Maxim Dlugy

Maxim Alexandrovich Dlugy[1][2] (born January 29, 1966) is an American chess player with the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM).[3] He was born in Moscow, USSR, and arrived with his family in the United States in 1977. He was awarded the International Master (IM) title in 1982.[3] He won the World Junior Chess Championship in 1985.[4] He was awarded the Grandmaster title in 1986 for his result at the World Chess Olympiad in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, where he played on the U.S. team that was in first place going into the last round.[3][5] Always a strong speed chess player, Dlugy was formerly ranked number one in the world by the World Blitz Chess Association.

Maxim Dlugy
Dlugy at the press room of the World Chess Championship 2012, Moscow
Full nameMaxim Alexandrovich Dlugy
Country United States
Born (1966-01-29) January 29, 1966
Moscow, Soviet Union
TitleGrandmaster (1986)
FIDE rating2513 (May 2022)
Peak rating2570 (January 1989)

In 1984 he finished 3rd in the U.S. Chess Championship. He was 2nd= in New York 1985, 2nd= in Clichy 1986–87 and 3rd= in the 1987 U.S. Chess Championship. He graduated from the Dalton School in New York City in 1984.[6]

He was elected president of the United States Chess Federation in 1990.

Dlugy worked on Wall Street. He became a principal of the Russian Growth Fund, a hedge fund. Former world chess champion Garry Kasparov was formerly associated with Dlugy's Russian Growth Fund.

In April 2005, Dlugy was arrested at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport and charged with embezzlement. He was held in prison for eight months while his case was investigated but then acquitted of all charges.[7][6]

In March 2006, after returning to the US, Dlugy received a special invitation to play in the U.S. Chess Championship in San Diego, California. He achieved a plus score.

Dlugy was one of the campaign managers along with Garry Kasparov for Anatoly Karpov when he ran for FIDE President in Khanty-Mansiysk, Siberia in 2010.

On April 28, 2015, Dlugy lost a 3-minute blitz game to an amateur 12-year-old Mumbai boy, Shrayan ‘Sunny’ Majumder, who went by the alias of 'Trickymate' with an Azerbaijan flag due to his aversion to publicity.[8] Majumder, who was rated 1400 Elo against Dlugy's 3131, made an unusual sequences of move in the Budapest Gambit (b6 and Bb7), sacrificing his bishop. Sensing a trap, Dlugy nevertheless decided to satiate his curiosity, only to get his queen trapped before eventually realizing he was about to be checkmated. The subsequent game received 1.1 million views on YouTube and received more than 23,000 upvotes on Reddit.[9][10]

References

  1. "Персона Дня - МАКСИМ ДЛУГИ" [Person of the Day - Maxim Dlugy]. ruchess.ru (in Russian). Russian Chess Federation. January 29, 2021. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
  2. "Article on Dlugy's arrest in Russia". nevod.ru. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
  3. "Dlugy, Maxim". FIDE.com.
  4. "Former Champions". 2008 World Junior Chess Championship.
  5. "27th Chess Olympiad: Dubai 1986". OlimpBase.org.
  6. "GM Max Dlugy aquitted [sic] in $9 million embezzlement charge". Chess News. December 21, 2005. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  7. Holdsworth, Nick (June 4, 2005). "From checkmate to inmate: chess champion held on fraud charges". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on July 6, 2016. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  8. "Meet TrickyMate, the 12-year Old Genius Indian Chess Player Who Defeated Grandmaster Max Dlugy | The Bayside Journal". web.archive.org. November 24, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  9. GM Max Dlugy plays Banter Blitz games on Chessclub.com - 2015-04-28, retrieved April 23, 2022
  10. "Chess grandmaster gets tricked into a checkmate by an amateur with the username :"Trickymate"".
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