page 1 of 11; games 1-25 of 256 |
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Game |
| Result | Moves |
Year | Event/Locale | Opening |
1. E Tate vs Alburt |
| ½-½ | 34 | 1992 | New York Open | A00 Uncommon Opening |
2. Y Nesterov vs Alburt |
| ½-½ | 17 | 1992 | New York Open | A45 Queen's Pawn Game |
3. R La Flair vs Alburt |
| 0-1 | 43 | 1992 | New York Open | A57 Benko Gambit |
4. Alburt vs V Fedorov |
| ½-½ | 57 | 1992 | New York Open | A70 Benoni, Classical with 7.Nf3 |
5. Alburt vs A Lesiege |
| 1-0 | 42 | 1992 | New York Open | E75 King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line |
6. Alburt vs Dlugy |
| 0-1 | 52 | 1992 | New York Open | A06 Reti Opening |
7. Alburt vs Shamkovich |
| ½-½ | 28 | 1992 | New York Open | A09 Reti Opening |
8. M Ashley vs P Moulin |
| 1-0 | 52 | 1992 | New York Open | B90 Sicilian, Najdorf |
9. M Ashley vs G Russek Libni |
| 1-0 | 31 | 1992 | New York Open | C01 French, Exchange |
10. M Ashley vs P Wolff |
| ½-½ | 54 | 1992 | New York Open | B89 Sicilian |
11. Ehlvest vs M Ashley |
| 1-0 | 87 | 1992 | New York Open | A04 Reti Opening |
12. Kaidanov vs M Ashley |
 | 1-0 | 31 | 1992 | New York Open | A62 Benoni, Fianchetto Variation |
13. D Poldauf vs M Ashley |
 | 0-1 | 46 | 1992 | New York Open | A36 English |
14. J Breider vs M Ashley |
| 0-1 | 29 | 1992 | New York Open | A07 King's Indian Attack |
15. A Bisguier vs Y Lapshun |
| ½-½ | 50 | 1992 | New York Open | D94 Grunfeld |
16. R Berube vs A Bisguier |
| ½-½ | 56 | 1992 | New York Open | C97 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin |
17. B Marinello vs A Bisguier |
| 0-1 | 26 | 1992 | New York Open | C67 Ruy Lopez |
18. J Bonin vs I Ibragimov |
| ½-½ | 40 | 1992 | New York Open | D27 Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical |
19. J Bonin vs S Sandager |
 | 0-1 | 54 | 1992 | New York Open | E97 King's Indian |
20. J Bonin vs S Greanias |
| 0-1 | 38 | 1992 | New York Open | D85 Grunfeld |
21. W Shipman vs J Bonin |
| 0-1 | 60 | 1992 | New York Open | D23 Queen's Gambit Accepted |
22. N Rogers vs J Bonin |
| 1-0 | 48 | 1992 | New York Open | C11 French |
23. J Bonin vs A B Carlin |
| ½-½ | 38 | 1992 | New York Open | E11 Bogo-Indian Defense |
24. Dzindzichashvili vs A Shneider |
| 0-1 | 33 | 1992 | New York Open | A04 Reti Opening |
25. A Wojtkiewicz vs Dzindzichashvili |
 | ½-½ | 12 | 1992 | New York Open | A37 English, Symmetrical |
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page 1 of 11; games 1-25 of 256 |
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Oct-09-22
 | | Stonehenge: The following games do *not* belong to this tournament: (other databases do have them as from the New York Open), maybe there are more: New York (1992). |
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Oct-09-22 | | stone free or die: <stone> (the original btw) - How did you come to exclude those games?
I assume you weeded them out from what <CG> included by using the USCF xtab and noting non-pairings. Is that correct?
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Oct-09-22
 | | Stonehenge: Yup, correct. |
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Oct-10-22 | | Granny O Doul: A note on lingo: "Rapids", short for "rapid transit chess", is what both the Manhattan (rest in passing) and the Marshall Chess clubs have, for decades, called their regular blitz action. The time controls have varied, from ten seconds per move in the old, old days, to g/7, to g/5, to, I think, 3/2 in modern times. I personally use the word "rapids" to denote that it took place in a tournament, while "blitz" is just fast chess; maybe not a tournament and maybe not equal time for each player. Of the two best-represented players in the not-the-New York Open games in Stonehenge's link, Henley has long been a contributor of rapids games to various chess publications, while Zilbermintz has been as dutiful preserving his blitz games, especially in the gambit openings he favors. |
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Oct-10-22 | | stone free or die: Thanks for the confirmation <stone>. * * * * *
<Granny> weren't the original transit games played without every board having a clock? I thought there was a style of rapid game where there was a referee calling out the time throughout the game. The players had to move at these regular intervals. This allowed a large number of simultaneous rapid games to be played when there weren't enough clocks to go around. Am I mistaken in this impression?
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Oct-11-22 | | ghost5: Yes, rapid transit has been around for some time (e.g. https://spectatorarchive.library.co...). Reuben Fine was fearsome at 10 second/move rapid transit, which was the preferred format for early US Speed Championships, IIRC. I'd have to dig through the old Chess Life/Chess Review PDFs for specific citations. I suspect older clocks were not meant to take the pounding of blitz play, unlike the BHB models we used. Those things were incredibly robust. |
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Jul-04-23 | | Granny O Doul: Before my time but I believe they used clocks with a bell that rang after ten seconds, and maybe another bell rang after three more seconds? I understand that some players regularly skated very close to the edge, knowing the referees were reluctant to forfeit on border-line calls. Later, after five-minute chess had taken over, they did manufacture special clocks just for blitz, on which the hand pointed straight down at the start of a five-minute game, and so moved at six times the speed of a regular clock. As I remember, these clocks were also about six times as likely to break. |
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Jul-04-23
 | | paulalbert: Many years ago I played at the Manhattan in a rapid transit tournament. They had a loud buzzer that sounded every ten seconds. It sometimes became confusing when players moved well before the 10 second buzzer went off, particularly in the opening stage when both players banged out the first few moves. I still have my original mechanical chess clock ( bought about 70 years ago ) that had an opening for a small battery. It could be set so a buzzer went off either at 5 seconds or 10 seconds intervals for rapid transit play. |
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