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Dragoljub Velimirovic
Velimirovic 
Photo copyright © 2010, Vladimir Jagr. Courtesy of chessdom.com.  

Number of games in database: 1,804
Years covered: 1958 to 2010
Last FIDE rating: 2407
Highest rating achieved in database: 2525
Overall record: +708 -458 =638 (56.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (394) 
    B47 B89 B57 B32 B46
 Ruy Lopez (136) 
    C92 C69 C97 C85 C96
 French Defense (92) 
    C18 C11 C13 C02 C16
 Sicilian Taimanov (82) 
    B47 B46 B45 B48
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (73) 
    C92 C97 C85 C96 C99
 King's Pawn Game (61) 
    C44
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (294) 
    B32 B39 B31 B22 B70
 Modern Benoni (133) 
    A56 A57 A77 A63 A65
 Sicilian Dragon (82) 
    B39 B77 B70 B76 B78
 Old Benoni (81) 
    A43 A44
 King's Indian (62) 
    E62 E66 E91 E90 E75
 Reti System (55) 
    A04 A05
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Velimirovic vs Ljubojevic, 1972 1-0
   Velimirovic vs Csom, 1974 1-0
   Velimirovic vs J Sofrevski, 1965 1-0
   Velimirovic vs H Ree, 1994 1-0
   Velimirovic vs J Fridjonsson, 1974 1-0
   Velimirovic vs V Bukal Sr, 1971 1-0
   Velimirovic vs M Pavlovic, 1998 1-0
   A Planinc vs Velimirovic, 1975 0-1
   Velimirovic vs R Al-Qazzaz, 1974 1-0
   B Pietrusiak vs Velimirovic, 1964 0-1

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Vrnjacka Banja (1973)
   Yugoslav Championship (1975)
   Radivoj Jovanic Memorial (1980)
   Budva Zonal (1981)
   Skopje Solidarnost (1971)
   Novi Sad (1976)
   Yugoslav Championship (1981)
   Bela Crkva Open (1983)
   Yugoslav Championship (1988)
   Yugoslav Championship (1995)
   Vrnjacka Banja (1991)
   Yugoslav Championship 1966 (1965)
   The Hague Zonal (1966)
   Parcetic Memorial (1972)
   Capablanca Memorial (1971)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Secret Hero Velimirovic by mneuwirth
   Secret Hero Velimirovic by daveyjones01
   Secret Hero Velimirovic by Gottschalk
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 112 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 113 by 0ZeR0
   Attacking games by takchess
   Attacking games by Sharpen Your Tactics
   Attacking games by dheerajmohan
   Attacking games by dheerajmohan
   Attacking games by Dhamal Goda

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Dragoljub Velimirovic
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DRAGOLJUB VELIMIROVIC
(born May-12-1942, died May-22-2014, 72 years old) Yugoslavia (federation/nationality Serbia)
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

International Master (1971); Grandmaster (1973); Yugoslav Champion (1970, 1975 and 1997).

Nicknamed "The Boss", (1), and sometimes called the "Yugoslav Tal", Dragoljub Velimirović (Serbian Cyrillic: Драгољуб Велимировић) was a well-liked, innovative and feared attacking tactician. While never a serious threat for the world title, he nevertheless contested three Interzonals and was ranked within the top 100 of the world's players for approximately 20 years from before 1969 through 1989, when he was at his most active. (2)

General

He was born in Valjevo, in the part of the former Yugoslavia that is now Serbia. He moved to Belgrade in 1960, where he lived until his death. He learned chess when he was seven from his mother Jovanka Velimirovic, who was Yugoslavia's first Women's Champion. (3)

Championships

<Junior> Junior Champion of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1958, he was 3rd in the 1959 Yugoslav Youth Championship, half a point behind co-leaders Bruno Parma and Ivan Nemet and then followed up by winning the Yugoslav Youth Championship in 1960 or 1961. (4), (5)

