Serbian chess player (1933?2022)
Borislav Ivkov
(12 November 1933 ? 14 February 2022) was a Serbian chess
Grandmaster
. He was a
World championship
candidate in 1965, and played in four more Interzonal tournaments, in 1967, 1970, 1973, and 1979.
Ivkov was a three-time
Yugoslav Champion
(1958 joint, 1963 joint, 1972) and was the first
World Junior Champion
in 1951.
He represented
Yugoslavia
12 times in Olympiad competition, from 1956 to 1980, and six times in European Team Championships.
Ivkov won numerous top-class events during his career; notable tournament triumphs include Mar del Plata 1955, Buenos Aires 1955,
Beverwijk
1961, Zagreb 1965, Sarajevo 1967, Amsterdam-IBM 1974, and Moscow 1999. For more than 15 years from the mid-1950s, he was the second-ranking Yugoslav player, after
Svetozar Gligori?
. He wrote an autobiography,
My 60 Years in Chess
.
National Master, World Junior Champion
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Ivkov earned his National Master title in 1949 at age 16, by placing shared 4th?7th in the
Yugoslav Championship
at
Zagreb
, with 11/19; the winner was
Svetozar Gligori?
. Ivkov earned his first international event opportunity at
Bled
1950, sharing 5th?6th places with 7½/14; the winner was
Miguel Najdorf
. In this tournament, which featured some of the world's best players, Ivkov defeated well-known stars such as
Hermann Pilnik
,
Milan Vidmar
Sr., and
Vasja Pirc
. After this impressive debut, he was selected to represent Yugoslavia in team matches against the United States and the Netherlands in 1950 and against
West Germany
in 1951.
Ivkov won the inaugural
World Junior Chess Championship
in 1951 at
Birmingham
; this tournament was established for players under age 20. He continued his progress with two solid showings in Yugoslav Championships: at
Sarajevo
1951 he tied 10th?12th places with 9½/19 (winner
Braslav Rabar
), and at Belgrade 1952 he tied 7th?9th places with 10/19 (winner
Petar Trifunovi?
). At
Opatija
1953, Ivkov scored 10/17 for a shared 4th?6th place; the winner was
Aleksandar Matanovi?
. Ivkov was still eligible by age in 1953 to try to repeat his World Junior success; at
Copenhagen
he won his preliminary group with 7/9, but scored only 3½/7 in the finals to place tied 3rd?4th, as
Oscar Panno
and
Klaus Darga
tied at the top.
Rapid rise
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Ivkov shared 4th?5th places at
Belgrade
1954 with 11½/19; this was his strongest event to date, the first Yugoslav event to welcome Soviet players following the end of World War II. The winner was
David Bronstein
. Ivkov earned the
International Master
title.
Ivkov broke through into the group of the world's elite players with two brilliant results in strong tournaments in
Argentina
. He won at
Mar del Plata
1955 with 11½/15, ahead of Najdorf, Gligoric, Szabo,
Lud?k Pachman
, Panno and Pilnik. Then he won again at
Buenos Aires
1955 with 13/17, ahead of Gligoric, Pilnik,
Laszlo Szabo
, Bisguier,
Lud?k Pachman
, Rosseto, Panno and Donner. In the Yugoslav Championship at
Novi Sad
1955, Ivkov had his best national result to date with a shared 3rd?4th place on 10½/17; the winner was Karaklajic. Then at
Zagreb
1955, he tied 2nd?3rd places with Matanovic on 12½/19; the winner was
Vasily Smyslov
. Ivkov earned his Grandmaster title in 1955.
At
Hastings
1955?56, Ivkov finished 3rd with 6½/9 behind winners
Viktor Korchnoi
and
Friðrik Olafsson
. He represented Yugoslavia in the World Students' Olympiad at
Uppsala
1956; on board two he scored 5/9 (+2 =6 ?1), and Yugoslavia won the team bronze medals.
National team stalwart
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Ivkov earned the first of his 12 selections to the Yugoslav Olympiad team in 1956, and was a member of the national team continuously through 1980. This was during a period when Yugoslavia was usually among the top three chess countries. He won a total of ten team medals and five board medals during his career.
