Edition | Date | Place | Winner | Score | Notes |
1 | 4–24 Oct 1920 | Moscow |
Alexander Alekhine | 12/15 (+9−0=6) |
Known as the All-Russian Chess Olympiad at the time, this tournament was later recognized as the first USSR championship. |
2 | 8–24 Jul 1923 | Petrograd |
Peter Romanovsky | 10/12 (+9−1=2) |
|
3 | 23 Aug–15 Sep 1924 | Moscow |
Efim Bogoljubov | 15/17 (+13−0=4) |
|
4 | 11 Aug–6 Sep 1925 | Leningrad |
Efim Bogoljubov | 14/19 (+11−2=6) |
|
5 | 26 Sep–25 Oct 1927 | Moscow |
Fedor Bogatyrchuk Peter Romanovsky |
14½/20 (+10−1=9) 14½/20 (+12−3=5) |
All of Bogatyrchuk's tournament results were erased from Soviet records after he emigrated to Canada and was declared a nonperson. |
6 | 2–20 Sep 1929 | Odessa |
Boris Verlinsky | 5½/8 (+4−1=3), 4/5 (+4−1=0), and 3½/4 (+3−0=1) |
The tournament was conducted in three stages. |
7 | 10 Oct–11 Nov 1931 | Moscow |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 13½/17 (+12−2=3) |
|
8 | 16 Aug–9 Sep 1933 | Leningrad |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 14/19 (+11−2=6) |
|
9 | 7 Dec 1934–2 Jan 1935 | Leningrad |
Grigory Levenfish Ilya Rabinovich |
12/19 (+8−3=8) 12/19 (+9−4=6) |
|
10 | 12 Apr–14 May 1937 | Tbilisi |
Grigory Levenfish | 12½/19 (+9−3=7) |
|
11 | 15 Apr–16 May 1939 | Leningrad |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 12½/17 (+8−0=9) |
|
12 | 5 Sep–3 Oct 1940 | Moscow |
Andor Lilienthal Igor Bondarevsky |
13½/19 (+8−0=11) 13½/19 (+10−2=7) |
Mikhail Botvinnik won the Absolute Championship, 23 Mar–29 Apr 1941, Leningrad/Moscow, 13½/20 (+9−2=9) |
13 | 21 May–17 Jun 1944 | Moscow |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 12½/16 (+11−2=3) |
|
14 | 1 Jun–3 Jul 1945 | Moscow |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 15/17 (+13−0=4) |
|
15 | 2 Feb–8 Mar 1947 | Leningrad |
Paul Keres | 14/19 (+10−1=8) |
|
16 | 10 Nov–13 Dec 1948 | Moscow |
David Bronstein Alexander Kotov |
12/18 (+7−1=10) 12/18 (+10−4=4) |
|
17 | 16 Oct–20 Nov 1949 | Moscow |
Vasily Smyslov David Bronstein |
13/19 (+9−2=8) 13/19 (+8−1=10) |
|
18 | 10 Nov–12 Dec 1950 | Moscow |
Paul Keres | 11½/17 (+8−2=7) |
|
19 | 11 Nov–14 Dec 1951 | Moscow |
Paul Keres | 12/17 (+9−2=6) |
|
20 | 29 Nov–29 Dec 1952 | Moscow |
Mikhail Botvinnik | 13½/19 (+9−1=9) |
Botvinnik defeated Mark Taimanov in a playoff +2−1=3.[1] |
21 | 7 Jan–7 Feb 1954 | Kiev |
Yuri Averbakh | 14½/19 (+10−0=9) |
|
22 | 11 Feb–15 Mar 1955 | Moscow |
Efim Geller | 12/19 (+10−5=4) |
Geller defeated Vasily Smyslov in a playoff +1=6.[2] |
23 | 10 Jan–15 Feb 1956 | Leningrad |
Mark Taimanov | 11½/17 (+8−2=7) |
Taimanov defeated Boris Spassky and Yuri Averbakh in a playoff. |
24 | 20 Jan–22 Feb 1957 | Moscow |
Mikhail Tal | 14/21 (+9−2=10) |
|
25 | 12 Jan–14 Feb 1958 | Riga |
Mikhail Tal | 12½/18 (+10−3=5) |
|
26 | 9 Jan–11 Feb 1959 | Tbilisi |
Tigran Petrosian | 13½/19 (+8−0=11) |
|
27 | 26 Jan–26 Feb 1960 | Leningrad |
Viktor Korchnoi | 14/19 (+12−3=4) |
|
28 | 11 Jan–11 Feb 1961 | Moscow |
