29th Chess Olympiad

The 29th Chess Olympiad (Serbian: 29. Шаховска олимпијада, 29. Šahovska olimpijada), organized by FIDE and comprising an open[1] and a women's tournament, as well as several other events designed to promote the game of chess, took place between November 16 and December 4, 1990, in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia (present-day Serbia).
This time around, the political controversy surrounded the Baltic states – Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania – who had all recently declared their independence from the Soviet Union and wanted to send their own teams to the Olympiad. The Yugoslavian hosts, however, followed the decree from Moscow and refused to accept their entries. Despite a petition from several top players they weren't allowed to play. This meant that big names like Jaan Ehlvest, Lembit Oll, Alexei Shirov, and former world champion Mikhail Tal could not appear at the Olympiad.
Incidentally, this would also turn out to be the last Olympic appearances of the "old" Eastern Bloc countries: East Germany, Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. The latter finished in style by winning their sixth consecutive gold medals and 18th overall, even without Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov who were in the midst of their fifth and final world championship match. Instead, the last Soviet team was led by Ivanchuk and Gelfand – two of the co-signers of the pro-Baltic petition. They still won in style, well ahead of the United States and England.
Open event
A total of 108 teams from 106 different nations played a 14-round Swiss system tournament. For the first time, the host nation got the right to field two additional teams. All three Yugoslavian sides finished in the top 30.
In the event of a draw, the tie-break was decided first by using the Buchholz system, then by match points.
Open event # Country Players Average
ratingPoints Buchholz 1
Soviet UnionIvanchuk, Gelfand, Beliavsky, Yusupov, Yudasin, Bareev 2645 39 2
United StatesSeirawan, Gulko, Christiansen, Benjamin, Fedorowicz, De Firmian 2599 35½ 452.5 3
EnglandShort, Speelman, Nunn, Adams, Chandler, Hodgson 2604 35½ 450.5
# Country Average
ratingPoints Buchholz MP 4
Czechoslovakia2530 34½ 5
Yugoslavia2576 33 460.0 6
China2521 33 444.0 7
Cuba2526 33 440.5 8
Iceland2451 32½ 452.0 9
West Germany2549 32½ 451.0 10
India2488 32½ 449.0 11
Sweden2439 32½ 441.5 12
Netherlands2561 32½ 435.0 13
Yugoslavia "B"2534 32½ 433.0 14
Bulgaria2514 32 451.5 15
France2493 32 433.0 16
Israel2533 32 431.0 17
Hungary2553 32 427.5 18
Poland2476 32 421.5 19
Mexico2463 32 414.5 20
Colombia2424 31½ 429.5 21
Philippines2443 31½ 427.0 22
Peru2381 31½ 421.0 23
Scotland2381 31½ 418.5 24
Finland2449 31½ 416.5 25
East Germany2509 31 446.0 26
Yugoslavia "C"2506 31 441.0 27
Chile2456 31 436.5 28
Indonesia2416 31 425.0 29
Argentina2439 31 423.5 30
Canada2451 31 418.5 31
Spain2495 31 417.0 32
Romania2483 31 412.5 33
Brazil2471 30½ 420.5 34
Australia2454 30½ 415.0 35
Italy2409 30½ 412.0 36
Switzerland2501 30 427.5 37
Norway2473 30 425.0 38
Denmark2498 30 424.0 39
Austria2465 30 417.5 40
Albania2386 30 417.0 41
Egypt2376 30 416.5 42
Wales2301 30 391.5 43
New Zealand2295 29½ 44
Vietnam2201 29 405.5 17 45
Mongolia2349 29 405.5 14 46
Singapore2370 29 396.0 47
Turkey2346 29 394.5 48
Ecuador2240 29 376.0 49
Greece2450 28½ 427.5 50
Paraguay2343 28½ 405.0 51
Bangladesh2363 28½ 403.5 52
Tunisia2329 28½ 403.0 53
Belgium2369 28½ 396.5 54
Costa Rica2276 28½ 392.0 55
Portugal2411 28 439.0 56
Pakistan2295 28 397.5 57
Uruguay2295 28 395.5 58
Iran2256 28 392.0 59
Ireland2306 28 391.0 60
Luxembourg2249 28 387.5 61
Thailand2230 28 377.5 62
Angola2324 28 377.0 63
Syria2291 27½ 395.0 64
Bolivia2230 27½ 378.5 65
Barbados2235 27½ 372.0 66
Japan2226 27½ 369.0 67
United Arab Emirates2216 27 383.0 68
Yemen2200 27 369.5 69
Morocco2259 26 390.0 70
Algeria2218 26 384.5 71
Puerto Rico2244 26 380.5 72
Lebanon2241 26 366.5 73
Malaysia2228 26 362.5 74
Trinidad and Tobago2200 26 361.5 75
Guatemala2230 26 337.0 76
Venezuela2285 25½ 386.0 77
Dominican Republic2235 25½ 378.5 78
Uganda2296 25½ 361.5 79
Faroe Islands2240 25 381.0 80
El Salvador2268 25 374.5 81
Nigeria2203 25 366.5 82
Cyprus2206 25 346.5 83
Hong Kong2240 24½ 364.0 84
Jamaica2218 24½ 351.5 85
Andorra2213 24½ 350.0 86
Libya2201 24½ 345.5 87
Guernsey and
Jersey2218 24 362.5 11 88
Zimbabwe2209 24 362.5 6 89
Qatar2229 24 362.0 90
Zambia2209 24 349.0 91
Netherlands Antilles2246 24 345.0 92
Mali2203 24 341.0 93
Sudan2201 23½ 358.5 94
Bahrain2200 23½ 347.5 95
Malta2210 23½ 343.0 96
Haiti2204 23 357.5 97
Fiji2200 23 326.0 98
San Marino2200 22 326.5 99
British Virgin Islands2200 22 326.0 100
Panama2200 22 323.5 101
United States Virgin Islands2226 22 317.0 102
Liechtenstein2200 22 315.5 103
Honduras2200 22 282.0 104
Botswana2200 21½ 323.5 105
Bahamas2201 21½ 314.0 106
Bermuda2200 21 107
Mauritius2200 20 108
Kenya2201 18
Individual medals
- Performance rating:
Robert Hübner 2734 - Board 1:
Zenón Franco Ocampos (9/12) and
Raül García Paolicchi (10½/14) = 75.0% - Board 2:
Dibyendu Barua 8½ / 11 = 77.3% - Board 3:
Egon Brestian 9½ / 12 = 79.2% - Board 4:
Roberto Martín del Campo 7½ / 10 = 75.0% - 1st reserve:
Satea Husari 6 / 7 = 85.7% - 2nd reserve:
Iolo Jones 6 / 7 = 85.7%
Women's event
65 teams from 63 different nations took part. Like the open event, the women's competition featured three Yugoslavian teams, all of which finished in the top 20. Lebanon were signed up, but didn't show up. Their first three matches were listed as forfeit, after which they were officially withdrawn.
