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Svetozar Gligoric
Gligoric 
 

Number of games in database: 3,362
Years covered: 1939 to 2007
Last FIDE rating: 2447
Highest rating achieved in database: 2600
Overall record: +1208 -470 =1660 (61.1%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 24 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Nimzo Indian (400) 
    E54 E43 E53 E41 E55
 King's Indian (187) 
    E92 E97 E94 E95 E80
 Modern Benoni (118) 
    A56 A57 A59 A75 A79
 Grunfeld (108) 
    D86 D87 D85 D92 D94
 Orthodox Defense (93) 
    D55 D58 D63 D68 D52
 Ruy Lopez (89) 
    C97 C96 C64 C82 C92
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (356) 
    C93 C92 C95 C97 C85
 King's Indian (344) 
    E66 E75 E64 E97 E60
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (272) 
    C93 C92 C95 C97 C85
 Sicilian (195) 
    B92 B83 B43 B59 B93
 Grunfeld (100) 
    D79 D78 D93 D94 D85
 Queen's Indian (79) 
    E12 E17 E19 E15 E14
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Gligoric vs Fischer, 1961 1/2-1/2
   Petrosian vs Gligoric, 1970 0-1
   Kotov vs Gligoric, 1953 1/2-1/2
   Gligoric vs Fischer, 1959 1/2-1/2
   Gligoric vs Matulovic, 1967 1-0
   Tal vs Gligoric, 1968 0-1
   A Medina Garcia vs Gligoric, 1968 0-1
   Najdorf vs Gligoric, 1953 0-1
   Gligoric vs Keres, 1958 1-0
   Gligoric vs Petrosian, 1954 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Yugoslav Championship (1947)
   Yugoslav Championship 1948/49 (1948)
   Mar del Plata (1953)
   The Hague Zonal (1966)
   Manila Meralco (1968)
   Yugoslav Championship (1945)
   Club Argentino (1955)
   Zuerich (1959)
   Reykjavik (1964)
   Dublin Zonal (1957)
   Zagreb (1955)
   Dubrovnik Olympiad (1950)
   Capablanca Memorial (1962)
   Stockholm Interzonal (1952)
   Amsterdam Interzonal (1964)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Svetozar Gligoric Collected Games (Leach) by Chessdreamer
   Svetozar Gligoric Collected Games (Leach) by JoseTigranTalFischer
   I Play Against Pieces (Gligoric) by Qindarka
   I Play Against Pieces by nakul1964
   I Play Against Pieces by oconetta
   I Play Against Pieces by jakaiden
   I Play Against Pieces by nakul1964
   I Play Against Pieces by skisuitof12
   I Play Against Pieces by nakul1964
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 74 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 103 by 0ZeR0
   The Exchange Sacrifice by Benzol

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Svetozar Gligoric
Search Google for Svetozar Gligoric

SVETOZAR GLIGORIC
(born Feb-02-1923, died Aug-14-2012, 89 years old) Yugoslavia (federation/nationality Serbia)
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

IM (1950); GM (1951).

Generally considered to be the greatest Yugoslav and Serbian player ever, Svetozar Gligorić (Светозар Глигорић) was born on February 2, 1923 in Belgrade in what was then the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He passed away in his home city over 89 years later, completing a life in which he was widely regarded as a key figure in the development of chess in his native country.

Preamble

Gligorić developed an interest in chess as a small child watching people play in a local bar. He began playing about three years after his father died, at the age of 11, when he was taught by a boarder in his family home. He frequented the Belgrade Chess Club, whose gates were defended by a guard who turned a blind eye to school-age Gligorić's entry. He was sufficiently interested in pursuing the game to make a chess set with pieces carved from the corks of wine bottles. He became a national master in 1939 at the age of 16 by winning the 1939 Yugoslav Amateur Chess Championship, the year before his mother died. His career was interrupted by the onset of World War II, during which he fought as a partisan against the Nazis, rising to be captain and winning two military awards. After the War, he worked as a journalist and organized tournaments while continuing his development as a chess player that had been interrupted by the War, gaining his Grandmaster title in 1951 thereby becoming one of the earliest of the modern official Grandmasters.

