Who he is
Tabatabaei is a Tehran-born Iranian grandmaster who became one of the most dangerous 2700-level open-tournament players of his generation.
Famous player replay lab
Amin Tabatabaei is an Iranian grandmaster whose best games combine ambitious attacking play, open-tournament stamina, Black-side counterplay and fearless calculation against elite opposition. Study him for practical pressure, tactical momentum, 2700-level confidence and the ability to keep creating problems in unclear positions.
Who he is
Tabatabaei is a Tehran-born Iranian grandmaster who became one of the most dangerous 2700-level open-tournament players of his generation.
Why his games matter
His games are rich in practical decisions: pawn storms, king exposure, rook activity, exchange choices and passed-pawn races.
What to watch for
Look for the moment he makes the opponent calculate every move: a rook lift, a pawn break, a queen check, or a quiet move that keeps threats alive.
Replay path
Follow a 17-game route from early Aeroflot attacks to Grand Prix pressure, Grand Swiss tactics and the 2026 Reykjavik winning run.
Start with the Aeroflot tactic, then move to the Grand Prix win over Giri, the Grand Swiss mating net and the Reykjavik victory over Ivanchuk.
These positions make the page a calculation lab: attack the king, hold counterplay, convert a rook hit and compare elite classical pressure with Reykjavik form.
Grand Prix bind: 30...Rg7
Against Anish Giri, Tabatabaei keeps the rook on the g-file and leaves White facing a dangerous king-side bind.
Anish Giri – Amin Tabatabaei, 2022.03.28
Aeroflot spark: 25.Nf8+
Tabatabaei’s knight lands on f8, turning pressure against a 2600+ opponent into a forcing finish.
M Amin Tabatabaei – Chithambaram V R Aravindh, 2018.02.24
Pragg squeeze: 53.Qg1+
The queen check seals a promotion race after Tabatabaei keeps the attack coordinated deep into the ending.
M Amin Tabatabaei – R Praggnanandhaa, 2023.07.15
Grand Swiss net: 42...g4+
The final pawn push forces the white king into a tactical cage in a sharp English-style battle.
Max Warmerdam – M Amin Tabatabaei, 2023.11.03
Ivanchuk hit: 30.Rxd8
Tabatabaei removes the last defender and completes a clean French Defence conversion in Reykjavik.
M Amin Tabatabaei – Vasyl Ivanchuk, 2026.03.28
Caro-Kann hold: 71...Ne3+
With Black against Maxime Lagarde, Tabatabaei’s knight jump keeps the initiative alive in a long technical fight.
Maxime Lagarde – M Amin Tabatabaei, 2026.03.28
Use the selector as a guided study route: early attacking wins first, then elite breakthrough games and the 2026 Reykjavik Open run.
Suggested first route: Tabatabaei–Aravindh, Giri–Tabatabaei, Warmerdam–Tabatabaei, Tabatabaei–Ivanchuk, then the Reykjavik Open optgroup.
Choose your practical training problem. The adviser gives a specific replay route, star ratings and a contrasting Discovery Tip.
Calculation under pressure
His best games often ask the opponent to solve several tactical problems at once.
Black-side ambition
Several replay games show Tabatabaei accepting risk with Black and then taking over the initiative.
Open-tournament stamina
The Reykjavik set shows how he keeps winning across different openings, ratings and styles.
Modern practical style
He is especially useful for learning when dynamic activity matters more than a tidy-looking position.
Use these opening links after the replay lab. They connect Tabatabaei’s games to practical structures you can play yourself.
These answers match the FAQ schema and point back to the replay lab, diagrams, adviser, opening links and course link.
Amin Tabatabaei is an Iranian grandmaster known for elite open-tournament strength, World Cup runs and dynamic calculation. He became a grandmaster in 2018 and later crossed into the 2700-level elite. Start with the Amin Tabatabaei Replay Lab to connect his attacking wins with his World Cup, Grand Prix and Reykjavik profile.
