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Yifan Hou 
World Junior Championship, Gaziantep, 2008
Photograph courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
 
Yifan Hou
Number of games in database: 903
Years covered: 2003 to 2013
Last FIDE rating: 2617
Highest rating achieved in database: 2639
Overall record: +299 -164 =294 (58.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      146 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (171) 
    B93 B42 B30 B92 B31
 Ruy Lopez (119) 
    C78 C67 C95 C65 C88
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (53) 
    C95 C88 C84 C92 C89
 French Defense (52) 
    C11 C10 C18 C03 C05
 Caro-Kann (40) 
    B18 B17 B13 B10 B11
 Sicilian Najdorf (36) 
    B93 B92 B90 B94
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (139) 
    B84 B22 B90 B81 B50
 Nimzo Indian (53) 
    E32 E37 E34 E46 E58
 French Defense (41) 
    C11 C07 C18 C01 C02
 Queen's Gambit Declined (40) 
    D38 D31 D30
 Sicilian Scheveningen (36) 
    B84 B81 B80 B83 B85
 Queen's Pawn Game (32) 
    A46 E10 E00 A40 D05
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   J Smeets vs Yifan Hou, 2008 0-1
   Yifan Hou vs M Sebag, 2011 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs Sasikiran, 2009 1-0
   M Fierro vs Yifan Hou, 2009 0-1
   Yifan Hou vs Judit Polgar, 2012 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs Le Quang Liem, 2012 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs Beliavsky, 2009 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs Short, 2008 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs N Zhukova, 2006 1-0
   Yifan Hou vs V Laznicka, 2008 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   37th Chess Olympiad: Women (2006)
   World Junior Championship (Girls) (2006)
   Women's World Team Championship (2007)
   World Junior Championship (2008)
   FIDE Women's Grand Prix (2009)
   Women's World Chess Championship (2010)
   Chess Olympiad (Women) (2010)
   FIDE Women Grand Prix (2010)
   FIDE Women's Grand Prix (2011)
   SportAccord Mind Games (Blindfold, Women) (2011)
   Tradewise Gibraltar (2012)
   FIDE Women's Grand Prix Kazan (2012)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Blunderdome's favorite games of 2012-2013 by Blunderdome
   Girl meets boy by englishplus
   Sicilian by Nicocobas
   fasi2all's favorite games by fasi2all
   Chinese Chess by notyetagm

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Yifan Hou
Search Google for Yifan Hou
FIDE player card for Yifan Hou


YIFAN HOU
(born Feb-27-1994) China
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]
Grandmaster and 2010 and 2011 Women's World Champion. Having lost the Champion's title in 2012, she will challenge for it in 2013.

Yifan was born in Xinghua City, Jiangsu, China. She is the youngest female in the history of chess to acquire the GM title, and was the youngest GM in the world when she acquired the title. At 14, she was the youngest ever finalist in a Women's World Championship contest. Winning the Women's World Championship title in 2010 at the age of 16 made her the youngest Women's World Champion ever, beating the mark long held by the legendary Maia Chiburdanidze who won the title in 1978 at the age of 17. In 2011, she successfully defended her title by winning the best-of-ten Hou-Koneru Women's World Championship (2011) by 5.5-2.5 (+3 =5 -0), also making her the youngest Women's World Champion to defend her title, and the youngest to do so successfully.

Yifan started playing chess at age 6, and in 2003 she won the U10 Girls division of the World Youth Championships in Halkidiki, Greece. In 2004, she contested the Boys' U10 World Championship in Heraklio, Crete, placing third. She came fifth in the 3 Arrows Cup in 2005 in Jinan, recording a performance rating of nearly 2400. At the age of 12, she contested the FIDE Women's World Championship (2006) in Ekaterinburg, Russia, defeating Nadezhda Kosintseva and Natalia Zhukova in the first two rounds before falling to Nino Khurtsidze in the third round.

