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Oscar Panno
Panno 
 

Number of games in database: 1,551
Years covered: 1952 to 2007
Last FIDE rating: 2438 (2440 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2580
Overall record: +567 -211 =761 (61.6%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 12 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 English (112) 
    A14 A15 A16 A17 A13
 King's Indian (111) 
    E92 E75 E80 E67 E60
 Nimzo Indian (59) 
    E59 E54 E43 E46 E32
 Reti System (56) 
    A04 A06 A05
 English, 1 c4 e5 (54) 
    A28 A22 A25 A21 A27
 English, 1 c4 c5 (49) 
    A30 A34 A33 A35 A31
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (258) 
    B43 B42 B32 B83 B22
 King's Indian (89) 
    E80 E60 E62 E94 E63
 Sicilian Kan (56) 
    B43 B42
 English (51) 
    A15 A10 A16 A14 A17
 Sicilian Scheveningen (46) 
    B83 B80 B81 B82 B84
 Queen's Pawn Game (41) 
    E00 A40 A46 A45 D02
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Panno vs Spassky, 1955 1-0
   Panno vs Eliskases, 1957 1-0
   Panno vs Polugaevsky, 1973 1-0
   Panno vs Larsen, 1971 1-0
   Quinteros vs Panno, 1968 0-1
   Panno vs Bronstein, 1956 1/2-1/2
   Spassky vs Panno, 1969 1/2-1/2
   Hort vs Panno, 1976 0-1
   Panno vs J M Aitken, 1958 1-0
   Chiburdanidze vs Panno, 1992 0-1

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Mar del Plata / Buenos Aires Zonal (1954)
   Rio de Janeiro Zonal (1957)
   Pan-American Championship (1958)
   Buenos Aires YMCA (1968)
   Mar del Plata Zonal (1969)
   Argentine Championship (1985)
   Argentine Championship (1958)
   Palma de Mallorca (1971)
   Argentine Championship (1975)
   Gothenburg Interzonal (1955)
   Buenos Aires (1970)
   Buenos Aires / Rio Hondo Zonal (1966)
   Sao Paulo Zonal (1972)
   Mar del Plata (1957)
   Manila Interzonal (1976)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Palma de Mallorca 1972 by Tabanus
   Palma de Mallorca 1971 by Tabanus
   Amsterdam IBM 1977 by suenteus po 147

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Oscar Panno
Search Google for Oscar Panno
FIDE player card for Oscar Panno

OSCAR PANNO
(born Mar-17-1935, 90 years old) Argentina

[what is this?]

World Junior Champion (1953), Champion of Argentina (1953, 1975 (with Miguel Najdorf), 1985, and 1992); Pan-American Champion (1958); Champion of South America (1954, 1957, 1966 and 1969); Candidate (1956).

Preliminary

Oscar Roberto Panno was born in Buenos Aires and is a civil engineer by trade. He was the first locally born superstar of South American chess.

Titles

Panno was awarded the IM title in 1954 and the GM title in 1955.

Championships

In 1953, Panno won both the World Junior Championship and the championship of Argentina. The following year, he won the South American Championship (staged in Mar del Plata), which also doubled as the Zonal Tournament for the continent in that year, thereby qualifying for the Gothenburg Interzonal (1955). At Gothenburg, Panno placed third behind David Bronstein and Paul Keres, thus gaining the grandmaster title and qualifying for the Amsterdam Candidates (1956) where he started strongly, co-leading for the first few rounds but eventually placing eighth ex aequo. He also contested the Portoroz Interzonal (1958), Palma de Mallorca Interzonal (1970), Petropolis Interzonal (1973) and Manila Interzonal (1976).

In 1958, Panno won the Pan-American championship (aka the Tournament of the Americas) that was staged in Bogotá and won three subsequent championships of South America: in Rio de Janeiro in 1957, Rio Hondo, 1966 (jointly, again doubling as a Zonal) and again at Mar del Plata, 1969 (again jointly).

Tournaments

Panno was a primarily a player for team events and championships especially in his early years, although he does have some notable tournament successes. One of his earliest major wins, if not the earliest, was his 12/17 result at Buenos Aires in 1952 when he was still 16 years old. While there are games missing from the record of this event, they appear to be missing in respect of players who were out of the running for first place. The following year, he won the World Junior Championship and the Argentine Championship (see above).

