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Thursday, September 12, 2013
Tartajubow Defense?
I recently played a 5 minute game on Playchess and it served as a reminder why I don’t play blitz; I need three days to select a move, not 3 seconds.
I call this defense the “Tartajubow Defense” because my database doesn’t have a single game with the defense. There must be a good reason.
Anyway I thought I might try it in an anonymous blitz game because what’s there to lose besides the game? Actually I was doing pretty good, winning even, until I missed several mates.
Recent Results with Stockfish
For the past several months now I have been using the latest version of Stockfish on Lechenicher SchachServer instead of Houdini (both the free version and H2) and was curious to see how my results compared in the last 33 games where I’ve used SF vs. the last 33 using Houdini.
Percentage-wise Stockfish didn’t make a lot of difference, but I went from +1 to +3 and that is, I think, an improvement.
However, of late I have been using both engines, relying on H2 in closed positions plus I have tried to spend more time analyzing different ideas in closed positions that are not suggested by the engines. SF tends to be considerably more optimistic/pessimistic in its evaluations and I notice that in closed positions when the engines start aimlessly shifting pieces around (especially Rooks) and don’t seem to be doing anything then it is time to start looking for a human inspired plan. Sometimes many moves later you will find out the evaluation will change one way or the other. Since I have been taking this approach the results improved considerably: +4 -0 =11 (86.4%)! I wanted to enter another tournament last week because one of the players was titled: an ICCF Master. But I messed around and missed the chance.
What made the following game rather difficult was that at points both SF and H2 couldn’t seem to offer any clear advice: several moves of nearly equal worth, different top suggestions for the engines and different evaluations. The result was that several times I had to forget the engines and rely on my own judgment. Just selecting the engine’s top move doesn’t guarantee a win. They may smash us OTB because they spot tactical errors, but eliminate the tactics and sometimes engines begin to have their ‘doubts’ about what the best move is just like we humans do.
Houdini +9 -8 =16 (51.5%)
Stockfish +7 -4 =22 (54.5%)
However, of late I have been using both engines, relying on H2 in closed positions plus I have tried to spend more time analyzing different ideas in closed positions that are not suggested by the engines. SF tends to be considerably more optimistic/pessimistic in its evaluations and I notice that in closed positions when the engines start aimlessly shifting pieces around (especially Rooks) and don’t seem to be doing anything then it is time to start looking for a human inspired plan. Sometimes many moves later you will find out the evaluation will change one way or the other. Since I have been taking this approach the results improved considerably: +4 -0 =11 (86.4%)! I wanted to enter another tournament last week because one of the players was titled: an ICCF Master. But I messed around and missed the chance.
What made the following game rather difficult was that at points both SF and H2 couldn’t seem to offer any clear advice: several moves of nearly equal worth, different top suggestions for the engines and different evaluations. The result was that several times I had to forget the engines and rely on my own judgment. Just selecting the engine’s top move doesn’t guarantee a win. They may smash us OTB because they spot tactical errors, but eliminate the tactics and sometimes engines begin to have their ‘doubts’ about what the best move is just like we humans do.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Professor Chess
Charles Weldon
Charles Weldon (b. 1939 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin - d. 1993 in Belgrade, Yugoslavia) was a master and a professor of computer science at City University of New York. He was considered to be the superstar of his university department; one of the brightest and best. Today CCNY offers an award in his name for outstanding students in computer science. He taught a class called “mainframe assembler.” It’s interesting that CCNY also had another very strong master on their faculty, a chemistry professor, Dr. Neil McKelvie, who at one time served as president of the Manhattan Chess Club.
Weldon won the US Amateur Chess Championship with a perfect score and was known for playing the Schliemann Defense against the Ruy Lopez. He was known to play in tournaments wearing a large pair of headphones, apparently to block out ambient sound.
He died at age 57 when he became interested in the country of Yugoslavia and traveled there to play in a tournament. Weldon did well in the tournament but got sick shortly after the tournament; he had appendicitis and his appendix was removed. He could have had a medical evacuation back to the United States or to a hospital in Germany, but he did not feel that his condition was sufficiently serious. When complications developed, it was too late because Yugoslavia was involved in civil war and did not have the life support facilities to properly care for his peritonitis and as a result he died.
Sam Sloane made an interesting observation that, unlike Bobby Fischer, Weldon’s presence in Yugoslavia, in view of his position of one of America's most distinguished computer scientists, was a matter of more serious concern than Fischer’s match against Spassky, but Weldon was never harassed by the US Government because of his presence in Yugoslavia.
The play of both sides in the following game is not perfect, but it’s exciting.
Weldon won the US Amateur Chess Championship with a perfect score and was known for playing the Schliemann Defense against the Ruy Lopez. He was known to play in tournaments wearing a large pair of headphones, apparently to block out ambient sound.
He died at age 57 when he became interested in the country of Yugoslavia and traveled there to play in a tournament. Weldon did well in the tournament but got sick shortly after the tournament; he had appendicitis and his appendix was removed. He could have had a medical evacuation back to the United States or to a hospital in Germany, but he did not feel that his condition was sufficiently serious. When complications developed, it was too late because Yugoslavia was involved in civil war and did not have the life support facilities to properly care for his peritonitis and as a result he died.
Sam Sloane made an interesting observation that, unlike Bobby Fischer, Weldon’s presence in Yugoslavia, in view of his position of one of America's most distinguished computer scientists, was a matter of more serious concern than Fischer’s match against Spassky, but Weldon was never harassed by the US Government because of his presence in Yugoslavia.
The play of both sides in the following game is not perfect, but it’s exciting.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
FIDE and Server Play
Earlier this month on the FIDE website, President, Kirsan E.T. Ilyumzhinov,wrote, “I am proud to announce today’s launch of the limited test version of FIDE online arena, FIDE’s official Internet playing platform developed in co-operation with CNC. In October 2013, after the Executive Board meeting in Tallinn, Estonia, the fully operational version of FIDE online arena will be in service and available all over the world.”
