GM Miroslav Filip, 1928–2009
Miroslav Filip, the Czech chess grandmaster, devoted his professional career
to many aspects of the game, as player, author, journalist and arbiter. In every
sphere he achieved world class results, though by modern standards he was something
of a late starter, his prospects being hampered by the fact that his formative
years coincided with the Nazi occupation of his home country and the various
deprivations caused by the second world war.
Filip was born in Prague in 1928, and like his fellow grandmaster to be Ludek
Pachman, Filip benefited from the occasional presence of the world champion
Alexander Alekhine in the Prague competition during the early 1940's. It was,
however, not until the age of twenty five that Filip began to make a serious
mark on the post war international chess scene, earning the title of international
master from FIDE, the world chess federation, in 1953. His growing prowess had
already become clear from his victories in the Czech national championships
of 1950 and 1953.
It was during the seven years from 1955 to 1962 that Filip, at six foot nine
inches in height an imposing presence at the chess board, truly became a world
force. During this period he twice achieved the notoriously arduous feat of
qualifying for the Candidates Tournaments for the World Championship, at Amsterdam
1956 and again at Curacao, 1962. Thus Filip was automatically propelled into
the upper echelons of the world elite. It was in this happy time that Filip
inflicted defeat on no fewer than three world champions, Dr Max Euwe in 1955,
Vassily Smyslov (the reigning champion) in 1957 and former world champion Mikhail
Tal in 1962.

Miroslav Filip playing Mikhail Tal
Filip also won the international tournaments at his home city of Prague in
1956, again at Marienbad 1960 and Buenos Aires 1961. In spite of his glittering
achievements and wins against the world's best in individual encounters, Filip
failed in his ultimate ambition to challenge for the world title. Indeed, in
his second appearance in the candidates tournament at Curacao 1962, despite
scoring a fine counter-attacking victory against Mikhail Tal, he was generally
outclassed, both by the established Soviet grandmasters and the new force represented
by Bobby Fischer, the mercurial young American. Therafter, Filip grew less enthusiastic
about tournament play, becoming more concerned with avoiding defeat, at which
he was an adept, than in scoring wins. As a result he turned his professional
hand ever more to authorship, journalism and arbiting.
He was selected by the World Chess Federation to be arbiter for six subsequent
world championship contests, including the controversial Karpov v Korchnoi match
at Baguio 1978. He conducted the chess column in the Prague daily sports paper
"Denik Sport" with great distinction, and wrote books on the candidates
tournament of 1956, the world championship of 1978 and the Lucerne Chess Olympiad
of 1982.
His prowess as a player was further confirmed by his results for Czechoslovakia
in the Chess Olympiads , where he represented his country on a remarkable twelve
occasions, three of those on top board, scoring 114 points from 194 games for
a 58.76 percentage. In 1970 he won the individual gold medal for his performance
in the Kapfenberg European Team Championship.
Miroslav Filip was a worthy successor to the tradition of the Prague School,
which numbered amongst its alumni Wilhelm Steinitz, the first "official"
world champion, Richard Reti, the pioneeer of hypermodernism and Oldrich Duras
, the great tournament competitor. Filip was born in Prague on October 27, 1928,
and died there on April 27, 2009.
Career highlights
CSR-ch 1953 |
10.5/15 |
+6 |
Rank 1 |
Bucharest 1954 |
11/17 |
+5 |
Rank 4 |
CSR-ch 1954 |
13/17 |
+9 |
Rank 1 |
NED-CSR 1955 |
1.5/2 |
+1 |
Rank 4 |
Marianske Lazne/Praha 1956 |
13/19 |
+7 |
Rank 1 |
Sofia zt 1957 |
9.5/13 |
+6 |
Rank 1 |
Bratislava 1957 |
8.5/13 |
+4 |
Rank 2 |
WchT U26 04th 1957 |
10/13 |
+7 |
|
Hastings 5758 1957 |
6/9 |
+3 |
Rank 3 |
Alekhine Memorial 1959 |
6/11 |
+1 |
Rank 4 |
Baden 1961 |
8/11 |
+5 |
Rank 2 |
Buenos Aires CA 1961 |
5.5/7 |
+4 |
Rank 1 |
CSR-ch 1961 |
13.5/19 |
+8 |
Rank 2 |
Mar del Plata 1961 |
11.5/15 |
+8 |
Rank 4 |
Maroczy Memorial 1961 |
9.5/15 |
+4 |
Rank 2 |
Santa Fe 1961 |
4.5/7 |
+2 |
Rank 2 |
Marianske Lazne zt 1961 |
12/15 |
+9 |
Rank 2 |
CSR-ch 1963 |
13.5/19 |
+8 |
Rank 2 |
CSR-ch 1968 |
13/19 |
+7 |
Rank 4 |
Praia da Rocha zt 1969 |
12.5/17 |
+8 |
Rank 2 |
Rubinstein Memorial 17th 1979 |
9.5/15 |
+4 |
Rank 2 |
Opponents
Ludek Pachman |
11/22 |
+0 |
22 Games |
Laszlo Szabo |
9.5/18 |
+1 |
18 Games |
Svetozar Gligoric |
6/16 |
-4 |
16 Games |
Paul Keres |
6.5/15 |
-2 |
15 Games |
Wolfgang Uhlmann |
6/14 |
-2 |
14 Games |
Tigran V Petrosian |
4.5/14 |
-5 |
14 Games |
Lajos Portisch |
5.5/13 |
-2 |
13 Games |
David I Bronstein |
4/13 |
-5 |
13 Games |
Bogdan Sliwa |
7/12 |
+2 |
12 Games |
Borislav Ivkov |
5.5/12 |
-1 |
12 Games |
Vassily Smyslov |
4.5/12 |
-3 |
12 Games |
Istvan Bilek |
5.5/11 |
+0 |
11 Games |
Efim P Geller |
3.5/11 |
-4 |
11 Games |
Reinhart Fuchs |
6.5/10 |
+3 |
10 Games |
Gedeon Barcza |
6/10 |
+2 |
10 Games |
Jan Hein Donner |
5.5/10 |
+1 |
10 Games |
Aleksandar Matanovic |
4/10 |
-2 |
10 Games |
Mihail Tal |
3/10 |
-4 |
10 Games |
Viktor Kortschnoj |
1/10 |
-8 |
10 Games |
Victor Ciocaltea |
5.5/9 |
+2 |
9 Games |
Pal C Benko |
3.5/9 |
-2 |
9 Games |
Data by ChessBase