Colin McNab

For the Scottish footballer, see Colin McNab (footballer).
Colin McNab
Full name Colin Anderson McNab
Country Scotland
Born (1961-02-03) 3 February 1961
Dundee, Scotland
Title Grandmaster (1992)
ICCF International Master (1993)
International Solving Master (2007)
FIDE rating 2440 (December 2016)
Peak rating 2500 (January 1998)

Dr Colin Anderson McNab (born 3 February 1961) is a Scottish chess player. He is Scotland's second player to be awarded the title of Grandmaster (GM), fulfilling its requirements in 1992 just after Paul Motwani. After achieving his three norms, he strained to get his rating up to the required 2500 level, and is possibly unique among Grandmasters in only achieving a published rating of 2500 some six years after being awarded the title. The FIDE regulations in force at the time stated that an 'intermediate' rating at any stage during an event would suffice, and that ratings between 2498.5 and 2500 would be rounded up, which is indeed what happened in 1992. He is also an International Master of correspondence chess since 1993[1] and International Master of chess problem solving since 2007.[2]

McNab played for Scotland in seventeen Chess Olympiads between 1980 and 2014.[3] He was also the Commonwealth champion in 1992,[4] and won the Scottish Chess Championship in 1983, 1991, 1993 and 1995.[5] In 2012 and 2013 McNab won the British Problem Solving Championship.[6]

His opening repertoire is noted for its seemingly quiet fianchetto systems, and he has written a book on the fianchetto variation of the King's Indian Defence, and co-authored a book about the Pirc Defence with John Nunn. He is renowned as an expert on the endgame and has written a regular column for Scottish Chess magazine for a number of years.

He is also a doctor of Mathematics, having studied for a DPhil at Oxford University under the supervision of Peter Neumann.

Books

Notable games

References

External links

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