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Thomas Luther

Thomas Luther (born November 4, 1969, in Erfurt) is a German chess player and International Grandmaster of chess. In 2000 he was a member of the German team that won the silver medal in the 34th Chess Olympiad in Istanbul.[1]

Thomas Luther
Thomas Luther playing in the Bundesliga.
CountryEast Germany (1978-1990)
Germany (1990-)
Born (1969-11-04) November 4, 1969 (age 54)
Erfurt, East Germany
TitleGrandmaster (1994)
FIDE rating2518 (April 2024)
Peak rating2604 (July 2001)
Peak rankingNo. 82 (July 2001)

Childhood and Youth edit

He started to play chess at the age of four. Even in his childhood days he started to avidly read classic chess literature and learned a lot by himself. 1978 he became a member of the club HSG Medizin Erfurt. 1980, 1981 and 1984 he won the respective East Germany championship for his age class. 1986 he won the 12. GDR youth-championship in correspondence chess. Beginning with 1985 he played for Mikroelektronik Erfurt in the Oberliga, the highest league in the GDR.

Chess career edit

1988 he was awarded the title International Master by FIDE. After a series of further successes, among them second places at the GDR championship in Zittau 1989 and in Altensteig 1991 and victories in Andorra 1992, Lenk and Hamburg 1993 and finally his first (all-)German championship 1993 (after a 2–0 victory in the final against Thomas Pähtz) he became Grandmaster in 1994.

World- and National Championship Results edit

1997 Thomas Luther qualified for the world championships in Groningen. In this KO-tournament he won the first round 3.5–2.5 against Lajos Portisch but lost (0.5–1.5) against Vladimir Akopian in round 2.

2001 he qualified again and won the first round in Moscow 3–1 against Sergey Volkov but lost against Ilya Smirin (0.5–1.5).

In 2002 he won the German championship in Saarbrücken again, outdistancing Alexander Graf and Florian Handke.

He won his third German national championship in 2006 in Osterburg in a tie-breaker with Vitaly Kunin and Artur Yusupov.

German National Team edit

Between 1998 and 2006 Thomas Luther was often part of the German selection representing Germany in various international team tournaments: in the Olympiads 1998 in Elista (6th place), 2000 in Istanbul (2nd place), 2002 in Bled (14th place) and 2006 in Turin (15th place).[2] He also played for Germany in the World Team Chess Championship of 2001[3] and the European Team Chess Championship of 2003 in Plovdiv.[4]

IPCA edit

Thomas Luther, who suffers from dysmelia played at the 39th Chess Olympiad in Khanty-Mansiysk, 2010 first board for the IPCA (International Physically Disabled Chess Association) and made 6.5 points out of 10.[2]

Tournament victories edit

During his active career he won many international tournaments, i.e. Lippstadt (1994), Hastings (1994/95), Bissen (1995), Apolda (1994 and 1999), Turin (1996), Cienfuegos (1997), Bad Zwesten (1998), Nova Gorica (2000), Böblingen (2005), Oberwart (2005) and Bad Homburg (2008). In 2009 he won 6th LGA Premium Chess Cup in Nürnberg.[5]

In October 2011 he won the first World Chess Games for Disabled with a perfect score of 7 out of 7.[6]

FIDE official and DSB official edit

He is the head of the FIDE Commission on Disabled and played for the IPCA team once. He is also head of the division for competitive chess (Referent für Spitzenschach) in the German chess federation.

Game edit

Thomas Luther's style is tactically oriented, which makes him a formidable opponent for even the strongest player. The following game is typical where he attacks former Candidate Robert Hübner right out of the opening. The game was played in the penultimate round of the German championship 2002 and laid the ground for Thomas' later winning the title. The comments are based on personal conversations with Thomas Luther himself.

Robert Hübner (2640) – Thomas Luther (2538)
(74th German Individual Championship, Saarbrücken, 2002, Round 8)
1. c2-c4 c7-c6 2. e2–e4 d7-d5 3. e4xd5 Ng8-f6

Black already offers a pawn sacrifice. Due to the gambit-style opening the position immediately becomes sharp and concrete.

4. Qd1-a4

After 4. d5xc6 Sb8xc6 black has a good game.

