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Zhou Jianchao (Chinese: 周健超; born June 11, 1988) is a Chinese-American chess player. In 2006, he became China's 21st Grandmaster at the age of 17. Zhou competed in the FIDE World Cup in 2007, 2009 and 2015.
Zhou Weiqi (40) - finished 35th; Shen Yang (45) - finished 52nd; Qualifiers. Therefore, eight Chinese players in total qualified for the World Cup. They are, in order of rating (as of October 2007): Wang Yue (2703) Bu Xiangzhi (2692) Zhang Pengxiang (2644) Wang Hao (2643) Zhou Jianchao (2566) Zhao Jun (2552) Xu Yuhua (2517) Wen Yang (2515 ...
In the following month, Wang Hao won the Chinese Chess Championship scoring 7½/11 and edging out 2004 champion Bu Xiangzhi and Zhou Jianchao on tiebreak. [25] In September 2010 he competed in the Grand Slam of Shanghai, a four players round-robin tournament, in which he played Levon Aronian, Alexei Shirov and Vladimir Kramnik. Wang Hao, the ...
Bu participated in the 1st Danzhou Tournament in China from June 11 through June 20. After a victory over Zhou Jianchao, Bu led the tournament with 5 + 1 ⁄ 2 /8 with one round remaining. A final round draw with Hou Yifan allowed Li Chao to catch him with 6/9, but Bu won the tournament on tiebreak with a performance rating of 2740. [18]
He tied for first with Alexander Huzman, Victor Mikhalevski and Vadim Milov in Ashdod 2003, [6] with Zhou Jianchao and Arsen Yegiazarian in the A2 tournament of the 2005 Aeroflot Open [7] and with Vladimir Baklan, Aleksander Delchev and Adam Horvath in Balaguer 2005. [8]
Peng began playing chess at the age of 8. He moved from his hometown of Panzhihua to Chongqing at age 11 to concentrate on chess. [3]Similar to Gata Kamsky and Wang Hao, Peng became a grandmaster without first gaining the International Master title.
Zhao Xue (Chinese: 赵雪; pinyin: Zhào Xuě; born 6 April 1985) is a Chinese chess player. She is the 24th Chinese person to achieve the title of Grandmaster.Zhao was a member of the gold medal-winning Chinese team at the Women's Chess Olympiad in 2002, 2004 and 2016, and at the Women's World Team Chess Championship in 2007, 2009 and 2011.
Wu Wenjin won the Asian Junior Chess Championship in 1996 in Macau. [3]In October 1999, Wu came joint first (with Đào Thiên Hải, Peng Xiaomin, and Bu Xiangzhi) with 6 pts at the Qingdao Daily Cup. [4]