The list of the International Masters of the Year 1984 lists all chess players who received the title of International Masters in 1984 from the World Chess Federation FIDE . A total of 72 players were honored, including a woman, Zsuzsa Polgár . 23 of the 72 players later achieved the grandmaster title.
Legend
The table contains the following information:
Name : gives the name of the player.
Country : The country for which the player was eligible to play in 1984.
Born : states the player's date of birth.
Died : states the player's death date.
GM : Indicates the year of award for players who were later promoted to grandmasters.
list
Surname
Born
Died
country
GM
Zurab Asmaiparashvili
March 16, 1960
Soviet Union
1988
Dan Barbulescu
06/23/1964
Romania
Dibyendu Barua
October 27, 1966
India
1991
Thomas Casper
03/17/1960
Germany
Alexander Cherepkov
10/30/1920
07/12/2009
Soviet Union
Roberto Cifuentes Parada
December 21, 1957
Spain
1991
Mark Condie
02/12/1965
Scotland
John Cooper
05/14/1954
Wales
Frans Cuijpers
04/12/1962
Netherlands
David Cummings
01/24/1962
England
Marcos Paolozzi Da Cunha
05/11/1960
Brazil
Silvio Danailow
04/21/1961
Bulgaria
Milan Draško
December 06, 1962
Yugoslavia
1993
Vereslav Ingorn
11/23/1956
Soviet Union
1986
Holger Eng
02/27/1961
Germany
Levon Eolian
09/16/1959
Soviet Union
Thomas Ernst
08/17/1960
Sweden
1990
Branko Filipovic
10/06/1957
Yugoslavia
Gyula Forgacs
03.03.1958
Hungary
Jens Ove Fries Nielsen
02/23/1960
Denmark
Julio Ernesto Granda Zúñiga
02/25/1967
Peru
1986
Juan Mario Gómez Esteban
02/15/1958
Spain
2004
Efstratios Grivas
03/30/1966
Greece
1993
Ronny Gunawan
03/01/1960
Indonesia
Marek Hawelko
08/10/1959
Poland
Rodrigo Hernandez Fierro
12/12/1958
Colombia
Jóhann Hjartarson
02/08/1963
Iceland
1985
Gregory Hjorth
06/14/1963
13/01/2011
Australia
József Horváth
08/13/1964
Hungary
1990
Ramon Huerta
05/12/1951
Cuba
Dusan Indjic
01/14/1960
Yugoslavia
Before that, Komljenovic
07/01/1944
Yugoslavia
1995
Anthony costs
07/24/1958
France
1990
Geoff W. Lawton
04/04/1960
England
Jonathan Levitt
06/03/1963
England
1994
Chee-Meng Jimmy Liew
11/19/1958
Malaysia
Živojin Ljubisavljevic
06/25/1941
Yugoslavia
Volodymyr Malanyuk
07/21/1957
07/02/2017
Soviet Union
1987
Thierry Manouck
05/13/1957
France
Ioan Marasescu
10/06/1958
Romania
Andrew David Martin
05/18/1957
England
Colin McNab
02/03/1961
Scotland
1992
Csaba Meleghegyi
09/15/1941
09/11/2004
Hungary
Gilberto Milos
10/30/1963
Brazil
1988
Slobodan Mirkovic
07/28/1958
Yugoslavia
Thomas Pähtz
09/04/1956
Germany
1991
Krzysztof Panczyk
07/14/1958
Poland
Dragan Paunovic
11/08/1961
05/19/2016
Yugoslavia
2007
Renato Pereira
07/18/1945
07/11/2018
Portugal
Daniel M. Rodriguez Pineda
11/27/1951
Spain
Zsuzsa Polgár
04/19/1969
Hungary
1991
Igor Polovodin
03/23/1955
06/22/2005
Soviet Union
Janos Rigo
10/28/1948
Hungary
Wet Saeed
December 15, 1965
United Arab Emirates
Valery Salov
May 26, 1964
Soviet Union
1986
Marc Santo Roman
09/13/1960
France
1996
Attila Schneider
04/14/1955
07/07/2003
Hungary
Jonathan Schroer
06/16/1963
United States
Luis Sieiro Gonzalez
06/01/1955
Cuba
Ervin Sindik
02/02/1953
Yugoslavia
Nikolaos Skalkotas
09/21/1949
Greece
Petr Spacek
02/26/1954
Czechoslovakia
Kazimierz Steczkowski
October 29, 1947
France
Pavel Stempin
07/13/1959
Poland
Artur Sygulski
07/22/1960
Poland
Jozsef Tabor
04/03/1936
Hungary
Roman Tomaszewski
May 16, 1960
Poland
Endre Vegh
December 20, 1957
Hungary
Thomas Welin
05.09.1959
Sweden
Michael Wiedenkeller
01/10/1963
Sweden
Jouni Yrjölä
October 24, 1959
Finland
1990
Beat Züger
06/03/1961
Switzerland
See also
literature
Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924–2002 , Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002
Gino Di Felice: Chess International Titleholders, 1950–2016 , McFarland & Co., 2017. ISBN 978-1476671321 .
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