In the fifties and sixties, he was amongst the World elite, contesting three Candidates events and forming lifelong friendships with Tigran Petrosian, Mikhail Botvinnik, Miguel Najdorf, Efim Geller, Mikhail Tal and Robert James Fischer, the last during the Candidates Tournament - Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates (1959). In later years he was the chief arbiter in the aborted Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match (1984/85), but turned down his appointment by FIDE to that position for the Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match (1985). During his playing career, he won 24 games against six players who were at one time World Champions, namely Max Euwe (2), Botvinnik (2), Smyslov (6), Tal (2), Petrosian (8) and Fischer (4). These wins include two wins against Petrosian while he was World Champion, one of which was Petrosian's first defeat since winning the title from Botvinnik.

Championships and Matches

In 1938, at the age of fifteen, Gligorić won the championship of the Belgrade Chess Club. He came first at the Bulgarian Championship in 1945, but was excluded from claiming the championship because he was not a national. He won the Yugoslav championship in 1947 jointly with Petar Trifunovic, 1948 jointly with Vasja Pirc, outright in 1949, 1950, 1956 and 1957, jointly with Borislav Ivkov in 1958, and outright in 1959, 1960, 1962 and 1966.

He was a regular participant in the World Championship cycle between 1948 and 1973, participating in every Interzonal between 1948 and 1973 inclusive, except for the 1955 Interzonal in Goteborg. He notched up zonal wins at Bad Pyrmont in 1951, Madrid in 1960 (joint), Enschede (Netherlands) in 1963, The Hague in 1966, and Praia da Rocha (Portugal) in 1969 (joint), and his finishes at the Interzonals of 1952, 1958, and 1967 were sufficient to qualify him for the Candidates events that followed. However, he was not as successful in any of the Candidates events, with mediocre results in the 1953 and 1959 Candidates Tournaments and a match loss to Mikhail Tal in the first round of the 1968 Candidates matches. Gligorić recalled how he allowed himself to be distracted from winning the match after he took a one game lead and was easily holding off Tal.* The Interzonal in 1973 was his last attempt at the World Championship.

Gligorić played three hard fought and close exhibition matches. The first was played against Gideon Stahlberg in 1949, with four games played in Belgrade and eight in Split, with Gligorić winning in what was then considered an upset by 6.5-5.5 (+2 -1 =9) - Gligoric - Stahlberg (1949). The second match was against Samuel Reshevsky at the Manhattan Chess Club in 1952, and was narrowly won by Reshesvky 5.5-4.5 (+2 -1 =7); this match was played soon after Reshevsky's match with Najdorf. Gligorić played his third match when he was in his late 50s versus world number 18 Ljubomir Ljubojevic in Belgrade in 1979, the result being narrowly in Ljubojevic's favour 4.5-5.5 (+4 -3 =3). Gligoric also played ten training games against Fischer in the lead up to the latter's rematch with Spassky in 1992. Most of the game scores are unavailable, but Gligorić's recollection is that Fischer won at least 3 games, while he won the last.**

Classical Tournaments

In 1947, Gligorić won his first major international event at Warsaw, ahead of Vasily Smyslov and Isaac Boleslavsky, winning by 2 full points with 8/9 (+7 -0 =2). Other victories were at events such as the Ljubjana Liberation Tournament of 1945/46, Mar del Plata 1950 and 1953, 1st Staunton Memorial (London) 1951, Hollywood 1952 (ahead of Oscar Panno), Stockholm 1954, equal 1st (with Samuel Reshevsky) Dallas in 1957, equal 1st with Ludek Pachman at Sarajevo in 1961, equal first with Lajos Portisch in Sarajevo in 1962, Belgrade 1962 and 1964, Tel Aviv 1966, Manila 1968, Lone Pine 1972 and 1979, and Los Angeles 1974. He was a regular competitor at the Hastings tournaments, winning in 1951–52, taking equal first with Bent Larsen in 1956–57, and winning in 1959–60 and 1960–61, and taking equal first in 1962–63 with Alexander Kotov

