Andras Adorjan (1950-2023)
Zitat von Conrad Schormann am 13. Mai 2023, 13:54 UhrAndras Adorjan war 1969 hinter Karpov Vizejugendweltmeister und spielte 1979 als Kandidat um die Weltmeisterschaft mit. Als Trainer betreute der ungarische Großmeister unter anderem Garry Kasparov und Peter Leko. Als Autor ist Adorjan bei weitem nicht nur, aber vor allem wegen seines Bestsellers "Black is ok" und dessen zahlreichen Nachfolgern in Erinnerung. Andras Adorjan starb am Donnerstag. Er wurde 73 Jahre alt.
https://twitter.com/StefanLoeffler/status/1656992324054908933
https://twitter.com/GMJanTimman/status/1657080597955633154
https://twitter.com/nigelshortchess/status/1657368249049260034
Nachruf von André Schulz:
https://de.chessbase.com/post/andras-adorjan-1950-2023
Andras Adorjan war 1969 hinter Karpov Vizejugendweltmeister und spielte 1979 als Kandidat um die Weltmeisterschaft mit. Als Trainer betreute der ungarische Großmeister unter anderem Garry Kasparov und Peter Leko. Als Autor ist Adorjan bei weitem nicht nur, aber vor allem wegen seines Bestsellers "Black is ok" und dessen zahlreichen Nachfolgern in Erinnerung. Andras Adorjan starb am Donnerstag. Er wurde 73 Jahre alt.
András Adorján passed away on Thursday. He was on the Hungarian team that won the Chess Olympiad 1978, made it to the Candidates in 1979/80 and coached Peter Lékó. He composed the rock opera "Aki" about the 1956 uprising and its brutal end by the Soviets. https://t.co/hrN1fqlAYf pic.twitter.com/sZoYVVNrzu
— Stefan Löffler #Boom is over, time to consolidate! (@StefanLoeffler) May 12, 2023
RIP Andras Adorjan. We played our first game back in 1967!
— Jan Timman (@GMJanTimman) May 12, 2023
In Hamburg, in the early 80s, with the Hungarian GM, Andras Adorjan, who died a few days ago. A brilliant analyst. Would have achieved more as a player had he not been so inwardly tormented. pic.twitter.com/cOPdom1dvy
— Nigel Short (@nigelshortchess) May 13, 2023
Nachruf von André Schulz:
https://de.chessbase.com/post/andras-adorjan-1950-2023
Zitat von Conrad Schormann am 14. Mai 2023, 9:49 UhrSaturday, 13 May 2023 17:07Andras Adorjan (1950-2023)FIDE is deeply saddened to hear of the passing of GM Andras Adorjan in his 74th year of age after a long and serious illness.
Born Andras Jocha in 1950 (he adopted his mother's maiden name Adorjan in 1968), Adorjan showed promise early on and, in 1969, became the European Junior Champion (Groningen). The same year he finished runner-up in the World Junior Chess Championship (Stockholm) to Anatoly Karpov. In 1970 he was awarded the IM title and three years later became GM after jointly winning the Hungarian championship. His second and only outright victory in the national championship came in 1984.
Adorjan reached his peak in the late 1970s. At the Riga Interzonal (1979), he tied for third place with his compatriot Zoltán Ribli (winning two last games against Bent Larsen and Tony Miles) and qualified for the Candidates after drawing the tiebreaker match (+1 −1 =2). At the Candidates, he narrowly lost his quarter-final match to Robert Huebner.
Andras had an excellent record in team competitions. He was a part of the legendary Hungarian team at the Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires (1978) that wrestled the gold medal from the Soviet team dominating this competition from 1952 to 1974.
As a coach, Adorján worked with Garry Kasparov and Peter Leko helping them prepare for World Championship matches. Known as one of the leading experts in the Grünfeld Defence, he influenced Kasparov and Leko in playing this opening.
In later years, Adorján concentrated on writing, becoming renowned for his series of books advocating the cause for black side – Black is OK, Black is Still OK, and Black is OK Forever.
FIDE extends its sincere condolences to Andras Adorjan's family, friends, and loved ones.
Photo: Dutch National Archive
FIDE is deeply saddened to hear of the passing of GM Andras Adorjan in his 74th year of age after a long and serious illness.
Born Andras Jocha in 1950 (he adopted his mother's maiden name Adorjan in 1968), Adorjan showed promise early on and, in 1969, became the European Junior Champion (Groningen). The same year he finished runner-up in the World Junior Chess Championship (Stockholm) to Anatoly Karpov. In 1970 he was awarded the IM title and three years later became GM after jointly winning the Hungarian championship. His second and only outright victory in the national championship came in 1984.
Adorjan reached his peak in the late 1970s. At the Riga Interzonal (1979), he tied for third place with his compatriot Zoltán Ribli (winning two last games against Bent Larsen and Tony Miles) and qualified for the Candidates after drawing the tiebreaker match (+1 −1 =2). At the Candidates, he narrowly lost his quarter-final match to Robert Huebner.
Andras had an excellent record in team competitions. He was a part of the legendary Hungarian team at the Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires (1978) that wrestled the gold medal from the Soviet team dominating this competition from 1952 to 1974.
As a coach, Adorján worked with Garry Kasparov and Peter Leko helping them prepare for World Championship matches. Known as one of the leading experts in the Grünfeld Defence, he influenced Kasparov and Leko in playing this opening.
In later years, Adorján concentrated on writing, becoming renowned for his series of books advocating the cause for black side – Black is OK, Black is Still OK, and Black is OK Forever.
FIDE extends its sincere condolences to Andras Adorjan's family, friends, and loved ones.
Photo: Dutch National Archive