Tigran Petrosian | 13½/19 (+9−1=9) |
|
29 | 16 Nov–12 Dec 1961 | Baku |
Boris Spassky | 14½/20 (+10−1=9) |
|
30 | 21 Nov–20 Dec 1962 | Yerevan |
Viktor Korchnoi | 14/19 (+10−1=8) |
|
31 | 23 Nov–27 Dec 1963 | Leningrad |
Leonid Stein | 12/19 (+6−1=12) |
Stein defeated Boris Spassky and Ratmir Kholmov in a playoff. |
32 | 25 Dec 1964–27 Jan 1965 | Kiev |
Viktor Korchnoi | 15/19 (+11−0=8) |
|
33 | 21 Nov–24 Dec 1965 | Tallinn |
Leonid Stein | 14/19 (+10−1=8) |
|
34 | 28 Dec 1966 – 2 Feb 1967 | Tbilisi |
Leonid Stein | 13/20 (+8−2=10) |
|
35 | 7–26 Dec 1967 | Kharkiv |
Lev Polugaevsky Mikhail Tal | 10/13 10/13 |
The tournament was a 126-player Swiss. |
36 | 30 Dec 1968–1 Feb 1969 | Alma-Ata |
Lev Polugaevsky Alexander Zaitsev |
12½/19 (+7−1=11) 12½/19 (+6=13) |
Polugaevsky defeated Zaitsev in a playoff +2−1=3.[3] |
37 | 6 Sep–12 Oct 1969 | Moscow |
Tigran Petrosian | 14/22 (+6−0=16) |
Petrosian defeated Polugaevsky in a playoff held in Feb 1970 by +2=3.[4] |
38 | 25 Nov–28 Dec 1970 | Riga |
Viktor Korchnoi | 16/21 (+12−1=8) |
|
39 | 15 Sep–17 Oct 1971 | Leningrad |
Vladimir Savon | 15/21 (+9−0=12) |
|
40 | 16 Nov–19 Dec 1972 | Baku |
Mikhail Tal | 15/21 (+9−0=12) |
|
41 | 1–27 Oct 1973 | Moscow |
Boris Spassky | 11½/17 (+7−1=9) |
|
42 | 30 Nov–23 Dec 1974 | Leningrad |
Alexander Beliavsky Mikhail Tal | 9½/15 (+6−2=7) 9½/15 (+6−2=7) |
|
43 | 28 Nov–22 Dec 1975 | Yerevan |
Tigran Petrosian | 10/15 (+6−1=8) |
|
44 |
26 Nov–24 Dec 1976 | Moscow |
Anatoly Karpov | 12/17 (+8−1=8) |
|
45 | 28 Nov–22 Dec 1977 | Leningrad |
Boris Gulko Iosif Dorfman | 9½/15 (+4−0=11) 9½/15 (+4−0=11) |
A playoff, held in 1978, was drawn +1−1=4.[5] |
46 | 1–28 Dec 1978 | Tbilisi |
Mikhail Tal Vitaly Tseshkovsky |
11/17 (+5−0=12) 11/17 (+6−1=10) |
|
47 | 29 Nov–27 Dec 1979 | Minsk |
Efim Geller | 11½/17 (+6−0=11) |
|
48 | 25 Dec 1980–21 Jan 1981 | Vilnius |
Lev Psakhis Alexander Beliavsky |
10½/17 (+8−4=5) 10½/17 (+6−2=9) |
|
49 | 27 Nov–22 Dec 1981 | Frunze |
Garry Kasparov Lev Psakhis |
12½/17 (+10−2=5) 12½/17 (+9−1=7) |
|
50 | 2–28 Apr 1983 | Moscow |
Anatoly Karpov | 9½/15 (+5−1=9) |
|
51 | 2–28 Apr 1984 | Lviv |
Andrei Sokolov | 12½/17 (+8−0=9) |
|
52 | 22 Jan–19 Feb 1985 | Riga |
Viktor Gavrikov Mikhail Gurevich Alexander Chernin |
11/19 (+4−1=14) 11/19 (+6−3=10) 11/19 (+5−2=12) |
|
53 | 4–28 Feb 1986 | Kiev |
Vitaly Tseshkovsky | 11/17 (+6−1=10) |
|
54 | 4–29 Mar 1987 | Minsk |
Alexander Beliavsky | 11/17 (+7−2=8) |
Beliavsky defeated Valery Salov in a playoff +2=2.[6] |
55 | 25 Jul–19 Aug 1988 | Moscow |
Anatoly Karpov Garry Kasparov |
11½/17 (+6−0=11) 11½/17 (+6−0=11) |
|
56 | 22 Sep–16 Oct 1989 | Odessa |
Rafael Vaganian | 9/15 (+5−2=8) |
|
57 | 18 Oct–3 Nov 1990 | Leningrad |
Alexander Beliavsky Leonid Yudasin Evgeny Bareev Alexey Vyzmanavin |
8½/13 (+5−1=7) 8½/13 (+4−0=9) 8½/13 (+6−2=5) 8½/13 (+5−1=7) |
|
58 | 1–13 Nov 1991 | Moscow |
Artashes Minasian | 8½/11 (+7−1=3) |
Minasian won this Swiss-style tournament on tiebreak over Elmar Magerramov. |