When
Samuel Reshevsky was once asked why Reuben Fine never won the U.S.
Championship he said, “Because I was [laying.” That wasn’t the case in
the 1943 U.S. Speed Championship (10 seconds per move). That wasn’t the
case in 1943 when Fine retained his U.S. Speed Title, romping through
the field with a perfect score/
There
were some surprises in the four preliminary qualifying tournaments.
Arnold Denker lost to Jack Soudakoff, at the time a Sergeant in the
Army, in the last round and failed to make the championship group. As a
result, he withdrew from the event.
Another
strong player, Albert Pinkus, also failed to qualify. The strong
amateur Edward S. Jackson also failed when in the last round he was
barely outpointed by Irving Heitner of Philadelphia and so it was
Heitner who went into the finals.
The
following game between Reshevsky and Fine is, to be honest, a bit
boring, but Reshevsky’s Rook handling is peculiar in that they are
doubled on a rank other that the 7th and not a file. Both players missed
a black win at move 30. After that it was nip and tuck before Fine
finally managed to squeeze out the win. The next post will feature what
was probably the most exciting of the tournament.
[Event "US Speed Champ, New York"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "1943.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Samuel Reshevsky"]
[Black "Reuben Fine"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "D28"]
[Annotator "Stockfish 18"]
[PlyCount "76"]
[EventDate "1943.??.??"]
{D28: Queen's Gambit Accepted: Classical Main Line} 1. d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. Nf3
Nf6 4. e3 e6 5. Bxc4 c5 6. O-O a6 7. Qe2 cxd4 8. Rd1 {This opening is pretty
boring, but that's the way the greats played the openings in those days. I
remember reading an artice by Anthomy Santasierre on the 1941
Reshevsky-Horowitz U.S. Championship match in which he complained bitterly
about their boring opening play. Years later Larry Evans, in an in print
dispute with Santasiere, wanted to know where were the games that qualified
Santasiere as the spokesman for Romantic chess?} b5 {Interesting! By far the
most usual move here is 8...Nf6, but Fine plays this rarely used move which
also happens to be the engine's top choice.} 9. Bb3 {After Fine's last move
the opening tree has been pruned to one move, 9...Bb7. Stockfish makes no
distinction between that move and Fine's.} Be7 (9... Bb7 10. Nxd4 Nbd7 11. e4 {
Now if black had played 11...Qc7 the chances would have been equal. Vernay, C
(2440)-Sarthou,G (2386) Guingamp FRA 2010}) 10. a4 (10. Rxd4 Qc7 11. Rd1 O-O
12. Bd2 {White has lost time with his R, but it doesn't matter because the
position cpuldm't be more equal. The same thing could be said of capturing on
d4 with wither the N or P.}) 10... bxa4 11. Rxd4 Qc7 12. Bxa4+ Bd7 13. Nc3 Bxa4
{Here, too, it makes no difference how white recaptures...the position could
not be moere equal.} 14. Raxa4 O-O 15. e4 Nc6 16. Rdc4 {This is an odd
position in that the Rs operate on the rank (other than the 7th) and not a
file. This comfiguration is not going to be able to accomplish much and
Reshevsky soon repositions them. The fact that he has the time to do so
without damaging his position speaks to the equality of the position.} Rfd8 17.
e5 {Completing his development with 17.Bg5 was a good alternative.} Nd5 18.
Nxd5 Rxd5 19. h3 {With not much going on and the Q required to guard against ..
.Re1# this is a good safety precaution.} Qd7 20. Bf4 a5 21. Ra1 {It’s
obvious he needs to reconfigure his Rs} Nb4 22. Kh2 Rd8 {\} 23. Bg5 h6 24. Bxe7
Qxe7 25. Rac1 Nd3 26. R1c3 Qb7 27. b3 Qb8 {[%cal Rd3e5]} 28. Rc7 Qb4 29. g3 {
Better was 29.Rc8. Now Fine gets the better of it and keeps up the pressure.}
Qb6 {Fine puts his finger on the weak point in white's position, f2.} 30. Kg2 {
This is a tactical mistake, but Fine missed it, too. Correct was 30.Qe3} Qb5 {
After this white is back in the game and now neither side can claim any
advantage. However, the position is quite sharp and bothe sides must choose
their move carefully.} (30... Nc5 {This cuts off the R on c7.} 31. R7xc5 (31.
Re7 Kf8) 31... Rxc5 {and black has won the exchange.}) 31. Qe4 Nxe5 32. Qf4 (
32. Nxe5 Rxe5 33. Qc4 {is equal even though black has an extra P because it is
on the 4 to 3 majority on the K-side which makes it meaningless plus black's
pieces are not well coordinated.}) 32... f5 (32... Rd1 {threatening ...Qf1+
leading to mate was the only way to keep up the pressure. After} 33. R3c4 Nd7 (
33... Nxc4 34. Qxf7+) 34. Ra7 Qb6 35. Qc7 {The chances are equal and an
eventual draw seems a likely outcome. In Shootouts black drew 4 and scored one
win.}) 33. Nxe5 Rxe5 34. Re7 Qd5+ 35. Kh2 Re1 {[%mdl 128] White needs to
defend precisely.} 36. Rf3 {[%mdl 8192] ...which he fails to do. This is the
wrong piece to put on g3. He had to play 36.Qf3 which blocks the long diagonal
and guards d1.} (36. Qf3 Qxf3 37. Rxf3 Rdd1 38. Rc3 {and the double R ending
should be drawn.}) 36... Qd1 {Now the gane is over.} 37. Rxg7+ Kxg7 38. g4 Qd6
{White resigned. A nice game by Fine who kept up the pressure and with a
little help from his opponent scored a forceful win.} 0-1



















