Happy Birthday to William (born Wilhelm) Steinitz yesterday on May 17 (or it could be May 14 as the tombstone says, or May 18 as other sources say). He was born in 1836 (or 1835) in Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia. He was undisputed chess champion of the world from 1886 to 1894.
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The arbiters at the 1984 World Chess Championship in Moscow. Left to right; Yuri Averbakh, Svetozar Gligoric, Vladas Mikenas.
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Victor Wahltuch, Jose Capablanca, Amos Burn, Henry Atkins and Sir George Thomas at the Hastings Victory Congress 1919
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16.c4!
An interesting attempt to seize the initiative.
16...d×c4
If 16...Qa6, then 17.Nd2! N×d2 18.Q×d2
A)18...d×c4 19.e4 0-0 20.f4 +/=
B)18...Q×c4 19.Rfc1 Qa4 20.h4 +/-
17.Q×c4 Qc6 18.Qb4
An interesting attempt to seize the initiative.
16...d×c4
If 16...Qa6, then 17.Nd2! N×d2 18.Q×d2
A)18...d×c4 19.e4 0-0 20.f4 +/=
B)18...Q×c4 19.Rfc1 Qa4 20.h4 +/-
17.Q×c4 Qc6 18.Qb4
22.Rab1!
Anton does not allow Black to improve his position.
22...Rfc8
22...b6 23.Qb5 +/-
23.Q×b7 Nf6 24.Be5! Q×b7 25.R×b7 Nd5 26.a3! +/-
Anton does not allow Black to improve his position.
22...Rfc8
22...b6 23.Qb5 +/-
23.Q×b7 Nf6 24.Be5! Q×b7 25.R×b7 Nd5 26.a3! +/-
32.Bg3
Samuel Sevian could have won the game easier:
32.f6!
A)32...g×f6 33.N×f6! B×f6 34.Bg3#
B)32....g5 33.Bg3 +-
32...B×g3 33.K×g3 f6 34.Nd6 Rh8 35.Kh4 Be8 36.Rd2 Rg8 37.Nb7 Bd7 38.Ne8 Re8 39.Re2 Rg8? 40.Ne6+ B×e6 41.R×e6 Kd7 42.Kh5 1-0
He earned his Grandmaster title at the age of 13 years, 10 months and 27 days. This makes him the United States' youngest ever grandmaster.
Samuel Sevian could have won the game easier:
32.f6!
A)32...g×f6 33.N×f6! B×f6 34.Bg3#
B)32....g5 33.Bg3 +-
32...B×g3 33.K×g3 f6 34.Nd6 Rh8 35.Kh4 Be8 36.Rd2 Rg8 37.Nb7 Bd7 38.Ne8 Re8 39.Re2 Rg8? 40.Ne6+ B×e6 41.R×e6 Kd7 42.Kh5 1-0
He earned his Grandmaster title at the age of 13 years, 10 months and 27 days. This makes him the United States' youngest ever grandmaster.
21... Nf3+
Black could have obtained a huge advantage with the following continuation:
21... Nfg4! 22. Qg2 Nd3! 23. Bxc8 Rxc8 24. f3 Ngf2 25. Rdc1 Nxc1 26.Rxc1 Nd3 27. Rc2 Qc5 28. Qg5 f5 29. Kh2 e5 -+
22. Bxf3 Qxf3 23. Qg2 Qh5 24. Be1 Rc5 0-1
Vasif Durarbayli (born February 24, 1992) is an Azerbaijani Grandmaster.
He won the World Youth Chess Championship under 14 years old (Batumi, Georgia).
Black could have obtained a huge advantage with the following continuation:
21... Nfg4! 22. Qg2 Nd3! 23. Bxc8 Rxc8 24. f3 Ngf2 25. Rdc1 Nxc1 26.Rxc1 Nd3 27. Rc2 Qc5 28. Qg5 f5 29. Kh2 e5 -+
22. Bxf3 Qxf3 23. Qg2 Qh5 24. Be1 Rc5 0-1
Vasif Durarbayli (born February 24, 1992) is an Azerbaijani Grandmaster.
He won the World Youth Chess Championship under 14 years old (Batumi, Georgia).
Here White could play 15 b4 with some advantage, but he has the opportunity to develop a serious initiative thanks to his lead in development. This, together with the great squares he can get for his pieces, as well as all the weaknesses in the black camp...
15.c5! bxc5 (15...Bc7 16.cxb6 Bxb6 17.Nc4 is clearly better for White.)
16.Nc4 Qe7 (16...Be7 17.dxc5 Nd7 18.b4 gives White a clear advantage.)
17.dxc5 Bxc5 18.b4 Bd6 19.Bb2 +/-.
15.c5! bxc5 (15...Bc7 16.cxb6 Bxb6 17.Nc4 is clearly better for White.)
16.Nc4 Qe7 (16...Be7 17.dxc5 Nd7 18.b4 gives White a clear advantage.)
17.dxc5 Bxc5 18.b4 Bd6 19.Bb2 +/-.