Every player gets an official rating online while playing tournaments on the web. FIDE is doing this because they believe online chess offers enormous opportunities for millions of players who are unable to regularly participate in over-the-board events to now play on an ‘official’ server and get an ‘official’ FIDE rating. Unlike other sites, they claim to have "a highly sophisticated chess anti-cheating system, AceGuard. Until now, it has been impossible to award official ratings for online chess because of the difficulty in preventing cheating. Now AceGuard will be an invaluable tool in FIDE's fight against cheaters and we would like to praise the PremiumChess company for developing this revolutionary technology and to congratulate CNC for bringing this service to FIDE." Not so sure about that; they are having a hard time detecting cheating at OTB events these days.
They claim, "When the full version of FIDE online arena starts in October, every move of every game played by full arena members will be monitored and extensively analyzed by the anti-cheating system and a special team of experts. Every member's playing history is evaluated with a Fairness Index rating, allowing you to see quickly if an opponent is reliable or not."
They will offer challenge games and tournaments, master challenge matches and simuls, free master lessons and lectures, full statistical analysis, broadcasts of major FIDE events, chat, game files, multi-lingual interface and more. From October on the site will be fully operational and guest members can update to full membership whenever they wish. The test version of the arena is for guest members only. Becoming a permanent guest member is free. Just fill in and send the guest membership application. You can register at FIDE Online Arena HERE.
I am not sure how this will affect other chess server sites and my guess is Ilyumzhinov sees it as a way to make more money from chessplayers. Apparently this is not going to be a correspondence site though and since I didn't sign up, I am not sure what the fee would be, time limits or anything else. Also, if one is not a "full member" does that mean their play won't be monitored for engine use?
Every player gets an official rating online while playing tournaments on the web. FIDE is doing this because they believe online chess offers enormous opportunities for millions of players who are unable to regularly participate in over-the-board events to now play on an ‘official’ server and get an ‘official’ FIDE rating. Unlike other sites, they claim to have "a highly sophisticated chess anti-cheating system, AceGuard. Until now, it has been impossible to award official ratings for online chess because of the difficulty in preventing cheating. Now AceGuard will be an invaluable tool in FIDE's fight against cheaters and we would like to praise the PremiumChess company for developing this revolutionary technology and to congratulate CNC for bringing this service to FIDE." Not so sure about that; they are having a hard time detecting cheating at OTB events these days.
They claim, "When the full version of FIDE online arena starts in October, every move of every game played by full arena members will be monitored and extensively analyzed by the anti-cheating system and a special team of experts. Every member's playing history is evaluated with a Fairness Index rating, allowing you to see quickly if an opponent is reliable or not."
They will offer challenge games and tournaments, master challenge matches and simuls, free master lessons and lectures, full statistical analysis, broadcasts of major FIDE events, chat, game files, multi-lingual interface and more. From October on the site will be fully operational and guest members can update to full membership whenever they wish. The test version of the arena is for guest members only. Becoming a permanent guest member is free. Just fill in and send the guest membership application. You can register at FIDE Online Arena HERE.
I am not sure how this will affect other chess server sites and my guess is Ilyumzhinov sees it as a way to make more money from chessplayers. Apparently this is not going to be a correspondence site though and since I didn't sign up, I am not sure what the fee would be, time limits or anything else. Also, if one is not a "full member" does that mean their play won't be monitored for engine use?
Monday, September 9, 2013
Fredick Olafsson
Olafsson was born 26 January 1935 and is an Icelandic GM and former president of FIDE. Few contemporary players have heard of Olafsson, but he was one of the better non-Soviet players after World War II and was strongest player in Iceland for many years.
He participated in the world championship cycle and has wins over the likes of Tartakower, Larsen (many), Fischer (twice), Petrosian (twice), Keres, Tal (twice), Karpov (when he was world champion), Korchnoi, Timman and Seirawan. He was also FIDE President, serving immediately before Campomanes’ reign began.
Born in Reykjavik, he won the Icelandic Championship in 1952 and the Scandinavian Championship a year later, rapidly becoming the strongest Icelandic player of his generation. His first international success was sharing first with Viktor Korchnoi at Hastings, 1955-56.
His best result in World Championship competition was in the 1958 Interzonal tournament at Portoroz where he finished equal 5th-6th, earning the grandmaster title and qualifying for the 1959 Candidates Tournament. The Candidates Tournament was the final event and determined the challenger for the World Champion. The 1959 event was held in Bled, Zagreb and Belgrade. Olafsson finished in seventh out of eight competitors with a score of with 10-18. He also played in the following Interzonal at Stockholm, 1962, but failed to qualify for the Candidates.
Among his best tournament results were joint third in the First Piatigorsky Cup, Los Angeles 1963, with 7.5-6.5 and sharing first with Ljubojevic at Wijk aan Zee 1976, ahead of Mikhail Tahl.
In 1978, he succeeded Max Euwe as President of FIDE. During his tenure he presided over the 1981 Korchnoi-Karpov World Championship match. Since Korchnoi defected from the Soviet Union in 1976, the Soviets were holding Korchnoi's son, Igor, hostage. Olafsson delayed the planned September 19 start date of the match in a bid to get the Soviets to release Victor's son. For this attempt, Olafsson drew the wrath of the Soviets, who then backed the FIDE Vice-President, Florencio Campomanes for Presidency of FIDE. As a result of this pressure from the Soviet Union, Olafsson lost the election in 1982 and Compomanes began his reign.
After that, Olafsson was appointed Secretary to the Icelandic Parliament and continued to play occasionally into the 21st century, winning a rapid match against fellow veteran Bent Larsen in 2003 by a score of 5-3.