[1]
- Moscow 1956
: board 3, 12/16 (+9 =6 ?1), board silver, team bronze;
- Munich 1958
: board 3, 9½/15 (+7 =5 ?3), team silver;
- Leipzig 1960
: board 3, 12/16 (+9 =6 ?1), board bronze, team bronze;
- Varna 1962
: board 4, 13½/16 (+11 =5 ?0), board gold, team silver;
- Tel Aviv 1964
: board 2, 11½/16 (+8 =7 ?1), team silver;
- Havana 1966
: board 2, 10/15 (+8 =4 ?3);
- Lugano 1968
: board 2, 9/14 (+5 =8 ?1), team silver;
- Siegen 1970
: board 2, 10/13 (+7 =6 ?0), board gold, team silver;
- Skopje 1972
: board 2, 12/18 (+6 =12 ?0), team bronze;
- Nice 1974
: board 3, 12/17 (+8 =8 ?1), board silver, team silver;
- Buenos Aires 1978
: board 4, 3/7 (+1 =4 ?2);
- Valletta 1980
: board 2, 5½/8 (+3 =5 ?0), team bronze.
Ivkov made his first appearance at the European team level in the inaugural event at
Vienna
1957, and was chosen on five further occasions. He won four team medals and one board medal in Euroteams events. According to the site olimpbase.org, Ivkov's totals in Euroteams play are (+10 =29 ?4), for 57 per cent.
- Vienna
1957: board 3, 3½/6 (+2 =3 ?1), team silver;
- Hamburg
1965: board 1, 5/10 (+2 =6 ?2), team silver;
- Kapfenberg
1970: board 2, 4/7 (+2 =4 ?1);
- Bath
1973: board 2, 4½/7 (+2 =5 ?0), board gold, team silver;
- Moscow 1977: board 6, 4/7 (+1 =6 ?0), team bronze;
- Skara
1980: board 3, 3½/6 (+1 =5 ?0).
Yugoslav Champion, international victories
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Ivkov narrowly missed becoming Yugoslav champion at
Sombor
1957 when he scored 14/22 to share 2nd?4th places behind Gligoric. But he had a setback at the 1957
Wageningen
Zonal tournament, failing to qualify for the
Interzonal
stage by making only 8½/17 for 9th position. He recovered with his first Yugoslav title at
Sarajevo
1958, sharing the title with Gligoric on 12½/19. This victory set off a string of tournament triumphs over the next five years. Ivkov won at
Sarajevo
1958 with 7/11. He won at
Belgrade
1959 by 2½ points with 9/11. In a strong field at
Dresden
1959, he shared 3rd?4th places with 10/15 behind winners
Efim Geller
and
Mark Taimanov
. Ivkov shared the win at
Lima
1959 with Pachman on 10½/13, and again shared the win at
Santiago
1959 with Pachman. At
Mar del Plata
1959, he shared 3rd?4th places with
Bobby Fischer
, behind winners Pachman and Najdorf.
Ivkov shared the victory at
Beverwijk
1961 with
Bent Larsen
on 7½/9. At
Belgrade
1962, he was second on 8/11 behind Gligoric. At
Havana
1962, Ivkov scored 14½/21, but had to content himself with sixth place, as Najdorf won. Ivkov qualified from the 1963
Halle
Zonal tournament into his first
Interzonal
the next year. At Halle, he tied 3rd?4th places with 12/19, then defeated
Karl Robatsch
by 2?0 in a playoff for the last berth. At Beverwijk 1963, he shared 3rd?5th places with 11/17, as
Jan Hein Donner
won.
Ivkov won his second Yugoslav title at
Zenica
1963 with 15/21, shared with
Mijo Udov?i?
. At
Havana
1963, he scored very well with 15½/21, but this was only good enough for a shared 5th?6th place, as Korchnoi won. Ivkov shared 2nd?3rd places at
Belgrade
1964 on 11½/17 behind
Boris Spassky
. At Beverwijk 1964, he was 4th with 10/15 behind Estonian winners
Paul Keres
and
Iivo Nei
. Then at
Sarajevo
1964, he finished 3rd with 9½/15 as
Lev Polugaevsky
won.
World Championship Candidate
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Ivkov qualified from the 1964
Amsterdam
Interzonal
to the Candidates' matches the next year, with a score of 15/23. But he lost his first-round Candidates' match at
Zagreb
to
Bent Larsen
by 5½?2½. He played at the Interzonal level four more times, but did not advance further. He narrowly missed moving on at age 46 in 1979.
