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Raymond Keene
Keene 
Photograph copyright (c) 2003 Bo Zaunders
courtesy of keeneonchess.com.
 

Number of games in database: 1,905
Years covered: 1960 to 2012
Last FIDE rating: 2455
Highest rating achieved in database: 2510
Overall record: +1018 -180 =661 (72.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 46 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Reti System (147) 
    A04 A05 A06
 King's Indian (119) 
    E62 E80 E63 E69 E94
 English (73) 
    A15 A13 A12 A16 A14
 Nimzo Indian (72) 
    E30 E41 E42 E49 E26
 Grunfeld (52) 
    D91 D85 D79 D74 D76
 Queen's Gambit Declined (49) 
    D31 D35 D37 D30 D06
With the Black pieces:
 Robatsch (121) 
    B06
 Sicilian (113) 
    B32 B25 B22 B30 B20
 Pirc (99) 
    B09 B08 B07
 King's Indian (69) 
    E83 E73 E94 E62 E92
 French Defense (58) 
    C18 C05 C00 C16 C07
 Queen's Pawn Game (55) 
    A45 A40 A41 A50 A46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Keene vs Miles, 1976 1-0
   S J Hutchings vs Keene, 1973 0-1
   Keene vs V Kovacevic, 1973 1-0
   Keene vs Robatsch, 1971 1-0
   Keene vs E Fielder, 1964 1-0
   Keene vs Briant, 1988 1-0
   M Basman vs Keene, 1981 0-1
   Keene vs S Kerr, 1979 1-0
   E Jimenez Zerquera vs Keene, 1974 0-1
   Keene vs J N Sugden, 1961 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Slater Young Masters (1968)
   Lugano Olympiad qual-1 (1968)
   Strasbourg Open (1973)
   Alicante (1977)
   British Championship (1971)
   Nice Olympiad qual-2 (1974)
   Capablanca Memorial-B (1974)
   5th Lloyds Bank Masters Open (1981)
   Sydney IM (1979)
   Hanover (1976)
   FRG-ch International (1975)
   Hastings 1968/69 (1968)
   Esbjerg (1981)
   British Championship (1982)
   Reykjavik (1976)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 46 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 45 by 0ZeR0
   50 K Players of Yesteryear by fredthebear
   ANNOTATED HUMAN GAMES by rpn4
   ANNOTATED+ GAMES by Patca63
   ANNOTATED HUMAN GAMES by gambitfan
   ANNOTATED+ GAMES by kafkafan
   ANNOTATED HUMAN GAMES by Rickdudester
   franskfranz's 1. Nf3 by franskfranz

GAMES ANNOTATED BY KEENE: [what is this?]
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004
   Leko vs Kramnik, 2004
   Kramnik vs Leko, 2004
   Topalov vs Kramnik, 2006
   >> 406 GAMES ANNOTATED BY KEENE

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Simultaneous exhibition
   Keene vs A Pleasants (Aug-??-12) 0-1, exhibition

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Raymond Keene
Search Google for Raymond Keene
FIDE player card for Raymond Keene

RAYMOND KEENE
(born Jan-29-1948, 77 years old) United Kingdom

[what is this?]

Raymond Denis Keene won the British Chess Championship in 1971, and was the first player from England to earn a Grandmaster norm, in 1974. In 1976 he became the second Englishman (following Tony Miles) to be awarded the Grandmaster title, and he was the second British chess player to beat an incumbent World Chess Champion (following Jonathan Penrose's defeat of Mikhail Tal in 1960). He represented England in eight Chess Olympiads.

Keene retired from competitive play in 1986 at the age of thirty-eight, and is now better known as a chess organiser, columnist and author. He was involved in organising the 1986, 1993 and 2000 World Chess Championships; and the 1997, 1998 and 1999 Mind Sports Olympiads; all held in London. Keene was the chess correspondent of The Times from 1985 to November 2019, and is a prolific author, having written over 100 books on chess. He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to chess in 1985.

Keene is a controversial figure in the chess world. He has been accused of plagiarism, and his business dealings and the quality of his chess books, columns and articles have also been criticised.

