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Judit Polgar
J Polgar 
Photo copyright © 2009 Jaksa Timea.  

Number of games in database: 1,809
Years covered: 1984 to 2022
Last FIDE rating: 2675 (2646 rapid, 2736 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2735
Overall record: +462 -268 =498 (57.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 581 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (341) 
    B90 B93 B33 B32 B30
 Ruy Lopez (203) 
    C67 C78 C89 C65 C92
 French Defense (114) 
    C11 C18 C10 C12 C15
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (98) 
    C89 C92 C95 C90 C84
 Sicilian Najdorf (89) 
    B90 B93 B92 B99 B94
 Caro-Kann (73) 
    B14 B17 B18 B13 B12
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (326) 
    B47 B90 B22 B40 B32
 King's Indian (171) 
    E97 E62 E81 E92 E73
 Sicilian Taimanov (72) 
    B47 B48 B46 B45 B49
 Queen's Indian (60) 
    E15 E12 E17 E16 E14
 Nimzo Indian (49) 
    E32 E21 E49 E53 E48
 Sicilian Najdorf (44) 
    B90 B92 B98 B99 B97
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   J Polgar vs F Berkes, 2003 1-0
   Shirov vs J Polgar, 1994 0-1
   J Polgar vs Anand, 1999 1-0
   J Polgar vs Mamedyarov, 2002 1-0
   J Polgar vs P Chilingirova, 1988 1-0
   J Polgar vs Karpov, 2003 1-0
   J Polgar vs Shirov, 1995 1-0
   J Polgar vs Kasparov, 2002 1-0
   J Polgar vs Kasimdzhanov, 2005 1-0
   Ljubojevic vs J Polgar, 1994 0-1

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999)
   FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Hastings Challengers 1988/89 (1988)
   Superstars Hotel Bali (2002)
   Villa de Canada de Calatrava (2007)
   Aruba (1992)
   Thessaloniki Olympiad (Women) (1988)
   Hastings 1992/93 (1992)
   Istanbul Olympiad (2000)
   99th US Open (1998)
   Novi Sad Olympiad (Women) (1990)
   European Championship (2011)
   Amsterdam OHRA (1989)
   European Championship (2001)
   SKA-Mephisto Tournament (1991)
   FIDE Moscow Grand Prix (2002)
   World Cup (2011)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Polgars Powers Originally Compiled by wanabe2000 by fredthebear
   Polgars Powers Originally Compiled by wanabe2000 by enog
   Polgars Powers Originally Compiled by Okavango
   Polgar Power Originally Compiled by wanabe2000 by rpn4
   Polgar Power Originally Compiled by wanabe2000 by Patca63
   Zsuzsa (Susan), Zsofia, and Judit Polgar by wanabe2000
   The Princess of Chess - Judit Polgar by rpn4
   The Princess of Chess - Judit Polgar by Resignation Trap
   The Princess of Chess - Judit Polgar by rpn4
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 95 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 94 by 0ZeR0
   JUDIT AND SUSAN POLGAR by rpn4
   JUDIT AND SUSAN POLGAR by vaskolon
   JUDIT AND SUSAN POLGAR by rpn4

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Offhand 3-minute blitz
   J Polgar vs Carlsen (Jul-02-22) 1-0, blitz
   Shankland vs J Polgar (Aug-10-14) 1-0
   J Polgar vs V Akopian (Aug-09-14) 1/2-1/2
   J Polgar vs H Nguyen (Aug-08-14) 1-0
   J Polgar vs H Santos (Aug-05-14) 1-0

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Judit Polgar
Search Google for Judit Polgar
FIDE player card for Judit Polgar

JUDIT POLGAR
(born Jul-23-1976, 48 years old) Hungary
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

Judit Polgar is universally considered the strongest woman chess player ever. She was #1 woman player in the world for an unbroken period of over 26 years starting from the age of 12 in 1989 when she burst into the world's top 100 until her retirement from competitive chess in August 2014, aged 38, and into 2015 while her rating was still active.

She was born in Hungary in 1976. Her childhood included an extensive chess education from her father, Laszlo, and her sisters. Beginning international competition as early as 1984, Polgar first defeated an International Master in Adelaide in 1986, when she beat Dolfi Drimer, and a year later the then 11 year old girl defeated her first grandmaster, Lev Gutman. In 1988 she won the U12 Boys World Championship, and in 1990, the U14 Boys World Championship. In 1991 she became an International Grandmaster by winning the "men's" Hungarian championship and at the age of fifteen years and five months, she was the youngest grandmaster in history, breaking a record that Robert James Fischer had held for over 30 years. She has been the highest-rated woman ever since FIDE's January 1990 list, and in 2003 she entered the overall top ten. In 2005, she became the first woman to take part in the final of an open world championship cycle when she participated in the FIDE World Championship Tournament (2005). Although she finished last, her participation in this event seeded her into the 2007 Candidates playoff for the World Championship Tournament in Mexico City, but she bowed out in the Candidates Match: Polgar - Bareev (2007) by 3.5-2.5.

