Walther three times won the Swiss Confederation Chess Championships (1949, 1957, 1971). In 1965, he was the best in the Swiss Cup. In 1965, he won first place in the
Swiss Chess Championship, but lost additional match. Between 1953 and 2007, he participated in the Swiss team championships with one club - Zürich Chess Club, which is considered to be an unparalleled record in Swiss chess history. In 1968, he won the Swiss Chess Team Championship with his club. He became more widely known for his participation in the
Zürich International Chess Tournament of 1959. Although Walther shared only 13th place (behind winner
Mikhail Tal), he played a drawn game with future World Chess Champion
Bobby Fischer, in which Fischer only just managed to save a lost game, partly by exploiting of the possibilities of an
endgame with opposite colored bishops two pawns down. In 1969, Fischer included this game in his book
My 60 Memorable Games, admitting he was tempted to resign at move 37. Walther played for Switzerland in the
Chess Olympiads: • In 1954, at second reserve board in the
11th Chess Olympiad in
Amsterdam (+8, =3, -2) and won individual silver medal, • In 1956, at third board in the
12th Chess Olympiad in
Moscow (+8, =5, -4), • In 1958, at fourth board in the
13th Chess Olympiad in
Munich (+6, =5, -3), • In 1964, at fourth board in the
16th Chess Olympiad in
Tel Aviv (+9, =1, -4), • In 1966, at second board in the
17th Chess Olympiad in
Havana (+8, =3, -5), • In 1968, at reserve board in the
18th Chess Olympiad in
Lugano (+4, =1, -5). He also played for Switzerland in the Clare Benedict Chess Cups (1958-1961, 1963-1966, 1968, 1971-1972). In team competition he won gold (1958) and bronze (1960) medals but in individual competition he won two gold (1961, 1963) medals. In later years, Walther actively participated in correspondence chess tournaments. He won the
Goldenen Springer tournament (196/7-1971) and the Swiss Correspondence Chess Championship. He successfully participated in the
8th World Correspondence Chess Championship semi-final, where he shared 1st-2nd place, but in the championship final (1975–80) he shared 11th-12th place. In 1978, Edgar Walther was awarded the International Correspondence Chess Master (ICM) title. ==References==