4. … e7-e6

Either way, Black absolutely wants to sacrifice a pawn.

5. d5xe6 Bf8-c5 6. Ng1-f3
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

White didn't want to take the risk of accepting the second sacrifice. After 6. e6xf7+ Ke8xf7 the rook h8 dangerously comes into play too.

6. … Nf6-g4

Again Black continues as aggressively as possible.

7. d2-d4 Bc5xd4 8. Nf3xd4 Qd8xd4 9. Qa4-c2 Nb8-a6
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

The second knight joins the attack. Blacks opening strategy was successful.

10. Nb1-a3 Bc8xe6 11. h2-h3 Na6-b4 12. Qc2-d2 Qd4-e4+ 13. Bf1-e2 Qe4xg2 14. Rh1-f1 Ng4-h2 (!)
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

Black starts a combination leading to material gain. The inconspicuous knight on h2 will single-handedly wreak havoc in Whites position.

15. Qd2xb4 0-0-0 16. Na3-b5

A good try to molest the black king with a knight sacrifice. Black, though, has a spectacular counterpunch:

16. … c6xb5 17. Bc1-f4
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

The threat is Qc5+, forcing Qc6 and the subsequent loss of a knight as Black would get mated otherwise.

17. … Qg2xf1+ !!

This queen sacrifice starts the very effective deployment of the knight. Black wins material.

18. Be2xf1 Nh2-f3+ 19. Ke1-e2 Nf3-d4+ 20. Ke2-d2

Asquiesces the discovered check but other king moves were even worse: Ke2-e1/e3 and Nd4-c2+ wins the queen.

20. … Nd4-c6+ 21. Qb4-d6 Rd8xd6+ 22. Bf4xd6 Be6xc4

Black reaps the fruit of his combinatorial fireworks: the smoke has cleared and he is two pawns ahead.

23. Kd2-c3 Rh8-d8 24. Bd6-f4 Bc4xf1 25. Ra1xf1 b5-b4+ 26. Kc3-c2 Rd8-d5 27. Bf4-e3 Kc8-d7 28. Rf1-g1 g7-g6 29. Rg1-g4 a7-a5 30. Rg4-h4 h7-h5 31. Rh4-f4 f7-f5 32. h3-h4 b7-b5 33. Rf4-f3 Nc6-d4+ 34. Be3xd4 Rd5xd4 35. Rf3-d3 Rd4xd3 36. Kc2xd3 g6-g5

This pawn breakthrough decides the game. The rest for completeness' sake:

37. h4xg5 h5-h4 38. Kd3-e2 f5-f4 39. f2-f3 Kd6-e6 40. Ke2-f2 Ke6-f5 41. Kf2-g2 Kf5xg5 42. Kg2-h3 Kg5-h5 43. Kh3-g2 Kh5-g6 44. Kg2-h2 Kg6-f6 45. Kh2-h3 Kf6-e5 46. Kh3xh4 Ke5-d4
White gave up!

Personal edit

Luther has a congenital disability (dysmelia) on his arms. As a child he was considered to have no perspective in sports from GDR officials. He tells to have taken a great amount of energy out of experiencing that he can be as good as others.[7]

Thomas Luther is author at ChessBase. He published various DVDs on opening theory and other topics. He is considered to be one of the leading experts on the French Defence, about which he published several times.

In 2009 he finished his studies at the University of Hagen acquiring the title of Diplomkaufmann (German equivalent to Master of Business Administration).

Luther's current Elo rating is 2528 (June 2020).

References edit

  1. ^ OlimpBase 34th Chess Olympiad, Istanbul 2000, Germany
  2. ^ a b Thomas Luthers results in Olympiads
  3. ^ Thomas Luthers results in World Team Championships
  4. ^ Thomas Luthers results European Men's Team Chess Championships
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  6. ^ Report from the World Chess Games for Disabled (german)
  7. ^ Dirk Poldauf: "Für mich gibt es kein Limit" (For me there is no limit.), Interview with Thomas Luther, Schach 2003/1, p31

