Milko Bobotsov

{{Short description|Bulgarian chess grandmaster (1931–2000)}}

{{Infobox chess player

| image = Milko Bobotsov 1966.jpg

| caption = Bobotsov in 1966

| country = Bulgaria

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1931|9|30}}

| birth_place = Plovdiv, Bulgaria

| death_date = {{death date and age|2000|4|3|1931|9|30}}

| death_place = Sofia, Bulgaria

| title = Grandmaster (1961)

| peakrating = 2485 (July 1971)

| peakranking = No. 96 (July 1971)

}}

Milko Georgiev Bobotsov ({{langx|bg|Милко Георгиев Бобоцов}}; 30 September 1931, in Plovdiv – 3 April 2000, in Sofia, Bulgaria[http://more.info.bg/old/2000/br683/rub03.asp#18 Почина Милко Бобоцов] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706143303/http://more.info.bg/old/2000/br683/rub03.asp |date=2011-07-06 }}. info.bg (4 April 2000)) was the first Bulgarian to attain the chess title of Grandmaster, achieving this title in 1961. Prior to gaining the title he won the Bulgarian national championship in 1958. Probably his best result was equal second at the powerful Alekhine Memorial tournament in Moscow in 1967. Other successes included first or shared first places at Varna 1957, Pécs (Asztalos Memorial) 1964 and Sarajevo, Bosna 1971.

He was not a full-time chess player, working as an instructor of gymnastics for several years before suffering a near-fatal stroke in 1972 that severely curtailed his chess and other activities. However, after 18 years of inactivity, he participated in a tournament in Iran in 1991. He was married to the Woman Grandmaster Antonia Ivanova.

File:Milko Bobotsov 1965.jpg

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book | author=Golombek, Harry (ed.) | title=Golombek's Encyclopedia of Chess | publisher=Crown Publishers | year=1977 | isbn=0-517-53146-1}}