In the event of a draw, the tie-break was decided first by using the Buchholz system, then by match points.
For the second Olympiad in a row, the Hungarian team beat the Soviet Union, although only on tie break this time. Once again, all three Polgár sisters (Zsuzsa, Zsófia, and Judit) were in the team - and they all won their respective boards. The best individual performance, however, came from Soviet reserve Arakhamia who registered a perfect 12/12 score and an unbelievable 2935 performance rating.
# Country Players Average
ratingPoints Buchholz 1
HungaryZsuzsa Polgár, J. Polgár, Zsófia Polgár, Mádl 2492 35 344.5 2
Soviet UnionChiburdanidze, Gaprindashvili, Galliamova, Arakhamia 2438 35 340.5 3
ChinaXie Jun, Peng Zhaoqin, Qin Kanying, Wang Lei 2302 29
# Country Average
ratingPoints Buchholz MP 4
Bulgaria2258 26 5
Yugoslavia2312 25 6
United States2357 24½ 7
England2235 24 351.5 8
Greece2242 24 337.0 9
Romania2275 24 334.0 10
Yugoslavia "B"2260 23½ 342.5 11
East Germany2248 23½ 328.0 12
Netherlands2157 23½ 303.5 13
Mongolia2112 23½ 293.5 14
Poland2257 23 347.0 15
Argentina2187 23 332.0 16
Cuba2173 23 329.5 17
West Germany2225 23 319.5 18
Israel2132 23 308.5 19
Czechoslovakia2250 22½ 345.5 20
Yugoslavia "C"2173 22½ 329.5 21
Vietnam2000 22½ 322.0 22
Denmark2120 22 310.0 23
Norway2032 22 302.0 24
France2090 22 296.0 25
Scotland2012 22 295.0 26
Brazil2102 22 292.0 27
Spain2198 21½ 319.5 28
Switzerland2133 21½ 310.5 29
Austria2073 21½ 299.5 30
Sweden2022 21½ 298.0 31
Australia2073 21½ 295.5 32
India2150 21 312.0 33
Finland2040 21 305.0 34
Bangladesh2063 21 252.0 35
Albania2000 20½ 312.0 36
Italy2055 20½ 289.0 37
Indonesia2042 20½ 286.0 38
Ireland2047 20½ 275.5 39
Wales2005 20 297.0 =40
Mexico2000 20 278.5 13 =40
New Zealand2000 20 278.5 13 42
Belgium2032 20 276.5 43
Ecuador2000 20 269.5 44
Syria2000 20 264.0 45
Egypt2007 20 262.0 46
Turkey2050 19½ 288.0 47
Dominican Republic2048 19½ 275.0 48
Portugal2003 19½ 274.5 49
Malaysia2002 19½ 262.5 50
Zambia2000 19½ 221.5 51
Bolivia2000 19 282.5 52
Uruguay2003 19 270.5 53
Puerto Rico2000 19 227.0 54
Canada2063 18½ 286.0 55
Venezuela2000 18½ 277.0 56
United Arab Emirates2003 18 57
Algeria2000 17½ 261.5 58
Jamaica2005 17½ 236.5 59
Zimbabwe2000 17½ 223.0 60
Angola2000 15½ 219.0 61
Netherlands Antilles2000 15½ 201.0 62
Nigeria2000 15 63
Malta2000 14½ 64
Botswana2000 11½ 65
United States Virgin Islands2000 10
Individual medals
- Performance rating:
Ketevan Arakhamia 2935 - Board 1:
Zsuzsa Polgár 11½ / 14 = 82.1% - Board 2:
Judit Polgár 10 / 13 = 76.9% - Board 3:
Zsófia Polgár 11½ / 13 = 88.5% - Reserve:
Ketevan Arakhamia 12 / 12 = 100.0%
References
- ^ Although commonly referred to as the men's division, this section is open to both male and female players.
External links
- 29th Chess Olympiad: Novi Sad 1990 OlimpBase