<National and Regional> Velimirović first played in the Yugoslav Championship in 1962 at the age of 20 when he placed =3rd with 8.5/13, a point behind the (eventual) 12-time winner Svetozar Gligoric, a half point behind the runner-up Aleksandar Matanovic and alongside Mato Damjanovic. (6) His next attempt was in the 21-round round-robin event held in Zenica in 1963, where he placed 12th with 10/21. (6) In 1965, he was =4th with 10.5/19 behind the winner Gligoric and the joint runners-up Borislav Ivkov and Bruno Parma. (7) He played in over 20 subsequent Yugoslav championships, the last one being 2003, with his best results being wins in 1970 (jointly with Milan Vukic) and 1975, 2nd in 1981 behind Bozidar Ivanovic, 2nd behind Predrag Nikolic in 1984 and =1st in 1997 when Yugoslavia had become a federal republic. (8) He was also the Balkans Champion in 1972. (9)

<World> Velimirović commenced his participation in the World Championship cycle when he entered (but failed to progress past) the Yugoslav national qualifier for the 1963 Zonals and ended in 1999 when he qualified via the Panormo Zonal in 1998 to play in FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (1999) in Las Vegas. (10) Unfortunately, he was not issued a visa by US authorities to allow him to compete in Las Vegas due to political tensions with Yugoslavia at that time. His best results within the World Championship cycles in which he participated were to qualify for and participate in the Rio de Janeiro Interzonal (1979), (11) the Moscow Interzonal in 1982 (12) and the Szirák Interzonal in 1987. (13)

Classical Tournament Record

<1970s> Velimirović scored 9.5/15 at Vinkovci 1970 placing 5th, a point behind the winner Bent Larsen, and half point behind joint runners up Gligoric, Vlastimil Hort and David Bronstein, but ahead of Tigran Petrosian, Mark Taimanov and Laszlo Szabo. (14) This result and others such as his 2nd placement at the category 9 Skopje tournament in 1971, behind Lev Polugaevsky and alongside Albin Planinc earned him his International Master title, (15) well after he was within the group that constituted the world's top 100 players. He earned his Grandmaster title when he won the Vrnjacka Spa event at Vrnjacka Banja in 1973, (16). In 1974: he was 3rd at Reykjavik (17). In 1976, he was =4th, a point behind co-leaders Viktor Korchnoi and Tony Miles and half a point behind 3rd placed Gyula Sax at the category 11 IBM tournament in Amsterdam. (18) He also competed at Novi Sad in 1976 placing 2nd behind Jan Smejkal and ahead of Hort and Gligoric. (19) In 1978, he placed =3rd at Osijek behind Gligoric and Andras Adorjan, (20) and 1st at Albufeira ahead of Ljubomir Ljubojevic. (21) In 1979, he came in 2nd at Smederevska Palanka behind Dusan Rajkovic. (22)

<1980s onward> This decade saw Velimirović continue his exploits and successes on the 64 squares. In 1980, he came 2nd at Borovo behind Milan Matulovic (23) =1st at Zemun alongside Milan Vukic (24); and =3rd at Maribor behind Vladimir Kovacevic and Jonathan Speelman. (25) In 1981, he was =2nd at Banja Luka behind Vitaly Tseshkovsky. (26) In 1982, he placed 3rd at Vinkovci behind Kovacevic and Matulovic and alongside Ivanovic. (27) In 1984, he was =1st alongside Korchnoi and ahead of Mikhail Tal at the powerful tournament in Titograd. (28) In 1985, he won outright at Vrsac and two years later was =1st in that event, winning on tiebreak. (29) His other successes in the 1980s include 1st at the Metz Open in 1988 (30) and =2nd at Zenica in 1989 behind Petar Popovic. (31) In 1994, he won at Niksic (32) and in 2001 he won the Savic Mauzer Memorial tournament in Bijeljina. (33)

