Irina Solomonovna Levitina (born June 8, 1954) is a former Soviet and current American chess and bridge player. In chess, she has been a World Championship Candidate in 1984 and gained the title Woman Grandmaster. In contract bridge she has won six world championship events, four women and two mixed, including play on two world-champion USA women teams.
Irina Levitina | |
---|---|
Full name | Ирина Соломоновна Левитина |
Country | United States (after 1991) Soviet Union (before 1991) |
Born | Leningrad, Soviet Union | June 8, 1954
Title | Woman Grandmaster (1976) |
FIDE rating | 2405 (November 2024) |
Peak rating | 2425 (July 1993) |
Chess career
editIn 1973, she tied for 2nd–5th in Menorca (interzonal). In 1974, she beat Valentina Kozlovskaya 6,5 : 5,5 in Kislovodsk (semifinal match). In 1975, she lost to Nana Alexandria 8 : 9 in a final match in Moscow. In 1977, she lost to Alla Kushnir 3 : 6 in a quarterfinal match in Dortmund.
In 1982, she took 2nd in Tbilisi (interzonal). In 1983, she beat Nona Gaprindashvili 6 : 4 in Lvov (quarterfinal), and Alexandria 7,5 : 6,5 in Dubna (semifinal). In 1984, she beat Lidia Semenova 7 : 5 in Sochi (final) and became World Women's Championship Challenger. Levitina lost to Maia Chiburdanidze 5½ : 8½ in a title match at Volgograd 1984.
In 1986, she took 7th in Malmö (Candidates Tournament; Elena Akhmilovskaya won). In 1987, she tied for 2nd–4th in Smederevska Palanka (interzonal). In 1988, she tied for 3rd–4th in Tsqaltubo (Candidates). In 1991, she tied for 3rd–4th in Subotica (interzonal). In 1992, she took 6th in Shanghai (Candidates; Susan Polgar won).[1]
She was the Soviet Women's Champion four times—in 1971, 1978 (jointly), 1979, and 1981.[2]
After her emigration in 1990 to the United States, she has also been U.S. Women's Champion in 1991 (jointly), 1992, and 1993 (jointly).[3]
Bridge career
editLevitina is now a professional bridge player. She has won 5 world champion titles in women's bridge and many "national" titles (major events at North American Bridge Championships, thrice-annual 10-day meets). Sometime prior to the 2014 European and World meets (summer and October), Levitina ranked 15th among 73 Women World Grand Masters by world masterpoints (MP) and 5th by placing points that do not decay over time.[4]
In 1986, Levitina won the Alpwater Award for the best played hand of the year by a woman player, becoming the first Soviet citizen to win a bridge award.[5]
Bridge accomplishments
editAwards
edit- Alpwater Award 1986
Wins
edit- Venice Cup (1) 2007
- World Women Team Olympiad (1) 1996
- McConnell Cup (1) 2002
- World Women's Pairs (1) 2006
- Transnational Mixed Teams (1) 2000
- North American Bridge Championships (9)
- Women's Swiss Teams (3) 2001, 2005, 2007
- Women's Board-a-Match Teams (3) 2004, 2006, 2008
- Women's Knockout Teams (3) 1993, 1995, 2008
- United States Bridge Championships (5)
- Women's Team Trials (5) 1996, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2009
Runners-up
edit- McConnell Cup (1) 2006
- North American Bridge Championships (5)
- North American Swiss Teams (1) 1995
- Women's Swiss Teams (1) 2008
- Women's Board-a-Match Teams (1) 2001
- Women's Knockout Teams (2) 1998, 2004
- United States Bridge Championships (3)
- Women's Team Trials (3) 2000, 2004, 2008
Notable chess games
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ World Chess Championship for Women
- ^ "Who's Who In Chess". Archived from the original on October 28, 2009. Retrieved October 28, 2009.
- ^ "Past U.S. Women's Chess Champions". Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved February 18, 2007.
- ^ "Women World Grand Masters" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. WBF. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ Alan Truscott's column, The New York Times
External links
edit- Irina Levitina rating card at FIDE
- Irina Levitina rating and tournament record at US Chess Federation
- Irina Levitina player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Irina S. Levitina chess games at 365Chess.com
- "International record for Irina Levitina". World Bridge Federation.
- Women Stars at the World Bridge Federation – with biographies (not yet Levitina, November 2014)
- LEVITINA Irina athlete information at the 1st SportAccord World Mind Games (2011)
- Controversy over anti-Bush placard: New York Times article, Fox News report on YouTube, MSNBC report on YouTube, The Nation website