Suat Atalık
Atalık in 2007
Country
Born (1964-10-10) October 10, 1964
Istanbul, Turkey
TitleGrandmaster (1994)
FIDE rating2439 (January 2024)
Peak rating2632 (April 2006)
Peak rankingNo. 79 (January 1998)

Suat Atalık (born October 10, 1964) is a Turkish-Bosnian chess grandmaster. He is a three-time Turkish Chess Champion and the first Turkish chess-player ever to obtain title of chess Grandmaster.

Chess career

He was born in Turkey in 1964, represented Turkey in the World Junior Chess Championship in 1983, and was their top board for several Chess Olympiads.

Despite this, and his current residence in Istanbul, he had disputes with chess organizers in his country, so he declared himself to be a resident of Bosnia and Herzegovina, his ancestral home.

During the 2000 Chess Olympiad in Istanbul, Atalik insisted on playing for Bosnia rather than Turkey. As a result, the organizers of the Olympiad banned him from the competition. After the selection of the new national chess federation he returned to the Turkish national team.

In 2003, he took first at Mar del Plata. In 2007 he tied for first with Michael Roiz at the Gorenje Valjevo Tournament.[1]

Atalık won the 3rd and 4th Mediterranean Chess Championships in Antalya, Turkey and Cannes, France, respectively.[2]

He was the only Grandmaster registered in the Turkish Chess Federation in Turkey beginning in 1994 and ending in 2005, when Mikhail Gurevich took up residence there.

Notable games

Personal life

He attended Galatasaray Lycee and studied Psychology in Boğaziçi University. On November 11, 2005 he married 22-year-old woman grandmaster Ekaterina Polovnikova from Russia. Former world championship challenger Nigel Short, who also played in the World Junior Championship in 1983, was his best man.

References

  1. Crowther, Mark (2007-06-25). "TWIC 659: Gorenje Valjevo Tournament". London Chess Center. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  2. Crowther, Mark (2006-02-13). "TWIC 588: 3rd Mediterranean Championship". London Chess Center. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
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