Győző Forintos


Győző Victor Forintos was a Hungarian chess player and by profession, an economist. He was awarded the titles International Master, in 1963, and Grandmaster, in 1974, by FIDE.
He first participated in the Hungarian championship as early as 1954 and became the national champion in 1968/9.
In tournaments he was 1st at Reggio Emilia 1962/3, 2nd at Wijk aan Zee-B 1970, 1st at Baja 1971, 3rd at Caorle 1972, 2nd at Vrnjačka Banja 1973, 2nd at Reykjavík 1974, 2nd at Novi Sad 1974, 2nd= at Lone Pine 1976, 2nd at Sarajevo 1978, and 1st= at the Perpignan Open 1987.
He played for Hungary in six Chess Olympiads. In 1958, he took an individual gold medal for his 80% score and has also won silver and bronze team medals.
As a writer on chess, he has produced two books on the opening in the English language, both co-authored by Ervin Haag: Petroff Defence, MacMillan Chess Library, 1992 and Easy Guide to the 5.Nge2 King's Indian, Everyman, 2000. The latter describes a fairly offbeat method of playing white against the King's Indian. Sometimes referred to as the 'Hungarian Attack', it is a system that Forintos has himself developed and become a leading expert on.
His daughter Gyöngyvér, also a chess player, was married to the Anglo-French grandmaster, Anthony Kosten.

Notable games

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