Péter Prohászka
Péter Prohászka | |
---|---|
Péter Prohászka, 2015 | |
Country | Hungary |
Born | 13 January 1992 (1992-01-13) (age 32) Vác, Hungary |
Title | Grandmaster (2010) |
FIDE rating | 2581 (May 2024) |
Peak rating | 2627 (August 2018) |
Péter Prohászka (born 13 January 1992) is a Hungarian chess grandmaster.
Chess career
Born in 1992, Prohászka earned his international master title in 2007 and his grandmaster title in 2010.[1] He is the No. 10 ranked Hungarian player as of February 2018.[2]
He won the Xtracon Open in 2014 and the Fano Chess Festival twice.
In 2017, he tied for first at the prestigious Benasque Open.[3]
European U-14 Champion in 2006.[4]
Winner of First Saturday October 2006 (1st GM norm) and First Saturday February 2008 (2nd GM norm).
Winner of First Saturday November 2009 (3rd GM norm).[5]
In 2019, Prohászka won the US Thanksgiving Open tied with Illia Nyzhnyk and Cemil Can Ali Marandi.[6]
In 2021, Prohaszka tied for first place with IM Christopher Yoo in the Memorial Day 2021 CCCSA GM Norm Invitational tournament.[7]
References
- ^ 1st quarter Presidential Board 2010, 3-6 January 2010, Bursa, TUR FIDE
- ^ Staff writer(s) (February 2018). "Federations Ranking - Hungary". FIDE. Archived from the original on 2018-02-10. Retrieved 2018-02-11.
- ^ "Peter Prohaszka | www.uschesschamps.com". uschesschamps.com. Retrieved 2020-06-16.
- ^ "European Youth Chess Championship 2006 - Boys U14 January 2007 FIDE Chess Tournament report". ratings.fide.com. Retrieved 2020-06-16.
- ^ "The chess games of Peter Prohaszka". www.chessgames.com. Retrieved 2020-06-16.
- ^ "2019 Thanksgiving Open January 2020 United States of America FIDE Chess Tournament report". ratings.fide.com. Retrieved 2020-06-16.
- ^ "CCCSA GM/IM Norm Invitational - Labor Day 2021 GM/IM Norm Invitational Chess Tournament".
External links
- Peter Prohaszka player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Peter Prohaszka rating card at FIDE
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- Péter Ács
- Gergely Aczel
- András Adorján
- Zoltán Almási
- Emil Anka
- Gergely Antal
- Imre Balog
- Csaba Balogh
- Tamás Bánusz
- Gedeon Barcza
- László Bárczay
- Dávid Bérczes
- Ferenc Berkes
- István Bilek
- Dénes Boros [Wikidata]
- Cao Sang [Wikidata]
- István Csom
- Attila Czebe [Wikidata]
- Péter Dely
- Viktor Erdős
- Iván Faragó
- János Flesch
- András Flumbort [Wikidata]
- Tamas Fodor Jr.
- Tibor Fogarasi [Wikidata]
- Győző Forintos
- Miklos Galyas [Wikidata]
- Benjámin Gledura
- László Gonda [Wikidata]
- Attila Grószpéter
- Zoltan Gyimesi
- Imre Héra Jr. [Wikidata]
- Hoang Thanh Trang
- Karoly Honfi
- Ádám Horváth
- Csaba Horváth
- József Horváth
- Péter Horváth
- Gábor Kállai
- Gergely Kántor
- Bence Korpa [hu]
- Ádám Kozák
- Peter Leko
- Levente Lengyel
- Péter Lukács
- Géza Maróczy
- Zoltán Medvegy [Wikidata]
- Oliver Mihok [de; ru; hu]
- Gábor Nagy
- Gyula Pap
- Gábor Papp [de; fr; hu]
- József Pintér
- Judit Polgár
- Susan Polgar
- Lajos Portisch
- Péter Prohászka
- Richárd Rapport
- Zoltán Ribli
- Róbert Ruck
- Gyula Sax
- Lajos Seres [de; pl; hu]
- Krisztián Szabó
- László Szabó
- Péter Székely
- Tibor Tolnai [Wikidata]
- László Vadász
- Zoltán Varga
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- Category:Hungarian chess players
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