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{{family name hatnote|Lvovich|Averbakh|lang=Eastern Slavic}}
{{Short description|Russian chess player and author (born 1922)}}
{{chess notation}}
{{Short description| Russian chess grandmaster}}
{{Infobox chess player
{{Infobox chess player
|name = Yuri Averbakh
|name = Yuri Averbakh
|image = AwerbakhYuri2002.jpg
|image = Yuriy Averbakh 1963.jpg
|caption = Averbakh at his 80th birthday
|caption = Averbakh in 1963
|full_name = Yuri Lvovich Averbakh
|country = Russia
|country = Soviet Union → Russia
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1922|2|8}}
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1922|2|8|df=y}}
|birth_place = [[Kaluga]], Russia
|birth_place = [[Kaluga]], [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian SFSR]] (Present-day [[Kaluga]], [[Russia]])<!-- Soviet Union not formally existed until 31 December 2022 -->
|death_date =
|death_date = {{death date and age|2022|5|7|1922|2|8|df=y}}<ref>{{Cite web |title=Yuri Averbakh passes away at age 100 |url=https://chess24.com/en/read/news/yuri-averbakh-passes-away-at-age-100 |access-date=2022-05-07 |website=chess24.com |language=en}}</ref>
|death_place =
|death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Russia]]
|title = [[Grandmaster (chess)|Grandmaster]]
|title = [[Grandmaster (chess)|Grandmaster]] (1952)
|worldchampion =
|worldchampion =
|womensworldchampion =
|rating = 2445
|rating =
|peakrating = 2550 (July 1971)
|peakrating = 2550 (July 1971)
|FideID = 4101529
}}
}}


'''Yuri Lvovich Averbakh''' ({{lang-ru|Ю́рий Льво́вич Аверба́х}}; 8 February 1922 – 7 May 2022) was a Russian [[chess]] grandmaster and author. He was chairman of the [[USSR Chess Federation]] from 1973 to 1978. He was the first [[centenarian]] FIDE [[Grandmaster (chess)|Grandmaster]]. Despite his eyesight and hearing having worsened, as of his 100th birthday he continued to devote time to chess-related activities.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Yuri Averbakh celebrates his 100th birthday|url=https://chess24.com/en/read/news/yuri-averbakh-celebrates-100th-birthday|access-date=2022-02-08|website=chess24.com|language=en}}</ref>
'''Yuri Lvovich Averbakh''' ((February 8, 1922 in [[Kaluga]], [[Russia]] - May 7, 2022, [[Moscow]], Russia)<ref>[https://elpais.com/ajedrez/partidas/2022-05-07/averbaj-muere-a-los-100-anos.html Áverbaj muere a los 100 años], El País, 7-5-2022</ref> is a [[USSR|Soviet]] and Russian [[chess]] player and author. He is currently the oldest living chess grandmaster.


[[Ro:Iuri Averbach]]
==Biography and career==
[[Hu:Jurij Lvovics Averbach]]
His father was German Jewish,<ref>[http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3657 Yuri Averbakh turns 85], [[Chessbase]], 8-2-2007</ref> and his ancestors came from Germany and were named [[Auerbach (surname)|Auerbach]], meaning "meadow brook." His mother was Russian. Both sets of grandparents disapproved of their marriage because his father was a likely [[atheist]] and his mother was [[Eastern Orthodox]], as well as the fact that his maternal grandmother died very young so his mother was expected to look after the family. Averbak was born February 8, 1922 in [[Kaluga]], Russia and is a holocaust survivor, having spent a year in [[Auschwitz]] in 1945. He calls himself a [[fatalist]].


