Joop van Oosterom

Joop van Oosterom (12 December 1937 – 22 October 2016) was a Dutch billionaire, chess and billiards sponsor, and twice correspondence chess world champion. He made his money with the Volmac Software Group.[3]

Joop van Oosterom
Full nameJoop van Oosterom
Country Netherlands
Born(1937-12-12)December 12, 1937
Hilversum, North Holland, Netherlands
Died22 October 2016 (age 78)[1]
Monaco
World ChampionWorld Correspondence Chess Champion, 2005 and 2008
FIDE rating2260 (at time of death)[2]
Peak rating2260

From 1992 to 2011 he staged the annual Melody Amber chess tournament in Monaco, where world-class Grandmasters played rapid and blindfold games. It is named after his first daughter Melody Amber. His other daughter was the eponym to the Crystal Kelly Cup, an invitational tournament for three-cushion carom billiards, which has been held between 1994 and 2011 mostly in Monte Carlo and Nice.[4]

Van Oosterom was a strong correspondence chess player, but suffered a severe brain haemorrhage in 1993. Nevertheless, he concluded the world correspondence chess championship successfully and became the 18th World Champion in Correspondence Chess in 2005. This achievement, however, has been criticized, as at the time of the championship van Oosterom had hired the strong grandmaster Jeroen Piket as his personal secretary. Earlier, van Oosterom had had two Dutch International Masters on his payroll whose job was to analyse his correspondence games. Chess author Tim Krabbé wrote: "The Turk was operated by William Schlumberger, Mephisto was operated by Isidore Gunsberg, Ajeeb was operated by Harry Pillsbury and Joop van Oosterom is operated by Jeroen Piket."[5] Van Oosterom also won the 21st World Championship Final in Correspondence Chess in 2008.

In February 2017 it was announced that van Oosterom had died in October 2016. No cause of death was announced and it is not clear why it was kept secret.[6]

Notes

  1. Johan Hut, Schaaksite.nl 19 Febr. 2017
  2. https://www.chess.com/news/view/joop-van-oosterom-1937-2016-4924
  3. Pein, Malcolm (18 February 2005). "Van Oosterom unbeaten". Telegraph.co.uk.
  4. Frits Bakker (2011-06-20). "Crystal Kelly Cup: Farewell to a phenomenon". Kozoom.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-09. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
  5. Wereldkampioen delegeren, by Tim Krabbé, originally published in the Algemeen Dagblad, April 2, 2005.
  6. http://nos.nl/artikel/2156440-mysterie-rond-dood-miljardair-en-schaakmecenas-van-oosterom.html
Preceded by
Ivar Bern
World Correspondence Chess Champion
2003–2004
Succeeded by
Christophe Léotard
Preceded by
Pertti Lehikoinen
World Correspondence Chess Champion
2008-2010
Succeeded by
Aleksandr Surenovich Dronov
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