Alexey Suetin

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Alexey Suetin
Alexey Suetin

Alexey Stepanovich Suetin (November 16, 1926 in KirovohradSeptember 10, 2001 in Moscow) was a Russian International Grandmaster of chess and an author.

A resident of Moscow and a mechanical engineer by profession, he became an International Master in 1961 and a Grandmaster in 1965. His philosophy was always that "mastery is not enough; you must dare, take risks". It was an axiom that fashioned him into a tough and fiercely competitive player and appeared to bring him his fair share of success.

His first major success came in 1955, when as a member of the Soviet team at the World Student Team Championships, he scored 80% and took individual and team gold medals.

As an active tournament player in the 1960s and 1970s, he achieved many fine results, including sharing or winning outright first place at Sarajevo 1965, Copenhagen 1965, Titovo Uzice 1966, Hastings 1967/68, Havana 1969, Albena 1970, Kecskemet 1972, Brno 1975 (the inaugural Czech Open Championship - the title of Champion going to Vlastimil Hort on tie-break), Lublin 1976, and Dubna 1979. Third place finishes at Debrecen 1961 and Berlin (Lasker Memorial) 1968 were also noteworthy.

Suetin participated in many USSR Championships of the 1950s and 60s, his best finishes being shared fourth place in 1963 (behind Spassky, Kholmov and Stein) and 1965 (behind Stein, Polugaevsky and Taimanov).

He also served as a second and trainer to Tigran Petrosian for many of his most important matches, including his world championship victory in 1963. He was for many years Moscow's senior coach, overseeing the development of promising new talents. Though less distinguished than before, his playing career stretched into the 1990s and included winning the Hastings Challengers event of 1990/91.

As a veteran player, he won the World Senior Championship in 1996.

He authored many chess books; principally those concerned with the middlegame or opening. These include; Modern Chess Opening Theory, Three Steps To Chess Mastery (a treatise which combines his earlier works, The Chess Player's Laboratory and The Path To Mastery), Plan Like A Grandmaster, A Contemporary Approach To The Middle-game, French Defence, The Complete Grunfeld and The Complete Spanish.

Alexey Suetin was married to Woman Grandmaster Kira Zvorykina and together they had a son Aleksandr, born 1951. They lived in Belarus for some years and frequently competed in the national championship. Suetin was a six-time winner of the event and he and Zvorykina held the Men's and Women's titles concurrently in 1960.

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