chessgames.com
Members · Prefs · Laboratory · Collections · Openings · Endgames · Sacrifices · History · Search Kibitzing · Kibitzer's Café · Chessforums · Tournament Index · Players · Kibitzing
 
21 B Club Stanford Dove
Compiled by fredthebear
--*--

"Chess first of all teaches you to be objective." — Alexander Alekhine

"Among a great many other things that chess teaches you is to control the initial excitement you feel when you see something that looks good. It trains you to think before grabbing and to think just as objectively when you're in trouble." — Stanley Kubrick

"Chess helps you to concentrate, improve your logic. It teaches you to play by the rules, take responsibility for your actions, how to problem solve in an uncertain environment." — Garry Kasparov

"Daring ideas are like chessmen moved forward. They may be beaten, but they may start a winning game." — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

"To avoid losing a piece, many a person has lost the game." — Savielly Tartakower

"Battles are won by slaughter and maneuver. The greater the general, the more he contributes in maneuver, the less he demands in slaughter." ― Winston S. Churchill

"In chess, as in life, a man is his own most dangerous opponent." ― Vasily Smyslov

"I always plan for long-term; life to me is a never-ending chess match." ― James D. Wilson

"Tis action moves the world....in the game of chess, mind that: ye cannot leave your men to stand unmoving on the board and hope to win. A soldier must first step upon the battlefield if does mean to cross it." ― Susanna Kearsley, The Winter Sea

"It's an entire world of just 64 squares. I feel safe in it. I can control it; I can dominate it. And it's predictable. So, if I get hurt, I only have myself to blame." ― Walter Tevis, The Queen's Gambit

"In life, as in chess, it is always better to analyze one's motives and intentions." ― Vladimir Nabokov

"Never play to win a pawn while your development is yet unfinished!" ― Aron Nimzowitsch

"Check your moves well, because it can
cost one pawn or losing a lot of just from three moves!" ― Deyth Banger

"What is a weak pawn? A pawn that is exposed to attack and also difficult to defend is a weak pawn. There are several varieties: isolated, doubled, too advanced, retarded backward." ― Samuel Reshevsky, Art of Positional Play (Note: A weak pawn cannot be defended by another pawn; it's protection must come from a piece of the back rank that might rather be more aggressively active.)

"The game gives us a satisfaction that Life denies us. And for the Chess player, the success which crowns his work, the great dispeller of sorrows, is named 'combination'." ― Emanuel Lasker

"The move is there, but you must see it." ― Savielly Tartakower

"Of course, errors are not good for a chess game, but errors are unavoidable and in any case, a game without errors, or as they say 'flawless game' is colorless." ― Mikhail Tal

"Whereas a novice makes moves until he gets checkmated (proof), a Grand Master realizes 20 moves in advance that it's futile to continue playing (conceptualizing)." ― Bill Gaede

"Chess is not a game, it's a war." ― Joshua the poetic penguin

"The King in chess is indeed a symbol of unity and wholeness and the other pieces are not separate entities but rather parts of "the One Thing", as Campbell put it." ― Roumen Bezergianov, Character Education with Chess

"In chess, without the king, the other pieces would all be "dead", so their existence is supported by the king, but they need to serve the king with their capacity for action in order to have a good game." ― Roumen Bezergianov

"...That is my biography from the first day of my chess life to the present.

JOURNALIST. And your plans?
PLAYER. To play!"
― Mikhail Tal, The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal

"There had been a few times over the past year when she felt like this, with her mind not only dizzied but nearly terrified by the endlessness of chess." ― Walter Tevis, The Queen's Gambit

"Но человек существо легкомысленное и неблаговидное и, может быть, подобно шахматному игроку, любит только один процесс достижения цели, а не самую цель." ― Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Notes from Underground Russian

"But man is a frivolous and unseemly creature and, perhaps, like a chess player, loves only one process of achieving a goal, and not the goal itself." ― Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Notes from Underground English translation

"Le jeu dechec, say the French, n'est pas assez jeu: That is, chess games and others of the same importance, are not Spill, but a Study. Such may be presented to those who have nothing to order, and who fear, out of idleness, for the rust of Hiernen, but not industrious people who seek recreation in Spill and Company." ― Ludvig Holberg, Epistles

"To refer to the oft mooted question, "Which piece is stronger, the Bishop or the Knight?" it is clear that the value of the Bishop undergoes greater changes than that of the Knight." ― Emanuel Lasker

"An advantage could consist not only in a single important advantage but also in a multitude of insignificant advantages." ― Emanuel Lasker, "Lasker's Manual of Chess", p.464

"Fancy what a game of chess would be if all the chessmen had passions and intellects, more or less small and cunning; if you were not only uncertain about your adversary's men, but a little uncertain also about your own; if your knight could shuffle himself on to a new square by the sly; if your bishop, at your castling, could wheedle your pawns out of their places; and if your pawns, hating you because they are pawns, could make away from their appointed posts that you might get checkmate on a sudden. You might be the longest-headed of deductive reasoners, and yet you might be beaten by your own pawns. You would be especially likely to be beaten, if you depended arrogantly on your mathematical imagination, and regarded your passionate pieces with contempt. Yet this imaginary chess is easy compared with the game a man has to play against his fellow-men with other fellow-men for his instruments." ― George Eliot, Felix Holt: The Radical

"She had heard of the genetic code that could shape an eye or hand from passing proteins. Deoxyribonucleic acid. It contained the entire set of instructions for constructing a respiratory system and a digestive one, as well as the grip of an infant's hand. Chess was like that. The geometry of a position could be read and reread and not exhausted of possibility. You saw deeply into the layer of it, but there was another layer beyond that, and another, and another." ― Walter Tevis, The Queen's Gambit

"Truth derives its strength not so much from itself as from the brilliant contrast it makes with what is only apparently true. This applies especially to Chess, where it is often found that the profoundest moves do not much startle the imagination." ― Emanuel Lasker, Common Sense in Chess

"Chess, like love, is infectious at any age - Salo Flohr" ― Irving Chernev, The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played: 62 Masterpieces of Chess Strategy

"Life is short, precious, and should not be wasted. Everyone has a chance at it. We're equals after all. There are no pawns, no kings, and no queens.
We're all humans and we all have the same value." ― Cristelle Comby, Blind Chess

"Life is a mysterious and witty intermingling of fate and events." ― Alexandra Kosteniuk

"Zugzwang. It's when you have no good moves. But you still have to move." ― Michael Chabon

"Everyone wants to be wanted and if all people wait for someone else to invest in them, the world will be stuck in an eternal stalemate: nobody moves and nobody wins." ― Laura L.

"У нас есть шахматы с собой, Шекспир и Пушкин, с нас довольно." ― Vladimir Nabokov, Стихотворения Russian

"We have chess with us,
Shakespeare and Pushkin, we've had enough." English translation ― Vladimir Nabokov, Poems

"So if you think that when you are better, it means that you can smash ahead and mate the guy, you are wrong, that is not what better means. What better means is that your position has the potential, if played correctly, to turn out well. So do not think that when you are better and when you are attacking that you can just force mate. That is not what it is about. Often the way to play best, the way to play within the position, is to maintain it." ― Josh Waitzkin

"I put my hand on a bishop, my would be assassin, and thought of my father's heights when he won, how he galloped around. The depths of his despair at losing, I expected, would be equal to the peaks. He'd mope about, his face fallen and miserable, his posture stooped as if his back ached. I took my hand from the piece and leaned back in deliberation." ― Rion Amilcar Scott, Insurrections: Stories

"We are men who find chess fascinating. Did you expect our lives to be secretly interesting?" ― Noah Boyd, Agent X

"I keep on fighting as long as my opponent can make a mistake." ― Emanuel Lasker

"You need to realize something if you are ever to succeed at chess,' she said, as if Nora had nothing bigger to think about. ‘And the thing you need to realize is this: the game is never over until it is over. It isn't over if there is a single pawn still on the board. If one side is down to a pawn and a king, and the other side has every player, there is still a game. And even if you were a pawn – maybe we all are – then you should remember that a pawn is the most magical piece of all. It might look small and ordinary but it isn't. Because a pawn is never just a pawn. A pawn is a queen-in-waiting. All you need to do is find a way to keep moving forward. One square after another. And you can get to the other side and unlock all kinds of power.'