Yifan played in the 37th Chess Olympiad: Women (2006) on the Reserve Board (Board 4), winning the silver medal with 11/13 and a performance rating of 2596. She scored 9/12 in the World Junior Championship (Girls) (2006) and secured second place on countback behind Yang Shen. In June 2007 she broke through to win the Women's Chinese National Chess Championship in Chongqing city, a title she successfully defended in Beijing the following May. Also in 2007, she won a team gold and individual gold and silver medals on board 2 at the 2007 Women's World Team Championships. In 2008 she also won the Isbank Ataturk Women Masters (2008) outright by a clear point ahead of Pia Cramling, and came third in the World Junior Championship (2008) (for both sexes) behind Abhijeet Gupta and Parimarjan Negi . In 2009, Yifan came equal third in the 8th Asian Continental Chess Championship (2009) (open) with 7/11, half a point behind GM Surya Shekhar Ganguly and GM Zhou Weiqi, qualifying her for the World Cup (2009) in which she bowed out in the first round after losing to Arkadi Naiditsch. Also in 2009, she won team gold and individual bronze playing top board fror China in that year's edition of the Women's World Team Championships. In April 2010, after relatively modest results in the Moscow Open (2010) and Aeroflot Open (2010) in February, she won the 3rd Kuala Lumpur Open with 7.5/9, came second with 7.5/11 in the Women's Grand Prix in Nalchik after Tatiana Kosintseva and won the FIDE Women Grand Prix (2010) in Ulan Bator, Mongolia with 8/11 and a 2649 performance rating. Later in the year, she then lead her country to a silver medal in the Chess Olympiad (Women) (2010); she also won bronze for her efforts on the top board where she scored 8/11 (+5 -0 =6). Yifan capped 2010 and her career so far by becoming the Women's World Champion in December, defeating Ruan Lufei in the tiebreaker 3-1 after drawing the classical games 2-2. Her win earned her China Central Television's 2010 award for Sportsperson of the Year involved in a sport that is not included in the Olympic category* and her title win also qualified her for participation in the World Cup 2011.

She competed in the "open" Chinese Championship (2011), scoring 6/11 (+2 -1 =8), won the 1st Women Master Tournament 2011 at Wuxi with 7/9, and played in the 2nd Hainan Danzhou GM tournament where she scored 2 points from 9 rounds. Her poor form continued in the 10th Asian Individual Championships (2011) (4.5/9), the Airports Authority of India (2011) (3/10) and the 1st Hangzhou Women's GM Tournament (2011)(4.5/9). Yifan staged a partial recovery by winning the FIDE Women's Grand Prix (2011) with 8/11, coasting to a victory by a clear point ahead of Kateryna Lahno (to whom she lost in their individual encounter) after leading by 2 points midway through the event. She qualified for the World Cup (2011) by dint of her being the Women's World Champion, but lost to Sergei Movsesian in the first round after missing a winning combination in the second game. Soon after the World Cup, she won the Shenzhen Women's Grand Prix (2011) with a score of 8/11 (+5 =6). In December 2011 at the inaugural World Mind Games which featured rapid, blitz and blindfold chess alongside Go, Bridge, Draughts, and Xiangqi, Hou won gold in the women's blitz and in the women's blindfold.** She finished a successful 2011 by winning team gold and two individual silver medals at the FIDE Women's World Team Championship (2011), and by overtaking Koneru as women's world number 2 after Judit Polgar.

Hou started 2012 in dramatic style by taking equal first place at Tradewise Gibraltar (2012) with 8/10 (+7 -1 =2; TPR 2872), alongside Nigel Short (+6 =4; TPR 2838), however she came second on tiebreak when she lost the 2 game blitz playoff with Short by 1.5-0.5; her record against the 7 GMs she played, each of whom was rated over 2700 was 5/7, and included wins against Zoltan Almasi, Judit Polgar, Le Quang Liem and Alexey Shirov, draws against Michael Adams and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov and a loss to Krishnan Sasikiran. A few weeks later, she came close to winning the Reykjavik Open (2012), but failed to find the right continuation to defeat the eventual winner, Fabiano Caruana, in the last round; she scored 7/9 (+5 =4; TPR 2677) to place =2nd, albeit 6th on count back. Her results have been more modest since then, including 5/11 at the Chinese Chess Championships (2012), and 6/9 at the 12th Bangkok Open (2012), costing her 16 Elo points, and then reached a nadir by placing last with 3/9 (-3 =6) at the 3rd Danzhou Tournament (2012). Neither her =3rd at the FIDE Women's Grand Prix Kazan (2012) with 7/11 nor her outright win at the Women Grand Prix Jermuk (2012) enabled her to regain any of her lost rating points, but nevertheless she won the 2011-12 Women's Grand Prix which entitles her to challenge for the Women's World Championship in 2013 since she lost her title in the 2012 World Women's Championship knockout tournament. Yifan represented China on board 1 of the Chess Olympiad (Women) (2012), and helped her team to win team silver (missing gold to Russia on tiebreak), and also picking up individual gold on board 1. 2012 finished with Hou crashing out of the FIDE Knock-Out Women's World Championship (2012), losing to GM Monika Socko in the rapid game tiebreaker in round 2. As the winner of the 2011-2012 Grand Prix series, Hou will be entitled to challenge the winner of the Knockout Tournament and 2012 Women's World Champion, GM Anna Ushenina, for the women's title in 2013.

