Joël Lautier
Joël Lautier | |
---|---|
Born | Scarborough, Ontario, Canada | April 12, 1973
Title | Grandmaster (1990) |
Years active | 1985–2009 |
FIDE rating | 2658 (October 2024) |
Peak rating | 2687 (January 2002) |
Peak ranking | No. 13 (January 1995) |
Joël Lautier (French pronunciation: [ʒɔɛl lotje]) is a French chess grandmaster and one of the world's leading chess players in the 1990s and early 2000s. In 1986, he won the U-14 World Youth Chess Championship in Puerto Rico, Argentina. In 1988, he won the World Junior Chess Championship, ahead of stars such as Vasily Ivanchuk, Boris Gelfand and Gregory Serper. He is the youngest player ever to win the World Junior Championship at the age of 15. He is one of the few players who has a lifetime positive score against Garry Kasparov. He was one of the people instrumental in Kramnik winning the Classical World Chess Championship 2000 against Kasparov by preparing the infamous 'Berlin Wall'. He also won the French Chess Championship twice in 2004 and 2005. He was the first president of the Association of Chess Professionals when it was founded in June 2003. In 2006, Lautier gave up competitive chess to pursue a career in investment banking. Since 2009 he has been CEO of the Moscow-based investment banking firm RGG Capital.[1]
Early life
[edit]Joel Lautier was born in Ontario, Canada on April 12, 1973. His father was French and his mother was Japanese. Later on, the family moved to France. He started playing chess when he was three and a half years old. His father introduced him to the game of chess. His father was a pretty decent player – rated around 2200 who often gave him interesting puzzles and quizzes and kept him interested in the game. He progressed quite quickly due to this. When he was 11, he started to beat his father on a regular basis. He dropped out of school when he was 16 as he wanted to focus more on chess tournaments.[2]
Chess career
[edit]Lautier won the Paris Championship for under-10 and then the under-10 French national title. In 1986, he participated in the U-14 World Championship in Puerto Rico, Argentina. Interestingly, his main competitors in that tournament were Sofia Polgar and Judit Polgar. He beat Sofia and drew against Judit. Eventually, he won the event with a good margin of 1.5 points, ahead of both the Polgar sisters. He worked with his father until he got his first world title in 1986, and then he trained with an IM named Didier Sellos.[3]
In 1988, at the age of 15, he won the World Junior Chess Championship in Adelaide, Australia. In this tournament, Joel was competing against stars such as Boris Gelfand, Vasyl Ivanchuk, Vladimir Akopian, Gregory Serper and Susan Polgar. Gelfand, Ivanchuk and Serper tied with him for the first place, but the tiebreak was the most number of wins and thanks to that Lautier became the youngest World Junior Champion; a record which is intact to date.[4] The same year he became an International Master.
In 1990, he became an International Grandmaster and also won the zonal tournament with 10.0/12 which qualified him to the inter-zonal. He started well at the inter-zonal with 3.5/4, beating strong players like Michael Adams, Vaganian and Yudasin but he lost to Viswanathan Anand and Alexei Shirov towards the end of the tournament and failed to qualify for the candidates’ matches. During this time, Lautier also improved his Russian, which he would learn to a fluent level alongside French, English and Japanese.
Lautier was a long-time leader of his national team at Chess Olympiad and, with him at the helm, France turned from a country that finished mid-table in the Tournament of nations into a mighty chess nation. Lautier performed well at the 1993 interzonal tournament, qualifying for the candidates’ matches under FIDE rules. He triumphed in over 30 international tournaments and national club championships in France, Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, and Spain. Besides Vasyl Ivanchuk, he is the only grandmaster who defeated every world champion of his time; he beat Anatoly Karpov, Garry Kasparov, Vladimir Kramnik, Alexander Khalifman, Vishwanathan Anand, Ruslan Ponomarev, Rustam Kasimdzhanov and Veselin Topalov. He is one of the few players who has a positive score of +2−1=7 against Garry Kasparov. He was the second of Vladimir Kramnik during the Classical World Chess Championship 2000 against Garry Kasparov.[5]
Despite all his success, Lautier never won the fight for the world championship. He partially realized his ambitions as a trainer: as part of Vladimir Kramnik’s team when he helped his friend to overcome Garry Kasparov. He is one of the founders of the Association of Chess Professionals and was its president from 2004 to 2005.[6] Since 2009, Lautier has been focusing on his business/professional activities rather than chess.
