CHESS PLAYER

Alexander Moiseenko

1980 - Today

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Alexander Moiseenko (Ukrainian: Олександр Моісеєнко, Oleksandr Moiseyenko; born 17 May 1980) is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster and the 2013 European champion. He was a member of the gold medal-winning Ukrainian team at the Chess Olympiads of 2004 and 2010. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Alexander Moiseenko is the 306th most popular chess player (up from 333rd in 2019), the 2,894th most popular biography from Russia (up from 3,167th in 2019) and the 46th most popular Russian Chess Player.

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Among CHESS PLAYERS

Among chess players, Alexander Moiseenko ranks 306 out of 461Before him are Ilya Smirin, Karen Asrian, Sergei Rublevsky, Atousa Pourkashiyan, R Vaishali, and Elina Danielian. After him are Alberto David, Vasil Spasov, Hans Niemann, Aleksej Aleksandrov, Dmitry Jakovenko, and Ye Jiangchuan.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Alexander Moiseenko ranks 580Before him are Massari, Samir Javadzadeh, Elio Germano, Gro Hammerseng-Edin, Christian Olsson, and Rodrigo. After him are Leonid Volkov, Kasper Bøgelund, Carlos Gurpegui, Bambang Pamungkas, Diomansy Kamara, and Hamza al-Ghamdi.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Alexander Moiseenko ranks 2,894 out of 3,761Before him are Olga Yegorova (1972), Elena Milashina (1978), Yaroslava Shvedova (1987), Anjelika Krylova (1973), Natalya Antyukh (1981), and Matvei Safonov (1999). After him are Leonid Volkov (1980), David Musulbes (1972), Svetlana Nageykina (1965), Marat Basharov (1974), Sergei Gonchar (1974), and Stanislav Pozdnyakov (1973).

Among CHESS PLAYERS In Russia

Among chess players born in Russia, Alexander Moiseenko ranks 46Before him are Leonid Yudasin (1959), Yury Dokhoian (1964), Alisa Galliamova (1972), Sergei Tiviakov (1973), Ekaterina Kovalevskaya (1974), and Sergei Rublevsky (1974). After him are Dmitry Jakovenko (1983), Sergei Shipov (1966), Vadim Milov (1972), Rustem Dautov (1965), Natalia Pogonina (1985), and Evgeny Alekseev (1985).