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Acropolis International chess tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Acropolis International was a chess tournament held in Athens. The longest running international chess tournament in Greece, the first event, an international invitation tournament was won by Luděk Pachman in 1968.

The next event was not held until 1977, but subsequently it has been organized on a fairly regular basis by the Greek Chess Federation, including sometimes another minor event for men and a tournament for women, too.

The 2007 tournament[1] was part of the Association of Chess Professionals Tour (ACP Tour). The 2009 open tournament took place in Chalkida on the island of Euboea[2] and was won by Borki Predojević on tie-break.[3] It turned out to be the last one.

The inaugural Acropolis was played as a round robin (all-play-all), then the format varied across the series, switching several times between closed and open tournaments played in Swiss system, totaling 24 editions.

Note: In the following list of the winners at Acropolis ICT, only the best player on tie-break is indicated if there were shared first places.

Winners

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Acropolis International in Athens
# Year Winner
1 1968  Luděk Pachman (Czechoslovakia)
2 1977  Valentin Stoica (Romania)
3 1978  Bela Soos (West Germany)
4 1979  Aurel Urzică (Romania)
5 1980  Dusan Raikovic (Yugoslavia)
6 1982  Nikolaos Skalkotas (Greece)
7 1983  Nikola Padevsky (Bulgaria)
8 1984  Sasa Velickovic (Yugoslavia)
9 1985  Valentin Stoica (Romania)
10 1986  Efstratios Grivas (Greece)
11 1987  Evgeni Vasiukov (Soviet Union)
12 1988  Vasilios Kotronias (Greece)
13 1989  Petar Velikov (Bulgaria)
14 1991  Efstratios Grivas (Greece)
15 1992  Rainer Knaak (Germany)
16 1993  Hannes Stefánsson (Iceland)
17 1997  Tamaz Gelashvili (Georgia)
18 2003  Vassilios Kotronias (Cyprus)
19 2004  Athanasios Mastrovasilis (Greece)
20 2005  Vugar Gashimov (Azerbaijan)
21 2006  Tamaz Gelashvili (Georgia)
22 2007  Ilya Smirin (Israel)[1]
23 2008  Ilya Smirin (Israel)[4]
24 2009  Borki Predojević (Bosnia and Herzegovina)[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Ilya Smirin wins Acropolis 2007", ChessBase News, 26 August 2007, retrieved 2008-04-10
  2. ^ "Acropolis 2009 - English version".
  3. ^ "Chessdom - Borki Predojevic wins the 24th ICT Acropolis". tournaments.chessdom.com. Archived from the original on 2009-08-23.
  4. ^ "Acropolis 2008: Smirin wins ahead of Parligras on tiebreak". ChessBase News. 26 August 2008. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
  5. ^ "Predojevic ganó el Abierto Acropolis 2009". ChessBase News (in Spanish). 20 August 2009. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
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