From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Correspondence Chess Olympiad is a correspondence chess tournament in which teams from all over the world compete. International Correspondence Chess Federation organises the tournament.

Correspondence Chess Olympiads

Event Gold Team Silver Bronze
1st (1949–1952) [1]   Hungary Janos Balogh, Gedeon Barcza, Miklós Szigeti/ Jozsef Gonda, Lajos Monostori, Arpad Szücs and Dezsö Elekes.   Czechoslovakia   Sweden
2nd (1952–1955) [2]   Czechoslovakia Vit Paroulek, Juraj Hukel, Karel Kausek, Valt Borsony, Vilém Olexa and Mirko Skrovina   Sweden   West Germany
3rd (1958–1961) [3]   Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Georgy Borisenko, Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Piotr Atiashev   Hungary   Yugoslavia
4th (1962–1964) [4]   Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Peter Dubinin, Georgy Borisenko, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Leon Masseiev   East Germany   Sweden
5th (1965–1968) [5]   Czechoslovakia Josef Snadjr, Frantisek Smrcka, Miroslav Urbanec, Jaroslav Hybl, Milan Weiner and Josef Nun   Soviet Union   West Germany
6th (1968–1972) [6]   Soviet Union Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin, Oleg Moiseev [ ru], Yuri Sakharov, Abram Khasin and Nikolai Kopylov   Czechoslovakia   East Germany
7th (1972–1976) [7]   Soviet Union Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Yuri Sakharov, Nikolai Kopylov and Lev Omelchenko   Bulgaria   Great Britain
8th (1977–1982) [8]   Soviet Union Yakov Estrin, Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin and Lev Omelchenko   Hungary   Great Britain
9th (1982–1987) [9]   Great Britain Jonathan Penrose, Adrian Hollis, Simon Webb, John Footner, John Toothill and Cris Shephard   West Germany   Soviet Union
10th (1987–1995) [10]   Soviet Union Tõnu Õim, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Gennady Nesis, Aleksei Michailov, Grigory Sanakoev and Sergei Korolev   England   East Germany
11th (1992–1999) [11]   Czech Republic &   Germany CZE: Jindrich Zapletal, Alois Lanc, Igor Privara, Milan Mraz, Jindřich Trapl and Jiri Goth/ Rudolf Sevecek. GER: Heinrich Burger, Hans Palm, Karl Maeder, Fritz Baumbach, Volker Anton and Martin Kreuzer   Canada and   Scotland
12th (1998–2004) [12]   Germany Joachim Neumann, Manfred Nimtz, Volker Anton, Martin Kreuzer, Stephan Busemann and Karl Maeder   Lithuania   Latvia
13th (2004–2009) [13]   Germany Fritz Baumbach, Siegfried Kluve, Martin Kreuzer, Robert von Weizsäcker, Roland Pfretzschner and Matthias Kribben   Czech Republic   Poland
14th (2002–2006) [14]   Germany Peter Hertel, Frank Gerhardt, Stephan Busemann, Andreas Brenke, Horst BroB and Hans Hofstetter   Lithuania   United States
15th (2006–2009) [15]   Norway Ivar Bern, Raymond Boger, Petter Stigar, Arild Haugen, Morten Lilleoren and Tor-Arne Klausen   Germany   Netherlands
16th (2010–2016) [16]   Czech Republic Roman Chitilek, Jiri Dufek, David Vrkoc and Jiri Vosáhlik   Germany   France
17th (2009–2012) [17]   Germany Maximilian Voss, Peter Hertel, Arno Nickel, Stephan Busemann, Hans Wunderlich and Gerhard Müller   Spain   Italy
18th (2012–2016) [18]   Germany Peter Hertel, Matthias Kribben, Maximilian Voss, Arno Nickel, Hans Wunderlich and Reinhard Moll   Slovenia   Spain

