Education
In 1992 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture.
In 1992 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture.
In October 2003, he was ranked fourth in the FIDE World Rankings, with an Elo rating of 2739. In September 2015, Evgeny Bareev transferred to the Canadian Chess Federation. The biggest success in his career was winning the Corus super-tournament in Wijk aan Zee 2002.
In this event he scored 9/13 ahead of elite players like Alexander Grischuk, Michael Adams, Alexander Morozevich, and Peter Leko.
In a man vs machine contest in January 2003, Bareev took on the chess program HIARCS in a four game-match: all four games were drawn. He was a second to Vladimir Kramnik in the Classical World Chess Championship 2000 against Garry Kasparov.
He was finalist of the World Cup 2000, where he lost to Viswanathan Anand and of the Rapid World Cup 2001, where he lost to Kasparov. His most notable participation in the World Chess Championship events was the Candidates Tournament for the Classical World Chess Championship 2004 in Dortmund 2002.
Bareev reached the semifinals, but lost his match against Veselin Topalov.
At the Chess World Cup 2005, Bareev qualified for the Candidates Tournament for the World Chess Championship 2007, played in May–June 2007. In 2010 he tied for first with Konstantin Chernyshov, Lê Quang Liêm and Ernesto Inarkiev in the Moscow Open. With Ilya Levitov, Bareev wrote «From London to Elista».
Best results
Team competitions
In 2006, Bareev organized a grandmaster chess school for top Russian junior players and headed it until 2010.
From 2010 to 2011, he was the head coach of the Russian men"s chess team Between 2010 and 2014, Bareev was the head coach of Russia’s Junior’s, Men's and Women's national teams.
Bareev was a member of the Soviet national team in the 1990 Chess Olympiad and of the Russian national team in the Chess Olympiads of 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2006.