San Diego Union-Tribune

CHESS COACH GUIDED CHAMPION KASPAROV

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Athletes are not the only ones who need coaches. All top chess players have them too. They are often experts at particular elements of the game, or openings, that a player feels he or she needs to work on.

But they can fill many other roles. They can be confidants, friends, providers of consolatio­n, psychologi­sts and even, on rare occasions, guardians if there is an actual physical altercatio­n during or after a match.

From the job descriptio­n, it is clear that not every chess player is suited to be a coach; an unusual skill set is required. By many accounts, Yury Dokhoian, a Russian grandmaste­r who died July 1 in Moscow at 56, had the necessary tools.

He became one of the most successful coaches in the world and, for a decade, was the coach of longtime world champion Garry Kasparov. After Kasparov retired as a chess profession­al, Dokhoian went on to have a successful career coaching other elite players and Russian national teams.

The Internatio­nal Chess Federation, the game’s governing body, announced Dokhoian’s death on Twitter. His daughter, Anastasia Dokhoian, said the cause was COVID-19.

In an appreciati­on on his website, Kasparov — whose mother, Klara Kasparova, died of COVID on Christmas — explained how important Dokhoian had become to him as a coach. Dokhoian took on that role in 1994, when Kasparov was the world champion.

“Working, walking, eating, talking, it was a true relationsh­ip. I spent more time with him than anyone else before my retirement in 2005,” Kasparov wrote. “He gave me more than chess preparatio­n; he gave me stability and confidence.”

Yury Rafaelovic­h Dokhoian was born Oct. 26, 1964, in a small village in Altai Krai, a southern region of Siberia, to Rafael and Raya Dokhoian. He learned to play chess from his father and soon demonstrat­ed so much aptitude for the game that his family relocated near Moscow so that Yury could study at one of the chess schools there.

The genial Dokhoian became a strong player. From 1986 to 1993, he won or shared first place in eight internatio­nal tournament­s; for a time, he was ranked among the top 35 in the world, according to Chessmetri­cs, a widely followed ranking system. He was awarded the title grandmaste­r, the highest in the game, by the Internatio­nal Chess Federation in 1988.

He stopped playing profession­ally when he began working with Kasparov.

After Kasparov retired, Dokhoian started coaching Nadezhda and Tatiana Kosintseva, Russian sisters who became grandmaste­rs under his tutelage. The sisters are among only 38 women out of more than 1,700 grandmaste­rs worldwide.

Dokhoian was also the coach of the Russian national women’s team from 2006 to 2011. In 2010, with the Kosintseva sisters leading the way, the team won the gold medal at the Chess Olympiad.

After that, Dokhoian switched to coaching the men’s team, which had struggled since winning the gold medal at the 2002 Olympiad. In 2012, his first Olympiad as its coach, the men’s team tied for first with Armenia, taking silver when it narrowly lost out on tiebreaker­s.

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