Roman Pelts
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Roman Shlemovich Pelts (born August 11, 1937) an Ukrainian-Canadian chess master, born in Odessa.[1]
In 1959, he founded a chess school in Odessa. Seven of his early students became grandmasters: Lev Alburt, Sam Palatnik, Vladimir Tukmakov, Valery Beim, Konstantin Lerner, Leonid Yurtaev, and Boris Kantsler. He was official trainer for the 1971 USSR student team on which Anatoly Karpov and Alexander Beliavsky played.[2]
At the beggining of his career, he took 15th at Minsk 1962 (Anatoly Bannik won), and played board one on the Soviet national team that won the 1964 Students' World Championship at Kraków, Poland.
Pelts came to Canada in 1978. After moving to Montreal, he established the first Canadian chess school in 1979. He later settled in Toronto and continued his school there. Pelts thrice played for Canada in Chess Olympiads: at Lucerne 1982 and Thessalonika 1984 and 1988.[3]
In 1981 Pelts earned the title of FIDE Master.[1] He was awarded the Canadian Chess Hall of Fame 2001.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Gaige, Jeremy (1987), Chess Personalia, A Biobibliography, McFarland, p. 323, ISBN 0-7864-2353-6}
- ^ <http://www.chessacademycanada.110mb.com/neweb/bio.html
- ^ OlimpBase :: the encyclopaedia of team chess
- ^ Canadian Chess
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