Feed on
Posts
Comments

Tag Archive '1995'

23.01.2010
– Just occasionally, the worlds of chess and murder have intersected: players
of our game have become either killers or victims. In addition to links to his
detailed coverage of the Wallace Murder Case and the fatal shooting of a Hastings
stalwart, the Editor of Chess
Notes
provides citations regarding such figures as the Lipstick Killer,
Moors Murderer and St Albans Poisoner.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Chess Explorations (35)

By Edward Winter

Our article Chess and the Wallace Murder Case relates a famous, particularly
baffling mystery, and occasional Chess Notes items have mentioned other connections
between chess and killing. Often, though, the information available is scant.

C.N. 3670 referred to the lethally charming Neville George Clevely Heath (born
1917), quoting a passage from page 189 of Portrait of a Sadist by Paull
Hill (London, 1960) which describes the killer’s last days, at Pentonville
Prison, London:

‘He spent a lot of time reading, made copious notes for his legal advisers,
played a certain amount of chess with the warders, two of whom were in his
cell day and night, and wrote a lot of letters to friends and his family.’


Neville George Clevely Heath

Neville Heath was hanged on 16 October 1946, the same day as, in Nuremberg,
Hans Frank
suffered the identical fate.

William George Heirens (see C.N. 3707) was a 17-year-old student at the University
of Chicago when, in 1946, he confessed to three murders. He became known as the
‘Lipstick Killer’ because on a wall in one of the victims’ homes
a message was found written in lipstick: ‘For heavens sake catch me before
I kill more. I cannot control myself.’ Although the evidence against Heirens
has been fiercely disputed, he is still in prison.


William Heirens

Page 102 of “Before I Kill More...” by Lucy Freeman (New
York, 1955) relates that at university Heirens had taken up chess, and on page
128 he is quoting as telling her:

‘Later I learned the psychiatrists that examined me were of the type
which only consider abnormalities that had a physical relationship, like tumors
on the brain, epilepsy and related diseases. They probably couldn’t
tell a person was possessed with a dual personality unless they examined a
Siamese twin.

There wasn’t a thing I could do about it. My counsel were running the
show. I was just a pawn to be pushed around the chess board and sacrificed
when it suited their whims.’

The case of the chess master Raymond Weinstein will be recalled.


Left to right: Jerry Spann (captain), Raymond Weinstein and
William Lombardy (world student team championship in Leningrad)

As recorded on page 127 of Chess Explorations (C.N. 1311), the late
Sidney Bernstein informed us in the 1980s:

‘I have it on most reliable authority (the author John Collins,
who was a close friend of Raymond Weinstein) that Weinstein (an extremely
strong and promising young player who finished third in the 1960-61 US Championship)
had been confined to a mental institution. While on temporary leave, he was
rooming with an older man who made derogatory remarks about Weinstein’s
mother. Raymond slit the man’s throat with a razor, and was, of course,
incarcerated permanently. Raymond’s mother is also in an asylum.’

Collins discussed Weinstein’s chess career on pages 195-235 of his book
My Seven Chess Prodigies (New York, 1974).

Another case in the United States has been extensively covered by other writers:
Claude Bloodgood.

As regards chessplaying victims, there are numerous accounts of the killing of the French master
Gilles Andruet in 1995. Abe Turner was murdered on the premises of Chess
Review
in 1962. C.N.
6423
gave a photograph of Turner in play against Bobby Fischer in the final
round of the 1957-58 US Championship in New York.

C.N. 5441 mentioned that on 5 December 1924 Norman Thorne (1900-1925) of Crowborough,
England dismembered his fiancée Elsie Cameron. Earlier that day he had
bought ‘a game of chess’ in Tunbridge Wells. Source: page 114 of
The Trial of Norman Thorne by Helena Normanton (London, circa
1929). Much has been written about that famous murder case, but we recall no
other reference to chess in connection with the life of Thorne, who was hanged
on 22 April 1925.


John Norman Holmes Thorne giving evidence at his trial, Lewes, 13 March 1925

A fine account of the case appeared on pages 88-126 of Verdict in Dispute
by Edgar Lustgarten (London, 1949). From page 108:

‘Spilsbury [the pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury, who was the prosecution’s
expert witness] had indeed done what few can hope to do; he had become a legend
in his own lifetime. To the man in the street he stood for pathology as Hobbs
stood for cricket or Dempsey for boxing or Capablanca for chess.’

