Yoav Dothan Explained

Yoav Dothan (born 1955) is an Israeli chess player who holds the chess title of International Correspondence Chess Grandmaster. He was the Israeli champion of correspondence chess for the 1997 championship and the winner of the Finland Jubilee 40.[1] He lives in Ramat Hasharon. At the ICCF congress in Leeds 2009, Dothan received the Bertl von Massow award in silver.[2]

Dothan's ICCF rating is 2632 (updated January 2011) and he holds the first place in Israel and 23rd in the world.

Dothan lives in Ramat Hasharon, is married to Ilana and father of Shai Dothan who is a Professor of International Law, and David and Deganit both physicians.

ICCF tournaments

Major tournaments in which Dothan has played!Start date!Name of the tournament!Site!Board for a team event!Place in individual event!Number of games!Category!GM norm!Actual result
1 June 1997The Israeli championship nr. 37--16--5.5
1 August 2000Jänisch Memorial (RUS)[3] -41491010
2003VI EU MSM - Preliminaries, section 3 - Board 2[4] 2-1097.57.5
25 April 200310 Years Russian CCA, group B[5] -11411910
30 July 2004Finjub - 40/Post (FIN)[6] -115101011
16 October 2004European TC VI, Final board 2[7] 2-121378.5
1 February 2005Altshuler Memorial[8] -114109.511
20 December 20057th European Team Championship - Semifinal 1 board 1[9] 1-1087.57.5
1 February 2007Murakhvery Memorial[10] -11491010
10 September 2007AEAC 5 Years - Alhambra[11] -3-5141288
30 September 2007Luciano Cámara memorial "A"[12] -1121378.5
1 May 2008Ragozin Memorial[13] -214128.59.5
21 February 20098th European Team Championship - Semifinal 3 board 1[14] 1-91166.5
9 July 2016800 Aniversario Orden de Predicadores - A[15] -2-516148.58.5

ICCF matches

Dothan represented Israel in international matches:

Mixed Doubles chess match

Roland Stratmann was asked by the Museum of Modern Art Liechtenstein to develop a contribution to the exhibition “Faites vos jeux ! Kunst und Spiel seit DADA”. The issue for the exhibition was to show the conjunction between Art and Game during the last hundred years. And the chess game was one of the leitmotifs of the exhibition. As Marcel Duchamp – who was an important artist and chess player as well – once said: “Not all artists are chess players, but all chess players are artists”. Stratmann kept this sentence in the back of his mind when he started to develop an idea for the exhibition.The result of his thoughts was a 7 by 7 meter big, from the museum ceiling upside down hanging chessboard – attached with 32 banners printed with chess characters. During the exhibition chess masters from four countries played a chess game via the Internet. The flags were then reassigned according to the result of the moves. Thus the space changes every day as well. Two teams were competing in the alternating correspondence chess game: Team A consisted of a player from Cuba and one from the United States of America; Team B consisted of a player from Israel and one from Morocco and in the fourth game a player from Ghana.

Meanwhile “Mixed Doubles” has also been shown and played at the Museum of Modern Art Siegen, the Cobra Museum of Modern Art in Amsterdam and in the Museum Zwickau. Stratmann said: "I am very happy that this game for peace and friendship is still going on successfully. But all this would not have happened without the capital support from the ICCF. For this purpose I would like to thank Med Samraoui and Fritz Baumbach who helped me from the very first. Great thanks to Corky Schakel, Pablo Salcedo Mederos, Yoav Dothan, Khalid Chorfi and Dr. Ole Jacobsen who created such exciting chess games. And I am grateful to all members of the ICCF and the Museums who have been involved in this project during the last two years."

The games:

Articles written by Dothan

References

  1. Web site: FINJUB-40/Post.
  2. Web site: Archived copy . September 29, 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101226035118/http://www.iccf.com/congress2009/draftmins1.pdf . December 26, 2010 .
  3. Web site: Jänisch Memorial.
  4. Web site: VI EU MSM - Preliminaries, section 3 - Board 2.
  5. Web site: Cross Table.
  6. Web site: FINJUB-40/Post.
  7. Web site: Cross Table.
  8. Web site: Cross Table.
  9. Web site: Cross Table.
  10. Web site: Cross Table.
  11. Web site: Cross Table.
  12. Web site: Cross Table.
  13. Web site: Cross Table.
  14. Web site: Cross Table.
  15. Web site: Cross Table.
  16. Web site: Cross Table.
  17. Web site: Cross Table.
  18. Web site: Cross Table.