Mrs. Elm"
― Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

"and a most curious country it was. There were a number of tiny little brooks running straight across it from side to side, and the ground between was divided up into squares by a number of little green hedges, that reached from brook to brook. I declare it's marked out just like a large chessboard!' Alice said at last. 'There ought to be some men moving about somewhere--and so there are!' she added in a tone of delight, and her heart began to beat quick with excitement as she went on. 'It's a great huge game of chess that's being played--all over the world--if this is the world at all, you know. Oh, what fun it is!" ― Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland / Through the Looking-Glass

"Grandmaster games are said to begin with novelty, which is the first move of the game that exits the book. It could be the fifth, it could be the thirty-fifth. We think about a chess game as beginning with move one and ending with checkmate. But this is not the case. The games begins when it gets out of book, and it end when it goes into book..And this is why Game 6 between Garry Kasparov and Deep Blue didn't count...Tripping and falling into a well on your way to the field of battle is not the same thing as dying in it...Deep Blue is only itself out of book; prior to that it is nothing. Just the ghosts of the game itself." ― Brian Christian, The Most Human Human: What Talking with Computers Teaches Us About What It Means to Be Alive

"Deep Blue didn't win by being smarter than a human; it won by being millions of times faster than a human. Deep Blue had no intuition. An expert human player looks at a board position and immediately sees what areas of play are most likely to be fruitful or dangerous, whereas a computer has no innate sense of what is important and must explore many more options. Deep Blue also had no sense of the history of the game, and didn't know anything about its opponent. It played chess yet didn't understand chess, in the same way a calculator performs arithmetic bud doesn't understand mathematics." ― Jeff Hawkins, On Intelligence

10 Ways a Computer Betters Your Chess
#1 Efficient and thorough opening preparation. #2 Prepare against a single opponent by viewing past games in database.
#3 Analyzing your own games with a silicon grandmaster. #4 Learning chess through a computer chess tutorial. #5 Playing games against a grandmaster opponent. #6 Reading chess books no longer in print in digital format. #7 Looking at games from any player, tournament, or opening. #8 Researching on the internet any facet of chess. #9 Storing or web publishing your own games for posterity. #10 Get a game with a human opponent of your level, anytime, anywhere through an internet chess interface.
- Eric Hicks

"You have good instincts, trust them. Thinking through every step is fine if you're playing chess, but this isn't chess." ― Rick Yancey, The 5th Wave

"I believe that, not only in chess, but in life in general, people place too much stock in ratings – they pay attention to which TV shows have the highest ratings, how many friends they have on Facebook, and it's funny. The best shows often have low ratings and it is impossible to have thousands of real friends." ― Boris Gelfand

"I remember, back in college, how many possibilities life seemed to hold. Variations. I knew, of course, that I'd only live one of my fantasy lives, but for a few years there, I had them all, all the branches, all the variations. One day I could dream of being a novelist, one day I would be a journalist covering Washington, the next - oh, I don't know, a politician, a teacher, whatever. My dream lives. Full of dream wealth and dream women. All the things I was going to do, all the places I was going to live. They were mutually exclusive, of course, but since I didn't have any of them, in a sense I had them all. Like when you sit down at a chessboard to begin a game, and you don't know what the opening will be. Maybe it will be a Sicilian, or a French, or a Ruy Lopez. They all coexist, all the variations, until you start making the moves. You always dream of winning, no matter what line you choose, but the variations are still … different." … "Once the game begins, the possibilities narrow and narrow and narrow, the other variations fade, and you're left with what you've got - a position half of your own making, and half chance, as embodied by that stranger across the board. Maybe you've got a good game, or maybe you're in trouble, but in any case there's just that one position to work from. The might-have-beens are gone." ― George R.R. Martin, Dreamsongs, Volume II

"Life is a lot like chess," he said.

"All a matter of choices. Every move you face choices, and every choice leads to different variations. It branches and then branches again, and sometimes the variation you pick isn't as good as it looked, isn't sound at all. But you don't know that until your game is over."

(Unsound Variations)"
― George R.R. Martin, Dreamsongs, Volume II

<"Papi taught me every piece has its own space.

Papi taught me every piece
moves in its own way.

Papi taught me every piece
has its own purpose.

The squares do not overlap.
& neither do the pieces.

The only time two pieces
stand in the same square

is the second before one
is being taken & replaced."
― Elizabeth Acevedo, Clap When You Land>

"Life is an exchange; you'd think a chess player would know that." ― Elizabeth Acevedo, Clap When You Land

"In life, as in chess, learning must be constant - both new things and fresh ways of learning them. The process will invariably involve a certain degree of unlearning, and possessing the readiness to that is utterly important. If your way of doing things isn't working, clinging to your conclusions is only going to hold you back. You have to get to the root of a snag in order to make a breakthrough, because it's possible that what you thought you knew isn't actually the way it is. Unlearning is perhaps the hardest thing to do, but it is a necessity if growth and success are your goals." ― Vishwanathan Anand

"World-class chess players, in addition to being considered awesomely smart, are generally assumed to have superhuman memories, and with good reason. Champions routinely put on exhibitions in which they play lesser opponents while blindfolded; they hold the entire chessboard in their heads. Some of these exhibitions strike the rest of us as simply beyond belief. The Czech master Richard Reti once played twenty-nine blindfolded games simultaneously. (Afterward he left his briefcase at the exhibition site and commented on what a poor memory he had.)" ― Geoff Colvin, Talent is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers from Everybody Else

* Alpha Glossary: https://www.chess-poster.com/englis...

* Lasker's Opening Rules: http://chessskill.blogspot.com/2013...

* Author Tim Sawyer explains openings: http://sawyerbdg.blogspot.com/

* Alekhine's Defense, Krejcik Variation: Opening Explorer

* Australian Interschools links/tournament guide: http://www.actjcl.org.au/actjcl/dow...

* Adolf Anderssen miniatures: http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches...

* Game Collection: Alekhine vs Bogolubov
search "Alekhine vs Bogolubov"

* Comprehensive 1929: Game Collection: Alekhine-Bogoljubov 1929 ARCHIVE

* The BCF: https://boylstonchess.org/

* The CCC: https://www.chichess.org/

* Chicago Chess Blog: http://chicagochess.blogspot.com/se...

Many club links on the lower right column; scroll down.

* Chess Mafia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLa...

* chessbrah streamer: https://www.twitch.tv/chessbrah

* Chesswarehouse: https://chesswarehouse.com/

* Chess in old newspapers: https://www.schach-chess.com/chess-...

* Cool Math/Board Games: https://www.coolmathgames.com/1-boa...

* Deadly Battery: https://www.chess.com/article/view/...

* Fried Fox is awful: https://allchessopenings.blogspot.c...

