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USSR Chess Championship

The USSR Chess Championship was played from 1921 to 1991. Organized by the USSR Chess Federation, it was the strongest national chess championship ever held, with eight world chess champions and four world championship finalists among its winners. It was held as a round-robin tournament with the exception of the 35th and 58th championships, which were of the Swiss system.

The participants of the fourth USSR Chess Championship in 1925.
Sitting (left to right): Vilner, Levenfish, Rokhlin (organizer), Gotthilf, I. Rabinovich, Bogolyubov (winner), Ilyin-Genevsky, Duz-Khotimirsky, Romanovsky, Sergeyev, Nenarokov, Verlinsky, A. Rabinovich.
Standing (left to right): von Freymann, Sozin, Eremeev (organizer), Grigoriev, Zubarev, Selezniev, Kaspersky, Kutuzov, Weinstein (organizer).

Most wins edit

List of winners edit

Edition Date Place Winner Score Notes
1 4–24 Oct 1920 Moscow Alexander Alekhine 12/15 (+9−0=6) Known as the All-Russian Chess Olympiad at the time,
this tournament was later recognized as the first USSR championship.
2 8–24 Jul 1923 Petrograd Peter Romanovsky 10/12 (+9−1=2)
3 23 Aug–15 Sep 1924 Moscow Efim Bogoljubov 15/17 (+13−0=4)
4 11 Aug–6 Sep 1925 Leningrad Efim Bogoljubov 14/19 (+11−2=6)
5 26 Sep–25 Oct 1927 Moscow Fedor Bogatyrchuk
Peter Romanovsky
14½/20 (+10−1=9)
14½/20 (+12−3=5)
All of Bogatyrchuk's tournament results were erased from Soviet records
after he emigrated to Canada and was declared a nonperson.
6 2–20 Sep 1929 Odessa Boris Verlinsky 5½/8 (+4−1=3),
4/5 (+4−1=0),
and 3½/4 (+3−0=1)
The tournament was conducted in three stages.
7 10 Oct–11 Nov 1931 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 13½/17 (+12−2=3)
8 16 Aug–9 Sep 1933 Leningrad Mikhail Botvinnik 14/19 (+11−2=6)
9 7 Dec 1934–2 Jan 1935 Leningrad Grigory Levenfish
Ilya Rabinovich
12/19 (+8−3=8)
12/19 (+9−4=6)
10 12 Apr–14 May 1937 Tbilisi Grigory Levenfish 12½/19 (+9−3=7)
11 15 Apr–16 May 1939 Leningrad Mikhail Botvinnik 12½/17 (+8−0=9)
12 5 Sep–3 Oct 1940 Moscow Andor Lilienthal
Igor Bondarevsky
13½/19 (+8−0=11)
13½/19 (+10−2=7)
Mikhail Botvinnik won the Absolute Championship,
23 Mar–29 Apr 1941, Leningrad/Moscow, 13½/20 (+9−2=9)
13 21 May–17 Jun 1944 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 12½/16 (+11−2=3)
14 1 Jun–3 Jul 1945 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 15/17 (+13−0=4)
15 2 Feb–8 Mar 1947 Leningrad Paul Keres 14/19 (+10−1=8)
16 10 Nov–13 Dec 1948 Moscow David Bronstein
Alexander Kotov
12/18 (+7−1=10)
12/18 (+10−4=4)
17 16 Oct–20 Nov 1949 Moscow Vasily Smyslov
David Bronstein
13/19 (+9−2=8)
13/19 (+8−1=10)
18 10 Nov–12 Dec 1950 Moscow Paul Keres 11½/17 (+8−2=7)
19 11 Nov–14 Dec 1951 Moscow Paul Keres 12/17 (+9−2=6)
20 29 Nov–29 Dec 1952 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 13½/19 (+9−1=9) Botvinnik defeated Mark Taimanov in a playoff +2−1=3.[1]
21 7 Jan–7 Feb 1954 Kyiv Yuri Averbakh 14½/19 (+10−0=9)
22 11 Feb–15 Mar 1955 Moscow Efim Geller 12/19 (+10−5=4) Geller defeated Vasily Smyslov in a playoff +1=6.[2]
