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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
USSR Championship Tournament

Mikhail Gurevich11/19(+6 -3 =10)[games]
Viktor Gavrikov11/19(+4 -1 =14)[games]
Alexander Chernin11/19(+5 -2 =12)[games]
Andrei Sokolov10.5/19(+4 -2 =13)[games]
Yuri Balashov10.5/19(+3 -1 =15)[games]
Sergey Smagin10.5/19(+5 -3 =11)[games]
Georgy Agzamov10/19(+5 -4 =10)[games]
Lev Psakhis10/19(+4 -3 =12)[games]
Vereslav Eingorn9.5/19(+3 -3 =13)[games]
Boris Gulko9.5/19(+3 -3 =13)[games]
Konstantin Lerner9.5/19(+5 -5 =9)[games]
Smbat Lputian9.5/19(+4 -4 =11)[games]
Evgeny Sveshnikov9.5/19(+4 -4 =11)[games]
Yuri Razuvaev9/19(+0 -1 =18)[games]
Vladimir Tukmakov9/19(+2 -3 =14)[games]
Adrian Mikhalchishin9/19(+2 -3 =14)[games]
Arshak Petrosian8/19(+2 -5 =12)[games]
Efim Geller8/19(+3 -6 =10)[games]
Viktor Kupreichik7.5/19(+5 -9 =5)[games]
Bukhuti Gurgenidze7.5/19(+2 -6 =11)[games]
*

Chessgames.com Chess Event Description
USSR Championship (1985)

First place was shared by Gavrikov, Gurevich and Chernin. The USSR Championship playoff (1985) saw all games end in draws. While the chess officials were pondering what to do next, a journalist announced that there would be no further play and Gurevich would be winner on tie-break from the final contest, what was accepted. So Mikhail Gurevich received the gold medal. Mark Taimanov notes that superior tie-break in the final had never been taken into account before.

Source: Wikipedia article: 1985 USSR Chess Championship

 page 2 of 8; games 26-50 of 190  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
26. A Mikhalchishin vs Tukmakov  ½-½191985USSR ChampionshipB22 Sicilian, Alapin
27. Sveshnikov vs V Eingorn  ½-½411985USSR ChampionshipC02 French, Advance
28. G Agzamov vs Gavrikov  ½-½141985USSR ChampionshipD91 Grunfeld, 5.Bg5
29. B Gurgenidze vs A Petrosian  ½-½371985USSR ChampionshipC77 Ruy Lopez
30. K Lerner vs Lputian  ½-½731985USSR ChampionshipD30 Queen's Gambit Declined
31. Chernin vs Balashov  ½-½141985USSR ChampionshipD62 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
32. Geller vs Smagin  0-1501985USSR ChampionshipC92 Ruy Lopez, Closed
33. A Petrosian vs Gulko  ½-½211985USSR ChampionshipD97 Grunfeld, Russian
34. Kupreichik vs G Agzamov  0-1531985USSR ChampionshipC42 Petrov Defense
35. Psakhis vs A Mikhalchishin  ½-½161985USSR ChampionshipA15 English
36. V Eingorn vs Razuvaev  ½-½201985USSR ChampionshipE12 Queen's Indian
37. Tukmakov vs A Sokolov  ½-½211985USSR ChampionshipE52 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line with ...b6
38. Gavrikov vs K Lerner  ½-½261985USSR ChampionshipE15 Queen's Indian
39. Lputian vs Sveshnikov  ½-½321985USSR ChampionshipD44 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
40. M Gurevich vs B Gurgenidze  0-1571985USSR ChampionshipD20 Queen's Gambit Accepted
41. Balashov vs Geller  ½-½131985USSR ChampionshipC84 Ruy Lopez, Closed
42. Gulko vs M Gurevich 0-1361985USSR ChampionshipA80 Dutch
43. K Lerner vs Kupreichik  ½-½411985USSR ChampionshipD10 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
44. A Sokolov vs Psakhis 1-0311985USSR ChampionshipC92 Ruy Lopez, Closed
45. Razuvaev vs Lputian  ½-½241985USSR ChampionshipD34 Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch
46. Smagin vs A Petrosian  ½-½181985USSR ChampionshipA07 King's Indian Attack
47. G Agzamov vs Tukmakov  0-1731985USSR ChampionshipE12 Queen's Indian
48. B Gurgenidze vs V Eingorn  0-1651985USSR ChampionshipC15 French, Winawer
49. Sveshnikov vs Gavrikov  ½-½401985USSR ChampionshipB22 Sicilian, Alapin
50. A Mikhalchishin vs Chernin  ½-½201985USSR ChampionshipD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
 page 2 of 8; games 26-50 of 190  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
Dec-27-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Razuvaev with 18 draws and 1 loss may have come as close as anyone to drawing all of his games at a Soviet championship. AFAIK, that has never been achieved. Arthur Bisguier in 1975 became the only player to draw every game in a U.S. Championship.
Dec-27-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <FSR>, if Kupreichik had drawn a few more games, he might have contended for an interzonal slot at least, rather than tying for bottom marker.
Dec-27-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <perfidious> True. He had five wins, a number that only Gurevich exceeded. But he had nine losses. If he had drawn seven of those, he'd have tied for first.

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