Team events

Velimirović played for the Yugoslav national team many times between 1960 and 1990, including in the student and open Olympiads, the Balkaniads, the European Team Championships and in the World Team Championship. He also played for the winning Belgrade team against a Moscow team in 1998. (34)

<Olympiads> In 1964 he played board 4 for the Yugoslavian team at the Student Olympiad held in that year in Cracow in Poland, (35) and helped his team to win the qualifying stage (36) to enable it into the final where it placed 5th. (37) He also played top board for his country in that event in 1967. (38) He represented Yugoslavia at six Olympiads, namely 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986 (when he was also the coach (39)), 1988 and 1990; his tally of medals included a team silver and an individual silver, both of which were won at the 1974 Nice Olympiad. (40)

<National Team> He played for Yugoslavia against the USSR team in 1961 (aged 19) in Belgrade (41), in 1966 (42), and in 1972 at Ohrid, during which he crushed Rafael Vaganian in the first round playing the Benoni Defence, (43) in 1973 (44) and in 1979 in Teslic (45). He also represented Yugoslavia in the match against Hungary held in Pula in 1971. (46)

Velimirović represented Yugoslavia in the Balkaniads (a round robin set of matches between some or all of the Balkans countries) in 1972 (vs Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey Greece), 1974 (vs Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria) and 1978 (vs Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece and Romania), winning 2 team golds and an individual gold, as well as an individual silver and a team and an individual bronze. (47) In the European Team Championship, he won individual silver in 1970 and 1977, team silver in 1973, individual bronze in 1973 and team bronze in 1977, but was shut out in 1980. He won team silver at the World Team Championship in Lucerne 1989. (49)

<European Club Cup> Velimirović briefly played in the ECC, that being in 1996 when his only known game in the event was for the team ŠK Montenegrobanka Podgorica. (50).

<National League> He played in the Yugoslav Cup from 1961 (51) and in the Yugoslav League from 1989 until 2003 inclusive. (52), the Serbia and Montenegro team championship of 2003 and the Serbian Team Championships of 2006 and 2007. He also played in the Greek League in 2000 (53) and 2001 (54).

<Other team events> Velimirović played for the Old Hands against the Snowdrops in the Czech Coal match of November 2010. (55)

Other

In 1981, he was Korchnoi's second in Merano, Italy during the Karpov - Korchnoi World Championship Match (1981). (56). He appears (as himself) in a film dated 2010 "Opelo za Bobija Fiser" (Requiem for Bobby Fischer"), a documentary seen through the eyes of Fischer's Serbian friends, chess opponents and acquaintances. (57) Velimirović's last games were played in 2011, where he competed in the Belgrade Cup and Serbian Cup.

Career ratings and rankings

Velimirović was considered to have been in the world's top 100 players since at least 1969 and possibly even before that time, when he was still untitled. He won his International Master title in 1971, the year FIDE first published its official ratings. His rating at that time was 2470 and he was ranked =83rd in the world. He remained in the top 100, apart from three ratings periods in 1981 and 1983, peaking at equal world number #20 in January 1986. His rating also peaked at that time at 2575. (58)

Theory

Velimirović's aggressive Velimirović Attack variation is identified by the sequence of moves: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 Nc6 6.Bc4 e6 7.Be3 Be7 8.Qe2 a6 9.0-0-0:


click for larger view

Some more theory, especially Black's 8th move options, at http://www.365chess.com/eco/B89_Sic...

Death and eulogies

Velimirović died on May 22, 2014, at the age of 72 in Belgrade and is survived by his wife, Mirjana Velimirovic.

Eulogy by GM Susan Polgar http://susanpolgar.blogspot.com.au/...

Eulogy by chessvibes.com: http://www.chessvibes.com/?q=dragol...