As mentioned in C.N. 5939, page 27 of The Even More Complete Chess Addict
by M. Fox and R. James (London, 1993) stated that John Reginald Halliday Christie
(who lived at 10 Rillington Place, London) ‘was a goodish chessplayer’
and that ‘Whilst awaiting the ultimate punishment in Brixton, he passed
the time thrashing his warders at chess (Chris the chess champion, they nicknamed
him).’ The grounds for these assertions remain to be discovered, since much
of the book is a source-free zone.

On a documented basis we added in that C.N. item that two other British serial
murderers regularly played chess against each other. On page 132 of The Gates
of Janus
(Los Angeles, 2001) Ian Brady described playing chess against Graham
Young (‘the St Albans Poisoner’) in Parkhurst Prison on the Isle
of Wight:

‘An inveterate but excitable chessplayer, he rather foolishly favoured
the black pieces, likening their potency to the Nazi SS. His daily opponent
on the board for years was the author of this book, against whom Young always
failed to win a match.’


Graham Young

Finally, attention is drawn to our feature article Chessplayer
Shot Dead in Hastings
.

Postscript: For a nineteenth-century case, see ‘Death of a Chessman: The Sad, Brutal Murder of Major William Cheever Wilson’ on pages 1-18 of Essays in American Chess History by John Hilbert (Yorklyn, 2002). In recent times, as mentioned to us by Hans Jørgen Lassen (Grenaa, Denmark), there has been the case of
Simon Webb
(1949-2005).


Submit information
or suggestions on chess explorations

All ChessBase articles
by Edward Winter


Edward
Winter is the editor of Chess
Notes
, which was founded in January 1982 as "a forum for aficionados
to discuss all matters relating to the Royal Pastime". Since then, over 6,450
items have been published, and the series has resulted in four books by Winter:
Chess
Explorations
(1996), Kings,
Commoners and Knaves
(1999), A
Chess Omnibus
(2003) and Chess
Facts and Fables
(2006). He is also the author of a monograph
on Capablanca
(1989).

Chess Notes is well known for its historical research, and anyone browsing
in its archives
will find a wealth of unknown games, accounts of historical mysteries, quotes
and quips, and other material of every kind imaginable. Correspondents from
around the world contribute items, and they include not only "ordinary readers"
but also some eminent historians – and, indeed, some eminent masters. Chess
Notes is located at the Chess
History Center.
Signed copies of Edward Winter's publications are
currently available.

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

19.01.2010
– Edgar Colle (1897–1932) was a Belgian chess who scored excellent results
in world-class tournaments. He died tragically at the age of 34, and is mainly remembered
for the Colle Opening System 1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.e3. This, as Dennis Monokroussos
relates in this week's Playchess lecture,
was not what he was able to play in a beautiful game against Ernst Grünfeld.
Be there at 9 p.m. EST.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Playchess training with FM Dennis Monokroussos

The Belgian master Edgar Colle is best known for the eponymous Colle System,
a placid-looking opening he turned into a dangerous attacking system. As is
often the case with the openings named for players, most of us probably know
a lot more about the opening than we do about the man who developed it into
something poisonous.

Edgar Colle (1897–1932) was a Belgian chess master who scored
excellent results in major international tournaments, including first
at Amsterdam 1926, ahead of Savielly Tartakower and future world champion
Max Euwe; first at Meran 1926, ahead of Esteban Canal; and first at Scarborough
1930, ahead of Maroczy and Rubinstein). His playing career was hampered
by ill health. He survived three difficult operations for a gastric ulcer
and died after a fourth at the age of 34. Colle is remembered today primarily
for his introduction of the chess opening now known as the Colle System:
1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.e3. In the picture we see Edgar Colle (second
from right) standing next to Salo Landau during a game Rubinstein vs Tartakower.

So let's fix that. In our ChessBase show this week we'll have a few things
to say about the man and see him in action against an even more notable name,
Ernst Grünfeld. Colle tried to play the Colle, but Grünfeld avoided
the main line and went for a Queen's Indian setup. It didn't matter: Colle showed
that he was more than a one-trick pony, and gave us a game of value. First of
all, he demonstrates how White can build an attack against a Queen's Indian
approach; second, he shows us what to do once the pieces are in place! Colle
won in beautiful style – but you'll have to join me Wednesday night at
9 p.m. ET (3 a.m. Thursday morning, CET) for the details.

To watch, just log on to the Playchess server at the given time, go to the
Broadcast room, and then find and select Colle-Grünfeld under the Games
tab. Hope to see you there!

Dennis Monokroussos'
Radio ChessBase
lectures begin on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST, which translates to 02:00h GMT,
03:00 Paris/Berlin, 13:00h Sydney (on Thursday). You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
, with exact times for most larger cities here.

And you
can watch older lectures by Dennis Monokroussos offline in
the Chess Media System room of Playchess:

Enter the above archive room and click on "Games" to see the lectures.


Monokroussos in Mexico: World Championship 2007
 

Dennis Monokroussos is 43, lives in South Bend, IN, where
he teaches chess and has worked as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame and Indiana University-South Bend.

At one time he was one of the strongest juniors in the U.S. and has reached
a peak rating of 2434 USCF, but several long breaks from tournament play have
made him rusty. He is now resuming tournament chess in earnest, hoping to reach
new heights.

Dennis has been working as a chess teacher for ten years now, giving lessons
to adults and kids both in person and on the internet, worked for a number of
years for New York’s Chess In The Schools program, where he was one of
the coaches of the 1997-8 US K-8 championship team from the Bronx, and was very
active in working with many of CITS’s most talented juniors.

When Dennis Monokroussos presents a game, there are usually two main areas
of focus: the opening-to-middlegame transition and the key moments of the middlegame
(or endgame, when applicable). With respect to the latter, he attempts to present
some serious analysis culled from his best sources (both text and database),
which he has checked with his own efforts and then double-checked with his chess
software.


Playchess Training with IM Merijn van Delft

Everyone is invited to join this weekly training hour on Wednesday evening.
Together we will have a look at the most recent grandmaster games. Recurring
themes during our analyses and discussions are the latest opening developments
and how to work on your own chess.

A word about myself: I was born (March 13, 1979) and raised in Apeldoorn, The
Netherlands. In 1995 I won the Dutch U16 Championship and played the European
Championship in Poland and the World Championship in Brasil. In 1998 I moved
to Amsterdam to study psychology and had a great time there. In 2003 I met my
wife Evi Zickelbein and ever since we've been living together in Hamburg, Germany.
In 2004 I made both master titles: one at the university and one in chess. Since
2005 I've been working fulltime in the chess world: training, coaching, writing,
organizing and still actively playing myself. By now I have about fifteen years
of experience as a chess trainer. Together with my dad I wrote a book
about chess training
(Schaaktalent Ontwikkelen), of which the Dutch
version
is already available and the English
version
will follow April 2010.

IM Merijn van Delft's lecture starts at 20:00h Central European Time (Berlin,
Paris, Rome), which translates to 19:00h London. You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
. Exact times for most larger cities are here.
The lecture is in the "Broadcast" room of Playchess. It is free for
Premium Playchess members (50 Ducats for others).


Links

The lectures are broadcast live on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light
, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

14.01.2010
– We hear a collective sigh of relief: after the Tal Memorial, the World Blitz,
the London Chess Classic and the World Team Championship (ended yesterday),
some chess fans out there were feeling a twinge of withdrawal. Not to worry:
top GMs are currently arriving in the Dutch seaside town for the annual chess
festival. We will provide full coverage on Playchess.
Here are the tournament details.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Wijk aan Zee 2010 – information and schedule

Wijk aan Zee is a small town on the coast
of the North Sea
in the municipality of Beverwijk in the province of North
Holland of the Netherlands.

View
Larger Map

The prestigious yearly tournament takes place in three Grandmaster Groups.
There are also a number of amateur groups taking part at the same time. The
three Grandmaster tournaments have 14 players each and are round robins (each
competitor plays against every other).

Participants of Grandmaster Group A

Title Player Nat.
Rating
rank
born
GM Magnus Carlsen NOR
2810
1
1990
GM Viswanathan Anand IND
2790
3
1969
GM Vladimir Kramnik RUS
2788
4
1975
GM Vassily Ivanchuk UKR
2749
8
1969
GM Peter Leko HUN
2739
12
1979
GM Alexei Shirov SPA
2723
20
1972
GM Sergey Karjakin RUS
2720
21
1990
GM Leinier Dominguez CUB
2712
25
1983
GM Hikaru Nakamura USA
2708
28
1987
GM Nigel Short ENG
2696
38
1965
GM Fabiano Caruana ITA
2675
51
1992
GM Sergey Tiviakov NED
2662
62
1973
GM Jan Smeets NED
2657
73
1985
GM Loek van Wely NED
2641
104
1972
Average rating: 2719 – Category:
19

The average rating in Group A is almost exactly the same as in the previous
year: 2719, making this a category 19 tournament. At the top is the world's
highest rated player, Magnus Carlsen, followed by World Champion Viswanathan
Anand and former World Champion Vladimir Kramnik. Hikaru Nakamura comes straight
from his resounding success in the World Team Championships in Bursa, Turkey,
and is good for providing interesting games. Two players from last year's Group
B have moved up to the A section: Nigel Short, former World Championship challenger,
and Fabiano Caruana, who at 17 is Italy's strongest ever grandmaster. Sergey
Karjakin, you might remember, is the winner of last year's event.

Participants of Grandmaster Group B

Title Player
Nat.
Rating
born
GM Arkadij Naiditsch
GER
2687
1985
GM Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu
ROM
2681
1976
GM Pentala Harikrishna
IND
2672
1986
GM Hua Ni
CHN
2657
1983
GM Emil Sutovsky
ISR
2657
1977
GM Wesley So
PHI
2656
1993
GM Tomi Nyback
FIN
2643
1985
GM Varuzhan Akobian
USA
2628
1983
GM Parimarjan Negi
IND
2621
1993
GM Erwin l'Ami
NED
2615
1985
GM David Howell
ENG
2606
1990
GM Anish Giri
NED
2588
1994
GM Dimitri Reinderman
NED
2573
1972
WGM Anna Muzychuk
SLO
2523
1990
Average rating: 2629 – Category:
16

Eleven players are rated over 2600, and there are three interesting youngsters
in the field: Wesley So and Parimarjan Negi, both 16 years old, and Dutch champion
Anish Giri, who is just 15. Anna Muzychuk, the only female in the field, is
19 and the number seven ranked women player in the world.

Participants of Grandmaster Group C

Title Player
Nat.
Rating
born
GM Li Chao
CHN
2604
1989
GM Abhijeet Gupta
IND
2577
1989
GM Ray Robson
USA
2570
1994
GM Kjetil Lie
NOR
2547
1980
IM Nils Grandelius
SWE
2515
1993
GM Robin Swinkels
NED
2495
1989
GM Daniele Vocaturo
ITA
2495
1989
IM Robin van Kampen
NED
2456
1994
WGM Marya Muzychuk
UKR
2447
1992
GM Zhaoqin Peng
NED
2402
1968
FM Stefan Kuipers
NED
2340
1990
WGM Soumya Swaminathan
IND
2323
1989
FM Benjamin Bok
NED
2322
1995
Sjoerd Plukkel
NED
2279
1983
Average rating: 2455 – Category:
11

In Group C the average has dropped by 66 points, but the category is maintained.
There are three female players, including the sister of Anna Muzychuk, Marya,
and the eleven-times Dutch Women's Champion Zhaoqin Peng, who at 41 is the oldest
player in the field. The youngest is FM Benjamin Bok, 14, followed by GM Ray
Robson and IM Robin van Kampen.

Rate of play
For all three groups the rate of play is 40 moves in two hours, then 20 moves
in one hour, followed by 15 minutes for the rest of the game, with a 30 second
increment per move.

Location: The tournament takes place in the De Moriaan Community
Centre (Dorpsduinen 4, 1949 EG Wijk aan Zee). There is running commentary on
the games of the Grandmaster Groups in a special Chess Pavilion, on the Village
Green in Wijk aan Zee (one minute walk from De Moriaan).

Accommodation: For information contact the local Tourist Office.
VVV IJmond Noord, Julianaplein 13-15, 1949 AT Wijk aan Zee. Telephone: + 31
(0)251 374253. E-mail: info@vvvijmondnoord.nl Website: http://www.visitwijkaanzee.nl

Schedule (playing days)

January 2010
M T W T F S S
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Games begin at 13:30h local time (CET), except for the last round on January
31st, which begins at 12:30h. There are three rest days, on January 20th, 25th,
and 28th.

Links

Read Full Post »

12.01.2010
– We continue this week with our second look at the chess of the great Akiba
Rubinstein, one of the greatest players never to become world champion. Rubinstein
was a supreme master in all phases of the game, of course, but his endgame skill
was legendary. A lofty claim, but we'll see clear evidence for this in this
week's Playchess lecture by Dennis Monokroussos.
9 p.m. EST.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Playchess training with FM Dennis Monokroussos

His victim in our game of the week was Alexander Alekhine, who would go on
to become the fourth world chess champion. Despite the caliber of Rubinstein's
opponent, he managed to win a rook ending that remains a model for us today.
(I would say that's one of the defining features of Rubinstein's greatness;
namely, how often he played games, against players of all levels, that looked
as if they were produced by textbook writers to educate the general public.)
In this one ending, we see beautiful illustrations of such fundamental endgame
ideas as the "do not hurry" rule, the principle of two weaknesses,
the process of inducing weaknesses, prophylaxis and the active king. These principles
may sound like abstractions, but in his hands these tools look as natural as
a baby's smile.


Polish grandmaster Akiba Kiwelowicz Rubinstein

So: to join in the fun, here's what you do. First, log on to the Playchess
server at 9 p.m. ET Wednesday night (= 3 a.m. Thursday morning CET). Second,
go to the Broadcast room. Third, find Rubinstein-Alekhineunder the Games tab,
double-click on it, and you're good to go. Hope to see you there!

Dennis Monokroussos'
Radio ChessBase
lectures begin on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST, which translates to 02:00h GMT,
03:00 Paris/Berlin, 13:00h Sydney (on Thursday). You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
, with exact times for most larger cities here.

And you
can watch older lectures by Dennis Monokroussos offline in
the Chess Media System room of Playchess:

Enter the above archive room and click on "Games" to see the lectures.


Monokroussos in Mexico: World Championship 2007
 

Dennis Monokroussos is 43, lives in South Bend, IN, where
he teaches chess and has worked as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame and Indiana University-South Bend.

At one time he was one of the strongest juniors in the U.S. and has reached
a peak rating of 2434 USCF, but several long breaks from tournament play have
made him rusty. He is now resuming tournament chess in earnest, hoping to reach
new heights.

Dennis has been working as a chess teacher for ten years now, giving lessons
to adults and kids both in person and on the internet, worked for a number of
years for New York’s Chess In The Schools program, where he was one of
the coaches of the 1997-8 US K-8 championship team from the Bronx, and was very
active in working with many of CITS’s most talented juniors.

When Dennis Monokroussos presents a game, there are usually two main areas
of focus: the opening-to-middlegame transition and the key moments of the middlegame
(or endgame, when applicable). With respect to the latter, he attempts to present
some serious analysis culled from his best sources (both text and database),
which he has checked with his own efforts and then double-checked with his chess
software.


Playchess Training with IM Merijn van Delft

Everyone is invited to join this weekly training hour on Wednesday evening.
Together we will have a look at the most recent grandmaster games. Recurring
themes during our analyses and discussions are the latest opening developments
and how to work on your own chess.

A word about myself: I was born (March 13, 1979) and raised in Apeldoorn, The
Netherlands. In 1995 I won the Dutch U16 Championship and played the European
Championship in Poland and the World Championship in Brasil. In 1998 I moved
to Amsterdam to study psychology and had a great time there. In 2003 I met my
wife Evi Zickelbein and ever since we've been living together in Hamburg, Germany.
In 2004 I made both master titles: one at the university and one in chess. Since
2005 I've been working fulltime in the chess world: training, coaching, writing,
organizing and still actively playing myself. By now I have about fifteen years
of experience as a chess trainer. Together with my dad I wrote a book
about chess training
(Schaaktalent Ontwikkelen), of which the Dutch
version
is already available and the English
version
will follow April 2010.

IM Merijn van Delft's lecture starts at 20:00h Central European Time (Berlin,
Paris, Rome), which translates to 19:00h London. You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
. Exact times for most larger cities are here.
The lecture is in the "Broadcast" room of Playchess. It is free for
Premium Playchess members (50 Ducats for others).


Links

The lectures are broadcast live on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light
, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

Akiba Rubinstein – 99 years ago

06.01.2010
– In 1910 Emanuel Lasker was World Champion, but the arguably strongest player
in the world was the Polish master Akiba Kiwelowicz Rubinstein (1882–1961),
a dominant figure in tournament chess who was winning most events and in glorious
style. In this week's Playchess lecture
Dennis Monokroussos looks at a game or two of his from the 1911 tournament in
Karlsbad. 9 p.m. ET

Advertisement

:
Deep Shredder 12 - Multiprocessor Version

Deep Shredder 12 by Stefan Meyer Kahlen. No other chess program
has won so many world championship titles. The new edition of Deep Shredder is stronger than all previous versions. Meyer Kahlen: “The improvements are visible all over
the place. Especially the search and the evaluation have become much more precise. The engine is 100 Elo points stronger than the predecessor Shredder 11.”
Available from 14 January 2010

More information...

Playchess training with FM Dennis Monokroussos

A lot has changed the last 100 years. For instance, the current world champion
may not be the clearly strongest player (at least judging by the rating list),
but in 1910... it may have been the same story. Emanuel Lasker barely survived
a challenge to Karl Schlechter that year, and while he (Lasker) was most likely
stronger than José Capablanca (the closest approximation to Magnus Carlsen
at the time), it's entirely possible that the best player at that moment was
the great Akiba Rubinstein (1882-1961).


Polish grandmaster Akiba Kiwelowicz Rubinstein

During the few years from around 1909 up to the beginning of WWI, Rubinstein
was the dominant figure in tournament chess, winning most events and in glorious
style. He was an openings innovator who could play sharp and quiet positions
extremely well, and his endgame technique was fantastic by any standard –
he was probably the best endgame player of the first half of the twentieth century.
Unfortunately, the "Great" War put an end to his hopes of playing
a title match with Lasker, and after that his nerves worsened. Although he remained
a top player, he was supplanted by Capablanca and then Alexander Alekhine, and
never again became the dominant player he once was.

All the same, his legacy to our game is colossal, and we'll celebrate it with
a look from a game or two of his from the 1911 tournament in Karlsbad. We'll
start with a victory that was decided in the middlegame – his win over
Grigory Levenfish (whom we recently profiled on this show) – and then,
time permitting, we'll look at the great rook ending he conducted against the
aforementioned Alekhine. (If time doesn't permit, we'll look at next week –
Rubinstein certainly merits back-to-back shows, and the games are very different
in character.)

To tune in, it's simple. Log on to the Playchess server at 9 p.m. ET Wednesday
night (that's tonight, or 3 a.m. CET Thursday morning for those on the other
side of the Atlantic), go to the Broadcast room and look for Rubinstein-Levenfish
under the Games tab. Hope to see you there!

Dennis Monokroussos'
Radio ChessBase
lectures begin on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST, which translates to 02:00h GMT,
03:00 Paris/Berlin, 13:00h Sydney (on Thursday). You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
, with exact times for most larger cities here.

And you
can watch older lectures by Dennis Monokroussos offline in
the Chess Media System room of Playchess:

Enter the above archive room and click on "Games" to see the lectures.


Monokroussos in Mexico: World Championship 2007
 

Dennis Monokroussos is 43, lives in South Bend, IN, where
he teaches chess and has worked as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame and Indiana University-South Bend.

At one time he was one of the strongest juniors in the U.S. and has reached
a peak rating of 2434 USCF, but several long breaks from tournament play have
made him rusty. He is now resuming tournament chess in earnest, hoping to reach
new heights.

Dennis has been working as a chess teacher for ten years now, giving lessons
to adults and kids both in person and on the internet, worked for a number of
years for New York’s Chess In The Schools program, where he was one of
the coaches of the 1997-8 US K-8 championship team from the Bronx, and was very
active in working with many of CITS’s most talented juniors.

When Dennis Monokroussos presents a game, there are usually two main areas
of focus: the opening-to-middlegame transition and the key moments of the middlegame
(or endgame, when applicable). With respect to the latter, he attempts to present
some serious analysis culled from his best sources (both text and database),
which he has checked with his own efforts and then double-checked with his chess
software.


Playchess Training with IM Merijn van Delft

Everyone is invited to join this weekly training hour on Wednesday evening.
Together we will have a look at the most recent grandmaster games. Recurring
themes during our analyses and discussions are the latest opening developments
and how to work on your own chess.

A word about myself: I was born (March 13, 1979) and raised in Apeldoorn, The
Netherlands. In 1995 I won the Dutch U16 Championship and played the European
Championship in Poland and the World Championship in Brasil. In 1998 I moved
to Amsterdam to study psychology and had a great time there. In 2003 I met my
wife Evi Zickelbein and ever since we've been living together in Hamburg, Germany.
In 2004 I made both master titles: one at the university and one in chess. Since
2005 I've been working fulltime in the chess world: training, coaching, writing,
organizing and still actively playing myself. By now I have about fifteen years
of experience as a chess trainer. Together with my dad I wrote a book
about chess training
(Schaaktalent Ontwikkelen), of which the Dutch
version
is already available and the English
version
will follow April 2010.

IM Merijn van Delft's lecture starts at 20:00h Central European Time (Berlin,
Paris, Rome), which translates to 19:00h London. You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
. Exact times for most larger cities are here.
The lecture is in the "Broadcast" room of Playchess. It is free for
Premium Playchess members (50 Ducats for others).


Links

The lectures are broadcast live on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light
, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

1 из 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 »