Other notable results include 2nd place at Zurich in 1959, half a point behind Tal, but ahead of Fischer and Paul Keres 2nd behind Ivkov at both Mar del Plata and Buenos Aires in 1955. There were 18 leading Grandmasters contesting the 4th Alekhine Memorial held in Moscow in 1956; Gligoric came 4th behind Botvinnik, Smyslov and Mark Taimanov, ahead of Najdorf, Paul Keres and David Bronstein, and was the only non-Soviet player to have a plus score against the Soviet GMs. This era in Gligoric's career lead Bronstein to opine that Gligoric was one of the three top players in the world. In 1975 at the age of 52, Gligorić placed equal 2nd with Geller behind Karpov at the Vidmar Memorial ahead of Bent Larsen, Lajos Portisch and Ljubomir Ljubojevic. He played his last tournament in the 2003 Rilton Cup at the age of 80.

Team events

<Olympiads> He represented Yugoslavia in fifteen Olympiads from 1950 to 1982, including 13 stints on board one and played 223 games (+88 −26 =109). In the first post-war Olympiad at Dubrovnik in 1950, Gligorić played first board and led Yugoslavia to win the team gold medal. The Yugoslav team was usually second or third in the world during the 1950s and 1960s, winning a further 6 silver and 5 bronze medals on his watch, and he personally won a gold medal for his top board performance in 1958.

<National Summit> During the match between Yugoslavia and the USSR held in Leningrad in 1957, Gligoric scored 6/8 (+4 =4), the best result of all the participants. although the USSR won the overall result decisively.

Legacy

Gligorić made far-ranging contributions to the theory and practice of the Nimzo-Indian Defense, the Ruy Lopez, and the King's Indian Defense, some of which were named after him, including such critical and commonly played opening variations as the Nimzo-Indian Gligorić System (E54): <1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. e3>:


click for larger view

the Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligorić Variation (C69): <1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Bxc6 dxc6 5. 0-0 f6 6. d4 Bg4>:


click for larger view

the Ruy Lopez Closed Breyer, Gligorić Variation (C95): < 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 O-O 8. c3 d6 9. h3 Nb8 10. d4 Nbd7 11. Nbd2 Bb7 12. Bc2 c5>:


click for larger view

and the King's Indian (Gligorić Variation) (E92): < 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. Nf3 0-0 6. Be2 e5 7. Be3>:


click for larger view

Publications

Gligorić was a regular columnist for <Chess Review> and <Chess Life> magazines and contributed regularly to the <Chess Informant>. He wrote his autobiography <I Play Against Pieces> and other books such as <Fischer vs Spassky Chess Match of the Century>, one of the biggest selling chess books of all time; <The French Defence>, co-authored with Wolfgang Uhlmann <King's Indian Defence, Mar Del Plata Variation>; <The Nimzo-Indian Defence>; <Play the Nimzo-Indian Defence>; <Selected Chess Masterpieces>; <Shall We Play Fischerandom Chess?>; <The Sicilian Defence> co-authored with Vladimir Sokolov <Svetozar Gligorić's Chess Career 1945-1970>, also co-authored with Vladimir Sokolov; <The World Chess Championship>, co-authored with Robert Wade <Le Grande Tournoi International D'echecs, Terre des Hommes, Montreal 1979>; <Najdorf Variation Sicilian Defence>; <Yugoslav Chess Triumphs>; <Interzonen Turnier Portoroz 1958>, co-authored with Aleksandar Matanovic <Kandidatenturnier fur Schachweltmeisterschaft / Bled - Zagreb - Beograd / 6 September-31 Oktober 1959> (Candidates Tournament for the World Chess Championship / Bled - Zagreb - Beograd / 6 September-31 October 1959), co-authored with Viacheslav Ragozin and was one of seven contributors, along with Larry Evans, Vlastimil Hort, Portisch, Petrosian, Larsen and Keres, to <How To Open a Chess Game>.

