Showing posts with label Alekhine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alekhine. Show all posts

Monday, January 22, 2018

More on Jacqueline Piatigorsky [UPDATED]

I spent some time this evening looking through Edward Winter's Chess Notes to see if he had published anything on Spassky's vodka story or if he had anything on the details of the contracts for the publication of the tournament book for the Second Piatigorsky Cup. Sadly, he had nothing on either, as best I can determine.

However, being Edward Winter's Chess Notes, the site has vast amounts of interesting stories. Of the items that caught my eye this time, he has a long series of items on Jacqueline and Gregor Piatigorsky, including some outtakes from her autobiography. I probably will not find what I'm looking for in that book, but I will try anyway.

Second, and unrelated to anything else, I found his glowing review of Alexander Alekhine’s Chess Games, 1902-1946 by Leonard M. Skinner and Robert G.P. Verhoeven (McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, 1998). The book is large and expensive, so sadly I won't be buying it anytime soon. But this line from Winter made me laugh:
There are over two hundred French Defence games, and the database buccaneers will not be slow to plunder the book’s treasures.
UPDATE: Jacqueline Piatigorsky's memoir arrived. Jump in the Waves has a chapter devoted to chess promotion, but that includes a wide range of activities, including various chess-in-the-schools programs. So I did not learn anything about the nature of the contracts for the Second Piatigorsky Tournament book.

I have not read the entire book, yet, but will soon. The memoir is short, and perusing a few random chapters it seems well-written and interesting. How many people do you know of that were raised in one of Talleyrand's old palaces?

Friday, September 23, 2016

An anticpated book...

Jan Timman is publishing a new book through New In Chess, Timman's Titans: My World Chess Champions. Here's a part of the advertising blurb from the publisher:
In this fascinating book, Jan Timman portrays ten World Chess Champions that played an important role in his life and career. Alexander Alekhine (1892-1946) he never met, but the story of how in Lisbon he bought one of the last chess sets belonging to the fourth World Champion is one of many highlights in this book.

Timman has a keen eye for detail and a fabulous memory, and he visibly enjoys sharing his insider views, including many revelations about the great champions. Timman’s Titans not only presents a personal view of these chess giants, but is also an evocation of countless fascinating episodes in chess history.

Each portrait is completed by a rich selection of illustrative games, annotated in the author’s trademark lucid style. Always to the point, sharp and with crystal-clear explanations, Timman shows the highs and lows from the games of the champions, including the most memorable games he himself played against them.
I'm pretty sure the connection to Botvinnik will be the one he covers in the introduction to The Art of Chess Analysis. I presume the connection to Fischer has a lot to do with his joint book with Euwe on the 1972 Fischer-Spassky match, though he may well have covered the 1992 match in person.

In any event, I have been very impressed with both of the books of his that I own, and look forward to owning this one. There's always another shelf to be cleared....

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Another ongoing discussion, this time concerning central pawn expansion in the QGD

Recently Paul Leggett and I have been discussing a plan created by Botvinnik in the QGD, in which as White he forgoes the minority attack of yore (even back then!) and instead plays for central expansion. The key line runs 1 d4 d5 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 Nf6 4 cxd5 exd5 5 Bg5 Be7 6 e3 0-0 7 Bd3 Nbd7 8 Qc2 Re8 and now 9 Nge2 with the plan of castling, tucking away the king, and then an eventual f2-f3 and e3-e4, gaining much space in the center and kingside. This plan was first seen, I believe, in Botvinnik-Keres, USSR Ch (Moscow) 1952. (The move order given above is a transposition.)

Prior to that, 9 Nge2 had occurred in this position nine times. According to Kasparov's MGP series, Botvinnik had the following to say after the additional two-ply of 9...Nf8 10 0-0:
This continuation was unusual for that time. After Ng1-f3 White normally used to castle on the kingside, whereas when he played Ng1-e2 he would castle queenside. But in the present game a 'hybrid' variation has been employed, with the aim of making it difficult for the opponent to choose a plan. After White's kindside castling it is harder for Black to obtain active play, in which Keres always felt confident. - M. Botvinnik
(That idea of Nge2, castling queenside and then attacking the kingside with pawns still had some poison in it at the top levels into the early 1980s, by the by.)

