In 1998 he took first place in the 5th World University Chess Championship in Rotterdam, helping Russia to win the team gold.2
In 2003 he tied for 3rd–10th with Vladimir Belov, Alexei Kornev, Farrukh Amonatov, Alexey Kim, Alexander Areshchenko, Mikhail Ulibin and Spartak Vysochin in the St.Petersburg 300 Open tournament.3 In 2004 he tied for 1st–5th with Christian Bauer, Boris Avrukh, Alexander Rustemov and Pavel Eljanov in the Masters Section of the Biel Chess Festival.4
"Men's Chess Olympiads: Andrei Shariazdanov". OlimpBase. Retrieved 23 January 2012. http://www.olimpbase.org/players/l7x77b1k.html ↩
Crowther, Mark. "TWIC 198: 5th World University Chess Championships". The Week in Chess. Retrieved 30 September 2015. http://www.theweekinchess.com/html/twic198.html#14 ↩
"St.Petersburg 300 Open January 2004 Russia". FIDE. Retrieved 23 January 2012. http://ratings.fide.com/tournament_report.phtml?event16=36771 ↩
"Morozevich clinches Biel with a 2863 performance". ChessBase.com. 2004-08-02. Retrieved 23 January 2012. http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1830 ↩