Ratings/Rankings

Gligorić was usually ranked in the top ten players of the world in the 1950s and 1960s. When numerical ratings were first introduced in the early 1970's, Gligorić, though nearly fifty years old, was placed fifteenth, and he remained in the top 100 until 1987 when he was 64.

Other

In 1958, he was declared the best athlete of Yugoslavia. In 1978, he was a candidate for FIDE president in the Congress in Buenos Aires and was eliminated in round one, having just one vote less than Fridrik Olafsson, who became the fourth FIDE president. During the last few years of his life, he turned to music, learning the piano and music theory, and at the age of 88, he recorded a music CD, <Kako Sam Preživeo Dvadeseti Vek> (How I Survived the Twentieth Century), featuring 12 compositions that drew on jazz, ballads and rap.

His philosophy: <"Life - that's all we have.">****

Eulogies:

chessbase.com http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail...; by chessdom.com: http://www.chessdom.com/legendary-g... by chessvibes.com http://www.chessvibes.com/reports/s... and by the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/17/w...; Three-part tribute by Macedonian art historian Kiril Penusliski: http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail... and http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp... and http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...

Gligorić was buried in the <Novom Groblju> (Alley of the Greats) at Belgrade's New Cemetery.

* http://www.chessintranslation.com/2...; ** http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail...; ***http://www.hastingschess.org.uk/pre...; **** Interview in 2011 with "Masha" Manakova posted posthumously at: http://chesspro.ru/_events/2012/man...; Interview in 2009 during the Jermuk Grand Prix by Smbat Lputian http://jermuk2009.fide.com/intervie...; Interview in 2010 with Yury Vasiliev: http://www.chessintranslation.com/2... Links to numerous photos on Edward Winter's site: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/...

Wikipedia article: Svetozar Gligorić

Last updated: 2024-08-29 11:45:48

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 135; games 1-25 of 3,362  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Gligoric vs E Grosman 1-0211939Belgrade BSK-chE22 Nimzo-Indian, Spielmann Variation
2. P Milojcic vs Gligoric  0-1421939Belgrade LeagueA35 English, Symmetrical
3. M Burmistrov vs Gligoric  0-1521939Belgrade LeagueB83 Sicilian
4. Gligoric vs V Medan  1-0511939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AD61 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
5. J Siska vs Gligoric  0-1621939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AE49 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Botvinnik System
6. Gligoric vs M Atijas  1-0291939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AE18 Queen's Indian, Old Main line, 7.Nc3
7. Gligoric vs F Licul  1-0371939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AD55 Queen's Gambit Declined
8. M Drasic vs Gligoric  0-1211939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AB30 Sicilian
9. Gligoric vs M Mlinar  1-0391939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AC82 Ruy Lopez, Open
10. I Jerman vs Gligoric  ½-½221939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AA16 English
11. Gligoric vs B Pavlovic  0-1651939Yugoslav Amateur Championship sf-AD83 Grunfeld, Grunfeld Gambit
12. Gligoric vs J Siska  1-0661939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipD61 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
13. J Sorli vs Gligoric  ½-½611939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipC82 Ruy Lopez, Open
14. Gligoric vs I Jerman  ½-½341939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipD57 Queen's Gambit Declined, Lasker Defense
15. M Rajkovic vs Gligoric  0-1331939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipA06 Reti Opening
16. Gligoric vs B Rabar 1-0281939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipE47 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3 O-O 5.Bd3
17. L Gabrovsek vs Gligoric 0-1281939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipD27 Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical
18. Gligoric vs M Subaric  ½-½411939Yugoslav Amateur ChampionshipD51 Queen's Gambit Declined
19. Gligoric vs Nedeljkovic  1-0481945Belgrade ChB10 Caro-Kann
20. Gligoric vs N Kulzinski 0-1511945Yugoslav ChampionshipE33 Nimzo-Indian, Classical
21. Gligoric vs V Tomovic 1-0311945Yugoslav ChampionshipB76 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
22. A Preinfalk vs Gligoric  0-1311945Yugoslav ChampionshipD48 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, Meran
23. Gligoric vs Kostic  0-1571945Yugoslav ChampionshipC83 Ruy Lopez, Open
24. M Subaric vs Gligoric  0-1401945Yugoslav ChampionshipD48 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, Meran
25. Gligoric vs M Vidmar Jr 0-1421945Yugoslav ChampionshipB05 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
 page 1 of 135; games 1-25 of 3,362  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Gligoric wins | Gligoric loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 18 OF 19 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jun-10-18  Nosnibor: I should have stated the Karpov Poikovsky in my last post.
Jun-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  plang: I'm saying that you can't compare ratings from different eras - Elo was very clear when he developed the formula that the intent was to measure differences in players of the same era not different eras (though many here ignore this distinction).
Jun-10-18  ChessHigherCat: <plang: I'm saying that you can't compare ratings from different eras - Elo was very clear when he developed the formula that the intent was to measure differences in players of the same era not different eras (though many here ignore this distinction).>

