Emmanuel Bricard
French chess grandmaster (born 1966)
Emmanuel Bricard | |
---|---|
Country | France |
Born | (1966-05-04) May 4, 1966 (age 58) Versailles, Yvelines, France |
Title | Grandmaster (2005)[1] |
Peak rating | 2511 (September 2011) |
Emmanuel Bricard is a French chess grandmaster.
Chess career
Bricard began playing chess at age 12.[2]
Bricard won the 1993 French Chess Championship, and finished third in the championship of the following year, behind Marc Santo-Roman and Manuel Apicella.
Bricard is also a chess coach, teaching at the Nîmes chess club.[3] In October 2017, he traveled to Tahiti to tutor children in chess.[4][5]
References
- ^ "FIDE Title Application (GM)".
- ^ Duret, Tony (September 8, 2013). "LE PORTRAIT DU DIMANCHE Emmanuel Bricard, toujours un coup d'avance".
- ^ Arnaud, Fabien (July 6, 2019). "Nîmes: the Nîmes Exchequer launches a crowdfunding campaign to maintain its high level".
- ^ Bluet, Valentine (October 25, 2017). "EMMANUEL BRICARD, GRAND MAÎTRE D'ÉCHECS À TAHITI".
- ^ Barrais, Delphine (October 26, 2017). "Un grand maître international d'échecs à Tahiti".
External links
- Emmanuel Bricard rating card at FIDE
- v
- t
- e
French Grandmasters
Chess players for France with the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM)
- Ossip Bernstein
- Nicolas Rossolimo
- Savielly Tartakower
none
- Josif Dorfman
- Boris Spassky
- Anatoly Vaisser
- Bachar Kouatly
- 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