Polgar's career-best tournament performances include four victories at Essent (twice shared), first in London 1988, first in Varna 1988, equal first with Bareev in Hastings 1992/93, clear first at Madrid 1994, first at the Isle of Lewis 1995 (1), equal first in the 1998 US Open, first at the VAM Tournament in Hoogeveen in 1998, first at the category 16 Japfa Classic in Bali in 2000, first at the the Sigeman & Company International Tournament in Malmo, equal first at the Najdorf Chess Festival 2000, fourth in the 2001 European Championship which fielded 143 GMs in a 13-round Swiss-system tournament, first at Superstars Hotel Bali (2002), clear second at Corus at Corus Group A (2003) and equal first at the European Championship (2011), the first time a woman has stood on the podium in this immensely competitive tournament that on this occasion attracted 167 grandmasters; her result also qualified her for participation in the World Cup (2011), where she defeated Cuban GM Fidel Corrales Jimenez, Armenian GM Sergei Movsesian, and Russian GM Sergey Karjakin and Cuban GM, Leinier Dominguez Perez in the first four rounds, but lost her quarter final match against the eventual winner, Russian GM Peter Svidler, to exit the contest. She was one of the President's nominees to play in the World Cup (2013), where she faced Cuban #4 player, GM Isan Reynaldo Ortiz Suarez in the first round, losing the first game and drawing the second.

Polgar represented Hungary at the (open) Olympiads in 1994, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2008, 2010, 2012 and 2014. During that time she won two team silver medals, and an individual bronze medal, both occurring at the 2002 Olympiad and the second team silver in 2014. During the Istanbul Olympiad (2012) held in Istanbul, she played on board 3 scoring 7.5/10 which yielded a TPR of 2744, her best result since the Istanbul Olympiad of 2000. Her overall game results from her participation in Olympiads now amounts to 85 games (+35 =35 -15) with a winning percentage of 61.8%. She represented Hungary twice in the European Team Championships, once in 1989 and then again in 1999, on the latter occasion helping her team to its best result, a silver medal, and also winning an individual silver medal for her result on board 2.

In rapids, Polgar's best results include equal first with Viswanathan Anand in the Wydra rapid in Israel in 1998, defeating David Navara 6-2 in a rapid match in the Czech Republic in 2010, and defeating Vassily Ivanchuk 2.5-1.5 and Veselin Topalov 3.5-0.5 to win the rapid Ajedrez UNAM Quadrangular (2010). She won an invitational rapid tournament, Festa da Uva (Grape Celebration), in Caxias do Sul in Brazil in early 2012, ahead of Henrique Mecking, Gilberto Milos and Andres Rodriguez Vila the contest was a round robin featuring 2 game mini-matches between each player, with one rapid and one blitz game in each match. (2) She played in the European Championship (2014) but only scored 6.5/11, losing a couple of games in the last few rounds of the tournament and failing to qualify for the World Cup 2015.

Polgar first entered the top 100 in January 1989 at the age of 12 when her rating skyrocketed to 2555 and number 55 in the world, and she has remained in the top 100 since then. She remains the youngest player by far to enter the top 100. Her standard rating as of 1 February 2015 is 2675 making her the world's top rated woman, Hungary's #4 player, and world #66; her peak rating was 2735 in 2005, when she was ranked #8 in the world. She is rated 2646 in rapid (world #100 and Women's world #1) and 2736 (world #30 & women's world #1) in blitz.

She lives in Budapest with her husband, veterinarian Gusztav Font, and their two children, Oliver and Hanna who were born in 2004 and 2006 respectively. In late 2012, she released her autobiography "How I Beat Fischer's Record". (3) In August 2014, she announced her retirement from competitive chess after 25 years as the top rated woman in chess. (4)

***

(1) 365chess: http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...
(2) Chessbase "Grape Celebration with Judit Polgar" http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...
(3) Chessbase "Judit Polgar: How I beat Fischer's record" http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...
(4) Chessbase "Judit Polgar to retire from competitive chess" http://en.chessbase.com/post/judit-...

