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Correspondence Chess Olympiad

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Correspondence chess tournament

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)  Hungary Janos Balogh, Gedeon Barcza, Miklós Szigeti/Jozsef Gonda, Lajos Monostori, Arpad Szücs and Dezsö Elekes.  Czechoslovakia  Sweden
2nd (1952–1955)  Czechoslovakia Vit Paroulek, Juraj Hukel, Karel Kausek, Valt Borsony, Vilém Olexa and Mirko Skrovina  Sweden  West Germany
3rd (1958–1961)  Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Georgy Borisenko, Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Piotr Atiashev  Hungary  Yugoslavia
4th (1962–1964)  Soviet Union Igor Bondarevsky, Peter Dubinin, Georgy Borisenko, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Leon Masseiev  East Germany  Sweden
5th (1965–1968)  Czechoslovakia Josef Snadjr, Frantisek Smrcka, Miroslav Urbanec, Jaroslav Hybl, Milan Weiner and Josef Nun  Soviet Union  West Germany
6th (1968–1972)  Soviet Union Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin, Oleg Moiseev, Yuri Sakharov, Abram Khasin and Nikolai Kopylov  Czechoslovakia  East Germany
7th (1972–1976)  Soviet Union Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Yuri Sakharov, Nikolai Kopylov and Lev Omelchenko  Bulgaria  Great Britain
8th (1977–1982)  Soviet Union Yakov Estrin, Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin and Lev Omelchenko  Hungary  Great Britain
9th (1982–1987)  Great Britain Jonathan Penrose, Adrian Hollis, Simon Webb, John Footner, John Toothill and Cris Shephard  West Germany  Soviet Union
10th (1987–1995)  Soviet Union Tõnu Õim, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Gennady Nesis, Aleksei Michailov, Grigory Sanakoev and Sergei Korolev  England  East Germany
11th (1992–1999)  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)  Germany Joachim Neumann, Manfred Nimtz, Volker Anton, Martin Kreuzer, Stephan Busemann and Karl Maeder  Lithuania  Latvia
13th (2004–2009)  Germany Fritz Baumbach, Siegfried Kluve, Martin Kreuzer, Robert von Weizsäcker, Roland Pfretzschner and Matthias Kribben  Czech Republic  Poland
14th (2002–2006)  Germany Peter Hertel, Frank Gerhardt, Stephan Busemann, Andreas Brenke, Horst BroB and Hans Hofstetter  Lithuania  United States
15th (2006–2009)  Norway Ivar Bern, Raymond Boger, Petter Stigar, Arild Haugen, Morten Lilleoren and Tor-Arne Klausen  Germany  Netherlands
16th (2010–2016)  Czech Republic Roman Chitilek, Jiri Dufek, David Vrkoc and Jiri Vosáhlik  Germany  France
17th (2009–2012)  Germany Maximilian Voss, Peter Hertel, Arno Nickel, Stephan Busemann, Hans Wunderlich and Gerhard Müller  Spain  Italy
18th (2012–2016)  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 1974–1979  Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Marta Litinskaya, Ljuba Kristol/Tamara Zaitseva and Liudmila Belavenets  West Germany  Czechoslovakia
2nd 1980–1986  Soviet Union Olga Rubtsova, Lora Yakovleva, Marta Litinskaya and Liudmila Belavenets  Czechoslovakia  Yugoslavia
3rd 1986–1992  Soviet Union Merike Rõtova, Marta Litinskaya, Liudmila Belavenets and Nadezida Krasikova  Czechoslovakia  Hungary
4th 1992–1997  Czech Republic Eva Mozná, Mariola Babulová, Hana Kubiková and Vlasta Horácková  Russia  Poland
5th 1997–2003  Russia Irina Perevertkina, Svetlana Khlusevich, Tamara Zaitseva and Elena Rufitskaya  Germany  Czech Republic
6th 2003–2006  Lithuania Vilma Dambrauskaité, Vineta Kveinys, Vigante Milasiuté and Jelizaveta Potapova  Germany  Italy
7th 2007–2009  Slovenia Maia Nadvesnik, Lara Kozarski, Eva Korosec and Anica Horvat  Lithuania  Germany
8th 2008–2010  Poland Barbara Skonieczna, Alicla Szczepaniak, Bronislawa Lubas and Bozena Wojcik-Wojtkowiak  Bulgaria  Italy
9th 2011–2014  Russia Olga Sukhareva, Larisa Morokova, Oksana Zhak and Svetlana Lobanova  Lithuania  Germany
10th 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".
Chess Olympiad
Official
Unofficial
Women's only
Paralympiad
Online


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