Hans-Joachim Hecht

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Hans-Joachim Hecht (1980)
Hans-Joachim Hecht, Valletta 1980
Association GermanyGermany Germany
Born January 29, 1939
Luckenwalde
title International Master (1969)
Grand Master (1973)
Current  Elo rating 2306 (June 2020)
Best Elo rating 2515 (May 1974)
Tab at the FIDE (English)

Hans-Joachim Hecht called Hajo H. (born January 29, 1939 in Luckenwalde ) is a German chess grandmaster .

Career

Hans-Joachim Hecht, who has held the title of grandmaster since 1973, was a professional chess player until the mid-1970s. He gave up insecure profitability for a salaried career in the local government of Solingen. In 1974 he married Annemarie Zeitler, the sister of the strong, blind German chess player Hans Zeitler. He has two sons, Christoph and Volkmar, who are also strong players.

Stefan Kindermann , Klaus Bischoff , Jörg Hickl , Detlef Heinbuch and in the middle, Hans-Joachim Hecht at the 1986 Chess Olympiad in Dubai

Hecht was German youth champion in Hitzacker in 1958 and won the Dähne Cup in 1964 . In 1970 he was first at the German Championship in Völklingen . In 1963 in Bad Pyrmont and 1967 in Kiel he was third in each case.

He took part in ten Chess Olympiads for the Federal Republic of Germany , namely in 1962 in Warna , 1968 in Lugano , 1970 in Siegen , 1972 in Skopje , 1974 in Nice , 1978 in Buenos Aires , 1980 in Valletta , 1982 in Lucerne , 1984 in Thessaloniki and 1986 in Dubai . Hecht also took part in the 1985 World Team Championships, where he achieved the best individual result on the fifth board, and at the European Team Championships in 1965, 1973 and 1977.

He celebrated his greatest triumphs with his tournament victories in Bad Pyrmont 1970, Olot 1971, Málaga 1972 and in Dortmund 1973 at the 2nd International German Individual Championship , in which Boris Spasski and Paul Keres also took part.

Hecht became German team champions in 1974 , 1975 , 1980 and 1981 with the Solingen SG in 1868 , 1985 , 1986 , 1989 and 1990 with FC Bayern Munich . With Solingen he also won the European Club Cup in 1976 , in which he participated seven times (three times each with Solingen and Munich, once with Sparkasse Schwarzach ). For many years he was the second of the top German player Robert Huebner .

In 1976, Hecht was awarded the Silver Laurel Leaf , the highest sporting award in Germany.

In recent years he has been involved in promoting young talent at the Fürstenfeldbruck chess club and has performed quite successfully at international senior tournaments, such as the 2005 Senior World Cup in Lignano Sabbiadoro , Italy (9th place out of 140 participants).

Elo development

Game example

Pike – Spassky
  a b c d e f G H  
8th Chess --t45.svg Chess qlt45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg 8th
7th Chess --t45.svg Chess nlt45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg 7th
6th Chess --t45.svg Chess klt45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg 6th
5 Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess pdt45.svg 5
4th Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess plt45.svg 4th
3 Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess pdt45.svg Chess kdt45.svg Chess --t45.svg 3
2 Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess bdt45.svg Chess --t45.svg 2
1 Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg Chess --t45.svg 1
  a b c d e f G H  
End position after 69. Qb8 +

Template: checkerboard-small / maintenance / new

In the following game, Hecht defeated former world champion Spasski with the white pieces in Dortmund 1973 in a brilliant attacking game.

Hecht – Spasski 1-0
Dortmund, May 18, 1973
Sicilian Defense ( Rossolimo Variation ), B31
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 g6 4. 0–0 Bg7 5. Re1 Nf6 6. Nc3 0–0 7. Bxc6 bxc6 8. h3 d6 9. e5 Nd7 10. exd6 exd6 11. d3 Rb8 12. Bg5 f6 13. Bf4 Ne5 14. Rb1 Rb7 15. Ne4 Nf7 16. Bd2 Re8 17. Ba5! (17.… Qxa5? 18. Nxf6 +! Bxf6 19. Rxe8 + Kg7 20. Rxc8 and wins ...) Qd7 18. Bc3 Re6 19. Qd2 Qd8 20. Ba5 Qf8 21. Bc3 d5 22. Ng3 Qd6 23. b3 Bh6 24 Rxe6 Bxe6 25. De2 Bd7 26. Re1 Bf8 27. Bb2 Bc8 28. Qd2 Kg7 29.Ba3 Qd8 30. Qc3 Rb5 31. d4 Da5 32. Qxa5 Rxa5 33.Bxc5 Bxc5 34. dxc5 Kf8 35. Nd4 Nd8 36. Nge2 Rxc5 37.Nf4 Bd7 38. f3 Ta5 39. a4 c5 40.Nde6 + Nxe6 41.Nxe6 + Kg8 42.Nc7 d4 43.Ne6 c4 44.Nxd4 Kf7 45. Kf2 h5 46. h4 Rd5 47. Ke3 g5 48. g3 Re5 + 49 Kf2 cxb3 50. cxb3 Rxe1 51. Kxe1 Ke7 52. Kd2 Kd6 53. Kd3 Ke5 54. a5 a6 55. b4 Kd5 56. Kc3 gxh4 57. gxh4 Ke5 58. Kc4 Kd6 59. b5 axb5 + 60. Nxb5 + Ke5 61 Bc8 62. Kb6 Bh3 63. a6 Bg2 64. f4 + Kxf4 65. Nd6 f5 66. Nb7 Kg3 67. a7 f4 68. a8 = Q f3 69. Qb8 + 1: 0

Works

Web links

Commons : Hans-Joachim Hecht  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Dombrowsky: At 80 you still have dreams . In: de.chessbase.com. January 29, 2019, accessed September 20, 2019.
  2. Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002 . Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 76.
  3. German individual youth championships 1958 in Hitzacker on TeleSchess
  4. ^ Cross table and all 270 games of the German championship 1970 on TeleSchach
  5. German individual chess championship 1963 in Bad Pyrmont on TeleSchach (cross table and games)
  6. German individual chess championship 1967 in Kiel on TeleSchach (cross table and games)
  7. Hans-Joachim Hecht's results at the Chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
  8. Hans-Joachim Hecht's results at team world championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  9. Hans-Joachim Hecht's results at the European Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  10. 2nd International German Individual Chess Championship 1973 in Dortmund on TeleSchach
  11. Hans-Joachim Hecht's results at European Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)
  12. Honors in the field of the German Chess Federation. In: schachbund.de. German Chess Federation V., accessed July 4, 2013 .
  13. ^ DWZ evaluation of the Senior World Championship 2005 archive of the German Chess Federation
  14. 15th Senior World Chess Championship 2005 in Lignano (Italy) on TeleSchach
  15. Numbers according to FIDE Elo lists. Data sources: fide.com (period since 2001), olimpbase.org (period 1971 to 2001)