Furman Semyon Abramovic (01.12.1920 – 17.03.1978)
Russian Grandmaster (1966), and chess theorist. Furman was the Honoured Trainer of USSR (1973), the trainer of Anatoly Karpov (1969-1978) and the USSR team at the Olympiad in 1974 and the European Team Championship in 1977.
Best results: Leningrad championship: 1953, 1st; 1954, 1st-3rd; 1957, 1st-2nd; 1947, Harrachov 1966, 1st ahead of Mark Taimanov, Vlastimil Hort and 15 other competitors; Madrid 1973, 3rd after Karpov and Vladimir Tukmakov and Bad Lauterberg 1977, 3rd after Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman. Bad Lauterberg 1977 was to be Furman’s final event.
He was much stronger than his reputation, as his life scores show: +3=3–1 (Keres), +2=3–0 (Boleslavsky), +1=3–0 (Smyslov), +2=10–2 (Bronstein), +4=11–4 (Korchnoi), +4=8–3 (Taimanov), =4 (Karpov) and +2=4–3 (Petrosian). He did not do as well against Spassky (+1=2–5), Tal (+1=4–4), Polugaevsky (+0=3–5) and Geller (+2=4–6).
Furman was well known as a writer, theoretician and the trainer of young players, like Anatoly Karpov. Furman also made a valuable contribution to the development of the theory of openings – Grunfeld and Nimzo-Indian Defence, Spanish Game, Queen Gambit and other openings.