Velimir Ivić | |
Country: | Serbia |
Grandmaster (2020) | |
Birth Place: | Belgrade, Serbia, FR Yugoslavia |
Peakrating: | 2620 (November 2021) |
Fideid: | 950122 |
Velimir Ivić (; born 27 August 2002) is a Serbian chess grandmaster since 2020, an International Master since 2018 and a FIDE Master since 2016. As of July 2022, he is ranked the third-best player in Serbia by FIDE rating.
Days short of his 15th birthday, Ivić was a member of the silver medal-winning U18 Serbian team (lost to Germany on additional criteria) at the 2017 European Youth Team Chess Championship, scoring 6/7 on board 4,[1] which earned him individual gold medal for his board and was also best overall result in the tournament according to points.[2]
In 2016, Ivić represented Serbia at the World Youth U16 Chess Olympiad, scoring 2.5/8 on board 2,[3] and scored 7 points after eleven rounds at the World Youth Chess Championship U14, ranking 8th - 14th.[4]
Ivić participated in the Chess Olympiad 2018, scoring 4.5/8 on board 5.[5]
In Sept 2019, at 17 years and 4 days old, Ivić became the youngest Serbian ever to earn all Grandmaster requirements and second youngest to earn third GM norm, few months short of record held by Milan Zajić, who was only awarded conditional GM title at 16).[6] Title was awarded following submission of IT2 application form[7] when Ivić officially broke the record held by Aleksandar Inđić[8] and became the youngest Serbian Grandmaster also recognized by the media in Serbia[9] until 29 November 2020 when Luka Budisavljević became the new record holder[10] at the age of 16 years, 10 months and 7 days.
Ivić qualified for the Chess World Cup 2021 where, ranked 110th, he defeated Robert Hungaski 1½-½ in the first round, 19th seed Francisco Vallejo Pons 1½-½ in the second round, 46th seed Matthias Bluebaum 1½-½ in the third round, and 14th seed Dmitry Andreikin 3-1 in the fourth round. He was defeated 3-1 by Vladimir Fedoseev in the fifth round.[11]
At the Chess World Cup 2023, Ivić defeated Ediz Gurel with the score of 3-1[12] in the first round, and was eliminated by Francisco Vallejo Pons with the score of 0-2[12] in the second round.
At the 2024 Champions Chess Tour, Ivić defeated Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 2-1 in round 1, and then defeated Fabiano Caruana 2½-1½ in round 2.