Olafsson usually played the Sicilian against 1.e4 and the Nimzo-Indian against 1.d4. With White, he usually played the English, but played almost as many games with 1.d4 and 1.e4. Prior to 1974 when he became a chess professional, he worked as a lawyer at the Icelandic Ministry of Justice.
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Bad News and Game Downloads
For the bad news: Jim Ablett’s excellent site, Winboard Chess Projects has bitten the dust. The site now reads, “Goodbye and farewell. It was fun for a while. Not anymore. Now back to the real world.” Jim Ablett. [08-08-13]
The site says a single self-extracting archive containing everything he has done over the past 15 years, chess engines compiles (inc every version) , logos etc. is available for download, but when I tried downloading I got a message saying the site is no longer available.
Game Downloads
Keeping a database updated is necessary if you want to keep up with recent developments in you favorite openings. Personally, I never use the opening book that comes with Fritz. I use a database instead. If I hadn’t found Fritz 12 on sale at Office Max for $20 a couple of years ago, I would be using Scid. Shane's Chess Information Database is a database application for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X operating systems that allows you to maintain a database games, search games by many criteria, view graphical trends, and produce printable reports on players and openings. In addition you can analyze games with the Xboard or UCI compatible chess program, play online on FICS, and even use Scid to study endings with endgame tablebases. Download Scid HERE.
A good source of recent games can be found at the following sites:
The Week in Chess – Mark Crowther’s The Week in Chess (TWIC) publishes games played each week
Now in Chess – Gerardo Fernandez' site offers games not included in TWIC.
ICOfY – This lesser known site is a free games collection that can be used with most free and commercial chess programs, which support the PGN file format. It is also available in the file formats of Chessbase, Chess Assistant and SCID. The collection does not contain any short games with less than ten moves (good) and does not include tournament locations (not so good) or round numbers (who cares about round number?!).
KATAR Chess - games for use with SCID
Norm’s Chess Downloads – Norm Pollock's page features a collection of games between top players.
Best engine downloads:
Stockfish 4
Houdini 1.5a
Game Downloads
Keeping a database updated is necessary if you want to keep up with recent developments in you favorite openings. Personally, I never use the opening book that comes with Fritz. I use a database instead. If I hadn’t found Fritz 12 on sale at Office Max for $20 a couple of years ago, I would be using Scid. Shane's Chess Information Database is a database application for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X operating systems that allows you to maintain a database games, search games by many criteria, view graphical trends, and produce printable reports on players and openings. In addition you can analyze games with the Xboard or UCI compatible chess program, play online on FICS, and even use Scid to study endings with endgame tablebases. Download Scid HERE.
A good source of recent games can be found at the following sites:
The Week in Chess – Mark Crowther’s The Week in Chess (TWIC) publishes games played each week
Now in Chess – Gerardo Fernandez' site offers games not included in TWIC.
ICOfY – This lesser known site is a free games collection that can be used with most free and commercial chess programs, which support the PGN file format. It is also available in the file formats of Chessbase, Chess Assistant and SCID. The collection does not contain any short games with less than ten moves (good) and does not include tournament locations (not so good) or round numbers (who cares about round number?!).
KATAR Chess - games for use with SCID
Norm’s Chess Downloads – Norm Pollock's page features a collection of games between top players.
Best engine downloads:
Stockfish 4
Houdini 1.5a
Does Hard Work in Chess Pay Off?
Natalia Pogonina’s site has an interesting article by GM Daniel Gormally in which he voiced his opinion on the subject. I found it interesting because it set off a storm of replies, some agreeing, some not, not only on Pogonina’s site, but on a couple of other forums. For example:
“This guy is a GM and he nails exactly what I’ve been saying for years.”
“The article is 100% conjecture and based on pure opinion. And not really all that insightful. He could be correct, or completely wrong. What he doesn't do is bring anything new to the discussion.”
So what did he have to say? Gormally wrote, “You often hear a debate about work vs talent. The "10,000" hours rule is brought up again and again by those who like to champion the merits of hard work. Basically the theory is, if you put in 10,000 hours of preparation, study, training and so on, you are certain to achieve a level of mastery of whatever subject or activity you are involved with. As if it can be boiled down to a mathematical formula. What a load of crap.”
My first question, why do we think chess is any different than anything else? Sports, music, writing, or any profession. Talent will only get you so far. As a corollary, hard work will only get you so far.
In her book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol S. Dweck argues that there are two fundamental mindsets that people use: the fixed mindset and the growth mindset. Dweck describes the properties of these mindsets in great detail, and demonstrates their profound effects by applying them to education, sports, relationships, and personal change.
The premise is the idea that people exercise either a growth mindset or a fixed mindset. Those with a fixed mindset believe their talents and abilities cannot be improved through any means. They feel that they are born with a certain amount of talent and typically do not wish to challenge their abilities due to the possibility of failure. Individuals with a fixed mindset frequently guard themselves against situations in which they feel they need to prove their personal worth. Challenges are frequently viewed negatively, instead of as an opportunity for personal growth.
People that practice a growth mindset believe abilities, such as athleticism and mathematical capacity, can be improved through hard work and persistence. When presented with an obstacle, those practicing a growth mindset tend to rise to the challenge. Often, people of the growth mindset do not fear failure; instead, they view it as a chance to improve themselves. Dweck explains that mindsets …can drive multiple aspects of our lives, ranging from parenting and relationships, to sports and work. She reveals how prominent members of a variety of fields – business, literature, music, science, and sports - possess the growth mindset to achieve personal goals and dreams.
In the realm of sports, mindsets have a bigger role than most realize. Often 'the greats' are looked at as perfect specimens with innate talent that allowed them to excel, but in reality, this is not the case. Talent and being 'a natural' can only get you so far. Hard work and dedication are necessary to fulfill your potential. People with a growth mindset realize this and push themselves to achieve and maintain this high level of accomplishment. On the other hand, people with a fixed mindset believe that you possess certain skills and that any attempt to go beyond this natural talent is not only useless, but is looked down upon.
