Craig Pritchett

Craig W Pritchett (born Glasgow, Scotland, 15 January 1949) is a Scottish chess International Master who has written several chess books. He was educated at Allan Glen's School,[1][2][3] where he was a prominent member of the chess club and represented the school in several tournaments. He has represented Scotland nine times in Chess Olympiads from 19661990. He has won the Scottish Chess Championships on two occasions (in 1977 and 2005), and played in two Zonal tournaments (1972 and 1975). He is also a chess coach.

Team results for Scotland

Pritchett represented Scotland three times in Student Olympiads, from 19681970. Here are his detailed results, from olimpbase.org:

Pritchett represented Scotland nine times in Chess Olympiads, from 19661990. Here are his detailed results, from olimpase.org. His totals in 117 games are (+43 =46 -28), for 56.4 per cent.

Scottish champion

Pritchett has been Scottish champion on at least two occasions. He became an International Master in 1976. Here are his detailed results, from https://web.archive.org/web/20050411000000/http://www.chessmetrics.com, the Craig Pritchett player file.

Steady results in British Chess Championships

Pritchett has competed many times in the British Chess Championships, with generally solid results, qualifying twice to Zonal tournaments. Here are his detailed results, from https://web.archive.org/web/20050411000000/http://www.chessmetrics.com, the Craig Pritchett player file.

Writings

Pritchett co-authored the book Best Games of the Young Grandmasters (Bell and Howell, London 1980) with Danny Kopec. Pritchett wrote Nimzo Indian 4.e3: Nimzowitsch, Hubner, and Taimanov Variations (Batsford 1980). Another book co-authored with Kopec is Chess World Contenders and Their Styles (2002). A more recent book is Starting Out: Sicilian Scheveningen, published in 2006; he wrote the first edition of this book in 1977. A forthcoming title from Pritchett in January 2008 is Play the English: A Complete Chess Opening Repertoire for White. Pritchett is the chess columnist for the Glasgow Herald.

References

External links

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