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Max Illingworth

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Country
  
Australia

Peak rating
  
2517

Name
  
Max Illingworth

FIDE rating
  
2517 (January 2016)

Title
  
International Master


Max Illingworth Max Illingworth becomes Australian Champion Chessdom

Born
  
5 November 1992 (age 31) Sydney, Australia (
1992-11-05
)

Im max illingworth at the 2014 australian chess championships


Max Illingworth (born 5 November 1992, Sydney) is an Australian chess Grandmaster, coach and writer. He became a FIDE Master (FM) in 2010, an IM in 2012, a FIDE Trainer in 2014 and a GM in 2016. He is the fifth Australian Grandmaster.

Contents

Max Illingworth FIDE Master Max Illingworth before the first round YouTube

gm nigel short vs im max illingworth chess blitz playchess com


Chess career

Max Illingworth enchessbasecomPortals4filesnews2014events

Illingworth started playing competitive chess at the age of nine, and represented Australia in the 2007 World Youth Olympiad.

He has competed in six Oceania Chess Championship events in 2007 (Fiji), 2009 (Gold Coast), 2011 (Rotorua), 2012 (Queenstown), 2013 (Nadi) and 2015 (Sydney). His best result was finishing =1st with a score of 7½/9 in the 2015 event. Illingworth won the Steiner Medal (for the Australian Player of the Year) in 2011 and 2012.

Max Illingworth Max Illingworth chess games and profile ChessDBcom

Illingworth scored 6/9 to finish =3rd at the 2009 Commonwealth Chess Championship in Singapore.

Max Illingworth Max Illingworth chess games and profile ChessDBcom

He finished =6th at the 2011 Thailand Open, scored 7/9 and came equal first (scoring a grandmaster norm) at the September 2011 First Saturday GM tournament, and scored 7/10 for Australia at the 2012 Chess Olympiad in Istanbul. These results earned him the IM title and established him as one of Australia's strongest chess players.

Max Illingworth Illingworth Chess CoachingImprovement with passion Max

Illingworth won the MCC Cup Weekender 2012 with a score of 8½/9. He has also won the New South Wales State Championship for three consecutive years (2011–13) and tied for first place in the 2011 and 2013 NSW Open.

Illingworth tied for second place in the 2013 Australian Open with a score of 8½/11 and also came equal second in the 2013 Malaysian Open with a score of 7/9.

Illingworth won the 2014 Australian Chess Championship in Springvale with a score of 8/11. He scored 6½/9 for Australia at the 2014 Chess Olympiad in Tromso and obtained his second grandmaster norm at the September 2014 First Saturday GM Tournament, scoring 7/9 and first place. Strong recent domestic results include winning the 2014 MCC Hjorth Open with a score of 9/9, finishing second with an 8/9 score in the 2015 MCC Hjorth Open and placing =2nd in the 2015 Australian Open.

In January 2017 Illingworth won the Australian Open Championship in Brisbane.

Internationally, Illingworth is known as a chess theoretician, as a contributor to the Australian chess magazine 50 Moves and the New In Chess Yearbook. He also writes surveys for the Chessbase Magazine as well as opening articles for ChessPublishing. Illingworth is a professional chess coach, who has worked with several of Australia's most promising junior players.

References

Max Illingworth Wikipedia