* ICA Youth Resources: https://www.il-chess.org/index.php?...

* Kingpin magazine: https://www.kingpinchess.net/

* Reasonable book choices: https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell...

* Ten books for aspiring masters: http://chessskill.blogspot.com/2023...

* More teenage tagging: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pU9...

* Bobby Fischer playing White against the Sicilian: http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches...

* Wonders and Curiosities: Game Collection: Wonders and Curiosities of Chess (Chernev)

* Walter Browne, American Champ: Game Collection: Six by Mr. Six Time

* 1610 Again: Games Like Polerio vs Domenico, 1610

* Vienna 1903 KG games: Game Collection: Vienna 1903

* Book: Game Collection: Dismantling the Sicilian (Jesus de la Villa)

* Fried Fox is awful: https://allchessopenings.blogspot.c...

* GK: Game Collection: Kasparov - The Sicilian Sheveningen

* LG - White wins: Game Collection: Latvian Gambit-White wins

* GPS: https://chesstier.com/grand-prix-at...

* Uncommon KP Gambits: Game Collection: Unusual Gambits

* The original AA minis: https://www.chessgames.com/perl/che...

* More AA minis: http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches...

* Brilliancies: Game Collection: brilliacies

* C-K Examples: Game Collection: Caro Kann Lines

* Chess Records: https://timkr.home.xs4all.nl/record...

"No matter what happens, no matter how far you seem to be away from where you want to be, never stop believing that you will somehow make it." ― Brad Gast

FTB says "Hopin' alone won't make it happen. You have to take action toward your goal, make commitments and meet deadlines! The world isn't going to hand you your dream. It's your dedicated actions that make it happen one day at a time. Decide wisely, be certain your dream is worthwhile, suitable for you'll pay a price to reach it. You have to go get it, pursue it step-by-step, train, work for it, sacrifice other opportunities, persist, and persevere. There will be a hundred reasons and a thousand opportunities to quit. Fight them all off. No excuses. No quit. Always keep the finish line in mind, and stride forward."

The Mountain In Labour

A mountain was in travail pang;
The country with her clamour rang.
Out ran the people all, to see,
Supposing that the birth would be
A city, or at least a house.
It was a mouse!

In thinking of this fable,
Of story feigned and false,
But meaning veritable,
My mind the image calls
Of one who writes, "The war I sing
Which Titans waged against the Thunder-king."
As on the sounding verses ring,
What will be brought to birth?
Why, dearth.

Riddle Question: What is a ghost's favorite fruit?

Dionysius1: I had basil on the pub's potage du jour yesterday. Soup herb!

Riddle Answer: BOO-BERRIES!

The Blossom
by William Blake

Merry, merry sparrow!
Under leaves so green
A happy blossom
Sees you, swift as arrow,
Seek your cradle narrow,
Near my bosom.
Pretty, pretty robin!
Under leaves so green
A happy blossom
Hears you sobbing, sobbing,
Pretty, pretty robin,
Near my bosom.

A piece of cake: https://blindpigandtheacorn.com/che...

Dover publishers have downsized their chess book offerings as decades have passed, but many of the all-time classics written in English descriptive notation remain available at affordable prices: https://doverpublications.ecomm-sea... Those who pitch their tent on the Rogoff page having no use for classic chess books can find adult coloring books at Dover publishers. It's a great, versatile publishing company!

For club players, I would recommend "Chess Master vs. Chess Amateur" by Max Euwe and Walter Meiden (as well as Max Euwe's "The Logical Approach to Chess," "Strategy & Tactics in Chess," and "The Road to Chess Mastery" from other book dealers, likely used) before reading James Mason's "The Art of Chess" which is 340 pages! Mason does not spoon-feed the reader as much as Euwe does IMHO.

Those readers demanding an algebraic notation offering from Dover Publishers would do well to buy any book by Tim Harding. Also, if memory serves correctly, there are two tournament books published in algebraic notation: Carlsbad International Chess Tournament 1929 by Aron Nimzovich, translated by Jim Marfia (30 games) and Zurich International Chess Tournament, 1953 by David Bronstein (210 games).

The sign says "free shipping" on orders over $25.00. Several chess offerings are available as e-books. You can bundle -- get both versions and save a bunch. For those wondering about adult coloring e-books, well... I'll have to get back to you on that one, the pace of new technology being what it is.

"Believe in yourself. Have faith in your abilities. Without humble but reasonable confidence in your own powers, you cannot be successful or happy." ― Norman Vincent Peale

7zapolish eza chess puzzles 4dvncd playrz like Zenon Franco remote sat kidimous watchn bside Dzagnidze right side South of Seville.

* Mr. Harvey's Puzzle Challenge: https://wtharvey.com/

Mar-21-23 WTHarvey:
There once was a website named WTHarvey,
Where chess puzzles did daily delay,
The brain-teasers so tough,
They made us all huff and puff,
But solving them brought us great satisfaction today.

There once was a website named WTHarvey
Where chess puzzles were quite aplenty
With knight and rook and pawn
You'll sharpen your brain with a yawn
And become a master of chess entry

There once was a site for chess fun,
Wtharvey.com was the chosen one,
With puzzles galore,
It'll keep you in store,
For hours of brain-teasing, none done.

There once was a website named WTHarvey,
Where chess puzzles were posted daily,
You'd solve them with glee,
And in victory,
You'd feel like a true chess prodigy!

Actions speak louder than words.

Mark 3:25 And if a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand.

"An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind." — Mahatma Gandhi

"If you are patient in one moment of anger, you will escape a hundred days of sorrow." ― Ancient Chinese Proverb

Apr-27-23 WTHarvey:
There once was a chess player keen
He studied each move he had seen
With tactics so clever
His games were a pleasure
His passion for chess was extreme!
There once was a chess player bright
Whose moves were a beautiful sight
He never lost hope
Or his skill, he would mope
For he believed in fighting the good fight.

There once was a chess player so keen
Whose passion for the game was extreme
He'd study and strategize
And often would visualize
His victories, in every daydream.

"Chess is played with the mind and not with the hands." ― Renaud & Kahn

"Chess is a terrific way for kids to build self-image and self-esteem." ― Saudin Robovic

"Chess is a sport. The main object in the game of chess remains the achievement of victory." – Max Euwe

"Life is like a chess. If you lose your queen, you will probably lose the game." – Being Caballero

"If you wish to succeed, you must brave the risk of failure." — Garry Kasparov

"You win some, you lose some, you wreck some." — Dale Earnhardt

"In life, unlike chess the game continues after checkmate." ― Isaac Asimov

"The Holy Scriptures...can alone secure to society order and peace, and to our courts of justice and constitutions of government, purity, stability, and usefulness.....Bibles are strong entrenchments. Where they abound, men cannot pursue wicked courses and at the same time enjoy quiet conscience." ― James McHenry

"It has always seemed to me that any man is a better man for being a hunter. This sport confers a certain constant alertness, and develops a certain ruggedness of character....Moreover, it allies us to the pioneer past. In a deep sense, this great land of ours was won for us by hunters." ― Archibald Rutledge

<Pastime with good company I love and shall, until I die.
Grudge who list, but none deny!
So God be pleased, thus live will I.
― Henry VIII of England>

"It is the duty of every man, as far as his ability extends, to detect and expose delusion and error." ― Thomas Paine

A GAME OF CHESS
by T S (Thomas Stearns) Eliot

The Chair she sat in, like a burnished throne, Glowed on the marble, where the glass
Held up by standards wrought with fruited vines From which a golden Cupidon peeped out 80 (Another hid his eyes behind his wing)
Doubled the flames of sevenbranched candelabra Reflecting light upon the table as
The glitter of her jewels rose to meet it,
From satin cases poured in rich profusion;
In vials of ivory and coloured glass
Unstoppered, lurked her strange synthetic perfumes, Unguent, powdered, or liquid— troubled, confused And drowned the sense in odours; stirred by the air That freshened from the window, these ascended 90 In fattening the prolonged candle-flames,
Flung their smoke into the laquearia,
Stirring the pattern on the coffered ceiling.

