A Chess forum. ChessBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » ChessBanter forum » Chess Newsgroups » rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General)
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Tags: , , , , ,

Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old March 15th 04, 11:17 PM
ian burton
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

The following sentence appears in an ad for Jude Acers' recent book, "The
Italian Gambit System."

"This World famous New Orleans Chess Master has the unique distinction, in
his long and venerable career, of being the only match player to face both
Bobby Fischer (Baton Rouge, 1964) and Walter Browne, six time U.S. Champion
(Baton Rouge 1967 and Berkeley 1970)"

Did Acers indeed play *matches* with Fischer and Browne? If not, what does
this ambiguous sentence mean?
--
Ian Burton
[Please Reply to Newsgroup]


Ads
  #2  
Old March 16th 04, 02:41 AM
Miriling
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

Subject: Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

On 15 March 2004 "ian burton" wrote in
Message-id: yXp5c.848$Bg.605@fed1read03

The following sentence appears in an ad for Jude Acers' recent book, "The
Italian Gambit System."

"This World famous New Orleans Chess Master has the unique distinction, in
his long and venerable career, of being the only match player to face both
Bobby Fischer (Baton Rouge, 1964) and Walter Browne, six time U.S. Champion
(Baton Rouge 1967 and Berkeley 1970)"

Did Acers indeed play *matches* with Fischer and Browne? If not, what does
this ambiguous sentence mean?
--
Ian Burton
[Please Reply to Newsgroup]



Jude Acers played Fischer in a two-game match on March 25, 1964, at the home

of Don L. Wagner in Baton Rouge. Wagner and his wife Phyllis hosted Fischer
during his stay in Baton Rouge, where he did a televised five-board
simultaneous exhibition (shown on the local Channel 9) from noon to 1 p.m. At 3
p.m. at the Wagner home,Fischer faced Acers, whom he beat in both games. Acers,
19 years old at the time and a student at Lousiana State University, had
arranged Fischer's visit to Louisiana. According to Acers: "A call to Larry
Evans' father, Harry, set up a full program for Bobby including a five-board
television simul and a two-game match with me in Baton Rouge, plus a 75-board
simul in New Orleans."
Acers was one of those who drew Fischer in the New Orleans simul, played on
March 26. Fischer, for his efforts, received a total of $485 for his 75-board
simul.

George Mirijanian





  #3  
Old March 16th 04, 04:24 AM
Randy Bauer
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

While $485 may not seem like a big amount of money, when adjusting for
inflation it would be almost $2,900 now. Not bad for a couple of days work.

Randy Bauer

"Miriling" wrote in message
...
Subject: Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne


On 15 March 2004 "ian burton" wrote in
Message-id: yXp5c.848$Bg.605@fed1read03

The following sentence appears in an ad for Jude Acers' recent book, "The
Italian Gambit System."

"This World famous New Orleans Chess Master has the unique distinction,

in
his long and venerable career, of being the only match player to face

both
Bobby Fischer (Baton Rouge, 1964) and Walter Browne, six time U.S.

Champion
(Baton Rouge 1967 and Berkeley 1970)"

Did Acers indeed play *matches* with Fischer and Browne? If not, what

does
this ambiguous sentence mean?
--
Ian Burton
[Please Reply to Newsgroup]



Jude Acers played Fischer in a two-game match on March 25, 1964, at the

home
of Don L. Wagner in Baton Rouge. Wagner and his wife Phyllis hosted

Fischer
during his stay in Baton Rouge, where he did a televised five-board
simultaneous exhibition (shown on the local Channel 9) from noon to 1 p.m.

At 3
p.m. at the Wagner home,Fischer faced Acers, whom he beat in both games.

Acers,
19 years old at the time and a student at Lousiana State University, had
arranged Fischer's visit to Louisiana. According to Acers: "A call to

Larry
Evans' father, Harry, set up a full program for Bobby including a

five-board
television simul and a two-game match with me in Baton Rouge, plus a

75-board
simul in New Orleans."
Acers was one of those who drew Fischer in the New Orleans simul, played

on
March 26. Fischer, for his efforts, received a total of $485 for his

75-board
simul.

George Mirijanian







  #4  
Old March 16th 04, 01:50 PM
David Ames
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

"ian burton" wrote in message news:yXp5c.848$Bg.605@fed1read03...
The following sentence appears in an ad for Jude Acers' recent book, "The
Italian Gambit System."