I understand your point, but if the elo ratings at a certain point in time reflect the probabilities of each rated player winning or losing against every other rated player at that moment (relative playing strength), it seems like a computer should be able to map those probabilities onto the present set of rated players somehow (I don't even want to think about how complicated the math would be and I'm sure some approximation would be involved, but I bet it's possible).

Jun-10-18  john barleycorn: <ChessHigherCat: ... (I don't even want to think about how complicated the math would be and I'm sure some approximation would be involved, but I bet it's possible).>

Then you better do NOT bet and stop posting garbled nonsense.

Jun-10-18  ChessHigherCat: The problem seems to be that one would have to base the calculations on a certain assumption about overall progress: one could assume that there's no general progress and that the old masters were every bit as good as the contemporary champions, or else one could simply say contemporary chessplayers have higher ratings now because they're better! Ever onward and upward!

Some degree of objectivity might still be possible: if you call the relative playing strengths at a certain time "synchronic", you could determine whether overall progress actually exists or not "diachronically" by analyzing the transitional games between players of one era and those of the next (with the complicating factor that the older masters might be growing old and weak and the newer masters in their prime (or else immature) when they play together.

Jun-10-18  john barleycorn: First of all: in general, today's players are better than those in the past as they have studied the "old" games and learned from them.

How then to compare a player today to a player in the past? would a player today be there where he is if he had to find out everything for himself? not replaying old games and studying the commentary? And have a fresh view on them?

In the middle ages people who could count to ten and do simple calculations up to 100 were considered mathematical geniuses. nowadays, you can't pass grade 3 without that.

(Ask <al wazir> ... ok, joke only)

Jun-11-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Today's players are much stronger than the players of the past. They are fitter, have better preparation, read more and better books, and have better endgame technique owing to advances in theory. There is inflation in the Elo system, but players are also simply better nowadays.

That is evolution. It's the same as in basketball or sprinting or surfing.

Jun-11-18  ChessHigherCat: < offramp: Today's players are much stronger than the players of the past. They are fitter, have better preparation, read more and better books, and have better endgame technique owing to advances in theory. There is inflation in the Elo system, but players are also simply better nowadays.

That is evolution. It's the same as in basketball or sprinting or surfing.>

Thanks for the compliment! Be sure not to tell anyone but I have it on good authority that the real reason that Fischer went it to hiding is that a gypsy woman told his mother that if he didn't leave the country he might have to face the humiliation of playing me!

Jun-12-18  brankat: There should be a much simpler and a more valid method of comparing the relative playing strength of players from different eras. Never mind all the possible mathematical complexities.