There are 3 main things that sports researchers found when they looked at commonalities between the athletes that exhibited the most (growth mindset):
1- found success in doing their best, in learning and improving
2- found setbacks motivating because they're informative and are a wake-up call
3- took charge of the processes that bring success and maintain it.
This is not to say that natural talent means nothing and cannot take a person far, but the growth mindset and the motivation and dedication that comes with it will take a person farther.
It seems you can have (1) a talent for chess but not work at it, (2) no talent and work very hard, or (3) both talent and the gumption work at it. Obviously the third possibility will result in more success while having just 1 or 2 alone will result in only limited success. My guess is that’s where most of us find ourselves; we’re not (3)’s.
So what did he have to say? Gormally wrote, “You often hear a debate about work vs talent. The "10,000" hours rule is brought up again and again by those who like to champion the merits of hard work. Basically the theory is, if you put in 10,000 hours of preparation, study, training and so on, you are certain to achieve a level of mastery of whatever subject or activity you are involved with. As if it can be boiled down to a mathematical formula. What a load of crap.”
My first question, why do we think chess is any different than anything else? Sports, music, writing, or any profession. Talent will only get you so far. As a corollary, hard work will only get you so far.
In her book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol S. Dweck argues that there are two fundamental mindsets that people use: the fixed mindset and the growth mindset. Dweck describes the properties of these mindsets in great detail, and demonstrates their profound effects by applying them to education, sports, relationships, and personal change.
The premise is the idea that people exercise either a growth mindset or a fixed mindset. Those with a fixed mindset believe their talents and abilities cannot be improved through any means. They feel that they are born with a certain amount of talent and typically do not wish to challenge their abilities due to the possibility of failure. Individuals with a fixed mindset frequently guard themselves against situations in which they feel they need to prove their personal worth. Challenges are frequently viewed negatively, instead of as an opportunity for personal growth.
People that practice a growth mindset believe abilities, such as athleticism and mathematical capacity, can be improved through hard work and persistence. When presented with an obstacle, those practicing a growth mindset tend to rise to the challenge. Often, people of the growth mindset do not fear failure; instead, they view it as a chance to improve themselves. Dweck explains that mindsets …can drive multiple aspects of our lives, ranging from parenting and relationships, to sports and work. She reveals how prominent members of a variety of fields – business, literature, music, science, and sports - possess the growth mindset to achieve personal goals and dreams.
In the realm of sports, mindsets have a bigger role than most realize. Often 'the greats' are looked at as perfect specimens with innate talent that allowed them to excel, but in reality, this is not the case. Talent and being 'a natural' can only get you so far. Hard work and dedication are necessary to fulfill your potential. People with a growth mindset realize this and push themselves to achieve and maintain this high level of accomplishment. On the other hand, people with a fixed mindset believe that you possess certain skills and that any attempt to go beyond this natural talent is not only useless, but is looked down upon.
There are 3 main things that sports researchers found when they looked at commonalities between the athletes that exhibited the most (growth mindset):
1- found success in doing their best, in learning and improving
2- found setbacks motivating because they're informative and are a wake-up call
3- took charge of the processes that bring success and maintain it.
This is not to say that natural talent means nothing and cannot take a person far, but the growth mindset and the motivation and dedication that comes with it will take a person farther.
It seems you can have (1) a talent for chess but not work at it, (2) no talent and work very hard, or (3) both talent and the gumption work at it. Obviously the third possibility will result in more success while having just 1 or 2 alone will result in only limited success. My guess is that’s where most of us find ourselves; we’re not (3)’s.
Friday, September 6, 2013
Howard Staunton
Howard Staunton (1810 – 22 June 1874) was generally regarded as having been the world's strongest player from 1843 to 1851. Today he is best known for his chess piece design, but probably very few players have actually played over any of his games; I haven’t.
Staunton was apparently twenty-six when he took a serious interest in chess and from 1840 onwards he became a leading chess commentator and won matches against top players of the 1840s. Modern experts consider Staunton's understanding of positional play to have been far ahead of his contemporaries. In 1847 he began a career as a Shakespearean scholar but ill health and his two writing careers led him to give up competitive chess after 1851.
Staunton was the principal organizer of the first international chess tournament in 1851, which made England the world's leading chess center and resulted in Adolf Anderssen being recognized as the world's strongest player. The tournament was disappointing for Staunton because in the second round he was knocked out by Anderssen who won the tournament convincingly and in the playoff for third place Staunton was narrowly beaten by Elijah Williams. Immediately after the tournament Staunton challenged Anderssen to a match of twenty-one games, for £100. Anderssen accepted the challenge but the match could not be arranged: Staunton was physically unfit for an immediate match and Anderssen had to return to work.
In 1847 Staunton published his most famous work, The Chess-Player's Handbook, consisting of over 300 pages of opening analysis, and almost 100 pages of endgame analysis and his book The Chess-Player's Companion followed in 1849. On 23 July 1849 Staunton married Frances Carpenter Nethersole, who had had eight children by a previous marriage.
In 1858 attempts were made to organize a match between Staunton and Morphy but for whatever reason, all attempts failed. Upon arriving in England in June 1858, Morphy promptly challenged Staunton to a match. At first, Staunton declined Morphy's offer but, finally, in July agreed provided he was given time to get back into practice on openings and endgames and provided that he could manage all this without breaking the publication contract for his Shakespearean work.
In early August, Morphy wrote asking Staunton when the match could occur and Staunton asked again for a delay of some weeks. Staunton’s enemy, George Walker, published an article accusing him of trying to delay the match indefinitely, and Staunton received another letter from Morphy pressing him to name a date for the match. Staunton and Morphy met socially in Birmingham and, after a discussion, Staunton agreed to play in early November. An anonymous letter appeared in Staunton's column in the Illustrated London News alleging that Morphy did not have the money for his share of the stakes. This letter is thought to have been written by Staunton himself.
