Daniël Stellwagen
Stellwagen in 2013
CountryNetherlands
Born (1987-03-01) 1 March 1987
Soest, Netherlands
TitleGrandmaster (2004)
FIDE rating2605 (January 2024)
Peak rating2639 (October 2007)
Peak rankingNo. 81 (October 2007)

Daniël Stellwagen (born 1 March 1987) is a Dutch chess grandmaster.

Chess career

In 1999 he won the Dutch Youth Championship (U12) and won silver both at the World Youth Championship (U12) and the European Youth Championship (U12). In 2002 he became an international master. In 2003, at age 15, he achieved major success by finishing at 2nd place in the Grandmaster B-group of the Corus Chess tournament, earning his first grandmaster norm in the process.[1] In 2003 he also won the endgame study solving contest at the De Feijter Festival in Deventer with an unprecedented 100%. In 2004 he became a grandmaster at 18 years old, making him the youngest Dutch grandmaster ever, a record that was later broken by Anish Giri.

Between 2003 and 2008 he participated in the Dutch Championships every year, becoming one of the most successful players in the championship with four second places overall. In 2007 he shared first place in the Dutch Championship but lost the final tiebreak to Sergey Tiviakov.[2] In 2007 Daniel also finished shared 5th at the World Junior Chess Championship in Yerevan. Daniel has been playing for the Dutch national team between 2007 and 2012, contributing to the team's top 8 ranking in the recent European Team Championship and Chess Olympiad.[3] He played his last FIDE rated game in January 2014, in the German Bundesliga.[4]

Personal life

Stellwagen earned his PhD in inorganic chemistry from Utrecht University with the thesis "Solid acid catalysts for transesterification and esterification".[5]

References

  1. "Corus Chess 2003 - Report of round 13".
  2. "Susan Polgar Blogspot - Dutch Championship final 2007". 29 June 2007.
  3. 40th Chess Olympiad
  4. "Stellwagen, Daniel". ratings.fide.com. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  5. Research - Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis Archived 11 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Utrecht University; archived on 26 September 2014
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