2013 started with Hou's inaugural participation in an open super-tournament, starting as the 14th and lowest seed in the category 20 Tata Steel (2013). After a string of early losses, she recovered well (especially when playing Black) to defeat current and previous 2700 players Anish Giri, Pentala Harikrishna and Ivan Sokolov to score 5.5/13 (+3 =5 -5) and a near 2700 performance to finish 10th, ahead of Fabiano Caruana, Erwin L'Ami and Sokolov. Seeded 4th, she came in at =4th (8th on tiebreak) with a relatively rating-neutral 5.5/11 (+3 =5 -3) result at the Chinese Championships (2013). Her participation in the Women Grand Prix Geneva (2013) in May 2013 has been her least successful to date, scoring only 5/11 and placing =8th out of 12, and shedding 22 rating points for the June 2013 rating period. In June, and presumably part of her preparation for her World Championship match with Ushenina, Hou played the Navara vs Yifan Hou, 2013 and drew all 4 classical games; however, after drawing the blitz tiebreakers 1-1 she won the Armageddon blitz tiebreaker.

As a WFM, her rating topped 2500 in the January 2007 FIDE ratings before FIDE formally conferred her WGM title in late January 2007. Her results in the Aeroflot Open (2008) and the Isbank Ataturk Women Masters (2008) provided her with her first and second GM norms. She picked up her third GM norm in the World Junior Championship (2008) with a round to spare. Any lingering doubts about Yifan's GM norm from the Isbank Ataturk Masters were resolved when she acquired another GM norm upon defeating Koneru Humpy to reach the final of the Women's World Championship (2008) before losing the championship match against Alexandra Kosteniuk. In October 2012 she helped her team Cercle d'Echecs Monte-Carlo to win gold at the 28th European Club Cup (Women) (2012).

Hou's rating as of 1 June 2013 was 2595, well down from her peak of 2639 on 1 March 2012. She is still the top rated girl (woman U20) in the world but has slipped a place to be the 3rd ranked woman in the world after Polgár and Koneru. She is the 10th ranked player overall in China. Her rapid rating is 2597 while her blitz rating is 2560.

Article about Hou being the youngest female GM: http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/women * http://www.fide.com/component/conte... ** http://www.worldmindgames.net/en/ne...

