Rasmus Svane (born 21 May 1997) is a German chess grandmaster living in Lübeck, Germany.[1] He has represented Germany at the European Team Chess Championship and Chess Olympiad. He is the No. 5 ranked German player as of September 2023.[2]

Rasmus Svane
Rasmus Svane, Dortmund 2023
CountryGermany
Born (1997-05-21) 21 May 1997 (age 26)
Allerød Municipality, Denmark
TitleGrandmaster (2016)
FIDE rating2635 (May 2024)
Peak rating2651 (May 2022)
Peak rankingNo. 96 (October 2023)

Personal life edit

Svane was born in Allerød Municipality, Denmark. He is a son of the Danish cellist Troels Svane,[3] and Danish is his first language.[1] Svane has a younger brother, Frederik (born 2004),[4] who is also a chess player.[5]

Svane received his Abitur in 2016, and when asked in 2017 what he plans to do if a career as a professional chess player does not work out he stated he can return to his studies.[6]

Chess career edit

Svane learned to play chess at the age of 4 after discovering a chess CD in a cereal packet.[3] He finished second at the German U12 Chess Championship in 2009,[7] and won the German U14 Chess Championship in 2010.[8] He was named the 2010 U14 Player of the Year by the German Chess Federation in recognition of the latter achievement.[9]

Svane earned his first international master (IM) norm at the 2011 German Chess Championship, scoring 5/9. He earned his second and third IM norms in 2012. The former came at the Politiken Cup held in July–August, where he scored 7½/10; the latter was achieved at the 1st Korbach GM tournament in December, with a score of 7/11. He was officially awarded the title by FIDE in May 2013.[10]

He earned his first grandmaster (GM) norm at the 2015 Aeroflot Open, scoring 4½/9. He earned his second at the 2015 Visma GM tournament, scoring 6/9, and attained the final norm during the 2015/2016 Chess Bundesliga season, scoring 6/10. He was awarded his GM title in September 2016, at age 19.[11]

From 28 October to 6 November 2017, he competed for Germany on board 4 at the European Team Chess Championship, scoring 5½/7 (+5–1=1) for a performance rating of 2762.[12] This was the second-best board 4 performance at the tournament, behind Rauf Mamedov's 2920 performance.[13] From 13 to 25 November, he competed at the World Junior Chess Championship. He placed joint eighth (seventeenth on tiebreak) with a score of 7½/11 (+6–2=3),[14] one point behind the winner Aryan Tari.[15]

From 23 January to 1 February 2018, Svane competed in the Tradewise Gibraltar Masters. He finished forty-first, scoring 6½/10 (+4–1=5),[16] one point behind the winner Levon Aronian.[17][18] From 20 to 28 February, he participated in the Aeroflot Open. He finished forty-seventh out of ninety-two,[19] scoring 4½/9 (+2–2=5).[20] From 17 to 28 March, he competed in the 2018 European Individual Chess Championship. He placed thirty-ninth,[21] scoring 7/11 (+6–3=2).[22] In August, he competed in the Riga Technical University Open. He placed fifth with 7/9 (+5–0=4).[23] Svane represented Germany on the reserve board at the 43rd Chess Olympiad, from 24 September to 5 October. He scored 4½/8 (+3–2=3),[24] as Germany finished 13th.

In 2019, he tied for 2nd-3rd place in the Sunway Sitges Festival with Vasif Durarbayli.[25]

Notable games edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mads Boe (29 June 2015). "Rasmus Svane stormester". nyheder.skak.dk. Retrieved 2023-02-12.
  2. ^ "PERIOD: SEPTEMBER 2023 – RANK STANDARD RATING GERMANY". FIDE.
  3. ^ a b Kürbis, Jens (22 November 2016). "Vom Prinzen zum Titelfavoriten". Lübecker Nachrichten (in German).
  4. ^ Staff writer(s) (2018). "Svane, Frederik FIDE Chess Profile". FIDE.
  5. ^ Schulz, André (6 December 2017). "Die neue Kaderliste des Deutschen Schachbundes" (in German). ChessBase.
  6. ^ Pfleger, Helmut (8 November 2017). "Brettspiel: Schach". Die Zeit (in German).
  7. ^ Staff writer(s) (2010). "Spieler des Jahres > 2009, U14, männlich" (in German). Deutsche Schachjugend im Deutschen Schachbund e. V.
  8. ^ Staff writer(s) (2011). "Spieler des Jahres > 2010, U14, männlich" (in German). Deutsche Schachjugend im Deutschen Schachbund e. V.
  9. ^ Staff writer(s) (2011). "Ergebnisse: Spieler des Jahres - 2010" (in German). Deutsche Schachjugend im Deutschen Schachbund e. V.
  10. ^ 2nd quarter Presidential Board Meeting 2013, 4-7 May, Baku, AZE FIDE
  11. ^ 87th FIDE Congress 2016, 1-14 September, Baku, Azerbaijan FIDE
  12. ^ Staff writer(s) (6 November 2017). "European Team Chess Championship 2017 Open Section". Chess Results.
  13. ^ Staff writer(s) (6 November 2017). "European Team Chess Championship 2017 Open Section: The best players per board". Chess Results.
  14. ^ Staff writer(s) (25 November 2017). "World Junior under 20 Championship 2017 (150309): Svane Rasmus". Chess Results.
  15. ^ Staff writer(s) (25 November 2017). "World Junior under 20 Championship 2017 (150309)". Chess Results.
  16. ^ Staff writer(s) (7 February 2018). "Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Festival 2018 - Masters: Svane Rasmus". Chess Results.
  17. ^ Staff writer(s) (7 February 2018). "Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Festival 2018 - Masters". Chess Results.
  18. ^ Crowthers, Mark (1 February 2018). "Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Festival 2018". The Week in Chess.
  19. ^ Staff writer(s) (28 February 2018). "Aeroflot Open 2018 A". Chess Results.
  20. ^ Staff writer(s) (28 February 2018). "Aeroflot Open 2018 A: Svane Rasmus". Chess Results.
  21. ^ Staff writer(s) (28 March 2018). "European Individual Chess Championship 2018". Chess Results.
  22. ^ Staff writer(s) (28 March 2018). "European Individual Chess Championship 2018: Svane Rasmus". Chess Results.
  23. ^ Schormann, Conrad (18 August 2018). "Riga Tech University Open: Armenians on top". ChessBase.
  24. ^ Staff writer(s) (5 October 2018). "43rd Olympiad Batumi 2018 Open". Chess Results.
  25. ^ "The Week in Chess 1311". theweekinchess.com. Retrieved 2020-07-09.

External links edit