MarketViktors Pupols
Company Profile

Viktors Pupols

Viktors Pūpols is a Latvian-born American chess master. A refugee who fled Soviet-occupied Latvia at age ten in the final days of World War II, he immigrated to the United States after five years in displaced persons camps in Germany and settled in Washington State in 1953.

Early life
He learned chess at age seven after discovering a chess set while rummaging through a cabinet; his father showed him how the pieces moved and left it at that. He grew up under successive occupations: first Soviet (1940-1941), then Nazi German (1941-1944), then Soviet again. On June 14, 1941, Soviet authorities deported approximately 30,000 residents of Riga. As the war ended in 1945, Pūpols and his family fled westward to avoid the returning Soviet forces. On May 8, 1945, the last day of the war in Europe, ten-year-old Pūpols reached Allied lines on foot, roughly half an hour ahead of Soviet troops, wearing a winter coat and carrying everything he owned. He spent the next five years in displaced persons camps in Allied-occupied Germany before immigrating to the United States by steamship. After initially settling in Nebraska, his family relocated to Washington State in 1953, drawn by the milder climate. == Chess career ==
Chess career
Pūpols first competed in the Washington State Championship in 1954. Entirely self-taught, he developed his game while working multiple jobs and without access to formal coaching or the chess infrastructure available on the East Coast. That same year, he drove to the U.S. Junior Championship in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he defeated twelve-year-old Bobby Fischer using the Latvian Gambit. Fischer, who was staying with the tournament organizer's family, lost on time, one of only two occasions this occurred in his career. Pūpols later recalled that Fischer "looked like he might be close to" crying after the loss. He won the Eastern Washington Open in both 1956 and 2005, a span of 49 years between titles. Pūpols has competed in 24 U.S. states and four foreign countries. He has victories against grandmasters Arthur Bisguier and Pal Benko, and wins and draws against Walter Browne. He faced Viktor Korchnoi in Las Vegas, losing quickly after arriving exhausted from a hiking trip in the Grand Canyon. He earned the FIDE Candidate Master title on May 25, 1992, and the USCF Life Master title on April 4, 1994. == Last Exit on Brooklyn and Seirawan ==
Last Exit on Brooklyn and Seirawan
From the late 1960s, Pūpols was a regular at the Last Exit on Brooklyn, a coffeehouse in Seattle's University District known as an informal gathering place for chess players, activists, and academics. He would drive in from Kitsap County specifically to play there. In the early 1970s, a teenage Yasser Seirawan began appearing at the Last Exit, bicycling over from Garfield High School. Pūpols later recalled teasing the younger player by pretending not to see him, joking, "Did you hear something? Was it under a table?" Seirawan was unfazed and learned quickly. Pūpols estimates he played more games with Seirawan than anyone else and recorded more wins against him than any other opponent, though these came during Seirawan's developmental years. A photograph of Pūpols and Seirawan appeared on the cover of Northwest Chess in January 1975; the two recreated the pose at the 2012 U.S. Open. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Pūpols met his wife, Deborah, at the Last Exit on Brooklyn, where she worked. She later sought employment at his business in Kitsap County, where he recognized her and hired her. They married after both had ended previous marriages. He has been a member of the Tacoma Chess Club since the 1950s, winning the club championship in 1955. He is affectionately known as "Uncle Vik" among Pacific Northwest chess players. == References ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com