Born
19 December 1991, Manhattan, New York.
Robert Hess is an American grandmaster, 2006 U.S. Junior Champion, elite commentator, coach and chess streamer. Use the replay lab, adviser and diagrams to study his Groningen wins, U.S. Championship results and Black-side Group B victories.
19 December 1991, Manhattan, New York.
Grandmaster in 2009.
2639 in July 2012.
2006 U.S. Junior Champion.
Chess.com commentator for World Championship, Candidates and major events.
U.S. Olympiad coach and second to Fabiano Caruana at the 2021 World Cup.
Hess is unusual because his page can answer both player-strength queries and modern chess-media queries. The supplied biography gives strong hooks around Chess.com commentary, Twitch streaming, Olympiad coaching, PogChamps coaching and charity chess work.
U.S. Championship success, World Team/Olympiad service and grandmaster tournament results.
World Championship, Candidates, Speed Chess, Pro Chess League, PogChamps and Tata Steel commentary.
Calculate the key move, read the compact move clue, then open the replay to see how Hess built the position.
Model moment: Robert Lee Hess vs Sergei Tiviakov, Groningen Chess Festival 2011.12.29 (1-0)
Key moves: 40.Ra8 Rb1+ 41.Kh2 Qh5+ 42.Nh4 Qh6 43.Qxe6+ Kh8 44.Qf7.
Model moment: Robert Lee Hess vs Julio Becerra Rivero, US Championship 2009.05.09 (1-0)
Key moves: 39.Rf8 g4 40.Rcc8 g6+ 41.Kf6 Rd6+ 42.Ke7 Kh6 43.f4 Re6+ 44.Kxf7.
Model moment: Alexander Onischuk vs Robert Lee Hess, US Championship (Group B) 2011.04.17 (0-1)
Key moves: 57.Kg1 h4 58.Rg8+ Kxf4 59.Rh8 Kf3 60.Kh1 f4 61.Ra8 Kf2 62.Kh2 f3.
Model moment: Larry Mark Christiansen vs Robert Lee Hess, US Championship (Group B) 2011.04.20 (0-1)
Key moves: 69.Rh8 Rxf1 70.Rd8+ Ke4 71.Kxf1 b2 72.Rd1 b1=Q 73.Kg2 Nh4+.
Model moment: Robert Lee Hess vs Parimarjan Negi, World Chess Team Championship 2011.07.21 (1-0)
Key moves: 28.Rc8 Rdd8 29.Rxd8 Rxd8 30.h4 fxg4 31.Rc8 h6 32.Qb8.
Model moment: Robert Lee Hess vs Ray Robson, United States Championship 2007.05.17 (1-0)
Key moves: 36.Qh6 Kg8 37.Rg1 Kh8 38.Qxf6+ Qg7 39.Rxe6 Qxf6 40.Rxf6 Nxd4 41.c6 Re7 42.Rd6.
Choose a Robert Hess game from the grouped replay lab, then open the viewer to study the key moments move by move.
Pick the training angle and jump to a useful model game.
Focus plan: Start with Hess–Tiviakov, then compare Hess–Negi.
Use these five focused routes after the model games when you want to turn Hess’s practical games into an opening study plan.
Use these answers as routes into the replay lab, diagrams, adviser and opening links.
Robert Hess is an American grandmaster, commentator, coach and chess streamer. He became a grandmaster in 2009 and is widely known today for Chess.com commentary on major events. Start with the at-a-glance cards and then load the Tiviakov replay.
Hess is page-worthy because he connects elite U.S. junior success, grandmaster-level tournament results and modern chess media influence. He was U.S. Junior Champion, tied second in the 2009 U.S. Championship and later became a major Chess.com commentator. Use the replay lab to see the player behind the broadcast voice.
The strongest hooks are 2006 U.S. Junior Champion, 2009 GM title, 2009 U.S. Championship runner-up tie, Groningen 2011 first-place tie, U.S. team-event roles, coaching and major-event commentary. These give the page a rare player-commentator-coach profile. Use the career cards before choosing a replay.
Robert Hess’s peak FIDE rating is 2639, reached in July 2012. That peak sits alongside his 2009 grandmaster title and strong U.S. Championship results. Use the Groningen and U.S. Championship replay groups for the clearest over-the-board strength examples.
Robert Hess became a grandmaster in 2009. His rise came after strong junior results and successful norm performances in major open events. Use the early U.S. and open successes group to study the rise.
Start with Hess–Tiviakov from Groningen 2011. It connects directly to the supplied biography’s Groningen success and gives a clear attacking finish against a strong grandmaster. Use the Tiviakov diagram and replay button.
Hess–Becerra from the 2009 U.S. Championship is the main example. It supports the biographical hook that Hess tied for second in that event. Use the Becerra diagram and replay.
Onischuk–Hess and Christiansen–Hess from the 2011 U.S. Championship Group B are strong Black-side models. They are especially useful because the supplied profile notes he beat former U.S. champions with Black in that group. Use the Group B replay route.
The Onischuk, Shabalov, Kaidanov and Christiansen games show the 2011 U.S. Championship Group B run. The supplied biography highlights that Hess scored 5.5/7 and beat former champions with the black pieces. Use the Group B replay group and adviser route.
Hess–Negi from the 2011 World Chess Team Championship is the team-event example. It gives a sharp Alapin Sicilian attacking finish. Use the Negi diagram and replay.
Yes, all 14 replay games are included in the selector. The page groups them by study purpose so the list stays easy to use. Use the full replay selector with confidence.
Use the diagram lab as a calculation warm-up before opening a full replay. Each board shows the final critical moment from a model Hess game, with the arrow marking the decisive move. Calculate the idea first, then press the replay button to see how the position was built.
