Daniel Naroditsky


Daniel Naroditsky is an American Chess Grandmaster. He has been a published chess author since age 14.
Naroditsky learned chess at age six from his father, Vladimir; shortly thereafter, he started to take serious chess lessons. In May 2007, he won the Northern California K-12 Chess Championship, becoming the youngest player ever to do so. Later that year, Naroditsky won the Under-12 division of the World Youth Chess Championship with a score of 9½/11. In May 2008, he won the Northern California 9-12 Chess Championship.
At the 2010 U.S. Open, Naroditsky scored 7½/9 to share second through fifth places, behind Grandmaster Alejandro Ramírez and tied with Grandmasters Alexander Shabalov and Varuzhan Akobian. Naroditsky played in the 2011 U.S. Chess Championship but finished with more losses than wins. In July 2011 he earned his first Grandmaster norm. Naroditsky earned his second Grandmaster norm at the 2013 Philadelphia Open by tying for first place with GM Fidel Jimenez. In 2014 Naroditsky tied for 1st–5th with Timur Gareev, Dávid Bérczes, Sergei Azarov and Sam Shankland in the Millionaire Chess Open in Las Vegas, Nevada.
In March 2014, Naroditsky was awarded the prestigious Samford Chess Fellowship.
Naroditsky has a chess playing brother, Alan, who is four years older than him. Alan is a rated Expert in the U.S. Chess Federation; he also holds an international FIDE rating of 2091. However, he has not played chess since 2009.
He graduated Stanford University in 2019 with a degree in History. He is active on YouTube and Twitch, and offers individual lessons to his streaming audience.
Daniel keeps his hand in as an author with a well-received endgame column for "Chess Life" magazine. The column began in the mid 2010s.

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