External links edit

  • Thomas Luther rating card at FIDE  
  • Thomas Luther player profile and games at Chessgames.com

thomas, luther, born, november, 1969, erfurt, german, chess, player, international, grandmaster, chess, 2000, member, german, team, that, silver, medal, 34th, chess, olympiad, istanbul, playing, bundesliga, countryeast, germany, 1978, 1990, germany, 1990, born. Thomas Luther born November 4 1969 in Erfurt is a German chess player and International Grandmaster of chess In 2000 he was a member of the German team that won the silver medal in the 34th Chess Olympiad in Istanbul 1 Thomas LutherThomas Luther playing in the Bundesliga CountryEast Germany 1978 1990 Germany 1990 Born 1969 11 04 November 4 1969 age 54 Erfurt East GermanyTitleGrandmaster 1994 FIDE rating2518 April 2024 Peak rating2604 July 2001 Peak rankingNo 82 July 2001 Contents 1 Childhood and Youth 2 Chess career 2 1 World and National Championship Results 2 2 German National Team 2 3 IPCA 2 4 Tournament victories 2 5 FIDE official and DSB official 3 Game 4 Personal 5 References 6 External linksChildhood and Youth editHe started to play chess at the age of four Even in his childhood days he started to avidly read classic chess literature and learned a lot by himself 1978 he became a member of the club HSG Medizin Erfurt 1980 1981 and 1984 he won the respective East Germany championship for his age class 1986 he won the 12 GDR youth championship in correspondence chess Beginning with 1985 he played for Mikroelektronik Erfurt in the Oberliga the highest league in the GDR Chess career edit1988 he was awarded the title International Master by FIDE After a series of further successes among them second places at the GDR championship in Zittau 1989 and in Altensteig 1991 and victories in Andorra 1992 Lenk and Hamburg 1993 and finally his first all German championship 1993 after a 2 0 victory in the final against Thomas Pahtz he became Grandmaster in 1994 World and National Championship Results edit 1997 Thomas Luther qualified for the world championships in Groningen In this KO tournament he won the first round 3 5 2 5 against Lajos Portisch but lost 0 5 1 5 against Vladimir Akopian in round 2 2001 he qualified again and won the first round in Moscow 3 1 against Sergey Volkov but lost against Ilya Smirin 0 5 1 5 In 2002 he won the German championship in Saarbrucken again outdistancing Alexander Graf and Florian Handke He won his third German national championship in 2006 in Osterburg in a tie breaker with Vitaly Kunin and Artur Yusupov German National Team edit Between 1998 and 2006 Thomas Luther was often part of the German selection representing Germany in various international team tournaments in the Olympiads 1998 in Elista 6th place 2000 in Istanbul 2nd place 2002 in Bled 14th place and 2006 in Turin 15th place 2 He also played for Germany in the World Team Chess Championship of 2001 3 and the European Team Chess Championship of 2003 in Plovdiv 4 IPCA edit Thomas Luther who suffers from dysmelia played at the 39th Chess Olympiad in Khanty Mansiysk 2010 first board for the IPCA International Physically Disabled Chess Association and made 6 5 points out of 10 2 Tournament victories edit During his active career he won many international tournaments i e Lippstadt 1994 Hastings 1994 95 Bissen 1995 Apolda 1994 and 1999 Turin 1996 Cienfuegos 1997 Bad Zwesten 1998 Nova Gorica 2000 Boblingen 2005 Oberwart 2005 and Bad Homburg 2008 In 2009 he won 6th LGA Premium Chess Cup in Nurnberg 5 In October 2011 he won the first World Chess Games for Disabled with a perfect score of 7 out of 7 6 FIDE official and DSB official edit He is the head of the FIDE Commission on Disabled and played for the IPCA team once He is also head of the division for competitive chess Referent fur Spitzenschach in the German chess federation Game editThomas Luther s style is tactically oriented which makes him a formidable opponent for even the strongest player The following game is typical where he attacks