23 10 Jan–15 Feb 1956 Leningrad Mark Taimanov 11½/17 (+8−2=7) Taimanov defeated Boris Spassky and Yuri Averbakh in a playoff.
24 20 Jan–22 Feb 1957 Moscow Mikhail Tal 14/21 (+9−2=10)
25 12 Jan–14 Feb 1958 Riga Mikhail Tal 12½/18 (+10−3=5)
26 9 Jan–11 Feb 1959 Tbilisi Tigran Petrosian 13½/19 (+8−0=11)
27 26 Jan–26 Feb 1960 Leningrad Viktor Korchnoi 14/19 (+12−3=4)
28 11 Jan–11 Feb 1961 Moscow Tigran Petrosian 13½/19 (+9−1=9)
29 16 Nov–12 Dec 1961 Baku Boris Spassky 14½/20 (+10−1=9)
30 21 Nov–20 Dec 1962 Yerevan Viktor Korchnoi 14/19 (+10−1=8)
31 23 Nov–27 Dec 1963 Leningrad Leonid Stein 12/19 (+6−1=12) Stein defeated Boris Spassky and Ratmir Kholmov in a playoff.
32 25 Dec 1964–27 Jan 1965 Kyiv Viktor Korchnoi 15/19 (+11−0=8)
33 21 Nov–24 Dec 1965 Tallinn Leonid Stein 14/19 (+10−1=8)
34 28 Dec 1966 – 2 Feb 1967 Tbilisi Leonid Stein 13/20 (+8−2=10)
35 7–26 Dec 1967 Kharkiv Lev Polugaevsky
Mikhail Tal
10/13
10/13
The tournament was a 126-player Swiss.
36 30 Dec 1968–1 Feb 1969 Alma-Ata Lev Polugaevsky
Alexander Zaitsev
12½/19 (+7−1=11)
12½/19 (+6=13)
Polugaevsky defeated Zaitsev in a playoff +2−1=3.[3]
37 6 Sep–12 Oct 1969 Moscow Tigran Petrosian 14/22 (+6−0=16) Petrosian defeated Polugaevsky in a playoff held in Feb 1970 by +2=3.[4]
38 25 Nov–28 Dec 1970 Riga Viktor Korchnoi 16/21 (+12−1=8)
39 15 Sep–17 Oct 1971 Leningrad Vladimir Savon 15/21 (+9−0=12)
40 16 Nov–19 Dec 1972 Baku Mikhail Tal 15/21 (+9−0=12)
41 1–27 Oct 1973 Moscow Boris Spassky 11½/17 (+7−1=9)
42 30 Nov–23 Dec 1974 Leningrad Alexander Beliavsky
Mikhail Tal
9½/15 (+6−2=7)
9½/15 (+6−2=7)
43 28 Nov–22 Dec 1975 Yerevan Tigran Petrosian 10/15 (+6−1=8)
44 26 Nov–24 Dec 1976 Moscow Anatoly Karpov 12/17 (+8−1=8)
45 28 Nov–22 Dec 1977 Leningrad Boris Gulko
Iosif Dorfman
9½/15 (+4−0=11)
9½/15 (+4−0=11)
A playoff, held in 1978, was drawn +1−1=4.[5]
46 1–28 Dec 1978 Tbilisi Mikhail Tal
Vitaly Tseshkovsky
11/17 (+5−0=12)
11/17 (+6−1=10)
47 29 Nov–27 Dec 1979 Minsk Efim Geller 11½/17 (+6−0=11)
48 25 Dec 1980–21 Jan 1981 Vilnius Lev Psakhis
Alexander Beliavsky
10½/17 (+8−4=5)
10½/17 (+6−2=9)
49 27 Nov–22 Dec 1981 Frunze Garry Kasparov
Lev Psakhis
12½/17 (+10−2=5)
12½/17 (+9−1=7)
50 2–28 Apr 1983 Moscow Anatoly Karpov 9½/15 (+5−1=9)
51 2–28 Apr 1984 Lviv Andrei Sokolov 12½/17 (+8−0=9)
52 22 Jan–19 Feb 1985 Riga Viktor Gavrikov
Mikhail Gurevich
Alexander Chernin
11/19 (+4−1=14)
11/19 (+6−3=10)
11/19 (+5−2=12)
53 4–28 Feb 1986 Kyiv Vitaly Tseshkovsky 11/17 (+6−1=10)
54 4–29 Mar 1987 Minsk Alexander Beliavsky 11/17 (+7−2=8) Beliavsky defeated Valery Salov in a playoff +2=2.[6]
55 25 Jul–19 Aug 1988 Moscow Anatoly Karpov
Garry Kasparov
11½/17 (+6−0=11)
11½/17 (+6−0=11)
56 22 Sep–16 Oct 1989 Odessa Rafael Vaganian 9/15 (+5−2=8)
57 18 Oct–3 Nov 1990 Leningrad Alexander Beliavsky
Leonid Yudasin
Evgeny Bareev
Alexey Vyzmanavin
8½/13 (+5−1=7)
8½/13 (+4−0=9)
8½/13 (+6−2=5)
8½/13 (+5−1=7)
58 1–13 Nov 1991 Moscow Artashes Minasian 8½/11 (+7−1=3) Minasian won this Swiss-style tournament on tiebreak over Elmar Magerramov.
 