==Early life==
His first major success was first place in the [[Moscow City Chess Championship|Moscow Championship]] of 1949, ahead of players such as [[Andor Lilienthal]], [[Yakov Estrin]] and [[Vladimir Simagin]]. He became an [[International Grandmaster]] in 1952. In 1954 he won the [[USSR Chess Championship]] ahead of players including [[Mark Taimanov]], [[Viktor Korchnoi]], [[Tigran Petrosian]], [[Efim Geller]] and [[Salo Flohr]]. In the 1956 Championship he came equal first with Taimanov and [[Boris Spassky]] in the main event, finishing second after the playoff. Later Averbakh's daughter, Jane, would marry Taimanov. Averbakh's other major tournament victories included Vienna 1961 and Moscow 1962. He qualified for the 1953 Candidates' Tournament (the last stage to determine the challenger to the [[World Chess Champion]]), finishing joint tenth of the fifteen participants. He also qualified for the 1958 Interzonal at [[Portorož]], by finishing in fourth place at the 1958 USSR Championship at Riga. At Portorož, he wound up in a tie for seventh through eleventh places, half a point short of advancing to the Candidates' Tournament.
Averbakh was born in [[Kaluga]], Russia. His father was German [[Jew]]ish,<ref>[http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3657 Yuri Averbakh turns 85], [[Chessbase]], 8-2-2007</ref> and his ancestors came from Germany and were named [[Auerbach (surname)|Auerbach]], meaning "meadow brook". His mother was Russian. Both sets of grandparents disapproved of their marriage because his father was likely an [[atheist]] and his mother was [[Eastern Orthodox]], as well as the fact that his maternal grandmother died very young, so his mother was expected to look after the family. Averbakh himself called himself a [[fatalist]].
==Career==


===Tournament successes===
His solid style was difficult for many pure attackers to overcome, as he wrote: :"...[[Rashid Nezhmetdinov|Nezhmetdinov]], who if he had the attack, could kill anybody, including [[Mikhail Tal|Tal]]. But my score against him was something like 8½–½ because I did not give him any possibility for an active game. In such cases he would immediately start to spoil his position because he was looking for complications."
His first major success was the first place in the [[Moscow City Chess Championship|Moscow Championship]] of 1949, ahead of players including [[Andor Lilienthal]], [[Yakov Estrin]] and [[Vladimir Simagin]]. He became an [[international grandmaster]] in 1952. In 1954 he won the [[USSR Chess Championship|USSR Championship]] ahead of players including [[Mark Taimanov]], [[Viktor Korchnoi]], [[Tigran Petrosian]], [[Efim Geller]] and [[Salo Flohr]]. In the 1956 Championship, he came equal first with Taimanov and [[Boris Spassky]] in the main event, finishing second after the playoff. Later Averbakh's daughter, Jane, would marry Taimanov. Averbakh's other major tournament victories included Vienna 1961 and Moscow 1962. He qualified for the 1953 [[Candidates' Tournament]] (the last stage to determine the challenger to the [[World Chess Champion]]), finishing joint tenth of the fifteen participants. He also qualified for the 1958 Interzonal tournament at [[Portorož]], by finishing in fourth place at the 1958 USSR Championship at Riga. At Portorož, he wound up in a tie for seventh through eleventh places, half a point short of advancing to the Candidates' Tournament. He played in the [[1993 Maccabiah Games]] in Israel, coming in fourth.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://chesstempo.com/gamedb/player/12966|title=Yuri L Averbakh - Chess Games|website=chesstempo.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.365chess.com/tournaments/Maccabiah_1993/16407|title=Maccabiah 1993|website=365Chess.com}}</ref>{{Better source needed|date=February 2021}}


===Playing style===
Averbakh was also a major [[endgame study]] theorist. He has published more than 100 studies, many of which have made notable contributions to endgame theory. In 1956 he was given by [[FIDE]] the title of [[International Judge of Chess Compositions]] and in 1969 he became an [[International Arbiter]]. Averbakh was also an important chess journalist and author. He edited the Soviet chess periodicals ''[[Shakhmaty v SSSR]]'' and ''[[Shakhmatny Bulletin]]''. From 1956 to 1962 he edited (with [[Vitaly Chekhover]] and others) a four-volume anthology on the [[Chess endgame|endgame]], ''Shakhmatnye okonchaniya'' (revised in 1980-84 and translated as ''Comprehensive Chess Endings'', five volumes).
His solid style was difficult for many pure attackers to overcome, as he wrote:
{{Quote|"...[[Rashid Nezhmetdinov|Nezhmetdinov]], who if he had the attack, could kill anybody, including [[Mikhail Tal|Tal]]. But my score against him was something like 8½–½ because I did not give him any possibility for an active game. In such cases he would immediately start to spoil his position because he was looking for complications."<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web|url=http://www.bg.ru/article/8937/|title=Юрий Авербах|website=Большой город|language=ru}}</ref>}}