Around this time Morphy wrote to friends in the US asking them to obtain the stake money for the Staunton match. Morphy's family refused to contribute as they "should not allow him to play a money match either with his own money or anyone else's", but the New Orleans Chess Club sent £500. Meanwhile Morphy went to Paris to play against continental masters. On 6 October 1858, while in Paris Morphy wrote Staunton an open letter which was also circulated to several publications, in which Morphy complained about Staunton's conduct. Staunton replied restating the difficulties he faced, but now giving them as reasons to cancel the match.
Morphy then wrote a letter to the president of the British Chess Association explaining his efforts to bring about the match and accusing Staunton of avoiding the match by all means short of admitting he did not wish to play, complaining about Staunton's representation of the facts in the Illustrated London News, and demanding "that you shall declare to the world it is through no fault of mine that this match has not taken place." The reply to Morphy was it was reasonable for Staunton to decline the match, but he should have done so plainly in his first letter to America, but had instead often given the impression that he would soon be ready to start the match.
In 1849 Nathaniel Cook registered a chess set design, and Jaques of London obtained the manufacturing rights. Staunton advertised the new set in his Illustrated London News chess column, pointing out that the pieces were easily identifiable, very stable, and good-looking. Each box was signed by Staunton, and Staunton received a royalty on each set sold. The design became popular and has been the standard ever since.
On March 1, 1849 the pattern was first registered by Nathaniel Cook. Prior to that, the pieces most commonly used were called the St. George design chessmen, followed by the Calvert, Edinburgh, Lund and Merrifield designs. In September 1849 the manufacturing rights were bought by John Jaques of London, workers of ivory and fine woods. Jaques was the brother-in-law of Nathaniel Cook. The sets were made in wood and ivory. The unweighted King was 3.5 inches in size. The weighted King was 4.4 inches in size. Jaques removed much of the decorative features of earlier chess patterns, and was able to manufacture the new design at less cost. On September 8, 1849 the first wooden chess sets from Jaques became available.
The first sets had a different pattern to the King's Rook and King's Knight that distinguished it from the Queen's Rook and the Queen's Knight. Eventually players came to realize that it was not necessary to distinguish between them. On the same day that the Jacques chess sets were available, Howard Staunton recommended and endorsed the sets in the Illustrated London News. Nathaniel Cook was Staunton's editor at the Illustrated London News (small world, huh?) The ad that appeared in the newspaper called it "Mr. Staunton's pattern."
Most of his later life was occupied in writing about Shakespeare. When he died suddenly of heart disease, on 22 June 1874, he was at his desk writing on Shakespeare. At the same time he was also working on his last chess book, Chess: Theory and Practice, which was published posthumously in 1876.
Chess historians trace much of the 20th-century animosity against Staunton to books by Sergeant about Morphy. Sergeant in turn made use of a book by Edge, who accompanied Morphy to Europe in 1858 as his secretary and personal assistant, but returned to the US in January 1859, a few months before Morphy. Sergeant's books made extensive use of Edge's book, but noted Edge's strong anti-Staunton bias. Lawson also suggests that Morphy had seen the manuscript of Edge's book, disliked its treatment of the Staunton affair so much that he disavowed it, and objected to Edge's treatment of other matters. Edge's letters show that he regarded Morphy as lazy and rather helpless, and himself as the one who would make Morphy's name immortal, and that Morphy wanted to keep the negotiations with Staunton discreet while Edge insisted on making them as public as possible.
H.J.R. Murray wrote that Staunton's response to Morphy's initial challenge and his article about the same in the Illustrated London News should have been interpreted as a courteous refusal of the offer, but that Morphy interpreted them differently, and one of the main reasons for his visit to Europe in 1858 was the hope of playing a match with Staunton.
Gary Kasparov considered Staunton "by the early 1840s ... superior to all his rivals" and Bobby Fischer believed that "Staunton was the most profound opening analyst of all time. He was more theorist than player, but nonetheless he was the strongest player of his day... In addition, he understood all of the positional concepts which modern players hold dear, and thus—with Steinitz—must be considered the first modern player."
Staunton was apparently twenty-six when he took a serious interest in chess and from 1840 onwards he became a leading chess commentator and won matches against top players of the 1840s. Modern experts consider Staunton's understanding of positional play to have been far ahead of his contemporaries. In 1847 he began a career as a Shakespearean scholar but ill health and his two writing careers led him to give up competitive chess after 1851.
Staunton was the principal organizer of the first international chess tournament in 1851, which made England the world's leading chess center and resulted in Adolf Anderssen being recognized as the world's strongest player. The tournament was disappointing for Staunton because in the second round he was knocked out by Anderssen who won the tournament convincingly and in the playoff for third place Staunton was narrowly beaten by Elijah Williams. Immediately after the tournament Staunton challenged Anderssen to a match of twenty-one games, for £100. Anderssen accepted the challenge but the match could not be arranged: Staunton was physically unfit for an immediate match and Anderssen had to return to work.
In 1847 Staunton published his most famous work, The Chess-Player's Handbook, consisting of over 300 pages of opening analysis, and almost 100 pages of endgame analysis and his book The Chess-Player's Companion followed in 1849. On 23 July 1849 Staunton married Frances Carpenter Nethersole, who had had eight children by a previous marriage.
In 1858 attempts were made to organize a match between Staunton and Morphy but for whatever reason, all attempts failed. Upon arriving in England in June 1858, Morphy promptly challenged Staunton to a match. At first, Staunton declined Morphy's offer but, finally, in July agreed provided he was given time to get back into practice on openings and endgames and provided that he could manage all this without breaking the publication contract for his Shakespearean work.
