Friðrik Ólafsson

Friðrik Ólafsson (born 26 January 1935) is an Icelandic chess grandmaster. He was president of FIDE from 1978 to 1982. He is a six-time Icelandic Chess Champion and a two-time Nordic Chess Champion.

Friðrik Ólafsson
Friðrik Ólafsson, 2008
CountryIceland
Born26 January 1935 (1935-01-26) (age 85)
Reykjavík, Iceland
TitleGrandmaster (1958)
Peak rating2600 (1969)
Peak rankingNo. 14 (1969)[1]

Chess career

Friðrik was born in Reykjavík, Iceland. A first-time winner of the Icelandic Chess Championship in 1952 and of the Nordic Chess Championship a year later, he rapidly became recognised as the strongest Icelandic player of his generation. Friðrik's first result of international note was his shared first with Viktor Korchnoi at Hastings 1955–56.

Friðrik's best result in World Chess Championship competition was in the 1958 Interzonal tournament at Portorož, where he finished equal 5th–6th, automatically earning the grandmaster title (the first for Iceland) and qualifying for the 1959 Candidates Tournament (the last stage to determine the challenger to the World Chess Champion) in 1960. In the event, held at Bled, Zagreb and Belgrade, however, he finished seventh of eight with 10/28. He also played in the following Interzonal (Stockholm 1962) but failed to qualify for the Candidates. Among his best tournament results were joint third in the first Piatigorsky Cup, Los Angeles 1963, with 7½/14 and shared first with Ljubomir Ljubojević at Wijk aan Zee 1976, ahead of Mikhail Tal. According to Chessmetrics, Olafsson at his best was rated 2692 on the October 1958 rating list, ranked #13 in world.[2]

In 1978, he succeeded Max Euwe as President of the international chess governing body FIDE. During the tenure he presided over the 1981 Karpov–Korchnoi World Championship match. Since Korchnoi defected from the Soviet Union in 1976, the Soviets were holding Korchnoi's son, Igor. Olafsson delayed the planned September 19 start date of the match in a bid to get the Soviets to release Victor's son. For this attempt, Olafsson drew the wrath of the Soviets, who then backed the FIDE Vice-President, Florencio Campomanes for Presidency of FIDE. After losing the election in 1982, Olafsson was appointed Secretary to the Icelandic Parliament. Friðrik continued to play occasionally into the 21st century, winning a rapid match against fellow veteran Bent Larsen in 2003 by a score of 5–3.

Friðrik usually played the Sicilian Defence against 1.e4 and the King's Indian Defence and Nimzo-Indian Defence against 1.d4.[3] With White, he usually played the English Opening, but he also played 1.d4, 1.e4 and 1.Nf3 many times.[4]

Personal life

In life outside of chess, Friðrik is married and has two adult daughters. Prior to 1974, when he became a chess professional, he worked as a lawyer at the Icelandic Ministry of Justice.[5]

gollark: It was the first image I found in my images folder which works as an icon.
gollark: I have now made "icons" work in the search results.
gollark: If I did that sort of thing, I would probably just store some wikitext/markdown notes together with a PDF.
gollark: Given the annoyances using a relational database, especially one which isn't widely-used with async (forcing me to write this stuff myself) is causing, I'm actually quite tempted to just replace the database tables with an array of dicts or something.
gollark: Oh no, the horrible concurrency bug remains unfixed.

References

  1. FIDE Rating List :: 1969
  2. Chessmetrics Player Profile: Fridrik Olafsson
  3. "The chess games of Fridrik Olafsson". Chessgames.com. 2010-02-22. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  4. "Chess Opening Explorer". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  5. "Former FIDE President Fridrik Olafsson turns 75 | Chess News". En.chessbase.com. Retrieved 2014-01-24.

Sources

  • Chess magazine, January 1979 – Interview with David Levy
  • The KGB Plays Chess – Yuri Felshtinsky
Preceded by
Max Euwe
FIDE President
1978–82
Succeeded by
Florencio Campomanes
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