
Russian Grandmaster (1966), and chess theorist. Furman was the Honoured Trainer of USSR (1973), the trainer of Anatoly Karpov (1969-1978) and of the USSR team at the Olympiad in 1974 and at the European Team Championship in 1977.
Best results in the championships of Leningrad: 1953, 1
st; 1954, 1
st-3
rd; 1957, 1
st-2
nd; 1947, 1950 and 1955, 3
rd-4
th. Furman was the champion of "Spartak" (1960) and he also participated in thirteen USSR championships. Best results were: 1948, 3
rd; 1949, 5
th-7
th and 1965, 4
th-5
th. With the team of Leningrad he won the USSR Team Championships 1953 and 1960. He was also a participant in the matches USSR vs. Yugoslavia 1957 and Leningrad-Budapest 1957-1962.
Best results in international tournaments: Harrachov 1966, 1
st ahead of Mark Taimanov, Vlastimil Hort and 15 other competitors; Madrid 1973, 3
rd after Karpov and Vladimir Tukmakov and Bad Lauterberg 1977, 3
rd 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).
In the USSR, Furman was well known as a writer, theoretician and the trainer of young players, like Anatoly Karpov. Furman also made a valuable contribution in the development of the theory of openings – Grunfeld and Nimzo-Indian Defence, Spanish Game, Queen Gambit and other openings. Since 1982, the Furman memorials have been in the process of being conducted.
Furman analyzing with Karpov, 2007
Updated
10.11.2011