Sources, references and footnotes

(1) http://www.chessvibes.com/?q=dragol...; (2) http://www.olimpbase.org/Elo/player...; (3) Wikipedia article: Dragoljub Velimirović; (4) http://balkanchess.blogspot.com.au/...; (5) Footnote deleted; (6) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... (the game count is two games shy of complete in this reference, but they are not missing from the leader-board ); (6) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (7) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (8) Wikipedia article: Yugoslav Chess Championship and http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... ; http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... and http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (9) http://balkanchess.blogspot.com.au/...; (10) http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/zon...; (11) http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/798...; (12) http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/828...; (13) http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/889...; (14) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (15) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... and http://www.kurir-info.rs/preminuo-v...; (16) universally cited, although the cross table no longer seems available, eg at http://www.365chess.com/tournaments..., the leading scorer is shown to be Velimirović, but this cannot be ascertained by the game count on that page. Also see http://www.kurir-info.rs/preminuo-v...; (17) http://balkanchess.blogspot.com.au/...; (18) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (19) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... and http://balkanchess.blogspot.com.au/...; (20) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (21) Wikipedia article: Dragoljub Velimirović; (22) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (23) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (24) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (25) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (26) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (27) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (28) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (29) Wikipedia article: Dragoljub Velimirovi%C4%87; (30) http://www.chessnc.com/biography/pe...; (31) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (32) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (33) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; 34 ] http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (35) http://www.olimpbase.org/playersy/z...; (36) http://www.olimpbase.org/1964y/1964...; (37) http://www.olimpbase.org/1964y/1964...; (38) http://www.olimpbase.org/playersy/z...; (39) http://www.kurir-info.rs/preminuo-v... ); (40) http://www.olimpbase.org/players/zl...; (41) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (42) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (43) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments..., the game in question being http://www.365chess.com/view_game.p...; (44) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (45) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (46) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (47) http://www.olimpbase.org/playersbm/...; (48) http://www.olimpbase.org/playerse/z...; (49) http://www.olimpbase.org/playerst/z...; (50) http://www.olimpbase.org/playersc/z...; (51) http://www.kurir-info.rs/preminuo-v...; (52) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (53) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (54) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (55) http://www.365chess.com/tournaments...; (56) .http://www.chessvibes.com/?q=dragol...; (57) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1522230...; (58) http://www.olimpbase.org/Elo/player....

