Masters and Matches: A History of Chess
In this sixth episode of Masters and Matches, Peter Doggers and Arne Moll discuss the 1988 Chess Olympiad held in Thessaloniki, Greece. This was one of the most fascinating Olympiads in history, with many stories and anecdotes connected to it. In the Open section, the Soviet team included the "two Ks" Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov. Despite internal struggles between these two giants of the game, the team won the tournament convincingly, once again. The big struggle for silver was fought between England and, surprisingly, the Netherlands, who were playing without their number one player Jan Timman. A key game was Nunn-Van der Sterren in the England-Holland match. Fourth came team USA, and one of the anecdotes is about Yasser Seirawan's game with Garry Kasparov. Of course we give a lot of attention to the Women's Olympiad as well, where Team Hungary, consisting of the three Polgar sisters and Ildiko Madl, surprised the chess world by claiming the gold medals ahead of the mighty Soviet Union, with a 12-year-old Judit Polgar scoring 12.5/13. SOURCES BBC documentary with Stephen Fry: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zopb7VDSuN8 Queen of Chess: https://www.netflix.com/watch/81749912 Hope you enjoyed the show! Please subscribe and spread the word about this podcast. About the hosts: Peter Doggers has played chess for over 30 years and written about it for almost 20. He regularly writes for Chess.com and New in Chess. He is the author of The Chess Revolution and also hosts The Chess News Podcast. https://peterdoggers.com/ Arne Moll has played chess even longer than Peter and also loves to write about it. He contributed many thought-provoking articles to the website ChessVibes.com between 2007 and 2013 and recently published his first book as well, called The Center Game. https://www.newinchess.com/the-center-game
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