He had plus records against the [[World Chess Championship|world champions]] [[Max Euwe]] and [[Tigran Petrosian]].
Averbakh is the [[eponym]] of several [[chess opening|opening]] variations, perhaps most notably the Averbakh System in the [[King's Indian Defence]]: '''1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.Be2 O-O 6.Bg5'''.


==Other==
===Writings===
Averbakh was also a major [[endgame study]] theorist. More than 100 studies were published during his lifetime, many of which have made notable contributions to endgame theory. In 1956, he was given by [[FIDE]] the title of [[International Judge of Chess Compositions]] and in 1969 that of [[International Arbiter]].
[[Image:AwerbakhYuri2007.jpg|right|150px|thumb|Averbakh in 2007]]
In the 1960s, Averbakh worked for the Soviet journal ''Znanie - sila'' (Knowledge is Power), which published science and science fiction stories, and once even played a simultaneous game against representatives from the notorious state censorship organ 'Glavlit'. A colleague claims to have begged him before the match "Yuri, have a heart and lose!"<ref>{{citation| editor1-first=Martin| editor1-last=Dewhirst| editor2-first=Robert| editor2-last=Farrell| title=The Soviet Censorship| place=Metuchen, NJ| publisher=The Scarecrow Press| year=1973| page=55}}</ref>


Averbakh was also an important chess journalist and author. He edited the Soviet chess periodicals ''[[Shakhmaty v SSSR]]'' and ''[[Shakhmatny Bulletin]]''. From 1956 to 1962 he edited (with [[Vitaly Chekhover]] and others) a four-volume anthology on the [[Chess endgame|endgame]], ''Shakhmatnye okonchaniya'' (revised in 1980–84 and translated as ''Comprehensive Chess Endings'', in five volumes).
==Writings==
* ''Chess Endings: Essential Knowledge'', by Yuri Averbakh, 1966, 1993, [[Everyman Chess]], ISBN 1-85744-022-6.
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 1: Bishop Endings, Knight Endings'' by Averbakh and Chekhover, 1983, Pergamon, ISBN 0-08-026900-1
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 2: Bishop vs Knight Endings, Rook vs Minor Piece Endings'' by Averbakh, 1985, Pergamon, ISBN 0-08-026901-X
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 3: Queen Endings'' by Averbakh, 1986, Pergamon, ISBN 0-08-026904-4
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 4: Pawn Endings'' by Averbakh and Maizelis, 1987, Pergamon, ISBN 0-08-032043-0
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 5: Rook Endings'' by Averbakh, 1987, Pergamon, ISBN 0-08-032048-1
*''Chess Tactics for Advanced Players'', by Averbakh, 1985, Pergamon, ISBN 0-87568-218-9


===Openings contributions===
==References==
{{algebraic notation|pos=secright}}
<references/>
Averbakh is the [[eponym]] of several [[chess opening|opening]] variations.
*[[King's Indian Defence]]: Averbakh variation (E73): 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.Be2 0-0 6.Bg5
*[[King's Indian Defence]]: semi-Averbakh system (E73): 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.Be2 0-0 6.Be3
*[[Modern Defense]]: Averbakh variation (A42): 1.d4 g6 2.c4 Bg7 3.Nc3 d6 4.e4