During the decade from 1958 to 1968, Panno actively pursued his civil engineering career and only played rarely, and not at all between 1958 and 1962. Between 1962 and 1968 he kept his eye in by playing in the occasional tournament with some success, the Club Argentino in 1963 (2nd with 8/11), the Buenos Aires YMCA event in 1963 (1st with 5.5/7), the Punta del Este event in 1964, Mar del Plata in 1965 (=4th with 9.5/13 behind Najdorf, Leonid Stein and Yuri Averbakh), and Buenos Aires 1965 (=2nd behind Najdorf with 8/11)

Upon returning to a fuller schedule, he won several strong tournaments, Buenos Aires 1968 (+8, =2, -1) ahead of Najdorf; Palma de Mallorca (1971) (+7, =8) in his finest achievement since Gothenburg in 1955, winning ahead of a stellar cast of Grandmasters including co-leader Ljubomir Ljubojevic, and Lajos Portisch, Samuel Reshevsky, Ulf Andersson, Bent Larsen, Pal Benko and Raymond Keene. He had other good results including =3rd at the Buenos Aires Open in 1968, 3rd with 11/17 at the famous Buenos Aires (1970) behind Robert James Fischer 's incredible 15/17 win and Vladimir Tukmakov 's distant runner up placement with 11.5/17. Other successes included first on tiebreak at Caracas in 1970 ahead of co-leaders Stein and Lubomir Kavalek, and runners-up Anatoly Karpov and Pal Benko. There was also an excellent =2nd behind Lev Polugaevsky at Mar del Plata in 1971, a 2nd placement at the Villa Gesell open in 1971 and a stunning win at Palma de Mallorca (1972) (+6, =8, -1) ahead of the likes of Lev Polugaevsky and Viktor Korchnoi.

Other good results in the 1970s included equal second behind Benko at Sao Paulo in 1973, equal third at Las Palmas in 1973, equal second at Lone Pine in 1976 behind Tigran V Petrosian, a runaway first at Bogota in 1976, second at Buenos Aires in 1977, equal second at Biel in 1977, equal second at Buenos Aires in 1978 and in 1983. After 1980, his results declined with age but he still won the Argentine championship in 1985 and 1992 (at age 57). Panno remained active into the 21st century, last playing in a FIDE-rated event at the Bobby Fischer Memorial tournament held in Vicente Lopez in Argentina in March 2008; in that event he remained undefeated (aged 73) winning one and drawing nine games finishing equal third with 5/9, half a point behind Diego Valerga and Mauricio Flores Rios.

Team Events

In 1958, Panno was on top board for Argentina at the World Student Championships. He led his team to a second=place finish in the qualifying group to contest the Finals, in which he scored 5.5/10 (+3 -2 =5) and his team placed seventh.

Panno represented his country eleven times at the Olympiads: in 1954, 1956, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1976, 1986, 1988 and finally in 1992. His medal tally for these events was a team silver (behind the Soviet Union) in 1954, team bronzes in 1958 and 1962 (behind the USSR and Yugoslavia on both occasions), individual bronze for board 2 in 1958 and individual gold for board 2 in 1966. In total at these Olympiads, Panno played 151 games (+51 -13 =87) for an overall percentage of 62.6%.

Panno also represented Argentina at the World Team Championship of 1985 and the Pan-American Team Championships staged in 1971, 1985 and 1991; in the 1971 and 1985 Pan-American events he won both team and individual gold.

Matches

Panno played matches against Ruben Rollansky in Buenos Aires in 1965 (winning with +3 =2), Vicente Palermo in 1966 (winning with +2 =5), Miguel Quinteros in 1970 (winning with +2 =7) and again in 1990 (also won with +2 =7), Horacio Garcia in 1971 (winning with +3 =5), Cesar Guillermo Poch in 1971 (winning with +4 =4), Oscar Cuasnicu in 1975 (+3 =3), and Rodrigo Vazquez in 1987 (+1 =9).

Ranking

Panno was never formally ranked or rated during his peak years. However, his results in the Interzonals and in major tournaments shows he was among the world's leading grandmasters. Chessmetrics.com, which attempts to rank players from before the introduction of FIDE ratings, estimates that Panno was as high as 18th in the world in late 1955 when he qualified for the Candidates by placing third at the Gothenburg Interzonal.

Tribute

Tributes to Panno on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of winning the World Junior in 1953 appear at https://www.fide.com/component/cont....

His You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw...

References

His You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw...