Chess career
Keene won the London and British Under 18 Championships (shared with Brian Denman) in 1964, and represented England at the 1965 and 1967 World Junior Chess Championships, held in Barcelona and Jerusalem respectively. At the latter event he took the silver medal, finishing behind Julio Kaplan. He was educated at Dulwich College and Trinity College, Cambridge (where he studied modern languages and graduated with an MA). Keene wrote his first chess book whilst studying at Cambridge, and won the British Chess Championship at Blackpool 1971. As a result, he was awarded the International Master title in 1972, the first English player to achieve this since Jonathan Penrose in 1961. In 1974, Keene married Annette, the sister of International Master David S. Goodman. They have one son, Alexander, born in 1991.

Keene was the second British player to meet the necessary requirements to become a Grandmaster. He was pipped to the post by a few months by Tony Miles, the first British Grandmaster in 1976. Both he and Miles won financial prizes for this feat.

Miles and Keene were at the forefront of the English chess explosion of the next 20 years, and they were followed by other British grandmasters such as Michael Stean, John Nunn, Jon Speelman and Jonathan Mestel.

Keene represented England for nearly two decades in international team events, beginning with the 1966 Chess Olympiad in Havana at age 18. He followed with the next seven straight Olympiads: Lugano 1968, Siegen 1970, Skopje 1972, Nice 1974, Haifa 1976, Buenos Aires 1978, and La Valletta 1980. His individual performances at Lugano and Haifa merited bronze medals (although individual medals were not, in fact, awarded at Haifa) and he was undefeated in three Olympiads – these two and Siegen. His later performances, though, were less impressive, with just two draws from four games at Buenos Aires and losses in both his games at La Valletta.

He represented England four times at the Students' Olympiad (Örebro 1966, Harrachov 1967, Ybbs 1968 and Dresden 1969) and four times at the European Team Championships (Bath 1973, Moscow 1977, Skara 1980 and Plovdiv 1983). At Skara he won both a bronze medal with the team and the individual gold medal for the best score on his board.

Keene won the 1971 British championship and shared second place on three occasions, in 1968, 1970 and 1972. His tournament victories include Hastings Challengers 1966, Slater Challenge Southend 1968, Johannesburg 1973, Woolacombe 1973, Capablanca Memorial (Master Group) 1974, Alicante 1977, Sydney 1979, Dortmund 1980, Barcelona 1980, Lloyds Bank Masters 1981, Adelaide 1983 and La Valletta 1985.

Playing style
Keene's playing style tended toward the strategically original and positional. Strongly influenced by Aron Nimzowitsch and Richard Réti, he accordingly preferred hypermodern openings such as the Modern Defence, Nimzo-Indian Defence and King's Indian Defence.

Chess-related work

Organiser
Keene worked as a chess event organiser. He was the originator and organiser of the annual Staunton memorial chess tournaments, one of the few regular events for masters held in London. The Oxford Companion comments: "By a combination of ability and shrewdness, Keene has attracted considerable sponsorship and has proved himself capable of efficient and rapid organisation of chess events".p196

Keene brought Victor Korchnoi and Garry Kasparov together for their 1983 Candidates' semi-final match in London as part of the 1984 World Championship cycle; the semi-final match between Vasily Smyslov and Zoltán Ribli was also played at the same site. He organised the 1984 Russia (USSR) vs Rest of the World match in London within two weeks, enabling the event to go ahead on time after the previous plans had fallen through, described by John Nunn as "a magnificent organisational achievement at such short notice."

Keene has also been involved in organising several World Championship finals matches. He arranged for the first half of the World Chess Championship 1986 return match between Kasparov and Karpov in London. The match, however, made a loss for the British Chess Federation (BCF) and, for reasons never clarified, he resigned from his position in the BCF shortly afterwards. He organised the 1993 PCA World Championship match between Kasparov and Nigel Short in London, for which he was one of the official commentators along with Grandmasters Jonathan Speelman and Daniel King. He was the instrumental force behind 'Brain Games', which organized the World Championship match in 2000 between Kasparov and Vladimir Kramnik. Following the match, however, he retained the trophy in lieu of money he believed he was owed by the collapse of Brain Games: Kramnik did not receive it until 2008. Brain Games later collapsed in controversial circumstances.

Columnist
Keene became the chess columnist of The Spectator in March 1977. His column was terminated in September 2019, when he was replaced by Luke McShane. Following the retirement of Harry Golombek, Keene was appointed the chess correspondent of The Times in 1985. In November 2019 he was replaced by David Howell. In December 1996 he became the chess columnist of the Sunday Times. In August 2017 he was replaced by David Howell.

