Braslav Rabar

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Braslav Rabar (27 September 1919, Zagreb6 December 1973, Zagreb) was a Croatian chess International Master and chess writer. He was Yugoslav champion in 1951, and in 1953 again tied for the tournament lead, but lost a playoff match. He played for Yugoslavia in three chess Olympiads, winning a total of five medals. At his peak in the early 1950s, Rabar played at Grandmaster strength. Rabar was a co-inventor of the classification systems for the Chess Informant publications.

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[edit] Early years

In 1941, he tied for 8-9th in Trentschin-Teplitz (Trencianske Teplice); the event was won by Jan Foltys.[1] In September 1941, he tied for 9-10th in Munich (Europaturnier, Gösta Stoltz won). In December 1941, he played at second board against Ludovit Potuček (1.5 : 0.5) in a match Croatia – Slovakia in Zagreb.[2] In September 1942, he took 12th in Munich (Europameisterschaft, 1st European Individual Chess Championship, Alexander Alekhine won).[3] He represented the Independent State of Croatia there.[4]

[edit] Yugoslav champion, peak form

In 1945/46, he took 4th in Ljubljana; the event was won by Svetozar Gligorić. In 1949/50, he tied for 2nd-3rd, in Lucerne. In 1950, he won, ahead of Mladen Šubarić, in Zagreb (CRO-ch). In 1951, he won the 10th Yugoslav Championsip in Sarajevo.

Although chess ratings were not formally introduced by FIDE, the World Chess Federation, until 1970, it is nevertheless possible to retrospectively rank historical chess performances from before this time using modern algorithms. The site chessmetrics.com specializes in this form of ranking. It places Rabar's peak rating at 2635 in January 1952, good for 35th in the world. This is clear Grandmaster territory, although Rabar was not awarded that higher title.

In 1953, he took 3rd in Opatija. In 1953, he tied for 1st with Vasja Pirc in Zagreb (12th YUG-ch), and afterwards lost a play-off match for the title. In 1954, he tied for 2nd-3rd with Jan Hein Donner, behind Wolfgang Unzicker, in Munich (zonal).[5] In 1955, he tied for 14-15th in Göteborg (Interzonal); the event was won by David Bronstein.[6]

[edit] Excels in team competitions

Rabar participated at the 1st Balkaniad in Belgrade in 1946. Yugoslavia won, ahead of Romania, Bulgaria, and Albania. He won silver medal at 8th board. Rabar played in three Chess Olympiads. In August/September 1950, he won two gold medals: individual at fourth board (+8 –0 =2), and team, along with Gligorić, Pirc, Petar Trifunović, Milan Vidmar jr, and Stojan Puc, at the 9th Olympiad in Dubrovnik. In August 1952, he played at second board at the 10th Olympiad in Helsinki (+5 –1 =6). Rabar won two bronze medals (individual and team). In September 1954, he played at fourth board at the 11th Olympiad in Amsterdam (+1 –3 =4). Yugoslavia won bronze medal. In the three Olympiads, Rabar won five medals, and in 30 games scored (+14 -4 =12), for 66.7 per cent.[7]

[edit] Legacy

Rabar was awarded the International Master (IM) title in 1950. He coedited the monthly chess magazine "Šahovski Glasnik". He is best remembered for designing the Opening Classification System that was used in the Chess Informant series of publications, which are the best-selling and most popular chess books of all time.

[edit] References

  1. ^ 1941
  2. ^ http://www.vjesnik.hr/pdf/2001%5C12%5C09%5C31A31.PDF KRONOLOGIJA HRVATSKOGA ŠAHA (393)
  3. ^ 1942
  4. ^ Gillam, Anthony J. & Swift, A J (2001), 1st European championship Munich 1942, Nottingham: The Chess Player, ISBN 1-901034-46-1
  5. ^ munchen
  6. ^ goteborg
  7. ^ OlimpBase :: the encyclopaedia of team chess

[edit] External links

http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessplayer?pid=19217