Yuri Sergeyevich Rasuwajew

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Yuri Razuvaev 1975.jpg
Yuri Rasuwajew, 1975
Association RussiaRussia Russia
Born October 10, 1945
Moscow
Died March 21, 2012
Moscow
title International Master (1973)
Grand Master (1976)
Best Elo rating 2590 (July 1991)

Juri Sergejewitsch Rasuwajew ( Russian Юрий Сергеевич Разуваев ; scientific transliteration Jurij Sergeevič Razuvaev ; born October 10, 1945 in Moscow ; † March 21, 2012 ibid) was a Russian chess grandmaster and trainer , journalist and historian .

Career

Success as a player

He received the title of International Master in 1973 and the title of Grand Master in 1976. He won the tournaments of Dubna 1976, Polanica Zdroj 1979, Keszthely 1981, Dortmund 1985, Jurmala 1987, Pula 1988, Protvino 1988, Reykjavík 1990, Leningrad 1992, Tiraspol 1994 , Reggio Emilia 1996 and San Sebastian 1996. In the second match between the USSR and the rest of the world in 1984, he played four draws against Robert Huebner on board 8 .

His last Elo rating was 2540, and he played the last rated game in 2001.

societies

As a teenager Rasuwajew played for Trud Moscow, with whom he won the 1964 Soviet club championship. In the 1970s Rasuwajew played for the team from Burevestnik Moscow, with which he was Soviet club champions in 1974 and 1976 and won the European Club Cup in 1976 and 1979 and in 1982 reached the final of the competition. He later played for Lokomotiv, with whom he also took part in the European Club in 1990, but failed in the second round. In the German Bundesliga he played for SF Dortmund-Brackel from 1990 to 1992, and in Austria he was registered for SK Merkur Graz from 1994 to 1997. While he was in the state league A without use, he took part with the Grazers in the European Club Cup 1997 and reached fifth place. The Hungarian team championship won Rasuwajew 2001 with the Miskolci SSC.

Chess training

Rasuwajew was assistant coach for two ex- world champions : from 1969 to 1974 with Mikhail Botvinnik and from 1978 to 1982 with Vasily Smyslow . Together with Semjon Furman , he supervised Anatoly Karpov from 1973 to 1978 . From 1982 to 1994 he was chairman of the coaching committee of the Russian Chess Federation. Since 1998 he has chaired the FIDE coaching committee and in this role dealt with the worldwide organization of the training of chess coaches. From 2004 he held the title of FIDE Senior Trainer . Among his students were Alexandra Kostenjuk and Evgeni Tomaschewski .

Rasuwajew wrote several chess books with various co-authors : 1980 a game collection by Akiba Rubinstein , 1981 together with Gennadi Nessis a work on the transition from middle game to endgame, which appeared in 1982 in German translation under the title The Art of Simplification, Volume 1 , and 1984 an English opening monograph, along with Anatoly Mazukewitsch the anti-Sicilian and 2006 a work on Gambit -Eröffnungen gambits - properly played .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ушел из жизни Юрий Разуваев
  2. Yuri Rasuwajew (1945-2012) - By Dagobert Kohlmeyer
  3. ^ Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002 . Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 76
  4. Dortmund Chess Days - overview and reports from 1973
  5. a b Yuri Rasuwajew's results at Soviet club championships on olimpbase.org (English)
  6. a b Yuri Rasuwajew's results at European Club Cups on olimpbase.org (English)