- 1992 in chess
Events in
chess in1992 ;Top players
FIDE top 10 byElo rating - January 1992#
Garry Kasparov URS 2780
#Anatoly Karpov URS 2725
#Vassily Ivanchuk URS 2720
#Nigel Short ENG 2685
#Viswanathan Anand IND 2670
#Boris Gelfand URS 2665
#Alexei Shirov LAT 2655
#Gata Kamsky USA 2655
#Artur Yusupov URS 2655
#Valery Salov URS 2655Chess news in brief
*
Nigel Short exceeds expectation by defeatingAnatoly Karpov 6-4 in the Candidates' semi-final. In the other semi-final,Jan Timman defeatsArtur Yusupov by the same score. Both matches are held inLinares, Spain .
*Bobby Fischer returns from twenty years of self-imposed exile, to play a match withBoris Spassky . The starting venue isSveti Stefan , a small seaside resort in war-torn Yugoslavia (nowadaysMontenegro ). As the country is subject to UN sanctions, theUS State Department forbids Fischer from playing and threatens him with heavy penalties. In defiance of the threats, Fischer plays the match and wins by a score of 10-5, with 15 draws. He earns prize money of $3.5 million, and is titled by the organisers the "Undefeated Champion of the World". The quality of play varies from game to game, but there are some glimpses of Fischer's former glory days. The match concludes inBelgrade .
*Boris Gelfand andViswanathan Anand share victory at a strong tournament held inMoscow , each scoring 4½/7.
*Garry Kasparov wins the Trophée Immopar inParis , including a first prize of more than $75,000. He defeats Anand in the final series of tie-break rapid games.
*Kasparov andVassily Ivanchuk win atDortmund .
*The prestigious Linares tournament sees Kasparov triumphant with 10/13, ahead of rivals, Ivanchuk and Timman (both 8/13).
*Anand (6/9) wins a strongReggio Emilia tournament, held at the 1991/92 year end. Gelfand and Kasparov share second place on 5½/9.
*Victory at the double-roundAmsterdam tournament goes to Anand and Short with 3½/6.
*Another double-round tournament is held atBiel . Karpov wins with an impressive 10½/14, whereasAlexei Shirov manages only 5½ points, a poor return for a young man rising rapidly through the world's top 10 rankings.
*Michael Adams wins theTilburg knockout event.
*The Women'sInterzonal inShanghai is won byZsuzsa Polgar , withNana Ioseliani in second place.
*The 30thChess Olympiad , held inManila , attracts 102 teams, including Philippines A, B and C. The event is dominated by a strong Russian team scoring 39/56, a full four points ahead of Uzbekistan (35/56) and Armenia (34/56). Kasparov's 8½/10 is eclipsed only by the performance of exciting new prospectVladimir Kramnik , as he scores 8½/9 to take an individual gold medal as first reserve. His tournament rating performance of 2958 (Elo) earns him another gold medal, despite having not yet earned theInternational Master title. Uzbekistan's second place is a complete surprise, particularly as they have no world-class players, yet it seems that the break-up of the Soviet Union may have the opposite effect to that predicted by many chess commentators. It was widely assumed that western nations would be the beneficiaries of greater medal prospects, but few pundits had stopped to consider the latent strength of each of the States that made up the former Union. In the Women's event, Georgia (30½/42) predictably dominate (it was the home country of most of the USSR's top women players), ahead of Ukraine (29/42) and China (28½/42). China are lead byWomen's World Chess Champion Xie Jun , whereas the Hungarian team, despite finishing fourth, contains none of the Polgar sisters.
*Unusually, theEuropean Team Championship (ETC) coincides with an Olympiad year. The event, held inDebrecen , is another resounding success for Russia, with Kasparov and Kramnik again topping the performance table, ahead of Adams. Final result: Russia 25/36 (gold), Ukraine 22½/36 (silver) and England 21½/36 (bronze). Notably, Debrecen also plays host to the inaugural Women's European Team Championship, which runs alongside the main competition. The winners are the Ukraine (13½/18), turning the tables on Georgia (13/18), with Azerbaijan (12½/18) taking third place. The runaway star of the event is Ukraine'sAlisa Galliamova , with a rating performance of 2689. Galliamova is married to GM Vassily Ivanchuk, although they later separate.
*The firstMelody Amber tournament is held atRoquebrune , Monaco and is won by Ivanchuk. An exciting new entry to the chess calendar, the tournament quickly develops into a major attraction for the world's elite players, due to its glamorous setting (from 1993,Monte Carlo ) and generous prize money. Starting life as a rapidplay event, the organisers later add a rapidplay 'blindfold' section to make it a unique, dual format event with a demanding, but entertaining schedule.
*Anand plays a match against Ivanchuk in Linares. There is considerable media interest, as both are seen as prospective future world champions. Anand is the victor by a score of 5-3.
*Patrick Wolff wins theUS Chess Championship , held inDurango .
*Gregory Kaidanov has a good year, celebrating double successes at the US Open inDearborn and the World Open inPhiladelphia .
*John Fedorowicz wins the National Open in Las Vegas.
*TheWorld Youth Championship takes place inDuisburg , Germany.Konstantin Sakaev takes gold in the Boys Under-18 contest, whileAlmira Skripchenko wins the Under-16 Girls andLuke McShane takes the Under-10 Boys' title at the age of eight.
*Efim Geller wins the World Senior Championship, held atBad Worishofen .Births
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Fabiano Caruana , Italian-American prodigy, youngest ever GM from Italy or the USA - July 30
*Lara Stock , Croatian prodigy, a WGM and former World Girls U-10 Champion - May 26
*Gauri Shankar , Indian prodigy, British U-10 Champion aged seven - October 1Deaths
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Mikhail Tal , Latvian Grandmaster and the eighth World Chess Champion (1960-61) - June 28
*Samuel Reshevsky , US Grandmaster, six-time national champion and World Championship Candidate - April 4
*Vladas Mikenas , Lithuanian IM, honorary GM and chess journalist - November 3
*Leopold Mitrofanov , Russian IM, chess composer and International Judge of chess composition - November 26
*Imre Konig , Hungarian IM who also lived in Austria, England and the USA - ?
*Arpad Elo , Hungarian chess master, Physicist and inventor of the Elo rating system - November 5
*Bernardo Wexler , Argentine IM and member of the Olympiad team - ?References
*cite book | author=Burgess, Graham | title=Chess Highlights of the 20th Century | publisher=Gambit Publications | year=1999 | id=ISBN 1901983218
* [http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/history.txt Chess History & Chronology - Bill Wall]
* [http://www.olimpbase.org Olimpbase - Olympiads and other Team event information]
* [http://chess.eusa.ed.ac.uk/Chess/Trivia/AlltimeList.html FIDE rating list data 1970-97]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE6D6143BF933A15751C1A964958260 Report of Trophée Immopar by Robert Byrne in the NY Times]
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