Liu Wenzhe

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Liu Wenzhe
Full name Liu Wenzhe
Country  China
Born (1940-10-07)October 7, 1940[1]
Harbin, China
Died September 20, 2011(2011-09-20)
Beijing, China
Title International Master (1980)[1]
FIDE rating 2473 (February 2014) [inactive]
Peak rating 2473 (July 2000)

Liu Wenzhe (Chinese: 刘文哲; October 7, 1940 - September 20, 2011)[2] was an International Master chess player. He was also one of China's top chess trainers.

Liu Wenzhe played for Guangdong chess club in the China Chess League (CCL).[3]

Chess career

He was the first Chinese chess master and China's first chess player to defeat a grandmaster. He is considered a pioneer of chess in China and a founding father of the Chinese School of Chess. He won the Chinese Chess Championship in 1980 and 1982.

Two years after the end of the Cultural Revolution and Mao Zedong's death and the fall of the Gang of Four in 1976, China competed in their first Olympiad in Buenos Aires. It was there that Liu Wenzhe became the first Chinese player to defeat a Western grandmaster, GM Jan Hein Donner of the Netherlands.[4]

In total, Liu made three appearances at the Chess Olympiads (1978–1982) with an overall record of 37 games played (+14, =4, -19). He also made four appearances in total at the Men's Asian Team Chess Championship (1979–1981, 1991–1993) with an overall record of 17 games played (+10, =4, -3).

In 1986 he was appointed to the post of Chief Trainer of the Chinese Institute of Chess and head coach of the Chinese national chess team. He was succeeded by Ye Jiangchuan in 2000.

In 2002-3, he wrote a seminal book on the "Chinese School of Chess" called the same name (see Further reading). In the book he charts the dramatic progress of Chinese players over the past 25 years.

Quotes

"Systematically training players is more important than selecting them."—Liu Wenzhe, head coach, women’s Chinese Olympic team.[5]

See also

References

Further reading

  • Liu, Wenzhe (2003). The Chinese School of Chess. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-8773-9. 
  • Bill Kelleher. "From I Ching to Zhu Chen". ChessCafe.com Book Review of Chinese School of Chess (2003) by Liu Wenzhe.

External links

Preceded by
Li Zunian
Men's Chinese Chess Champion
1980
Succeeded by
Ye Jiangchuan
Preceded by
Ye Jiangchuan
Men's Chinese Chess Champion
1982
Succeeded by
Xu Jun
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