| IM Anna Zatonskih |
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![]() Photo Jacob Okada Anna is known for calculation skills that even Garry Kasparov praised at a 2004 Olympic training session. This is no accident. To train, Anna sets a clock, studies a complex endgame study or tactical position and writes down all her analysis. "You must write it down", she insists, "Otherwise you'll think you saw something which you didn't." Like many top players, Anna finds the traveling that chess requires exhausting at times but mostly thrilling. Some of her favorite places are the Blue Lagoon in Iceland, a year round geothermal bath; Curacao, where she scuba-dived every day and the wild nature of Kapensiki in northern Canada, where she paddled a canoe for the first time and encountered bears. Her adventurous spirit also shows over the board. Anna's coach at the 2004 Olympiad, Alexander Chernin urged her to try openings she never played before, including 1.d4. She was successful and gained confidence that she could play any position. Her bravery contributed to the team's historic silver medal finish. Anna Zatonskih is intense on and off the board. Sometimes she gets so wrapped up in a tournament that she has trouble sleeping. She admits that getting over these bouts of extreme nervousness allow her to play her best. In the 2006 U.S. Championship, she was more relaxed than ever. Her solid nerves guided her to her first U.S. Women's championship title. She won her group, and then defeated her friend Rusudan Goletiani in the final. Anna coaches the Great Knights chess team in Long Island. She enjoys coaching, especially when her students forget that she is the Queen only of the U.S.A., and call her the Women's World Champion. Anna does have an eye on the ultimate crown. "It's not too late for me to take a shot." |