During the 1957-1959 period S.Gligoric may have been behind Botvink, Smyslov, Tal, Petrosian, Keres, possibly Reshevsky. Which would place him 7th, to say the least.

Check out the ratings of the 7th player of today. Whatever the number is, that was Gligoric's strength 60 years ago.

Jun-12-18  ChessHigherCat: <brankat: During the 1957-1959 period S.Gligoric may have been behind Botvink, Smyslov, Tal, Petrosian, Keres, possibly Reshevsky. Which would place him 7th, to say the least. Check out the ratings of the 7th player of today. Whatever the number is, that was Gligoric's strength 60 years ago.> I hate to disagree with a fellow feline but here's the problem. For your argument to work, you have to assume there's no progress. The following example may be an absurd exaggeration but bear with me to illustrate my point.

Say in 1850, some missionary arrived in Botswana and introduced the game of chess in his church. In 1852, there were only ten chess players in the country and even the best of them was extremely weak. Then say, again for the sake of argument, that thanks to chess instruction in 1950 the top ten players in Botswana are 3 grandmasters, 5 IMs and two experts. Is the International Master number 7 in 1950 the same strength as no. 7 in 1852 who barely knew how to move the pieces?

That's an extreme example but it's really the same situation now, because you have some people who claim that the top 15 players in the world now are all much better than the World Champion a hundred years ago.

Feb-01-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  WTHarvey: Here are 30 mates and combinations from Gligoric's games: http://wtharvey.com/glig.html What's the winning move?
Feb-02-19  parmetd: "That's an extreme example but it's really the same situation now, because you have some people who claim that the top 15 players in the world now are all much better than the World Champion a hundred years ago."

Something I regularly see argued by the top 200 GMs. Except they don't say top 15, they say top 100.

Feb-02-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <That's an extreme example but it's really the same situation now, because you have some people who claim that the top 15 players in the world now are all much better than the World Champion a hundred years ago.>

Don't know about World Champion, but let's look at lesser masters of the past. For me the KO argument against their strength were... child prodigies of the time, particularly Reshevsky.

Reshevsky is known to have competed with masters at tournaments at the age of eight and beat Wolf in an informal club game at the age of five. <Five>. Guys, look at modern child prodigies and masters. Can you imagine a modern master losing to a five year old, no matter how prodigious the five year old is? Or eight year old for that matter? And Wolf was a top 100 player...

Feb-02-19  parmetd: It happens all the time in Chicago.
Feb-02-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  Penguincw: R.I.P Gligoric.
Feb-28-19  SkySports: Why this great GM doesn't have a "notable games" section?
Feb-28-19  Retireborn: <SkySports> Good question. His win against Petrosian's Qh1 would be my first nominee.
Feb-28-19  SkySports: Mine would be his famous Mar del Plata KID versus Najdorf...
Feb-02-20  Nosnibor: R.I.P.Grandmaster Gligoric.The first G.M. I ever played 60 years ago.
Feb-02-23  syracrophy: <<<<Happy centennial, Mr. Gligoric!>>>>
Feb-02-23
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: <<<<<Happy centennial, Mr. Gligoric!>>>>>

+1

Apr-07-23  Nosnibor: Is there going to be a Memorial Tournament to honour Gligoric and his birth 100 years ago? Presumably this would be held in Serbia.
Apr-07-23
Premium Chessgames Member
  Stonehenge: A rather meagre tournament was held:

Gligoric Trophy Final (2023).

Apr-07-23
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: 'Rather meagre' may well be an understatement, given Gligoric's stature; one would have expected more than a relatively weak elimination event.
Oct-10-23  Mathematicar: What Botvinnik is for Soviet and Russian chess, that's (in a softer manner) Gligorić for chess of the Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro. In these countries we see him as the predecessor of players like Ivkov, Parma, Kurajica, Cvitan, Matanovic, Marovic, Cebalo, Dizdarevic, Hulak, Kovacevic, Ivanovic, Milic, Trifunovic, etc.
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