Television personality
Keene has appeared on television. He covered the world championships of 1981, 1985, 1986, 1990, 1993, and 1995 for BBC 2, CHANNEL 4, and Thames TV. In the "Duels of the Mind" series which aired on the UK ITV network, Keene, along with South African author and civil rights campaigner Donald Woods, discussed and analysed what Keene regarded as the twelve best chess games ever played.

Magazine editor
From 1978 to 1982, Keene was the editor of Modern Chess Theory, a magazine on openings which included contributions from the Soviet world champions Mikhail Botvinnik, Vasily Smyslov, and Mikhail Tal.

Author
Keene claims to be "the author of 140 books on chess". He was the Chess Advisor to Batsford. His early books such as Howard Staunton (1975, with R. N. Coles) often dealt with players with styles similar to his own. Aron Nimzowitsch: a Reappraisal (1974) is much admired and was revised and translated into Russian in 1986,1 with an algebraic edition published in English in 1999. In 1989, he and Nathan Divinsky wrote Warriors of the Mind, an attempt to determine the 64 best chess players of all time. The statistical methods used have not met with wide approval, but the player biographies and games were regarded by one book as providing a good overviewbut also incurred criticism for inaccuracy. Much of Keene's later work has attracted criticism for sloppiness, plagiarism and the habit of copying passages, including errors, from one book to another.

Controversies
Allegations of plagiarism
Keene has on several occasions been accused of plagiarism. In 1993 John Donaldson accused Keene of committing plagiarism in The Complete Book of Gambits (Batsford, 1992). Donaldson wrote "Just how blatant was the plagiarism? Virtually every word and variation in the four and a half pages devoted to Lisitsin's Gambit in Keene's book was stolen." After Keene refused to pay Donaldson a requested $200 for the use of his material, Keene's American publisher Henry Holt and Company ended up paying Donaldson $3,000.

In 2008, Keene was accused of plagiarising a column by Edward Winter for a piece published in The Spectator and subsequently on the website Chessville and on page 129 of his book The Official Biography of Tony Buzan. More than a third of the article was taken directly from Winter's column.

In 2013, Winter reflected on plagiarism in chess: "a particularly sordid corner of the chess world which will never be eradicated without maximum public exposure". He went on: "The latest instance is the discovery by Justin Horton that material from the first volume of Kasparov's My Great Predecessors series has been misappropriated by Raymond Keene in The Spectator."

Private Eye describes the plagiarism as involving "substantial amounts of text lifted from chess books, mainly Kasparov's but also other authors". One case involves Keene's notes to a game between Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov, which he annotated for The Times on 8 December 2011 and The Spectator on 5 January 2013.

These alleged plagiarisms, which Edward Winter calls "eye-popping" are catalogued at "a convenient 'plagiarism index' which is being kept updated".

Tony Miles
In 1985, Keene received £1,178 from the BCF for being Tony Miles' second at the Interzonal in Tunis; however, he had not actually been Miles' second but accepted the money and shared it with Miles. Miles had initially agreed to this plan but eventually told the BCF about it in 1987. Two months later, Keene resigned his posts as BCF Publicity Director and FIDE delegate. Keene said that his resignation was for different reasons, and that he was "furious" at his treatment after organising numerous events from 1983 to 1987.

Brain Games Network
In 2000, Keene's former brother-in-law David Levy accused him of deceiving the directors of their company Mind Sports Olympiad Ltd (MSO) by setting up a rival company, Brain Games Network plc (BGN), without their knowledge and using £50,000 of MSO Ltd money to do so. Levy further alleged that Keene changed his story several times as to the purpose of the payment and the reasons why the new company had been set up. He complained that shares in the new company were held by Keene and an associate (Don Morris) but not by the company for which they had been supposed to be working, nor any of its directors other than themselves. Levy wrote:

As one would expect, our original investors were equally astounded at the news and extremely angry at Keene. They had by now invested £1.5 million (approximately $2.25 million at that time) partly or largely on the basis of their faith in Keene and myself. Now they had learned that one of their two key consultants, the one with money-raising skills, had been working to set up a rival company.

Nothing, however, was proven against Keene (who had swiftly paid an identical sum, i.e. £50,000 to MSO, making the subsequent explanation that this constituted a personal loan from himself) and his new company went on to organise the world championship match later that same year. (It was at this time that Private Eye started referring to him as "The Penguin", a nickname he had first acquired in 1966.)