Huge sea-wood fed with copper
Burned green and orange, framed by the coloured stone, In which sad light a carved dolphin swam.

Above the antique mantel was displayed
As though a window gave upon the sylvan scene
The change of Philomel, by the barbarous king
So rudely forced; yet there the nightingale 100 Filled all the desert with inviolable voice
And still she cried, and still the world pursues, "Jug Jug" to dirty ears.

And other withered stumps of time
Were told upon the walls; staring forms
Leaned out, leaning, hushing the room enclosed.

Footsteps shuffled on the stair.

Under the firelight, under the brush, her hair Spread out in fiery points
Glowed into words, then would be savagely still. 110

"My nerves are bad to-night.
Yes, bad.
Stay with me.

"Speak to me.
Why do you never speak.
Speak.

"What are you thinking of? What thinking? What? "I never know what you are thinking.
Think.
"

I think we are in rats' alley
Where the dead men lost their bones.

"What is that noise?"
The wind under the door.

"What is that noise now? What is the wind doing?" Nothing again nothing. 120
"Do "You know nothing? Do you see nothing? Do you remember "Nothing?"

I remember
Those are pearls that were his eyes.

"Are you alive, or not? Is there nothing in your head?" But O O O O that Shakespeherian Rag—
It's so elegant
So intelligent 130 "What shall I do now? What shall I do?"
I shall rush out as I am, and walk the street
"With my hair down, so.
What shall we do to-morrow?
"What shall we ever do?"
The hot water at ten.

And if it rains, a closed car at four.

And we shall play a game of chess,
Pressing lidless eyes and waiting for a knock upon the door.

When Lil's husband got demobbed, I said—
I didn't mince my words, I said to her myself, 140 HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
Now Albert's coming back, make yourself a bit smart.

He'll want to know what you done with that money he gave you To get yourself some teeth.
He did, I was there.

You have them all out, Lil, and get a nice set, He said, I swear, I can't bear to look at you.

And no more can't I, I said, and think of poor Albert, He's been in the army four years, he wants a good time, And if you don't give it him, there's others will, I said.

Oh is there, she said.
Something o' that, I said.
150
Then I'll know who to thank, she said, and give me a straight look.

HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
If you don't like it you can get on with it, I said.

Others can pick and choose if you can't.

But if Albert makes off, it won't be for lack of telling.

You ought to be ashamed, I said, to look so antique.

(And her only thirty-one.
) I can't help it, she said, pulling a long face, It's them pills I took, to bring it off, she said.

(She's had five already, and nearly died of young George. ) 160
The chemist said it would be alright, but I've never been the same.

You are a proper fool, I said.

Well, if Albert won't leave you alone, there it is, I said, What you get married for if you don't want children? HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
Well, that Sunday Albert was home, they had a hot gammon, And they asked me in to dinner, to get the beauty of it hot— HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
Goonight Bill.
Goonight Lou.
Goonight May.
Goonight.
170
Ta ta.
Goonight.
Goonight.

Good night, ladies, good night, sweet ladies, good night, good night.

"Champions keep playing until they get it right." ― Billie Jean King

"You must play boldly to win." ― Arnold Palmer

Those who'll play with cats must expect to be scratched. ~ Miguel De Cervantes

"What we play is life." ― Louis Armstrong

...an old joke found in the book "Chess with the Masters: 100 Classic Games 1834-1962" by Martin Beheim, Arco Publishing Company, 1963.

Burletzki (a coffee house player) arranged a 6-game match with a German master named Kohlein. Kohlein won the first game. Burletzki said "I made a silly mistake". Kohlein won the 2nd game. "You can't be expected to win every game". Kohlein won game 3. "I'm not in form today". Kohlein made it 4 in a row. "He's not a bad player". Kohlein picked up win number 5. "I think I underestimated my opponent". And after Kohlein won game 6, Burletzki admitted "I believe the man may well be my equal".

The Devil tempts all men... but some men tempt the Devil - Arab proverb

"I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy." ― Rabindranath Tagore

<"The Chess Players" was a film written and directed by Satyajit Ray in 1977, based on Munshi Premchand's short story of the same name. Two chess-mad noblemen, Mir and Mirza, are so obsessed with their game that they refuse to notice the turmoil of the British incursions seething around them, not to mention the disintegration of their marriages. Despite these catastrophes, Ray's touch in the film is light, as is Howard Altmann's in the poem of the same name.>

worbdftun:
R18 Editor Steinitz perjury iz worse than danidze surgery becuz an op fixes yu up ore downtown Freddie Browning bolt-action 4gets thur a tension 4honorable mention but most women donut.

Sep-07-24 Cecco: According to this engine the much criticized 34. ... h2 is the best move. Sep-07-24 offramp: I was wondering about all the chess engines that disappeared from our world. What happened to Mephisto? I used to play that board/set in a London department store.

Gandalf has gone. Shredder has gone. Rybka went suddenly down the toilet. AlphaZero is not commercially available; it probably gave up chess to mine bitcoins. Bee-nado is coming!

The best-known engines now seem to be Fritz and Stockfish.

I often have a look at TCEC, which is always interesting. It's the chess version of <RobotWars>.

Sep-07-24 Muttley101: <offramp> if you're unaware of the story of Rybka, the ICCA (or whatever they are/were called), claimed that Rybka contained large sections of code copied from Oakfoam, and banned it from computer chess competitions. If I recall correctly, Chessbase took on the developers and incorporated Rybka's techniques into Fritz. The DCNN that underpins Alphazero was bought by Google and is being used to investigate all sorts of research problems, for example: drug design, protein folding. Not hard to find information, amazing stuff. In any case, Leela (amongst others) used the DCNN architecture (Google published numerous articles on techniques, they are wonderful), and the recent work on KANs is another example of how the area is developing.

Have fun reading up.

Sep-07-24
offramp: User: Muttley101 your précis is perfect. I'm going to have a look. When I lost to Mephisto I must have thought, "This game will create protein folding."

worbdftun:
R18 Editor Steinitz perjury iz worse than danidze surgery becuz an op fixes yu up ore downtown Freddie Browning bolt-action 4gets thur a tension 4honorable mention but most women donut.

* https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/oth...

Phone scammers are getting smarter with their tactics like AI voice scams. And if you're not careful, they could make big bucks off of you, the unsuspecting caller. Aside from hanging up if you hear this four-word phrase, there's something else you can do to avoid becoming a victim and to keep up with your smartphone security and privacy.

Certain area codes can warn potential targets that the call isn't safe, according to Joseph Steinberg, CEO of SecureMySocial. Although scam callers once used a 900 number, they've changed their methods as the general public became aware of their tactic. Now, many scam phone numbers have different area codes, including 809, which originates in the Caribbean.

Another area code to look out for may look like it's coming from the United States, but isn't. "Criminals have been known to use caller IDs with the area code 473, which appears to be domestic, but is actually the area code for the island of Grenada," Steinberg says. Watch out for these phone call scams that could steal your money, too.

