Sébastien Mazé
Sébastien Mazé | |
---|---|
Mazé at the European Team Championship, Warsaw 2013 | |
Country | France |
Born | (1984-02-08) 8 February 1984 (age 40) Paris, France |
Title | Grandmaster (2007) |
FIDE rating | 2553 (August 2024) |
Peak rating | 2628 (July 2016) |
Sébastien Mazé (born 8 February 1984) is a French chess player and trainer. He holds the title of Grandmaster, which FIDE awarded him in 2007.
Chess career
Born in Paris, he learned to play chess from his mother at the age of 8.[1] He achieved the titles of International Master in 2003 and Grandmaster in 2007. Mazé finished second to Russian grandmaster Evgeny Alekseev in the Master open tournament of the Biel Chess Festival in 2008, and followed it up with fourth place at the French championship (won by Étienne Bacrot). This qualified him from the French national team at the Olympiad in Dresden that year, where he scored 3½/6. In 2010, he finished in a tie for first place in the Master open at Biel with Alexander Riazantsev, Nadezhda Kosintseva, Vitali Golod, Leonid Kritz, Sébastien Feller and Christian Bauer, finishing seventh on tiebreak.[2] Mazé shared first place with Étienne Bacrot in the London Chess Classic FIDE Open in 2016.[3] The next year, he tied for first again in the same tournament, this time with Gabriel Sargissian and Hrant Melkumyan.[4]
Trainer
In 2009 and 2010, he acted as second to Étienne Bacrot in the tournaments at Elista, Dortmund and Nanjing. Since 2011 he has been a contributor to the book series Chess Evolution.[5]
He was appointed captain of the French national team in 2013, leading them to a silver medal at the European Team Chess Championship in Warsaw, held in that year.[6]
References
- ^ Coudrette, Olivier (16 February 2007). "Interviews d'une personnalité des échecs". ECHECS Mag (in French). Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ^ "43rd Biel Chess Festival: Master Open". ChessBase. 31 July 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ^ Chevannes, Sabrina (30 December 2016). "Rencontrez Etienne – Le Champion". Chess News. ChessBase. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ^ Schulz, André (22 December 2017). "Lookback: The British K.O. and LCC Open". Chess News. ChessBase. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
- ^ Chess Evolution - The Complete Series, New In Chess
- ^ "Équipe de France : interview de Sébastien Mazé". Echecs 64 (in French). 1 December 2013. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
External links
- Sebastien Maze rating card at FIDE
- Sebastien Maze player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Sebastien Maze chess games at 365Chess.com
- Sébastien Mazé Chess Olympiad record at OlimpBase.org
- v
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- 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