Levy further criticised Keene for selling three of his own companies to BGN for £220,000 despite their being "virtually worthless". The three companies had between them "a total capital and reserves of only £2,300". At much the same time, according to Levy, BGN purchased a web site and two domain names from Chess and Bridge Limited. However, they made the purchase in two stages. The first of these stages was its sale to Giloberg Finance Limited, owned by Keene's associate Alan Lubin: the second was the immediate sale of the same items, by Giloberg, to BGN. The first sale was for approximately £60,000 (in fact $100,000) and the second was for £290,000, hence making Giloberg "an instant profit of approximately £230,000" and raising the question of why BGN should have paid a sum much greater than the original vendors considered the items were worth.

BGN collapsed in controversial circumstances. Shareholders were unhappy that sums amounting to at least £675,000 had been paid to directors in "fees and payments" despite the company swiftly becoming insolvent. Investors were also unhappy that Keene and Lubin had acquired 88% of the company "for a song" even though the remaining 12% had been sold for around £3 million.

During the course of the 2000 Braingames World Championship Keene was accused of heavy-handed behaviour in having journalist John Henderson removed from the press room with the assistance of bouncers.

Korchnoi
Viktor Korchnoi alleged that when acting as his second in the 1978 World Championship match, Keene broke his contract by writing a book about the match (which appeared three days after the match finished) having specifically signed an agreement "not to write, compile or help to write or compile any book during the course of the match". Korchnoi commented: "Mr Keene betrayed me. He violated the contract. It was clear that while Mr Keene was writing one book and then another, Mr Stean was doing his work for him."

Attempts to defend Keene were rebutted by Michael Stean's mother, who stated that she was in a position to know what was in Keene's contract since she herself had typed it. Keene, she claimed, had signed this despite having already negotiated a contract with Batsford to write a book about the match. She described "a premeditated and deliberate plan to deceive" and noted that Keene's conduct had come under suspicion during the match.

Articles by Raymond Keene
https://www.chessgames.com/RaymondK...

User: ray keene Wikipedia article: Raymond Keene

Last updated: 2024-09-06 02:36:52

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 77; games 1-25 of 1,905  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. N Totton vs Keene 0-1381960Bromley tourneyE00 Queen's Pawn Game
2. Keene vs J N Sugden  1-0241960Match game 8B90 Sicilian, Najdorf
3. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0261960Dulwich CollegeA12 English with b3
4. H T Jones vs Keene  0-1241960Exhibition gameC55 Two Knights Defense
5. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0191960Dulwich CollegeB98 Sicilian, Najdorf
6. J N Sugden vs Keene 0-1481960MatchD22 Queen's Gambit Accepted
7. J N Sugden vs Keene 0-1341960MatchD22 Queen's Gambit Accepted
8. J N Sugden vs Keene 0-1311960MatchC16 French, Winawer
9. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0261960Match game, ClaphamA12 English with b3
10. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0281960Match game 1, ClaphamB23 Sicilian, Closed
11. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0261961MatchD47 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
12. Keene vs L Bauer  1-0271961Clapham Common CCA70 Benoni, Classical with 7.Nf3
13. S Leff vs Keene 0-1361961Clapham Common CCA20 English
14. J N Sugden vs Keene 1-0261961MatchA55 Old Indian, Main line
15. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0341961Match game 21, Dulwich CollegeA17 English
16. J Regruto vs Keene  0-1331961Clapham Common CC ChampsA47 Queen's Indian
17. T D Baldwin vs Keene  0-1351961Olympia ExhibitionC17 French, Winawer, Advance
18. G K Sandiford vs Keene 0-1271961Dulwich CollegeB00 Uncommon King's Pawn Opening
19. A Ogus vs Keene  ½-½371961School matchC18 French, Winawer
20. G K Sandiford vs Keene  0-1521961Match, game 5B16 Caro-Kann, Bronstein-Larsen Variation
21. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0351961OlympiaA67 Benoni, Taimanov Variation
22. J N Sugden vs Keene 0-1301961Match game 6, BeckenhamE40 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3
23. Keene vs J N Sugden 1-0251961Match game 6, Bognor RegisD43 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
24. Keene vs Orly 1-0101961Clapham Common CCB02 Alekhine's Defense
25. J N Sugden vs Keene 0-1291961MatchE40 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3
 page 1 of 77; games 1-25 of 1,905  PGN Download
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Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 1 OF 402 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-30-03
Premium Chessgames Member
  Chessical: GM Raymond Keene is now better known as an author and businessman, but he had a powerful positional style based on Nimzowitsch combined with a tactician's eye for combinations.