Last updated: 2024-04-19 10:57:53

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 73; games 1-25 of 1,805  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. A Deze vs Velimirovic  ½-½471958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
2. Velimirovic vs S Radonjic 1-0301958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC97 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin
3. A Lozic vs Velimirovic  ½-½581958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipB67 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...a6 Defense, 8...Bd7
4. Velimirovic vs D Rajkovic  ½-½241958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC26 Vienna
5. Velimirovic vs Parma ½-½261958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC96 Ruy Lopez, Closed
6. D Sahovic vs Velimirovic  0-1461958Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE80 King's Indian, Samisch Variation
7. V Kovacevic vs Velimirovic  0-1311959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipA07 King's Indian Attack
8. Velimirovic vs V Milosevic  1-0361959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE85 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Variation
9. D Vucenovic vs Velimirovic 0-1221959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC91 Ruy Lopez, Closed
10. Velimirovic vs D Perencevic  1-0441959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE90 King's Indian
11. Velimirovic vs A Lozic  1-0281959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE85 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Variation
12. Velimirovic vs L Jovic  1-0411959Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipA60 Benoni Defense
13. Velimirovic vs V Kovacevic  1-0401960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC90 Ruy Lopez, Closed
14. L Tancev vs Velimirovic  1-0561960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE95 King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1
15. Velimirovic vs B Nedeljkovic  1-0311960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipE67 King's Indian, Fianchetto
16. I Nemet vs Velimirovic  0-1421960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipB67 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...a6 Defense, 8...Bd7
17. S Kosanski vs Velimirovic  0-1141960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipC46 Three Knights
18. Velimirovic vs D Perencevic  1-0261960Yugoslav Junior ChampionshipA16 English
19. M Milicevic vs Velimirovic 0-1371961YUG-Cup ttA57 Benko Gambit
20. Brons vs Velimirovic  0-1291961YUG-Cup ttB32 Sicilian
21. B Barbulovic vs Velimirovic  ½-½421961YUG-Cup ttB32 Sicilian
22. I Kindij vs Velimirovic 0-1421961YUG-Cup ttA57 Benko Gambit
23. Velimirovic vs M Ankerst  1-0411961YUG-Cup ttE25 Nimzo-Indian, Samisch
24. Velimirovic vs A Shmit  0-1301961Yugoslavia - Soviet UnionB81 Sicilian, Scheveningen, Keres Attack
25. U Vaskans vs Velimirovic  0-1411961Yugoslavia - Soviet UnionB32 Sicilian
 page 1 of 73; games 1-25 of 1,805  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Velimirovic wins | Velimirovic loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 1 OF 3 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Mar-21-04  Ed Caruthers: I did a search of Velimirovic's games & couldn't find the one that made "Velimirovic Attack" against the Sicilian a main line. I think there was a Nd4xe6 sac. I think it was played somewhere around 1968. Can you find this game & add it to the collection? Are there any other collections I could search?
Mar-21-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Benzol: <Ed Caruthers> I think this is the game your looking for Velimirovic vs Ljubojevic, 1972
Mar-21-04  BiLL RobeRTiE: I doubt that's it. The Velimirovic Attack is a setup with Bc4, Be3, Qe2, and O-O-O played against the Classical Sicilian. That game was a 6. Bg5 Najdorf and it didn't even have an Nxe6 sac! =]
Mar-22-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Benzol: Thanks Bill, I was getting confused. There's another game I'm thinking of too, one between Stean and Velimirovic that was played at the Nice Olympiad. In that one I think Velimirovic was actually playing the Black side.
Mar-23-04  Ed Caruthers: I think it was
Velimirovic-Bukal, Yugoslavia, 1971
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Bc4 e6 7. Be3 Be7 8. Qe2 a6 9. O-O-O Qc7 10. Bb3 O-O 11. g4 Nd7 12. Nf5 exf5 13. Nd5 Qd8 14. gxf5 Na5 15. Nxe7+ Qxe7 16. Bd5 Kh8 17. Rhg1 Nf6 18. Qf3 Nxd5 19. Rxd5 Nc4 20. f6 Qxf6 21. Qxf6 gxf6 22. Bd4 Ne5 23. f4 Nd7 24. Rxd6 Rg8 25. Rd1 Re8 26. f5 Rxe4 27. Rg1 h5 28. Rg5 Rg4 29. Rxf6 Rg1+ 30. Kd2 Rg2+ 31. Ke3 1-0 Anyone know a better one?
Aug-06-04  Dick Brain: Velimirovic vs Sofrevski, 1965

Was an earlier example.

Dec-02-04  Backward Development: wow, what a name. and a system to his name as aggressive as his play. i've only seen a few of his games, but i need only look at his repetoire to know his character. this guy is the kind of player i would hate to play over the board. he is a ruthlessly tactical player.
Apr-11-05  get Reti: Yay! He's a practitioner of the ponziani
May-19-05  aw1988: This is possibly the most dangerous player who ever lived. Diemer was tricky, Alekhine liked to attack, Capablanca would simply crush you positionally, Karpov too, etc etc, but in my mind, only the name "Velimirovic" truly sends chills down my spine. I witnessed him play some years back. He absolutely dominated the opposition. I can't imagine what it must be like to play him.
Aug-30-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  WTHarvey: Here are some crucial positions from Drago's early games: http://www.wtharvey.com/veli.html
Aug-30-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  TheAlchemist: "Drasko" as he was also called, was a witty man, and many fun stories are linked to him. Once, he went hunting with some friends. He got lost and while everybody was searching for him, Velimirovic was trying to find the way back on his own. Suddenly, he heard some rustling behind him, he turned around and saw a wild boar.

