Kamil Miton
FIDE ID 1111914
درباره
Overview
Kamil Mitoń is a Polish chess Grandmaster (GM) born on April 12, 1984. Mitoń represents the Polish Chess Federation (POL) and officially received his Grandmaster title in 2002. He reached a career-high classical FIDE rating of 2655 in January 2007, climbing into the world's top 50 players. Beyond his achievements as a competitive tournament player and national team representative, Mitoń is internationally recognized as an elite trainer—most notably for his long-term coaching relationship with world-class Polish Grandmaster Jan-Krzysztof Duda—and as a prolific theoretical author and opening specialist.
Biography & Major Career Milestones
Mitoń was established as one of Poland's most outstanding youth prodigies during the 1990s. In 1996, he achieved international prominence by winning the World Under-12 Chess Championship in Menorca. The following year, in 1997, he secured the silver medal at the World Under-14 Chess Championship. In 2000, at age 16, Mitoń took clear second place on tie-break at the World Junior (Under-20) Chess Championship in Yerevan, Armenia, scoring 8.5/13 behind winner Lázaro Bruzón and earning a Grandmaster norm. He formally secured his Grandmaster title in 2002.
In standard tournaments, Mitoń won the Cannes Open in 2000. In July 2005, he shared first place at the highly competitive 33rd World Open in Philadelphia, scoring 7.5/9, and subsequently defeated Magesh Chandran Panchanathan in a blitz playoff to win the event. Later that year, he tied for first at the Bajada de la Virgen ahead of grandmasters such as Vladimir Baklan and Evgeny Gleizerov, and tied for second at the high-caliber Samba Cup in Skanderborg.
Mitoń's rating trajectory peaked in January 2007, when he reached his career-high rating of 2655. In December of that year, he won the 17th Magistral de Elgoibar. His subsequent tournament victories include tying for first and winning on tie-breaks at the Ciudad de La Laguna in April 2010, and tying for first at the Reykjavík Open in 2011 with a score of 7/9. Nationally, he achieved a podium finish at the 2012 Polish Chess Championship in Warsaw, earning the bronze medal with a score of 6.5/9.
In his coaching career, Mitoń has served as the long-term head coach of Polish elite Grandmaster Jan-Krzysztof Duda, overseeing Duda's ascension to the absolute world elite. Mitoń has also worked extensively as an author and analytical contributor to the "Chess Evolution" series of theoretical manuals alongside grandmasters such as Arkadij Naiditsch and Csaba Balogh.
Elite Team & Event Performance
- 2008 Chess Olympiad (Dresden): Represented Poland on Board 2, scoring 4 points out of 8 games.
- 2010 Chess Olympiad (Khanty-Mansiysk): Represented Poland on Board 3, scoring a notable 7.5 points out of 10 games.
- 2017 European Team Chess Championship (Crete): Served as the captain of the Polish national team, leading the delegation to a fourth-place finish.
Playing Style, Material Tendencies & Endgame Profiling
Mitoń is a classically trained positional player whose style is characterized by strategic clarity, technical precision, and structural discipline. He prefers closed and semi-closed structures where he can cultivate incremental space advantages. He has a noted aversion to premature tactical complications, instead aiming to steer middlegame play toward controlled, technically superior endings.
His handling of material tendencies reflects a deep respect for pawn structures and minor-piece coordination. Mitoń is highly proficient in deploying the Catalan light-squared bishop as an active long-range weapon. In the middlegame, he often works to establish stable blockades and pressure weak pawn complexes, typically maintaining a solid defensive threshold when pressed into worse positions.
Endgame technique is one of Mitoń’s strongest strategic assets. He possesses advanced expertise in rook-and-pawn endgames, a topic on which he has published theoretical articles. He excels at converting minor static advantages in simplified, queenless middlegames and endings, exhibiting high accuracy in technical phases involving opposite-colored bishops, knight-versus-bishop dynamics, and active king activation.
