From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article uses algebraic notation to describe
chess moves.
- The native form of this personal name is Polgár
Judit. This article uses the Western name order.
|
Judit Polgár |

Photo by Gennadiy Titkov |
| Full name |
Judit Polgár |
| Country |
Hungary |
| Born |
July 23, 1976 (1976-07-23)
(age 33)
Budapest, Hungary |
| Title |
Grandmaster |
| FIDE rating |
2682
(No. 46 on the December 2010 FIDE ratings list) |
| Peak rating |
2735 (July 2005) |
Judit Polgár (born July 23, 1976) is a Hungarian chess grandmaster. She is by far the
strongest female chess player in history.[1] In
1991, she achieved the title of Grandmaster (GM) at the age of 15 years and
4 months. She was, at that time, the youngest person ever to do so.
Polgár is ranked number 46 in the world on the January 2010 FIDE rating list with an Elo
rating of 2682, the only woman on FIDE's Top 100 Players list,
and has been ranked as high as eighth.
Background
Judit Polgár is Jewish, and from
Budapest. Members of her
family perished in the Holocaust.
She and her two older sisters, Grandmaster Susan and International Master Sofia, were part of
an educational experiment carried out by their father László
Polgár, in an attempt to prove that children could make
exceptional achievements if trained in a specialist subject from a
very early age. "Geniuses are made, not born," was László's thesis.
He and his wife Klara educated their three daughters at home, with
chess as the specialist subject. However, chess was not taught to
the exclusion of everything else. Each of them has several diplomas
and speaks four to eight languages. Their father also taught his
three daughters the international language Esperanto.
The rest of Judit's family eventually emigrated (Sofia and her
parents to Israel and later to
Canada, Susan to New York), but she remained
in Hungary and married Gusztáv Font, a veterinary
surgeon from Budapest, whom she met through his caring for her
dog.[2]
Career
Polgár has always preferred men's events, making it clear from
the beginning that she wanted to become the true World Champion of Chess.
Trained in her early years by her sister Susan (who ultimately
became Women's World Champion herself) Polgár was a prodigy from an
early age. She first defeated an International Master (Dolfi
Drimer) at age 10,[3] and a
Grandmaster (Vladimir
Kovacevic) at age 11.[4]
Judit Polgar qualified as a Grandmaster in December 1991, aged
15 years 4 months, at the time the youngest ever. In 1993 she
confirmed her status as one of the world's leading players,
narrowly failing to qualify for the Candidates Tournaments at the
rival FIDE and PCA Interzonal tournaments.[5][6]
In 1994 she suffered a controversial defeat at the hands of
then-world champion Garry Kasparov, the highest-rated
chessplayer of all time. Kasparov changed his mind after making a
losing move and then made another move instead. According to chess
rules, once a player has released a piece s/he cannot make a
different move, so Kasparov should have been made to play his
original move. However, Polgár did not challenge this because she
says there were no witnesses and an arbiter was not around. She was
also unaware at the time that the re-move was caught on tape by a
television crew. The tournament director was criticised for not
forfeiting Kasparov when the videotape evidence was made available
to him.[7]
However, she won a rapid
chess game against Kasparov in 2002 and her official score
stands at +1 -11 =3 with Kasparov.
On the January 1996 FIDE ratings list, Polgár's 2675 rating made
her the number 10 ranked player in the world,[8] the
only woman ever to enter the world's Top Ten.
In 2003, Polgár scored one of her best results: an undefeated
clear second place in the Category 19 Corus
chess tournament in Wijk aan Zee, Netherlands, just a half-point behind
future World Champion Viswanathan Anand, and a full point
ahead of then-world champion Vladimir Kramnik.[9]
In 2004, Polgár took some time off from chess to give birth to
her son, Olivér. She was consequently considered inactive and not
listed on the January 2005 FIDE rating list. Her sister Susan
reactivated her playing status during this period, and temporarily
became ranked the world's number one woman player again.[10]
Polgár returned to chess at the prestigious Corus chess
tournament on January 15, 2005, scoring 7/13. She was therefore
relisted in the April 2005 FIDE rating list, gaining a few rating
points for her better-than-par performance at Corus. In May she
also had a better-than-par performance at a strong tournament in Sofia, Bulgaria, finishing third. This brought her to
her highest ever rating, 2735, in the July 2005 FIDE list and
enabled her to retain her spot as the eighth ranked player in the
world.
In September 2005, Polgár became the first woman to play for a
World Championship, at the FIDE World Chess
Championship 2005. However, she had a rare disappointing
performance, coming last out of the eight competitors. Nigel Short criticised
her poor opening repertoire, and some speculated that taking a year
off to have a baby may have left her rusty, despite her strong
performances in two tournaments earlier in the year.