==Death and tributes==
Averbakh was born on 8 February 1922, in [[Kaluga]] and died on 7 May 2022.<ref name="Chess.com">[https://www.chess.com/news/view/yuri-averbakh-obituary Chess.com: Yuri Averbakh, 1922-2022]</ref> Averbakh is survived by a daughter, who was married to [[Mark Taimanov]] for ten years.<ref name="Chess.com" />

==Honours and awards==
* [[Honoured Master of Sports of the USSR]]
*[[Order of Friendship of Peoples]] (1981)
*[[Medal "For Labour Valour"]] (1957)
*[[Medal "For Distinguished Labour"]] (1970)
*[[Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary since the Birth of Vladimir Il'ich Lenin"]] (1970)
* [[House of Romanov|Russian Imperial Family]]: Knight Commander of the [[Order of Saint Stanislaus (House of Romanov)|Imperial Order of Saint Stanislaus]]<ref>{{Cite web|title=Russian Imperial House - The Head of the Russian Imperial House and Her Heir Visit Moscow, April 23-29, 2017|url=http://www.imperialhouse.ru/en/allnews-en/news/the-head-of-the-russian-imperial-house-and-her-heir-visit-moscow-april-23-29-2017.html|access-date=2021-02-08|website=www.imperialhouse.ru}}</ref>
*[[Order of Honour (Russia)|Order of Honor]]<ref>[https://www.zakon.kz/6013662-100-letnii-grossmeister-mira-nagrazhden-ordenom-pocheta.html 100-year-old grandmaster awarded the Order of Honor]</ref>

==Books==
* ''Chess Endings: Essential Knowledge'', 1966, 1993, [[Everyman Chess]], {{ISBN|1-85744-022-6}}.
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 1: Bishop Endings, Knight Endings'' by Averbakh and Chekhover, 1983, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-503-2}}
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 2: Bishop vs Knight Endings, Rook vs Minor Piece Endings'', 1985, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-504-0}}
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 3: Queen Endings'', 1986, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-505-9}}
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 4: Pawn Endings'', with Ilya Maizelis, 1987, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-506-7}}
*''Comprehensive Chess Endings 5: Rook Endings'', 1987, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-507-5}}
*''Chess Tactics for Advanced Players'', 1985, Pergamon, {{ISBN|4-87187-508-3}}
*''Chess Tactics for Advanced Players'', 2008, Lebate, {{ISBN|978-0-87568-219-8}}
* ''A History of Chess from Chaturanga to the Present Day'', 2012, Russell Enterprises, {{ISBN|978-1-936490-44-8}}
*''Journey to the Chess Kingdom'', with Mark Beilin, 2014, Chess Evolution, {{ISBN|978-83-934656-6-8}}
*''Centre-Stage and Behind the Scenes: A Personal Memoir'', 2011, New In Chess, {{ISBN|978-9056913649}}
*''Chess Middlegames: Essential Knowledge''
*''Averbakh's Selected Games''
*''Rook v Minor Piece Endings''
*''The World Chess Championship'', with Mark Taimanov
*''Small Chess Dictionary''

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
*{{cite book
*{{cite book
| author=Petursson, Margeir
| author=Petursson, Margeir
Line 51: Line 87:
| year=1996
| year=1996
| publisher=Cadogan Books
| publisher=Cadogan Books
| id=ISBN 9781857441185}}
| isbn=978-1-85744-118-5}}
*''Averbakh's Selected Games'' by Averbakh, 1998, Everyman Chess, ISBN 1-85744-548-1
*''Averbakh's Selected Games'' by Averbakh, 1998, Everyman Chess, {{ISBN|1-85744-548-1}}
*Interview in ''The Day Kasparov Quit'' by Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam
*Interview in ''The Day Kasparov Quit'' by Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam

==See also==
* [[List of Jewish chess players]]