- Article in the Independent dated 24 November 2012: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/p...
- Personal website: http://www.polgarjudit.com/index_en...
- Psychology Today article titled "The Grandmaster Experiment" http://www.psychologytoday.com/arti...
- John Miller's (User: wanabe2000) collection of games and tournaments of the Polgar sisters: Game Collection: Zsuzsa (Susan), Zsofia, and Judit Polgar
- Live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/women
- Polgar's Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/GMJuditPolgar
- Q & A between Polgar and fans: http://www.crestbook.com/en/node/1668
- https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast... (2017 podcast interview with Ben Johnson of Perpetual Chess)
- Audio-visual collage of Polgar Chessday 2009: http://www.timeapictures.com/en/jud... (link in print underneath photo array)
- Wikipedia article: Judit Polgar

Last updated: 2021-07-23 08:34:41

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 73; games 1-25 of 1,809  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. J Polgar vs Szendrei 1-0211984BudapestB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
2. I Balogh vs J Polgar 0-1281984BudapestB30 Sicilian
3. J Polgar vs H Grooten 1-0221984Blindfold gameB83 Sicilian
4. J Polgar vs T Halasz 1-0261985Training gameB01 Scandinavian
5. J Polgar vs T Hutters 1-0411986CopenhagenB32 Sicilian
6. J Polgar vs Z Simic  1-0421986New York Open Section VIIC10 French
7. J Polgar vs S Villegas  1-0451986Wch U16 GirlsC30 King's Gambit Declined
8. V Alvarez vs J Polgar  0-1371986Wch U16 GirlsB20 Sicilian
9. J Polgar vs O Capo Iturrieta 0-1591986Wch U16 GirlsB83 Sicilian
10. J Polgar vs N Bojkovic 1-0711986Wch U16 GirlsB30 Sicilian
11. J Polgar vs S Nagabhusanam  1-0491986Wch U16 GirlsB53 Sicilian
12. I Majul vs J Polgar 0-1641986Wch U16 GirlsA37 English, Symmetrical
13. J Polgar vs I Kientzler-Guerlain 1-0341986Wch U16 GirlsB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
14. M Riofrio Palma vs J Polgar  0-1231986Wch U16 GirlsA46 Queen's Pawn Game
15. A Hernandez Bonilla vs J Polgar 0-1361986Wch U16 GirlsA36 English
16. J Polgar vs S Djuric 0-1451986Australian Open 1986/87C30 King's Gambit Declined
17. J Polgar vs E Mednis 0-1441987Australian Open 1986/87C15 French, Winawer
18. J Polgar vs D Drimer 1-0621987Australian Open 1986/87B45 Sicilian, Taimanov
19. J Polgar vs K Hornung 1-0541987Australian Open 1986/87C31 King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit
20. T Hay vs J Polgar 1-0311987Australian Open 1986/87B83 Sicilian
21. B Leverett vs J Polgar 0-1301987New York Open U-2400A57 Benko Gambit
22. J Polgar vs A Huss 0-1521987Biel MixC15 French, Winawer
23. J Costa vs J Polgar 0-1221987Biel MixA31 English, Symmetrical, Benoni Formation
24. C Landenbergue vs J Polgar  0-1441987Biel MixA04 Reti Opening
25. J Polgar vs J Costa 1-0321987Biel MixC33 King's Gambit Accepted
 page 1 of 73; games 1-25 of 1,809  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Polgar wins | Polgar loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 14 OF 77 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-09-04  arielbekarov: This is great news and I think Judit Polgar will make a great tournament. We need personalities like her, and I think she is very motivated, and be sure that she will be well prepared. All the best to Judit Polgar !
Ariel
Nov-09-04  iron maiden: <does corus literally coincide with the K-K match?> I think so; both are late January/early February, so neither Kasparov nor Kasimdzhanov could play at Wijk aan Zee even if they wanted to.
Nov-09-04  acirce: <Joshka> I didn't do very well, although it was no disaster either. It is possible that I might post a game, yes. At the moment the only scoresheet I haven't mislaid happens to be my only win (in the rated games; I don't record the rapids).. :-) It is really a coincidence, I promise! I hope I find the other ones soon because I believe strongly that analyzing your losses is very rewarding.
Nov-09-04  TheParadigm: <Acirce> Are any of your games already posted on chessgames.com? If so, could you spare a few moments to post a link?
Nov-09-04  acirce: <TheParadigm> they are spread out here and there. One on FIDE World Championship (2004) and most of the others on The Kibitzer's Café somewhere...
Nov-09-04  Phoenix: Excellent! Judit's back. That completes the field for Corus 2005.

