Unity Chess Club
1.61K subscribers
18.2K photos
1.96K videos
4.35K files
6.66K links
Download Telegram
āœ… #about_Horowitz

šŸ”ø Israel Albert Horowitz
šŸ”ø Jewish-American International Master

šŸ”° Israel Albert Horowitz was a Jewish-American International Master of chess. He is most remembered today for the books he wrote about chess.

šŸ”˜ Full name: Israel Albert Horowitz
šŸ”˜ Country: United States
šŸ”˜ Born: November 15, 1907
šŸ”˜ Brooklyn, New York
šŸ”˜ Died: January 18, 1973 (aged 65)
šŸ”˜ Title: International Master; chess author, columnist, magazine owner

šŸ”° Horowitz was the chess columnist for The New York Times, writing three columns a week for ten years. He was the owner and editor of Chess Review magazine from 1933 until it was bought out and taken over by the United States Chess Federation in 1969 and merged into Chess Life. Chess Review magazine was founded in 1933 as a partnership between Horowitz and Isaac Kashdan; however, Kashdan dropped out after just a few issues and Horowitz became sole owner. Before that, Horowitz had been a securities trader on Wall Street. He had been partners with chess masters Maurice Shapiro, Mickey Pauley, Albert Pinkus and Maurice Wertheim. Horowitz dropped out and devoted himself to chess, while the others stayed on Wall Street.

šŸ”° Horowitz was a leading player in the U.S. during the 1930s and 1940s. He was U.S. Open Champion in 1936, 1938, and 1943. In 1941, he lost a match (+0āˆ’3=13) with Samuel Reshevsky for the U.S. Chess Championship. He played on the U.S. Team in four Chess Olympiads, in 1931, 1935, 1937, and 1950; the first three of which were won by the U.S. In a famous USA vs. USSR radio chess match 1945, Horowitz scored one of the only two wins for the U.S. by defeating GM Salo Flohr. He split his "mini-match" of two games against Flohr, and in the 1946 edition of the same event, split his mini-match against Isaac Boleslavsky.

ā™¦ļø A memorable game by HorowitzšŸ‘‡
šŸ”ø Samuel Reshevsky vs Israel Albert Horowitz
šŸ”ø Rosenwald (1955/56), New York, NY USA, rd 6, Dec-25
šŸ”ø Benoni Defense: King's Indian System (A56)

ā™¦ļø Review and download PGN filešŸ‘‡

@unitychess
@Reshevsky-Horowitz 1955.pgn
910 B
šŸ”ø Samuel Reshevsky - Israel Albert Horowitz, Rosenwald (1955/56)
šŸ”ø PGN format

@unitychess
šŸ”øBlitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
šŸ”øRound 7
āšŖļøAnand,Viswanathan (2759)
āš«ļøGrischuk,Alexander (2766)
šŸ”øĀ½-½
69... Qf4+?
69... Qh4!
A forced winning continuation for Black.
70. Qe3 Qh1+ 71. Qg1 Qh6 72. Rd1 72... Qf4+ 73. Ke2 Qe4+ 74. Kd2 Nb4
70. Qf3 Qxd2 71.Qf7+ with perpetual check.
1/2-1/2
šŸ”øBlitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
šŸ”øRound 8
āšŖļøMamedyarov,Shakhriyar (2808)
āš«ļøSo,Wesley (2778)
šŸ”ø1-0
23...Nac5??
Wesley made a strange blunder.
24.Nd6+ Kc7 25.NƗf7 Rhf8 26.NƗd8 +-
šŸ”øBlitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
šŸ”øRound 8
āšŖļøVachier-Lagrave,Maxime (2789)
āš«ļøAronian,Levon (2764)
šŸ”øĀ½-½
36...Nd2?
Missing a golden opportunity. Aronian could have easily won the game with 36...NƗf2! 37.BƗf2 Nd3 -+
37.BƗc5+ bƗc5 38.RƗc5 Kf6 with the slight advantage for Black.
šŸ”øBlitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
šŸ”øRound 8
āšŖļøNakamura,Hikaru (2769)
āš«ļøGrischuk,Alexander (2766)
šŸ”ø1-0
40...h5??
Aronian should have played 40...Kg8, getting rid of the pin.
41.Ne6 Qf5+ 42.Kd2 Rd1+ 1-0
āš«ļø#521 (Strategy-Black to Move)
šŸ”øKramnik,V
šŸ”øCarlsen,M
šŸ”øWijk aan Zee, 2008
13...Ne8!
It is possible to exchange knights on e4, but the text-move is thematic and stronger. The Black knight's retreat securely protects d6 and, with ...Ra7 to follow, and perhaps ...Qa8, raises the prospect of obtaining good counter-attacking prospects, with three minor pieces on the board, based on a ...b5 break. White must now attend to the plight of his awkwardly-placed knights, particularly the knight on g5, which is now essentially striking at thin air. Both knights may be pushed back, by .. .h6 and possibly ...f5. It is, however, important to note that the latter advance cannot be undertaken by Black unless he can thereby sustain a significant initiative or it may simply result in grave weakness.
14.b3 Ra7 15.Bb2 Rd7.
āšŖļø#522 (Strategy-White to Move)
šŸ”øCarlsen,M
šŸ”øAnand,V
šŸ”øLinares, 2009
22.Kf3!
Black's position remains a little uncomfortable. He can only passively wait to see how far White can increase the pressure on his game. From f3, White's king raises the possibility of an eventual Kf4, attacking Black's f-pawn.
22...Rc8 23.a4!
Now White's a-pawn heads for a5, gaining queenside ground. It is useful to constrain Black's a- and b-pawns, leaving Black's pawn on b7 a possible, long-term target and denying Black's rook access to b6 and possible play against White's b-pawn.
23...Rc7 24.a5 h6 25.h4!
White's h-pawn speeds to h5. From there, it will deny Black's knight access to g6, making it easier for White to play his king to f4 without problem. It also means that if White were later to capture Black's pawn on h6, White's resulting passed h-pawn would be far advanced and potentially threatening.
25...Kf6 26.h5.
āšŖļø#523 (Strategy-White to Move)
šŸ”øGeller,E
šŸ”øKeres,P
šŸ”øUSSR Championship, Moscow, 1952
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 523
public poll

C: Be1 – 6
šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘ 75%
Gavin, @Afshin3333, Ramesh, Jahanbakhsh, @SteveWongso, Vincent

A: Rac1 – 2
šŸ‘šŸ‘ 25%
@Hesamgrandterminator, āˆžS€€Y€Dāˆž

B: Be5
ā–«ļø 0%

šŸ‘„ 8 people voted so far.