17-Year-Old Ukrainian IM Roman Dehtiarov Wins European Championship, Earns GM Title

Seventeen-year-old Ukrainian IM Roman Dehtiarov has made history as both the youngest and lowest-seeded player ever to win the European Individual Chess Championship. He started the event in Katowice, Poland ranked 126th out of 501 players, with a 2452 rating, but took sole first place on 9/11, half a point ahead of Azerbaijani GMs Nijat Abasov, Aydin Suleymanli, and Mahammad Muradli. He won €20,000 (~$23,500), a spot in the 2027 FIDE World Cup, and an instant grandmaster title as the winner of a continental championship.

The event took place in the football stadium Arena Katowice. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

The 2026 European Championship took place April 7-19 and brought together a record 501 players. It was an 11-round Swiss, with players having 90 minutes for 40 moves then another 30 minutes, with a 30-second increment from move one. At stake was a €100,000 prize fund, but perhaps more importantly for most players, 20 spots in the next World Cup.

No one could have predicted the winner—the first IM ever to win the title since the tournament was first held in 2000.

European Individual Chess Championship 2026: Final Top 30 


































Rank Seed Title Name FED Rating Score TB TB2 Perf.
1 126 IM Roman Dehtiarov 2452 9 71 76.5 2781
2 29 GM Nijat Abasov 2586 8.5 73 78 2678
3 4 GM Aydin Suleymanli 2653 8.5 73 77.5 2737
4 20 GM Mahammad Muradli 2605 8.5 70 74.5 2689
5 9 GM Ediz Gurel 2635 8 75 81 2674
6 2 GM David Anton 2656 8 74 80 2647
7 36 GM Eduardo Iturrizaga 2575 8 72 78 2697
8 7 GM Alexander Donchenko 2642 8 71.5 77.5 2653
9 12 GM Robert Hovhannisyan 2621 8 71.5 77 2678
10 86 GM Nikolozi Kacharava 2500 8 71.5 76.5 2691
11 38 GM Valery Kazakouski 2572 8 71 76 2655
12 18 GM Jaime Santos 2610 8 70.5 76 2650
13 10 GM Haik Martirosyan 2633 8 69.5 75 2667
14 11 GM Jonas Buhl Bjerre 2623 8 69 75 2672
15 74 GM Vignir Vatnar Stefansson 2512 8 69 74 2656
16 40 GM Gleb Dudin 2566 8 68.5 74 2649
17 19 GM Marc’Andria Maurizzi 2608 8 68 72.5 2640
18 23 GM Daniel Dardha 2596 8 67.5 73 2649
19 254 FM Anton Zlatkov 2299 8 67.5 72 2616
20 17 GM Anton Korobov 2610 8 67 71.5 2654
21 3 GM Bogdan-Daniel Deac 2655 8 66.5 71 2634
22 30 GM Elham Amar 2586 8 65 70 2586
23 142 IM Arsen Davtyan 2430 8 63.5 68 2617
24 14 GM Maxime Lagarde 2621 7.5 73 78 2598
25 59 GM Jan Malek 2533 7.5 72.5 77 2644
26 13 GM Vasyl Ivanchuk 2621 7.5 72 76.5 2608
27 103 GM Emin Ohanyan 2481 7.5 71.5 76 2657
28 5 GM Shant Sargsyan 2647 7.5 71 77.5 2616
29 26 GM Szymon Gumularz 2590 7.5 69.5 74.5 2585
30 88 GM Jan Klimkowski 2498 7.5 69.5 73 2595

Full games and results.

Dehtiarov’s result would be remarkable for anyone, but it’s even more impressive when you add the backstory. Dehtiarov is from Kharkiv, a city 30 kilometers from the Russian border and therefore in constant danger since the outbreak of the full-scale war in 2022. Another player from that city, GM Pavel Eljanov, explained that he’d tried to evacuate Dehtiarov’s family, but 14-year-old Roman said no, not wanting to abandon his father.

Eljanov ends:

He stayed in one of the most dangerous places in Ukraine. With very limited chances to travel and barely any practice, he still became Ukrainian Champion. Now he’s grown up—and just caused the biggest sensation in the history of the European Championship!

Remember the name: Roman Dehtiarov!
Not for nothing our city Kharkiv is called “reinforced concrete!”

In 2024, at the age of 16 years and five months and already studying at V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Dehtiarov became the youngest-ever Ukrainian Champion. He scored 7.5/9 and had better tiebreaks than top-seed GM Mikhailo Oleksienko.

Dehtiarov has steadily climbed the rating list when he’s played, but he hasn’t been able to play nearly as often as most of his peers.

Dehtiarov has played a fraction of the games of most talented youngsters. Image: FIDE.

Another example of his potential was taking silver in the 2024 European Under 16 Youth Rapid Championship, but nothing could have prepared us for his performance in Katowice.

Roman Dehtiarov won the trophy and much more in Katowice. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

He was the first international master to win the European Championship in its 26 editions, the youngest player to do so (next is 19-year-old GM Ian Nepomniachtchi), and by far the lowest seed—before him, Nepomniachtchi’s coach GM Vladimir Potkin held that honor as the 43rd seed in 2011. Dehtiarov was seeded only 126.






























