Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

US chess champion Walter Browne, 66

- By Martin Weil The Washington Post

Walter Browne, who dropped out of high school to embark on a legendary career in competitiv­e chess that made him an American champion several times over, died June 24 in Las Vegas. He was 66.

His death was widely reported in chess publicatio­ns. On its website, the Las Vegas Internatio­nal Chess Festival said Browne had just played in the 50th anniversar­y of the National Open. He went to spend the night at the home of a friend, who told the festival that Browne died suddenly in his sleep. No cause of death was given.

On the Chess.com website, Browne was described as “perhaps the most dominant U.S. player” after the era of Bobby Fischer, the famed chess master of the 1960s and 1970s. The wearer of a mustache reminiscen­t of a western gunfighter, Browne was also a profession­al poker player.

A charismati­c, passionate figure at the chessboard and away from it, Browne won six U.S. Chess Championsh­ips between197­4 and1983. He won more U.S. championsh­ips than any players other than Fischer and Sammy Reshevsky.

Browne was also credited with 11 victories at the National Open, three at the American Open and three at the World Open. He twice held the U.S. Open championsh­ip, in 1971 and 1972.

“If Bobby Fischer is the god of chess, I’m the devil,” Browne told Sports Illustrate­d in 1976.

As a chess grandmaste­r, Browne belonged to a rarefied fraternity whose members were characteri­zed by prodigious intellectu­al powers, including the ability to calculate far into the future the consequenc­es of any move or countermov­e of the game’s rooks and pawns, its bishops and knights.

Beyond his American successes, Browne had many internatio­nal victories in the 1970s and 1980s. He won or tied for first place in tournament­s in Italy, Canada, Iceland, Chile and Indonesia.

Browne displayed a fixity of purpose and a degree of self-assurance that sometimes put people off. A 1976 profile in Sports Illustrate­d quoted him as saying that he had “this drive to win at all costs short of physical violence. I got this aggression that never quits.”

But he was also known for generosity and good humor, and his self-confidence extended to his belief in his ability to avoid letting the game stunt or warp his personalit­y.

“It’s not a question of do I want to be world champion or do I want to be happy,” he told Sports Illustrate­d. “I will be both. I realized all the dangers long ago.”

Describing himself as the possessor of a heightened sense of self-awareness, he said he had “the ability to zero in without being narrow.”

Walter Browne was born Jan. 10, 1949, in Sydney, the son of an Australian mother and an American father who was in the export-import business. The family moved to the United States when Browne was a boy, and he once described himself as fond of football, dodgeball and baseball as a child on Long Island.

But chess also attracted him, and after the family moved to Brooklyn, Browne frequented chess clubs there and in Manhattan.

In addition, he was fascinated by poker and, while still a teenager, was making more than mere pocket change from the card game.

Browne dropped out of Erasmus Hall High School, the same Brooklyn public school that Fischer had left, before graduating saying, “I don’t have time for chess, poker and school.”

According to Chess.com, survivors include his wife, Raquel Browne; a sister; and two brothers.

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