Bent Larsen

Danish chess grandmaster and author (1935–2010)

Jørgen Bent Larsen (4 March 1935–9 September 2010) was a Danish chess Grandmaster. He was a six-time Danish champion, and a candidate for the World Chess Championship on four occasions: 1965, 1968, 1971, and 1977. He won three Interzonal tournaments: Amsterdam 1964, Sousse 1967, and Biel 1976. Larsen won several dozen major international tournaments during his career, and was awarded the first Chess Oscar in 1967. At his best he was rated (FIDE rating list) fourth in the world.

Bent Larsen
Full nameJørgen Bent Larsen
Country Denmark
Born(1935-03-04)March 4, 1935
Tilsted near Thisted, Denmark
DiedSeptember 9, 2010(2010-09-09) (aged 75)
Buenos Aires
TitleGrandmaster
FIDE rating2415 (January 2009)
Peak rating2660 (January 1971)

Larsen was the strongest chess player born in Denmark, and the strongest Scandinavian until the emergence of Magnus Carlsen.[1][2] From the early 1970s, he lived for part of the year in Las Palmas, and in Buenos Aires, with his Argentinian-born wife.

Olympiad performances change

Bent represented Denmark six times in Chess Olympiads, always on first board, and compiled an aggregate score of 75/109 (+61 =28 −20), for 68.8%, according to olimpbase.org. He always played a very high number of games, almost all of the rounds, and won three board medals, one gold and two bronze.

  • Amsterdam 1954, board one, 13½/19 (+11 =5 −3), board bronze medal;
  • Moscow 1956, board one, 14/18 (+11 =6 −1), board gold medal;
  • Munich 1958, board one, 13/19 (+11 =4 −4);
  • Havana 1966, board one, 11/18 (+9 =4 −5);
  • Lugano 1968, board one, 10½/18 (+8 =5 −5);
  • Siegen 1970, board one, 13/17 (+11 =4 −2), board bronze medal.

Disaster in Denver change

The worst result of his career was his 6–0 defeat by Bobby Fischer in the semi-finals of the Candidates matches in 1971. The match was played in Denver, Colorado. Larsen later claimed in a Kasparov.com interview (1998) that his one-sided loss to Fischer was due in part to his condition during the match: "The organizers chose the wrong time for this match. I was languid with the heat and Fischer was better prepared for such exceptional circumstances... I saw chess pieces through a mist and, thus, my level of playing was not good". Fischer was the great player of the day, and went on to beat Spassky in 1972 for the World Championship.

  • Bent Larsen 1970. Larsen's selected games of chess. Bell, London.

Other websites change

References change

  1. Aaron Nimzovich, who became Danish, was born in Latvia.
  2. Edward Winter: Bent Larsen (1935-2010)