Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Bibisara Assaubayeva
Kazakhstani chess grandmaster (born 2004) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Bibisara Assaubayeva (Kazakh: Бибісара Асаубаева; Romanized: Bïbisara Asawbaeva; born 26 February 2004) is a Kazakhstani chess grandmaster.[1][2] She is a two-time Women's World Blitz Chess Champion. She was given the award of Outstanding Female Chess Player of 2021 in Asia by FIDE when being still a teenager.[3] She entered the Guinness World Records book in 2022, for her achievement as the youngest women's World Blitz Chess Champion, which she became in 2021 and retained in 2022.[4][5]
At the 2025 Sharjah Masters tournament, Assaubayeva qualified for the grandmaster title.[6]
Remove ads
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
Born in Taraz,[7] Kazakhstan, Assaubayeva played her first chess game at the age of four,[8] taught by her grandfather.[9] She won her first city championship when she was six years old.[8] She achieved the title of Woman FIDE Master in 2011, at the age of 7, when she won the World Youth Championships in Caldas Novas, Brazil in the Girls U8 section. Assaubayeva also competed in artistic gymnastics being a champion of Astana several times.[8]
In 2016 she moved with her family to live in Moscow and switched her federation affiliation to Russia. Assaubayeva won the gold medal at the World Cadets Championships in Batumi, Georgia in the Girls U12 category,[10] and the next year, she won silver in the Girls U14 division in Montevideo, Uruguay.[11] Also in 2017, at the age of 13, Assaubayeva competed in the European Individual Championship in Minsk.[7] She won three games, lost three and drew four, gaining a norm for the title of International Master.[12]
In 2019 Assaubayeva decided to move back to Kazakhstan and switched her national federation to her native country;[13] she never applied for the Russian citizenship while living in Russia.[14] In March 2019 she made her debut in the Kazakhstani national team at the Women's World Team Championship on the 3rd and 2nd boards and gained 5 points out of 9; the result was the best in the team.[15]
In December 2021, she finished second behind Alexandra Kosteniuk in the Women's World Rapid Championship, held in Warsaw, Poland. 2 days later she became the Women's World Blitz champion, winning the event held with a round to spare and a score of 14/17, winning 13 games. She defended her title the next year, at the World Blitz Chess Championship 2022 held in Almaty, Kazakhstan, where she won with a score of 13/17.[16]
At the 2025 Sharjah Masters tournament, Assaubayeva qualified for the grandmaster title, having completed both her final norm as well as the required 2500 rating.[6] She became the 43rd female chess player to achieve the title and the second from her country.[6][17]
At the Grenke Freestyle Open in 2025, she was one of the two best female players with 6/9 points, and placed 42nd among all 299 players.[18]
Consequently, she was the first woman to be invited to a Freestyle Chess Grand Slam at Las Vegas in July 2025. However, she finished last in the group stage and also lost in the Knockout Round 1 of the Lower Bracket.[19]
Remove ads
Controversies
Summarize
Perspective
Solozhenkin cheating claims
Russian grandmaster and coach Evgeniy Solozhenkin accused Assaubayeva on several internet articles of cheating during the World Youth U14 Championship in Uruguay in September 2017, claiming his daughter had heard her talking about her ongoing game during a toilet break. The FIDE Ethics Commission investigated the case and ultimately suspended Solozhenkin for making unsubstantiated allegations of cheating, citing an analysis of Kenneth W. Regan that showed no evidence of cheating.
A group of grandmasters wrote an open letter protesting against Solozhenkin's suspension, without giving an opinion about his accusations against Assaubayeva.[20] Assaubayeva's family sued Solozhenkin for defamatory allegations made in public and in the media that offended Assaubayeva's honor and dignity. The Moscow Appellate Court ordered Solozhenkin to apologize, disavow his allegations to the media, delete the defamatory articles, and pay a compensatory sum of 100,000 rubles.[21]
Unsolicited letters
In 2022 the investigative journalism outlet Meduza revealed that Assaubayeva was one of at least 15 female chess players who had received harassments in form of unsolicited letters containing used condoms and pornographic pictures from a resident in Riga, Latvia between 2009 and 2021. Assaubayeva was fourteen when she received such a letter in 2018, and several other recipients had also been minors. With the assistance of forensic experts and through searching the contents of data breaches, Meduza managed to pinpoint the identity of the sender to international master Andrejs Strebkovs.[22][23][24][25] Although he was unable to be prosecuted under Latvian law, Strebkovs was subsequently banned from all FIDE events for 12 years, and had his International Master title revoked.[26]
Remove ads
Achievements

- December 2022 – Women's World Blitz Chess Championship – winner[5]
- December 2021 – Women's World Blitz Chess Championship – winner (with one round to spare)
- December 2021 – Women's World Rapid Chess Championship – 2nd place
- August 2021 – Asian Women's Continental Online Chess Championship – winner[27]
- August 2019 – 26th Abu Dhabi International Chess Festival, Open, 3rd place among Women[28]
- May 2019 – Tashkent Zonal 3.4 tournament Women – 1–3 place, 3rd on tiebreak[29]
- February 2019 – Moscow Open Women – third place
- June 2017 – FIDE Master, European Individual Chess Championship 2017, Minsk, Belarus[12]
- October 2016 – winner, U12, World Championship among cadets in classical chess, Batumi, Georgia[10]
- September 2014 – vice world champion, girls U10, Durban, South Africa[9]
- August 2014 – winner in the category "players with rating up to 2000" of the 21st Abu Dhabi International Chess Festival[9]
- August 2014 – winner at 10 years old, male U14, in 13th Dubai Juniors Chess Championship[9]
- June 2014 – vice Asian champion, girls U12, Tashkent, Uzbekistan[9]
- May 2013 – world champion, girls U9, Porto Carras, Greece[9]
- May 2012 – world champion, girls U9, Iași, Romania[9]
- March 2012 – champion of Kazakhstan in blitz chess, girls U12 (when she was 8 years old)[9]
- at the age of seven she was awarded the title of Woman FIDE Master of the World Chess Federation[9]
- November 2011 – gold medal,[30] junior world champion, U8, Caldas Novas, Brazil[9]
- May 2011 – world champion among schoolchildren, girls U7, Kraków, Poland[9]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
