Jump to content

Miklós Bródy: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Removed nonsense
+references section so the refs show up
Line 10: Line 10:
* In 1928, at first board at 2nd Olympiad in [[The Hague]] (+4 –8 =4);
* In 1928, at first board at 2nd Olympiad in [[The Hague]] (+4 –8 =4);
* In 1935, at third board at 6th Olympiad in [[Warsaw]] (+5 –3 =7).<ref>http://www.olimpbase.org/1935/1935rom.html</ref>
* In 1935, at third board at 6th Olympiad in [[Warsaw]] (+5 –3 =7).<ref>http://www.olimpbase.org/1935/1935rom.html</ref>

==References==
<references/>


[[Category:1877 births|Brody, Miklos]]
[[Category:1877 births|Brody, Miklos]]

Revision as of 19:57, 21 May 2007

Miklós (Nicolae) Bródy (born 30 March 1877, Nagykaroly, Transylvania – died 17 December, Cluj, Transylvania) was a Hungarian–Romanian chess master.

In 1897, he tied for 4-5th in Berlin (Ignatz von Popiel won). In 1897, he tied for 3rd-4th in Vienna (Georg Marco won). In 1899, he took 3rd in Budapest (Géza Maróczy won). In 1899, he tied for 2nd-3rd with Carl Schlechter, behind Maróczy, in Vienna (Kolisch Memorial). In 1900, he took 13th in Paris (Emanuel Lasker won).

In 1902, he took 8th in Hanover (13 DSB-Kongress, B tourn., Walter John won). In 1906, he took 3rd in Györ (1st HUN-ch, Zoltan von Balla won). In 1908, he tied for 6-7th in Düsseldorf (16 DSB-Kongress, Frank Marshall won). In 1909, he tied for 2nd-4th, behind Zsigmond Barász, in Budapest. In 1911, he tied for 3rd-5th in Budapest (HUN-ch, Balla and Barasz won). In 1913, he tied for 6-7th in Budapest (Rudolf Spielmann won).

After WW I, he became a Romanian citizen as a result of the postwar border changes in 1920. Brody took 6th at Budapest 1921 (Savielly Tartakower and Szávay won). In 1927, he took 2nd, behind Alexander Tyroler, in Bucharest (2nd ROM-ch).[1]

He played for Romania in two Chess Olympiads:

  • In 1928, at first board at 2nd Olympiad in The Hague (+4 –8 =4);
  • In 1935, at third board at 6th Olympiad in Warsaw (+5 –3 =7).[2]

References