Yes, every retained replay game features Robert Lee Hess as White or Black. The replay PGNs keep the supplied player name while the page title uses the shorter reader-friendly Robert Hess. Use the selector groups to choose a study route.
The focused opening links are Sicilian Defense, Alapin Sicilian, French Defense, Ruy Lopez and Nimzo-Indian Defense. They reflect the supplied games without turning the profile into a broad opening index. Use the opening cards after a replay.
Five opening links keep the page focused on Robert Hess rather than making it a general opening page. The links are chosen from repeated or high-value structures in the supplied games. Use those cards as follow-up after the diagram lab.
Hess–Perez, Hess–Robson and Hess–Negi all connect to Sicilian structures. The Negi game is especially useful for the Alapin Sicilian route. Use the Sicilian and Alapin cards after the Negi replay.
Hess–Hansen and Hess–Kaidanov are French Defense examples. They show both a high-rated draw and a long endgame conversion. Use the French Defense card and Kaidanov replay.
Hess–Becerra from the 2009 U.S. Championship is the Ruy Lopez example. It is also one of the page’s strongest U.S. Championship hooks. Use the Ruy Lopez card and Becerra diagram.
Onischuk–Hess and Christiansen–Hess are Nimzo-Indian or Bogo/Nimzo-family Black-side games. They support the Group B achievement hook. Use the Nimzo-Indian card and Group B replay group.
A strong attacking path is Tiviakov, Becerra, Negi and Robson. That gives a Groningen win, U.S. Championship scalp, team-event attack and junior-era attacking game. Use the adviser’s attacking route first.
A strong Black-side path is Onischuk, Christiansen, Shabalov and Ragnarsson. That route shows Hess converting with Black in serious tournament settings. Use the adviser’s Black-side route.
Start with Cannes 2007, then Foxwoods 2009, U.S. Championship 2009 and Groningen 2011. That route follows the rise from junior talent to grandmaster strength. Use the replay selector groups in chronological order.
Watch Hess–Tiviakov, inspect the final Qf7 diagram and then replay Hess–Negi. That gives two clear attacking games without a long technical grind. Use the quick attacking route in the adviser.
Study Hess–Kaidanov and Christiansen–Hess. Those games show long endgame conversion and patient Black-side technique. Use the Group B replay group for the deep route.
Yes, the page covers Hess as a Chess.com commentator for major events such as World Championship and Candidates coverage. The playing games explain why his commentary has practical authority. Use the media cards and replay lab together.
Yes, the page covers his U.S. Olympiad coaching work and other coaching roles. That gives the profile a modern teaching and leadership angle beyond tournament results. Use the coach/media section before the replay lab.
Yes, the page mentions his GMHess Twitch stream and online chess-content role. That broadens the profile from player biography to modern chess media. Use the at-a-glance cards and then choose one replay.
Club players should use one replay, one diagram and one opening card per visit. Hess’s games are practical because they show clean attacks, Black-side counterplay and conversion. Start with Tiviakov or Becerra.
Advanced players should compare the 2011 Group B Black wins with the Groningen wins. That shows both tournament resilience and technical handling against strong grandmasters. Use the Group B and Groningen replay groups.
The page groups the games by study purpose, adds validated diagrams and connects each answer to an on-page tool. It is built for learning and guided game study rather than just PGN storage. Use the adviser first if the replay list feels long.
Yes, Robert Hess remains an active chess figure through commentary, coaching, streaming and occasional high-level chess activity. His public role is now especially connected with explaining elite events to viewers. Use the media section, then replay one tournament game to connect his commentary voice with his playing strength.
Hess is especially good to study for clear calculation, practical conversion and explaining why a move works for humans. His games often show direct plans rather than abstract perfection. Use the adviser to choose an attacking, Black-side or career-story route.
Studying Hess’s games shows the practical authority behind his commentary. The replay lab includes U.S. Championship games, Groningen wins and strong Black-side conversions. Start with Hess–Tiviakov and then compare a 2011 Group B Black win.
Hess–Negi is the best short calculation route because the final attack is direct and forcing. The Alapin Sicilian structure leads to a clean tactical finish on the back rank. Use the Negi diagram, then replay the full game.
Hess–Kaidanov is the best endgame route because it becomes a long technical conversion. It shows how active pieces and passed pawns can decide after the queens leave the board. Use the deep-session route in the adviser.
Onischuk–Hess is the best calm-conversion model with Black. Hess trades into an endgame, improves the king and rooks, and eventually converts with connected threats. Use the Onischuk replay after the diagram lab.
Hess is less defined by a world-title run and more by a blend of grandmaster results, coaching and major-event commentary. That makes him especially useful for players who want instructive, practical games rather than only superstar mythology. Use the career-story route to study the player first.
Beginners should copy the habit of connecting tactics to simple plans: king safety, open files, passed pawns and active pieces. Do not try to memorize every opening detail first. Start with Tiviakov, Negi or Robson and pause before the final move.
Advanced players should copy the patient conversion style in the Group B and Kaidanov games. Those examples show how small advantages become clear only after repeated improving moves. Use the deep-session route and write down the turning point.
A calculation course fits Hess’s replay set because the best games reward forcing moves, conversion and practical candidate selection. His attacking games and long technical wins both depend on accurate calculation. Use the CourseLink section after the FAQ for structured follow-up training.
The Complete Guide to Chess Calculation
Hess's best examples reward forcing-move discipline, conversion technique and calm candidate selection. Use this course after the replay lab to turn the model games into a repeatable calculation routine.
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