He got so frightened, he threw his rifle away and began running as fast as he could, past his friends too. (Some "legends" even say, he rode the boar for some time). The boar had stopped chasing him (if it did at all) long ago, but that couldn't stop Velimirovic. Only when he found himself in water up to his waist, he realized where he was - in a nearby lake.

Dec-29-05  Goran: He is also called "boss". Long time coach and second of Svetozar Gligoric.

He wanted to sue Russian publishers when they renamed "Velimirovic attack" into something else (Russians were famous for trying to put their own names). Eventualy they had to pay him big money.

Feb-09-06  BIDMONFA: Dragoljub Velimirovic

VELIMIROVIC, Dragoljub
http://www.bidmonfa.com/velimirovic...
_

May-14-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fagin: Here you can find 150 of his great combinations online:

http://www.schachklub.info/partien/...

May-25-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  LIFE Master AJ: (http://db.chessmetrics.com/CM2/Play...)

I have often thought that if I could write 1,000 (or more) chess books, I would have to do one on this player. An attacking player, his games really fire the imagination. (One example, http://www.angelfire.com/games3/lif...)

While not quite a "forgotten player" (http://www.geocities.com/lifemaster...); this player deserves to be better known today than he is. (I find that most young players don't even know who he is.)

Aug-14-06  Bonol: this is the type of player who throws the kitchen sink at you, followed by the kitchen. I would not like to be a sicilian player needing half a point in the last round against this guy.
Aug-15-06  Timothy Glenn Forney: He is the best accelerated dragon player of all time.
Aug-15-06  Albertan: According to this website:
http://chesslodge.blogspot.com/2005...

"Drasko was born on 1942. His mother Jovanka was Yugoslav women champion and his grandfather Nikolay was famous Bishop and is recognized as a saint by Serbian Orthodox Church. Drasko earned his IM title on 1972 and GM title on 1975. He participated in Yugoslav national championships more then 25 times and was the winner on 1970 and 1975." As Dick Brain pointed out
the game that finally made "Velimirovic attack" famous was Velimirovic-Sofreski YUG-ch 1965 when he played the Nf5 sac.

May-12-08  brankat: Happy Birthday Drasko!
Jun-21-08  Some call me Tim: According to the openings database on this site the earliest example of the Velimirovic Attack is Velimirovic vs Bradvarevic, 1962 Velimirovic castled K-side in that game and didn't sac on f5 or e6. But he did come up with the basic formation with Be3, Qe2 etc. The wild sac attacks came later. An exciting player, to be sure.
Dec-13-08  Parelius: Met GM Velimirovic at Belgrade Trophy 2008 and had the luck to analyze a bit with him , wonderful caracter ! A lot of funny and interesting stories as well and he showed me quite a lot of his best games. Will never forget it ! When we trying to prepare before his meeting with GM Sergej Kasparov we looked at some lines in the e5 CK when suddenly he said ; but wait , this position I had against the real Kasparov :-) And then he showed us , almost without a flaw , Velimirovic - Kasparov , Garry Moscow IZ 1982 .
Feb-06-09  brankat: <Parelius> Thank You for the story.

I also had a privilege of meeting GM Velimirovic on a couple of occasions way back in the late 1960s.

You are right, he's not only an extraordinary master, but also a very fine person.

May-12-09  SimonWebbsTiger: Happy Player of the Day, to Drago today! I have been working through Sacrifices in the Sicilian by David Levy; there are a few examples of the man's famous Nd5 sacs; what is amusing is that Levy appends stories of how everyone would go for weeks unsure whether the sacs were sound! Enterprising stuff. :)
May-12-09  WhiteRook48: happy birthday!
May-12-10  wordfunph: happy 68th birthday Velimirovic Attack!
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