By the way, those calls add up fast. You could be charged for taking a call from any of these foreign countries, according to AARP. Plus, scammers can swindle you out of your money through phony vacation scams and fake stories about danger or money problems. iPhone scams and Uber scams are also on the rise, making Apple fans and Uber users alike more wary. Make sure you know how to avoid Uber scams and how to stop spam texts on your phone.

To play it extra safe, Steinberg recommends never answering or returning a call from a number you don't recognize. If you actually know the person, they can always leave a voicemail. "Remember that it's unlikely that someone you do not know—who is in distress at a location with which you are not familiar—would dial a random number in another country and ask you to help them," he says. "They would call the police."

It can't hurt to be wary of possible scam phone numbers with the following international area codes. And watch out for these Facebook Marketplace scams before you go shopping.

Scam phone numbers: International Area Codes with a +1 Country Code

232—Sierra Leone

242 — Bahamas

246 — Barbados

268 — Antigua

284 — British Virgin Islands

345 — Cayman Islands

441 — Bermuda

473 — Grenada, Carriacou, and Petite Martinique

649 — Turks and Caicos

664 — Montserrat

721 — Sint Maarten

758 — St. Lucia

767 — Dominica

784 — St. Vincent and Grenadines

809, 829, and 849 — The Dominican Republic

868 — Trinidad and Tobago

869 — St. Kitts and Nevis

876 — Jamaica

It's important to note that scammers can create scam phone numbers by spoofing numbers from many area codes, not just the ones listed above. Remember, a good rule of thumb is if you don't recognize the phone number, don't pick up your phone and let it go to voicemail. This can help you avoid falling for common phone scams, such as those pesky car extended warranty calls.

By the way—if you are charged for picking up a scam call, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recommends contacting your phone company to try and take care of the matter. You can also file a complaint about the scam call with the FCC.

Next, read about these online scams you need to be aware of and how to avoid them. Also, read up on what doxxing is and how it sets you up to be hacked.

<"From this day to the ending of the world, But we in it shall be remembered-
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition;
And gentlemen in England now-a-bed
Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here,

And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks

That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day." ― William Shakespeare, Henry V>

"They made us many promises, but they kept only one. They promised to take our land -- and they did." — Chief Red Cloud, Oglala-Lakota Sioux, 1822-1909.

"There are two kinds of people in this world: Those who believe there are two kinds of people in this world and those who are smart enough to know better." ― Tom Robbins, Still Life with Woodpecker

2 Corinthians 4:16-18
So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen.

Patience is a virtue.

Dec-26-23 hemy: I sent email messages to <jessicafischerqueen> and <Tabanus>. I was contacted by email to both of them for many years. Responses from the mail servers were: "Sorry, your message to <her email address> cannot be delivered. This mailbox is disabled" and "Recipient address rejected: Access denied". Credits for Robert Bergersen aka <Tabanus>, include his picture, for his contribution to "Lithuanian chess history" project, you can find on page 45 of this project. He also mentioned on page 141 (with one more picture), pages 166, 1315, 1383-1386, 1823, 2807 and 3423.

"Make peace with imperfection." ― Richard Carlson

Matthew 19:26
But Jesus looked at them and said, 'With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.'

* The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played: 62 Masterpieces of Chess Strategy by Irving Chernev - https://lichess.org/study/w2JcfP5K

* Legendary: Game Collection: The 12 Legendary Games of the Century

The Sofia Rules forbid agreed draws before 30 moves. The "Bilbao" scoring system awards 3 points for a win, 1 for a draw and 0 for a loss.

"You must learn to be still in the midst of activity and to be vibrantly alive in repose." ― Indira Gandhi

Psalm 96: 1-3
Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing to the Lord, praise his name; proclaim his salvation day after day. Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples.

"To a large degree, the measure of our peace of mind is determined by how much we are able to live in the present moment." — Richard Carlson

Bee-nado is coming!

"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not: nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not: the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent." — Calvin Coolidge

Proverbs 3:5-6
Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.

Romans 8:28
And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.

HUMPTY DUMPTY
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall.
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the King's horses
And all the King's men
Couldn't put Humpty
Together again.

16 yellow #2 pencilz

variants / KGA at R odds (000) 1-0 work the diagonals
Morphy vs A Perrin, 1857 
(000) Chess variants, 21 moves, 1-0

Chess variants - No N (000) 1-0 Inflict doubled Ps, seize files
Morphy vs A B Arnold, 1859 
(000) Chess variants, 21 moves, 1-0

Chess variants (000) 1-0 Tarrasch gives a lesson on attacking!
Tarrasch vs Romberg, 1893 
(000) Chess variants, 21 moves, 1-0

Owen Defense (B00) 1-0 Heavy HEAVY pieces in the center
Blackburne vs J Owen, 1890  
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Owen Defense: Matovinsky Gambit (B00) 0-1 21 moves
A Strautmanis vs E Gize, 1940 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

Owen Defense: General (B00) 1-0 House of Cards
J Minckwitz vs J Noa, 1881 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Nimzowitsch 2...d5 Scandi. Bogoljubow Var. Nimzowitsch G (B00)
Kudrin vs E Formanek, 1994 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

Nimzowitsch Def. Scandi. Bogoljubow Var. Nimzo Gambit (B00) 1-0
Milner-Barry vs J Mieses, 1935 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Nimzowitsch Defense: Williams Var (B00) 1-0 Resembles Opera #
Gligoric vs J Rosenstein, 1963 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Borg Defense (B00) 1-0 Don't move pawns when pieces need movin'
L Cierny vs B Berg, 1993
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Borg Gambit: Poisoned Pawn Var (B00) 1-0 W needs 3 pawn moves
J Roscher vs B Bettermann, 1989 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Perhaps the oldest recorded game of chess
F de Castellvi vs N Vinyoles, 1475 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr Defense 3.d4 e5 (B01) 1-0 Sitting double R sacs
O H Labone vs NN, 1901 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr Leonhardt Gambit 4.b4 Qxb4 (B01) 1-0 Greek gift
B Stein vs P Backwinkel, 1981 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr 3...Qa5, 5.d3 Main Lines (B01) 1-0 Q trap, pinned B
A Dounis vs A Gogolis, 2006 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr 3...Qa5 4.b4 Leonhardt Gambit (B01) 1-0 Sac attack!
J Raoux vs J Du Mont, 1913 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

3..Qd8-Ilundain Variation. Capa's unpin opening trap in action
A Raetsky vs W Schmid, 2012 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: Spielmann Gambit (B02) 1-0 P thrusts & sacrifices
J Bellon Lopez vs V Kovacevic, 1979 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Defense: Four Pawns Attack (B03) 0-1 Stunning combo!
J Vetemaa vs Shabalov, 1986 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Alekhine Def. Modern. ML (B05) 1-0 N&Q discoveries are deadly
Nigmadzianov vs L Kaplun, 1977 
(B05) Alekhine's Defense, Modern, 21 moves, 1-0

Modern Def (B06) 1-0 Fire on board, by Judit; Neither K castles
J Polgar vs Shirov, 1995 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Modern Defense, Standard(B06) 0-1A kick in the pants from the N
O Hirn vs T Hillarp Persson, 2006 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 0-1

Modern Defense: Standard Def (B06) 1-0 Philidor's Legacy
V Vepkhvishvili vs D Magalashvili, 1966 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Modern Def: Three Pawns Attack (B06) 0-1More pieces than pawns!
W Mubarak vs A Planinc, 1974 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 0-1

