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| Tags: alekhine, kramnik |
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#1
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If Kramnik played Alekhine, who would win?
They are both super GMs and world champions. Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. |
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#2
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EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. |
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#3
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wrote in message ups.com... EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. Muller-Behting, 1899. It is an adaptation from Polerio who played the same move in a Vienna [with #. Bc4 in 1850]. What Alekhine did was ressurect it to current tournament play. Gulko plays it. Phil |
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#4
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Chess One wrote: wrote in message ups.com... EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. Muller-Behting, 1899. Heck, it goes back way before then, Phil. The first examples I have date from no later than London 1851, with Anderssen, Staunton, Szen and Horwitz playing it. Morphy too, at New York 1857. It is an adaptation from Polerio who played the same move in a Vienna [with #. Bc4 in 1850]. What Alekhine did was ressurect it to current tournament play. How did he accomplish that, if he played it only once in a little-known match in 1919, that got little publicity outside Russia? Nor is it mentioned in his "Best Games 1908-1923." Gulko plays it. True. |
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#5
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Chess One wrote: wrote in message ups.com... EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. Muller-Behting, 1899. I can find no such game. The closest match seems to be Moller-Giersing, Nordic Congress 1899 (1-0, 17). It is an adaptation from Polerio who played the same move in a Vienna [with #. Bc4 in 1850]. This seems unlikely, since Polerio died in 1612. You trying to pull my leg, Phil? |
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#6
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#7
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Chess One wrote:
Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. The Berlin defense of the Ruy Lopez has its name because it was analyzed by the players of the Berlin Chess School, also known as "The Pleiades". They were the foremost players of the Berliner Schachgesellschaft in the middle of the 19th century. The Pleiades consisted of Ludwig Bledow, Karl Schorn, Bernhard Horwitz, Carl Mayet, Wilhelm Hanstein, Paul Rudolph von Bilguer and Baron Tassilo von Heydebrand und der Lasa. The last two wrote a famous chess book, the Bilguer handbook of chess. The club often had guests masters like Adolf Anderssen, Max Lange, Jean Dufresne and Carl Friedrich Jänisch. Here is a chess game featuring two players of the Pleiades playing the Berlin defense: [Site "Berlin"] [Date "1840.??.??"] [Result "0-1"] [White "Von Der Lasa Tassilo"] [Black "Hanstein Wilhelm"] [ECO "C65"] 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.O-O Bd6 5.Bxc6 dxc6 6.d4 Bg4 7.Qd3 Bxf3 8.gxf3 Nh5 9.Nc3 exd4 10.Ne2 Qh4 11.Ng3 O-O 12.Qxd4 Rfd8 13.Qc3 Nxg3 14.fxg3 Bxg3 15.hxg3 Qxg3+ 16.Kh1 Rd6 17.Qe1 Qh3+ 18.Kg1 Rg6+ 19.Kf2 Rg2+ 20.Ke3 f5 21.e5 Rxc2 22.Bd2 Rd8 23.Bc3 f4 24.Kxf4 Qh6+ 25.Ke4 Qg6+ 26.Kf4 Qh6+ 27.Ke4 Rh2 28.Rd1 Rh4+ 29.f4 Qg6+ 30.Ke3 Rh3+ 31.Rf3 Rxf3+ 32.Kxf3 Rxd1 33.Qe2 Rd3+ 0-1 Certainly not Kramnik style. Claus-Juergen |
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#8
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"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message oups.com... Chess One wrote: wrote in message ups.com... EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. Muller-Behting, 1899. Heck, it goes back way before then, Phil. The first examples I have date from no later than London 1851, with Anderssen, Staunton, Szen and Horwitz playing it. Morphy too, at New York 1857. I believe it, the '99 game was the earliest in my MCO. Shamkovitch and Schiller don't metion it at all, even though they have 'non-a6' lines, they cover Cordel proper, Cordel/Konikowski, and Jaenisch. I imagine opening became 'an item', circa 1830, with Petrov and Jaenisch plus a group of Hungarian players, all centered on Berlin. It is an adaptation from Polerio who played the same move in a Vienna [with #. Bc4 in 1850]. What Alekhine did was ressurect it to current tournament play. How did he accomplish that, if he played it only once in a little-known match in 1919, that got little publicity outside Russia? He gave it 'an outing'. Probably didn't get enough action from it, besides, his other problem was to how to defeat the hypermodernists. The same lapsus occured in the KID, when it was given up for dead in the late 20s, then in the late 30s sove Soviet players found considerable new resources, which didn't see the light of day until way after WWII. Nor is it mentioned in his "Best Games 1908-1923." Gulko plays it. True. And lots of other GMs, it was a minor fad in the 90s, and very dangerous for the unprepared. Phil |
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#9
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"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ups.com... Chess One wrote: wrote in message ups.com... EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. Muller-Behting, 1899. I can find no such game. The closest match seems to be Moller-Giersing, Nordic Congress 1899 (1-0, 17). It is an adaptation from Polerio who played the same move in a Vienna [with #. Bc4 in 1850]. This seems unlikely, since Polerio died in 1612. You trying to pull my leg, Phil? ![]() just checking if anyone is awake to an origin [and the move is indeed attributable to Polerio over 250 years earlier] Polerio was an apprentice of Leonardo, or a sort. Much is owed to Polerio for correcting the outright lies and exaggerations of Boi, Salvio and Carrera - Boi, eg, contrived to play chess on horseback against 'the Arabs' who did not actually play chess at the time. Both Salvio and Boi were 'taken by pirates', and so on... He also seemed to be the recorder of a game Leonardo v Lopez, which may have been as early as 1560. Apart from the court of Madrid, the other patron of chess at this time was in Italy, Giacomo Buoncompagno, Duke of Sora who also dies in 1612, and who was the illegitimate son of Pope Gregory XIII. I think the Buoncompagno family still possess two original Polerio manscripts. This was a high point in the 'invention of openings' despite considerable printing difficulties, and Sam Sloan might be interested to know that Damiano was REpublished in 1606 [Bologna], and Tarsia's Lopez [1584]. Polerio was interesting particualrly because his analysis was so much better than anyone else's. But also secret! Not widely known and in fact closely held. Some MSS of the time required the author as a sort of mentor [paid, of course] to unravel the secrets... which were as encoded as a Portugese rutter. Nothin much happened in northern Europe pre 1610, which was pretty much limited to Tarsia's Lopez, an inferior work to that of Polerio. This situation was eventaully relieved by Greco, who travelled north, hung out in Paris and in London a decade later. In 1621 he was at the French court, and in 1622 or 1623 in London. He made quite a stash by chess-teaching select rich clients. Unlike other books, Greco's made no concessions at all to the weak player, and can be seen to have distributed some of the high-level Polerio material, or material of equal intensity and depth to stimulate more serious play in Northern Europe. A Question... I should be interested to learn from anyone here what they know of the fate of Greco. His last sure sighting was in Paris in 1624, and then is thought to have gone to Spain. It is said, if later writers are to be believed - that is, retrospective writing of unclear provenance and date - that he went to the West Indies and died there about 1630. There is no certain evidence that he did so, and no established motive for doing so either. Cordially, Phil Innes |
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#10
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James wrote: wrote : EG wrote: Alekhine invented the Berlin defense which Kramnik "borrowed" so obviously Alekhine is the most talented. Not true at all. The Berlin Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) was widely played decades before Alekhine was born. He almost never played it himself, the only known instance being against Grigoriev, August 1919 in Moscow. I have another game, against Bernstein, Saint Petersburg, 1914. N/A. Alekhine plays White in that game. |
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