He started to play chess at the age of four. Even in his childhood days he started to avidly read classic chess literature and learned a lot by himself. 1978 he became a member of the club HSG Medizin Erfurt. 1980, 1981 and 1984 he won the respective East Germany championship for his age class. 1986 he won the 12. GDR youth-championship in correspondence chess. Beginning with 1985 he played for Mikroelektronik Erfurt in the Oberliga, the highest league in the GDR.
Chess career
1988 he was awarded the title International Master by FIDE. After a series of further successes, among them second places at the GDR championship in Zittau 1989 and in Altensteig 1991 and victories in Andorra 1992, Lenk and Hamburg 1993 and finally his first German championship 1993 (after a 2–0 victory in the final against Thomas Pähtz he became Grandmaster in 1994.
[FIDE] official and DSB">German Chess Federation">DSB official
He is the head of the FIDE Commission on Disabled and played for the IPCA team once. He is also head of the division for competitive chess in the German chess federation.
Game
Thomas Luther's style is tactically oriented, which makes him a formidable opponent for even the strongest player. The following game is typical where he attacks former CandidateRobert Hübner right out of the opening. The game was played in the penultimate round of the German championship 2002 and laid the ground for Thomas' later winning the title. The comments are based on personal conversations with Thomas Luther himself. Black already offers a pawn sacrifice. Due to the gambit-style opening the position immediately becomes sharp and concrete. After 4. d5xc6 Sb8xc6 black has a good game. Either way, Black absolutely wants to sacrifice a pawn. White didn't want to take the risk of accepting the second sacrifice. After 6. e6xf7+ Ke8xf7 the rook h8 dangerously comes into play too. Again Black continues as aggressively as possible. The second knight joins the attack. Blacks opening strategy was successful. Black starts a combination leading to material gain. The inconspicuous knight on h2 will single-handedly wreak havoc in Whites position. A good try to molest the black king with a knight sacrifice. Black, though, has a spectacular counterpunch: The threat is Qc5+, forcing Qc6 and the subsequent loss of a knight as Black would get mated otherwise. This queen sacrifice starts the very effective deployment of the knight. Black wins material. Asquiesces the discovered check but other king moves were even worse: Ke2-e1/e3 and Nd4-c2+ wins the queen. Black reaps the fruit of his combinatorial fireworks: the smoke has cleared and he is two pawns ahead. This pawn breakthrough decides the game. The rest for completeness' sake:
Personal
Luther has a congenital disability on his arms. As a child he was considered to have no perspective in sports from GDR officials. He tells to have taken a great amount of energy out of experiencing that he can be as good as others. Thomas Luther is author at ChessBase. He published various DVDs on opening theory and other topics. He is considered to be one of the leading experts on the French Defence, about which he published several times. In 2009 he finished his studies at the University of Hagen acquiring the title of Diplomkaufmann. Luther's current Elo rating is 2528.