Anna-Maria Botsari

Anna-Maria Botsari

Anna-Maria Botsari at EuroChess Iraklion in 2007
Full name Anna-Maria Botsari
Country  Greece
Born (1972-10-05) 5 October 1972
Kavala, Greece
Title Woman Grandmaster (1993)
FIDE rating 2338 (Oct 2013)
Peak rating 2394 (Oct 2003)

Anna-Maria Botsari (Greek: Αννα-Μαρία Μπότσαρη) (born 5 October 1972 in Kavala, Greece) is a Greek chess player holding the title of Woman Grandmaster (WGM).

Chess career

Botsari has won, or jointly won, the Greek Women's Chess Championship seven times. She was a bronze medalist at the 1990 World Junior Chess Championship and silver medalist in 1991. She was the highest rated Greek female chess player for more than a decade.

Botsari was a participant in the 1991, 1993 and 1996 World Women's Chess Championship Interzonal tournaments. She scored 9/18 in the 1990 Women's Interzonal in Azov, 6/13 in the 1991 Women's Interzonal in Subotica, and 7.5/13 at the 1993 Women's Interzonal in Jakarta.

Botsari has represented Greece in fourteen Chess Olympiads from 1986 to 2012. Her best results were at the 28th Chess Olympiad in Thessaloniki in 1988, where she scored 8.5/12 and finished sixth on the first reserve board, and the 35th Chess Olympiad in Bled in 2002, where she scored 8.5/13 with a performance rating of 2435, to finish ninth on board one.[1]

She has represented Greece in nine European Women's Team Chess Championships from 1992 to 2011, and won a gold medal on second board in Debrecen 1992.[2] She won two individual gold medals (in Mangalia 1992 and Varna 1994) and a team gold medal (in Varna 1992) in the Women's Chess Balkaniads.[3]

Between 27 and 28 February 2002, Anna-Maria Botsari achieved a new Guinness World Record in Kalavryta, Greece, by playing 1102 opponents in a little over 30 hours. Her score was +1095 =7 -0.[4][5]

Botsari gained the Woman Grandmaster (WGM) title in 1993.

She won the Women's title of the 7th Mediterranean Chess Championship in Rijeka 2009.[6][7][8]

Personal life

She was once married to Serbian Grandmaster Igor Miladinović. She currently resides in Athens with her daughter Melina.

References

External links

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