A Soviet stamp dedicated to the 1962 USSR Chess Championship

See also edit

Publications edit

  • Mark Taimanov, Bernard Cafferty, Soviet Championships, London, Everyman Chess, 1998 (ISBN 978-1-85744-201-4)

References edit

  1. ^ "USSR Championship 1952". Chessgames.com. 1953-02-05. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  2. ^ "USSR Championship 1955". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  3. ^ "USSR Championship 1968/69". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  4. ^ "USSR Championship 1969". Chessgames.com. 1969-10-12. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  5. ^ "USSR Championship 1977". Chessgames.com. 1977-12-22. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  6. ^ "USSR Championship 1987". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 2012-05-26.

Further reading edit

ussr, chess, championship, played, from, 1921, 1991, organized, ussr, chess, federation, strongest, national, chess, championship, ever, held, with, eight, world, chess, champions, four, world, championship, finalists, among, winners, held, round, robin, tourn. The USSR Chess Championship was played from 1921 to 1991 Organized by the USSR Chess Federation it was the strongest national chess championship ever held with eight world chess champions and four world championship finalists among its winners It was held as a round robin tournament with the exception of the 35th and 58th championships which were of the Swiss system The participants of the fourth USSR Chess Championship in 1925 Sitting left to right Vilner Levenfish Rokhlin organizer Gotthilf I Rabinovich Bogolyubov winner Ilyin Genevsky Duz Khotimirsky Romanovsky Sergeyev Nenarokov Verlinsky A Rabinovich Standing left to right von Freymann Sozin Eremeev organizer Grigoriev Zubarev Selezniev Kaspersky Kutuzov Weinstein organizer Contents 1 Most wins 2 List of winners 3 See also 4 Publications 5 References 6 Further readingMost wins editSix titles Mikhail Botvinnik Mikhail Tal Four titles Tigran Petrosian Viktor Korchnoi Alexander Beliavsky Three titles Paul Keres Leonid Stein Anatoly KarpovList of winners editEdition Date Place Winner Score Notes1 4 24 Oct 1920 Moscow Alexander Alekhine 12 15 9 0 6 Known as the All Russian Chess Olympiad at the time this tournament was later recognized as the first USSR championship 2 8 24 Jul 1923 Petrograd Peter Romanovsky 10 12 9 1 2 3 23 Aug 15 Sep 1924 Moscow Efim Bogoljubov 15 17 13 0 4 4 11 Aug 6 Sep 1925 Leningrad Efim Bogoljubov 14 19 11 2 6 5 26 Sep 25 Oct 1927 Moscow Fedor BogatyrchukPeter Romanovsky 14 20 10 1 9 14 20 12 3 5 All of Bogatyrchuk s tournament results were erased from Soviet records after he emigrated to Canada