Botvinnik-Keres, USSR Ch (Moscow) 1952
after 9 Nge2

Paul brought this up within the context of a recent game of his, which he posted on Facebook*. Later in the discussion, Paul made the following comment:
I am almost finished reading "Rubinstein Move by Move" by GM Zenon Franco (an excellent book), and what do I find towards the end of the book? Botvinnik-Keres 1952 and Kasparov-Andersson 1988, annotated in the context of Rubinstein's contribution to the QGD. These games will live forever.
To which I replied that I had just noticed the game Rubinstein-Bogoljubov, London 1922, which seemed to be heading in the direction of the Botvinnik game above, but after playing Nge2, Rubinstein then played e3-e4 followed by f2-f4. It seemed that Rubinstein was going for a direct kingside attack. (I have no idea if this game is mentioned Franco's book. I'm sure Paul can give an answer to that one.)

Alas, my abilities to visualize the action were sadly lacking. On vacation a few days ago I managed to finally get to the game, which goes as follows: 1 d4 d5 2 c4 c6 3 e3 Nf6 4 Nc3 Bf5 5 cxd5 Nxd5 (a key difference in pawn structures!) 6 Bc4 e6 7 Nge2 (our star move) Nd7 8 0-0 Qh4, and now Rubinstein committed a tactical oversight and played 9 e4, which simply lost a pawn. 

But in the tournament book, Alekhine made the following comment about this position:

Rubinstein-Bogoljubov, London 1922
after 8 ... Qh4
An inoffensive reply to which White should simply play 9 f3, and if 9...Bd6 10 g3 and Black is forced to withdraw his queen to e7, for if 10...Qh3 11 e4 Nxc3 12 bxc3 Bg6 13 e5 followed by 14 Nf4 and wins. - A. Alekhine
Clearly Alekhine was looking to central expansion here, and I imagine that he believed that was Rubinstein's original intent. But that knight on d5 induced a tactical error!

It's hard to believe that Botvinnik wasn't aware of both the game and Alekhine's commentary on the game, and perhaps it inspired him. Probably not in 1952, but rather in 1938, against another one of the giants of the game. For the famous Botvinnik-Capablanca game at the renowned AVRO tournament featured Botvinnik playing 9 Nge2 with an eventual 0-0, f2-f3 and e3-e4 against Black's pawns on the a-d files and an absent Black e-pawn.

I rather imagine, sans any evidence, that this was all a chain of inspiration over time, one thing leading naturally to another. It makes for a nice story, but I have no idea how much if any validity it merits. I do know that in his book One Hundred Selected Games Botvinnik mentions as early as Black's sixth move in the Capablanca game that White's basic plan is to play f2-f3 and e3-e4, breaking through in the center. He goes on to mention after 9 Nge2 that the game recalls Lilienthal-Ragozin, Moscow 1935, but with a couple of minor differences. Clearly Botvinnik had given this strategical idea some thought! 

Those with better paper archives might find more on the genesis of the Nge2, 0-0, f2-f3, e3-e4 idea in these structures, and of Botvinnik's inspiration. (I only have three books by Botvinnik, the one mentioned which only covers games up until 1946, Championship Chess on the Absolute Soviet Championship of 1941, and a book that he sorta kinda maybe co-authored on the Grunfeld Defense in the 1970s, so I have nothing by him on his games against Keres or Larsen save what Kasparov quotes.) And those with better db skills may well turn up some stones plowing fields of data.

So for now, I leave it at that.

...

But I do have two additional comments of a tangential nature. First, the Rubinstein-Bogoljubov game, and Alekhine's notes to it, have more interesting features, which I hope to return to soon. Second, can you imagine one of the top players now writing a tournament book? Imagine Carlsen or Giri writing notes to the recent BilBao tournament, for example, which was also a six player double round robin. Come on, guys, it's only 30 games, and I'm sure your seconds will kick in a good deal of the work. Let's make tournament books great again! 

* I hope that's the correct link. Facebook is a real pain in the posterior to deal with on such matters.

Monday, July 11, 2016

Tactics Time: Capablanca-Alekhine

Below is a position from the 29th game of the 1927 World Championship match between Capablanca and Alekhine. Capablanca had just played 21 Qb3!

Capablanca-Alekhine
World Championship Match (29)

Clearly, Alekhine would be happy to liquidate his b- & c-pawns for White's b- & d-pawns. However, he did not play 21...c5. Can you see why? (Answer in white-font below the fold.)