Modern Defense (B06) 0-1 Retreat and set/pile on the pin
Yagupov vs Kasimdzhanov, 1998 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 0-1

Robatsch Def (B06) 1-0 juniors pawn chain battle, late 0-0-0
J Mestel vs H Koopman, 1973
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Lion Def: Anti-Philidor. Lion's Cave (B07) 1-0 Cornered
O Pavlenko vs Kobzar, 1966 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def. Austrian Attack. Weiss Var (B09) 1-0 Diagonal heat
G Cabrilo vs A Strikovic, 1991 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def. Austrian Attack. Kurajica Var (B09)1-0 h-file battery
Grischuk vs G Seul, 2004 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 22 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def Austrian Attack. Weiss (B09) 1-0Nervy Alekhine's Block
Fischer vs Benko, 1963 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

It's a KP carving, not a C-K Def (B10) 1-0 Notes by Steinitz
C F Burille vs N MacLeod, 1889  
(B10) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 1-0

C-K Defense, Two Knights Attack (B11) 1-0 The passer is coming
Noteboom vs S van Mindeno, 1927 
(B11) Caro-Kann, Two Knights, 3...Bg4, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def: Advance. Bayonet Attack (B12) 0-1W pawns wave on
M Levine vs Santasiere, 1922
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def. Advance. 4.h4 Tal Var (B12) 1-0 0-0-0 victory
G Jones vs K Stokke, 2011 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Advance. Short Var (B12) 0-1 Spearhead
T Shadrina vs V Gunina, 2011 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Var (B13) 1-0 Discovered+
Geller vs Razuvaev, 1979 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Panov Attack 0-0-0 vs 0-0 (B13) 0-1
J G Sullivan vs G Fuster, 1957
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Defense: Panov Attack (B14) 1-0 Nice breakthrough
Topalov vs Speelman, 1995 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def: Main Line (B15)1-0 R deflection sac allows Qxf7+
Hromadka vs M Kirschen, 1911 
(B15) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 1-0

Radulov makes it all too easy
I Radulov vs Larsen, 1972 
(B16) Caro-Kann, Bronstein-Larsen Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 7 in 'The Sorcerer's Apprentice' by David Bronstein
Bronstein vs Kotov, 1946 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Schachmeisterpartien 1960 - 1965 edited by Rudolph Teschner
Tal vs Benko, 1964 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Classical Var (B18) 1-0 19.?
Spassky vs Larsen, 1978 
(B18) Caro-Kann, Classical, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def. Smith-Morra Gambit (B21) Both Ns bash Black
Blackburne vs Clare / Janssens, 1868 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian McDonnell Attk / French(B21) 1-0 Premature resignation
Greco vs NN, 1620 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Smith-Morra Gambit (B21) 0-1 Black Ns cross frontier
M Albano vs Matulovic, 1968 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Alapin. General (B22) 0-1 Another Nxg2 gut punch!
N Minev vs Gligoric, 1954 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 0-1

Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA) issue Saturday 20 August 1887
Gossip vs J E Crewe, 1887 
(B25) Sicilian, Closed, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian O'Kelly. Normal System Kan Line(B41) 0-1Demolition job
Lasker vs NN, 1898 
(B28) Sicilian, O'Kelly Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Nimzowitsch. Closed (B29) 0-1 Rob the pin
Olland vs Colle, 1928 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 0-1

Game 96 in Modern Chess Brilliancies by Larry Melvyn Evans
B Gurgenidze vs A Lein, 1967 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Nimzowitsch. ML (B29) 1-0 Spearhead->Philidor's Legacy
T Peine vs V Budde, 1970 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 1-0

Old Sicilian (B30) 0-1Brawl includes Dbl R sacs, clearance sac
R Tischbierek vs G Gauglitz, 1981 
(B30) Sicilian, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Nezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attack (B30) 1-0 h-file attack
S Soylu vs A Idrizaj, 2004 
(B30) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Nezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attk. Fnchetto (B31) 1-0 Q trap
Anand vs Salov, 1991 
(B31) Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 35 in Stein: Move by Move by Thomas Engqvist
Stein vs J Pelikan, 1966 
(B35) Sicilian, Accelerated Fianchetto, Modern Variation with Bc4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: French Var. Normal (B40) 1-0 Messiah annotates
C Bergstrom vs E Rayner, 1975 
(B40) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: French Variation. Normal (B40) 1-0 Exchange sac
Ragozin vs P Noskov, 1930 
(B40) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Kan. Modern (B42) 1-0 About to discover check
Stein vs Portisch, 1962 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Kan. Modern Var (B42) 1-0 Q sac removes defender, P+
Tal vs Suetin, 1969 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Paulsen. Bastrikov Var (B47) 1-0 Double Bishop sac
G Kuzmin vs Sveshnikov, 1973 
(B47) Sicilian, Taimanov (Bastrikov) Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Double rook sacrifice tears open the g-file
M Golubev vs V Podinic, 2001 
(B48) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

G32: Chess World Title Contenders...Styles by Kopec & Pritchett
Andersson vs Portisch, 1972 
(B51) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Canal Attack (B51) 1-0 Nxe6 sac
Rublevsky vs E Vorobiov, 2003 
(B51) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def. Chekhover (B53) 1-0 BAM! Game over!
H Seifert vs M Szmyd, 2009 
(B53) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Dragon. Fianchetto (B70) 0-1 Q forks disconnected Rs
W Adams vs Reshevsky, 1944
(B70) Sicilian, Dragon Variation, 21 moves, 0-1

Sic Dragon. Yugoslav Attk Early deviations (B75) 1-0 B, Q sac
A Beni vs I Anagnostou, 1954 
(B75) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Q-sac for double check, a la Fischer-Mygmasuren
I Madl vs D Summermatter, 1988 
(B81) Sicilian, Scheveningen, Keres Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

First game ever played in the history of Chess Olympiads
Yates vs O Naegeli, 1927 
(B83) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 20 in Instructive Chess Miniatures by A.E. Ataman
Smyslov vs C Kottnauer, 1946 
(B84) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Fischer-Sozin Attk. Flank Var (B87) 0-1 Stockfish
J G Soruco vs Fischer, 1966 
(B87) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5, 21 moves, 0-1

Sic Fischer-Sozin Attk. Flank Var (B87) 1-0 2 minor sac offers
Tal vs M Mukhin, 1972 
(B87) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Velimirovic Attack (B89) 1-0 keep an eye on that
I A Zaitsev vs Suetin, 1968 
(B89) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Najdorf (B90) 1-0 The dark-squared bishop awaits...
J Polgar vs Szendrei, 1984 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Najdorf (B90) 0-1
F J Perez vs Smyslov, 1962 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Najdorf. Zagreb (Fianchetto) (B91) 0-1 Scorecard
I Garais vs Fischer, 1957 
(B91) Sicilian, Najdorf, Zagreb (Fianchetto) Variation, 21 moves, 0-1

Game 256 in Boris Spassky's 400 Selected Games
Spassky vs N Rashkovsky, 1973 
(B96) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 115 of 200 Modern Brilliances by Kevin Wicker (pub. 1984)
J Grefe vs Browne, 1973 
(B98) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

French Defense: Two Knights (C00) 0-1 Nifty central sequence
J Rigo vs Gulko, 1988 
(C00) French Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

French Def: Two Knights Var (C00) 0-1 Return the queen
A Dunne vs K Plesset, 1976 
(C00) French Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

French Defense: Exchange Var (C01) 0-1 Simul Slam!
A Strande vs A Nimzowitsch, 1925 
(C01) French, Exchange, 21 moves, 0-1

