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Yuliia Osmak

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Ukrainian chess player In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Vladyslavivna and the family name is Osmak.
Yuliia Osmak
Osmak in 2015
Country Ukraine
Born (1998-03-06) March 6, 1998 (age 26)
Kyiv, Ukraine
TitleInternational Master (2017)
Woman Grandmaster (2016)
FIDE rating2458 (December 2024)
Peak rating2471 (August 2024)

Yuliia Vladyslavivna Osmak (Ukrainian: Юлія Владиславівна Осьмак) is a Ukrainian chess player who holds the title of Woman grandmaster (WGM, 2016) and International master (IM, 2017). Women's Chess Olympiad winner (2022).

Biography

Osmak won the Ukrainian Girl's Chess Championships several times in different age categories: U10 (2006, 2008), U12 (2010), U16 (2013), U20 (2012, 2013). In 2010, she won the World Youth Chess Championship in the U12 girl's age group. She won bronze medals at the European Youth Chess Championships twice: in the U10 girl's age category (2008) and in the U12 girl's age category (2010). At the Ukrainian Women's Chess Championships, Osmak won gold (2017), silver (2019) and four bronze (2014, 2015, 2018, 2020) medals.

In August 2021, Osmak won 2nd place in the European Individual Women's Chess Championship. In November 2021, she ranked 21st overall in the FIDE Women's Grand Swiss Tournament 2021.

Osmak represented the Ukrainian team in major team chess tournaments:

Osmak was awarded the title of Woman Grandmaster (WGM) in 2016 by FIDE, and in 2017 she achieved the title of International Master (IM).

Disqualification from the FIDE Universiade tournament

On 27 and 28 March 2021, Osmak won with a score of 4.5/5 in the final of the Women's Rapid section of the 1st FIDE World University Online Chess Championship, but her score was changed to 0/5, with Julia Antolak declared the winner. She was disqualified based on a statistical analysis of her five games from the final. The Fair Play Panel of the event say 20 players in total were disqualified but there is no sufficient "proof of actual cheating". Osmak has expressed a willingness to take a lie-detector test to dispute the verdict.

References

  1. Administrator. "FIDE Title Applications (GM, IM, WGM, WIM, IA, FA, IO)". ratings.fide.com.
  2. Ukraine Junior Chess Championship-2014 (Girls)
  3. 2010 World Youth Chess Championship — Final report
  4. World Youth Chess Championships 2010 — Girls under 12
  5. "Ukraine Women`s Final - 2017"
  6. EUROPEAN INDIVIDUAL WOMEN’S CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP 2021
  7. 2021 FIDE Chess.com Women's Grand Swiss
  8. 44th Olympiad Chennai 2022 Open
  9. 14th European Team Chess Championship 2021 - Women
  10. Women's World Team Championship 2021 Semi-Final
  11. Title Applications (WGM): Osmak, Iulija
  12. 2nd quarter PB Meeting 2017 by written resolution
  13. McGourty, Colin (28 March 2021). "Cheating scandal hits FIDE World Online University Championships". Chess24.com.

External links

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