Ivkov played board ten in the
Russia (USSR) vs Rest of the World
team match at
Belgrade
1970, but lost his match 3?1 to
Paul Keres
.
Continued excellence
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At
Havana
1965, Ivkov shared 2nd?4th places with Geller and Fischer, and defeated Fischer for the second time in their game; the winner was Smyslov. In fact he was leading before he blew an easily won game against
Gilberto Garcia
, the latter of whom had lost most of his games at that point; this would have been his greatest victory.
[2]
Ivkov shared 2nd?3rd places in the Yugoslav Championship at
Titograd
1965 with 11½/18 as Gligoric won. Then at
Zagreb
1965, Ivkov scored perhaps his most impressive career victory, sharing the title with
Wolfgang Uhlmann
on 13½/19, ahead of World Champion
Tigran Petrosian
,
Lajos Portisch
, Larsen, and Bronstein. Ivkov won at
Venice
1966 with 5/7. He ended 4th at Beverwijk 1966 on 10/15 as Polugaevsky won. Ivkov won at
Eersel
1966 with 4/5. He had a disappointing result at the elite
Piatigorsky Cup
tournament at
Santa Monica, California
, finishing with a minus score, as Spassky won. But then he nearly won the 1966 Open
Canadian Chess Championship
at
Kingston
. He shared 3rd?4th at
Sarajevo
1966 with 10/15, behind winners
Mikhail Tal
and
Dragoljub ?iri?
. He was 4th at
Palma de Mallorca
1966 with 9½/15 behind winner Tal.
In the Yugoslav Championship at
Kraljevo
1967, he ended tied 2nd?6th behind winner
Milan Matulovi?
. At
Maribor
1967, he shared 3rd?5th places with 9/15, with
Wolfgang Unzicker
winning. He was 6th at
Palma de Mallorca
1967 with 10/17, with Larsen winning. Then he shared the title at
Sarajevo
1967 on 10½/15 with
Leonid Stein
. Ivkov won the Zonal tournament at
Vrnja?ka Banja
1967 with 12/17 to qualify for the Interzonal later that year. He shared the title at
Malaga
1968 with
Dra?en Marovi?
on 7½/11. From the
Raach
Zonal 1969, he advanced to the Interzonal after sharing 2nd?5th places with Portisch,
Jan Smejkal
, and
Ulf Andersson
, then winning a further playoff. He was 3rd at
Vr?ac
1969 with 9½/15 behind winner
Dragoljub Janosevic
.
At
Budapest
1970, Ivkov shared 3rd?4th places with 8½/15 as Keres won. At
Caracas
1970, Ivkov shared 4th?6th places with 11½/17, behind winner Lubomir Kavalek; Ivkov defeated rising star
Anatoly Karpov
. Ivkov won at
Stockholm
1970 with 6½/9. He was third at
Wijk aan Zee
1970 with 10/15 behind Taimanov. At
Rovinj
/
Zagreb
1970, he scored 9/17 for a tied 7th?8th place, as Fischer won. At Wijk aan Zee 1971, Ivkov shared 2nd?5th places on 9½/15, as Korchnoi won. Ivkov shared the title at the 1972
Caorle
Zonal tournament on 12/17 with
Ljubomir Ljubojevi?
, to qualify for the next year's Interzonal.
Ivkov won his third Yugoslav title at
Umag
1972 with 12/19. He tied 2nd?3rd places at
Bauang, La Union
1973 on 6½/9 behind Kavalek. Then he shared the title at
Amsterdam
1974 on 10/15 with
Vlastimil Jansa
and
Vladimir Tukmakov
.
Later years
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Ivkov fell out of the top 40 after 1975, and appeared less frequently in major events. But he still had some notable results later in his career. He was 2nd at
?tip
1977 with 8½/13, behind Hort. At
Bor
1984, he shared 2nd?4th places with 8½/13 behind winner
Slobodan Martinovic
. He won the traditional
Capablanca Memorial
tournament, played at
Cienfuegos
in 1985 with 10/13. In the 1991 Yugoslav Championship at
Kladovo
, he shared 4th?7th places with 9/13. Ivkov shared 2nd?9th places in the 1998 World Senior Championship at
Grieskirchen
on 8/11 behind champion
Vladimir Bagirov
. His most impressive late-career feat was a shared 1st?2nd place in the strong
Tigran Petrosian
Memorial at Moscow 1999 with 5/9, along with Portisch. Ivkov tied 2nd?4th places in the 25th anniversary
Paul Keres
Memorial at
Vancouver
with 7½/10, behind winner
Vladimir Epishin
. He was awarded the
International Arbiter
title in 1986.