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons}}
* {{fide|id=4101529}}
*{{FIDE|4101529|Yuri L. Averbakh}}
* {{chessgames player|id=20559}}
*{{365Chess.com player|Yuri_L_Averbakh|Yuri L. Averbakh}}
* [http://www.chessworld.net/chessclubs/statistics_pgn_rating_chart.asp?username=Averbakh,Yuri%20L Statistics at ChessWorld.net]
*{{Chessgames player|20559|Yuri L. Averbakh}}
*[http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles181.pdf Interview Part 1]
*[http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles183.pdf Interview Part 2]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080227105124/http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles181.pdf Interview Part 1], ''ChessCafe.com''
*[http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles183.pdf Interview Part 2], ''ChessCafe.com''

{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Averbakh, Yuri}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Averbakh, Yuri}}
[[Category:1922 births]]
[[Category:1922 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:2022 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Kaluga]]
[[Category:Chess grandmasters]]
[[Category:Chess grandmasters]]
[[Category:Chess theoreticians]]
[[Category:Chess theoreticians]]
[[Category:Chess historians]]
[[Category:Russian chess players]]
[[Category:Russian chess players]]
[[Category:Soviet chess players]]
[[Category:Soviet chess players]]
[[Category:Jewish chess players]]
[[Category:Soviet chess writers]]
[[Category:Soviet male writers]]
[[Category:20th-century Russian male writers]]
[[Category:International Judges of Chess Compositions]]
[[Category:International Judges of Chess Compositions]]
[[Category:Chess composers]]
[[Category:Russian chess writers]]
[[Category:Russian chess writers]]
[[Category:Chess arbiters]]
[[Category:Chess arbiters]]
[[Category:German Jews]]
[[Category:Russian people of German-Jewish descent]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Honour (Russia)]]

[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Friendship of Peoples]]
[[bg:Юрий Авербах]]
[[Category:Honoured Masters of Sport of the USSR]]
[[de:Juri Lwowitsch Awerbach]]
[[Category:Jewish chess players]]
[[es:Yuri Averbaj]]
[[Category:Competitors at the 1993 Maccabiah Games]]
[[fr:Youri Averbakh]]
[[Category:Maccabiah Games chess players]]
[[id:Yuri Averbakh]]
[[Category:Maccabiah Games competitors for Russia]]
[[it:Jurij L'vovič Averbach]]
[[Category:Bauman Moscow State Technical University alumni]]
[[lt:Jurijus Averbachas]]
[[Category:Men centenarians]]
[[nl:Joeri Averbach]]
[[Category:Russian centenarians]]
[[nn:Jurij Averbakh]]
[[pl:Jurij Awerbach]]
[[ru:Авербах, Юрий Львович]]
[[fi:Juri Averbah]]
[[uk:Авербах Юрій Львович]]

Revision as of 03:42, 8 May 2022

Yuri Averbakh
Averbakh in 1963
Full nameYuri Lvovich Averbakh
LandSoviet Union → Russia
Born(1922-02-08)8 February 1922
Kaluga, Russian SFSR (Present-day Kaluga, Russia)
Died7 May 2022(2022-05-07) (aged 100)[1]
Moscow, Russia
TitelGrandmaster (1952)
Peak rating2550 (July 1971)

Yuri Lvovich Averbakh (Russian: Ю́рий Льво́вич Аверба́х; 8 February 1922 – 7 May 2022) was a Russian chess grandmaster and author. He was chairman of the USSR Chess Federation from 1973 to 1978. He was the first centenarian FIDE Grandmaster. Despite his eyesight and hearing having worsened, as of his 100th birthday he continued to devote time to chess-related activities.[2]

Early life

Averbakh was born in Kaluga, Russia. His father was German Jewish,[3] and his ancestors came from Germany and were named Auerbach, meaning "meadow brook". His mother was Russian. Both sets of grandparents disapproved of their marriage because his father was likely an atheist and his mother was Eastern Orthodox, as well as the fact that his maternal grandmother died very young, so his mother was expected to look after the family. Averbakh himself called himself a fatalist.

