Lev Gutman (, ; born 26 September 1945 in Riga) is a Latvian, Israeli, and German chess grandmaster.
At the beginning of his career, Gutman tied for 11âÂÂ12th at Riga 1967 (LAT-ch; JÃÂnis KlovÃÂns won), which was the first of many appearances in the Latvian championship; he tied for 5âÂÂ7th place in 1969, tied for 4âÂÂ5th in 1971, won in 1972, tied for 7âÂÂ8th in 1973, took 3rd in 1974, took 4th in 1975, took 2nd in 1976, tied for 2ndâÂÂ3rd in 1977, tied for 7âÂÂ9th in 1978, tied for 4âÂÂ5th in 1979.
In 1972 he won, equal with Alvis Vëtolià Âà ¡ and à  mits, the Riga Chess Championship. In 1974, he tied for 6âÂÂ7th in Pärnu. In 1975, he tied for 6âÂÂ8th in Riga. In 1976, he tied for 7âÂÂ9th in Riga. In 1977, he tied for 6âÂÂ7th in Homel. In 1978, he tied for 4âÂÂ7th in Vladivostok. In 1978, he won in Haapsalu.
Gutman emigrated from the Soviet Union to Israel in 1980, later moving to Germany.
A former second to Viktor Korchnoi, he is known as an expert on opening theory.
He played for Israel in two Chess Olympiads.
In 1984, he won in Grindavik. In 1985, he won in Beer Sheva. In 1986, he won in Wuppertal. In 1986, he tied for 1stâÂÂ4th with Viktor Korchnoi (winner on tie-break), Nigel Short, and James Plaskett in the strong Lugano Open. In 1987, Gutman was clear first at the traditional Biel Open. He also lost to Judit Polgar in Brussels in that year, making him the first GM she beat.
He was awarded the Grandmaster title in 1986.
In September 2015, on the occasion of the 70st birthday of Lev Gutman, the chessclub Schachverein Lingen 1959 organised a tournament, the Lev Gutman 70 GM-Turnier in Lingen. The winner was GM Stelios Halkias (6 pt./9). Gutman himself became 8th with 3.5 pt./9.