The following are two excellent sacrificial games from his best period:

Keene vs Robatsch, 1971

Keene vs Vladimir Kovacevic, 1973

Nov-30-03  mack: Yes; he does a superb daily column in The Times and Sunday Times, well worth checking out. Currently he is running a series on world champions to have played London (the only city he believes to have seen every champion, unofficial champion and their contenders)
Feb-13-04  Stavrogin: his book applying samurai strategy on chess is great. Buy it and find out what colour your belt has!
May-03-04  mack: Despite all this, I respect him a great deal, if for nothing else but the fact he brought Kasparov and Short together in London in '93 (his newspaper column in exceptional too).
May-04-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: He does have a bad reputation, but in his time he could really play, and some of jis books are very good - nothing recent, sadly. His book on the 1978 WC match in Baguio was brilliant - a shame it was in descriptive! And I've heard his books on Nimzowitsch are excellent - but I don't like Nimzo so I wouldn't know.
May-04-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Benzol: <offramp> et al. Some of his books are excellent e.g. the one on Nimzowitsch, one with R E Coles on Staunton and the two books on the Pirc/Modern Defence complex. Some of his others, however, are potboilers, unfortunately.
May-04-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Yes, Benzol. We have both been generous...
When you call them 'potboilers' - in most cases you are being EXTREMELY generous!
May-04-04  WMD: <His book on the 1978 WC match in Baguio was brilliant - a shame it was in descriptive!> Actually the book was awful in both conception and execution. Korchnoi claimed Keene, his second during the match, broke his word in writing it.
May-04-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I suppose the book was produced quickly, but the analysis was good. Kortschnoi published a book called Anti-Chess about the match; he said that Keene had been a double-agent working for the Karpov camp, I have never seen or heard any actual evidence of that - has anyone else?
May-10-04  mack: <WMD> That's a bit harsh. You've got to bear in mind that he's not got an awful lot of room for his column yet publishes interesting games of historical importance on a daily basis, with *okay* analysis. The only thing you could level at him is (possibly) plagiarism, but even that's a murky issue when it comes to chess annotation. Coupled with the daily 'Winning Move' puzzles and I would say that it's the best chess column in the world (and no, that's not an exaggeration).
May-10-04  WMD: It's obvious we have nothing more to talk about.
May-13-04  Jim Bartle: That letter is a true WMD!

You could find a lot from John Donaldson in Inside Chess as well. Keene lifted pages of Donaldson's material for a book without attribution, then refused to face up to the obvious truth.

Jun-07-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: On the back cover of the book 'Clash of the Titans' by Ray Keene about the 1990 K v K match the blurb says, talking about Ray himself:

"Recently he played a key role in a celebrated murder investigation by solving a chess-like problem for the police."

Now just what is all that about?

Jun-07-04  maoam: <offramp> Presumably that's an extravagant way of saying that Keene won a game of Cluedo.
Jun-07-04  mack: You know what, I take it all back about Keene's excellent writing. On saturday he annotated one game thus:

"A stab from the rear finally makes everything clear".

Oh dear.

Jun-07-04  WMD: <"Recently he played a key role in a celebrated murder investigation by solving a chess-like problem for the police."

Now just what is all that about?>

I don't know the specifics of the case but Keene talked about it in his interview with Cathy Forbes, published in Chess Monthly in November 1990 (and reprinted in Forbes' Meet The Masters):

"The publicity in this case", declared GM Keene, speaking of his recent involvement as a code-breaking sleuth in a sensational murder hunt, "has increased the perception in the public mind of chess players as people with superhuman intelligence, which does nothing but good for chess."

"It was immense. I gave about 45 interviews to newspapers, magazines, television and radio. It was on Sky TV, ITN, CBS and CNN in the US, and CBC in Canada. I've had calls from Australia, New Zealand, France and Italy. It was on the front page of the Times and the Sunday Times for 4 days running. There was almost a full page in the Daily Mail, a large article in the Sun...absolutely endless. I did nothing but give interviews last week." (No body has yet been found and nobody prosecuted -CF).