Career

Tournament successes

His first major success was the first place in the Moscow Championship of 1949, ahead of players including Andor Lilienthal, Yakov Estrin and Vladimir Simagin. He became an international grandmaster in 1952. In 1954 he won the USSR Championship ahead of players including Mark Taimanov, Viktor Korchnoi, Tigran Petrosian, Efim Geller and Salo Flohr. In the 1956 Championship, he came equal first with Taimanov and Boris Spassky in the main event, finishing second after the playoff. Later Averbakh's daughter, Jane, would marry Taimanov. Averbakh's other major tournament victories included Vienna 1961 and Moscow 1962. He qualified for the 1953 Candidates' Tournament (the last stage to determine the challenger to the World Chess Champion), finishing joint tenth of the fifteen participants. He also qualified for the 1958 Interzonal tournament at Portorož, by finishing in fourth place at the 1958 USSR Championship at Riga. At Portorož, he wound up in a tie for seventh through eleventh places, half a point short of advancing to the Candidates' Tournament. He played in the 1993 Maccabiah Games in Israel, coming in fourth.[4][5][better source needed]

Playing style

His solid style was difficult for many pure attackers to overcome, as he wrote:

"...Nezhmetdinov, who if he had the attack, could kill anybody, including Tal. But my score against him was something like 8½–½ because I did not give him any possibility for an active game. In such cases he would immediately start to spoil his position because he was looking for complications."[6]

He had plus records against the world champions Max Euwe and Tigran Petrosian.

Writings

Averbakh was also a major endgame study theorist. More than 100 studies were published during his lifetime, many of which have made notable contributions to endgame theory. In 1956, he was given by FIDE the title of International Judge of Chess Compositions and in 1969 that of International Arbiter.

Averbakh was also an important chess journalist and author. He edited the Soviet chess periodicals Shakhmaty v SSSR and Shakhmatny Bulletin. From 1956 to 1962 he edited (with Vitaly Chekhover and others) a four-volume anthology on the endgame, Shakhmatnye okonchaniya (revised in 1980–84 and translated as Comprehensive Chess Endings, in five volumes).

Openings contributions

Averbakh is the eponym of several opening variations.

Death and tributes

Averbakh was born on 8 February 1922, in Kaluga and died on 7 May 2022.[7] Averbakh is survived by a daughter, who was married to Mark Taimanov for ten years.[7]

Honours and awards

Books

  • Chess Endings: Essential Knowledge, 1966, 1993, Everyman Chess, ISBN 1-85744-022-6.
  • Comprehensive Chess Endings 1: Bishop Endings, Knight Endings by Averbakh and Chekhover, 1983, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-503-2
  • Comprehensive Chess Endings 2: Bishop vs Knight Endings, Rook vs Minor Piece Endings, 1985, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-504-0
  • Comprehensive Chess Endings 3: Queen Endings, 1986, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-505-9
  • Comprehensive Chess Endings 4: Pawn Endings, with Ilya Maizelis, 1987, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-506-7
  • Comprehensive Chess Endings 5: Rook Endings, 1987, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-507-5
  • Chess Tactics for Advanced Players, 1985, Pergamon, ISBN 4-87187-508-3
  • Chess Tactics for Advanced Players, 2008, Lebate, ISBN 978-0-87568-219-8
  • A History of Chess from Chaturanga to the Present Day, 2012, Russell Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-936490-44-8
  • Journey to the Chess Kingdom, with Mark Beilin, 2014, Chess Evolution, ISBN 978-83-934656-6-8
  • Centre-Stage and Behind the Scenes: A Personal Memoir, 2011, New In Chess, ISBN 978-9056913649
  • Chess Middlegames: Essential Knowledge
  • Averbakh's Selected Games
  • Rook v Minor Piece Endings
  • The World Chess Championship, with Mark Taimanov
  • Small Chess Dictionary

Notes

References

  • Petursson, Margeir (1996). King's Indian Defense: Averbakh Variation. Cadogan Books. ISBN 978-1-85744-118-5.
  • Averbakh's Selected Games by Averbakh, 1998, Everyman Chess, ISBN 1-85744-548-1
  • Interview in The Day Kasparov Quit by Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam

See also