Wikipedia article: Hou Yifan


 page 1 of 37; games 1-25 of 903  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Yifan Hou vs M Danelia  1-061 2003 Wch U10 GirlsB52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
2. N Szabo vs Yifan Hou  0-135 2003 Wch U10 GirlsB56 Sicilian
3. Yifan Hou vs M Hejazipour  ½-½51 2003 Wch U10 GirlsC96 Ruy Lopez, Closed
4. A Kashlinskaya vs Yifan Hou  0-139 2003 Wch U10 GirlsA46 Queen's Pawn Game
5. Yifan Hou vs M Butuc  1-042 2003 Wch U10 GirlsB13 Caro-Kann, Exchange
6. G Madanasri vs Yifan Hou  0-146 2003 Wch U10 GirlsB20 Sicilian
7. Yifan Hou vs N Paikidze ½-½57 2003 WYCC - G10B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
8. Yifan Hou vs J Bluebaum  1-050 2003 Wch U10 GirlsC18 French, Winawer
9. A Le Bail vs Yifan Hou  0-137 2003 Wch U10 GirlsB56 Sicilian
10. D Shahinyan vs Yifan Hou  0-129 2004 Wch U10C02 French, Advance
11. Yifan Hou vs E Karavade  0-167 2004 Asian-ch (Women)B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
12. Ju Wenjun vs Yifan Hou  ½-½61 2004 Asian-ch (Women)A37 English, Symmetrical
13. Yifan Hou vs S Narayanan  1-047 2004 Wch U10B85 Sicilian, Scheveningen, Classical
14. P Zhao vs Yifan Hou  ½-½64 2004 Wch U10A46 Queen's Pawn Game
15. Yifan Hou vs Wang Yu  0-137 2004 Asian-ch (Women)C84 Ruy Lopez, Closed
16. S Meenakshi vs Yifan Hou  1-037 2004 Asian-ch (Women)E32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
17. Yifan Hou vs A A De la Rosa Lara  1-044 2004 Wch U10B92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
18. N Bortnik vs Yifan Hou  ½-½47 2004 Wch U10B22 Sicilian, Alapin
19. Yifan Hou vs S Vijayalakshmi  1-043 2004 Asian-ch (Women)C88 Ruy Lopez
20. M Ovezova vs Yifan Hou  0-1133 2004 Asian-ch (Women)A45 Queen's Pawn Game
21. Yifan Hou vs J Moussard 0-152 2004 Championnat du Monde -10B76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
22. Yifan Hou vs B Khvan  1-041 2004 Wch U10B71 Sicilian, Dragon, Levenfish Variation
23. A Galymzhanov vs Yifan Hou  0-156 2004 Wch U10B50 Sicilian
24. Yifan Hou vs S Zigangirova  1-045 2004 Asian-ch (Women)B42 Sicilian, Kan
25. D Khachykian vs Yifan Hou  0-157 2004 Wch U10A30 English, Symmetrical
 page 1 of 37; games 1-25 of 903  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Yifan Hou wins | Yifan Hou loses  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 35 OF 45 ·  Later Kibitzing>
May-05-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  flhoosier: wonder why yifan is doing so poorly at the asian championship? she won the ladies chinese masters recently.
May-05-11  wordfunph: GM Hou was lucky to escape with a draw against GM Orazly.

a walk in the park tonight for Hou against scoreless Yang Ching 1717..

http://chess-results.com/tnr49118.a...

May-05-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  notyetagm: <flhoosier: wonder why yifan is doing so poorly at the asian championship? she won the ladies chinese masters recently.>

Thankfully Yifan drew today to stop the skid at three losses.

But not a pretty picture: <+0 =1 -3>.

May-16-11  plimko: A nice win for Hou Yifan in the first round of the 2nd Danzhou SuperGM Tournament:

[Event "2nd Danzhou Grand Master Chess Tournamen"]
[Site "Danzhou, China"]
[Date "2011.05.15"]
[Round "1"]
[White "Hou, Yifan"]
[Black "Zhou Weiqi"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C06"]
[WhiteElo "2577"]
[BlackElo "2570"]
[PlyCount "75"]
[EventDate "2011.??.??"]
[TimeControl "5400+30"]

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nd2 a6 4. Ngf3 Nf6 5. Bd3 c5 6. e5 Nfd7 7. c3 Nc6 8. O-O Be7 9. Re1 c4 10. Bc2 b5 11. Nf1 Bb7 12. h3 h6 13. N3h2 Qb6 14. Qh5 g6 15. Bxg6 fxg6 16. Qxg6+ Kd8 17. Qxe6 Na7 18. Qf7 Nf8 19. f4 Rh7 20. Qh5 Qg6 21. Qxg6 Nxg6 22. f5 Nh4 23. f6 Bf8 24. e6 Bd6 25. Ng4 Kc7 26. Nxh6 Rah8 27. Bg5 Nc8 28. Bxh4 Rg8 29. Nf7 Rxh4 30. Nxd6 Kxd6 31. e7 Nxe7 32. Rxe7 Bc8 33. Rg7 Rf8 34. f7 Rf4 35. Ne3 R8xf7 36. Rxf7 Rxf7 37. Rf1 Rg7 38. Rf6+ 1-0

http://biker60.wordpress.com/2011/0...

May-20-11  Imposter: followed by 4 losses - another polgar she's is most definitely not

women's ratings look somewhat inflated because they mainly play each other, but when they play in open tournaments like this one, they tend to brought back to earth with a thud

most women, including the gms, (and excluding polgar) seem to have trouble beating any male gm with a rating of more than 2500. i wonder sometimes if any of the top women, apart from polgar, koneru and hou are genuinely 2500+ players.

only extended exposure to open tournaments, and many more women participating in the game, can cure this

May-21-11  ChessXin: She lost to Yu Yangyi, Wang Yue, Zhou Jianchao, Wang Hao. All are pretty strong GMs. Any 2600 male GM can also lost to them if he is not in form.
Jun-25-11  Imposter: She's on a terrible losing streak. Hopefully, she's gaining something constructive out of all this, now that she's started competing in powerful open competitions against men.
Aug-02-11  plimko: Women's GP FIDE begins in Rostov.
First round Hou Yifan-Koneru Humpy!