Amin Tabatabaei is famous for his 2021 World Cup quarter-final run, FIDE Grand Prix breakthrough, major open wins and 2700-level rise. His career includes wins at Biel Masters 2019, Aeroflot Open 2024 and Reykjavik Open 2026. Use the Career Snapshot section to trace how those milestones build a modern elite-player story.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei was a strong junior who became an International Master in 2015 and a Grandmaster in 2018. His early results included world-junior and open-event performances against much older grandmasters. Replay the World Junior attack against Thybo to discover how his attacking style already looked mature.
Amin Tabatabaei’s style is dynamic, practical and calculation-heavy. His games often feature pawn storms, exposed kings, exchange sacrifices, sharp queen activity and confident conversion in messy positions. Use the study adviser to choose whether your first route should be attack, counterplay, open-tournament stamina or Reykjavik form.
Amin Tabatabaei’s 2021 World Cup quarter-final run was his biggest knockout breakthrough. He eliminated Yu Yangyi, Pentala Harikrishna and Haik Martirosyan before losing to Vladimir Fedoseev. Use the World Cup and Grand Prix route in the page navigation to connect that breakthrough with his later elite results.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei reached the 2022 FIDE Grand Prix after his 2021 World Cup quarter-final run. In the Grand Prix series he won a pool in the third leg and advanced to the semifinal stage. Replay the Giri–Tabatabaei Grand Prix game to discover the direct king-side pressure behind that level of result.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei beat Anish Giri with Black in the 2022 FIDE Grand Prix. The game ends with Tabatabaei’s rook on g7 and White’s king under severe pressure. Open the Grand Prix bind diagram to discover how the attack is held together.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei beat R Praggnanandhaa in the 2023 Geza Hetenyi Memorial. The game becomes a long tactical endgame where promotion threats and king safety decide the result. Replay the Pragg squeeze game to discover how 53.Qg1+ ends the race.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei beat Vasyl Ivanchuk at the 2026 Reykjavik Open. The game came from a French Defence structure and ended after 30.Rxd8. Press the Ivanchuk hit diagram button to discover how the final rook capture works.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei won the 2026 Reykjavik Open outright. Reports described an 8/9 score and a dominant run from the top board. Use the Reykjavik Open optgroup in the Replay Lab to study the run through Li, Belkaid, Tsolakidou, Razafindratsima, Ivanchuk, Lagarde and Maurizzi.
Start with Tabatabaei–Aravindh from Aeroflot Open 2018. The game is short, forcing and easy to calculate because 25.Nf8+ delivers a clear tactical punch. Press the Aeroflot spark diagram button to discover the finish before replaying the full game.
Tabatabaei–Thybo from the 2018 World Junior Championship best shows his early attacking style. The move 25.Rd7 keeps pressure on the seventh rank after a sharp kingside sequence. Open the World Junior replay to discover how rook activity and king pressure combine.
Giri–Tabatabaei and Fedoseev–Tabatabaei are the strongest Black-side counterplay examples in this page. Both games show active defence turning into direct pressure against an elite opponent. Use the Black-side option in the adviser to open the best replay for your training time.
The Reykjavik Open games best show Amin Tabatabaei’s open-tournament stamina. The sequence includes wins with White and Black against different styles and opening systems. Use the Reykjavik Open optgroup to replay the run as a connected tournament path.
Tabatabaei–Aravindh is the cleanest tactical finish in the replay set. The final 25.Nf8+ makes Black’s king and back rank collapse under forcing pressure. Calculate the Aeroflot spark diagram to discover why the defence runs out.
Tabatabaei–Tsolakidou from Reykjavik 2026 is the clearest long endgame conversion in this page. The game lasts 75 moves and shows patient handling after the middlegame tension has settled. Replay the Tsolakidou game to discover how Tabatabaei turns small advantages into a full point.
The replay set includes Italian Game, Ruy Lopez structures, Queen’s Gambit systems, Caro-Kann, French Defence, Dutch Defence, English Opening and King’s Indian structures. That variety makes the page useful for both attacking and positional study. Use the Opening Links cards to continue from the replay that most resembles your own repertoire.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei is useful for club players because his games often show concrete attacking plans rather than abstract theory only. The featured positions include forcing checks, rook lifts, passed-pawn races and king-safety decisions. Start with the Six Tabatabaei Positions section to calculate the tactic before pressing replay.
