Maxime Lagarde
Maxime Lagarde | |
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Lagarde in 2021 | |
Country | France |
Born | 16 March 1994 (1994-03-16) (age 30) Niort, Deux-Sèvres, France |
Title | Grandmaster (2013) |
FIDE rating | 2604 (June 2024) |
Peak rating | 2659 (February 2020) |
Peak ranking | No. 82 (February 2020) |
Maxime Lagarde (born 16 March 1994) is a French chess grandmaster. He won the French Chess Championship in 2019.
Chess career
Born in 1994, Lagarde earned his international master title in 2011[1] and his grandmaster title in 2013.[2]
Lagarde finished second at the 2018 Reykjavik Open,[3] scoring 7/9 (+6–1=2).[4] He won the French Chess Championship in 2019. He placed joint-first with 6/9 (+4–1=4), and defeated Laurent Fressinet on tiebreak to take the title.[5]
He won the 6th Purtichju Open in 2019.[6]
In 2020, Lagarde won the 22nd Trieste Festival.[7]
References
- ^ 82nd FIDE Congress 2011, Krakow, 15-22 October, POL FIDE
- ^ 2nd quarter Presidential Board Meeting 2013, 4-7 May, Baku, AZE FIDE
- ^ "GAMMA Reykjavik Open 2018 - Bobby Fischer Memorial". Chess Results. 15 March 2018.
- ^ "GAMMA Reykjavik Open 2018 - Bobby Fischer Memorial: Lagarde Maxime". Chess Results. 15 March 2018.
- ^ Khadilkar, Dhananjay (27 August 2019). "Lagarde, Guichard bag French national titles in thrilling finale". ChessBase.
- ^ "6th Purtichju Open 2019 2019 - 365Chess.com Tournaments". www.365chess.com. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
- ^ "The Week in Chess 1348". theweekinchess.com. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
External links
- Maxime Lagarde rating card at FIDE
- Maxime Lagarde player profile at Chess.com
- Maxime Lagarde player profile and games at Chessgames.com
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French Grandmasters
Chess players for France with the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM)
- Ossip Bernstein
- Nicolas Rossolimo
- Savielly Tartakower
none
- Anthony Kosten
- Joël Lautier
- Olivier Renet
- Manuel Apicella
- Mircea-Sergiu Lupu
- Éric Prié
- Marc Santo-Roman
- Vladislav Tkachiev
- Pavel Tregubov
- Andrei Shchekachev
- Étienne Bacrot
- Christian Bauer
- Jean-Marc Degraeve
- David Marciano [fr; ru]
- Gilles Mirallès
- Igor-Alexandre Nataf
- Eloi Relange
- Darko Anić
- Andrei Sokolov
- Laurent Fressinet
- Arnaud Hauchard
- Vladimir Lazarev
- Jean-Luc Chabanon
- Robert Fontaine
- Cyril Marcelin
- Emmanuel Bricard
- Maxime Vachier-Lagrave
- Sébastien Feller
- Sébastien Mazé
- Thal Abergel
- Matthieu Cornette
- Marie Sebag
- Romain Édouard
- François Fargère
- Tigran Gharamian
- Fabien Libiszewski
- Jean-Pierre Le Roux
- Anthony Wirig
- Aliaksei Charnushevich
- Yannick Gozzoli
- Maxime Lagarde
- Laurent Guidarelli
- Jean-Noël Riff
- Adrien Demuth
- Jonathan Dourerassou
- Jules Moussard
- Axel Delorme
- Paul Velten
- Alireza Firouzja
- Gabriel Flom
- Marc'Andria Maurizzi
- Pierre Bailet
- Clovis Vernay
- Pierre Laurent-Paoli
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- Category:French chess players
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