Alexander Khalifman: the world champion nobody saw coming
- País
- 🇷🇺 Russia
- Título
- Grandmaster (GM)
- Nacimiento
- January 18, 1966, Leningrad (Saint Petersburg), Russia
- Estado
- retirado
- ELO máximo
- 2702 · Jan 2000
- Campeón del mundo
- 1999-2000 (FIDE)
Not all champions arrive with fanfare. Alexander Khalifman won the title in 1999 without anyone seeing it coming: without being a favorite, without prior headlines, just with preparation, technique, and a solidity that knocked out rivals one by one.
Who was Khalifman
He was born on January 18, 1966 in Leningrad (today Saint Petersburg). He was a solid, well-prepared player who established himself among the best in Russia without ever reaching the media stardom of Kasparov or Karpov.
The Las Vegas championship
In 1999, FIDE organized its World Championship in a knockout format in Las Vegas. Khalifman, who wasn’t considered a favorite, eliminated rivals one by one through a combination of thorough preparation and solidity under pressure. When he won the tournament, the chess world was surprised, but those who knew his game knew the victory was deserved.
He reached his peak of 2702 ELO after the title.
Educator and writer
After his playing career, Khalifman turned to teaching and writing. His series of opening books became a reference, and his chess school in Saint Petersburg trained a new generation of Russian players.
His chess DNA
In our chess DNA system, Khalifman represents the prepared technician profile: high solidity and technique, with methodical preparation that compensates for any lack of flashiness. If your GM twin is Khalifman, you win through preparation and precision, not brilliance.
Keep exploring
- Rustam Kasimdzhanov, another unexpected champion
- Peter Svidler, his compatriot and generational rival
- Mikhail Botvinnik, the model of the chess scientist
- All players
Preguntas frecuentes
Why is Khalifman said to have been an unexpected champion?
At the 1999 FIDE World Championship, played in a knockout format in Las Vegas, Khalifman wasn't considered one of the favorites. However, his methodical preparation and solidity allowed him to eliminate more high-profile rivals one by one until he won the tournament. His victory was legitimate but surprising to the general public.
What did Khalifman contribute to chess after becoming champion?
Khalifman founded a chess school in Saint Petersburg and wrote a series of technical books on openings (the 'Opening for White According to...' series) that became a reference for club and professional players alike. His contribution as an educator is as important as his title.