Opening Repertoire & Theoretical Move Orders
1. As White
Mitoń is predominantly a 1.d4 player. His White repertoire centers around main-line closed openings, with a strong emphasis on Catalan setups and classical responses to the Slav Defense.
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Catalan Opening (Closed Variation): Mitoń frequently employs the Catalan to establish a solid positional foundation and pressure Black's queenside.
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Catalan Opening (Open Variation): Against active setups where Black captures on c4, he relies on classical central control.
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The Bogo-Indian Defense: When facing the Bogo-Indian, Mitoń typically responds with the solid 4.Bd2 development.
2. As Black
As Black, Mitoń meets 1.e4 with highly asymmetrical and strategic Sicilian structures, particularly favoring the Kalashnikov and Richter-Rauzer variations. Against 1.d4, he employs solid Indian defense setups, including the King's Indian Defense.
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Sicilian Defense (Kalashnikov Variation): A primary weapon for Mitoń against 1.e4, seeking early counterplay in the center.
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Sicilian Defense (Richter-Rauzer Variation): Mitoń has utilized this concrete system to construct active, counter-attacking piece play.
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King's Indian Defense: Against 1.d4, Mitoń occasionally utilizes the King's Indian structure to generate dynamic middlegame complications.
Links
بازیهای اخیر 1073
| تاریخ | رنگ | حریف | نتیجه |
|---|---|---|---|
| — | Andreas Schenk(2455) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Christopher Lutz(2597) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Giovanni Vescovi(2592) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Pavel Ponkratov(2630) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Pontus Carlsson(2463) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Pavel Eljanov(2701) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Jan Krejci(2530) | 1-0 | |
| — | Ottomar Ladva(2404) | 1-0 | |
| — | Eduardas Rozentalis(2570) | 0-1 | |
| — | Arnaud Hauchard(2499) | 1-0 | |
| — | Pawel Jaracz(2476) | 0-1 | |
| — | Dariusz Swiercz(2540) | 0-1 | |
| — | Piotr Bobras(2518) | 1-0 | |
| — | Jakub Czakon(2475) | 1-0 | |
| — | Krzysztof Chojnacki(2436) | 0-1 | |
| — | Kamil Dragun(2516) | 1-0 | |
| — | Piotr Piesik(2431) | 0-1 | |
| — | Dmitry Jakovenko(2708) | 0-1 | |
| — | Mustafa (34) Yilmaz(2537) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Vladimir Kramnik(2772) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Dmitry A. Korobov(2678) | 1-0 | |
| — | Sergei Rublevsky(2680) | 1-0 | |
| — | Juan Mario Gomez Esteban(2490) | 1-0 | |
| — | Dmitry A. Korobov(2554) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Miguel Angel Balaguer Miralles(2477) | 0-1 | |
| — | Boris Avrukh(2609) | 0-1 | |
| — | Lukas Cernousek(2455) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Eric Prie(2513) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Rafal Lubczynski(2413) | 1-0 | |
| — | Jan Krejci(2458) | 1-0 | |
| — | Gleb I Kovalenko(2653) | 1-0 | |
| — | Pawel Czarnota(2530) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Radoslaw Wojtaszek(2726) | 0-1 | |
| — | Mykhaylo Oleksiyenko(2638) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Mustafa (34) Yilmaz(2577) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Daria-Alexandra Dumitrache(2467) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Mikhail Gurevich(2633) | 0-1 | |
| — | Pentala Harikrishna(2664) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Julio Becerra Rivero(2598) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Dmitry Schneider(2502) | 0-1 | |
| — | Bartosz Socko(2577) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Ildar Ibragimov(2624) | 0-1 | |
| — | Joshua Friedel(2465) | 1-0 | |
| — | Vasyl Ivanchuk(2748) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Farhad Tahirov(2452) | 0-1 | |
| — | David Navara(2730) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Grzegorz Gajewski(2628) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Xiangzhi Bu(2685) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Lazaro Bruzon Batista(2648) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Dariusz Swiercz(2557) | 1/2-1/2 |