Yes, Amin Tabatabaei is good to study for daily chess because his positions reward careful calculation and deep candidate-move comparison. Daily chess gives you time to inspect the forcing lines that make his attacks work. Use the Replay Lab after each diagram calculation to discover whether your line matches the game.
Learn how Black can keep attacking pressure even after material and structure become unclear. The move 30...Rg7 keeps the rook active and supports threats around White’s exposed king. Open the Grand Prix bind replay to discover how Tabatabaei converts pressure against a super-grandmaster.
Learn how a short tactical sequence can punish a weakened kingside. The final 25.Nf8+ works because Black’s king, back rank and defensive pieces are overloaded. Calculate the Aeroflot spark diagram to discover the forcing pattern.
Learn how Dutch-style counterplay can become a direct king attack. The final 20...Rf4 brings the rook into the attack while White’s king has limited shelter. Replay the Online Olympiad game to discover how Black’s pieces arrive around the king.
Learn how passed pawns and king safety can override material impressions. The final 53.Qg1+ freezes Black’s counterplay after a complicated promotion race. Open the Pragg squeeze replay to discover how Tabatabaei coordinates queen and king in the final phase.
Learn how Black can create a mating net from an apparently simplified English structure. The final 42...g4+ forces White’s king into a tactical trap. Press the Grand Swiss net diagram button to discover the forcing route.
Learn how active pieces can justify risk in the Caro-Kann. The final 40...Ne4+ keeps White’s king exposed and highlights Tabatabaei’s tactical confidence. Replay the Fedoseev game to discover how Black survives the opening storm and takes over.
Learn how clean calculation can convert a French Defence structure without needing a long attack. The final 30.Rxd8 removes the defender and leaves White in control. Open the Ivanchuk hit diagram to discover the decisive tactical detail.
Learn how Black can keep practical chances alive in a long Caro-Kann fight. The final 71...Ne3+ shows a knight jump that keeps White’s king and rook tied down. Use the Caro-Kann hold diagram to discover how Tabatabaei presses in a technical position.
A tactics course fits Amin Tabatabaei because the strongest study value in these games is calculation under pressure. His wins repeatedly reward forcing moves, king safety, exchange decisions and passed-pawn timing. Use the CourseLink section to continue from the replay lab into structured tactics training.
Choose one diagram, calculate checks and forcing moves for three minutes, then replay the full game. This calculation-first method matches the way Tabatabaei turns initiative into concrete results. Use the adviser after your first replay to pick the next route: Grand Prix pressure, Aeroflot tactic, Reykjavik form or Black-side counterplay.
After replaying Amin Tabatabaei’s games, choose one opening family and one recurring tactical theme to study next. His games point naturally toward Caro-Kann counterplay, French structures, English positions and sharp 1.e4 e5 battles. Use the Opening Links and CourseLink sections to turn the replay session into a practical training plan.
Amin Tabatabaei is both tactical and practical, but this replay set highlights his tactical side. The games repeatedly feature forcing checks, open kings and dynamic pawn races rather than quiet manoeuvring alone. Use the adviser’s tactical route to compare the Aeroflot, Grand Prix and Grand Swiss examples.
Strong players can lose quickly to Tabatabaei when they underestimate his forcing-move momentum. Several featured games show one exposed king or overloaded defender turning into a decisive tactic. Study the Six Tabatabaei Positions section to identify exactly where the danger becomes concrete.
Yes, many Tabatabaei opening structures are suitable for club chess if you understand the plans rather than memorize only moves. The Caro-Kann, French, English and King’s Indian structures on this page all lead to practical middlegames. Use the Opening Links cards to choose one structure after replaying its matching model game.
Tabatabaei’s games are a natural fit for tactics training because the replay lab keeps returning to initiative, king safety, forcing moves and dynamic practical calculation.
Supercharge Your Chess Tactics with Winning Combinations
After replaying Amin Tabatabaei’s model games, continue with this 39.5-hour tactics course to train the same practical themes: checks, captures, forcing moves, exposed kings, passed pawns and calculation under pressure.
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