Atanas Kolev
Atanas Kolev | |
---|---|
Country | Bulgaria |
Born | (1967-07-15) July 15, 1967 (age 57) Botevgrad, Bulgaria |
Title | Grandmaster (1993) |
FIDE rating | 2529 (September 2024) |
Peak rating | 2604 (July 2012) |
Atanas Kolev (Bulgarian: Атанас Колев; born July 15, 1967) is a Bulgarian Grandmaster of chess. His highest rating was in July 2012 at 2604 points.[1] Kolev was the coach of the Bulgarian women's national chess team 2004–2006.[2] Kolev and fellow Bulgarian grandmaster Kiril Georgiev are co-authors of the best-seller The Sharpest Sicilian, a book about the Najdorf Variation of the Sicilian Defense, which was published in 2007. Five years after the first edition, the book was completely rewritten and redesigned and "The Sharpest Sicilian 2012" was published in October 2012. Atanas and Macedonian grandmaster Trajko Nedev are co-authors of The Easiest Sicilian, a book about the Sveshnikov Variation of the Sicilian, which was published in 2008.[3]
He won the 33rd Plovdiv Open 2011, shared first place with GM Cheparinov at Albena Open 2011, won the 20th annual Midway Championship in Chicago 2011, and the First Annual International Chess Festival in Detroit 2011. He won five of the six tournaments he played in 2011 and by the end of that year he had accomplished a remarkable career milestone: he had won (or shared first place) 60 international chess tournaments (1988–2011, active chess tournaments included).
References
External links
- Official website
- Atanas Kolev rating card at FIDE
- Atanas Kolev player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Book Review of The Sharpest Sicilian by John Watson
- Book Review of The Easiest Sicilian by Anthony Rotella
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- G. Petar Arnaudov
- Milko Bobotsov
- Dejan Bojkov
- Boris Chatalbashev
- Ivan Cheparinov
- Aleksander Delchev
- Radoslav Dimitrov
- Vladimir Dimitrov
- Dimitar Donchev [Wikidata]
- Petar Drenchev
- Ivajlo Enchev [ru]
- Evgenij Ermenkov
- Petar Genov
- Kiril Georgiev
- Krum Georgiev
- Vladimir Georgiev
- Grigor Grigorov [uk; pl; bg]
- Ventzislav Inkiov
- Valentin Iotov
- Evgeni Janev [Wikidata]
- Nino Kirov
- Atanas Kolev
- Valentin Lukov [Wikidata]
- Momchil Nikolov
- Nikolaj Ninov [bg; nl; ru]
- Nikola Padevsky
- Momchil Petkov
- Vladimir Petkov
- Marijan Petrov [Wikidata]
- Martin Petrov
- Milko Popchev
- Ivan Radulov
- Yulian Radulski
- Krasimir Rusev [Wikidata]
- Vasil Spasov
- Luben Spasov
- Nikola Spiridonov
- Antoaneta Stefanova
- Todor Todorov [uk; pl]
- Veselin Topalov
- Georgi Tringov
- Milen Vasilev [bg; pl; uk]
- Petar Velikov
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- Category:Bulgarian chess players
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