Lev Isaakovich Aptekar (born 26 November 1936 in Kyiv, USSR) is a Soviet–New Zealand - Australian chess master, coach and writer.[1]
Career
He finished 15th in the Kiev championship of 1963. In the mid-1970s, he left the Soviet Union for New Zealand. In 1975/76, he shared first with Murray Chandler and Ortvin Sarapu in the 83rd New Zealand Championships in Upper Hutt. In 1976/77, he finished 6th in Auckland (84th NZL-ch, Sarapu won). In 1979/80, he finished 6th in Upper Hutt (87th NZL-ch, Sarapu, Small and Green won). In 1980/81, he tied for 7-9th in Christchurch (88th NZL-ch, Sarapu, Small and Nokes won). In December 2011 he moved to Sydney, Australia.[2]
Aptekar represented New Zealand in two Chess Olympiads:[3]
- In 1980, at fourth board in 24th Olympiad in La Valletta (+3 –4 =4);
- In 1988, at 2nd reserve board in 28th Olympiad in Thessaloniki but really the non-playing captain.
He was the national chess coach for the 1990 Olympiad in Novi Sad.
Books
- Wisdom in chess (1987) Editor Bob Mitchell
- The Art of Chess - The Power of Tactics (2008) Editor Bob Mitchell - available on iPad app e+Books
- The Art of Chess - The Wisdom of Strategy (2008) Editor Bob Mitchell - available on iPad app e+Books
- The Art of Chess - The Flame of Attack (2008) Editor Bob Mitchell - available on iPad app e+Books
References
- ↑ Lev Aptekar (1987). Wisdom in Chess. Editor Bob Mitchell. Government Printer. Wellington.
- ↑ Welcome to the Chessmetrics site Archived 2006-04-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Lev Aptekar Chess Olympiad statistics from www.olimpbase.org
External links
- Lev Aptekar player profile and games at Chessgames.com