Ekaterina Borulya

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Ekaterina Borulya
Ekaterina Borulya in 2009
CountrySoviet Union (until 1991)
Ukraine (from 1992 until 1994)
Germany (from 1995)
Born (1969-12-31) 31 December 1969 (age 54)
Kyiv, Ukraine
TitleWoman Grandmaster (1994)
FIDE rating2299 (January 2014)
Peak rating2385 (July 1996)

Ekaterina Borulya (Ukrainian: Катерина Юріївна Боруля; born 31 December 1969) is a German chess Woman Grandmaster (WGM, 1994) of Ukrainian descent who won Open German Women's Chess Championship (1994). As a physiotherapist, she is known by the name Katja Borulya.

Career and Profession[edit]

Ekaterina Borulya has held the FIDE title Woman Grandmaster (WGM) since 1994.[n 1] She is a qualified chess trainer (A-Trainer), qualified sports coach, physiotherapist and works for the chess center in Baden-Baden.[n 2]

Chess successes[edit]

Her first major tournament was the 1990 USSR Women's Chess Championship in Podolsk, which Ketevan Arakhamia won.[n 3] In 1994 in Wuppertal she won first place at the Open German Women's Chess Championship.[n 4] At the German Women's Chess Championship in 1995 in Krefeld she was second after a playoff behind Tatiana Grabuzova.[n 5] In 1995 in Enghien-les-Bains she outperformed her husband Yaroslav Srokovski with 5 points from 9 games.[n 6] First was Igor Rausis with 6.5 points ahead of Étienne Bacrot.

Team matches in the German Chess Women's Bundesliga, she first played for the Krefelder Schachklub Turm 1851 (season 1994/95 to season 2000/01), since the season 2002/03 Borulya plays for OSG Baden-Baden (until December 2004 SC Baden-Oos, from December 2004 to June 2008 OSC Baden-Baden), with which she won the Chess Women's Bundesliga in the seasons 2002/03, 2003/04, 2004/05, 2007/08, 2008/09, 2010/11 and 2012/13.

At the Chess Olympiad 2002 in Bled she played for the German women's team on the reserve board.[n 7]

Borulya is listed as inactive by FIDE (as of November 2016) because she last played in two competitions of the Chess Women's Bundesliga 2013/14 Elo-rated games in November and December 2013.

Family[edit]

Ekaterina Borulya is married to the Chess International Master (IM) Yaroslav Srokovski.[a 1] They have two children: Alexander Srokovski and Andrea Jaqueline Srokovski,[a 2] who also have chess successes. Andrea was German Youth Chess Vice Champion in age group U10 in 2007,[n 8] as well as third at the German Youth Chess Championship in age groups U12 and U14.[n 9] Alexander's best result was a shared first place at the Baden Youth Chess Championship in age group U14.

Her twin sister Luba Borulia, also a good chess player, is married to the Israeli chess grandmaster Boris Alterman.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924–2002. Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, S. 82
  2. ^ Ekaterina Borulya
  3. ^ Sowjetische Meisterschaft der Frauen 1990
  4. ^ 12. Offene Deutsche Damenmeisterschaft 1994 in Wuppertal
  5. ^ 33. Deutsche Damenmeisterschaft 1995 in Krefeld
  6. ^ Enghien les Bains 1st 1995
  7. ^ OlimpBase :: Women's Chess Olympiads :: Ekaterina Borulya
  8. ^ "DWZ-Auswertung: Deutschen Meisterschaft 2007 u10". Archived from the original on 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
  9. ^ "DWZ-Auswertung: Deutsche Einzelmeisterschaft U14w". Archived from the original on 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2022-11-15.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Spelling at the request of the man (signature), different spellings will be changed.
  2. ^ The DWZ index card of the German Chess Federation states: Srokovskiy, Alexander; Srokovskiy, Andrea; IM Srokovskiy, Yaroslav and GM Borulya, Ekaterina Uriivna, which will probably be corrected after clarification. There are also different spellings for her husband.

External links[edit]