<World Ranking and players: 2 Anand IND 2781; 3 Kramnik RUS 2760; 4 Morozevich RUS 2758; 5 Topalov BUL 2757; 6 Leko HUN 2743; 7 Adams ENG 2740; 8 Svidler RUS 2735; 9 Polgar HUN 2728; 13 Ponomariov UKR 2710; 15 Grischuk RUS 2704; 21 Short ENG 2687; 25 Van Wely NED 2681; 37 Sokolov NED 2663; 59 Bruzon CUB 2637>

Can't wait for this tournament to begin! Hopefully we'll get see a few KID games from her. Must start a countdown on my calendar :-)

Nov-10-04  iron maiden: Keep in mind, of course, that those ratings are going to change before Corus begins. The upcoming Russian Championship will probably have a say on the January list.
Nov-10-04  RisingChamp: Who on Earth is Bruzon and why is he in this tournament ahead of at least ten others I could think of....seems a little out of place at a mega event like this.
Nov-10-04  ruylopez900: <RisingChamp> I believe that Bruzon was the winner of the Corus Chess Tournament Group B, and therefore received an automatic invitation to play in Group A. Magnus Carlsen is playing in Group B having won Group C last year.
Nov-10-04  RisingChamp: Ok that explains it and keeping that in mind I see nothing at all wrong with him getting a chance at all the big guys.Bruzon must be excited-this is the chance of a liffetime.
Nov-10-04  percyblakeney: Just going by the ranking Polgar is in the second half of the field, and the fact that she's not been playing for a while should also make it probable that she she won't finish among the top players of Corus. I don't think she'll be better than fifth or worse than tenth.
Nov-10-04  acirce: Bruzon has also been doing very well during the year, including performing 2771 in the Olympiad, etc. I definitely do not think he'll finish last.

Before Polgar became inactive she used to perform higher than her rating, 2764 in 2003 and 2751 in 2002, so she was definitely on the rise. It's not obvious that a year of inactivity makes you play that much worse, just look at Susan. So it will be very interesting to see what she does here.

Nov-10-04  ongyj: unfortunately Ivanchuk's not playing. How I miss his innovative play...
Nov-10-04  shr0pshire: I must admire Judit for making her comeback at the Corus tournament. Last year's Corus A group was won by Anand with 8.5 points out of 13. It was a tough tournament, and you have WIN GAMES.

It would have been much easier for Judit to make a comeback at Linaries where she could draw all her games and come out with a trophy!

Judit if you want a training partner for Corus, contact the site's hosts, and we can play. ;)

Nov-10-04  iron maiden: <shr0pshire> Actually, that's pretty much what Judit did last time she played at Corus, in 2003. Out of thirteen games she won three and drew ten.
Nov-10-04  iron maiden: My predictions for Corus A-Group:

Winner: Anand at +4
2nd: Topalov at +3
3rd: Leko at +2
4th-7th: Adams, Kramnik, Morozevich and Svidler at +1 8th-9th: Polgar and Grischuk with even scores
10th: Van Wely at -1
11th: Sokolov at -2
12th-13th: Ponomariov and Bruzon at -3
And finally, Short at -4.

Predictions based on current strength, and prone to change before the start of the tournament, of course.

Nov-10-04  yoozum: ah, poor short. i have a feeling this won't be such a good tournament for him in light of his recent results in calvia. i sincerely hope he'll end up with an even score or possibly higher.
Nov-10-04  iron maiden: I have nothing against Short either, but he's just been playing horribly. In fact I'm not sure why he was even invited in the first place. Shirov, Bacrot, Ivanchuk, Bareev or Gelfand would have been more worthy candidates.
Nov-10-04  yoozum: i think that shirov is in a similar situation to short, albeit not as bad. he has definitely under-performed the last two tournaments, especially the latter. maybe i don't appreciate shirov because i joined the chess community only earlier this year and haven't really had the chance to see his "fire on the board"
Nov-10-04  iron maiden: And of course Ponomariov is also playing terribly ever since he returned to classical chess, which was why I projected him to finish that low.
Nov-10-04  RisingChamp: Short is just totally unpredictable.It quite possible he might score -4 but I wouldnt be surprised at +5 even in this field.I think Morozevich or Svidler will win the Corus and mab even Judit.Actually IMO her layoff mab an advantage because preparing for her openings may be a bit tougher-she hasnt played recently-and I have a feeling she might have revamped her repertoire.BTW anyone think she might be Raffael on Playchess.com?
Nov-10-04  iron maiden: <RisingChamp> Well I for one can't picture anyone, except MAYBE Anand, scoring +5 in a field like this.
Nov-10-04  RisingChamp: Short at his best is just as good as Anand ever was.If u dont believe just look over the games of his World Championship Match with Kaspy.The GAMES not the score.However Short can play some pretty awful chess as we have all seen.I wouldnt be surprised at anything from him.Besides +5 from Moro or Topalov wouldnt stun me either given Moros ability to win tournaments he wins with staggering scores.
Nov-11-04  shr0pshire: I had a thought that she may be raffeal on playchess.com. I actually wanted her to be raffeal, but those patzers on there think it is Kasparov and some even think it is Fischer. I honestly don't know who it is.

Evidently GM Malshun does though.

Nov-11-04  milanez: i heard people say it's rafael vaganian
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