She did not play at the 2006 Linares tournament because she was
pregnant again. On July 6, 2006, she gave birth to a girl,
Hanna.
In October 2006, Polgár scored another excellent result: tied
for first place in the Essent Chess Tournament, Hoogeveen,
Holland.[11] She
scored 4.5 out of 6 in a double round robin tournament that
included two wins against the world's top-rated player, Veselin
Topalov.
In May-June 2007 she played in the Candidates Tournament for the FIDE
World Chess Championship 2007. She was eliminated in the first
round, losing 3.5-2.5 to Evgeny Bareev. In November the same year
she took part in an historic event, the "Liga de Campeones"
tournament, played in Vitoria Gasteiz, Spain. That tournament was
conceived to put together all the living active world male chess
champions, plus Judit. She managed to score a very valuable fifty
percent, finishing third.
In January 2008 she competed in the Corus Wijk aan Zee
tournament, scoring a respectable 6.0/13.
In November 2008, Polgár played the number 2 board for the
Hungarian open ("men's") team in the 38th Chess Olympiad in Dresden, finishing 3.5/8.
Playing
style
Polgar is known for an aggressive playing style, preferring
openings like the Sicilian and, while a solid positional
player, excels in tactical positions.[12] She
has also spoken of appreciating the psychological aspect of chess.
She has stated preferring to learn an opponent's style so she can
play intentionally against him versus playing “objective”
chess.[13] In an
interview regarding playing against computers she said, “Chess is
30 to 40 per cent psychology. You don't have this when you play a
computer. I can't confuse it."[14]
Illustrative
games
- Polgar-GM Ferenc Berkes, Budapest 2003
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bg5 dxe4 5.Nxe4 Be7 6.Bxf6 Bxf6
7.Nf3 O-O 8.Qd2 Nd7 9.O-O-O Be7 10.Bd3 b6 11.Neg5 h6 12.Bh7+ Kh8
13.Be4 hxg5 14.g4 Rb8 15.h4 g6 16.hxg5+ Kg7 17.Qf4 Bb7 18.Rh7+ Kxh7
19.Qh2+ Kg8 20.Rh1 Bxg5+ 21.Nxg5 Qxg5+ 22.f4 Qxf4+ 23.Qxf4 Bxe4
24.Qxe4 1-0
- Polgar-Kasparov, Russia vs. The Rest of
the World match, Moscow 2002
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4.O-O Nxe4 5.d4 Nd6 6.Bxc6 dxc6
7.dxe5 Nf5 8.Qxd8+ Kxd8 9.Nc3 h6 10.Rd1+ Ke8 11.h3 Be7 12.Ne2 Nh4
13.Nxh4 Bxh4 14.Be3 Bf5 15.Nd4 Bh7 16.g4 Be7 17.Kg2 h5 18.Nf5 Bf8
19.Kf3 Bg6 20.Rd2 hxg4+ 21.hxg4 Rh3+ 22.Kg2 Rh7 23.Kg3 f6 24.Bf4
Bxf5 25.gxf5 fxe5 26.Re1 Bd6 27.Bxe5 Kd7 28. c4 c5 29.Bxd6 cxd6
30.Re6 Rah8 31.Rexd6+ Kc8 32.R2d5 Rh3+ 33.Kg2 Rh2+ 34.Kf3 R2h3+
35.Ke4 b6 36.Rc6+ Kb8 37.Rd7 Rh2 38.Ke3 Rf8 39.Rcc7 Rxf5 40.Rb7+
Kc8 41.Rdc7+ Kd8 42.Rxg7 Kc8 1-0
Literature
- Forbes, Cathy
(1992), The Polgar Sisters: Training or Genius?, Henry
Holt & Co., ISBN
0805024263
- Hurst, Sarah
(2002), Curse of Kirsan: Adventures in the Chess
Underworld, Russell Enterprises, ISBN
1888690151
- Karolyi, Tibor (2004), Judit Polgar,
the Princess of Chess, Batsford, ISBN
0-7134-8890-5
- Polgar,
Susan; Truong, Paul
(2005), Breaking Through : How the Polgar Sisters Changed
the Game of Chess, Everyman Chess, ISBN
1857443810
- Shahade,
Jennifer, Chess Bitch: Women In The Ultimate Intellectual
Sport, Siles Press, ISBN
189008509X
- Polgár, Judit; Kepes, András
(2008). Matt a férfiaknak (Checkmate to Men) English
translation due 2009.
References
External
links