In early August, Morphy wrote asking Staunton when the match could occur and Staunton asked again for a delay of some weeks. Staunton’s enemy, George Walker, published an article accusing him of trying to delay the match indefinitely, and Staunton received another letter from Morphy pressing him to name a date for the match. Staunton and Morphy met socially in Birmingham and, after a discussion, Staunton agreed to play in early November. An anonymous letter appeared in Staunton's column in the Illustrated London News alleging that Morphy did not have the money for his share of the stakes. This letter is thought to have been written by Staunton himself.
Around this time Morphy wrote to friends in the US asking them to obtain the stake money for the Staunton match. Morphy's family refused to contribute as they "should not allow him to play a money match either with his own money or anyone else's", but the New Orleans Chess Club sent £500. Meanwhile Morphy went to Paris to play against continental masters. On 6 October 1858, while in Paris Morphy wrote Staunton an open letter which was also circulated to several publications, in which Morphy complained about Staunton's conduct. Staunton replied restating the difficulties he faced, but now giving them as reasons to cancel the match.
Morphy then wrote a letter to the president of the British Chess Association explaining his efforts to bring about the match and accusing Staunton of avoiding the match by all means short of admitting he did not wish to play, complaining about Staunton's representation of the facts in the Illustrated London News, and demanding "that you shall declare to the world it is through no fault of mine that this match has not taken place." The reply to Morphy was it was reasonable for Staunton to decline the match, but he should have done so plainly in his first letter to America, but had instead often given the impression that he would soon be ready to start the match.
In 1849 Nathaniel Cook registered a chess set design, and Jaques of London obtained the manufacturing rights. Staunton advertised the new set in his Illustrated London News chess column, pointing out that the pieces were easily identifiable, very stable, and good-looking. Each box was signed by Staunton, and Staunton received a royalty on each set sold. The design became popular and has been the standard ever since.
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St. George pieces |
On March 1, 1849 the pattern was first registered by Nathaniel Cook. Prior to that, the pieces most commonly used were called the St. George design chessmen, followed by the Calvert, Edinburgh, Lund and Merrifield designs. In September 1849 the manufacturing rights were bought by John Jaques of London, workers of ivory and fine woods. Jaques was the brother-in-law of Nathaniel Cook. The sets were made in wood and ivory. The unweighted King was 3.5 inches in size. The weighted King was 4.4 inches in size. Jaques removed much of the decorative features of earlier chess patterns, and was able to manufacture the new design at less cost. On September 8, 1849 the first wooden chess sets from Jaques became available.
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Staunton pieces |
The first sets had a different pattern to the King's Rook and King's Knight that distinguished it from the Queen's Rook and the Queen's Knight. Eventually players came to realize that it was not necessary to distinguish between them. On the same day that the Jacques chess sets were available, Howard Staunton recommended and endorsed the sets in the Illustrated London News. Nathaniel Cook was Staunton's editor at the Illustrated London News (small world, huh?) The ad that appeared in the newspaper called it "Mr. Staunton's pattern."
Most of his later life was occupied in writing about Shakespeare. When he died suddenly of heart disease, on 22 June 1874, he was at his desk writing on Shakespeare. At the same time he was also working on his last chess book, Chess: Theory and Practice, which was published posthumously in 1876.
Chess historians trace much of the 20th-century animosity against Staunton to books by Sergeant about Morphy. Sergeant in turn made use of a book by Edge, who accompanied Morphy to Europe in 1858 as his secretary and personal assistant, but returned to the US in January 1859, a few months before Morphy. Sergeant's books made extensive use of Edge's book, but noted Edge's strong anti-Staunton bias. Lawson also suggests that Morphy had seen the manuscript of Edge's book, disliked its treatment of the Staunton affair so much that he disavowed it, and objected to Edge's treatment of other matters. Edge's letters show that he regarded Morphy as lazy and rather helpless, and himself as the one who would make Morphy's name immortal, and that Morphy wanted to keep the negotiations with Staunton discreet while Edge insisted on making them as public as possible.
H.J.R. Murray wrote that Staunton's response to Morphy's initial challenge and his article about the same in the Illustrated London News should have been interpreted as a courteous refusal of the offer, but that Morphy interpreted them differently, and one of the main reasons for his visit to Europe in 1858 was the hope of playing a match with Staunton.
Gary Kasparov considered Staunton "by the early 1840s ... superior to all his rivals" and Bobby Fischer believed that "Staunton was the most profound opening analyst of all time. He was more theorist than player, but nonetheless he was the strongest player of his day... In addition, he understood all of the positional concepts which modern players hold dear, and thus—with Steinitz—must be considered the first modern player."
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Chess Hotel
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
1960 Ohio Valley Open
Looking through an old issue of the West Virginia Chess Bulletin, May 1961 to be exact, I came across the crosstable for the 1960 Ohio Valley Open (5 rounds). The standings were: 1-G.W. Baylor (4.5) 2-3-H.Landis Marks and William Byland (4.0) 4-5-Anthony Cantone and Walter Grombacher (3.5) followed by six players at 3.0. There were 25 entrants.
A couple of names jumped out at me. One was that of roving Walter Grombacher of Chicago, Illinois. Grombacher was a Class A player and a real character who worked at a Chicago haberdashery and who was likely to pop up at a weekend Swiss anywhere in the country. I met him once at very small tournament held in Avon Lake, Ohio. Grombacher showed up with another player from Chicago and was so disgusted with the turnout of about a 12-15 fairly low rated players that he was having a hissy fit in the ‘coffee room’ and wanted to go home, but the guy he had traveled to the tournament with (an Expert, if I remember) convinced him to stay, telling Grombacher one of them could likely win it and a pick up a few dollars prize money. I don’t remember who won the tournament, but remember my dad dropping me and a non-playing friend off at an inn that was within walking distance to the venue, the basement of the public library, where we stayed overnight by ourselves. (At the inn, not the library!) I went into the last round with a 2-2 score and had figured a win would net me a (very) small prize and maybe, just maybe, put me into Class A. My opponent was an old Russian player with a Class C, or maybe it was a B rating, and I was up two Pawns in a won N and P ending when disaster struck! Somehow I blundered away 3 (!) Pawns and lost. I’d show you the game, but the shoe box that held all those old games and my notebook filled with ‘analysis’ has long since disappeared. Another thing I remember was there was a picture of the tournament that appeared in Chess Review magazine and I was in it. Well, sort of in it...you could see my entire left arm in the photo.