Ladies Correspondence Chess Olympiads

Years Gold Team Silver Bronze
1st [19] 1974–1979   Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Marta Litinskaya, Ljuba Kristol/ Tamara Zaitseva and Liudmila Belavenets   West Germany   Czechoslovakia
2nd [20] 1980–1986   Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Lora Yakovleva, Marta Litinskaya and Liudmila Belavenets   Czechoslovakia   Yugoslavia
3rd [21] 1986–1992   Soviet Union Merike Rõtova, Marta Litinskaya, Liudmila Belavenets and Nadezida Krasikova   Czechoslovakia   Hungary
4th [22] 1992–1997   Czech Republic Eva Mozná, Mariola Babulová, Hana Kubiková and Vlasta Horácková   Russia   Poland
5th [23] 1997–2003   Russia Irina Perevertkina, Svetlana Khlusevich, Tamara Zaitseva and Elena Rufitskaya   Germany   Czech Republic
6th [24] 2003–2006   Lithuania Vilma Dambrauskaité, Vineta Kveinys, Vigante Milasiuté and Jelizaveta Potapova   Germany   Italy
7th [25] 2007–2009   Slovenia Maia Nadvesnik, Lara Kozarski, Eva Korosec and Anica Horvat   Lithuania   Germany
8th [26] 2008–2010   Poland Barbara Skonieczna, Alicla Szczepaniak, Bronislawa Lubas and Bozena Wojcik-Wojtkowiak   Bulgaria   Italy
9th [27] 2011–2014   Russia Olga Sukhareva, Larisa Morokova, Oksana Zhak and Svetlana Lobanova   Lithuania   Germany
10th [28] 2015–2017   Germany Svetlana Kloster, Barbara Boltz, Kristin Achatz and Irene Neuburger   Lithuania   Russia

See also

References

  1. ^ "ol-01 Final".
  2. ^ "ol-02 Final".
  3. ^ "ol-03 Final".
  4. ^ "ol-04 Final".
  5. ^ "ol-05 Final".
  6. ^ "ol-06 Final".
  7. ^ "ol-07 Final".
  8. ^ "ol-08 Final".
  9. ^ "ol-09 Final".
  10. ^ "Cross Table".
  11. ^ "Cross Table".
  12. ^ "Cross Table".
  13. ^ "Cross Table".
  14. ^ "Cross Table".
  15. ^ "Cross Table".
  16. ^ "Cross Table".
  17. ^ "Cross Table".
  18. ^ "Cross Table".
  19. ^ "Cross Table".
  20. ^ Cross Table
  21. ^ "Cross Table".
  22. ^ "Cross Table".
  23. ^ "Cross Table".
  24. ^ "Cross Table".
  25. ^ "Cross Table".
  26. ^ "Cross Table".
  27. ^ "Cross Table".
  28. ^ "Cross Table".


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Correspondence Chess Olympiad is a correspondence chess tournament in which teams from all over the world compete. International Correspondence Chess Federation organises the tournament.

Correspondence Chess Olympiads

Event Gold Team Silver Bronze
1st (1949–1952) [1]   Hungary Janos Balogh, Gedeon Barcza, Miklós Szigeti/ Jozsef Gonda, Lajos Monostori, Arpad Szücs and Dezsö Elekes.   Czechoslovakia   Sweden
2nd (1952–1955) [2]   Czechoslovakia Vit Paroulek, Juraj Hukel, Karel Kausek, Valt Borsony, Vilém Olexa and Mirko Skrovina   Sweden   West Germany
3rd (1958–1961) [3]   Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Georgy Borisenko, Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Piotr Atiashev   Hungary   Yugoslavia
4th (1962–1964) [4]   Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Peter Dubinin, Georgy Borisenko, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Leon Masseiev   East Germany   Sweden
5th (1965–1968) [5]   Czechoslovakia Josef Snadjr, Frantisek Smrcka, Miroslav Urbanec, Jaroslav Hybl, Milan Weiner and Josef Nun   Soviet Union   West Germany
6th (1968–1972) [6]   Soviet Union Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin, Oleg Moiseev [ ru], Yuri Sakharov, Abram Khasin and Nikolai Kopylov   Czechoslovakia   East Germany
7th (1972–1976) [7]   Soviet Union Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Yuri Sakharov, Nikolai Kopylov and Lev Omelchenko   Bulgaria   Great Britain
8th (1977–1982) [8]   Soviet Union Yakov Estrin, Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin and Lev Omelchenko   Hungary   Great Britain
9th (1982–1987) [9]   Great Britain Jonathan Penrose, Adrian Hollis, Simon Webb, John Footner, John Toothill and Cris Shephard   West Germany   Soviet Union
10th (1987–1995) [10]   Soviet Union Tõnu Õim, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Gennady Nesis, Aleksei Michailov, Grigory Sanakoev and Sergei Korolev   England   East Germany
11th (1992–1999) [11]   Czech Republic &   Germany CZE: Jindrich Zapletal, Alois Lanc, Igor Privara, Milan Mraz, Jindřich Trapl and Jiri Goth/ Rudolf Sevecek. GER: Heinrich Burger, Hans Palm, Karl Maeder, Fritz Baumbach, Volker Anton and Martin Kreuzer   Canada and   Scotland
12th (1998–2004) [12]   Germany Joachim Neumann, Manfred Nimtz, Volker Anton, Martin Kreuzer, Stephan Busemann and Karl Maeder   Lithuania   Latvia
13th (2004–2009) [13]   Germany Fritz Baumbach, Siegfried Kluve, Martin Kreuzer, Robert von Weizsäcker, Roland Pfretzschner and Matthias Kribben   Czech Republic   Poland
14th (2002–2006) [14]   Germany Peter Hertel, Frank Gerhardt, Stephan Busemann, Andreas Brenke, Horst BroB and Hans Hofstetter   Lithuania   United States
15th (2006–2009) [15]   Norway Ivar Bern, Raymond Boger, Petter Stigar, Arild Haugen, Morten Lilleoren and Tor-Arne Klausen   Germany   Netherlands
16th (2010–2016) [16]   Czech Republic Roman Chitilek, Jiri Dufek, David Vrkoc and Jiri Vosáhlik   Germany   France
17th (2009–2012) [17]   Germany Maximilian Voss, Peter Hertel, Arno Nickel, Stephan Busemann, Hans Wunderlich and Gerhard Müller   Spain   Italy
18th (2012–2016) [18]   Germany Peter Hertel, Matthias Kribben, Maximilian Voss, Arno Nickel, Hans Wunderlich and Reinhard Moll   Slovenia   Spain

