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TOURNAMENT STANDINGS
Hastings 1966/67 Tournament

Mikhail Botvinnik6.5/9(+5 -1 =3)[games]
Wolfgang Uhlmann5.5/9(+3 -1 =5)[games]
Michael Basman5/9(+3 -2 =4)[games]
Bojan Kurajica5/9(+3 -2 =4)[games]
Yuri Balashov5/9(+4 -3 =2)[games]
Jonathan Penrose4.5/9(+2 -2 =5)[games]
Henrique Mecking4/9(+3 -4 =2)[games]
Raymond Keene3.5/9(+1 -3 =5)[games]
William Hartston3/9(+0 -3 =6)[games]
Moshe Czerniak3/9(+2 -5 =2)[games]
*

Chessgames.com Chess Event Description
Hastings 1966/67

The 42nd Hastings Christmas Congress was held December 28, 1966 - January 6, 1967 in Hastings, England.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 Pts 1 Botvinnik * = = 1 1 1 1 0 = 1 6.5 2 Uhlmann = * 1 0 1 = = = = 1 5.5 3 Basman = 0 * 1 0 = 1 = 1 = 5.0 4 Kurajica 0 1 0 * = = 1 = = 1 5.0 5 Balashov 0 0 1 = * 1 0 1 1 = 5.0 6 Penrose 0 = = = 0 * 1 = = 1 4.5 7 Mecking 0 = 0 0 1 0 * 1 = 1 4.0 8 Keene 1 = = = 0 = 0 * = 0 3.5 9 Hartston = = 0 = 0 = = = * 0 3.0 10 Czerniak 0 0 = 0 = 0 0 1 1 * 3.0

<The Gods Smiled on Botvinnik>

by William Ritson-Morry

The Forty-second Hastings Christmas Congress disproved the old adage "Those whom the Gods love die young!" ex-World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik, now fifty-five and looking very fit indeed, won what he himself described as his luckiest tournament after some escapes which would have astounded even Houdini.

History does not always repeat itself. In 1934-35 Sir George Thomas defied the tradition that British Champions always do badly at Hastings by beating Botvinnik, Capablanca, and Lilienthal to tie for first with Euwe and Flohr and put the young Russian among the "also-ran." This time both the present British Champion and the rapidly improving Michael Basman could have won or shared first prize had they taken their respective chances to beat Botvinnik. A great British triumph was averted by a hairs-breadth solely because of the Maestro's remarkable recuperative powers. The cold figures of the score table tell little of the excitement of the final rounds.

History was made in other directions. There was the new venue at the Falaise Hall in the White Rock Gardens just behind the White Rock Pavilion, where I attended the first of my twenty-nine Christmas Congresses in 1931. That was the first of seventeen at the Pavilion to be followed by twelve at the Sun Lounge, but I think it is fair to say that, on the whole, the accommodation this time was the best we have ever had. Certainly the floor was a trifle noisy and sound tended to be magnified owing to the structure of he hall, but there was not the lack of ventilation of the windowless room at the Pavilion nor inadequacy of the heating in the Sun Lounge in cold weather. There was, moreover, room enough to cater for the largest entry ever received (231).

At 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday, December 28th, the Mayor extended his customary welcome to the competitors and called on the Brazilian Ambasador, Señor Jayme Sloan Chermont, formally to open the congress. The Mayor then made the draw for the first round of the Challengers' Tournament and the Ambassador made Botvinnik's first move. Play began just after 4 o'clock.

This year an impressive contingent of young players had been assembled. No less than six of the ten competitors in the Premier Section were twenty years old or less. H. Mecking, the Brazilian Champion, who created a sensation by his tie with Panno and J. Bolbochan in the South American Zonal Tourney, is only fourteen and the youngest player ever to participate in that section. Kurajica, the World Junior Champion, and Balashov, winner of last year's Challengers' Tourney, are but eighteen. Penrose seems almost a veteran with his thirty-two years by the side of Hartston and Keene (nineteen) and Basman (twenty)! The balance of experience and age was adjusted by the presence of grandmasters Botvinnik and Uhlmann and the Israeli master M. Czerniak. (1)

Two games in the 8th Round were played on Monday, January 2 instead of the original January 5 to enable Hartston and Keene to attend a reception at the Cuban Embassy on the Thursday. (2)

Prize money was as follows: 1st - £150; 2nd - £60; and 3rd-5th, £21 13s. 4d. (3)

Video: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/U...