Ivkov's last FIDE rated tournament was a "Snowdrops vs Old Hands" event held in late 2013.
Personal life and death
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With his wife Olga Maria Kesic, Ivkov had a son and a grandson. With his second wife, Branka Vujnovic, he had two children.
Ivkov died on 14 February 2022, at the age of 88.
[3]
Legacy and playing style
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Ivkov defeated five World Champions:
Vasily Smyslov
,
Mikhail Tal
,
Tigran Petrosian
,
Bobby Fischer
, and
Anatoly Karpov
. He also scored wins over most of the top players of his era, except
Mikhail Botvinnik
and
Paul Keres
. Head-to-head, he was dominated by such stars as Gligoric, Tal, and Larsen.
Ivkov's style is classical, and he opened regularly with both 1.e4 and 1.d4 during his peak years, making him problematic to prepare for. As Black, he replied to 1.e4 with the Sicilian Defence, the French Defence, and 1...e5, showing a wide repertoire which he handled well. While usually tending toward solid positional play, Ivkov could switch to fierce tactics when given the opportunity. During his peak years, he played in many high-class tournaments, and was almost always near the top of the table.
Notable games
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- Borislav Ivkov vs Vasja Pirc, Bled 1950, Nimzo-Indian Defence, Saemisch Variation (E28), 1?0
Pirc was a five-time Yugoslav champion, so for the 17-year-old Ivkov, this win helped build his reputation.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Tigran Petrosian, Belgrade 1954, Sicilian Defence, Richter?Rauzer Variation (B63), 1?0
Petrosian had been a World Championship Candidate the year before.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Ludek Pachman, Buenos Aires 1955, Sicilian Defence, Accelerated Dragon Variation (B34), 1?0
On his first trip outside Europe, Ivkov has a strong Argentinian showing.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Mark Taimanov, Hastings 1955, Sicilian Defence, Classical Variation (B56), 1?0
Another Candidate has to concede defeat; Ivkov enjoyed excellent career success against Taimanov.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Lajos Portisch, Bled 1961, French Defence, Winawer Variation (C18), 1?0
These two players would meet many more times, with Portisch eventually establishing an edge.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Laszlo Szabo, Sarajevo 1963, Sicilian Defence, Taimanov Variation (B47), 1?0
Ivkov overcomes the nine-time Hungarian champion.
- Pal Benko vs Borislav Ivkov, Tel Aviv Olympiad 1964, Queen's Gambit Declined (D37), 0?1
Ivkov destroys Benko in a tactical slugfest miniature.
- Bobby Fischer vs Borislav Ivkov, Havana 1965, Ruy Lopez, Closed Variation (C96), 0?1
Fischer lost very rarely with White, so this is an impressive game.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Vasily Smyslov, Havana 1965, Queen's Gambit, Slav Defence, Exchange Variation (D13), 1?0
Ivkov takes off the former World Champion and winner of this tournament.
- Svetozar Gligoric vs Borislav Ivkov, Zagreb 1965, Nimzo-Indian Defence, Rubinstein Variation (E56), 0?1
It took Ivkov nearly 20 years to defeat Gligoric, the top Yugoslav post-war player.
- Borislav Ivkov vs David Bronstein, Zagreb 1965, King's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation (E62), 1?0
Defeating Bronstein in the King's Indian is always a notable feat.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Bent Larsen, Santa Monica 1966, Queen's Indian Defence (E16), 1?0
Larsen defeated Ivkov in their match, and had the career edge, but Ivkov gets a nice win here.
- Efim Geller vs Borislav Ivkov, Belgrade 1969, Sicilian Defence, Scheveningen Variation (B84), 0?1
Geller was a powerful theoretician, but he meets his match on this day.
- Borislav Ivkov vs Anatoly Karpov, Caracas 1970, Queen's Gambit Declined, Tartakower Variation (D58), 1?0
Karpov miscalculates and gets annihilated by a beautiful attack.
- Vlastimil Hort vs Borislav Ivkov, Petropolis Interzonal 1973, Nimzo-Indian Defence, Classical Variation (E39), 0?1
References
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External links
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