French Defense: Exchange Variation (C01) 1-0 Q sac opens h-file
Blackburne vs J West, 1885 
(C01) French, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

French Exchange. Monte Carlo (C01) 0-1 Royal fork off the menu
Velimirovic vs Uhlmann, 1976 
(C01) French, Exchange, 21 moves, 0-1

French Defense: Exchange (C01) 1-0 Pile on the pin
Blackburne vs J A Huckvale, 1875 
(C01) French, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

French Advance. Milner-Barry Gambit (C02) 1-0The Wizard of Riga
Tal vs I Nei, 1958 
(C02) French, Advance, 21 moves, 1-0

French Advance 6.Be2. Euwe Var (C02) 1-0 Steady Kside march
Kasparov vs K Klimczok, 1993 
(C02) French, Advance, 21 moves, 1-0

French Def. Advance 6.a3 Main Line (C02) 0-1 Loose pieces
Y Santiago vs A J Walton, 2015 
(C02) French, Advance, 21 moves, 0-1

French Advance. Wade Variation (C02) 1-0 Self-inflicted hole
J Nun vs M Brodsky, 1994 
(C02) French, Advance, 21 moves, 1-0

French Def: Tarrasch. Guimard Defense M.L. (C04) 1-0 Spearhead#
E Canal vs G Fletzer, 1948
(C04) French, Tarrasch, Guimard Main line, 21 moves, 1-0

French Tarrasch. Guimard Def Main Line (C04) 1-0 Bs behind Qs
M Bely vs Portisch, 1957 
(C04) French, Tarrasch, Guimard Main line, 21 moves, 1-0

Solitaire Chess by I. A. Horowitz, p. 83
I Pleci vs L Endzelins, 1939 
(C07) French, Tarrasch, 21 moves, 1-0

French Rubinstein (C10) 1-0 Miniature: = PM's Opera House Game
Najdorf vs Gliksberg, 1929 
(C10) French, 21 moves, 1-0

French Def. Classical. Swiss Var (C11) 1-0 Another fine mess
Bogoljubov vs J H Donner, 1951 
(C11) French, 21 moves, 1-0

French Defense: McCutcheon. Lasker Var (C12) 1-0 Q+ & fork EAD
Euwe vs J W te Kolste, 1921 
(C12) French, McCutcheon, 21 moves, 1-0

French Def. McCutcheon. Lasker Var (C12) 0-1 Lateral pins
S Belavenets vs A Chistiakov, 1938 
(C12) French, McCutcheon, 22 moves, 0-1

French Alekhine-Chatard Attack. Albin-Chatard Gambit (C13) 1-0!
K Spraggett vs R Bedard, 1972 
(C13) French, 21 moves, 1-0

From Emanuel Lasker's "How To Play Chess."
A Fritz vs Mason, 1883 
(C13) French, 26 moves, 1-0

French Def: Classical. Steinitz Var (C14) 0-1 Simul exhibition
Fischer vs O I Truelsen, 1962 
(C14) French, Classical, 21 moves, 0-1

French Winawer Winckelmann-Riemer Gambit (C15) 0-1 h-file bomb
K O'Brien vs D Salter, 2008 
(C15) French, Winawer, 21 moves, 0-1

French Def. Winawer. Advance Moscow Var (C17) 1-0 Q sac awaits
Bogoljubov vs W J Fry, 1950 
(C17) French, Winawer, Advance, 21 moves, 1-0

French Winawer Poisoned P (C18) 0-1Counterattack threatens mate
E Mortensen vs L Karlsson, 1988 
(C18) French, Winawer, 21 moves, 0-1

G45 in David vs Goliath Chess: H2B a Stronger Player by Soltis
Fischer vs C Powell, 1964 
(C18) French, Winawer, 21 moves, 0-1

King Pawn Game: Alapin Opening (C20) 1-0 She left the scene
J Porges vs Steinitz, 1874 
(C20) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit 4...d5 (C21) 1-0 Marshall's minors flush the K
Marshall vs S Mlotkowski, 1913 
(C21) Center Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit: Accepted. Copenhagen Def (C21) 1-0 Knights Smite
Blackburne vs Cotton, 1880 
(C21) Center Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Ponziani Gambit (C24) 1-0 Q&B pair pressure
H Szymaniak vs J Claus, 2005 
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit: Accepted. Classical (C21) 1-0 Nxh7+ deflection
M Bier vs S R Rocamora, 1876 
(C21) Center Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit (C21) 1-0 See F. Young vs L. Dore, 1892
H Atkins vs H Jacobs, 1915 
(C21) Center Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Steinitz Gambit Zukertort Def (C25)1-0 2 K walks
Taubenhaus vs J Heilpern, 1887 
(C25) Vienna, 14 moves, 1-0

Vienna Game: Anderssen Def (C25) 1-0 Exchange sac opens g-file
Blackburne vs J Minckwitz, 1870 
(C25) Vienna, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Hamppe-Muzio Gambit (C25) 1-0 Capped Knight!!!
M Lange vs J von Schierstedt, 1856 
(C25) Vienna, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Game: Mieses Variation (C26) 0-1 A smashing finish!
Lasker vs S Polner, 1889 
(C26) Vienna, 21 moves, 0-1

Vienna Game: Stanley Var (C26) 1-0Refreshing Evans Gambit style
Alekhine vs Bogoljubov, 1914 
(C26) Vienna, 21 moves, 1-0

Bishop's/Vienna Blanel Gambit (C27) 0-1 P fork trick, uncastled
W Haller vs W Pollock, 1890 
(C23) Bishop's Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

Bishop's Opening: Blanel Gambit (C27) 0-1 Castling mishap
H Johnsohn vs S Herland, 1907 
(C23) Bishop's Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

Vienna Game: Stanley. 3Knts (C28) 1-0 W has 2 minors for 4Ps
J Walker vs A Smith, 1884
(C28) Vienna Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Game: Vienna Gambit (C28) 1-0 R sac rounds up both Ns
Alekhine vs De Klerck, 1933 
(C28) Vienna Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Bardeleben Var (C29) 1-0 Pile on the pin
Spielmann vs L Prokes, 1908 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Steinitz Var(C29) 0-1 Early Ps eat Ns
Zukertort vs Blackburne, 1876  
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 21 moves, 0-1

Vienna Gambit. Breyer Var (C29) 1-0 Passer
J Hector vs S Polgar, 1988 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Bardeleben Vari (C29) 1-0 Pin to win
Spielmann vs Levenfish, 1911 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

KGD. Petrov's Def (C30) 0-1 The champ drops a casual game.
Steinitz vs L D Barbour, 1882 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 0-1

KGD: Panteldakis Countergambit. Symmetrical (C30) 1-0 Rs on 8th
J Mieses vs Swiderski, 1903 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 1-0

K's Gambit: Declined. Classical (C30) 0-1 Blindful Simul loss
Pillsbury vs K Moll, 1902 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 0-1

King's Gambit: General (C30) 0-1 Frank Marshall is a stunt man!
P Reid vs Marshall, 1937 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 0-1

KGD. Classical Var (C30) 0-1 Cornered King
H Suechting vs H Wolf, 1902 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 0-1

KGD. Classical (C30) 1-0 Pins and skewers
McDonnell vs NN, 1830 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 21 moves, 1-0

KGD Falkbeer Countergambit. Charousek Gambit (C31) 1-0 Q trap
Keres vs Vidmar, 1936 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Some scholastic coaches tell students to always play until #.
N Popova vs T Zaitseva, 1974 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

