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  • Friday, April 21, 2023

    Going From Winning To Losing

         World Champion Dr. Max Euwe once pointed out that generally speaking tactics (or as we used to call them, combinations) are either hard to see or hard to calculate. Nevertheless, we can improve our ability to see tactics by learning common tactical devices. 
         In the following game Rubinstein places his R on the seventh rank, a strategy that he often used, and got a favorable position. But, then we see how things can go horribly wrong in tactical situations even for a great player like Rubinstein.
         Rudolf Spielmann (May 5, 1883 - August 20, 1942) was an Austrian player of the Romantic School who had a complete mastery of tactics and they often showed up in his games in unexpected and beautiful ways. 
         Spielmann was a newspaper editor in Vienna and in spite of his attacking nature on the board Reuben Fine wrote, "In appearance and personal habits Spielmann was the mildest-mannered individual alive. Beer and chess were the great passions of his life; in his later years, at least, he cared for little else. Perhaps his chess became so vigorous as compensation for an otherwise uneventful life." 
         Known as The Master of Attack and The Last Knight of the King's Gambit, his daredevil play was full of sacrifices, brilliancies and beautiful ideas. 
         In 1934, Spielmann, who was Jewish, fled Vienna due to pro-Nazi sympathies and moved to the Netherlands. In 1938, he went to Prague to be with his brother, but the German army occupied Czechoslovakia only a few months later. Leopold Spielmann was arrested and died in a concentration camp a few years later. One of their sisters also perished in a camp, the other survived the war, but never recovered mentally from the ordeal of it and ended up committing suicide.
         Spielmann was more fortunate. He managed to flee to Sweden with the help of a friend and from there he hoped to eventually reach England or the United States. In order to earn money for the voyage he played exhibition matches, wrote chess columns and a book (Memories of a Chess Master). With the war in full swing and some members of the Swedish Chess Federation being Nazi sympathies who disliked Spielmann, his book was repeatedly delayed and never published.
         As a result, Spielmann became withdrawn and depressed and one day in August 1942, he locked himself in his Stockholm apartment and did not emerge for a week. On August 20, neighbors summoned police to check on him. They entered the apartment and found him dead. The official cause of death was coronary artery disease, aka hardening of the arteries. Others claimed that he intentionally starved himself. 
         Akiba Rubinstein (December 1, 1880 - March 14, 1961) was also a tragic figure. Born in Poland to a Jewish family, he learned to play chess at the age of 14. In 1903 he abandoned his rabbinical studies and devoted himself entirely to chess. 
         Between 1907 and 1912, Rubinstein established himself as one of the strongest players in the world. After 1932 he withdrew from tournament play as his anthropophobia (fear of people) showed traces of schizophrenia (a serious mental disorder in which people interpret reality abnormally.). It is not clear how he survived World War II in Nazi-occupied Belgium, but it's possible that it was due to the fact that he was confined in a sanatorium. He spent the last 29 years of his life living at home with his family and in a sanatorium because of his severe mental illness. 
          Rubinstein's playing style was primarily positional and his endgame technique was legendary. His knowledge and understanding of Rook endings was far ahead of his time. A game that I liked (Fritz 17)
    Akiba RubinsteinRudolf Spielmann0–1A44Stockholm1919Stockfish 15.1
    Semi-Benoni 1.d4 c5 2.d5 e5 3.e4 d6 4.d3 e7 5.c4 5.e2 c7 6.d2 g6 7.a4 e7 8.c4 b6 9.0-0 Black's position is very passive. Kool, G-Kieninger,G Amsterdam 1963 5.f4 exf4 6.xf4 g6 7.g3 e7 8.f3 0-0 9.bd2 d7 10.c4 Equals. Kozma,J-Stoeckl,E Munich 1958 5...g6 6.g3 e7 7.h4 h6 8.c3 White clearly has the better prospects thanks to black's passive position. d7 9.f3 f6 10.h2 Black's position is so passive that Rubinstein has plenty of time to undertake a lengthy N maneuver. d7 11.f1 f8 12.e3 From here the N eyes f5 and also supports the advance of the g-Pawn g6 13.e2 h5 14.d2 c8 15.f3 g8 16.c2 h6 17.0-0-0 c7 18.g4 A near decisive breakthrough. 0-0-0 18...hxg4 19.fxg4 0-0-0 20.g5 g8 21.b5 White has the advantage on both sides and his position is strategically won. Black cannot afford to play xb5 22.cxb5 d7 23.a4 f8 24.a5 b6 25.c4 and white is winning. 19.dg1 b8 20.gxh5 Also good was 20.g5 keeping black in a serious bind. gxh5 21.f5 xf5 22.exf5 h7 23.g7 The R is going Pawn hunting on the 7th rank. There's nothing wrong with the move and white can claim a slight advantage. But...it will all go horribly wrong. Over his career Rubinstein won many games, especially endings, by establishing a R on the 7th (or 2nd) rank. was another way to grab a P. 23.f4 e4 24.xh5 df8 25.xe4 Here, too, white has slightly the better of it. 23...f6 24.xf7 xf5 With both his Q and R attacked white has no choice except to exchange Qs. 25.xc7 xc2 26.b5 This is where white goes astray. The R has no way out so white must give it up for as much as possible. 26.xc2 xc7 leaves white down the exchange. 26.f7 g6 27.xf6 xf6 Here, too, white is down the exchange and black is slightly better. 26.xc5 dxc5 27.xc2 and at least white has some compensation for the exchange in the form of a protected passed Pawn in the center.. 26...f5 There is no way out for the R. 27.g5 This move leads to a complete collapse of white's game. 27.f7 g6 wins the exchange. 27.a5 save the day! b6 28.xb6 axb6 29.c6 and the best for both sides is to accept the draw. b7 30.c7+ b8 31.c6 etc. 27...xg5 Because white is now without any threats black can go on the attack and wrap things up. A very sudden collapse of white's position! 28.hxg5 xg5+ 29.d1 d7 White resigned. It would be hopeless to play on the exchange down for nothing. 29...a6 would also work. 30.f7 h7 31.c7 g6 32.g7 dg8 33.xg8+ xg8 34.e6 29...d7 This forces 30.xd7 xd7 29...d7 30.xb7+ xb7 31.xd6+ c7 32.f7 f4 33.xd8 xd8 Black is a piece up. 0–1

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