(1) British Chess Magazine, February 1967, pp. 33-34.
(2) British Chess Magazine, February 1967, p. 39.
(3) British Chess Magazine, February 1967, p. 41.

Based on an original Collection by User: TheFocus.

Previous: Hastings (1965/66). Next: Hastings (1967/68)

 page 2 of 2; games 26-45 of 45  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
26. Keene vs B Kurajica  ½-½131967Hastings 1966/67A07 King's Indian Attack
27. W Hartston vs J Penrose  ½-½191967Hastings 1966/67A36 English
28. Botvinnik vs B Kurajica 1-0411967Hastings 1966/67E49 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Botvinnik System
29. J Penrose vs Mecking  1-0481967Hastings 1966/67C98 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin
30. W Hartston vs M Basman  0-1461967Hastings 1966/67A23 English, Bremen System, Keres Variation
31. M Czerniak vs Uhlmann  0-1711967Hastings 1966/67C01 French, Exchange
32. Keene vs Balashov 0-1401967Hastings 1966/67A14 English
33. M Basman vs J Penrose  ½-½481967Hastings 1966/67B82 Sicilian, Scheveningen
34. Balashov vs W Hartston  1-0641967Hastings 1966/67E91 King's Indian
35. B Kurajica vs M Czerniak  1-0601967Hastings 1966/67B06 Robatsch
36. Mecking vs Botvinnik 0-1421967Hastings 1966/67A88 Dutch, Leningrad, Main Variation with c6
37. Uhlmann vs Keene ½-½331967Hastings 1966/67A71 Benoni, Classical, 8.Bg5
38. Balashov vs Uhlmann  0-1411967Hastings 1966/67D86 Grunfeld, Exchange
39. M Czerniak vs Mecking 0-1661967Hastings 1966/67B58 Sicilian
40. Botvinnik vs M Basman ½-½761967Hastings 1966/67A29 English, Four Knights, Kingside Fianchetto
41. J Penrose vs Botvinnik 0-1301967Hastings 1966/67A42 Modern Defense, Averbakh System
42. Uhlmann vs W Hartston  ½-½411967Hastings 1966/67D27 Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical
43. B Kurajica vs Balashov  ½-½651967Hastings 1966/67B45 Sicilian, Taimanov
44. M Basman vs M Czerniak ½-½771967Hastings 1966/67E04 Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3
45. Mecking vs Keene 1-0371967Hastings 1966/67A71 Benoni, Classical, 8.Bg5
 page 2 of 2; games 26-45 of 45  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
Feb-08-17  Marmot PFL: Believe it or not Mikhail Botvinnik was not the oldest player at Hastings, Czerniak was one year older.

Botvinnik at fifty-five was giving twenty-some years to Uhlmann, over forty to Mecking, yet still wins more games than anyone else.

Apr-08-21  vonKrolock: Footage showing the participants during (allegedly) a 'warming-up' session; surely identified from 3:06 appears Botvinnik vs Balashov, Keene vs Basman, Uhlmann vs Kurajica, Czerniak vs Mecking. (Maybe Penrose and Hartston - the remaining duo - are shown from 2:50 in this newsreel's footage <"Boy Wonder" Challenges The Masters"> *this title may refers to Mecking who at fourteen was the youngest participant).

On the same almost five minutes video we see Flohr and Capablanca during a (four handed!?) simul in Czechoslovakia; then Elaine Saunders playing one game blindfolded; more on Hastings: Gaprindashvili, Littlewood etc

LINK https://youtu.be/vQO-69mmm-s

Apr-08-21
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: I'm sure Paul Keres was gratified to be described as a "Russian sportswriter" accompanied by video of someone else (anyone know who?) (~2:20).
Apr-09-21  Retireborn: <keypusher> Looks like Gheorghiu to me.
Jun-06-21
Premium Chessgames Member
  kingscrusher: Great tournament result for Basman :)

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