Personal life
[edit]He married Almira Skripchenko in 1997. Almira Skripchenko is a Woman Grandmaster and one of the strongest women chess players in late 1990s and early 2000s. They divorced in 2002.[7] In 2007, he married his second wife Alissa with whom he has a daughter named Naomi.[8]
Business career
[edit]As of 2022, Lautier no longer classified himself as a chess professional but as a businessman working in Russia. He quit his professional chess career in 2006 to pursue a career in investment banking in Russia. After his professional playing career, he turned to business in 2006 and made use of his connections to Russia which he found useful. At first, he worked as chairman of the mergers and acquisitions division of the European Business Associate. He quickly climbed up the ladder and is currently the CEO of RGG Capital, a company that specializes in Mergers and Acquisitions. In fact, he founded his mergers and acquisitions consultancy RGG (Russia goes global) which specialized in buying and selling assets in Russia. He also studied at Skolkovo management school in Moscow. He advised several large Russian companies in the oil, electricity, and pharmaceuticals sectors and acted as a non-executive director for Evropeyskaya Elektrotekhnica, a Russian electronics company.[8]
In 2020, he became a non-executive director and member of the supervisory board of the Russian bank Sovcombank. For that reason, the USA added him in March 2022 to the list of sanctioned people over the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The same day Anatoly Karpov was also added to the US sanctions list with Lautier. French business newspaper Les Echos called the US sanctioning Lautier 'bizarre' and noted him having already resigned from his position in the bank on 25 February, the day after the bank itself was placed on the sanctions list.[9] As of June 2023,[update] Lautier is no longer on the sanction list after OFAC in the US Department of Treasury accepted a petition he filed challenging the validity of his designation.[10]
Notable games
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- Garry Kasparov vs Joel Lautier, Mar-13, Linares 1994, round 13, Italian Game: Classical Variation, Giuoco Pianissimo, 0-1.[11]
- Joel Lautier vs Peter Leko, Feb-10 , Ubeda 1997, round 5, Sicilian Defense: Scheveningen. Fianchetto Variation (B80), 1-0.[12]
- Veselin Topalov vs Joel Lautier, Oct-30, Tilburg Fontys 1998, round 7, Sicilian Defense: Lasker-Pelikan. Sveshnikov Variation Novosibirsk Variation, 0-1.[13]
- Joel Lautier vs Anatoly Karpov, Apr-14, Dortmund 1993, round 4, English Opening: King's English. Four Knights Variation Fianchetto Lines, 1-0.[14]
- Joel Lautier vs Viswanathan Anand, Mar-01, Linares 1994, round 5, Gruenfeld Defense: Exchange. Modern Exchange Variation, 1-0.[15]
- Joel Lautier vs Ivan Sokolov, Mar-01, Linares 1995, round 1, Catalan Opening: General, 1-0.[16]
- Joel Lautier vs Victor Bologan, Mar-11, Enghien-les-Bains 3rd 1999, round 8, Caro-Kann Defense: Accelerated Panov Attack. Modern Variation, 1-0.[17]
References
[edit]- ^ "The chess games of Joel Lautier". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "A school drop-out, a world class GM and a CEO (1/2)". en.chessbase.com. August 11, 2016. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
- ^ "A school drop-out, a world class GM and a CEO (1/2)". en.chessbase.com. 11 August 2016.
- ^ "1988 World Junior chess championship". www.chessgames.com. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
- ^ "A school drop-out, a world class GM and a CEO (2/2)". en.chessbase.com. August 16, 2016. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
- ^ "Joel Lautier". ruchess.ru.
- ^ "20 самых красивых шахматисток мира". www.sports.ru (in Russian). 9 June 2016.
- ^ a b "A school drop-out, a world class GM and a CEO (2/2)". en.chessbase.com. 16 August 2016.
- ^ "Joël Lautier, the French chess star on the US sanctions list". France24.com. 23 April 2022. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
- ^ "Russia-related Designations; Issuance of Amended Russia-related Directive 4, Russia-related General Licenses; Publication of Russia-related Determinations; and New and Amended Frequently Asked Questions". 19 May 2023. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
- ^ "Garry Kasparov vs Joel Lautier (1994) Chess is Mental Torture". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Joel Lautier vs Peter Leko (1997)". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Veselin Topalov vs Joel Lautier (1998)". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Joel Lautier vs Anatoly Karpov (1993)". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Joel Lautier vs Viswanathan Anand (1994)". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Joel Lautier vs Ivan Sokolov (1995)". www.chessgames.com.
- ^ "Joel Lautier vs Victor Bologan (1999)". www.chessgames.com.
External links
[edit]Media related to Joël Lautier at Wikimedia Commons Joel Lautier player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- 1973 births
- Living people
- Chess Grandmasters
- French chess players
- Canadian chess players
- French people of Japanese descent
- World Youth Chess Champions
- World Junior Chess Champions
- Chess Olympiad competitors
- French people of Canadian descent
- Sportspeople from Scarborough, Ontario
- French chief executives
- French corporate directors
- Businesspeople from Toronto
- Investment bankers