Team results were referenced from http://www.olimpbase.org/players/82..., World championship qualifying events from http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/wcc.... Other events, mainly non-championship tournaments, were sourced primarily fromwww.365chess.com. The chessmetrics stat appears at http://www.chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/....

His You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw...

Wikipedia article: Oscar Panno

Last updated: 2023-02-01 20:43:28

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 63; games 1-25 of 1,551  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Panno vs C Incutto 1-0461952Ch-ARGD68 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense, Classical
2. Panno vs A Foguelman ½-½921952Buenos AiresD45 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
3. Panno vs M Luckis  1-0581952Buenos AiresA33 English, Symmetrical
4. F Benko vs Panno  ½-½451952Buenos AiresB22 Sicilian, Alapin
5. Panno vs J Ciro Sanchez  ½-½471952Buenos AiresD57 Queen's Gambit Declined, Lasker Defense
6. J P Rubinstein vs Panno 0-1691952Buenos AiresD78 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.O-O c6
7. Panno vs Eliskases  ½-½431953ARG-chD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
8. E Dodero vs Panno  0-1571953ARG-chE95 King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1
9. C Guimard vs Panno  0-1381953ARG-chD80 Grunfeld
10. L Marini vs Panno  1-0411953ARG-chB73 Sicilian, Dragon, Classical
11. Panno vs B Wexler  ½-½411953ARG-chE59 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line
12. I Pleci vs Panno  0-1791953ARG-chA45 Queen's Pawn Game
13. F Olafsson vs Panno  ½-½171953World Junior Championship qual-1D75 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.cd Nxd5, 7.O-O c5, 8.dxc5
14. Panno vs Y Barda  1-0431953World Junior Championship qual-1E67 King's Indian, Fianchetto
15. R Siemms vs Panno  ½-½621953World Junior Championship qual-1B73 Sicilian, Dragon, Classical
16. Panno vs E Reichel  ½-½441953World Junior Championship qual-1E43 Nimzo-Indian, Fischer Variation
17. R Persitz vs Panno  0-1441953World Junior Championship qual-1E70 King's Indian
18. Panno vs D Keller  0-1511953World Junior Championship qual-1E16 Queen's Indian
19. Ivkov vs Panno  0-1611953World Junior Championship qual-1B76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
20. B Mellberg vs Panno  0-1361953World Junior Championship qual-1B73 Sicilian, Dragon, Classical
21. Panno vs J M Boey  ½-½301953World Junior Championship qual-1E64 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System
22. Panno vs F Olafsson 1-0351953World Junior Championship Final-AE69 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line
23. Panno vs Ivkov  1-0241953World Junior Championship Final-AE59 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line
24. K Darga vs Panno  ½-½411953World Junior Championship Final-AE94 King's Indian, Orthodox
25. Panno vs Larsen 1-0831953World Junior Championship Final-AE18 Queen's Indian, Old Main line, 7.Nc3
 page 1 of 63; games 1-25 of 1,551  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Panno wins | Panno loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 5 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Feb-04-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Or at least a picture of two rooks.
http://www.furry.org.au/kangaroos/o...
Mar-17-06  BIDMONFA: Oscar Panno

PANNO, Oscar
http://www.bidmonfa.com/panno_oscar...
_

Mar-27-06  Resignation Trap: Panno won the World Junior Championship in 1953 and scored a very good third place at the 1955 Interzonal Tournament in Goteborg, behind Bronstein and Keres. By this, he qualified to be a participant in the 1956 Candidates Tournament in Holland. Today marks the 50th anniversary of the start of this tournament, and I have begun a special round-by-round commentary on this event. See: User: Resignation Trap .
Mar-27-06  Resignation Trap: For a good article about Panno, with photographs, try this link (in Spanish): http://aacevedo.galeon.com/ANPA/ANP...
Mar-19-07  gabisrael: Panno was- and is- a great player, but, beleive it or not, he is not a GM!! (this means he didn't receive that title)
Mar-19-07  nescio: <gabisrael: Panno was- and is- a great player, but, beleive it or not, he is not a GM!! (this means he didn't receive that title)>

I have difficulty believing that. Players who qualified for a candidates tournament were awarded the title automatically.

Mar-19-07  laskereshevsky: <gabisrael:Panno..... is not a GM!!>

same sources?!

i dont want blame you <gab>, but from this official page,

http://www.fide.com/ratings/card.ph...

looks like he have the GM title....
at least for the FIDE he does....