former Candidate Robert Hubner right out of the opening The game was played in the penultimate round of the German championship 2002 and laid the ground for Thomas later winning the title The comments are based on personal conversations with Thomas Luther himself Robert Hubner 2640 Thomas Luther 2538 74th German Individual Championship Saarbrucken 2002 Round 8 1 c2 c4 c7 c6 2 e2 e4 d7 d5 3 e4xd5 Ng8 f6Black already offers a pawn sacrifice Due to the gambit style opening the position immediately becomes sharp and concrete 4 Qd1 a4After 4 d5xc6 Sb8xc6 black has a good game 4 e7 e6Either way Black absolutely wants to sacrifice a pawn 5 d5xe6 Bf8 c5 6 Ng1 f3abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefgh White didn t want to take the risk of accepting the second sacrifice After 6 e6xf7 Ke8xf7 the rook h8 dangerously comes into play too 6 Nf6 g4Again Black continues as aggressively as possible 7 d2 d4 Bc5xd4 8 Nf3xd4 Qd8xd4 9 Qa4 c2 Nb8 a6abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefgh The second knight joins the attack Blacks opening strategy was successful 10 Nb1 a3 Bc8xe6 11 h2 h3 Na6 b4 12 Qc2 d2 Qd4 e4 13 Bf1 e2 Qe4xg2 14 Rh1 f1 Ng4 h2 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefgh Black starts a combination leading to material gain The inconspicuous knight on h2 will single handedly wreak havoc in Whites position 15 Qd2xb4 0 0 0 16 Na3 b5A good try to molest the black king with a knight sacrifice Black though has a spectacular counterpunch 16 c6xb5 17 Bc1 f4abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefgh The threat is Qc5 forcing Qc6 and the subsequent loss of a knight as Black would get mated otherwise 17 Qg2xf1 This queen sacrifice starts the very effective deployment of the knight Black wins material 18 Be2xf1 Nh2 f3 19 Ke1 e2 Nf3 d4 20 Ke2 d2Asquiesces the discovered check but other king moves were even worse Ke2 e1 e3 and Nd4 c2 wins the queen 20 Nd4 c6 21 Qb4 d6 Rd8xd6 22 Bf4xd6 Be6xc4Black reaps the fruit of his combinatorial fireworks the smoke has cleared and he is two pawns ahead 23 Kd2 c3 Rh8 d8 24 Bd6 f4 Bc4xf1 25 Ra1xf1 b5 b4 26 Kc3 c2 Rd8 d5 27 Bf4 e3 Kc8 d7 28 Rf1 g1 g7 g6 29 Rg1 g4 a7 a5 30 Rg4 h4 h7 h5 31 Rh4 f4 f7 f5 32 h3 h4 b7 b5 33 Rf4 f3 Nc6 d4 34 Be3xd4 Rd5xd4 35 Rf3 d3 Rd4xd3 36 Kc2xd3 g6 g5This pawn breakthrough decides the game The rest for completeness sake 37 h4xg5 h5 h4 38 Kd3 e2 f5 f4 39 f2 f3 Kd6 e6 40 Ke2 f2 Ke6 f5 41 Kf2 g2 Kf5xg5 42 Kg2 h3 Kg5 h5 43 Kh3 g2 Kh5 g6 44 Kg2 h2 Kg6 f6 45 Kh2 h3 Kf6 e5 46 Kh3xh4 Ke5 d4 White gave up Personal editLuther has a congenital disability dysmelia on his arms As a child he was considered to have no perspective in sports from GDR officials He tells to have taken a great amount of energy out of experiencing that he can be as good as others 7 Thomas Luther is author at ChessBase He published various DVDs on opening theory and other topics He is considered to be one of the leading experts on the French Defence about which he published several times In 2009 he finished his studies at the University of Hagen acquiring the title of Diplomkaufmann German equivalent to Master of Business Administration Luther s current Elo rating is 2528 June 2020 References edit OlimpBase 34th Chess Olympiad Istanbul 2000 Germany a b Thomas Luthers results in Olympiads Thomas Luthers results in World Team Championships Thomas Luthers results European Men s Team Chess Championships Chessdom Thomas Luther wins 6th LGA Premium Chess Cup Archived from the original on 2011 07 08 Retrieved 2009 09 08 Report from the World Chess Games for Disabled german Dirk Poldauf Fur mich gibt es kein Limit For me there is no limit Interview with Thomas Luther Schach 2003 1 p31External links editThomas Luther rating card at FIDE nbsp Thomas Luther player profile and games at Chessgames com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Luther amp oldid 1214641330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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