The other name was that of George W. Baylor whom I believe was rated an Expert. When I was just getting into tournament chess, his name was pretty prominent in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area as one of the better players in the area and a prominent junior player. Then he just disappeared from the chess scene.
It turns out that Baylor is a retired professor of psychology from University of Montreal and the author of a number of papers on dreams and is a consulting editor for the ASD journal, Dreaming. He did clinical training in psychosynthesis. Baylor was also a student and friend of Herbert Simon. As chess player and student at Carnegie Mellon University, Baylor was hired by Simon to work on his chess programs and he wrote a mating combinations program, dubbed Mater, which was subject of his masters thesis; he later focused on cognitive psychology.
Herbert Simon was a strong influence and determining force in Baylor’s life. They met in 1959-60 while Baylor was as a sophomore at Carnegie Institute of Technology. Simon and Allen Newell were programming computers to play chess and Simon hired Baylor as a summer research assistant to work on chess programs. Shortly after that he sent Baylor to Amsterdam to help translate Adriaan de Groot's book on the thought processes of chessplayers. When Baylor returned, Simon helped him with his masters thesis on the mating combinations program and helped Baylor become a cognitive psychologist.
By then it was 1967-68 and the war in Vietnam was raging so Baylor bailed out on the prospect of getting drafted and went to Canada. Thirty years later, in 1997-98, Baylor returned to Carnegie-Mellon University to do a sabbatical with Simon.
Here’s the deciding game from that Ohio Valley tournament. There was a whole gaggle of spectators to watch the hair raising finish. Both flags were dropped at the end (the time control was at 45 moves), but nobody was paying any attention to the clocks and it took the players about an hour to reconstruct the scoresheets! Obviously, the players can be excused for the seesaw of errors late in the game.
A couple of names jumped out at me. One was that of roving Walter Grombacher of Chicago, Illinois. Grombacher was a Class A player and a real character who worked at a Chicago haberdashery and who was likely to pop up at a weekend Swiss anywhere in the country. I met him once at very small tournament held in Avon Lake, Ohio. Grombacher showed up with another player from Chicago and was so disgusted with the turnout of about a 12-15 fairly low rated players that he was having a hissy fit in the ‘coffee room’ and wanted to go home, but the guy he had traveled to the tournament with (an Expert, if I remember) convinced him to stay, telling Grombacher one of them could likely win it and a pick up a few dollars prize money. I don’t remember who won the tournament, but remember my dad dropping me and a non-playing friend off at an inn that was within walking distance to the venue, the basement of the public library, where we stayed overnight by ourselves. (At the inn, not the library!) I went into the last round with a 2-2 score and had figured a win would net me a (very) small prize and maybe, just maybe, put me into Class A. My opponent was an old Russian player with a Class C, or maybe it was a B rating, and I was up two Pawns in a won N and P ending when disaster struck! Somehow I blundered away 3 (!) Pawns and lost. I’d show you the game, but the shoe box that held all those old games and my notebook filled with ‘analysis’ has long since disappeared. Another thing I remember was there was a picture of the tournament that appeared in Chess Review magazine and I was in it. Well, sort of in it...you could see my entire left arm in the photo.
The other name was that of George W. Baylor whom I believe was rated an Expert. When I was just getting into tournament chess, his name was pretty prominent in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area as one of the better players in the area and a prominent junior player. Then he just disappeared from the chess scene.
It turns out that Baylor is a retired professor of psychology from University of Montreal and the author of a number of papers on dreams and is a consulting editor for the ASD journal, Dreaming. He did clinical training in psychosynthesis. Baylor was also a student and friend of Herbert Simon. As chess player and student at Carnegie Mellon University, Baylor was hired by Simon to work on his chess programs and he wrote a mating combinations program, dubbed Mater, which was subject of his masters thesis; he later focused on cognitive psychology.
Herbert Simon was a strong influence and determining force in Baylor’s life. They met in 1959-60 while Baylor was as a sophomore at Carnegie Institute of Technology. Simon and Allen Newell were programming computers to play chess and Simon hired Baylor as a summer research assistant to work on chess programs. Shortly after that he sent Baylor to Amsterdam to help translate Adriaan de Groot's book on the thought processes of chessplayers. When Baylor returned, Simon helped him with his masters thesis on the mating combinations program and helped Baylor become a cognitive psychologist.
By then it was 1967-68 and the war in Vietnam was raging so Baylor bailed out on the prospect of getting drafted and went to Canada. Thirty years later, in 1997-98, Baylor returned to Carnegie-Mellon University to do a sabbatical with Simon.
Here’s the deciding game from that Ohio Valley tournament. There was a whole gaggle of spectators to watch the hair raising finish. Both flags were dropped at the end (the time control was at 45 moves), but nobody was paying any attention to the clocks and it took the players about an hour to reconstruct the scoresheets! Obviously, the players can be excused for the seesaw of errors late in the game.
Alekhine Articles
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Alekhine and his cat, "Chess" |
Alekhine’s propensity to fake games in his writings is well known and I just finished reading chess historian Edward Winter's article, Mysteries at Sabadell, 1945. Held in August 1945, Sabadell was a small tournament won by Alekhine. Two (of six pictures) gave rise to a couple of mysteries that make interesting reading. The vintage photographs of the tournament are a delight. For those who are not aware, Winter has one of the most fascinating sites on the Web. Read article.
