Maxim Matlakov
FIDE ID 4168003
Tentang
Overview
Maxim Sergeevich Matlakov (born March 5, 1991) is a Russian chess Grandmaster (awarded in 2010) representing the Russian federation (RUS). A former elite junior competitor, Matlakov won the World Under-18 Championship in 2009 and reached his competitive pinnacle in adult chess by winning the European Individual Chess Championship in 2017. He achieved a career-high FIDE classical rating of 2738 in November 2017, ranking as world No. 23. In addition to his achievements as a world-class tournament competitor and a gold-medal-winning national team member, Matlakov has established a prominent identity as an elite opening theoretician and second. He served as a long-time trainer for Peter Svidler during the 2013, 2014, and 2016 Candidates Tournaments, and subsequently worked as a key analyst on the coaching staff of Ju Wenjun during her successful defenses of the Women's World Chess Championship.
Biography & Major Career Milestones
Born in Leningrad, Matlakov developed his chess foundation at the Anichkov Palace youth chess school. He was mentored by prominent coaches including Sergei Havksy, Alexey Yuneev, and Grandmaster Sergei Ivanov. Matlakov dominated the domestic youth circuit, winning successive Russian youth titles in the Under-12, Under-14, Under-16, and Under-18 divisions. Internationally, he earned bronze medals at the World Youth Chess Championship in the Under-12 section (2003) and the Under-14 section (2005), before capturing the Under-18 world title in 2009 in Antalya.
Matlakov obtained the International Master (IM) title in 2007, followed by the Grandmaster (GM) title in 2010. His GM norms were achieved at the Aivars Gipslis Memorial in Riga (March 2009), the Mazovian Chess Festival in Warsaw (July 2009), and his first-place finish at the World Under-18 Championship (November 2009). He also secured the Saint Petersburg Chess Championship title in 2009 and the Russian Junior (Under-20) Championship in 2011.
In 2012, Matlakov finished tied for second (sixth on tiebreaks) at the 13th European Individual Chess Championship in Plovdiv with a score of 8/11, qualifying him for the 2013 FIDE World Cup. In the World Cup, he defeated Dutch GM Jan Smeets in the opening round but was eliminated in the second round by Azerbaijani GM Shakhriyar Mamedyarov.
By 2013, Matlakov's theoretical expertise led to his recruitment as a second for Peter Svidler, assisting him in three consecutive Candidates Tournaments. Alongside his coaching duties, Matlakov remained a formidable competitor: he tied for first with Alexander Moiseenko in the Moscow Open A in 2014, finished as runner-up in the Russian Cup Final in late 2014, and tied for third at the strong Gibraltar Masters in 2015.
His career-best individual achievement occurred in June 2017, when he won the 18th European Individual Chess Championship in Minsk, Belarus. He finished on 8.5/11 points, edging out Baadur Jobava and Vladimir Fedoseev on tiebreak to secure the continental gold. This performance elevated his classical FIDE rating to its peak of 2738 in November 2017. Later notable individual successes include winning the 21st Dubai Open on tiebreaks with 7/9 in 2019, and winning the silver medal at the Russian Championship Superfinal in 2023.
Elite Team & Event Performance
- 11th World Team Chess Championship (Khanty-Mansiysk, 2017): Represented Russia, contributing to the team's silver-medal finish.
- 21st European Team Chess Championship (Hersonissos, 2017): Played on Board 4 for Russia, scoring 5.5/8 (+3 =5 -0) to help the team win silver, while earning an individual silver medal for his board performance.
- 22nd European Team Chess Championship (Batumi, 2019): Competed on Board 3, scoring 2.5/6 to help the Russian national team secure the team gold medal.
- SCO International Team Chess Tournament (Qingdao, 2023): Represented the victorious Russian squad that secured first place.
- European Club Cup: Represented the Saint Petersburg club (competing as "Mednyi Vsadnik"), winning team gold in 2011, 2018, and 2021. He won an individual silver medal on Board 5 in 2013 and took individual silver on Board 2 in the 2021 European Online Chess Club Cup with a 2726 performance rating.
- Russian Team Championship: Long-time player for Saint Petersburg. Won team gold in 2013, team silver in 2012, and multiple individual and team medals in 2011, 2014, and 2015.
Playing Style, Material Tendencies & Endgame Profiling
Matlakov possesses a universal and positional playing style, heavily supported by rigorous home preparation. He is characterized by deep opening preparation and structural clarity, allowing him to transition cleanly into safe, maneuvering middlegames. Matlakov typically avoids unnecessary tactical risks but remains a sharp and concrete calculator in complex complications.
His handling of space advantages is classical; he specializes in squeezing opponents through minor-piece coordination, particularly in queenless middlegames. He is highly willing to accept structural imbalances, such as doubled or isolated pawns, provided they yield active open files for his rooks or a functional bishop pair.
Matlakov’s technical capability is most pronounced in the endgame, where he demonstrates great conversion of microscopic positional pluses. He is particularly strong in active rook-and-pawn endgames and knight-versus-bishop endings. Defensively, Matlakov relies on active piece activity and counter-attacking resources to hold worse positions, preferring energetic counter-play over passive, defensive setups.
Opening Repertoire & Theoretical Move Orders
1. As White
Matlakov primarily utilizes closed openings, heavily favoring systems with 1.d4 and 1.Nf3 to establish positional control.
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The Catalan Opening: His primary weapon against 1...Nf6 and 2...e6 setups. He regularly deploys it to apply positional pressure down the long diagonal.
In the open variations, his lines typically proceed: -
The Bogo-Indian Defense: A common transpositional line when Black counters with an early bishop check, met with positional restraint:
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The Queen's Gambit Declined: Employed frequently to maintain central tension:
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The Réti Opening / Nimzowitsch-Larsen Attack: Frequently used to bypass mainline theory and enter maneuvering midgames:
2. As Black
Against both 1.e4 and 1.d4, Matlakov favors theoretically dense, highly active defenses that offer rich counter-attacking potential.
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Against 1.e4:
- Sicilian Taimanov: One of his primary defensive weapons against open Sicilians, yielding complex pawn structures and active queenside counterplay.
- Ruy Lopez (Morphy Defense): Relying on classical, robust pawn structures in the closed systems.
- Italian Game: Meeting the quiet variations of the double king's pawn with symmetry and central stability.
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Against 1.d4:
- Slav Defense: A highly reliable option leading to solid, central pawn chains.
- Queen's Gambit Declined (Ragozin/Semi-Slav): Deployed when aiming for active, asymmetrical piece play:
Links
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