| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1946-03-05)March 5, 1946 (age 79) |
| Chess career | |
| Country | Ukraine |
| Title | Grandmaster (1972) |
| FIDE rating | 2540 (February 2026) |
| Peak rating | 2610 (January 1998) |
| Peak ranking | No. 17 (July 1983) |
Vladimir Borisovich Tukmakov (Ukrainian:Володимир Борисович Тукмаков,romanized: Volodymyr Borysovych Tukmakov, born March 5, 1946, inOdesa) is a Ukrainianchess grandmaster. He gained theGrandmaster title in 1972.
His career first blossomed when he helped and then led the USSR to consecutive wins of the World Student Team Championship from 1966 to 1972, winning nine gold medals along the way.
In the 1970s and 1980s he progressed to the senior Soviet Russian team and was again on the multiple gold medal winning trail. In his onlyOlympiad appearance in1984 he took team gold and in 1973, 1983 and 1989 he played in theEuropean Team Chess Championship, where his collective haul was an amazing 5 (three team and two individual) gold medals.
In international tournaments, his best results include second place (afterFischer) at Buenos Aires 1970, 2nd (afterKarpov) at Madrid 1973, 1st= (withJansa andIvkov) atIBM Amsterdam tournament 1974, 1st at Decin 1977, 1st= (withSax) at Las Palmas 1978, 1st at Vilnius 1978 (ahead ofTigran Petrosian) and 1st at Malta 1980. At Yerevan 1982, he was 2nd (afterYusupov), at Tilburg 1984, 2nd= (afterMiles). Tukmakov also won the strong Lugano Open in 1985 and the 30thReggio Emilia tournament 1987/88; at Amsterdam OHRA-B (Open) 1990, shared first place withJudit Polgár. He won theCanadian Open Chess Championship in 1989 and 1994.
At the Gijon (active) tournament of 1988, he showed he was a fine player of rapid chess too, finishing joint first withAnatoly Karpov.
Of his many attempts to become Soviet champion he came very close on three occasions; at Riga 1970, Baku 1972 and at Moscow 1983, where he finished behindKorchnoi,Tal andKarpov respectively. He was however thenational champion of Ukraine in 1970.
At the momentous London 1984USSR vs Rest of the World clash, he made a surprising, but important contribution. Starting as a lowly reserve for the USSR team, he was twice asked to substitute forSmyslov on board 4 and then once forPolugaevsky on board 3. The outcome was that he delivered the team a useful net plus score againstLjubojević (one win and one draw) and Korchnoi (draw).
Much less active as a player nowadays, Tukmakov nevertheless retains a competitiveElo rating (2551 in October 2007). Competing at the very strong Odesa rapid tournament of 2007, he got off to a flying start, drawing with Korchnoi and defeating the highly ratedSmirin andBacrot. Sadly, tiredness then took over and he lost the remainder of his games.
He was non-playing captain with the victorious Ukraine team at the36th Chess Olympiad inCalvià (2004). In the same year he was awarded the title ofFIDE Senior Trainer.[1]
Anish Giri, a Dutch grandmaster, started working with Tukmakov in 2014.[2]