Become a Member
Obituaries

Boris Spassky, chess grandmaster who played the ‘game of the century’, dies aged 88

One of the sport’s first mainstream stars, his reported Jewishness remains an enigma

February 28, 2025 13:10
GettyImages-1346050087 (2).jpg
Soviet chess grandmaster Boris Spassky has died aged 88 (Image: Getty)

ByMenachem Wecker, Jewish News Syndicate

2 min read

Boris Spassky, the Soviet chess grandmaster famed for his part in the “game of the century”, died in Moscow on Thursday aged 88, the International Chess Federation has confirmed.

The former world number two was on the losing end of the legendary 1972 World Championship final, which saw American Bobby Fischer claim the title in a match billed as a Cold War showdown. 

Spassky was an “independent spirit and true chess artist,” who was “the first genuinely universal player”, excelling in complex and dynamic middlegame positions, according to the FIDE, chess’ international governing body.

The 1972 championship against Fischer was “one of the most iconic matches in chess history,” and “a symbol of rivalry between the United States and Soviet Union during the Cold War”, the federation added.