Silman's Alekhine articles at Chessdotcom: Part 1 Part 2
Monday, September 2, 2013
Bora Kostic
Bora Kostic (born on 24 February 1887 in Vrsac, died November 3, 1963) was the first Serbian grandmaster. He learned chess at the age of ten and by the time he was in grammar school, he was one of the best players in Vrsac. After school, Kostic went to study in Budapest at the Oriental Trade Academy.
His first major success was winning the Budapest amateur tournament in 1909. In 1911 he won a sensational victory against Frank Marshall and that same year he participated in the international tournament Carlsbad (Karlove Vari) where he finished tied for 19-21 out of 26 with a score of +5 -9 =11. The event was won by Teichmann ahead of Rubinstein and Schlechter.
In 1913 Kostic moved to Buenos Aires where he worked as the chess lecturer at the Military Academy. In Argentina, at one time or another, he defeated most of their best players. 1915 found him in New York where started a chess tour from the East to the West Coast. The tour lasted six months Kostic achieved the world record for the number of games on simultaneous exhibitions. Out of 3281 games he lost only 112, and drew 237. During his stay in America he visited Nikola Tesla and was a chess coach for Enrico Caruso. Kostic matches against Frank Marshall, Jackson Showalter, and Paul Leonhardt, and won them all.
While in New York City, Kostic participated in many Manhattan Chess Club Championships and as a result of his games against Capablanca in those tournaments a match in Havana was arranged. The match was a disaster for Kostic. The match was supposed to be eight games, draws not counting. The match came to an untimely end after only five games, all won by Capablanca. You can read all the gory details HERE.
He returned to Europe in 1915 and in Hastings took the second place after Capablanca. The next year in Hastings he took the first place then came Gothenburg 1920 - fourth place, Budapest 1921 – tied for 3-4, Hague 1921 4-5 place. In Yugoslavia a rivalry developed between Dr. Milan Vidmar and Kostic but unfortunately, a match was never organized.
Kostic liked to travel and see new countries and customs so he organized world chess tour which lasted from 11 November 1923 to 28 May 1926. As he himself said to his friend Kosta Jovanovic immediately before the trip: "I want to see the world, those parts of the world that were only the objects of my imagination. I believe that on that trip there will be a lot of interest for chess. "
First he set off to Australia and New Zealand. Then over to South Africa and Kenya, where the famous match on the equator was played. Kostic was on the northern hemisphere, and his opponent on the south. His next stop was India, where he was at the end met by maharaja from Patiale who organized tournaments on the heights of the Himalayas. From there he went to Nepal and on Tibet, and then to the island of Java in Indonesia. From Java he crossed to Sumatra where he played with the chief of the Bataki tribe. From there he moved to the Philipines, and then to Hong Kong and China. From China he moved to the Soviet Union from where his return to Vrsac began. Through Siberia, over Irkutsk, Novosibirsk, Omsk, Sverdlovsk, Moscow, Odessa, Leningrad to Riga.
Everywhere he played simultaneous matches, blindflod games, matches, and as he himself confessed the greatest number of lost games he had, were played just in the Soviet Union. Finally, at the end of May 1926, he arrived to Vrsac and ended the first part of his trip around the world at the chess-board.
The first chess Olympics were played in 1927 and Kostic played first board for Yugoslavia and scored 8.5 (out of 15). The following year he won in Trencanske Toplice, and in 1930 he was fourth in Nice. In the same year he continued his trip around the world. He went to Mexico where he stayed eight months. From there he went to Cuba, then to the United States and returned home in the middle of 1931 to arrive to the Olympics which took place in Prague. Then came extraordinarily strong tournament in Bled , which was marked by the world champion Alekhine.
The first Yugoslav championships took place in 1935 in Belgrade and Kostic shared the first place with Vasja Pirc. Kostic achieved his greatest tournament result in 1938 in Ljubljana at the Yugoslav championships. He scored 10.5 out of 15 games defeating the likes of Szabo, Tartakower and Steiner.
At the beginning of WW2 chess activity stopped for all those who did not want to play in Nazi Germany. Kostic was one of them and as a result spent some time in the concentration camp in Veliki Beckerek (Zrenjanin). Kostić, an Orthodox Christian, was imprisoned in a by a Nazi SS commander Schiller because he declined to participate in tournaments called "Free Europa" and to glorify the Nazi regime. Afterwards, he played chess only in a more minor capacity. His final appearance was at the Zurich Veterans Tournament in1962, which he won.
Kostic was awarded the Grandmaster title by in 1950, on the first list issued by FIDE. Kostic died in Belgrade, 3 November 1963. Objectively Kostic would not be ranked among the world’s top players, but his constant travel and the circumstances he lived under later did not allow him to fulfill his creative potential to its full extent. However, he was a unique, extraordinary person who devoted his life to chess.
Watch how easily he defeats Tartakower in the following game.
An Article on the Use of Databases
Chess Skills had an interesting blog post concerning databases and their use back in March of 2011.
"Ever since the dawn of civilization, humans have sought help in games of chess that did not conclude in a single sitting. Such help takes many forms. Sometimes the help is actively encouraged. Other times it is forbidden. When I was young, top level chess tournaments and world championship matches were characterized by adjournments. After many hours of play, a competitor would seal a move, eat a small meal, and go to sleep. While he slept, teams of seconds would labor through the night, analyzing the likely continuations. After a night of sleep and a hearty breakfast, the player would spend the morning with his seconds learning the results of overnight research. He returned to the game fully prepared for the next stages." ...READ MORE
"Ever since the dawn of civilization, humans have sought help in games of chess that did not conclude in a single sitting. Such help takes many forms. Sometimes the help is actively encouraged. Other times it is forbidden. When I was young, top level chess tournaments and world championship matches were characterized by adjournments. After many hours of play, a competitor would seal a move, eat a small meal, and go to sleep. While he slept, teams of seconds would labor through the night, analyzing the likely continuations. After a night of sleep and a hearty breakfast, the player would spend the morning with his seconds learning the results of overnight research. He returned to the game fully prepared for the next stages." ...READ MORE
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