Alexander Kotov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alexander Alexandrowitsch Kotov (Александр Котов) (August 12, 1913January 8, 1981) was a Russian chess grandmaster and author. He was a Soviet champion, a two-time world title Candidate, and one of the greatest of all chess authors.

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Kotov was born in Tula in Russia to a large working class family. He moved to Moscow in 1939 to study engineering, and also studied chess a great deal.

While best remembered today as an author, Kotov also had a number of good results as a player. One of his best early results was his second place finish in the 1939 USSR Championship, just missing out to Mikhail Botvinnik in the final round. This result won him the Soviet Grandmaster title, the third Soviet player to hold the title after Botvinnik and Grigory Levenfish. Kotov was Moscow champion in 1941. He won the Soviet title jointly with David Bronstein in 1948, and won at Venice in 1950, ahead of Vasily Smyslov.

He was granted the title of International Grandmaster in 1951 by the World Chess Federation. In the first ever Candidates Tournament of 1950 (the tournament to determine who challenges the World Champion, who at the time was Botvinnik) held in Budapest, he scored 8.5/18. He had qualified for the event by finishing fourth in the 1948 Interzonal Tournament in Stockholm, scoring 11.5/19.

Perhaps his best result came at the 1952 Saltsjobaden Interzonal, which he won with a score of 16.5/20, three clear points ahead of Tigran Petrosian and Mark Taimanov in second place, and without losing a game. In the following Candidates Tournament in Zürich, he scored 14/28, and was the only person to win a game against the tournament's winner, Smyslov.

Kotov played for the USSR at the Chess Olympiads of 1952 and 1954, contributing to team gold medal victories. He was the second reserve board both times; at Helsinki 1952 he scored 2/3, while at Amsterdam 1954, he made 4/6. After 1960, all the tournaments he took part in were outside the USSR. They included a shared first place with Svetozar Gligorić at Hastings in 1962, half a point ahead of Smyslov. He played in very few tournaments in his later years.

Kotov was a great admirer of World Champion Alexander Alekhine, and wrote a comprehensive four-volume autobiographical series of books on his life and career, which were published between 1953 and 1958. The work significantly contributed to Alekhine's rehabilitation in the Soviet Union.

His trilogy of books Think Like a Grandmaster, Play Like a Grandmaster, and Train Like a Grandmaster, are his best known, with Think Like a Grandmaster, which was translated from the Russian by Bernard Cafferty, and published by Batsford in 1971 being particularly famous. The book is not concerned with advising where pieces should be placed on the board, or tactical motifs, but rather with the method of thinking that should be employed during a game. Kotov's advice to identify candidate moves and methodically examine them to build up an "analysis tree" remains well known today.

Kotov contributed to the Yugoslav series Encyclopedia of Chess Openings {ECO}, which began in 1974, and to the associated games book series Chess Informator as an analyst.

The importance and breadth of Kotov's work as a chess author ranks him among the all-time greats in this field.

Kotov developed a sharp style, was definitely not afraid of complications on the chessboard, and willingly entered into them against even the greatest of opponents. He favoured the Closed Openings with White, and was a terror with the Sicilian Defence as Black.

  • Alexander Alekhine by Alexander Kotov, four volumes, Moscow, 1953-1958.
  • The Art of the Middle Game, by Paul Keres and Alexander Kotov (translated from the Russian by Harry Golombek), London, Dover 1962, ISBN 0486261549
  • Think Like a Grandmaster, by Alexander Kotov (translated from the Russian by Bernard Cafferty), London, Batsford 1971, {Algebraic Edition 2003) ISBN 0713478853
  • Plan Like a Grandmaster, by Alexander Kotov (translated from the Russian by Bernard Cafferty), London, Batsford 1973, {Algebraic Edition 2003} ISBN 0713418079
  • World Championship Interzonals: Leningrad -- Petropolis 1973, by R.G. Wade, L.S. Blackstock, and Alexander Kotov, New York, RHM Chess Publishing 1974, ISBN 0213428512
  • Train Like a Grandmaster, by Alexander Kotov (translated from the Russian by Bernard Cafferty), London, Batsford 1981, ISBN 0713436099
  • Grandmaster at Work, by Alexander Kotov (first English edition), Macon, American Chess Promotions 1990, ISBN 0939298864
  • The Soviet School of Chess, by Alexander Kotov and Mikhail Yudovich, Los Angeles, University Press of the Pacific 2001, ISBN 0898754151

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