Pan Inspector

Utgivelsesdato 2026
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Yuri Sakharov (1922-1981) was a leading Ukrainian chess player and coach from the 1950s until his death, ranked the world number 17 in 1968 according to Chessmetrics. Although little-known in the West as he rarely played outside the Soviet Union, he qualified for six Soviet championship finals, with a highest position of joint sixth in 1967. Sakharov won the Ukrainian Championship twice and deployed many opening novelties in his time. As he aged he increasingly turned to correspondence chess, where he won gold medals at the ICCF Olympiads as a member of the Soviet team in 1972 and 1976.

As we see in this book, he went toe-to-toe with greats such as Tal, Smyslov, Bronstein, Keres, Polugaevsky, Taimanov, Geller, Averbakh, Stein, Ivkov and Kotov among many others. He started out as a primarily attacking player whose games often involved the Sicilian (especially the Najdorf variation), King’s Indian and Ruy Lopez openings, but he later evolved into a more universal player with strong positional skills. Sakharov also coached or seconded many future or contemporary grandmasters, including Vladimir Savon, Gennady Kuzmin, Ruslan Pogorelov, Dimitri Komarov, and Vladimir Sergeev, as well as WGMs Lidia Semenova and Elena Sedina. As his own chess understanding matured, he focused his pupils’ attention on more solid openings, such as the Slav Defense and Nimzo-Indian.

However, as first detailed to Western readers in the third volume of Sergey Voronkov’s Masterpieces and Dramas of the Soviet Championships, based on articles by this book’s author Mykola Fuzik, Yuri Sakharov had a fascinating but tragic life-story. His father was executed in 1938 during the Stalin purges. Finding himself and his mother destitute under the Nazi occupation of Ukraine during World War II, he volunteered to work in Germany, although he later escaped and joined the US Army in a civilian capacity. During his time in Germany he found himself drawn into a tragic incident of which his contemporaries were almost certainly unaware. After his return to the USSR, a case was gradually built against him culminating in his arrest in 1951 followed by a trial in 1952 and imprisonment. Yet he survived five years in the Soviet GULAG system and emerged to play his best chess in his forties.

Ukrainian Candidate Master Mykola Fuzik has written a detailed account of Sakharov’s life and career based on many years of research. He previously published a biography of another leading Ukrainian chess player, Isaak Lipnitsky, with Elk and Ruby in 2024. The current book includes reminiscences of Sakharov’s pupils and other strong players who studied with him, such as double World Senior Champion GM Vladimir Okhotnik. 121 of Sakharov’s own games and fragments, as well as four games of his contemporaries that he annotated, are analyzed in this book. Many games are annotated by Sakharov himself and others by some of the strongest contemporary players of his time, including Korchnoi and Flohr, as well as guest grandmasters and the author. In particular, Ukrainian Grandmaster Vladimir Sergeev provided a significant portion of the annotations for this book as well as making important contributions on the biographical side.

The games and commentary are highly instructive – as Vladimir Okhotnik remarks at the end of one game: “I think that this game demonstrates Yuri Nikolaevich Sakharov’s strongest sides: serious home preparation, consistent game plans, and excellent conversion technique.”

This book is supplemented with a large number of photos never published before in the West.

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Innhold
005 Index of Games
008 Author’s Preface
011 Foreword: Memories from Alma-Ata by Grandmaster Igor Zaitsev
017 PART I: THE LIFE OF YURI SAKHAROV
017 Chapter 1: Zakhariy’s Descendant
017 The Early Years
020 Across Ukraine
023 Chapter 2: Surviving the War
023 The Secret Police Files
026 The Catastrophe
031 Finally Escaping the Nazis
035 Chapter 3: Homecoming Number 1: Back to the USSR
035 Peaceful Life under the Vigilant Eye
038 A Dream Come True ...
042 ...and its Collapse
045 Chapter 4: The Stolen Years
045 Arrest and Investigation
047 In the Gulag Archipelago
052 “Conclusion”
054 Chapter 5: Homecoming Number 2: Back from Oblivion
054 Freedom!
056 A New Life
057 The Mentor
070 Chapter 6: The Swinging Sixties
070 Ukrainian Competitions
074 At the National Level
081 The Kharkov Ascent with Obstacles
083 Triumph and Fiasco in Alma-Ata
086 The Last Attempts
088 International Affairs: Travel Abroad Despite Compromising Materials
100 Master of Correspondence Chess
106 Chapter 7: The Endgame
106 Trade Union Champion
109 Loyal to his Vocation
114 The Mysterious Match
115 The Tragic Finale
119 PART II: SELECTED GAMES
310 APPENDICES
310 Appendix 1. Yuri Sakharov’s Tournament Results
315 Appendix 2. Pan Inspector, or Secrets of a Dramatic Biography (Efim Lazarev)
321 Appendix 3. When the Coach Gives his All (Abram Khavin)
323 Appendix 4. The Apprehension was Unfounded (Yuri Sakharov)
326 Appendix 5. Letters to a Friend: Yuri Sakharov writes to Efim Lazarev
329 Appendix 6. Polish Impressions (Yuri Sakharov)
Detaljert info
Innbundet? Nei
Type Bok
Språk Engelsk
Antall sider 330