Serbian female chess players
This biographical article relating to a Serbian chess figure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e