and was declared a nonperson 6 2 20 Sep 1929 Odessa Boris Verlinsky 5 8 4 1 3 4 5 4 1 0 and 3 4 3 0 1 The tournament was conducted in three stages 7 10 Oct 11 Nov 1931 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 13 17 12 2 3 8 16 Aug 9 Sep 1933 Leningrad Mikhail Botvinnik 14 19 11 2 6 9 7 Dec 1934 2 Jan 1935 Leningrad Grigory Levenfish Ilya Rabinovich 12 19 8 3 8 12 19 9 4 6 10 12 Apr 14 May 1937 Tbilisi Grigory Levenfish 12 19 9 3 7 11 15 Apr 16 May 1939 Leningrad Mikhail Botvinnik 12 17 8 0 9 12 5 Sep 3 Oct 1940 Moscow Andor LilienthalIgor Bondarevsky 13 19 8 0 11 13 19 10 2 7 Mikhail Botvinnik won the Absolute Championship 23 Mar 29 Apr 1941 Leningrad Moscow 13 20 9 2 9 13 21 May 17 Jun 1944 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 12 16 11 2 3 14 1 Jun 3 Jul 1945 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 15 17 13 0 4 15 2 Feb 8 Mar 1947 Leningrad Paul Keres 14 19 10 1 8 16 10 Nov 13 Dec 1948 Moscow David BronsteinAlexander Kotov 12 18 7 1 10 12 18 10 4 4 17 16 Oct 20 Nov 1949 Moscow Vasily SmyslovDavid Bronstein 13 19 9 2 8 13 19 8 1 10 18 10 Nov 12 Dec 1950 Moscow Paul Keres 11 17 8 2 7 19 11 Nov 14 Dec 1951 Moscow Paul Keres 12 17 9 2 6 20 29 Nov 29 Dec 1952 Moscow Mikhail Botvinnik 13 19 9 1 9 Botvinnik defeated Mark Taimanov in a playoff 2 1 3 1 21 7 Jan 7 Feb 1954 Kyiv Yuri Averbakh 14 19 10 0 9 22 11 Feb 15 Mar 1955 Moscow Efim Geller 12 19 10 5 4 Geller defeated Vasily Smyslov in a playoff 1 6 2 23 10 Jan 15 Feb 1956 Leningrad Mark Taimanov 11 17 8 2 7 Taimanov defeated Boris Spassky and Yuri Averbakh in a playoff 24 20 Jan 22 Feb 1957 Moscow Mikhail Tal 14 21 9 2 10 25 12 Jan 14 Feb 1958 Riga Mikhail Tal 12 18 10 3 5 26 9 Jan 11 Feb 1959 Tbilisi Tigran Petrosian 13 19 8 0 11 27 26 Jan 26 Feb 1960 Leningrad Viktor Korchnoi 14 19 12 3 4 28 11 Jan 11 Feb 1961 Moscow Tigran Petrosian 13 19 9 1 9 29 16 Nov 12 Dec 1961 Baku Boris Spassky 14 20 10 1 9 30 21 Nov 20 Dec 1962 Yerevan Viktor Korchnoi 14 19 10 1 8 31 23 Nov 27 Dec 1963 Leningrad Leonid Stein 12 19 6 1 12 Stein defeated Boris Spassky and Ratmir Kholmov in a playoff 32 25 Dec 1964 27 Jan 1965 Kyiv Viktor Korchnoi 15 19 11 0 8 33 21 Nov 24 Dec 1965 Tallinn Leonid Stein 14 19 10 1 8 34 28 Dec 1966 2 Feb 1967 Tbilisi Leonid Stein 13 20 8 2 10 35 7 26 Dec 1967 Kharkiv Lev PolugaevskyMikhail Tal 10 1310 13 The tournament was a 126 player Swiss 36 30 Dec 1968 1 Feb 1969 Alma Ata Lev PolugaevskyAlexander Zaitsev 12 19 7 1 11 12 19 6 13 Polugaevsky defeated Zaitsev in a playoff 2 1 3 3 37 6 Sep 12 Oct 1969 Moscow Tigran Petrosian 14 22 6 0 16 Petrosian defeated Polugaevsky in a playoff held in Feb 1970 by 2 3 4 38 25 Nov 28 Dec 1970 Riga Viktor Korchnoi 16 21 12 1 8 39 15 