1988 in chess
Top players
Kasparov and Karpov remained the top two players in the world, positions that they had held since July 1982. Over the year, Dutch player Jan Timman and Alexander Beliavsky of the USSR moved up the list, whilst Andrei Sokolov from the USSR and Ljubomir Ljubojević of Yugoslavia moved down.[1]
January 1988 FIDE rating list. Top 11 players
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Events
The following major chess tournaments took place in 1988:
Grandmasters Association World Cup
The Grandmasters Association held six World Cup tournaments over 1988 and 1989, with some of the world's best players invited. The first three of these tournaments were held in 1988.
- 1 April – 22 April: The first tournament was held in Brussels and won by Karpov with 11/16, ahead of Valery Salov with 10.[3]
- 14 June – 3 July: The second tournament was held in Belfort, France and won by Kasparov with 11½/15, ahead of Karpov with 10½.[4]
- 3 October – 24 October: The third tournament was held in Reykjavík and was again won by Kasparov, with 11/17. Beliavsky was second, with 10½/15.[5]
28th Chess Olympiad
The 28th Chess Olympiad in Thessaloniki, Greece was held between 12 November and 30 November. It was won by the USSR, ahead of England in second and the Netherlands in third.[6]
The gold medal on the first board was won by Kasparov of USSR with 8½/10. Lajos Portisch of Hungary was second, also scoring 8½, but from 11 games.[7]
The Women's Chess Olympiad was held alongside the open tournament. The winners were Hungary, ahead of the USSR and Yugoslavia.[8]
Other major tournaments
- 23 February – 8 March: The Linares tournament was won by Timman with 8½/11, ahead of Beliavsky with 7.[9]
- 6 September – 28 September: The 12th Tilburg tournament was won by Karpov with 10½/14, ahead of Short with 8½.[10]
- December 1988 – January 1989: The Reggio Emilia tournament was won by Mikhail Gurevich with 6½/9, ahead of Kiril Georgiev and Ulf Andersson Ivanchuk with 5½.[11]
- The Wijk aan Zee tournament was won by Karpov with 9/13, ahead of Anderssen with 8½.[12]
Titles awarded
Grandmaster
In 1989, FIDE awarded the Grandmaster title to the following 20 players:[13]
- Viswanathan Anand (b. 1969)
India - Zurab Azmaiparashvili (b. 1960)
Georgia - Emir Dizdarevic (b. 1958)
Yugoslavia - Yury Dokhoian (b. 1964)
Soviet Union - Boris Gelfand (b. 1968)
Soviet Union - Krum Georgiev (b. 1958)
Bulgaria[14] - Jörg Hickl (b. 1965)
Germany - Julian Hodgson (b. 1963)
England - Miguel Illescas (b. 1963)
Spain - Gregory Kaidanov (b. 1959)
Ukraine/ United States - Stefan Kindermann (b. 1959)
Germany - Josef Klinger (b. 1967)
Austria - Bogdan Lalić (b. 1964)
Croatia/ England - Valentin Lukov (b. 1955)
Bulgaria - Gilberto Milos (b. 1963)
Brazil - Michael Rohde (b. 1959)
United States - Harry Schussler (b. 1957)
Sweden - Elizbar Ubilava (b. 1950)
Georgia/ Spain - Reynaldo Vera (b. 1961)
Cuba - Michael Wilder (b. 1962)
United States
In addition George Koltanowski (b. 1903) was awarded an honorary Grandmaster title in 1988.[15]
Births
The following chess grandmasters were born in 1988:[16]
- 9 January Viktor Láznička
Czech Republic - 5 February Markus Ragger
Austria - 8 February Arik Braun
Germany - 14 February Evgeny Romanov
Russia - 14 February Adam Tukhaev
Ukraine - 3 March Timur Gareev
Uzbekistan - 11 March Ante Brkić
Croatia - 11 March Alexandr Fier
Brazil - 14 April Pawel Czarnota
Poland - 18 April Yuriy Ajrapetjan
Ukraine - 20 April Mark Bluvshtein
Canada - 21 April Subramanian Arun Prasad
India - 26 April Boban Bogosavljević
Serbia - 26 April Rauf Mamedov
Azerbaijan - 30 April Denes Boros
Hungary - 13 May Luka Lenič
Slovenia - 11 June Zhou Jianchao
China - 21 June Alejandro Ramírez
Costa Rica - 7 July Wen Yang
China - 8 August Marin Bosiočić
Croatia - 23 August Dmitry Kononenko
Ukraine - 6 September Valentin Iotov
Bulgaria - 9 September Bassem Amin
Egypt - 27 September David Baramidze
Germany - 11 November Yuri Vovk
Ukraine - Anatoly Bykhovsky
Israel - Nikolai Chadaev
Russia - Laszlo Gonda
Hungary - Vitaliy Kiselev
Russia - Daniel Alsina Leal
Spain - Wojciech Moranda
Poland - Ioannis Papadopoulos
Greece - Pavel Ponkratov
Russia - Deep Sengupta
India
Deaths
The following leading chess personality died in 1988:
- 30 June Bernardo Wexler (b. 1925): Argentine International Master who was the 1959 national champion and played in three Olympiads.
- 27 November Jan Hein Donner (b. 1927): Dutch Grandmaster who won the Dutch Championship in 1954, 1957 and 1958.[17]
Other events
- The German chess magazine, Deutsche Schachzeitung ceased publication in December 1988, having been published regularly since 1846.
- The musical Chess premiered on Broadway in April 1988. It closed in June 1988.[18]
See also
- Corus Chess Tournament
- Linares chess tournament
- List of strong chess tournaments
References
- "Top men's ratings 1970–1997". Archived from the original on 24 July 2010. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- olimpbase.org. "History of Elo ratings 1971–2001". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.chessgames.com. "Brussels WC 1988". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.chessgames.com. "Belfort WC 1988". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.chessgames.com. "Reykjavík WC 1988". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.olimpbase.org. "28th Chess Olympiad, Thessaloniki". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.olimpbase.org. "28th Chess Olympiad, individual medalists". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.olimpbase.org. "28th Chess Olympiad, women's tournament". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- www.chessgames.com. "Linares 1988". Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- "Tilburg 1988" (in French). Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- "Reggio Emilia 1988/89" (in Italian). Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- "Wijk aan Zee 1988". Archived from the original on 2010-06-09. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
- Bill Wall. "List of rated players". Archived from the original on 2009-10-28. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- "FIDE ratings card". Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- "The chess games of Georges Koltanowski". Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- "Grandmasters born in 1988". FIDE. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- "Jan Hein Donner at www.chessgames.com". Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- "Chess the musical". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 6 August 2010.