Evgeny Shtembuliak
FIDE ID 14113325
About
Overview
Evgeny Olehovych Shtembuliak is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster born on March 12, 1999, in Odesa, Ukraine. He represents the Ukrainian chess federation (UKR) and was officially awarded the Grandmaster (GM) title by FIDE in 2019, after earning his International Master (IM) title in 2016 and FIDE Master (FM) title in 2010. Shtembuliak achieved a career-high classical FIDE rating of 2628 in February 2020. His competitive identity is defined by significant international open victories, elite junior championships—most notably winning the World Junior Chess Championship—and strong collegiate team performances in the United States. His current FIDE ratings are 2620 in classical, 2520 in rapid, and 2520 in blitz.
Biography & Major Career Milestones
Shtembuliak was introduced to chess at the age of five by his mother in Chornomorsk, Ukraine. He rapidly advanced through the junior ranks, winning the Ukrainian Under-8 national championship and securing second-place finishes in the European Youth Chess Championships across the Under-8, Under-10, and Under-12 divisions. In 2011, Shtembuliak won the Ukrainian Boys Under-14 Championship.
Shtembuliak climbed the international ranks while completing his norm requirements. He secured Grandmaster norms at multiple events, including the 2018 Minnesota GM Norm tournament and a first-place tiebreak victory over GM Denes Boros at the 2019 Saint Louis Norm Congress, where he scored 7/9. He officially gained the GM title in early 2019.
The year 2019 marked the peak of Shtembuliak's competitive career. In October 2019, he won the World Junior Chess Championship in New Delhi, India, finishing clear first with an undefeated score of 9/11 (+7 =4 -0) and a tournament performance rating of 2752. Shortly thereafter, in December 2019, he claimed the 88th Ukrainian Chess Championship in Lutsk. Entering the round-robin national tournament as an underdog, he finished clear first with 7/9 (+5 =4 -0). In 2020, he participated in the premier Aeroflot Open A in Moscow, scoring a solid 5/9 against elite competition.
Alongside his individual pursuits, Shtembuliak moved to the United States on a full scholarship to study finance at Texas Tech University, where he heavily contributed to the university's competitive chess program.
Elite Team & Event Performance
- FIDE World Youth U16 Olympiad (2014): Represented the Ukrainian national team on Board 2 in Győr, Hungary.
- Pan-American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship (2019): Represented the Texas Tech University "Check Them Tech" squad. Shtembuliak played on a top board to help lead the university to an outright team championship with an undefeated 6-0 match score.
- FIDE Online Olympiad (2020): Competed as a member of the Ukrainian national team in the Top Division and knockout stages.
Playing Style, Material Tendencies & Endgame Profiling
Shtembuliak is characterized as a highly disciplined, positional master with exceptional strategic clarity. During his developmental years, he refined his positional acumen by studying classic manuals, notably David Bronstein's book on the Zurich Interzonal 1953 and Boris Gelfand's Positional Decision Making.
His treatment of king safety is fundamentally solid; he frequently employs standard kingside fianchettos to construct structural barriers before seeking active play. He excels in squeezing small space advantages in closed or semi-closed positions and prefers maintaining structural integrity over dynamic, double-edged complications. Consequently, he rarely accepts structural weaknesses, such as isolated pawns or compromised king covers, without direct, concrete tactical compensation.
Shtembuliak exhibits a strong affinity for closed middlegames, utilizing precise minor-piece coordination and structural pawn breaks to slowly outplay opponents. His transition from the opening is heavily geared toward dry, strategically rich middlegames with slow maneuvering.
In the endgame, Shtembuliak displays elite technical precision. He is especially proficient in converting minuscule positional pluses in rook endgames, minor-piece blockades, and queenless middlegames. This technical capability allowed him to secure crucial wins against strong opposition in both the 2019 World Junior and Ukrainian championships, outmaneuvering opponents in long, grueling endgames.
Opening Repertoire & Theoretical Move Orders
1. As White
Shtembuliak is primarily an English Opening (1.c4) specialist, a weapon he used almost exclusively to claim his World Junior Championship title in 2019. He also utilizes 1.Nf3 and 1.e4 to transpose into solid, positional structures.
Against 1...e5, his primary setup in the English is the King's English, Four Knights System:
Against 1...c5, he frequently relies on the Symmetrical English or transposes into Closed Sicilian setups:
When playing 1.Nf3, he prefers King's Indian Attack and Catalan-style structures to bypass deeply theoretical lines in favor of positional maneuvering:
2. As Black
Against 1.e4, Shtembuliak's primary defensive weapon is the French Defense, which he plays with structural rigidity and a focus on counterplay in the center.
His preferred choice in the Tarrasch Variation is:
Against the Advance Variation, he targets the white pawn chain immediately:
Alternatively, he employs the Pirc/Modern or Philidor structures to navigate closed positions:
Against 1.d4, Shtembuliak leans toward the King's Indian Defense or the Queen's Indian Defense, looking for complex positional battles:
Links
Recent games 183
| Date | Color | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-02-12 | Kevin Wang(2341) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-29 | Tran Vo Quoc Bao(2117) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-29 | Haik M. Martirosyan(2625) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-29 | Martinez Ramirez,L(2412) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-29 | Alena Volchkova(2106) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Marek Karas(2251) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Efe Aynaoglu(2085) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Pranav Senthilkumar(2044) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Sion Radamantys Galaviz Medina(2514) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-22 | V Pranav(2641) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Maksim Schekachikhin(2354) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-22 | Cristian Silva Lucena(2202) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Duda,J(2731) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Mathias Andre Casalaspro(2305) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Sarana,A(2686) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Grischuk,A(2645) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Gedeon Hartge(2303) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-01-06 | Batpelden Buyankhishig(2125) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-01-01 | Joaquin Castro Castro(2015) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-13 | Michael Wang(1882) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-13 | Liudmyla Ivanytska(2041) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-11 | Andrew Tang(2548) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-11 | Padmini,R(2337) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-11 | Matlakov,M(2606) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-11 | Bernd Wolfram(2190) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-11 | Volen Dyulgerov(2181) | 1-0 | |
| — | Praveen Balakrishnan(2409) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Jorge Cori(2689) | 1-0 | |
| — | Yasser Quesada Perez(2558) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Vladimir Belous(2533) | 1-0 | |
| — | Jacek Tomczak(2596) | 0-1 | |
| — | Kacper Drozdowski(2476) | 1-0 | |
| — | Razvan Preotu(2513) | 0-1 | |
| — | Sergey Grigoriants(2539) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Nikolas Theodorou(2546) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Anton Kovalyov(2658) | 1-0 | |
| — | Hrant Melkumyan(2654) | 0-1 | |
| — | Victor Mikhalevski(2578) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Advait Patel(2467) | 0-1 | |
| — | Carlos Antonio Hevia Alejano(2496) | 1-0 | |
| — | Sergei Matsenko(2550) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Sandipan Chanda(2552) | 1-0 | |
| — | Akshat Chandra(2490) | 0-1 | |
| — | Sergey Erenburg(2562) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Denis Kadric(2505) | 1-0 | |
| — | Alina Bivol(2403) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Bharath Subramaniyam H(2417) | 0-1 | |
| — | Cemil Can Ali Marandi(2537) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| — | Gergely Kantor(2418) | 1-0 | |
| — | Sergei Movsesian(2659) | 1/2-1/2 |