Tal Baron Explained

Tal Baron
Country:Israel
Birth Date:1992 8, df=yes
Birth Place:Tel Aviv, Israel
Grandmaster (2011)
Peakrating:2560 (August 2016)
Fideid:2809958

Tal Baron (Hebrew: טל בר און‎; born August 7, 1992, in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli chess Grandmaster.[1] [2] As of May 2021, he is ranked 15th in Israel.

Life

Baron was born in Tel Aviv, where he also attended high school. He acquired the title of International Master in 2010, having completed the required norms in December 2008 at the Israeli championship in Haifa and in 2010 at the European championship in Rijeka.[3] He was awarded the title of Grandmaster on June 2, 2011. He completed the requirements necessary to obtain the title of Grandmaster at the 26th Czerniak Memorial Tournament. At the time, Baron was the youngest Grandmaster in Israeli history, a title he retains as of 2023.

In August 2016, Baron was selected to represent Israel on the Israeli National Chess Olympiad team in Baku, Azerbaijan.

In April 2017, Baron confessed to using a chess computer to cheat, as a technical matter, in the final round of an online tournament on Chess.com.[4]

He won the gold medal in the second GM group at the 2017 Maccabiah Games, in which former Women's World Champion, Ukrainian grandmaster Anna Ushenina took the silver medal.[5]

In 2019, he won 2nd- 3rd place in the Netanya International Chess Championship along with Alexander Moiseenko.[6]

References

  1. Web site: The chess games of Tal Baron. www.chessgames.com. 2018-08-16.
  2. Web site: Tal Baron chess games and profile - Chess-DB.com. chess-db.com. 2018-08-16. 2016-07-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20160730045157/http://chess-db.com/public/pinfo.jsp?id=2809958. dead.
  3. http://ratings.fide.com/title_applications.phtml?details=1&id=2809958&title=IM&pb=26 IM application
  4. Web site: Did I CHEAT on Chess.com??? - The Ugly Truth . . en . 2019-10-11.
  5. Web site: Georg Meier wins 20th Maccabiah. July 21, 2017. Chess News.
  6. Web site: Netanya International Chess Festival 2019 - Open Section August 2019 Israel FIDE Chess Tournament report. 2020-06-16. ratings.fide.com.

External links