Jun-07-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: <WMD> Thanks for that. Now we have our own mystery because I don't remember anything about that at all - and it sounds like a major event!
Jun-08-04  WMD: The Spring 2000 edition of Kingpin ran an article Raymundo contra Mundum in which further completely unwarranted and baseless accusations were levelled at poor Mr. Keene. As a display of sheer ingratitude, this from GM Larry Christiansen takes some beating:

"Keene was my second in Moscow 1982. Shall we say he didn't live up to expectations. He was paid $3,500 by the American Chess Foundation but he seemed more interested in making book deals than helping me. We were two weeks in Moscow. I had just one adjourned game...a very complex rook ending and he showed up inebriated and collapsed. Why me, God? I thought.'"

Was it Ray's fault that Christiansen didn't adjourn more games?

Jun-10-04  dr eales: IN DEFENCE OF RAY KEENE

For some time I have seen postings concerning the dispute between David Levy and Ray Keene. I have read these with interest, since as many readers will know, I was married to David for 17 years and I am Ray 's sister. I think those who attack Ray should have the courage to identify themselves and not hide behind pseudonyms.I also happen to believe that what looks like a concerted attack on Ray by a number of writers too scared to reveal their true identities is in direct violation of rule 3 of the posting guidelines prohibiting personal attacks!So-if we are into personal attacks readers might also like to know that David has a track record of sharp business practices.

There was the famous occasion , when he instructed his staff to remove valuable computers and other items from his offices at 39 Store Street London WC1 at midnight to avoid the bailiffs taking them.

On another occasion, when he was abroad on one of his numerous lengthy "business" trips the bailiffs actually called at our London home and I had to dissuade them from seizing my possessions to pay off David's bad debts.

I could give many other examples, but I know David well enough to inform your readers that his attacks on Ray are a means of deflecting attention from his own business failures. And by the way Jean Stean was Michael Stean’s mother not his wife!Do people also realise that Stean was contributing to a book behind Korchnoi's back which David Levy was involved in publishing.

You should be very careful about believing negative reports on anyone since what is published often turns out to have an ulterior motive!

with best wishes,

Dr Jacqueline Eales
formerly Dr Jacqueline Levy.

Jun-10-04  ughaibu: Unless Keene is a member there's no contravention of rule 3.
Jun-10-04  vonKrolock: <dr eales> may i register here that Raymond Keene's "The Evolution of Chess Opening Theory From Philidor to Kasparov" i one of the best Chess books available, and one of my favorites. ZK
Jun-10-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  ray keene: hi and greetings from member ray keene. thank you to all those who have looked at and enjoyed my games both wins and losses. however-having been alerted to the existence of this wonderful site i must say that some readers give far too much credence to jealous rivals-failed chess businessmen looking for someone to blame-people to whom i have had on occasion to refuse a job and embittered players who have peformed less well than they wanted and prefer to blame anyone but themselves!! i will name no names but i think its obvious to whom i refer. this site shd be about enjoying chess and its great games ,personalites and literature-not about raking up unsubstantiated accusations by those desperate to accuse others for their own failures and shortcomings. long live chess as the greatest test of human intellectual powers and personal qualities-all wrapped up in a game.oh and by the way-whats wrong with my note to kasparov -topalov in the times-a stab from the rear makes everything clear-this comments on kasparovs diabolical move Rd7 and in my opinion describes its lethal effect perfectly if -in an entirely unintentional and accidental rhyming couplet! all the best ray keene igm obe
Jun-10-04  WMD: Will the REAL Ray Keene please stand up? Do these imposters think we came down in the last shower?
Jun-10-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  ray keene: the real ray keene is here-perhaps if i tell you what i am going to write in the times on july 3 -which i doubt an imposter would be able to predict-you can abolish any lingering doubts.on saturday july 3 i shall be inviting readers to attend garry kasparovs signing session at the london chess centre-i shall be announcing the result of the times reader poll as to the 12 best players of all time and i shall be publishing a kasparov win from the armenia -world match which started today in moscow.if you live in the uk you can look in that days times. if not the times is available online.for those who cant wait until july 3 i shall be closing the times reader poll this monday-june 14 and inviting readers to use the last day to register their votes for the 12 greatest of all time by email.so long as votes reach me -i shall write- before midnight on monday june 14 they will be counted.ray keene
Jun-10-04  drukenknight: Someone call Ray Keene and tell him somone is reading is thoughts.
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