Year City Title Winner Name Seeded
2000 Saint-Vincent GM Pavel Tregubov 10 / 120 players
2001 Ohrid GM Emil Sutovsky 35 / 204 players
2002 Batumi GM Bartlomiej Macieja 14 / 101 players
2003 Silivri GM Zurab Azmaiparashvili 3 / 207 players
2004 Antalya GM Vassily Ivanchuk 1 / 74 players
2005 Zegrze GM Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu 11 / 229 players
2006 Kusadasi GM Zdenko Kozul 17 / 138 players
2007 Dresden GM Vladislav Tkachiev 15 / 403 players
2008 Plovdiv GM Sergei Tiviakov 31 / 337 players
2009 Budva GM Evgeny Tomashevsky 17 / 306 players
2010 Rijeka GM Ian Nepomniachtchi 35 / 408 players
2011 Aix-les-Bains GM Vladimir Potkin 43 / 393 players
2012 Plovdiv GM Dmitry Jakovenko 3 / 348 players
2013 Legnica GM Alexander Moiseenko 13 / 286 players
2014 Yerevan GM Alexander Motylev 33 / 259 players
2015 Jerusalem GM Evgeniy Najer 37 / 250 players
2016 Gjakova GM Ernesto Inarkiev 12 / 245 players
2017 Minsk GM Maxim Matlakov 5 / 397 players
2018 Batumi GM Ivan Saric 26 / 302 players
2019 Skopje GM Vladislav Artemiev 1 / 361 players
2021 Reykjavik GM Anton Demchenko 33 / 180 players
2022 Brezice GM Matthias Bluebaum 20 / 317 players
2023 Vrnjacka Banja GM Alexey Sarana 11 / 484 players
2024 Petrovac GM Aleksandar Indjic 33 / 388 players
2025 Eforie GM Matthias Bluebaum 17 / 375 players
2026 Katowice IM Roman Dehtiarov 126 / 501 players

The European Championship is always fiercely competitive—for instance, in round two alone, top-seed GM Igor Kovalenko lost to IM Samuel-Timotei Ghimpu and third-seed GM Bogdan Daniel-Deac lost to IM Alparslan Isik.

Anton Korobov is among the observers as IM Samuel-Timotei Ghimpu beats ratings favorite Igor Kovalenko. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

Dehtiarov’s path wasn’t always smooth.  

The first sign that this might be a big event for Dehtiarov was perhaps his win over Turkish GM Emre Can in round three. 17.Qa4? stumbled into a killer blow.

In round four Dehtiarov drew against Abasov, best known for a brilliant World Cup that qualified him for the 2024 FIDE Candidates in Toronto, who would ultimately finish second. 

In round five, however, disaster struck, with Dehtiarov lost on move 8 vs. Turkish GM Isik Can, when he seemed to mix up his moves! 

After scoring the only win over Dehtiarov, Isik Can (left) was a co-leader on 4.5/5. He played Robert Hovhannisyan on top board in round six, with Dana Reizniece, Deputy President of the European Chess Union, making the first move. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

That could have sucked the air out of the 17-year-old’s tournament, but he hit back with a stunning 5.5/6 against strong grandmasters. He was playing catch-up until a win over French GM Maxime Lagarde put him into a five-way tie for first place before the final round. 

In fact, only two players held the sole lead until the event was over. The first was a surprise, 23-year-old Icelandic GM Vignir Vatnar Stefansson, who raced to 5.5/6.

Vignir Vatnar Stefansson set the early pace. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

He then lost in round seven, however, to Spanish GM David Anton, who was a European Championship runner-up in 2014. Anton went on to take the sole lead himself on 7/8, and would be the final boss for Dehtiarov to face in the last round.

Anton’s win over Polish GM Jan Malek made him the sole leader after eight rounds. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

The final round of the European Championship is somewhat infamous for draws, since the main goal for most of the field is to take one of the top-20 World Cup qualification spots. It was the same in 2026, with seven draws on the top-eight boards. On the top board, however, there was a big non-financial incentive for one of the players—Dehtiarov knew that if he won the tournament he’d skip the grandmaster norms and gaining of a 2500 rating usually needed for the title. Winning a continental chess championship earns the title on the spot, and that’s just what Dehtiarov did.

It helped that Anton is one of the most fighting players in chess and knew that even a loss shouldn’t harm his World Cup chances (he still finished sixth), so that we got to see blood. Anton rejected a pawn grab and instead launched his f-pawn down the board, but it backfired.

Dehtiarov’s achievements in the tournament included winning the junior category for players 18 and under, though the regulations mean he can’t add the €1,000 to his €20,000 for first place (the higher prize counts).

The junior podium also featured Dehtiarov, with Ediz Gurel and Ihor Samunenkov completing the line-up. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

Second in the junior category was 17-year-old Turkish GM Ediz Gurel, with an unbeaten 8/10 and fifth place, while another Ukrainian, 16-year-old GM Ihor Samunenkov was the third best junior on 7.5, though he’ll have been disappointed to miss out on World Cup qualification with 34th place.

The podium in the Women’s category all scored 6.5 points, with IM Teodora Injac, who won the 2025 European Women’s Championship with a stunning 9.5/11, edging out IMs Stavroula Tsolakidou and Nurgyul Salimova on tiebreaks.

By the finest of margins it was 1.Injac, 2.Tsolakidou, 3.Salimova. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

Against Hungarian GM Gergely Kantor, Injac got to play a dramatic move!

The senior category was won by the 2004 winner of the event, GM Vasyl Ivanchuk, who finished 26th on 7.5/11.

It’s always a joy to see Vasyl Ivanchuk, now 57, playing chess. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

The Ukrainian legend suffered one loss, and it was a painful one, since he had a fortress if he hadn’t grabbed the pawn of Georgian GM Nikolozi Kacharav on move 85.    

One point behind was Icelandic GM Hannes Stefansson and another point back yet another Ukrainian chess legend, 74-year-old GM Oleg Romanishin.

Oleg Romanishin took the bronze medal for players 50 or over. Photo: Rafal Oleksiewicz/European Chess Union.

The star of the show, however, was Roman Dehtiarov—is this just the start of his rise? 



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