Official site:
http://rostov2011.fide.com/index.php

On 'Scacchi Internazionali':
http://biker60.wordpress.com/2011/0...

Aug-02-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  polarmis: Also with Houdini analysis at WhyChess: http://rostov2011.live.whychess.org/

And an intro here: http://whychess.org/en/node/1162

Aug-02-11  plimko: Why China didn't take part in World Junior Chess Campionship 2011?
Aug-02-11  plimko: Poor play by Koneru Humpy in time trouble:

[Event "FIDE Women Grand Prix 2011"]
[Site "Rostov/Russia"]
[Date "2011.08.02"]
[Round "1"]
[White "Koneru, Humpy"]
[Black "Hou, Yifan"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "E46"]
[WhiteElo "2614"]
[BlackElo "2575"]
[PlyCount "82"]
[EventDate "2011.??.??"]
[TimeControl "40/5400+30:1800+30"]

1. d4 e6 2. c4 Nf6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. e3 O-O 5. Nge2 d5 6. a3 Be7 7. cxd5 exd5 8. Nf4 c6 9. Bd3 a5 10. O-O Na6 11. Bc2 Nc7 12. f3 c5 13. Na4 Na6 14. Nc3 Nc7 15. Qe2 b5 16. dxc5 Bxc5 17. Rd1 Ba6 18. Qf2 Bb7 19. Bd2 Re8 20. Nce2 Ne6 21. Nd3 Bb6 22. Nd4 Rc8 23. Bc3 Ba6 24. Kh1 Rc4 25. Bb3 Rc7 26. Rac1 b4 27. Nxe6 Rxe6 28. Bxf6 Rxf6 29. Rxc7 Bxc7 30. axb4 axb4 31. f4 Bc4 32. Qc2 Bxb3 33. Qxb3 Rb6 34. Nc5 h6 35. Rxd5 Qh4 36. h3 Qe1+ 37. Kh2 Rg6 38. Qc2 Qxe3 39. Nd3 Bb6 40. Nc5 Qxf4+ 41. Kh1 Qf1+ 0-1

36. h3?? perhaps 36. g3

Aug-03-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: I wish she would be considered for the Chess Oscar. Why not give the award to the most interesting contributor of the year? World champion at age 16-17.

The Oscar usually goes to whomever won the most GM tournaments. Boring. Why award the obvious?

Aug-09-11  DrMAL: Women's World Champion last year at age 16, and on her way to decisively win again, this girl is quite amazing! Hope she goes on like Polgar did to show the men a thing or two.
Aug-09-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  Whitehat1963: Otherworldly in women's-only events, but merely below average in men's high-level tourneys. What do you do if you're Yifan Hou?
Aug-09-11  DrMAL: Get more experience playing peers as Carlsen and others are also doing. Hou is 17 a few months older than Anish Giri. Top level chess is more difficult than when Tal or even Kasparov became WC at such a young age.
Aug-09-11  kia0708: don't they have another photo of Hou ?
she looks so awful here :-(
Aug-11-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  Stonehenge: I think it's quite a nice picture.
Aug-11-11  Sbetsho: how is it awful? It's fine to me.
Aug-11-11  Blunderdome: The photo is fine, a little dated though. Young folks need their photos updated often.
Aug-11-11  plimko: I like this one:
http://slide.sports.sina.com.cn/go/...
Aug-11-11  SimonWebbsTiger: Hou has grown out of her hairclip phase now. She is a little lady now (and pretty darn ruthless if you ask her female peers at the FIDE GP!).
Aug-11-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  jakaiden: She has never played even one time 1.d4 geez!
Sep-07-11  plimko: Shenzhen FIDE Women's Grand Prix from 7 to 19 september. Hou Yifan is the top seed.

Official site:
http://shenzhen2011.fide.com/index....

On 'Scacchi Internazionali':
http://biker60.wordpress.com/2011/0...

Sep-07-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  polarmis: Live games with Houdini analysis:

http://shenzhen2011.live.whychess.o...

Sep-08-11  plimko: Great start by Hou Yifan: 2/2 in a very convincingly manner
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