Yosha Iglesias (born 22 December 1987) is a French chess player. She is one of the world's only openly transgender professional chess players.[1]
Yosha Iglesias | |
---|---|
Country | France |
Born | Paris, France | 22 December 1987
Title | FIDE Master (2019) Woman International Master (2024) |
Peak rating | 2321 (August 2024) |
Biography
editIglesias was born on 22 December 1987 in France.[2] She began attending chess club at the age of 9.[3] In addition to being a chess player, she is a chess coach, composer, YouTuber,[4] and poker player.[5] She works for chess24.[4] Iglesias has trained with Annemarie Sylvia Meier.[6] She considered transitioning when she was around 20, and eventually did so around 2020.[3]
In a June 2022 interview with Jennifer Shahade, Iglesias advocated for trans-inclusive policies within chess organizations, stating: "If men and women have equal abilities for the game of chess, the so-called 'female category' is justified by the numerous additional difficulties and discriminations that the players underdog because of their gender. And believe me, trans players are no more spared than other players."[4]
In September 2022, Iglesias released a report during the Carlsen–Niemann controversy. Using the Chessbase analysis tool, she found that Hans Niemann played with 100% accuracy in ten of his over-the-board games in the last three years, and highlighted this as being incriminating evidence of him cheating.[7]
In 2023, Iglesias was among 14 women who signed an open letter denouncing sexism and sexist violence in the French chess world.[8]
In August 2023, Iglesias criticized FIDE's decision to disallow transgender people from participating in women's events, describing the regulations as "unfair, exclusive, and discriminatory".[9][10][11] Despite these regulations, she fulfilled the requirements for the Woman International Master title later in December, becoming the first openly transgender person to qualify for the title.[12][13] On 29 April 2024, she announced that she had formally received the title of Woman International Master.[14]
References
edit- ^ Smith, Emma (27 December 2023). "Transgender chess decision: New Fide rules criticised by players but welcomed by committee chair". BBC Sport.
- ^ "Yosha Iglesias". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
- ^ a b Sharf, Sam (5 December 2023). "Trans Excellence, Competition and Community with Chess Master Yosha Iglesias". GLAAD.
- ^ a b c Shahade, Jennifer (22 June 2022). "Ladies Knight, June 2022: FM Yosha Iglesias". US chess federation.
- ^ Shahade, Jennifer (8 August 2022). "The Grid 067 ft. Yosha Iglesias – Ace-King Offsuit". The Poker Grid.
- ^ Reed, Erin (9 January 2024). "Yosha Iglesias Becomes First Ever Transgender Woman International Master In Chess". Erin in the Morning.
- ^ "Hikaru Nakamura comments on Yosha Iglesias's 'the most incriminating evidence against Hans Niemann'". Chessdom. 28 September 2022.
- ^ Waringuez, Frédéric (6 October 2023). "Yosha Iglesias : « Dénoncer des violences sexuelles, c'est comme un coming out »". L'Équipe (in French).
- ^ Gupta, Adarsh (17 August 2023). "'Unfair, exclusive, and discriminatory', World Chess body faces backlash over new regulations on transgender players". Hindustan Times.
- ^ Hansford, Amelia (16 August 2023). "Chess regulator bans trans women from competitive play for two years: 'These are dark days'". Pink News.
- ^ Valens, Ana (16 August 2023). "Oh Great, Now I Can't Play Chess Because I'm Trans". The Mary Sue.
- ^ Reed, Erin (31 December 2023). "Looking back, a case for hope: Victories trans people won in 2023". Los Angeles Blade.
- ^ Svensen, Tarjei J. (3 January 2024). "Yosha Iglesias To Make History As 1st Transgender WIM, Pending FIDE Approval". Chess.com.
- ^ Iglesias, Yosha. "Twitter".
External links
edit- Yosha Iglesias rating card at FIDE
- Official website
- Yosha Iglesias's channel on YouTube