László Vadász
Hungarian chess player
László Vadász | |
---|---|
Vadász vs. Hans Ree (1965) | |
Country | Hungary |
Born | January 27, 1948 (1948-01-27) Kiskunfélegyháza |
Died | January 3, 2005 (2005-01-04) (aged 56) |
Title | Grandmaster (1976) |
Peak rating | 2505 (January 1978) |
László Vadász (January 27, 1948 in Kiskunfélegyháza – January 3, 2005) was a Hungarian chess player who held the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM). He was one of the strongest Hungarian players in the 1970s. In 1978 Vadász played as second reserve in the victorious Hungarian team in the Chess Olympiad of 1978, held in Buenos Aires. In 1980's his play tended to decline dramatically. His last Elo was 2271, but he was considered inactive as he did not play any Elo-rated game after the 2000/01 Hungarian Championship. Vadász reached his highest Elo number in 2505 in January 1978.[1]
References
- ^ "Vadasz, Laszlo". OlimpBase.org. Retrieved February 20, 2017.
External links
- László Vadász FIDE rating history at OlimpBase.org
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Hungarian grandmasters
Chess players for Hungary with the FIDE title of grandmaster (GM)
- Péter Ács
- Gergely Aczel
- András Adorján
- Zoltán Almási
- Emil Anka
- Gergely Antal
- Imre Balog
- Csaba Balogh
- Tamás Bánusz
- Gedeon Barcza
- László Bárczay
- Dávid Bérczes
- Ferenc Berkes
- István Bilek
- Dénes Boros [Wikidata]
- Cao Sang [Wikidata]
- István Csom
- Attila Czebe [Wikidata]
- Péter Dely
- Viktor Erdős
- Iván Faragó
- János Flesch
- András Flumbort [Wikidata]
- Tamas Fodor Jr.
- Tibor Fogarasi [Wikidata]
- Győző Forintos
- Miklos Galyas [Wikidata]
- Benjámin Gledura
- László Gonda [Wikidata]
- Attila Grószpéter
- Zoltan Gyimesi
- Imre Héra Jr. [Wikidata]
- Hoang Thanh Trang
- Karoly Honfi
- Ádám Horváth
- Csaba Horváth
- József Horváth
- Péter Horváth
- Gábor Kállai
- Gergely Kántor
- Bence Korpa [hu]
- Ádám Kozák
- Peter Leko
- Levente Lengyel
- Péter Lukács
- Géza Maróczy
- Zoltán Medvegy [Wikidata]
- Oliver Mihok [de; ru; hu]
- Gábor Nagy
- Gyula Pap
- Gábor Papp [de; fr; hu]
- József Pintér
- Judit Polgár
- Susan Polgar
- Lajos Portisch
- Péter Prohászka
- Richárd Rapport
- Zoltán Ribli
- Róbert Ruck
- Gyula Sax
- Lajos Seres [de; pl; hu]
- Krisztián Szabó
- László Szabó
- Péter Székely
- Tibor Tolnai [Wikidata]
- László Vadász
- Zoltán Varga
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- Category:Hungarian chess players
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