Sep 17 Oct 1971 Leningrad Vladimir Savon 15 21 9 0 12 40 16 Nov 19 Dec 1972 Baku Mikhail Tal 15 21 9 0 12 41 1 27 Oct 1973 Moscow Boris Spassky 11 17 7 1 9 42 30 Nov 23 Dec 1974 Leningrad Alexander BeliavskyMikhail Tal 9 15 6 2 7 9 15 6 2 7 43 28 Nov 22 Dec 1975 Yerevan Tigran Petrosian 10 15 6 1 8 44 26 Nov 24 Dec 1976 Moscow Anatoly Karpov 12 17 8 1 8 45 28 Nov 22 Dec 1977 Leningrad Boris GulkoIosif Dorfman 9 15 4 0 11 9 15 4 0 11 A playoff held in 1978 was drawn 1 1 4 5 46 1 28 Dec 1978 Tbilisi Mikhail TalVitaly Tseshkovsky 11 17 5 0 12 11 17 6 1 10 47 29 Nov 27 Dec 1979 Minsk Efim Geller 11 17 6 0 11 48 25 Dec 1980 21 Jan 1981 Vilnius Lev PsakhisAlexander Beliavsky 10 17 8 4 5 10 17 6 2 9 49 27 Nov 22 Dec 1981 Frunze Garry KasparovLev Psakhis 12 17 10 2 5 12 17 9 1 7 50 2 28 Apr 1983 Moscow Anatoly Karpov 9 15 5 1 9 51 2 28 Apr 1984 Lviv Andrei Sokolov 12 17 8 0 9 52 22 Jan 19 Feb 1985 Riga Viktor GavrikovMikhail GurevichAlexander Chernin 11 19 4 1 14 11 19 6 3 10 11 19 5 2 12 53 4 28 Feb 1986 Kyiv Vitaly Tseshkovsky 11 17 6 1 10 54 4 29 Mar 1987 Minsk Alexander Beliavsky 11 17 7 2 8 Beliavsky defeated Valery Salov in a playoff 2 2 6 55 25 Jul 19 Aug 1988 Moscow Anatoly KarpovGarry Kasparov 11 17 6 0 11 11 17 6 0 11 56 22 Sep 16 Oct 1989 Odessa Rafael Vaganian 9 15 5 2 8 57 18 Oct 3 Nov 1990 Leningrad Alexander BeliavskyLeonid YudasinEvgeny BareevAlexey Vyzmanavin 8 13 5 1 7 8 13 4 0 9 8 13 6 2 5 8 13 5 1 7 58 1 13 Nov 1991 Moscow Artashes Minasian 8 11 7 1 3 Minasian won this Swiss style tournament on tiebreak over Elmar Magerramov nbsp A Soviet stamp dedicated to the 1962 USSR Chess ChampionshipSee also editWomen s Soviet Chess Championship Russian Chess ChampionshipPublications editMark Taimanov Bernard Cafferty Soviet Championships London Everyman Chess 1998 ISBN 978 1 85744 201 4 References edit USSR Championship 1952 Chessgames com 1953 02 05 Retrieved 2012 05 26 USSR Championship 1955 Chessgames com Retrieved 2012 05 26 USSR Championship 1968 69 Chessgames com Retrieved 2012 05 26 USSR Championship 1969 Chessgames com 1969 10 12 Retrieved 2012 05 26 USSR Championship 1977 Chessgames com 1977 12 22 Retrieved 2012 05 26 USSR Championship 1987 Chessgames com Retrieved 2012 05 26 Further reading editSoltis Andrew 1999 Soviet Chess 1917 1991 McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 7864 0676 3 The Soviet Chess Championship 1920 1991 RUSBASE part V 1919 1937 1991 1994 RUSBASE part IV 1938 1960 RUSBASE part III 1961 1969 1985 1990 RUSBASE part II 1970 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USSR Chess Championship amp oldid 1139710560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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