Ladies Correspondence Chess Olympiads

Years Gold Team Silver Bronze
1st [19] 1974–1979   Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Marta Litinskaya, Ljuba Kristol/ Tamara Zaitseva and Liudmila Belavenets   West Germany   Czechoslovakia
2nd [20] 1980–1986   Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Lora Yakovleva, Marta Litinskaya and Liudmila Belavenets   Czechoslovakia   Yugoslavia
3rd [21] 1986–1992   Soviet Union Merike Rõtova, Marta Litinskaya, Liudmila Belavenets and Nadezida Krasikova   Czechoslovakia   Hungary
4th [22] 1992–1997   Czech Republic Eva Mozná, Mariola Babulová, Hana Kubiková and Vlasta Horácková   Russia   Poland
5th [23] 1997–2003   Russia Irina Perevertkina, Svetlana Khlusevich, Tamara Zaitseva and Elena Rufitskaya   Germany   Czech Republic
6th [24] 2003–2006   Lithuania Vilma Dambrauskaité, Vineta Kveinys, Vigante Milasiuté and Jelizaveta Potapova   Germany   Italy
7th [25] 2007–2009   Slovenia Maia Nadvesnik, Lara Kozarski, Eva Korosec and Anica Horvat   Lithuania   Germany
8th [26] 2008–2010   Poland Barbara Skonieczna, Alicla Szczepaniak, Bronislawa Lubas and Bozena Wojcik-Wojtkowiak   Bulgaria   Italy
9th [27] 2011–2014   Russia Olga Sukhareva, Larisa Morokova, Oksana Zhak and Svetlana Lobanova   Lithuania   Germany
10th [28] 2015–2017   Germany Svetlana Kloster, Barbara Boltz, Kristin Achatz and Irene Neuburger   Lithuania   Russia

See also

References

  1. ^ "ol-01 Final".
  2. ^ "ol-02 Final".
  3. ^ "ol-03 Final".
  4. ^ "ol-04 Final".
  5. ^ "ol-05 Final".
  6. ^ "ol-06 Final".
  7. ^ "ol-07 Final".
  8. ^ "ol-08 Final".
  9. ^ "ol-09 Final".
  10. ^ "Cross Table".
  11. ^ "Cross Table".
  12. ^ "Cross Table".
  13. ^ "Cross Table".
  14. ^ "Cross Table".
  15. ^ "Cross Table".
  16. ^ "Cross Table".
  17. ^ "Cross Table".
  18. ^ "Cross Table".
  19. ^ "Cross Table".
  20. ^ Cross Table
  21. ^ "Cross Table".
  22. ^ "Cross Table".
  23. ^ "Cross Table".
  24. ^ "Cross Table".
  25. ^ "Cross Table".
  26. ^ "Cross Table".
  27. ^ "Cross Table".
  28. ^ "Cross Table".



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