Carl Carls
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Carls (born 16 September 1880, Varel – died 11 September 1958, Bremen) was a German chess master.
In 1922, he took 2nd, behind Erhardt Post, in Bad Oeynhausen (22nd DSB–Congress). He won the 2nd German Championships at Bad Aachen 1934.
He took 7th at The Hague 1928 (Amateur World Championship, Max Euwe won).[1]
Carls represented Germany in Chess Olympiads:
- 1st Olympiad at London 1927 (+7 –3 =5);
- 3rd Olympiad at Hamburg 1930 (=6 –1 =7);
- 3rd unofficial Olympiad at Munich 1936 (+5 –2 =10).
He won two team bronze medals (1930 and 1936).[2]
During World War II, he tied for 10-12th at Krakow – Warsaw 1941 (2nd GG-ch, Alexander Alekhine and Paul Felix Schmidt won). Carls won, ahead of Klaus Junge, at Rostock 1942. He resigned after 8 games at Prague 1943 (Alekhine won).
Carls was awarded the International Master title in 1951.
[edit] References
- ^ OlimpBase :: 2nd Chess Olympiad The Hague 1928: Amateur World Championship
- ^ OlimpBase :: the encyclopaedia of team chess
This biographical article related to chess is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |