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English Pages [290] Year 1996
Capablanca's Best Games Harry Golombek With a Memoir by J. du Mont
Algebraic Classics Series Series Editor: Dr John Nunn GM
B. T. Batsford Ltd, London
©Harry Golombek 1947 First published by G. Bell and Sons 1 947 First algebraic edition©B. T. Batsford 1996 Additional material©John Nunn 1 996 ISBN 0 7 1 34 8064 5 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, by any means, without prior permission of the publisher.
Typeset by John Nunn and printed in Great Britain by Redwood Books, Trowbridge, Wilts for the publishers, B. T. Batsford Ltd,
583 Fulham Road, London SW6 5BY
A BATSFORD CHESS BOOK
Editorial Panel: Mark Dvoretsky, Jon Speelman General Adviser: Raymond Keene OBE Specialist Adviser: Dr John Nunn Commissioning Editor: Graham Burgess
Contents
List of Garnes Introduction by John Nunn Preface by Harry Golombek Memoir by J. du Mont Capablanca's Results
I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Early Years - The Match with Marshall Rapid Development - The Visit to Europe On the way to the World Championship World Champion Victory and Disaster Attempts at Rehabilitation
1929
-
A Rich Year
Prelude to Retirement Triumphant Return The Final Phase
Index of Openings Index of Opponents
4 7 9 11 25 27 43 69 98 127 161 187 222 240 270 287 288
List of Games
I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Corzo - Capablanca, match (8) Havana 1901
Capablanca - Corzo, match (I I ) Havana 190 I
Fox - Capablanca, New York 1906 Capablanca - Marshall, match (6) Morristown 1909 Capablanca - Marshall, match (8) Wilkes-Barre 1 909 Marshall -Capablanca, match (23) New York 1909 Capablanca-Jaffe, New York 1910 Capablanca - Bernstein, San Sebastian 1 9 1 1 Capablanca-Burn, San Sebastian 191 1 Capablanca -Molina, Buenos Aires 191 1
II
Corzo - Capablanca, Havana 1 913
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
Capablanca-Alekhine, St Petersburg 1913 Capablanca - Duz-Khotimirsky, St Petersburg 1913 Bernstein - Capablanca, Moscow 1 914 Alekhine -Capablanca, St Petersburg 1 9 14 Capablanca - Bernstein, St Petersburg 1 9 14 Capablanca - Blackburne, St Petersburg 1914 Capablanca- Chajes, New York 1915 Capablanca-Kupchik, New York 1915 Capablanca- Schroeder, New York 1916 Janowski - Capablanca, New York 1916 Capablanca - Marshall, New York 1 9 18 Capablanca-Janowski, New York 1918 Capablanca - Kostic, match
(I) Havana 1919
Capablanca - Scott, Hastings 1919 Em. Lasker - Capablanca, Wch (10) Havana 1921 Capablanca- Em. Lasker, Wch
( I I) Havana 1921
Capablanca - Bogoljubow, London 1 922 Capablanca - Vidmar, London 1922 Capablanca - Tartakower, New York 1924 Capablanca - Yates, New York 1924 Bogoljubow - Capablanca, New York 1924 Maroczy - Capablanca, New York 1924 Capablanca - Em. Lasker, New York 1924
27 29 32 33 36 38 41 43 47 49 51 54 56 58 61 64 67 69 72 74 77 79 83 84 88 90 95 98 102 104 107 111 113 1 17
List of Games 5 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74
Capablanca- Janowski, New York 1924 Tartakower - Capablanca, New York 1924 Capablanca -Marshall, Moscow 1 925 Capablanca - Zubarev, Moscow 1925 Capablanca - Bogoljubow, Moscow 1925 Gothilf - Capablanca, Moscow 1925 Ed. Lasker -Capablanca, Lake Hopatcong 1926 Nimzowitsch-Capablanca, New York 1927 Alekhine - Capablanca, New York 1927 Capablanca - Vidmar, New York 1927 Capablanca - Spielmann, New York 1 927 Nimzowitsch - Capablanca, New York 1 927 Capablanca- Alekhine,Wch (3) Buenos Aires 1 927 Capablanca-Alekhine, Wch (7) Buenos Aires 1927 Capablanca - Alekhine, Wch (29) Buenos Aires 1927 Capablanca - Tartakower, Bad Kissingen 1928 Capablanca - Mieses, Bad Kissingen 1928 Capablanca-Yates, Bad Kissingen 1928 Bogoljubow -Capablanca, Bad Kissingen 1928 Capablanca -Havasi, Budapest 1928 Merenyi - Capablanca, Budapest 1928 Capablanca -H. Steiner, Budapest 1928 Capablanca - Von Balla, Budapest 1928 Capablanca - Rubinstein, Berlin 1928 Rubinstein - Capablanca, Berlin 1928 Winter - Capablanca, Rarnsgate 1929 Capablanca - Becker, Karlsbad 1 929 Capablanca -Treybal, Karlsbad 1929 Capablanca - Mattison, Karlsbad 1 929 Capablanca - Marshall, Karlsbad 1929 Colle - Capablanca, Karlsbad 1929 Capablanca -Maroczy, Karlsbad 1929 Capablanca - Brinckmann, Budapest 1929 Havasi -Capablanca, Budapest 1 929 Capablanca -Colle, Barcelona 1929 Monticelli - Capablanca, Barcelona 1929 Ribera -Capablanca, Barcelona 1 929 Capablanca - Torres, Barcelona 1929 Capablanca-Yates, Barcelona 1929 Capablanca - Tylor, Hastings 1930/1
122 124 128 131 133 136 138 140 143 145 147 150 153 155 158 161 164 166 168 172 174 177 179 181 184 187 191 192 195 197 200 203 205 208 210 212 215 217 219 222
6 List of Games
75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Miss Menchik -Capablanca, Hastings 1 930/1 Kevitz - Capablanca, New York 1931 Marshall -Capablanca, New York 1931 Euwe - Capablanca, Amsterdam 1931 Capablanca -Euwe, Amsterdam 1931 Capablanca -H. Steiner, Los Angeles 1933 Alatortsev -Capablanca, Moscow 1935 Capablanca-Ragozin, Moscow 1935 Capablanca - Kan, Moscow 1935 Capablanca -Miss Menchik, Moscow 1935 Capablanca - Levenfish, Moscow 1935 Capablanca -Mieses, Margate 1935 Capablanca - Sir G . Thomas, Margate 1935 Capablanca - Milner-Barry, Margate 1936 Capablanca - Lilienthal, Moscow 1936 Capablanca -Eliskases, Moscow 1936 Allies - Capablanca, Leningrad 1936 Capablanca -Alexander, Nottingham 1936 Ragozin -Capablanca, Semmering-Baden 1937 Capablanca -Rossolimo, Paris 1938 Capablanca - Znosko-Borovsky, Paris 1938 Capablanca - Flohr, AV RO 1938 Capablanca - Golombek, Margate 1939 Capablanca - Mikenas, Buenos Aires 1939 Capablanca -Vassaux, Buenos Aires 1939 Capablanca - Czerniak, Buenos Aires 1939
224 227 229 232 236 238 240 243 245 248 250 252 254 256 258 261 265 267 270 273 274 276 278 280 282 284
Introd uction by John Nunn
The original edition of this book was
to learn chess strategy. His natural
one of the first chess books I ever
talent created games of deceptive
read, and was certainly the first game
simplicity. Under the surface he may
collection I ever studied. It was pure
well have been calculating hard to
coincidence that Golombek's book
work out exactly how to restrain his
came to my attention so early. When
opponent's potential counterplay,
I was about seven years old, my fa
but this is not obvious when playing
ther worked for what was then the
over the games - instead one has the
London County Council. Their head
impression of strategic plans effort
quarters, at County Hall on the South
lessly consummated. This strong sty
Bank of the Thames, included a size
listic feature makes Capablanca a
able staff library. One day my father
particularly good subject for Golom
took me to the library and I looked
bek 's style of annotation, which es
through the chess books to find one I
chews detailed analysis. Intricate
would like to borrow. There were
variations would only obscure the
quite a few chess books in the li
overriding principles, and while it is
brary, but I was attracted by the idea
hard to emulate Capablanca's style
of playing over the games of a World
without the gift of immense natural
Champion. After the first few games
talent, there is a lot to be learnt from
I was captivated and during the fol
his games.
lowing weeks I played over all 100
While I was working on this book,
games and carefully studied Golom
I was struck more and more force
bek's notes.
fully by the parallel between Capa
I was perhaps rather fortunate in
blanca's style and that of Karpov.
my choice. Had I chosen Alekhine's
The list of strengths is remarkably
collection instead, I would have been
similar: the rare ability to beat very
daunted by the complexity of the
strong opponents from equal, sim
games and Alekhine's notes. How
plified positions, excellent end
ever, Golombek did not go into great
game technique and mastery of the
analytical detail, but concentrated on
art of constructive liquidation. Per
the general principles governing the
haps the main difference between
play. This was my first encounter
them is that Karpov's style contains
with chess strategy and the concept
an underlying aggression which was
of forming a long-term plan.
lacking in Capablanca. The Cuban
There was certainly no better
was often accused of being lazy;
player than Capablanca from whom
having now played over a large
8 Introduction by John Nunn
number of his games in order to gain
and the strategic overview. The dis
some perspect ive for my work on . this book, I have concluded that
cerning reader will recognise that at times he over-simplifies but, as I dis
there is a modest element of truth in
covered myself, a book such as this
this accusation. Against relatively
can often serve its educational pur
weak players Capablanca would
pose better if the intricate details are
sometimes play tactically, perhaps
hidden from view. Perhaps Golom
confident that he could win in any
bek's main flaw is his extreme dog
case; against strong players not at
matism on the subject of openings,
the very top he would rely on his
but fortunately this only affects a few
astonishing positional intuition and
games.
excellent technique. But to succeed
While I was working on this book
at the very top, it is necessary to de
I discovered a number of analytical
feat players of almost one's own cal
flaws, some of which had already
ibre, and this is where Capablanca
been spotted by earlier analysts. If
was lacking. Skill in simplified posi
the flaw was minor, then I simply
tions is all very well, but against
corrected the analysis without com
first-rank opposition the strategy of
ment. However, major flaws and
simply waiting for a mistake will not
omissions are indicated by the pres
work. Mistakes have to be induced
ence of footnotes. The fact that there
by stimulating complications or stra
are quite a few of these should not
tegically unbalanced situations. Ca
be interpreted as an implicit criti
pablanca rarely attempted this, and
cism of Golombek. Annotating other
he was not helped b y a limited and
players' games is one of the hardest
predictable opening repertoire.
tasks in chess, especially if the sub
Having said this, Capablanca was World Champion for six years and
ject is a stronger player than the an notator.
an extremely successful tournament
I hope readers will enjoy this new
player. Nobody has ever excelled
algebraic, corrected edition of a clas
his handling of the endgame. There
sic book and learn as much as I did
is no question that he was one of the
myself all those years ago.
greats of chess history, and time
Finally, I would like to thank Ed
spent studying his games will not be
ward Winter, who corrected many
wasted.
historical errors in the original book,
As regards Golombek's annota
and two diligent proof-readers: Gra
tions, his great strength was in the
ham Burgess, the Batsford chess edi
general descriptions of the games
tor, and my wife Petra.
Preface by Harry Golombek
The games of Capablanca are per
games. Possibly this was because he
vaded by a general feeling quite dif
assumed immediate comprehension
ferent from those of other great
on the part of the reader of moves
players. They breathe a serenity, a lu
that really demanded considerable
cid crystal clarity, a type of model
explanation.
perfection present in no other master.
Then, too, he has suffered a great
splendidior vitro quality of Ca
deal at the hands of his rivals. Too
pablanca's style has led some critics
many of these (Tartakower being a
to assume falsely that he erred on the
notable and happy exception) have
side of over-safety and that in his
allowed jealous prejudice to blind
preference for the simple line rather
them to the greatness of his games
than the richly complicated he was
and have consequently joined in cre
inclined to concede too many draws.
ating a myth concerning the aridity
Nothing could be further from the
and dullness of his style. Those who
truth. This simplicity of perfection
read the German edition of the New
was the product of supreme art. Play
York tournament book of 1927 will
ing through a Capablanca game and
find it an excellent illustration of the
fully understanding it after close
systematic depreciation employed
study constitutes a liberal education
by one of the world's greatest anno
in the art of chess.
tators. To explain away the hard fact
This
For this reason I have found it
that Capablanca won the tournament
necessary to annotate the games as
several points ahead of all the lead
exhaustively as was within my pow
ing players in the world every oppor
ers. With Capablanca every move is
tunity is taken. and some occasions
significant and his games will re
that did not previously exist are cre
ward the closest study thanks to the
ated, to show how weakly and with
freshness and clear beauty of the
what strange regularity all Capa
conceptions they contain. I believe
blanca's opponents played below
their essential greatness has been
their true form against him. Only
somewhat obscured in popular esti
grudging admissions are given, and
mation from several causes. Firstly,
these rarely, of Capablanca's great
and though it may seem something
play. This injustice was never re
lese-majeste to say it, yet this is
paired since Capablanca never trou
like
my sincere belief and I must out with
bled to reply.
it, Capablanca was strangely poor at
Well, here are the games and the
explaining and annotating his own
reader can judge for himself. But
JO Preface by Harry Golombek
when the reader has played through
antipathy at the Buenos Aires Olym
the games I would ask him to con
piad of 1939. I was standing in one
sider this question: has any other
of the corridors of the Teatro Poli
player the chess world has yet seen
teama, where the congress was held,
produced such a mass of games im
when Alekhine came in, and I
pregnated by that inner logical har
walked down the corridor with him,
mony that to my mind constitutes the
discussing a game he had played the
essential quality of a great game of
previous day. Suddenly Capablanca
chess? Rubinstein, alone, I believe,
emerged from a side door in the thea
would have rivalled Capablanca, had
tre and came up towards us in the
it not been for a regrettable tendency
somewhat narrow corridor which
to lapse into grotesque blunders,
would only just take three abreast. It
thereby marring the perfection of
was extraordinary and indeed comic
many a wonderful game.
to observe how they passed each
It is this harmonious perfection that makes him such a model for
other by with a supreme oblivious ness as to each other's presence.
the young and aspiring player. The
Now that they are both dead one
stormy and attractive genius of Alek
can only regret the petty nature of the
hine, on the other hand, is full of pit
quarrel that prevented a return match
falls for its imitators. The mention of
for the championship and so prob
Alekhine's name brings me to one of
ably deprived the world of some
the great controversies of the chess
great games.
world of the present century. Every
Into the details of Capablanca's
body is fully aware of the quarrel and
life it is unnecessary for me to enter,
even enmity that existed between
since this has already been done so
these two great masters and it is by
capably by Mr du Mont in his biog
now generally realised that faults ex isted on both sides, though at one
raphy, which follows.
time the chess world was sharply di
my deep indebtedness to my friend
vided into supporters of either camp.
F. W. Allen, who not only submitted
I became acquainted with both
himself to the tedium of checking
champions towards the end of their
through the proofs but also proffered
careers and found them equally
several valuable suggestions and
charming, friendly and most agree
corrections to the notes, and my
able and sparkling conversational
grateful thanks are also due to W.
ists. But if you once mentioned the
Ritson Morry who was so kind as to
name of their hated rival (it was not
furnish me with the sources of some
done more than once) then a con
games I had been unable to trace.
I would like to acknowledge here
strained and freezing atmosphere was immediately noticeable. T here
H. Golombek
was an amusing illustration of this
December 1946
Memoir of Capablanca By J. du Mont
A man's importance in the scheme of
to his readers in the presentation of
things is entirely relative. People go
the man. You may as well disparage
through life both cheerfully and suc
Beethoven's immortal works be
cessfully without giving astronomy
cause his landladies complained of
a thought. To them the most famous
his being untidy.
astronomer is but a name should they
Capablanca has frequently been
happen to have heard of him. To his
compared with Morphy, and with
fellow astronomers he is of para
good reason. Both were of Latin de
mount interest and importance.
scent, they learned to play good
Capablanca, a star of the first
chess as small children, and became
magnitude in the chess firmament,
masters at the age of twelve. They
was, however, more than a name to
beat every contemporary American
the general public. It is not easy to
player at the age of twenty, following
adduce a tangible reason for this re
this up immediately by a visit to
markable fact; perhaps it is the un
Europe, where they beat the fore
erring instinct of the people, which
most European masters with con
seldom fails to single out the man
summate ease.
who makes history.
Here the parallel ends; Morphy
Be that as it may, Capablanca has
retired, unbeaten, at the age of just
done more than anyone to spread the
twenty-two, but Capablanca who,
gospel of chess by the glamour of his
had he likewise retired, would also
personality and the brilliance of his
have perpetuated the nimbus of in
achievement, and he has the great
vincibility, went on from success to
merit of having raised the status of
success, winning the World Champi
the chess player by the dignity and
onship, until he met Alekhine, to
graciousness of his dealings with his
whom he lost a long-drawn-out
fellow men.
match by 6 losses, 3 wins and 25
He may have had his faults, but
draws. He was then thirty-nine.
they were at the worst some of the
This unexpected reverse played
minor weaknesses from which gen
havoc with Capablanca's self-con
ius is hardly ever free. However, they
fidence, and there is no doubt that
had nothing to do with his art, and
his failure to secure a return match
the biographer who gives these more
preyed on his mind and affected his
than a passing note does a disservice
playing strength. At any rate, he was
12
Memoir of Capablanca
no longer the odds-on candidate for
November 1 9th, 1888. He was in his
first prize when playing in a strong
fourth year when he first showed
tournament. Nevertheless, with one
signs of his exceptional talent for
exception, he invariably came out
chess, and the following incident is
high up in the lists of the tourna
perfectly authentic. One day the child
ments in which he took part and
happened to watch his father play a
twice scored a success comparable
game of chess with a friend. The
with his first appearance at San Se
pieces attracted him, and he watched
bastian, in 1 9 1 1 , namely the great
the players again on the next day. On
tournaments of Moscow and Not
the third day he noticed that his fa
tingham in 1 936. His only com
ther moved a knight from a white
parative failure was in the 1938
square to another white square. At
AV RO Grandmasters' Tournament.
the end of the game the child laughed
He was then exactly fifty years old
at his father and said he had won by
and suffering from high blood pres
cheating. His father remonstrated
sure, which may have contributed to
with him, saying that he did not even
his fatal stroke a few years later.
know the moves, whereupon Jose
The comparative strength of the
Raul said he could beat his father
great chess players is practically im
and forthwith vindicated his asser
possible to assess, for their powers
tion by beating him twice. Thus,
are no static entity. It seldom hap
without ever having been shown the
pens that both the players taking part
moves, the boy genius won his first
in a match are on the ascendant. The
two games of chess. During the next
reigning champion in particular is
few years, on medical advice, the
not over-anxious to play a really
child was allowed to play chess on
dangerous rival until forced to do
rare occasions only.
so by circumstances; a human fail
After his eighth birthday young
ing, deplorable perhaps, but not re
Raul was taken to the Havana Chess
stricted to chess. Who knows what
Club and thus was launched on his
would have happened had Lasker
chess career.
played Tarrasch in 1898, if Lasker
The Havana Chess Club has long
had played Capablanca in 1914 or
enjoyed the reputation of being one
Capablanca had met Alekhine in
of the most enthusiastic and enter
1925?
prising clubs in the world. In its fine
The true criterion of a chess mas
and spacious premises, many impor
ter, as it is also in other walks of life,
tant matches have taken place, such
is whether his work will endure through generations. There is little
as, for instance, Steinitz-Chigorin and Chigorin-Gunsberg. Many lead
doubt that Capablanca will prove
ing players have been the guests of
one of the immortals.
the Club-Morphy: Captain Macken
Jose Raul Capablanca y Graupera
zie, Blackburne, Pillsbury and many
was born in the city of Havana on
others. The membership has always
Memoir of Capablanca
13
marks in scientific subjects and as
been numerous, with a high percent age of strong players.
much as 99 per cent in algebra. After
The youthful genius thrived in
two years devoted to his studies at
this atmosphere, and three months
the university and, incidentally, a
after joining the club he was pro
great deal of sport, he left the univer
moted to the first class and held his
sity and gave most of his time to
own easily with the strongest players
chess.
in the club, with the exception of
In that year, 1909, he went on a
Vazquez and Corzo. His progress was so rapid and his success so sus
tour of the United States for the first time and broke all records both by
tained that it was decided to arrange
the results and the speed of his si
a match for the championship of the
multaneous play. He played 184
club between the boy, now aged
games in ten consecutive seances,
twelve, and the holder, Juan Corzo.
conceding only two draws, before
Corzo won the first two games, and it
losing one game out of twenty-two at
seemed as if the youngster was being
Minneapolis. As to speed, he could
tried too high. But young Raul, with
at that time always be relied upon to
a steadiness worthy of an experi
complete thirty games in under two
enced master, was not to be denied
hours. Altogether his score during
and ran out the winner by 7-6.
this his first tour was 5 7 1 wins, 18
After this remarkable success, the
draws and only 13 losses.
boy was kept away from chess as
Then came his first real test, his
much as possible so that he could
match with Frank Marshall, the un
devote himself to his studies, with
disputed leader of American chess
special attention to the English lan
since the death of Pillsbury. With a
guage, in preparation for his forth
long list of European successes to his
coming entrance examination to the
credit and his sensational triumph at
University of Columbia.
Cambridge Springs in 1904, no one
In this connection he visited the
thought that Marshall had anything
Manhattan Chess Club for the first
to fear from his youthful and inexpe
time in 1904, and in subsequent vis
rienced opponent. As Capablanca
its he showed such good form that, a
said himself, he had never studied a
year later, he was considered second
book on the openings, and the result
to none in this famous club. He was
of the match - a win for Capablanca
easily the best at lightning chess, and
by 8-1 and 14 draws - was amazing
in 1906, during a visit by Dr Lasker,
and none was more surprised than
he won a rapid transit tournament,
Marshall himself.
beating the World Champion in their individual game.
Shortly after the match Capa blanca returned home to Cuba after
In the same year he entered the
an absence of five years, during
University of Columbia. In the en
which he had almost forgotten his
trance examination he gained high
mother tongue.
14
Memoir of Capablanca
On his return to the USA, Capa
every contestant had to show that
blanca undertook his second tour.
he had won at least two third prizes
This was of a very exacting nature,
in very strong master tournaments.
as a result of which he found that his
This resulted in an exceptionally
physical condition made it impera
strong entry, the participants being
tive to postpone his first visit to
Rubinstein, Vidmar, Marshall, Bern
Europe, where he had accepted an
stein, Maroczy, Schlechter, Tarrasch,
invitation to take part in the interna
Spielmann, Teichmann, Janowski,
tional tournament at Hamburg in
Nimzowitsch, Burn, Leonhardt and
1910. This gave rise to many acid
Duras - the most powerful contin
comments. some European experts
gent of masters ever known in one
suggesting that fear of the strong op
contest up to that time. In view of his
position was the real reason for the
sensational victory over Marshall, an
defection.
exception was made for young Ca
The following year he undertook
pablanca, who had not yet played in
yet another very exacting tour of the
any masters' tournament, let alone
USA. This was followed by his par
won two third prizes. There was
ticipation in a tournament in New
much shaking of heads, especially in
York which he thought would be
view of his partial failure in a sec
good practice for the forthcoming
ond-rate tournament shortly before,
tournament at San Sebastian. The
and several of the masters taking part
only opponent of real calibre was
in the San Sebastian fixture objected
Marshall, but, evidently as a conse
strongly to the newcomer's entry be
quence of his strenuous exertions
ing accepted. The most vocal were
when on tour, Capablanca started the
Bernstein and Nimzowitsch, and it
tournament very badly and at the
was poetic justice that Capablanca
half-way stage he stood fifth in the
should beat Bernstein in the first
list. He then found his form and, by
round in a sensational 'brilliancy'
winning six consecutive games, he
and that he should also account for
finished second to Marshall.
Nimzowitsch in decisive fashion. In
Shortly afterwards he was on the
the end he lost only one game,
high seas, making for Europe, hop
against Rubinstein, won six and
ing to emulate the feat of his great
drew seven. The scores of the leaders
predecessors, Morphy and Pillsbury,
were: Capablanca 9112, Rubinstein
by holding his own, at the first time
and Vidmar 9, Marshall 8112.
of asking, with the best that Europe could muster.
No-one expected the novice to win this tournament, in which, with
The San Sebastian Tournament
the sole exception of Dr Lasker, all
of 19 1 1 was the first contest which
the leading players of the world took
could be rightly called a grandmas
part, and it is safe to say that there
ters' tournament as we know it today.
has never been a greater sensation in
A novel condition of entry was that
the history of the game. As a result
Memoir of Capablanca
15
there was a tremendous demand for Capablanca's services from clubs
second place, half a point behind the
throughout Europe, but, as he had
his next tournament, in New York,
accepted a two months' engagement
Capablanca won all thirteen games
in the Argentine, he took only a short
and although, of the participants,
trip through Germany on this occa
only Duras could be said to be of his
sion. His visit to the Argentine was
own class, it was nevertheless an un
very successful; playing only the
usual feat.
winner, was accounted a failure. In
very best opponents single-handed,
During this year, 1 9 1 3 , Capa
or in consultation, he won every
blanca entered the Cuban Foreign
game but one, a consultation game
Office. This carried a substantial sal
(versus Illa and Gelly), which was
ary and involved a good deal of trav
drawn.
elling, which enabled him to meet
Taking in a number of South
the strongest players of most coun
American cities on his way back, he
tries. This appointment is generally
returned to Europe, where a trium
thought to have been a sinecure. This
phant tour took him through Hol land, Denmark, Germany, France
was not so, and, although the Cuban Government were fully aware of
Austria-Hungary and England. Ca
the magnificent advertisement they
pablanca made excellent results in
were given by the sensational activi
his simultaneous play, even though
ties of their compatriot in the chess
every club he visited took a pride in
world, he took his duties, such as
putting up their strongest possible
they were, seriously and certainly in
team. Quite unusual too were the
correct diplomatic style never dis
fees demanded and which clubs paid
cussed them with anyone.
willingly for such an outstanding ex
His first mission took him to St
perience as a visit from Capablanca.
Petersburg. On his way he gave si
There is no doubt that professional
multaneous exhibitions in London,
chess benefited from this.
Paris, Berlin, Frankfurt, Warsaw and
After he left Europe in November
Lodz. During a short stay in the last
1 9 1 1 , nothing of any great import
named city, four exhibition games
ance occurred for some time; during
were arranged, two against Mieses
1912 his activity was limited to some
and two against Teichmann. He won
tours in Cuba and the USA.
all four games. Soon after his arrival
In a double-round tournament in
in St Petersburg a similar series of
Havana in 1 9 1 3 , Capablanca lost
six games was arranged, two each
two games, to Janowski and Mar
against Alekhine, Znosko-Borovsky
shall, in consequence of which he
and Duz-Khotimirsky. One of these
finished second, half a point behind
he lost to Znosko-Borovsky, the five
Marshall. Such was the exaggerated
others he won.
view the chess public took of the
The following year again brought
popular hero that for him to take the
much travelling and visits to Vienna
16
Memoir of Capablanca
and Paris. In addition to simultane
and that Capablanca was the only re
ous play, there were many serious
alistic challenger for the world title.
games against masters such as Dr
There were indeed several attempts
Bernstein and Tartakower.
to bring these two great players to
Capablanca's next great test was
gether, but the war of 1914 inter
the tournament at St Petersburg in
vened and it was not until Jong
1914, where for the first time he met
afterwards that the match actually
the holder of the World Champion
took place.
ship, Dr Lasker, in a tournament. In
Shortly before the start of war,
point of strength, the entries to this
Capablanca left St Petersburg for
great tournament were on a par with
Buenos Aires, where he had an en
San Sebastian, 1911, but an unusual
gagement. His visit was longer than
arrangement was that the first five
anticipated. All the steamers carried
players were to decide the destina
the British flag and many suffered
tion of the prizes in a final double
heavy damage from German raiders.
round group. Even more unusual
Here his diplomatic status again
was the fact that the scores in the pre
helped him, as he was allowed to
liminary tournament were taken over
board one of the Argentine trans
into the second. Capablanca won
ports sailing for Philadelphia, where
through his first stage, scoring 8
he landed at the beginning of 1915.
points without loss, a point and a half
The war years very naturally made
ahead of his great rivals, Dr Lasker
major chess fixtures impossible, and
and Dr Tarrasch. Next came Alek
all there is to report during that time
hine and Marshall with six points
is the winning of two minor tourna
each. It seemed a foregone conclu
ments, a visit to Havana, and the in
sion that Capablanca, with this sub
evitable tour for simultaneous play.
stantial start, should come out first,
In the autumn of 1918 a double
but Dr Lasker, in one of those bursts
round tournament at New York
of superhuman energy for which he
brought a number of masters to
was famous, actually managed to
gether, the result being Capablanca
score two more points than his rival
101'2, Kostic 9, Marshall 7, Chajes 6,
and in the end was first with 131'2 to
Janowski 4, Black 31/>, Morrison 2.
Capablanca's 13. After an interval
Both the leaders won through the
of 3 points came Alekhine, the first
tournament without Joss, Kostic draw
great achievement of the future
ing both his games against Capa
world champion. Dr Tarrasch scored
blanca. Thereupon Kostic issued a
81'2 and Marshall 8. If the result of
challenge to Capablanca which was
this tournament gave no real indica
accepted, and a match duly took
tion of the relative strength of Dr
place in the fine surroundings of the
Lasker and Capablanca at that time,
Union Club of Havana. Kostic re
it at least made it very clear that the
signed the match after losing five
two were in a class by themselves
games off the reel.
Memoir of Capablanca
17
plains the feeling of hopelessness
The long-awaited match with Dr Lasker for the world championship
which befell the loser and justified
finally took place in 192 1 . The venue
his resignation. He played well ac
was Havana, and Capablanca proved
cording to principles recognised at
the winner by four wins, ten draws
the time, and this match perhaps
and no losses. Much has been said
more than any previous achievement
and written about this result. Dr
of Capablanca's revealed the fact
Lasker certainly did not appear as
that his genius had found something
the Titan of former days; on the other
deeper and quite individual which
hand, he could have met his younger
formed the basis of his play. These
opponent at an earlier date, when
games were at the time quite beyond
possibly the result might have been
the understanding of the average stu
different or at any rate the contest
dent of the game and left him with a
more even. Anno Domini is a hard
sense of wonderment.
taskmaster, and possibly the four
A study of these five games ex
Capablanca's style of play never
war years, in which Dr Lasker practi
formed the basis of a method, nor
cally lost his all, reacted on his stam
were the principles underlying it
ina and playing strength.
ever analysed and proclaimed as
Capablanca had now reached the
something new. But there is no doubt
pinnacle of fame, and the first tour
that it gave the younger masters food
nament in which he took part after
for thought and initiated a general
winning the championship, the Lon
overhaul of the guiding ideas in
don tournament of 1922, was won
chess. I feel certain that from this
by him with consummate ease. He
sprang the whole idea of modern
scored thirteen out of fifteen, allow
play which was later rather blatantly
ing his competitors only four draws.
styled 'hypermodern'.
Alekhine was second with 11112. He
At the end of the First World War
also went through the tournament
the famous Hastings Club arranged
without loss, but scored seven draws.
a tournament in celebration of the
Yet it was noticeable in the new
Allied victory. The twelve partici
champion's play that something was
pants were of uneven strength and it
lacking. One missed his indomitable
is no wonder that Capablanca scored
I 0112, winning all his games except a
will to win. He won by sheer skill and not by the exercise of his normal
draw with Kostic, who was second
combativeness.
with 9112 points. The third and fourth
This was accentuated in the next
prizes were shared by Sir George
two big tournaments in which he
Thomas and Yates with 7 points.
took part, New York 1924, and Mos
This overwhelming victory, coming
cow 1925. In New York he made a re
after the hiatus of the war years, re
ally bad start with four draws of a
awakened public interest in chess
lackadaisical nature and one bad loss
and in Capablanca in particular.
against Reti before he pulled himself
18
Memoir of Capablanca
together and played more like a Champion. He went through this ar duous double-round event without further loss and but five more draws. However, in the meantime Dr Lasker had forged ahead in the style of his best days, and although Capablanca scored one win and one draw against Lasker in their individual encoun ters, he could not atone for his bad start and the tournament resulted in a win for the grand old man with 16 points, l'h points ahead of Capa blanca. Next came Alekhine with 12 and Marshall with 1 1 . In Moscow he fared even worse at the start, losing two games to com paratively unknown players, Ilyin Zhenevsky and Verlinsky, who came out equal ninth and equal twelfth re spectively. In the end the tournament was won by Bogoljubow, who thus scored in his homeland the greatest triumph of his career. His score was 151/z, Lasker was second with 14, followed closely by Capablanca with 1 31/z. Capablanca beat the win ner and drew with the runner-up, but again could not make good his fail ure in the early rounds. At Lake Hopatcong, in 1926, Ca pablanca took part in a double-round tournament in which Maroczy and Marshall took part as well as Edward Lasker and Kupchik. He won easily with four wins, four draws and no loss. Kupchik surprisingly won the second prize with 5 points, losing only one game against the winner. At this time a number of chal lenges were put forward for a world championship match, especially by
Nimzowitsch and Alekhine, who both had scored important successes since the end of the First World War. A tournament was arranged in New York, the participants being Capa blanca, Alekhine, Nimzowitsch, Vid mar, Spielmann and Marshall. This was a quadruple-round affair, and in this tremendous trial of strength, Ca pablanca once more deployed the whole of his amazing powers and won with 14 points and not a single loss (eight wins and twelve draws) 21/z points ahead of Alekhine who scored 1 11/z (five wins, thirteen draws and two losses). This victory probably marked the pinnacle of the Cuban's career, and may in some measure be responsible for the result of the match with Alekhine which took place the same year in Buenos Aires. There is no doubt that, after this overwhelming triumph, Capablanca did not take the challenge seriously and started the match totally unpre pared. In the first game he played White in a French Defence and lost after missing a chance of a draw. He never recovered from the shock. The new champion, however, did not score a runaway victory, for he won by six games to three with the un precedented number of 25 draws. For the rest of his life Capablanca tried hard to get a return match and he was more than justified in doing so. In all the tournaments in which both these players took part Alek hine beat Capablanca just once. The total results between them read:
Memoir of Capablanca
Wins
Draws
Losses
Tournaments
4
8
I
Exhibition Games
2
-
-
Championship Match
3
25
6
Total
9
33
7
Omitting the exhibition games, Capablanca's score reads: 7 wins, 3 3 draws, 7 losses. There is no shadow of doubt that Capablanca was in truth fully enti tled to a return match. The chess world is the poorer for the fact that it never took place. There would be lit tle to be gained at this stage by ap portioning the blame, but it would have been a keen encounter, for Ca pablanca would have prepared him self for the ordeal in a very different way from the almost casual manner in which he usually regarded these things. Of course, nobody could tell what the result would have been. During the next ten years Capa blanca played in many tournaments, trying to establish his claim to a re turn match. On the whole he was successful, although at times he won a negative success by securing the third or even the fourth prize. In 1928 he played in three impor tant tournaments. At Bad Kissingen he was second, one point behind Bogoljubow, who scored 8. In Buda pest he was first, I point ahead of Marshall and in Berlin he was first with 81h points, I 'h points ahead of
19
Nimzowitsch. In I 929 at Karlsbad he shared second prize with Spielmann, scoring 141'2 to Nimzowitsch's 15. He was first in three tournaments in that year, at Ramsgate, Budapest and Barcelona. This period ends with his victory at Hastings 1929/30, a point ahead of Vidmar. During the next five years he seems to have lost heart, taking part in only two minor tournaments, se curing the second prize at Hastings, 1930/1, and the first in New York 1931.
Lack of practice told when he re sumed activities at the end of 1934; he finished only fourth in Hastings and fourth again in Moscow 1935, his worst placing so far. He recov ered much of his strength in 1936. After two second prizes in less important fixtures at Margate in 1935 and 1936, he scored a notable triumph in the Moscow 1936 double round tournament with 13 points, a point ahead of Botvinnik and no less than 31h points ahead of the third prize-winner, Flohr! In the same year he scored another outstanding success in one of the strongest tournaments ever held, that
20
Memoir of Capablanca
at Nottingham, where, with the cur
without loss. In the same year he
rent champion and three former
played in the team tournament at
champions competing, he shared
Buenos Aires, which witnessed the
first prize with Botvinnik, the new
advent of the Second World War.
star from Russia.
This, his last appearance, was an ex
This seems to have been his swan
cellent one. He played top board for
song, although his third equal with
Cuba, and of the sixteen games he
Reshevsky in the Semmering-Baden
played he won seven and drew nine.
tournament of 1937, closely behind
The World War now put an end
Keres and Fine, must be accounted a
for a time to representative interna
good performance judged by normal
tional chess.
standards. He won a weak tourna
On March 8th, 1942, Capablanca
ment in Paris in 1938, but did badly
died of a cerebral haemorrhage. He
in the AVRO double-round tourna
was taken ill at the Manhattan Chess
ment held in 1938, his only failure
Club, from where he was taken to the
throughout his career. At that time
Mount Sinai Hospital, New York.
he was already suffering from an
His great rival, Dr Lasker, had pre
gina pectoris. He was then fifty and
ceded him to the same hospital just
the conditions of the tournament, in
over one year before.
which each round was played in a different town, entailed much un
The veteran Frank Marshall ex pressed himself as follows:
comfortable travelling. Moreover,
"Comparatively little has been
besides the champion, his six rivals -
written about Capablanca's style of
Keres, Fine, Botvinnik, Reshevsky,
play, and much of what has ap
Euwe and Flohr - were all grand
peared in the press was contradic
masters, fully fledged contenders
tory. Many called his play dull and
for the title and all considerably
himself a mathematical precision
younger than himself. Alekhine him
machine. Yet in his very first game in
self, at forty-six, found the condi
international chess,
tions too onerous, and did almost
Bernstein in San Sebastian, 1911,
equally badly, scoring but one point
Capablanca deservedly won a first
more than Capablanca. Even so, Ca
brilliancy prize and the game re
pablanca finished only 2112 points be
mains a classic among brilliancies.
hind the joint winners, Keres and Fine, scoring two wins, eight draws
In tournament after tournament Ca pablanca gained brilliancy prizes, as
and four losses.
many as three in Budapest, 1929. In
that against
After the AVRO tournament, Ca
deed, the prizes he won for brillian
pablanca took part in only two more
cies in major tournaments almost
events. At Margate 1939, he shared
equalled the number of such events
the second prize with 6112 points be
in which he took part.
hind Keres, who scored 7112. He and
"The truth is that, a true artist, he
Keres went through the tournament
felt that the simplest way to win was
Memoir of Capablanca
21
also the most artistic. He never went
which he played with a precision sel
in for a brilliancy for the sake of be
dom equalled and never excelled. In
ing brilliant. Only when the sacrifice,
the middlegame his extraordinarily
the combination were the shortest
quick grasp of the position gave him
way to a win did Capablanca exhibit
a tactical advantage over most of his
his outstanding talent in that direc
opponents, so that he seldom needed
tion."
to go in for deep strategy.
In a lengthy article in the book of
His openings were correct and
the San Sebastian tournament of
ably planned, but here his aversion
1911, Mieses, that eminent critic and
to the extensive study of 'the book'
author, wrote as follows:
put him rather at a disadvantage,
"Concerning his type of play, let it
be said that it has not, contrary to what
which became more marked after he lost the championship, when a great
one might expect, anything youthful
number of eager young players, all
and lacking in development; it is en
of world championship class, made
tirely mature. One must not forget
their presence felt, to name but a few
that Capablanca as a man is young,
besides Alekhine, Botvinnik, Keres,
but as a player he is quite aged; from
Reshevsky, Fine, Euwe, Flohr, all of
the fourth to the twenty-second year
them possible world champions and
of his life he gave practically all his
versed in the intricacies of modern
time to his favourite pursuit, and at
opening strategy.
this period of life eighteen years
Nikolai Grekov, in his personal
count double or treble... Many an ex
reminiscences, gives an interesting
pert says that there is a certain affin
account of Capablanca's reception
ity between his style and that of the
in Russia. It goes farther than most
world master, Lasker. There may be
published accounts in giving side
some truth in it. Lasker's style is
lights on the character of the man:
clear water, but with a drop of poison
"In 1914, on the eve of the First
which is clouding it. Capablanca's
World War, Jose Raul Capablanca
style is perhaps still clearer, but it
took part in a big tournament at St
lacks that drop of poison."
Petersburg. An unlucky defeat by
In 1911 Znosko-Borovsky gave a
Tarrasch deprived him of the first
lecture on the Cuban master before the St Petersburg Chess Club and
prize. Capablanca came second to Lasker, but received a special prize
clearly showed that it was Capa
for the tournament's most beautiful
blanca's play that gave the Russian
game.
author the first idea of his theory of
"After the October Revolution I
time and space, which he later on de
met Capablanca in Moscow in 1925,
veloped in his remarkable book, The
1935 and 1936 during the three big
Middle Game in Chess.
international tournaments. In 1925
Like all world champions, Capa blanca excelled in the endgame,
he arrived there with the title of World Champion added to his other
22 Memoir of Capablanca
laurels. In the Moscow tournament
dramatic encounter with Emanuel
of 1925 he lost two games, one to
Lasker. Capablanca found himself
Boris Verlinsky and the other to Al
in a difficult position. His opponent
exander Ilyin-Zhenevsky, who was
was nervous because he was afraid
killed by a German bomb near Len
of victory slipping through his fin
ingrad during September 1941. Ca
gers. But still more excited was Las
pablanca started badly in the 1925
ker's wife. After he made his move,
contest and as a result was placed
Capablanca would calmly pace the
third, but nobody can forget his bril
hall and beg Mrs Lasker not to
liant finish: in the last ten games he scored 8112 points, defeated the win
worry, because in his opinion her husband had the better position.
ner of the tournament and again got
"Capablanca's last appearance in
the prize for the most beautiful
a Soviet chess competition was an
game.
impressive one. In the two-round
"As Editor of the Soviet chess
1936 tournament he won the first
magazine, I received an article from
prize without a single loss. Taking
Capablanca in which he charac
into account the fact that a number of
terised his attitude towards chess.
outstanding players (Botvinnik, Las
'Let us depart from science,' he
ker, Flohr, etc.) took part, the result
wrote. 'Chess can never reach its
cannot be called anything but bril
height by following in the path of sci
liant. Again, as in the two previous
ence.... Let us, therefore, make a new
ones, he received the prize for the
effort and with the help of our imagi
most beautiful game.
nation turn the struggle of technique into a battle of ideas.'
"The following curious episode took place during the 1936 Moscow
"The last words were particularly
tournament. During the interval a
characteristic of Capablanca, as his
thirteen-year-old schoolboy, Pavel
success came from his natural gifts
Pomoshnikov,
and qualities as a tournament player
blanca and in fluent French chal
rather than his knowledge of chess
lenged the ex-Champion to a game.
theory.
Not wanting to distress the boy,
approached Capa
"What Soviet players admired
Capablanca consented. Having lost
most in the late ex-Champion was
three games in succession, Pavel Po
his tremendous self-possession. In
moshnikov demanded a handicap of
1935, after an interval of almost
three years 1, Capablanca was placed
a queen. Capablanca replied that a
fourth in the international tourna
solemnly declared that in ten years
ment held in Moscow. I recall his
he would play against Capablanca as
queen was too much. The boy then
It is not clear whal Grekov means here. Shortly before Moscow 1935, Capablanca had played a tournament at Hastings.
Memoir of Capablanca 23
an equal and with better success. The
in public, and showed an ability to
Cuban champion advised the young
gauge the positions with an insight
champion to prepare well for the coming match and presented him
that is possessed only by players of gemus.
with an autographed copy of his
"In 1925 Capablanca took part in
book on chess.
a film produced in Moscow and de
"Capablanca's literary works en
voted to the international tourna
joy widespread popularity in the So
ment held there at the time. The film
Chess
was entitled Chess Fever and made a
viet Union. Six editions of his
Fundamentals have been published
great hit throughout the country.
to date. The book has become almost
"While in Soviet Russia, Capa
a handbook for a whole generation
blanca showed a lively interest in the
of Soviet players, and particularly
Soviet system. He liked to go sight
for Mikhail Botvinnik, the present
seeing in Moscow and frequently
Champion of the USSR. It is inter
visited sports grounds to play vari
esting to note that Capablanca was
ous games, especially tennis, which
the first to predict a brilliant future
he liked very much. He was also an
for Botvinnik. When during a simul
enthusiastic theatre-goer and ex
taneous chess match in Leningrad in
pressed his particular admiration for
1925 Botvinnik won a game from
the Russian ballet.
the master, Capablanca said: 'This
"Those who had the privilege of
boy will go far.' The prophecy came true. Ten years later, in the interna
knowing Capablanca will always re
tional tournament in Moscow, Bot
a player of genius.''
vinnik shared the first prize with Salo Flohr
and
outstripped his
member him as a charming man and Capablanca most important books
teacher. In the big I936 Nottingham
My Chess Career, Chess Fun damentals and a Primer of Chess, all
tournament Botvinnik shared the
three valuable additions to chess lit
first prize with Capablanca. In the
erature which were translated into
1936 Moscow tournament Botvin
many languages.
were
nik lost to the former champion of
I had the privilege of collaborat
the world, but had his revenge in
ing with the author in the production
Rotterdam (AVRO) in 1938. The full
of the first two of these and had the
score of Botvinnik's tournament
opportunity of getting an unusual
games with Capablanca is + I , -1, =5.
insight into the character of this
"Capablanca last visited the So
great player. His chief characteristics
viet Union in 1936. Whenever he
seemed to me to be simplicity, charm
came to Russia, Capablanca not only
and sincerity. After the publication
competed in tournaments, but played
of his
numerous
matches
criticised, especially by English crit
with amateurs. He was always will
ics, for what they thought to be his
ing to study and analyse his game
overweening conceit. I can vouch for
simultaneous
Chess Career he was severely
24 Memoir of Capablanca
it that there was no trace of this in his
Games, to name only two, contain
make-up. These critics did not allow
none of their losses.
or had no understanding for the dif
Capablanca was very sensitive to
ference between a Southern tem
criticism - too much so - and in his
perament and our own, between the
later book
views of a towering genius and those
gave six of his ten lost games up to
of the merely gifted. A Britisher,
that time.
Chess Fundamentals he
having achieved something great,
His personality was both genial
would say with characteristic un
and magnetic, and when he walked
derstatement, "It was nothing" or, at
unobtrusively, unheralded, into a
most, "Not too bad." Capablanca
room full of people, not necessarily
would not hesitate to say, "I played
chess players, his presence would
this ending as well as it could be
never pass unnoticed. He would im
played," and why should exception
mediately become the centre of in
be taken to this if indeed it was the
terest.
case. It is a mere statement of fact,
There are and have been many
made without any trace of vainglori
great chess players and there have
ous boasting.
been great figures in chess, among
Another criticism levelled against
the latter Philidor, Morphy, Steinitz,
Chess Career he
Lasker, Capablanca and Alekhine.
gave none of his lost games. Why
Who shall say now who was the
should Capablanca have been criti
greatest?
him was that in his
cised for taking advantage o f the
One thing is certain. Capablanca
accepted privilege of selecting his
has written pages of indelible glam
own best games, which are naturally
our in the history of chess and his
those which he won - his losses were
games will bring joy and happiness
readily recorded by his adversaries?
to many as long as chess is played.
Alekhine's two volumes of some
As Marshall said "His games will be
220 annotated games, Keres'
Best
his everlasting memorial."
Capablanca 's Results
Tournaments Rank
Won
Lost
Drawn
New York State, 1910
I
6
0
I
New York, 1911
2
8
I
3
Total 61h 91;,
San Sebastian, 1911
I
6
I
7
91;,
New York, 1913
I
10
I
2
11
Havana, 1913
2
8
2
4
New York, 1913
I
JO
13
0
13
St Petersburg, 1914
2
2
6
13
New York, 1915
I
JO
0
12
0
13
New York, 1916
12
4
New York, 1918
I I
I
2
JO
0
3
Hastings, 1919
I
9
0
I
14 101;, 101;,
11
4
London, 1922
I
New York, 1924
2
JO
0 I
9
13 14112
Moscow, 1925
3
9
2
9
13112
Lake Hopatcong, 1926
I
4
0
4
6
New York, 1927
I
8
0
12
Bad Kissingen, 1928
2
4
I
6
14 7
Budapest, 1928
I
5
0
4
Berlin, 1928
5
0
7
Rarnsgate, 1929
I I
7 31;,
4
3
51;,
Karlsbad, 1929
2-3 I
JO
0 2
9
0
5
Barcelona, 1929
I
8
14112 10112
0
I
Hastings, 1929/30
I
13 4
0
5
Hastings, 1930/1
2
5
I
3
New York, 1931
I
9
0
2
Hastings, 1934/5
4
4
2
3
Moscow, 1935
4
7
2
Margate, 1935
2
JO
JO 5 11z
6
I
2
12 7
Margate, 1936
2
5
0
4
7
8
0
10
13
Budapest, 1929
13112 61h 61/z
Moscow, 1936
I
Nottingham, 1936
1-2
7
I
6
Semmering-Baden, 1937
3-4
2
I
11
10 711z
Paris, 1938
I
6
0
4
8
AVRO, 1938
7
2
4
8
Margate, 1939
2-3
4
0
5
6 61/z
Buenos Aires Olympiad, 1939
7
0
9
I l 'h
Total
271
26
188
25
26 Capablanca 's Results
Matches Won
Lost
Drawn
Corzo, 1901
4
3
6
Marshall, 1909
8
1
14
Jaffe, 1 9 1 2
2
0
1
0
0
Chajes, 1912
I
Teichmann, 1913
2
0
0
Mieses, 1913
2
0
0
I
Znosko-Borovsky, 1913
I
Alekhine, 1913
2
0
0
Duz-Khotimirsky, 1913
2
0
0
Bernstein, 1914
I
Tartakower, 1914
0
0
I
1
0
1
Aurbach, 1914
2
0
0
Kostic, 1919
5
0
0
Em. Lasker, 1921
4
0
10
Alekhine, 1927
3
6
25
Euwe, 1932
2
0
8
Total
42
11
66
1 Early years - the match with Marshall
The amazing precocity of genius evi
brilliant ingenuity but occasionally,
denced in the early games of Capa
alas, he would embark on a dashing
blanca has no real parallel in the
combination without first testing it
history of chess. The nearest exam
thoroughly for flaws. Capablanca's
ple that springs to mind, that of
calm, clear, far-seeing play, per
Reshevsky, cannot compete with the
vaded by 'organised simplicity', ap
sureness of touch and maturity of
peared a natural antidote to the elan
technique that are to be found in, for
of his opponent's style.
instance, the ending of the second game given here against Corzo. Still
Game l
more striking is his astonishing vic
J. Corzo - Capablanca
tory over Marshall in 1909, against
Havana match (8) 190/
a player who then ranked high
Vienna Gambit
amongst the world's best chess mas ters and who only a few years pre viously had won the Cambridge Springs tournament above the most outstanding players in the world. The games themselves are, as one would expect, somewhat crude and
1 e4
2 li:lc3 3 f4 4 lllf3 5 h4 6 lllgS
eS li:lc6 exf4 gS g4
lacking in subtlety in the opening.
This is the Hampe-Allgaier Gam
The middlegames, however, are char acterised by a fine, rich combinative
bit, which sacrifices a piece for rapid development. It is not sound, but
vein full of fresh ideas, and the end
White was relying upon his oppo
games, as always with Capablanca,
nent's complete lack of book knowl
are impeccable. His games against
edge and hoping he would go astray
Marshall are especially interesting
in the complications that arise. In a
for the marked contrast in personal
sense he was right, since Capablanca
ity reflected by the opposing styles
does diverge from the book of the
employed. The same difference will
time - but only to find a better con
be constantly observed in Capa
tinuation for Black !
blanca's contests against the Ameri
6
can master throughout his career.
7 li:lxf7
Marshall's play was full of fire and
8 d4
h6 lt>xf7 dS
28 Havana match (8) 1901 Better than 8 ...d6 9 i.xf4 i.g7 10 i.c4+ with a strong attack. 9 exdS 9 i.xf4 i.b4 is good for Black. 9 •e7+ 10 �f2 g3+ 1 1 �gl (D)
The white king is only apparently in safety; Black now returns the piece in order to open up the diago nal g l -a7, after which, owing to the presence of the black pawn on g3, White is continually harassed by mating threats. 11 liJxd4! 12 'iVxd4 White must accept the return of the piece for if 12 .ixf4, then Black replies 12 ... 1i'f6!. 12 'ifcS 13 lLle2 ..,,6! An original and pleasing touch and much stronger than the humdrum 13 ...'iVxd4+ 14 lDxd4 i.c5 15 c3. Now Black's threat of ....ic5 forces White to exchange queens, thereby
allowing Black to bring the a8-rook into the game at once1 . axb6 14 •xb6 15 tLJd4 i.cS 16 c3 :Ia4 This wins a pawn because White has to meet the threat of ... .:txd4 followed by mate. 17 .ie2 i.xd4+ 18 cxd4 .:txd4 19 b3 (D) White has been relying upon this manoeuvre to tum the game in his fa vour by exploiting the risky position ofBlack's d4-rook. It soon becomes apparent that Black has seen further into the position than White.
B
..•
•.•
19 lLlf6 .:td2 20 .ib2 And not 20....:txd5 21 i.c4. 21 .ihS+ Hoping for 2 1 . .. �g? 22 i.c3 .:tc2 23 i.e5 when White has distinct counter-chances, but Black now fin ishes off the game in the best style. 21 ... liJxhS!
The key point is that 14 .i.e3 !? fxe3 1 5 •xh8 fails to 1 5 ....i.g7 16 'W°h7 •r6 1 7 lbxg3 Wf2+ 1 8 �h2 lbf6.
Capablanca f3
22 .ixh8 23 gxf3
- J. Corzo
29
Bogoljubow-Capablanca from New York 1924 (or perhaps it should be
White must exchange pawns, due to 23 .ic3 f2+ 24 �f l .if5 25 .i xd2
put the other way round) for quite a
.id3#.
compare Capablanca's masterly han
liJf4 (D)
23 ...
way, and if the reader would like to dling of the defence with the anti-po sitional methods adopted by Corzo,
m.tm - � w � .\ - --� � � - � •
w�
A 0� � � �� 0 -
he should consult Game 32.
1 2 3 4
��
&v � •
w·
· fi: ef..,)
of youth; since the queen's bishop is shut in by the e3-pawn, it must be de veloped in some other way - hence the text.
4 5 .ib2 6 ltJbd.2
24 .ieS Mate follows after 24 l:.e l l:.g2+ 25 �f l l:.f2+ 26 �g l .i h3, etc.
24 2s �n 26 'itte 1
d5 c5 ltJc6
Played with the elementary logic
A � �;; ��� 0 A &� 0 A; � W , w � � A 0 � ,;,e�� .. � - - 'it> l!t
�
d4 ltJf3 e3 b3
e6 ltJf6 cxd4?
l:tg2+
This is inferior objectively to both 6....id6 and 6... .ie7; the text is also
:ri+
bad from a psychological point of
ltJd3+
view, since it simplifies the opening
0-1 This, and the following game,
problems for his inexperienced op are
ponent.
7 exd4 8 .id3 9 0-0
indeed astounding for a thirteen year-old player. Game 2
-
Capablanca J. Corzo Havana match ( 11) 1901 Queen's Pawn
.id6 0-0 liJhS
The commencement of a time wasting manoeuvre from which only White profits. Correct was 9 ... b6 fol lowed by ... .i b7. As played, Black's queen's bishop is left with little fu-
When playing with White against Corzo, Capablanca almost invari ably opened 1 d4, since at that time it was comparatively uncharted ground and the young player's complete
ture.
10 11 12 13
g3 ltJeS f4 fxe5
fS ltJf6 .ixeS ltJg4
lack of book knowledge would not
Black hopes to extract more than a
matter so much. Curiously enough,
draw out of the position; otherwise
the opening follows the encounter
he would have striven for equality by
30 Havana match ( 11) 1901 13...llJe4. Needless to say, the text is
Casting a clear light on the wealc
much inferior and Black loses time
ness of Black's last move. If now
in order to find the knight a peaceful
20... fxg4, then 2 1 hxg4 followed by 22 l1h l gives White a strong king
haven.
14 'ii'e2 15 tl)f3
•b6 i.d7 (D)
Black is still obsessed with the idea of avoiding a draw. He is rudely
side attack, and if 20... f4, in an at tempt to block the position, then White can eventually break it open by h4.
20 21 'ii'e3 22 :ael
disillusioned by the later middle game play. His best move now was to play for bishops of opposite col ours by 15... tlJb4.
tlJe7 %lg8
All this is in excellent positional style, worthy of a mature master.
22 23 gxfS 24 �h2
w
lDg6 tl)f4+ tlJxd3
If 24... exf5, then 25 tlJxg5 !. 25 'ii'xd3 exf5 26 c4! Very strong; White now com pletely brealcs open the position.
26 ...
The alternative was 26.. .'ii' h6 27 cxd5 g4 28 tlJg l lDg5 29 e6 llJf3+ 30 l1xf3 ! gxf3 31 'fkxf3 and White
16 a3 Now White has prevented this and contemplates an eventual advance of his c- and b-pawns.
16 ...
'ii'e6
wms.
27 cxdS 28 e6! (D)
'ii'xdS
�h8
Black reorganises his pieces in or der to obtain some counterplay on the kingside.
17 h3 18 'ii'f2 19 �g2
tlJh6 tl)f7 gS
He does not wish to remain pas sive whilst White advances on the queenside with c4, b4, c5, b5, etc., but now a weakness has been created on the long diagonal of which W hite talces subtle advantage.
20 g4!
This fine winning combination foreshadows the grandmaster.
Capablanca 28
i.b5 (D) i. For if 28 ... xe6, then 29 :xe6. •.•
29 •xb5
in his stride, as though already world champion.
pablanca had in mind when playing 28 e6. It is true that 29 'ifd2 also wins
36 f0e7! Neatly cutting the king off from the centre.
36 37 38 39 40 41 42
in somewhat simpler and quicker fashion but this hardly detracts from the merits of the combination. •.•
J. Corzo 31
precision, and Capablanca takes it all
A very pretty sacrifice which Ca
29 30 d5+ 31 exf7
-
'ii'xbS
:g7
h6 (D)
31 ...:f8 would have put up better resistance though White should still win by 32 C0d4 'ifxd5 33 :e8 'ifxf7
�g2 d6 hxg4 i.e5 d7 C0g8+
:rs h5 g4 hxg4 �h6 :ld8 l:.xg8
Or 42 . . .� g6 43 C0f6 � f7 44 i.c7 and wins.
34 :xf8+ 'ifxf8 35 tl:>xf5, according to Capablanca.
•••
43 i.f6
�g6
Black plays on in the hope of achieving a draw with bishop and wrong rook's pawn, and might have achieved it against a less wary oppo-
w
nent.
32 C0d4
'ii'xfl
There is nothing better; if Black plays 32 . . .'ifd7 Capablanca gives 33 tl:>xf5 'ffxf7 34 i. xg7+ �h7 35 :e7 winning the queen since 35...'ifxd5
leads to mate after 36 i.e5+ �g6 37 :g1+ �h5 38 tog3+ � h4 39 :f4+ gxf4 40 :g4#.
33 :xn 34 :xr5 35 C0xf5+
:xn :xr5 �h7
The rest is a matter of technique, but one demanding considerable
44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53
d8'ii' i.xd8 �f2 �e3 �d3 �c3 i.h4 i.f2 b4 i.b6
:xd8 b5 �f5 �e5 �d5 g3 g2 aS �e4
And not 53 bxa5 which would give a draw, as the queening square is the opposite colour to the bishop.
53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
�d3 i.gl i.h2 �d4 �e5 �d5 �c5!
�d5 �c6 �d5 �c6 a4 �b6 �a6 1-0
32 New York 1906
Since White has not fallen into the trap with 60 �c6 g l 'ii 61 � xg l
germ of Capablanca's later famous
stalemate, Black resigns.
the Orthodox Defence to the Queen's
method of freedom by exchange in Gambit; the principle is very similar.
A.
Game 3
Fox - Capablanca New York 1906
Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defence
1 1 j_xd7 12 f4
'ilxd7
This move does not suit the nature of the position. It would have been quite in order if W hite's rooks were
1 2 3 4 5
e4 ltJf3 �b5 0-0 l:el
e5 lLlc6 lLlf6 �e7 d6
By transposition via the Berlin Defence we have now arrived at the
placed on e l and f l , but as it is, it merely loosens W hite's control of the centre. 1 2 b3 is still best, fol lowed by j_b2 and lbd5.
12 ... 13 lbr5
lbg6 j_rs
Threatening ...lbxe4.
has the merit of solidity. In addition,
l:tad8 lb But now 14 . . . xe4 15 l:txe4 'ii'xf5 16 l:txe8 'ii'xd3 17 l:txf8+ would lose
there is always the possibility that
a piece.
Steinitz Defence, which demands great patience on Black's part but
White will overreach himself - as he does in the present game.
6 7 8 9
d4 lLlxd4 lbc3 lbde2
exd4 �d7 0-0
14 1i'd3
15 j_d2 (D) A miserable square for the bishop, but there is now no time for 15 b3, when 15 ...d5 would be even more ef fective than in the actual game. He might, however, have prevented the
Since Black has a somewhat con
ensuing combination by 15 h3.
stricted position White does well to avoid exchanges. For example, 9 � xc6 bxc6 1 0 � g5 h6 1 1 �h4 l:te8 1 2 1!fd3 lbh7 13 j_xe7 .:txe7 14 l:e3 'ii b8 with equality (Capablanca Lasker, Havana W eh (3) 1921 ). However, a better way of main taining the initiative is 9 j_fl fol lowed by b3 and j_b2. After the text the exchange of W hite's valuable light-squared bishop is inevitable. l:e8 9 ...
10 lbg3
lbe5
15
d5!
It is not perhaps too fanciful to
White's opening strategy is con
discern in this freeing manoeuvre the
demned by this strong move, which
Capablanca at once shows up the weakness on the f-file and the hanging nature of White's knight on f5.
16 eS Forced, since 1 6 exd5 :xe 1 + 17 :xel ltJxd5 will lose at least a pawn, as would also 16 ltJg3 dxe4, etc.
16 17 �hl •..
.i.cS+
.•.
:xn lLJh6+ .d4 •xa7?
e4 gxh6
.g7
White's game is clearly lost, but this accelerates the end. He should have played 25 .i.c3 'ii'xd4 26 .i. xd4 b6 27 f5 ltJe5 28 b4 ltJc4 when the ably longer.
l2Jg4 f6!
Black is playing with great en ergy; now White's pawns disappear from the centre with alarming rapid ity.
19 h3 If White had played 19 exf6 then Capablanca would have won by con tinuing 19 ...ltJxf4 20 ltJe7 + (or 20 :.xe8+ :xe8 21 'ii'c3 'ii'xf5 22 'ii'xc5 ltJe2) 20 ...:xe7 2 1 fxe7 ltJxd3 22
exd8'ii'+ 'ii'xd8 23 cxd3 'ii'h4 24 h3 'ii'g3 - a fine combination.
19 20 ltJxf2 21 :e2 (D)
F. Marshall 33
game would have lasted consider
Not 17 i.e3 ltJxf4.
17 18 ltJdl
22 23 24 25
-
l2Jf2+
i.xf2
25 26 :et
•xb2 d4!
•••
Cutting off the queen from the centre and winning more material.
27 28 29 30
fS l:[fe2 i.cl •a4
e3 ltJf4 'ii'b6
Not liking to resign when there are prospects of obtaining a check.
30 31 32 33 34 35
•.•
•c4+ J:txe2 •d3 cxd3 g4 0-1
ltJxe2 �h8 •a6 •xd3 cS c4
Grune 4
Capablanca F. Marshall Morristown match (6) 1909 -
Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defence
1 2 3 4
e4 t[)f3 i.bS c3
eS lLJc6 d6
This restrained move is not so strong as the normal 4 d4 but at this
21
fxeS!
early stage in his development Ca
A temporary sacrifice of the piece
pablanca knew practically nothing
in order to gain control of the centre.
about the openings. Nevertheless, as
34 Morristown match (6) 1909 soon as the preliminaries of the open ing are passed, he intuitively adopts a system of kingside attack strongly reminiscent of some of the games of Steinitz. i.g4 4 This pin is a waste of time, as it will only facilitate White's kingside attack by encouraging him to play h3 and g4. Not good, however, is the alterna tive recommended by Capablanca and others, 4 ...f5, since White can treat it on similar lines to the so called Siesta Defence (but with still greater effect) and play 5 exf5 .i.xf5 (not 5 ...e4 6 lLJ J:l:ab8 31 g2
32 J:l:ab 1
f6
Black prepares to bring the bishop back into play via g8 and in addition White's e-pawn is now permanently backward; the one disadvantage to this move - a great one, however - is that it permits White to establish a piece on e6. Tartakower recommends instead 32 ... J:l:b2 33 J:l:xb2 11'xb2 since 34 J:l:b l 'ii'c2 35 -t> f3 lbb3 36 ILJgfl f6 gives Black the better game. How ever, White can play 34 J:l:e2 with variations similar to the actual game. 33 li)f3 J:l:b2+
34 J:l:xb2 1
'ti'xb2+
-
E. Bogoljubow 101
35 J:l:e2 36 llld4
'Wib3 'Wixe3
Black cannot afford even the one tempo necessary to capture the c pawn, for after 36 ... 11'xc4 37 lbe6! J:l:b8 (37 ...ILJxe6 38 dxe6 leaves Black hopelessly placed) 38 lbxc5 dxc5 39 J:l:d2 J:l:b3 40 'ii'f2 a3 4 1 d6 White has a clearly won game.
37 J:l:xe3 38 J:l:c3
J:l:b8
39 w 40 ILJge2 41 ILJe6!
J:l:b2 i.g8
-t>f7 Better than 38 ...J:l:b2+ 39 � lbb3 40 ILJge2 followed by ILJe6 and Black has merely pushed White along the path he wants to go.
Very neatly timed; Black is obvi ously lost after 4 J . .. lbxe6 42 fxe6+ -t>e7 43 llld4 i.h7 44 c5, etc., nor can Black play 4 1 . .. lbxe4 42 -t>xe4 J:l:xe2+ 43 -t>d4 and White will fol low up with c5, creating a winning passed d-pawn. lbb3 41
42 cS! 43 ILJxcS 44 -t>f2
dxcS llld2+ -t>e7 Black loses quickly after this natural-looking move; stouter re sistance would have been put up by 44... lbb l 45 ILJxa4 ILJxc3 46 ILJxb2 lbxe4+ 47 -t>e3 llld6 even though Black would still lose eventually
27 f4 just loses material after 27 ... c3. In fact Black is least equal after 26... bxc4, so the criticism of Black's earlier moves is out of place. It is hard to see why Black preferred to take the a-pawn, giving himselfdoubled and isolated pawns, when he could have removed the far more important c-pawn, at the same time creating pos sible knight outposts on b3 and d3 and preparing to undermine e4 with ...c3.
102 London 1922 after 48 �d4 �e7 49 lllf4 followed by llle6. lllbl 45 �el a3 46 l:[d3 �d8 (D) 47 d6+
48 tlld4! Forcing the black rook to retreat because of the threat of lllc6+.
48
..•
49 tllde6+ 50 fxe6 51 e7+
52 lllxa6
l:[b6
i.xe6
l:[b8
�e8
1-0
For if 52 ... a2, 53 lllxb8 a l 1i' 54 d7+ and Black is soon mated. Game 29 Capablanca - M. Vidmar
London 1922 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defence
1 d4 2 tllf3 3 c4 4 lbc3 S i.gS 6 e3
7 :et
8 'ifc2
dS
lllf6 e6 i.e7 lllbd7
0-0 c6
After this Black should have no difficulty in securing equality; best is the normal move 8 .i.d3. 8 ... dxc4 This manoeuvre should be ade quate if correctly followed up. Also satisfactory for Black is 8 .. .liJe4 9 i.xe7 'ikxe7 I 0 lllxe4 dxe4 1 1 'ikxe4 Wb4+ 1 2 llld2 'ikxb2 with a level game. 9 i.xc4 10 i.xe7 Not 10 llle4 'ii'a5+ 1 1 �e2 f6 1 2 i.h4 lll7b6, which is favourable for Black. 'ii'xe7 10 ... 11 0-0 b6? A disastrous mistiming, as a result of which White gains complete con trol of the c-file. Correct was first 1 1. ..lllxc3 and then ...b6. cxdS 12 lllxdS This is the point; Black cannot re capture by 1 2 ... exd5 because of 1 3 i.d3 and White wins a pawn. Now the white queen will occupy the weak square on c7. h6 13 i.d3 1 3 . . .lllf6 would likewise be met by 14 'iic7 after which Black cannot free himself. 14 'ii'c7 'ifb4 (D) This move is a desperate freeing attempt which fails against White's fine combination. He hopes to in duce White to play b3, whereupon ...lllf6, ... 'ika3 and ...i.a6 would give him complete emancipation, but the logic of positions of this nature is such that the more forceful the en deavour to break loose, the greater the collapse.
Capablanca It must be observed that quieter moves would also prove unavailing, e.g. 1 4 .. Jle8 15 i.b5 or 1 4 ...l:ld8 1 5 llJe5.
-
20 lllxd7 Hastily played; White overlooks Black's next move by which he es capes with the loss of the exchange for a pawn. Instead, 20 l:lb l Wa2 2 1 i.b3 would have won a clear piece. This is an unfortunate blemish on White's otherwise impeccable play; nevertheless, the technique involved in winning the final part of the game is instructive and not at all straight forward.
20 21 ..,,, •.•
15 a3!
•a4
After 15 ...'ii'xb2 Capablanca gives the following line: 1 6 l:lbl Wxa3 1 7 i.b5 'ii'e7 (or 1 7 . . .lllf6 1 8 l:tal Wb4 1 9 l:tfbl and the queen is lost) 1 8 i.c6 l:lb8 19 llJe5 Wd8 20 Wxa7 lllxe5 21 dxe5 winning a piece.
16 h3 17 llle5
lllf6 i.d7
Any attempt to develop the queen side results in loss of material. If 17 ... i.a6, 18 b3 •a5 l 9 lllc6 Wxa3 20 l:ta l and the bishop is lost. ..,,5 18 i.c2
19 a4
M. Vidmar 103
l:tac8
Owing to the pin that eventually arises on the bishop and rook, White cannot win a piece by 2 1 lllxf6+ gxf6 22 Wg3+ �h8, etc.
21 22 23 24 25
i.h7+ l:txc8 •xc8 l:tcl
26 27 28 29
•c2+ ..c6 •as+ l:tc7 (D)
•.•
tt.Jxd7 e4 foilowed by lDd4 and lDf5+. �r7 61 gS+ 62 lbeS+ �e7 Or 62 ... g7 63 d6 i.b6 64 d7 i.c7 65 �e4 i.d8 66 lDf3 �f7 67 �d5 �e7 68 �c6. 63 lDxg6+ �d6 i.g3 64 �e4 65 lDf4 �e7 66 �e5 i.el 67 d6+ �d7 68 g6 i.b4 69 �dS �e8 1-0 70 d7+ A very strenuous game with an ending worthy of an endgame study.
6 Attempts at Rehabilitation
The next few years see Capablanca engaging in tournament after tour nament in an endeavour to prove to the world his right to a return match against Alekhine for the World Cham pionship. He played in more tourna ments during this period than in any before or after, and since he was in extremely fine form, a large number of great games resulted. A return match was denied him, however, and whose fault this was it is difficult, if not impossible, to say; nevertheless, the dispassionate observer can only remark what a pity it was that the chess world lost the prospect of the many fine games that another match between two such great players might have well produced. The Bad Kissingen Tournament of 1928 shows Capablanca in scien tific mood, laying clear the posi tional defects of his opponents with remorseless accuracy, as for example in his games against Tartakower, Mieses and Yates. His best game in the tournament is that against Bogol jubow, where the ending is managed with consummate artistry. Next, there is the Budapest Siesta Tournament with Capablanca at the top of his form. The game against Havasi contains the typical Capa combination, but here with even more stunning effect, owing to Black 's waste of a move. The other three
games are fine illustrations of the lucid perfection of Capablanca's style. Finally, from the important Berlin Tournament, which Capablanca won with some ease, we have selected a remarkable pair of games against the great Polish master, Rubinstein. Ca pablanca, who had a great respect for the genius of this player, was justly proud of his victory over him here, and the draw is one of the most origi nal games ever played. Game 50 Capablanca S. Tartakower Bad Kissingen 1928 Budapest Defence -
1 d4 lbr6 e5 2 c4 Tartakower is a great exponent of the Budapest, but this is one of the defences least likely to succeed against a player of Capablanca's style. Its slightly dubious reckless ness plays into the hands of one pos sessed of such sure positional flair. 3 dxe5 liJg4 3 ...liJe4, the Fajarowicz variation, met with convincing disproof in the game Alekhine-Tartakower, Lon don 1932, as follows: 3 . .liJe4 4 liJd2 liJc5 5 liJgf3 liJc6 6 g3 i!/e7 7 �g2 g6 8 liJbI liJxe5 9 0-0 liJxf3+ I 0 exf3 �g7 1 1 l:el liJe6 1 2 liJc3 0-0 1 3 .
162 Bad Kissingen 1928 tLJd5 'iid8 14 f4 c6 15 lbc3 and Black had a very bad game. 4 e4 d6 Played in gambit style. Better is the more usual 4 ...CtJxe5 5 f4 CCiec6 6 .ie3 .ib4+ 7 lbc3 though White still has rather the better game. The early way of playing this defence was 4... h5 5 lLlc3 lLlc6 6 lLlh3 lLlgxe5 7 .ie2 d6 8 lLlf4 g6 9 0-0 and White again has the advantage (Samisch Spielmann, Copenhagen 1923). S exd6 .ixd6 6 .ie2! White must play carefully here { for if 6 h3, then 6 ...'iih4 7 'iid4 .i.e5 etc., whilst 6 ftJf3 .ib4+ 7 .id2 .ic5 leads to a clear win for Black. fS 6 An interesting idea suggested by the Rumanian master Balogh. It en deavours to obtain further attacking chances by opening up the f-file and also avoids losing time by support ing the threatened knight. 6... h5 7 lLlf3 lbc6 8 lLlc3 'iie7 9 .ig5 ! leaves White, not only a pawn up, but with the better position. 7 exf'S 'fle7 8 tLlfJ Here White can win a piece by 8 c5 .ixc5 9 'ii'a4+ lbc6 10 'ilxg4 but when this game was played, and for a considerable time thereafter, it was thought that Black obtained too much compensation after 10... llJg2 aS 26 h5 Threatening h6, i.g8 and h7, etc. 26 i.g7 27 f4 i.h6 In order to prevent g4. l:.a4 28 l:.e 1 29 i.g8 l:.d4 30 l:.e7+ l:.d7 If 30 ...lli>d8, then 3 1 l:.e6 wins easily; Black is now in a hopeless situation. 31 l:.xd7+ lli>xd7 cS 32 lli>f3 c4 33 g4 34 g5 i.18 Or 34...i.g7 35 h6 i.h8 36 g6. 35 h6 a4 36 f5 lli>c6 If 36 ...c3, then 37 lli>e2. 37 h7 i.g7 38 f6 c3 In the vain hope that White will carelessly play 39 fxg7 c2 40 h8'i!I' c I 'iii' 4 1 'i!l'h6+ lli>c5 with drawing chances. 39 lli>e2 i.h8 40 f7 1-0 A very efficiently played game by Capablanca. .•.
Game 5 1 Capablanca J. Mieses Bad Kissingen 1928 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defence -
1 2 3 4 5
d4 c4 tl\c3 i.g5 e3
tl\f6 e6 d5 i.e7 tLlbd7
6 tl\f3 0-0 7 l:.cl a6 A move of doubtful validity, in dicative of a policy little likely to succeed against Capablanca. Its in tention is to play an eventual ...dxc4, . .. b5, ...i.b7 and ... c5, but Black can be prevented from doing this quite simply and the normal move 7 ...c6 is to be preferred. 8 cxd5 Simplest and best, as it gives Black little chance of counterplay and opens up the prospect of obtain ing pressure on the queenside. Not so good is 8 c5 c6 9 i.d3 e5 I 0 dxe5 tl\g4 and Black regains his pawn with an excellent game. 8 exd5 9 'ifb3 A new and strong move by Capa blanca which brings more pressure to bear on the queenside pawns. The normal method of play is 9 i.d3 c6 10 'i!l'c2 J:te8 1 1 0-0 tl\f8 and White will proceed with operations on the queenside by a3, b4, tl\a4 and tl\c5 whilst Black will endeavour to counter on the kingside. c6 9 ... tl\h5? 10 i.d3 This manoeuvre is always suspect in the Orthodox Defence to the Queen's Gambit. In order to ex change pieces it wastes two moves (for the knight cannot remain on h5), and Black cannot well afford this loss of time. Instead, Black should continue along the lines described in the note to the 9th move and play 10... l:.e8 followed by 1 1 . ..tl\f8. 'lli'xe7 1 1 i.xe7 ••.
Capablanca - J. Mieses 165 12 0-0
lLJhf6
More logical is 1 2 ... g6 followed by ...lLJg7 and ... llle6 with control of the important square c5.
13 lLJa4 Attacking the weaknesses on b6 and c5; this move was frequent! y employed by Capablanca in analo gous positions in the World Champi onship match against Alekhine. 13 lLJe4? This knight is overworked, having been moved three times in the last four moves. White benefits from these tempi in the acceleration of his queenside attack, and Black can now hardly recover from his great waste of time. 14 .ixe4 •xe4 (D) It may be that Black originally in tended 14 ... dxe4 - if so, he now real ises that after 15 tiJd2 lLJf6 1 6 llJc5 l:te8 17 lDc4 the white knights will prove altogether too menacing on the queenside.
king's bishop, which he has been at such great pains to exchange.
15 ...
...g6
Played with fatalistic resigna tion; a better defence was 1 5 ... f6 al though White would still retain his winning advantage by l 6 lLJd2 1We6 17 tiJb3 l:te8 18 tiJbc5 tlJxc5 l 9 lLJxc5 'iie7 20 l:tc3, followed by :b3.
16 17 1s 19 20
•••
'ike7 :c3 'ikd6 :rcl 'ikxf8+
f6 'ike8 :n 'ikf8 �xf8 (D)
If 20...lLJxf8, then 21 lLJb6 :bs 22 lLJxd5, etc., whilst taking with the rook would simply mean removing this piece from its correct rank.
w
w 21 llJel!
15 'ii'b4! A very strong move which domi nates the weakened dark squares in his opponent's position. Black now suffers badly from the lack of the
The transference of this knight to the queenside (either c5 or b4, according to circumstances) repre sents the final devastating blow in White's strategy; owing to his weak ness on the dark squares, Mieses cannot adequately parry this.
21 ...
�e8
The tempting 2 l ... b5 fails against 22 :xc6 .ib7 23 :c7, etc.
22 �3
:bs
166 Bad Kissingen 1928 23 f3
24 �
l:te7 ll:Jf8 (D)
White now wins two clear pawns, when Black can resign with a clear conscience; Capablanca's play has been characterised by its usual crys tal clarity. 29 lbxb7 l:tbxb7 30 l:txc6 a5 31 l:txb6 axb4 32 l:txb7 l:txb7 33 l:txb4 1-0 Game 52 Capablanca F. Yates Bad Kissingen 1928 Sicilian Defence -
25 l:tb3 Forcing the return of the knight to d7 because of the threat of ll:Jac5 fol lowed by lllxa6. ll:Jd7 25 b5 26 g4 After this Black's position col lapses like a house of cards. In the long run, however, Black must suc cumb to the many weaknesses in his position. Should he mark time by ...�d8, then White will prepare a breakthrough on the kingside by h4h5, etc. 27 ll:Jac5 lllb6 Or 27 ... ll:Jxc5 28 l:txc5 i.b7 29 l:ta3 l:ta8 30 l:ta5 l:tc7 3 1 lllb4 �d7 32 l:tc3 followed by l:tca3, etc. 1 28 ll:Jb4 i.b7 .••
2
c5 1 e4 2 llle2 A novelty, but one which often merely transposes into a normal variation. d6 2 Now White can transpose into the Dragon variation. 2 ...e5 is another possibility, which leads to a com pletely different type of game. cxd4 3 d4 g6? 4 lbxd4 Allowing White to obtain the Ma roczy bind; necessary is 4 ...ll:Jf6 in order to force White to shut in his c pawn by 5 lllc32 . S c4! •••
Curiously enough, this doesn't finish Black off because after 32...�d6 33 :ca3 .i.c8 White cannot play 34 lbxa6 due to 34...lka7 35 fiJc7 :xa5 36 fiJxa8 :xa3 37 bxa3 .i.b7 38 fiJb6 �c7 and the knight is trapped. White would therefore have to open up a second front, either on the kingside or in the centre. At the time the Maroczy Bind formation (i.e. white pawns on c4 and e4 against a Sicilian pawn structure) was thought to be clearly favourable to White, hence Golombek' s rather extreme comments on the opening. These days it is considered no better for White than other opening systems.
Capablanca This strong move gives White control of the centre and Black must grovel about to find a counterattack. i.g7 s lDf6 6 llJc3 0-0 7 i.e2 8 0-0 llJbd7 Played with the idea of going to c5 and so attacking the e-pawn, but this attack is very easily met and simply loses time. The usual 8 ...llJc6 was better. llJcS 9 i.e3 i.d7 10 fJ 1 1 .d2 White is proceeding systemati cally; he first concentrates his major pieces in the centre and then, when all his forces are ready, proceeds to advance his pawns. l:tc8 11 12 l:tfdl a6 This move results in a weakness on b6, but Black must try to prepare some counter on the queenside, and he also may have had in mind the idea of playing ...'ilc7 without being open to attack by the knights from b5. llJe6 13 l:tacl Intending ...llJh5 and ...llJf4. 14 b3 (D) White's pawn structure is very impressive; Black is hard put to it to discover a reasonably good con tinuation. llJhS 14 Consistent, but bad. He should have sought relief in exchanges by 14 ...llJxd4 15 i.xd4 .i.c6. Even then his position is unenviable, as White can play 16 'ile3 threatening 17 c5 ••.
.•.
-
F. Yates 167
d5 18 exd5 llJxd5 1 9 lDxdS i.xd5 20 i.xg7 �xg7 2 1 'ild4+, thereby win. nmg a piece. 15 lLJxe6 .i.xe6 16 lLJa4 Causing Black to bitterly regret his 12th move. White now threatens 17 i.b6 and 1 8 c5. l:tc6 16 Directly countering the above threat, but now White cunningly tackles the problem from the other side. 17 f4 lbf6 18 i.fJ Threatening to win the exchange by e5. llJg4 18 If 1 8 ...i.g4, then 19 e5 i.xf3 20 exf6 .i.xd 1 2 1 fxg7 winning two pieces for the rook and pawn. 19 eS! llJxe3 20 •xe3 l:tc7 21 cS Winning the d-pawn; the com bined pressure of White's centralised pieces is too powerful for Black to resist. ...,8 21 exd6 22 exd6 l:te8 23 :Xd6 .
•••
•.•
·
•••
168 Bad Kissingen 1928 b5 (D)
w
to an endgame with the exchange and a pawn less, and, of course, is ut terly lost, despite his few last re maining kicks.
30 :xa6 31 •c3+
•e7 �g8
Not 3 l .. .f6 32 'tli'e3 forcing the exchange of queens. 32 •eS
33 .ie4 34 h3 35 .idS! 25 t2Jb6 , Avoiding Black s traps of 25 t2J b2 .ixb2 26 'ili'xb2 :xc5 27 :xc5 •xd6 regaining the pawn, and 25 cxb6 :xc l + 26 'ilixc l 'ilixd6 winning the rook. .if8 25 26 t2Jd5! The only move - but sufficient. 26 :c6 :xc6 27 .ixc6 .i xc5+ ! 28 :xc5 'ili'xb6 would be bad, as Black has regained his lost pawn. ...
26
•..
:xc5
An ingenious move which is still more ingeniously met. If Black plays 26 ... .ixd6, then 27 tbf6+ �f8 28 'ili'xd6+ :ee7 29 tlJxh7+ �g7 30 tbf6 �f8 3 1 'ilid4 and wins. Alternatively, after 26... .ixd5 27 :xd5 Black has obtained a position with bishops of opposite colour, but there is no possible chance of a draw, White's passed pawn and strong central posi tion being too much of an advantage. 27 tbf6+ �h8 :xcl + 28 tbxe8
29 •xcl
•xe8
29 . . . .ixd6 loses at once after 30 'ilic3+. Black must therefore descend
Acceptance of the bishop would give Black a perpetual check by 35 gxh3 •d l + 36 �f2 'ilid2+ 37 �f3 'ilid 1 + and the king must return to f2 since 38 �g3 would mean loss of the rook and 38 �e3 would actually lose the queen after 38 ... .ic5+.
35 36 •r6 •••
..-it4
Again 36 gxh3 would lead to per petual check after 36....ic5+ 37 �h2 'ilif2+ 38 .ig2 Wg l + 39 �g3 'ilif2+, etc.
36 37 �h2 •..
.ic5+ 1-0
Game 53
E. Bogoljubow - Capablanca Bad Kissingen 1928 , Queen s Indian Defence
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9
d4 c4
tbf3
lLJc3 .igS e3 .ixe7 llJxe4 lLJd2
tbf6
e6 b6 .ib7 .ie7 t2Je4 'ilxe7 .ixe4
E. Bogoljubow - Capablanca 169 For remarks about the opening, the reader is directed to Game 7 1 , Ribera-Capablanca. This game is mainly included for its remarkable ending and later middlegame play. At this stage in the tournament Bo goljubow was l '12 points ahead and would have been well content with a draw, which explains his policy of exchanges. However, 9 .ie2 is best here.
9 10 .ie2 •..
.ib7 'ii'g5
An instructive move; Capablanca refuses to weaken his position by de liberately avoiding exchanges. Such a false policy would lead to anti-po sitional play. It is true that as a result of the text White is able to exchange queens, but there is no reason to avoid this if one's position is conse quently improved. 10 .. . .ixg2? 1 1 l:tg l .ib7 1 2 .if3 followed by l:txg7 would be bad for Black. .ixf3 1 1 .if3
12 'ilt'xf3
Played with a view to exchanging queens. If 1 2 li:lxf3 then Black does not play 1 2...'l!fxg2 1 3 l:tg l followed by l:txg7 and the open g-file is in White's favour, but (after 1 2 li:lxf3) 1 2 ... 'l!ff6, where the queen is very well placed. li:lc6 12 Apart from the necessity of de fending the a8-rook, this move has latent threats of an eventual ... li:lb4 or ...e5. ...
13 'ii'g3 A policy dictated by the tourna ment score; Bogoljubow hopes to
obtain an easy draw once the queens are exchanged. Curiously enough, better prospects of an easy draw are offered by White avoiding the ex change of queens, e.g. 1 3 0-0 0-0 14 li:le4 'i!fg6 15 l:tfd l f5 16 li:lc3 a6 (to prevent li:lb5) 1 7 a3 and the position is absolutely equal.
13 14 hxg3 •••
'ii'xg3 �e7
Naturally, White should still have no difficulty in reaching a draw, but his next few moves evince a startling Jack of understanding of the posi tion, whilst Black's every move is subtly to the point.
15 g4 With some vague idea of com mencing a belated kingside attack. He should pay his opponent the com pliment of imitation and develop his king by 15 �e2.
15 ...
h6!
Putting an end to any aggression by White on this flank.
16 a3 A passive defensive move which merely creates a hole in White's pawn structure; again 16 �e2 was best.
16 ...
a6!
This move, on the other hand, foreshadows a breakthrough by ...b5.
17 �e2
l:thb8! (DJ
Now, at least, White should have realised his dangerous position and safeguarded himself accordingly; Black's concentration of strength on the extreme queenside is alarmingly obvious.
18 li:le4? This knight move only worsens the position. 18 l:thbl b5 19 �d3 was
170 Bad Kissingen 1928 20
cxd6 (D)
.•.
w w
[j 'i:J
�
safest, for example after l 9 ... bxc4+ 20 ltJxc4 :b3+ 2 1 �c2 :ab8 22 llxi2 :3b5 23 b4 White is out of dan ger. 1 8 a4 is not so good, since after 1 8 ... b5 Black will open up the b-file with an attack on White's b2-pawn, and 1 8 b4 b5 19 c5 a5 20 f4 axb4 2 1 axb4 :a4 would be very bad strate gically, leading to a won position for Black.
18 19 cS
bS
19 20 cxd6+
dS!
..•
Or 1 9 cxb5 :xb5 20 :hbl J:.ab8 and Black has very strong pressure on the queenside ...
That this exchange is now inevita ble is another evil consequence of White's faulty 1 8th move. For if now 20 ltJc3, then 20 ... b4 again breaking through on the b-file; whilst after 20 llxl2 e5 2 1 �d3 �f6 Black will now have threats on both wings.
8 �
� � 8 � zV:� - WA'. .: Two fresh dangers now arise for White, control of the c-file and the weak square c4, the latter providing the black knight with a fine outpost.
21 f4? White is still deluded by the lure of a counter-demonstration on the kingside, but it soon becomes evi dent that he can achieve nothing on this wing; instead he should bend all his efforts to countering Black's threats on the queenside and play 2 1 :he 1 . Even then analysis by Tartak ower shows that Black retains the advantage: 21 .. .�d7 22 :c2 :a7 23 :ac 1 ltJa5 24 lLJd2 b4 ! 1•
21 ... 22 fS?
:ea
Keeping blindly to his kingside attack idea, but giving Black far too much scope on the opposite wing. Another unfortunate result of the text move is that Black's king is given
The comments in this game are far too pessimistic for White. It is only after his next move that White really runs into trouble. For example, at the end of Tartak ower' s line 25 axb4 %txb4 26 l:tal lDb3 27 lDxb3 l:txb3 28 %ta5 is a safe draw, as the a6-pawn is just as weak as the one on b2.
E. Bogoljubow - Capablanca 171 opportunities of eventually penetrat ing on the kingside via the holes on f4 and g5. It was imperative to oppose rooks 1 on the c-file by playing 22 :hcl .
22 23 �d3 24 :abl •••
lLJaS lLJc4
..
.•.
:c6 fxe6
This pawn sacrifice is intended to prevent ...�f6-g5 and also has vague hopes of exploiting the open h-file. There is now, however, no sufficient means of dealing with Black's threats 1
•••
hxg5
�6
:ac8
Threatening to win two pawns by 30...lilxb2+.
aS!
Not only shutting out the white knight, but foreshadowing an even tual ... b4. �g6 31 :a+
32 g4
lLJd6! ( D)
Black has envisaged a mating net by bringing the knight to e4 and his rook to the 7th rank.
d5!
Capablanca's play here and to the end of the game is perfect in its eco nomic and beautiful exploitation of a strategically won position. 25 lLJc3 After 25 lLJc5 Black can either play with effect 25 . . .e5 or continue neatly with 25 ...lLJe5+ 26 dxe5 :xc5 27 :be 1 :ac8 28 :xc5 :xc5 threat ening both ...:c4 and .. .f6.
25 26 fxe6 27 g5
27 2s :h5 29 :h3 30 lLJa2
Of the three passive moves at his disposal, White, his optimism now suddenly transmuted into pessimism, chooses the most passive. However, 24 : a2 would be met by 24 ... :c6 25 b3 lLJas 26 :c2 :ac8, etc., and af ter 24 b3 lLJa5 25 liJd2 :c7 26 :ac l :ac8 27 : xc7+ :xc7 28 e4 �f6 Black cannot be prevented from con tinuing ...�g5, since 29 :h5 would be met by 29...:c t .
24 .
�
of penetrating with his king and also of doubling rooks on the c-file.
33 lLJc3 34 axb4 35 lLJdl
b4 axb4
Or 35 lLJa2 lLJe4 36 lilxb4 :c4 37 lLJa2 :c2 38 :dt :xb2, etc.
35 36 :a •••
:cl
b3!
A beautifully harmonious and the matic move; the finish is extremely pleasing.
Indeed, it is still hard to see how White could lose after 22 l:lhcl �a5 23 liXl2, fol lowed by b3.
172 Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 37 :at 38 :e2 39 :bt
lLJe4 :8c6
White is limited to moving this rook, since playing any of the other pieces results in immediate mate. If 39 lbc3, then 39 . . .:6xc3+ 40 bxc3 : xc3#; or alternatively 39 l:txc2 :xc2 and 40...lld2# follows.
39
eS!
•••
The final touch; mate now looms up in quite another direction.
40 llat 4t llaS (D)
ll6c4
S .ixc4 6 lbxd4 7 lbc3
cxd4 lbf6 a6?
Up to this point the game has been identical with that won by Capa blanca against Bogoljubow at Mos cow 1925 (Game 39). Bogoljubow's 7 ... .ic5 did not prove sufficient, but the text is even worse, since it repre sents the pure waste of a tempo. 7 ...lbbd7 is best here.
8 0-0
.icS
Havasi is obviously ignorant of the game mentioned above and heads straight into a similar disaster. Whatever he does, he must now get the inferior game. If, for example, 8 .. e5, then 9 lbf3 Wxdl 10 :xdl liJc6 1 1 liJd5 with a winning posi tion. Comparatively best is 8 ... .ie7, though White can then maintain the pressure by 9 e5. 9 .ie3 (D) .
4t
lbcS+! 0-t
White is mated by 42 ...e4. The finish, as in so many ofCapablanca's best games, presents a handsome geometric picture. Game 54
Capablanca K. Havasi Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 -
Queen's Gambit Accepted
t 2 3 4
d4 c4
lbf3
e4
dS e6 dxc4 cS
liJbd7 9 9 . . 0-0 was absolutely necessary; •••
.
White could then continue with 1 0 e5 liJfd7 1 1 liJe4 Wc7 12 :c l ! and if now 12 ... Wxe5, 1 3 liJxc5 lbxc5 14 liJf3 Wh5 15 .i xc5 Wxc5 16 .ixe6 and wins. Consequently, Black has
Capablanca - K. Havasi 173 to reply l l . .. i.e7 when 12 f4 leaves him badly placed but still alive 1 • 10 i.xe6! The same combination as in the Bogoljubow game, but here even more devastating, as White has had time to castle. 10 fxe6 •aS 11 liJxe6 Now l l . ..'ifb6 loses at once be cause of 1 2 liJxc5 liJxc5 13 liJa4. 12 liJxg7+ q;n 13 liJfS Threatening 14 •b3+ q;g6 15 liJe2 and liJf4+. 13 liJeS 14 .,,3+ �g6 (D) ...
w
The attack proceeds with great energy; if now 16 ...liJxe4, 17 :xc8 :xc8 18 •e6+, etc. 16 h5 11 :rd1! This quiet positional move is much more conclusive than 17 i.b6 •b5 1 8 liJf4+ q;h7 19 :c7+ i.d7. 11 :gs 18 t;)f4+ q;h7 19 i.b6 .,,s q;h8 (D) 20 :c7+ If 20 ...i.d7, then 2 1 liJd5 liJxd5 22 :xd5 •xb3 23 axb3 winning a piece, and if 20... i.g7, 2 1 •xg8+ q;xg8 22 :xg7+ q;f8 23 :d8+ liJe8 24 :xc8, etc. •••
w
�'it'
� ��,
�
� ,..m
IS :act! Threatening 16 i.xc5 •xc5 1 7 lLJe2 with a mating attack. IS .i.f8 15....i.xe3 16 fxe3 would only open up fresh lines of attack for White's pieces. 16 liJe2! •••
21 'ilixb5! This far from obvious move initi ates the final winning combination. axbS 21 22 :ds :xa2 Black has no saving move; if 22... i.xf5, then 23 :xa8 i.xe4 24 :cc8 liJfd7 25 i.d4. •••
I don't see any reason why Black should not play l 1 ...llJxe5 in this line, with gen eral liquidation and a likely draw after 1 2 .i.xe6 .i.xd4 1 3 .i.xd4 .i.xe6 14 .i.xe5 llJc6.
174 Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 23 l:tdxc8 lLic4 By utilising the threat of mate on the back rank, Black seems to have regained his lost material, but the next few moves cruelly undeceive him. 24 h3 lLixb6 25 l:txf8! lLlfd7 l:txb2 26 :n 1-0 27 lLldS A piece is lost, e.g. 27 . . . l:tdS 28 lLixb6 and Black cannot recapture because of mate in three. Game 55 L. Mereny - Capablanca Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 Sicilian Defence
1 e4 c5 Capablanca very rarely used this defence, preferring either the Caro Kann or l . .. e5. He uses it here as an aggressive variation against an op ponent who is obviously playing for a draw. g6 2 lLif3 This move is the first and only in accuracy that Capablanca commits in the whole game. Either 2 ...lLic6 or 2 ...d6 should be played here; after the text, White can transpose into a very favourable variation - the Ma roczy - by 3 c4 if.. g7 4 d4 with a strong bind on the position. 3 c3 This slow move allows Black to take the initiative in the centre. dS! 3 ... I
By taking advantage of White's inability to attack the queen by lLic3, Black obtains a fine game 1 . if..d7 4 if..b5+ 5 if..xd7+ Or 5 "iii'e2 dxe4 6 if.. xd7+ "iii'xd7 7 "iii'xe4 lLlf6 8 "iii'e2 lLic6 and Black is considerably ahead in development. 'ii'xd7 5 ... 6 exdS Having in mind a further simpli fication involving the exchange of queens, after which he hopes the draw will become apparent because of the reduction of material on the board. Capablanca, however, is not content with the half point and ex tracts all that is possible from the po sition to secure a win. Had White less pacific intentions, he would have played 6 e5 followed by 7 d4. It is true that Black would have still enjoyed an excellent game, but at least this way of playing would provide him with counter-chances and a plan of action other than the purely defensive. 'ii'xdS 6 ... cxd4 7 d4 'ii'xd4 8 'ii'xd4 eS! (D) 9 lLixd4 10 lLlbS? A plausible move which would be effective enough if Black were forced to reply IO ...lLia6. Since this is not the case, White should have contented himself with the more modest 10 lLic2 lLic6 1 1 if..e3 0-0-0 and though Black has the superior
The opening comments are very odd, even for the lime Golombek wrote them.
L. Mereny - Capablanca 175
w
game, his advantage is less marked than after the text-move. 10 �d7! With this and the following move Black's king becomes a fighting unit in its own right - an extraordinary and rare occurrence for the second player as early as the lOth move. 11 �e2 �c6! There is a good deal of impish hu mour behind this move 12 a4 liJd7 13 .ie3 If at once 1 3 .:ld 1 Black does best to play 1 3 ...a6 since 1 3 ... tbgf6 al lows White to embark on a mating combination by means of 14 .ih6 .ixh6? ( 1 4 ... .ie7 is necessary) 1 5 l:.d6+ �c5 16 tbla3 a5 17 l:.bl. 13 a6 tbgf6 14 l:.dl 15 tbd2 Temporarily, at any rate, White is able to develop his pieces, but they will be rapidly driven back and dis organised. White's play is typified by move-to-move tactical progress rather than far-sighted positional planning. 15 c4 is better than the text, thereby depriving Black's knight of the square d5 and providing his own ..•
knight with a good post for develop ment on c3. 15 16 lLJa3 17 tbdc4 An important move with a double purpose; firstly, it prevents White's threatened tba5+; secondly, it fore shadows the positional idea of block ading White's queenside pawns by an eventual ... a5. 18 .:td2 .ixa3 White's pieces are further disor ganised by this unexpected exchange of bishop for knight. 19 .:lxa3 If 1 9 tbxa3, then 19 ... tbxe3 fol lowed by 20... tbc5 preserves Black's advantage. 19 .:the8 20 tbd6 White'shand-to-mouthexistence continues with a faulty combination which permits Black to obtain a ter rifyingly overwhelming position in the centre. 20 l:.al was better. 20 l:.e7! (D) Not 20 ... �xd6 2 1 c4 with advan tage to White. •••
•••
••.
21 c4
176 Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 If 2 1 lbb7 lbxc3+ followed by 22 . .�xb7 winning a pawn 1 . 21 ... lbxe3 22 fxe3 With vague hopes of a counter on the f-file. White is in any event posi tionally lost, but 22 �xe3 was to be preferred. lbcS 22 23 lbe4 Ingeniously escaping from mate rial loss, but Capablanca's next se ries of powerful moves shows up the positional insufficiency of White's plan in glaring fashion. 23 :xd2+ aS! 24 lbxd2 This fixes the queenside for good. Black's two pawns adequately hold White's three on this wing whilst he proceeds to the final attack on the other side. The rest of the game is a model of clear-cut, incisive exploita tion of thematic advantages worthy of the most careful study. 25 lbbl White realises that Black intends .. .e4 followed by ...lbd3, and as com pensation manoeuvres his knight so as to be able to play to d5 or d4 ac cording to the sequence of Black's moves. :d7 25 26 lbd2 e4 27 lbb3 lbd3 .
28 lbd4+ �cS 29 b3 f5 30 :at (D) Hoping for time to play 3 1 :n, but now Black crowns his fine play with a decisive positional sacrifice.
•••
.••
1 2
30 ... l:txd4! Black gives up the exchange as the dominating position of his king and knight will prevent White from stemming the advance of his king side pawns. 31 exd4+ �xd4 32 g3 If 32 h4, then 32... f4 followed by ... h6 and ...g5 with an ending similar to that in the actual game. 32 g5 33 b4 In the vain hope that Black will be tempted away from his thematic pur pose to play 33 ...lbxb4, when White will even win by 34 :n 2. •.•
In fact this line loses the exchange after 22 J%xc3+ �xb7 23 i.g5, but the simple 2 1 ...iDf4+ wins a piece immediately. White is hardly winning after 34 :n; indeed, Black is still much better if he re plies 34...�e5. However, Golombek's point is basically correct - Black can win without being deflected by White's queenside play.
Capablanca 33
f4! f3+ e3 bxcS �xe3 c4
...
34 c5 35 �n 36 J:lel
37 J:lxe3 38 bxaS 0-1
Game 56 Capablanca H. Steiner Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defence -
1 d4 li:Jf6 2 c4 e6 d5 3 li:Jc3 4 J.g5 li:Jbd7 5 e3 J.e7 6 li:Jf3 0-0 c6 7 J:l.c l 8 J.d3 For 8 'i!fc2 see Game 66. dxc4 8 li:JdS 9 J.xc4 10 J.xe7 fkxe7 1 1 0-0 li:Jxc3 b6 12 J:lxc3 This is too slow and allows White to gain command of the c-file, as Ca pablanca demonstrates with a total mastery of the necessary technique. The normal 1 2 ...e5 is adequate and is the only correct move in this position. 13 fl'c2! An attempt to exploit the pre sumed weakness on the queenside by 1 3 'i!fe2 J.b7 14 J.a6 J.xa6 1 5 'i!fxa6 leads to nothing after 15 ...c5 16 'i!i'b7 J:lfb8. c5 13 •••
•..
-
H. Steiner 177
Black must play this at once as otherwise he cannot free himself. If 1 3 ... J.b7, then 14 J.d3 and to avoid the loss of a pawn Black must further weaken his position by 14 ... f5, as both 14 ...g6 15 J.e4 and 14 ...li:Jf6 15 li:le5 are bad. 14 dxc5! This apparently simple continu ation contains, as is customary with Capablanca, a wealth of hidden posi tional meaning. Nothing is to be achieved by obvious tactical means, e.g. 14 J.b5 cxd4 15 J:lc7 'i!fd8 16 exd4 (or 16 li:lxd4 li:Jc5) 16 ...li:Jf6 and now 1 7 'i!fc6 li:Jd5 1 8 J:l.xf7? would be bad for White: 1 8 ...J:lxf7 19 'i!fxa8 li:lc7 20 'i!fc6 J.d7, etc. li:lxcS 14 Now, however, 14 ... bxc5 would lose a pawn after 15 J.b5. 15 b4 li:Ja6 The knight is reduced to this im potent position, since 1 5 ... li:ld7 16 J.d3 g6 17 J:lc7 'i!fd8 18 J.e4 loses very quickly for Black. 16 a3 J.b7 17 J.d3 g6 18 J:lcl! (D) Very strong, since Black loses ma terial after 1 8 ...J:lacS 19 J:lxc8 J:lxc8 20 'i!fxc8 J.xc8 2 1 J:lxc8+ �g7 22 J.xa6. 18 J:lad8 Preparing to bring the knight back into play via b8. 19 li:Je5 Threatening 20 J.xa6 and 2 1 li:Jc6. 'ikd6 19 ... li:Jb8 20 f4 With this move Black contem plates the eventual sacrifice of a pawn •••
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178 Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928
in order to gain freedom; but White's fine play nullifies this and maintains his grasp on the position. If instead 20. . .f6, then 2 1 l'Dxg6 hxg6 22 .i.xa6 i.xa6 23 •xg6+ �h8 24 b5 i.b7 25 e4 and wins. 21 :c7 i.a8 22 :xa7 l'LJc6 Hoping for 23 t'Dxc6 i.xc6 24 'ili'xc6 'ili'xd3 25 •xb6, when he can force a draw by 25 ... 'ili'e2 26 h3 :d2 27 1i'b7 'ti'xe3+ 28 �h 1 :d7 29 'ili'xd7 'ii'x cl+, etc. 23 :xa8! l'DxeS 24 :xd8 :xd8 (D)
However Black plays, his knight will run into trouble. If 25 ... lDd7, 26 :d1 'ili'e7 (or 26 ... 'ili'b8 27 •d2) 27 'ili'c7 �f8 28 i.b5. 26 'ii'xd.2! The exchange of queens is more decisive than the immediate win of a piece by 26 fxe5 'ti'xe3+ 27 �h i :d2 28 Wes+ �g7 29 i.f3 'ii'xa3, when White's pawns will prove diffi cult to defend. 26 :xd.2 27 :cS+ ci>g7 2s �n This quiet move is the point of White's combination; the knight is compelled to go to a square on which it will be pinned by White's rook. 28 llxl7 29 :ds �r6 30 i.bS :d5 (D) ••.
w
31 a4! And not 3 1 i.xd7 �e7 32 :b8 :xd7 33 :xb6 :a7 with drawing chances. 31 :xbS Desperation, but Black is utterly lost. The pawn ending after 3 1 . .. �e7 32 :xd7+ :xd7 33 i.xd7 �xd7 34 �e2 is equally hopeless. ...
25 i.e2! In this open position, the bishop is far superior to the knight. 25 'ii'd.2 .••
Capablanca - Z. Von Balla 179 cj/e7 32 axb5 e5 33 :cs 34 :c6 e4 f5 35 cj/e2 36 cj/d2 cj;f7 37 cj/c3 1-0 White's king cannot be prevented from reaching d6; a game of the ut most neatness and precision. Game 57 Capablanca - Z. Von Balla Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 Nimzo-Indian Defence
1 d4 liJf6 2 c4 e6 3 ltJc3 i.b4 4 'ir'c2 c5 4 ...d5 has more adherents nowa days; the Zurich (or Milner-Barry) variation, 4 ...tl)c6, is also popular. 5 dxcS i.xc5 For 5 ...tl)c6 see Game 63. 6 a3 In a previous round of the same tourney, against Marshall, Capa blanca played here 6 liJf3 ltJc6 7 a3 liJd4 8 ltJxd4 i.xd4 9 e3 i.xc3+ 1 0 'ilkxc3 0-0 1 1 b4 d5 with a level game. The text introduces a more vigorous plan. 6 ltJc6 7 b4 i.e7 'flc7? 8 ltJrJ This premature development of the queen costs Black time that he can ill afford. 8 ...b6 at once would have been better. 9 g3! An economical plan typical of Capablanca's style; he develops his
king's bishop on its most effective diagonal and also prepares to attack the queen with his other bishop. The same process is commonly em ployed by White in some lines of the Slav Defence (cf. Game 67 v. Brinck mann). 9 b6 And now 9 . . . a6 would be better in order to prevent White's eventual liJb5. �b7 10 i.g2 1 1 �f4 d6 1 1 . .. e5 1 2 �g5 followed by 1 3 liJd5 would be very bad for Black. 12 liJbS 'ft8 (D) If 12 ...Wd8, then White replies 1 3 :dt. ••.
13 c5! White opens up the position in or der to profit from the greater mobil ity of his pieces. e5 13 14 cxd6 �xd6 Best; if 14 . . . exf4, then 1 5 ltJc7+ cj/d8 16 dxe7+ cj/xc7 1 7 l2Je5 We8 1 8 :et wins. 15 :dl This strong move is the only way to maintain the attack, since Black .••
180 Budapest Siesta Tourney 1928 wins after 15 tt.Jxd6+ 'ii'xd6 16 ltlxe5 t0xb4 t . 15 0-0 If 1 5 . . . exf4, then 1 6 tt.Jxd6+ �f8 17 lLlxb7 'ii'xb7 18 tt.Jh4 %k8 19 %kl winning a piece, or 15...i.e7 16 tt.Jxe5 ltlxb4 ( 16 ...ltlxe5 17 i.xe5) 17 axb4 i.xg2 18 lDc7+ �f8 19 'i'c4 i.d5 20 ltlxd5, etc. exf4 (D) 16 tt.Jxd6 .••
17 ltlh4! Decisive; now Black cannot avoid the loss of a piece. 17 tt.Jd8 18 tt.Jxb7 ltlxb7 19 'ifc6 This enhancement of the strength of the fianchettoed bishop is striking both from aesthetic and thematic points of view. 19 fxg3 20 hxg3 It is unnecessary to take the piece at once and allow Black counter chances by 20...gxf2+. •e5 20 .••
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21 •xb7 •cJ+ The rest of the game is clearly a matter of technique, but it is still in teresting to observe the clear-cut and elegant methods employed by Capa blanca to efficiently despatch his op ponent. 22 �n :ad8 23 :et Naturally, not 23 :xd8 •c l + fol lowed by mate. 23 ... •xa3 24 tt.Jf5 White could have saved the pawn by 24 b5 but prefers to end the game by a kingside attack. 24 :d7 •xb4 25 •o 26 :h4 ...,2 :rd8 21 'ii'r4 :d2 28 i.c6 29 •g5 g6 If 29... lbe8, then 30 i.xe8 :xe8 3 1 tt.Jxg7 !. 30 tt.Je3 •cJ 31 :c4 ...,2 32 :r4 tt.Jh5 If 32 ...l:t8d6, then 33 lDc4 wins at once. 33 ltJc4 f6 34 .g4 ..al 35 '6'e6+ �h8 l:tdl 36 :e4 l:txdl+ 37 :xdl 1-0 38 �g2 White threatens both 39 i.d5 and 39 g4; Black is unable to parry both threats.
At the end of this line White can force instant resignation by 17 'ii'a4+, so Black should play 1 6 l0d4! with a clear advantage. ...
Capablanca - A. Rubinstein 181 Gaine 58 Capablanca - A. Rubinstein Berlin 1928 Queen's Pawn 1 d4
2 li:lf3
dS cS
3 dxcS Capablanca forms a scheme for isolating Black's d-pawn, but this should not prove a serious handicap to the second player, who is able to complete his development quite eas ily. The move likely to give Black the most trouble is 3 c4 and if 3 ...cxd4, then 4 'ii'xd4, e.g. 4 ...li:lf6 5 cxd5 li:lxd5 6 e4 or 4 ...e6 5 cxd5 followed by 6 .ig5. 3 ...e6 and 3 ... dxc4 4 e3 lead respectively to the Tarrasch De fence and the Queen's Gainbit Ac cepted. e6 3 ... Should Black wish to avoid the isolated pawn he can quite well play 3...'ii'a5+ followed by ...'ii'xc5.
4 e4 .ixcS 4 ... dxe4 5 'ii'xd8+ �xd8 6 li:lg5 gives White a pawn and the better gaine. S exdS exdS
6 .ibS+ A move of dubious value, as the bishop is not very effectively placed on b5. Better is 6 .ie2. 6 liJc6 7 0-0 li:le7 8 li:lbd2 This knight is to be developed on b3 in order to control d4 and so pre vent the further advance of Black's d-pawn. 0-0 8 9 li:lb3 t .ib6 9 .. ..id6 also caine into considera tion, leading to quite a different type of gaine, with Black's counter-attack consisting of pressure on the h2rather than the f2-pawn. 10 :C.el Preparing for .ie3, but this ma noeuvre cannot be carried out for some time, and meanwhile Black can get a good gaine by concentrat ing on the weak square f2. I 0 .if4 would be better, to be followed by 1 1 c3. 10 . .ig4 Threatening ... .ixf2+ followed by ... 'ii'b6+. •.•
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1 1 .id3
Curiously, we have transposed into a line of the Tarrasch French with White hav ing a tempo less. After I e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 11ld2 c5 4 exd5 exd5 5 11lgf3 11lc6 6 i.b5 i.d6 7 dxc5 i.xc5 8 0-011le7 9 11lb3 we have the same position as in this game, but with Black not having castled. Another oddity is that ECO gives the following line (first five moves as before) "6 dxc5 i.xc5 7 i.b5 11le7 8 0-0 0-0 9 11lb3 i.b6 10 J:l.e 1 = Capablanca-Rubinstein, London 1922". Presumably they are referring to the present game, as Rubinstein was White in their (totally different) game from London 1922. Moreover, by altering the move-order the ECO author, Matanovic, introduced the possibility of 7... �xf2+!, winning a pawn. Since the Tarrasch French line is today considered more or less equal, and given that Black has an ex tra tempo, Rubinstein had no problems from the opening.
182 Berlin 1928 This unhappy bishop is still incor rectly placed; on d3 it is open to even tual attack and exchange by Black's knight. 1 1 h3 i.h5 1 2 c3 would have been better. 11 lbg6 i.xf3 12 h3 13 •x0 lbce5 14 •r5 lbxd3 15 •xd3 (D) •••
d4? 15 ... This strategic blunder converts the d-pawn into a real liability and deprives Black of any counter-at tack. Black must maintain pressure on the kingside by 1 5 ... •f6, after which White has nothing better than 1 6 :n ( 16 i.e3 •xb2 is rather to Black's advantage) 16 ...:ad8 17 c3 lbe5 1 8 •d l (not 1 8 We2 l:tfe8) 1 8 ... lLJc4 and Black has an excellent game. 16 i.