
Iranian chess player
Alireza Firouzja
Alireza Firouzja is one of the greatest Iranian chess players, or rather the greatest of them. Alireza Firouzja was born in 1382. He is the most famous Iranian chess player in the world in such a way that his biography on Wikipedia has been translated into 17 different languages. Alireza Firouzja was born in 1382 or more precisely on June 18, 2003. He is a French-Iranian chess grandmaster and is the number 2 ranked player in the world. He is the youngest player ever to reach a score above 2800.
Alireza Firouzja was born in Iran and started playing chess at the age of 8. At the age of 12, he became the youngest winner of the Iranian Chess Championship and later that year he became the International Master and also achieved his first Grandmaster standard. At the age of 14, he won the title of Grand Master. At the age of 15, he finished sixth in the 2018 World Rapid Chess Championship. At the age of 16, Firouzja became the second youngest player to reach 2700 points.
Atusa Pourkashian
Atusa Pourkashian is the second most famous Iranian chess player and the second among the greatest Iranian chess players. His biography has been translated into 15 different languages. Atusa Pourkashian was born on May 16, 1367 in Tehran. She holds the title of Grand Master of Women, which was awarded to her by FIDE in 2009. Pourkashian has won the Iranian women's championship six times (2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2014).
Pourkashian won the 2000 World Junior Chess Championship in the under-12 category for girls. Also, in April 2010, Pourkashian won the Asian Women's Chess Championship in Subic Bay. She participated in the World Women's Chess Championship in 2006, 2008, 2012, 2017. She has played for Iran in team competitions, in eight Women's Chess Olympiads (2000-2014), Asian Women's Team Championship and Under-16 World Youth Chess. but now she play for USA
Ehsan Qaim Magaki
Ehsan Ghaem Maggi, born on August 11, 1982, is an Iranian chess grandmaster. With 13 championship titles, he is the record holder of the Iranian chess championship. He had 2583 points in the list of Fide Shahrivar 1390. He has a bachelor's degree in law and is currently studying sports management at Tehran University.
In 2004, he won first place in GM Kish competition. In 2009, he won a 20-game combination match (four classic, four quick, and twelve blitz) against Anatoly Karpov. The overall score of this combined match was as follows. 8 wins for the deputy, seven wins for Karpov and five draws.
Mehrsa Mohseni far