Anatoly Avraamowitsch Bychowski
Anatoly Bychowski, 2015 |
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Association |
Soviet Union (until 1991) Russia (since 1992)
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Born | April 30, 1934 Izhevsk |
title | International champion (1982) |
Current Elo rating | 2354 (October 2019) |
Best Elo rating | 2445 (July 1982 to July 1991) |
Tab at the FIDE (English) |
Anatoly Avraamowitsch Bychowski ( Russian Анатолий Авраамович Быховский , with the World Chess Federation FIDE Anatoly A Bykhovsky ; born April 30, 1934 in Ischewsk ) is a Russian chess player and coach.
Life
Bychowski spent the first ten years of his life in Izhevsk, Moscow and Molotov . After that, he returned to Moscow with his family. He attended the chess section in the pioneer house and was a member of the Moscow youth team. In the semifinals of the Moscow City Championship in 1958, he met the norm for the title of Master of Sports of the USSR . The city championship of Moscow in 1963, which was held as the quarter-finals of the Soviet championship, he won with 9.5 points out of 14. In a tournament of the sports association Burewestnik he qualified for the final of the Soviet championship in 1965 in Tallinn . There he shared tenth place with Viktor Korchnoi and Wladimir Simagin with 9 points out of 19 . Bychowski also took part in some international tournaments (Moscow 1962, Belgrade 1963, Kislowodsk 1964, Belgrade 1967) in the 1960s . The FIDE did not award him the title of International Master until 1982, the norms for it he achieved at tournaments in Reggio Emilia 1978/79 (2nd place behind Ralf Hess) and 1981/82 (3rd place behind Arne Dür and Rafael Vaganian ).
In 1956 Bychowski graduated from the NE Bauman Higher Technical School in Moscow, and then worked at a research institute. From 1967 until the dissolution of the Soviet Union, he was the head coach of the Soviet youth team. He was instrumental in the organization of the pioneer friendships Belaya Ladja and the tournaments of the pioneer palaces. In recognition of his achievements, he was honored with the title of Honored Coach of the USSR in 1975 and the Medal of Honor in 1981 . Bychowski has held the title of International Referee since 1993 . As a trainer, he worked with Alexander Grishchuk and Boris Gratschow in the 1990s . Bychowski has been chairman of the coaching council in the Russian Chess Federation since 2003 .
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Private
His father Abram (Avraam) Bychowski (1895–1972) held managerial positions in the armaments industry, including as director of the Ishstal factory in Izhevsk. For his work he was awarded the title Hero of Socialist Labor , the Suvorov Order of the First Class and several Orders of Lenin .
literature
- Anatoli Karpow et al .: Chess - encyclopedic dictionary , Sowjetskaja enzyklopedija, Moscow 1990, ISBN 5-85270-005-3 , p. 51 (Russian)
Web links
- Replayable chess games by Anatoli Awraamowitsch Bychowski on 365Chess.com (English)
- Anatoli Bychowski on ruchess.ru (Russian)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Numbers according to FIDE Elo lists. Data sources: fide.com (period since 2001), olimpbase.org (period 1971 to 2001)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Bychowski, Anatoly Avraamowitsch |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Быховский, Анатолий Авраамович (Russian); Bykhovsky, Anatoly A (FIDE) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian chess player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 30, 1934 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Izhevsk |