Salo Flohr: the positional master who nearly became world champion
- País
- 🇨🇿 Czechoslovakia / Soviet Union
- Título
- Grandmaster (GM)
- Nacimiento
- 21 November 1908, Horodok, Galicia (today Ukraine)
- Fallecimiento
- 18 July 1983
- Estado
- fallecido
- ELO máximo
- 2650 · c. 1933-1938 (retroactive estimate)
Chess history is full of “what ifs,” and few cases are as sad as Salo Flohr’s. In the 1930s he was one of the best players in the world, a title contender, but the Great Depression and World War II stole his best years.
Who was Flohr
He was born on 21 November 1908 in Horodok, in Galicia (today Ukraine), into a Jewish family. He was orphaned young and raised by relatives. Despite the hardships, his chess talent was evident, and he soon began winning tournaments in Czechoslovakia, where he grew up.
In the 1930s he became one of the best players in the world, winning or sharing first prizes in major European tournaments and being considered the natural contender for the world championship title.
One step from the title
In 1935, negotiations began for a match against Alexander Alekhine for the World Championship. Flohr had the level; what he lacked was the money. The Great Depression made it impossible to finance a match of that scale, and the negotiations dragged on without result.
As the world began preparing for war, Flohr emigrated to the Soviet Union in 1938, where he continued his career. But the lost years and the fierce competition from young Soviet masters prevented him from regaining his peak level.
Legacy
Flohr took part in the 1948 tournament-match that decided Alekhine’s successor as world champion, but finished last. His best chess was already behind him. In later years he became a chess journalist and arbiter, roles in which he was equally respected.
His chess DNA
In our chess DNA system, Flohr represents the positional master profile: maximum soundness, flawless technique, and a consistency that compensates for a lack of aggression. If your GM twin is Flohr, your strength is not making mistakes and winning endgames that others only draw.
Keep exploring
- Alexander Alekhine, the champion he should have faced
- José Raúl Capablanca, the other great positional player of his era
- Akiba Rubinstein, another endgame master of his generation
- All players
Preguntas frecuentes
Why didn't Flohr get to play a World Championship match?
Flohr came close: in the 1930s he was one of the leading title candidates, and terms were negotiated for a match against champion Alexander Alekhine. However, the economic troubles of the Great Depression and the outbreak of World War II prevented the match from taking place. The war destroyed Flohr's best competitive years.
What playing style did Flohr have?
Flohr was a master of positional soundness and endgame technique. His style was unspectacular but enormously effective: he accumulated microscopic advantages and converted them with admirable precision. He rarely lost a game, which made him especially dangerous in long tournaments.