"This World famous New Orleans Chess Master has the unique distinction, in
his long and venerable career, of being the only match player to face both
Bobby Fischer (Baton Rouge, 1964) and Walter Browne, six time U.S. Champion
(Baton Rouge 1967 and Berkeley 1970)"

Did Acers indeed play *matches* with Fischer and Browne? If not, what does
this ambiguous sentence mean?


Obviously a "match player" is someone who plays with matches.

David Ames
  #5  
Old March 16th 04, 02:06 PM
Phil Innes
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne


"Miriling" wrote in message
...

Acers was one of those who drew Fischer in the New Orleans simul, played

on
March 26. Fischer, for his efforts, received a total of $485 for his

75-board
simul.


A guy at a tournament told me a Fischer simul story. He had played him 6
months before, and became his college's organiser for a second simul. After
the simul Fischer said to him "do you remember your position on move..." and
started to set up the board, but not the one just played (!) but the one 6
months before.

Phil Innes

George Mirijanian







  #6  
Old March 16th 04, 10:34 PM
Wayne Martin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

"Phil Innes" wrote:

A guy at a tournament told me a Fischer simul story.
He had played him 6 months before, and became his
college's organiser for a second simul. After the simul
Fischer said to him "do you remember your position on
move..." and started to set up the board, but not the one
just played (!) but the one 6 months before.

Phil Innes


Yeah, Fischer played and practiced so much that the game and all of
its moves became instant recalling chunks of data to him. Much like a
computer programmer remembering an entire subroutine in one of his
huge programs of thousands and thousands of lines.



  #7  
Old March 17th 04, 07:37 AM
ian burton
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne


"David Ames" wrote in message
om...
"ian burton" wrote in message

news:yXp5c.848$Bg.605@fed1read03...
The following sentence appears in an ad for Jude Acers' recent book,

"The
Italian Gambit System."

"This World famous New Orleans Chess Master has the unique distinction,

in
his long and venerable career, of being the only match player to face

both
Bobby Fischer (Baton Rouge, 1964) and Walter Browne, six time U.S.

Champion
(Baton Rouge 1967 and Berkeley 1970)"

Did Acers indeed play *matches* with Fischer and Browne? If not, what

does
this ambiguous sentence mean?


Obviously a "match player" is someone who plays with matches.

David Ames


Good to see you haven't changed much since your days at the Manhattan,
David!
--
Ian Burton
[Please Reply to Newsgroup]


  #8  
Old March 17th 04, 08:13 AM
Dan Scoones
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Jude Acers, Bobby Fischer, and Walter Browne

On Tue, 16 Mar 2004 21:34:23 GMT, "Wayne Martin"
wrote:

"Phil Innes" wrote:

A guy at a tournament told me a Fischer simul story.
He had played him 6 months before, and became his
college's organiser for a second simul. After the simul
Fischer said to him "do you remember your position on
move..." and started to set up the board, but not the one
just played (!) but the one 6 months before.

Phil Innes


Yeah, Fischer played and practiced so much that the game and all of
its moves became instant recalling chunks of data to him. Much like a
computer programmer remembering an entire subroutine in one of his
huge programs of thousands and thousands of lines.



At the Vancouver 1971 Candidates match (where he was seconding Mark
Taimanov) Evgeny Vasjukov asked Fischer if he remembered playing blitz
against him (Vasjukov) at the Central Chess Club in Moscow in 1958.
By way of reply Fischer proceeded to rattle off ALL the moves of ALL
of the blitz games he had contested with Vasjukov on that day in
Moscow.

Fischer would meet minor European masters at Olympiads and other
events and immediately tell them where they had gone wrong in obscure
tournament and match games played years previously.


 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The Bobby Fischer interviews: are they legitimate sources of information? Michael Sayers rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) 29 September 24th 03 04:13 AM
The Bobby Fischer interviews: are they legitimate sources of information? Michael Sayers rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) 30 September 24th 03 04:13 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:56 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 2.4.0
Copyright ©2004-2008 ChessBanter, part of the NewsgroupBanter project.
The comments are property of their posters.
Equity Release - Car Finance - Mortgages - Buy Anything On eBay - Gardening