Mar-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  plang: Panno is definitely a GM. For a time in the 60s I believe he was the strongest player from south america.
Apr-02-07  clausurez: Nowadays, GM Panno is the director of a web site http://www.teachess.com/ (in spanish), dedicated to the teaching of chess (specially for children).
Apr-04-07  gabisrael: I was a student from him, once he confessed me that he never received the GM title and that some collegues laughingly reminded him that. I don't remember exactly the reason why they didn't give it to him. He inedeed won the junior world championship but in that time the title was not granted automaticaly as nowadays.
Apr-04-07  Ingolf: When Bent Larsen played in the Mar del Plata tournament in 1958, he one night went to a casino with some of the other players. First they weren't allowed in because they didn't wear a tie (why reduce the flow of blood to the brain, as Larsen says), but when someone whispered to the guard: "Don't you know who this is?! He is leading 1½ points ahad of Panno" they were immediately let in.
Apr-26-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: Great quote from this Panno!!..damn even GM's deal with this dilema??...going to try his advice and see how it works out in my next game!:-)
Aug-13-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: Scroll down just a bit for a picture of Panno giving a simul exhibition in May 2005: http://www.ajedrezmutante2.galeon.c...
Aug-14-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: In an interview (posted on an Argentine website: http://www.ajedrezmutante2.galeon.c...) Panno remembers the 1953 World Junior Championship that he won in Copenhagen. He was at a disadvantage when it came to opening theory and novelties, as all chess magazines arrived in Argentina way too late from Europe. So he and his coach, Julio Bolbochan, worked intensively on opening ideas and plans trying to guess what novelties the European players might have already come up with. At that time, the World Junior Championship (it was the 2nd, with Ivkov having won the first) was organized with limited resources, and Panno and Bolbochan were assigned rooms with hosting families. Bolbochan wanted to be with Panno, so they took a room in a rather cheap hotel instead. They would go to sleep at 3am but their hotel room had no thick curtains and the sun would rise at that time in the Copenhagen summer, so they hang a spare bed cover to cover the window. When he returned to Buenos Aires as a world champion, Panno was a celebrity. Peron's government had already scheduled a number of commitments, exhibitions, simuls, etc., around the country for him. It took a while for his life to return to its normal pace.
Aug-19-07  cheski: Oscar Panno as Black versus Dib. Barua, is in a spot of bother at the minute in a B33 For some reason he doesn't want to push his e-pawn up in the middle game.

Tourney in Arnhem, NL, in honour of Max Euwe.

http://www.euwe-stimulans.nl/conten...

Aug-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <cheski> Okay, if I got it right, Panno is playing a tournament in Holland right now. It seems that the link you posted was to a live broadcast of the games, but the game was over by the time I clicked on it and I couldn't find results or finished games on the website (the fact that I don't speak Dutch may have something to do with my ineptitude!) Could you point me in the right direction? Thanks!
Aug-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <cheski> Also, could you tell me what dates/time the games are played? I'd like to follow them online. Thanks!
Aug-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <cheski> Sorry, I just saw there is an English version of the website.. Duh. It seems the games are going on right now, but for some reason I get nothing when I click on the live games link... and it's not that I don't have Adobe Player. I do have indeed the latest version on my computer. I assume you can see the games without problems, right? (otherwise you wouldn't have posted your last kibitz!)
Aug-19-07  cheski: <Fusilli: >
The games are over for the day. Start again tomorrow Tuesday at 13.00 GMT.

Adobe? Java more like. Good luck.

Aug-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <cheski> How did the Barua - Panno game end up? Results are not posted yet.
Aug-19-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <cheski> never mind, results are up now. Thanks for the info on the tournament and the times.
Mar-17-08  brankat: In his time a very strong GM indeed.

Happy Birthday Mr.Panno!

Mar-17-08
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Didn't he resign rather than play Fischer just before the start of the candidate's matches? Happy Birthday.
Mar-17-08  Petrosianic: Not quite. The game had been rescheduled to a different time than the rest of the round (because of Fischer's refusing to play on the Sabbath), and Panno refused to play at the new time.

For once Fischer was on the other side of primma-donna-ishness. On odd outcome for his last ever tournament game. But principle is principle... T(The fact that it was the last round and they were at a famous island vacation spot might have influenced Panno's decision too, I suppose...)

Mar-17-08  MichAdams: < Bolbochan wanted to be with Panno, so they took a room in a rather cheap hotel instead. They would go to sleep at 3am...>

Enough already.

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