In 2007, Soćko won an international women's tournament in Baku, Azerbaijan ahead of former Women's World Champion Antoaneta Stefanova.[2] In 2008, she was awarded the title of Grandmaster (GM) by FIDE,[3] becoming the first and, to date, only Polish female player to achieve this. The following year, she won the Arctic Chess Challenge in Tromsø, Norway in spite of being only ranked as number 16 before the tournament, while her top-ranked husband, Bartosz Soćko, finished in 13th place.[4][5] In March 2010, she won the bronze medal at the Women's European Individual Chess Championship edging out Yelena Dembo and Marie Sebag on tie-breaks.[6][7]
In 2014 Soćko won the Erfurt Woman Grandmaster round-robin tournament.[8] In 2017 she won the 8th Sharjah Cup for Women 2017 in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates edging out Ukrainian player Svetlana Moskalets on tiebreak score, after both players scored 7½/9 points.[9]
In May 2024, in Rzeszów she won bronze medal in Polish Women's Chess Championship.[11]
Rules appeal in 2008
In the 2008 Women's World Championship she was involved in a game which resulted in a dispute about the interpretation of the FIDErules of chess. In an armageddon game she needed a win to advance to the next round. The position got down to each player having only a king and a knight in which a checkmate position is possible but cannot be forced. Her opponent, Sabina-Francesca Foisor, ran out of time under the time control. Since checkmate cannot be forced with this material, the arbiter initially ruled that the game was a draw, therefore her opponent advanced to the next round. Soćko appealed, pointing out that the rules state that what matters is not whether or not checkmate can be forced, but rather it is possible (see Rules of chess#Timing). The arbiter compared the possible checkmate position to a helpmate, in which the defender has to cooperate in order to get to the checkmate. Soćko won the appeal and advanced to the next round.[12][13]
^Loeb, Dylan (3 September 2008). "NY Times". Gambit.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 20 October 2011.
^Wall, Bill. "Women and Chess". Bill Wall. Retrieved 13 July 2020. The position got down to each player having only a king and a knight in which a checkmate position is possible but cannot be forced. Her opponent, Sabina-Francesca Foisor, ran out of time under the time control.[...]The arbiter compared the possible checkmate position to a helpmate, in which the defender has to cooperate in order to get to the checkmate. Soko won the appeal and advanced to the next round.
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