KGD: Falkbeer CG. Charousek Gambit Morphy Def (C31) 1-0 B nabs?
L Rosen vs S Sharp, 1908
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

KGD: Falkbeer CG. Charousek Gambit (C31) 0-1 Unusual final pos
W M Byland vs H L Marks, 1947 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 0-1

KGD. Falkbeer Countrgambit. Accepted (C31) 1-0Remove the Guard
B Wall vs L Kilpatric, 1990 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

KGD. Falkbeer Countergambit. Modern Transfer (C31) 1-0Lolli's #
Philidor vs NN, 1749 
(C32) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 23 moves, 1-0

KGD. Falkbeer CG. Charousek Gambit Accptd (C32) 0-1 h-file pile
Marshall vs V Soldatenkov, 1928 
(C32) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 0-1

KGD. Falkbeer CG. Charousek Gambit Accepted (C32) 1-0 No recapt
E E Middleton vs Vidmar, 1905 
(C32) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 21 moves, 0-1

KGA Bishop's Gambit Cozio Var (C33) 1-0 Q & Dbl Kt. Sac
F Burden vs NN, 1860 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Tumbleweed 3.Kf2!? Qh4+ (C33) 1-0 B+ fork/clearance sac
J Fort vs W Campbell, 1913 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

King's Gambit: Accepted. Tumbleweed (C33) 1-0What can be said?
D Rigby vs J Moylan, 1976 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

Fischer finishes off "Greenblatt" with a truly unusual mate
Fischer vs Mac Hack VI, 1977 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Bishop's Gambit (C33) 1-0 Fantastic sacrificial planning!!
Charousek vs J Wollner, 1895 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Gambit MacDonnell Attk (C33) 1-0Analyze final position
M Lange vs Anderssen, 1851 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Bishop's Gambit Maurian Def (C33) 1-0 Dbl B sac
S Bergh vs O Gotlin, 1867 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Bishop's Gambit (C33) 1-0 Black Q must surrender to stop #
J Cazenove vs NN, 1819 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Fischer Def (C34) 1-0 Pile on the pin
L Day vs G Johnstone, 1994 
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Fischer Def (C34) 1-0 Notes by Joseph Henry Blackburne
Blackburne vs A Pigott, 1862  
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA Schallop Defense (C34) 1-0 Castle by hand; gain time on Q
Schlechter vs J Mieses, 1903 
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

K's Gambit: Accepted. Becker Def (C34) 0-1 More than one path
W M Byland vs L Evans, 1949
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 0-1

KGA MacLeod Defense (C34) 1-0 Textbook development, easy attack
L Schmid vs H Hoffmann, 1943 
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA Abbazia Defense (C36) 1-0 Both castle long
Bronstein vs S Wood, 1976 
(C36) King's Gambit Accepted, Abbazia Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Double Muzio Gambit won by 1900 against 2500 IM
S Jensen vs F Urkedal, 2013 
(C37) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Muzio Gambit Wild Muzio Gambit (C37) 1-0 Stockfish notes
Charousek vs K Schneider, 1891 
(C37) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Double Muzio Gambit (C37) 1-0 Activate ALL your pieces!
B Renaut vs NN, 1974 
(C37) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA Kieseritsky Gambit Berlin Def (C39) 0-1 Uncastled P grabs
L Waldstein vs Zukertort, 1864 
(C39) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 0-1

KGA. Kieseritsky Gambit Long Whip (C39) 1-0 Blindfold Simul
Blackburne vs J E Rabbeth, 1874 
(C39) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

KGA. Kieseritsky Gambit Anderssen Defense (C39) 1-0 Boden's #
Steinitz vs A Belaieff, 1873 
(C39) King's Gambit Accepted, 21 moves, 1-0

Latvian Gambit: Accepted. Bilguer Var (C40) 0-1 Reti's # set-up
F Bernsdorfer vs W Hasenfuss, 1937 
(C40) King's Knight Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

Philidor Def: Morphy Gambit (C41) 1-0 Black moves too many Ps
Morphy vs F Sicre, 1864 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Philidor Def./Lion (C41) 1-0 Plenty of tactics
D Coleman vs J Shepley, 2014 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Philidor Defense: Hanham Var (C41) 1-0 N forks 3 w/# threat QxR
I Makogonov vs A Zorin, 2007
(C41) Philidor Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

An early Philidor (C42) 1-0 Pry open the h-file, pin w/P wedge
Greco vs NN, 1620 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Philidor Countergambit (C41) 1-0 LPDOs in the Shooting Gallery
G Salmon vs I Szabo, 1858 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Classical Attack. Marshall Var (C42) 0-1 Qxb7?!
J Witton vs R Hodgson, 1891 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Russian Game: Cochrane Gambit. Center Var (C42) 1-0 Control
S Sulskis vs T Michalczak, 2005 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Modern Attk. Center Attk (C43) 1-0 Complex Reti #
M Bonch-Osmolovsky vs B Baranov, 1953 
(C43) Petrov, Modern Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 27 in The Art of Sacrifice in Chess by Rudolf Spielmann
P Leonhardt vs Spielmann, 1906 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 0-1

A kind of delayed Jerome Gambit punished by Morphy
A Meek vs Morphy, 1855 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 0-1

Scotch Gambit (C44) 1-0 Q trap goes horribly wrong
Bledow vs K Schorn, 1839 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 2 "Naked Chess: Learn from the Champions" by Will Once
Staunton vs NN, 1842 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Saratt Var (C44) 1-0 Resembles Jerome Gambit
J McCord vs J Penquite, 1949
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Göring Gambit. Bardeleben Var(C44) 1-0 4 isolated pawns
J Penrose vs Butcher, 1962 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit (C44) 1-0 Kick the Queen around
von der Lasa vs Anderssen, 1845 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Advance (C44) 1-0 Bxh7+ is 1st of 3 sac offers
E Grobe vs A Johnsson, 1986 
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Schmidt Var (C45) 0-1 Blunder
Tarrasch vs J Minckwitz, 1885 
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 0-1

Scotch Game: Meitner Variation (C45) 0-1 Anastasia's Mate in 2
R Lemon vs M Plum, 1982 
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 0-1

Scotch 4...Qh4 Modern Def (C45) 1-0 White enters back door
Hjartarson vs P Moulin, 1994
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Horwitz Attack (C45) 0-1 notes by Stockfish
W J Lewis vs W Perry, 1819 
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 0-1

Scotch Game: Haxo Gambit (C45) 1-0 Qside #. RV analysis
Martin vs Pompei, 1955 
(C45) Scotch Game, 21 moves, 1-0

4 Knights Scotch. Krause Gambit Leonhardt Def (C47)1-0 AN notes
A Nimzowitsch vs P Leonhardt, 1907  
(C47) Four Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Game: Spanish. Rubinstein Var (C48) 1-0 Boden's #
Ed Lasker vs F Englund, 1913 
(C48) Four Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Spanish (C48) 1-0 Decoy Q sac allows NxB+ fork
Navara vs Z Ruzicka, 1997 
(C48) Four Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Game: Spanish. Classical Var (C48) 0-1 cable match
G H Stevens vs L Tolins, 1910
(C48) Four Knights, 21 moves, 0-1

Four Knights Game: Spanish. Symmetrical (C49) 1-0 Get in close
K Treybal vs K Moll, 1907 
(C49) Four Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Italian Var (C50) 1-0 Q squeeze will cost a R
G MacDonnell vs G Fraser, 1867
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Italian Var (C50) 0-1 Sweet B&Q sac, 2Ns DELIVER
NN vs Blackburne, 1871  
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 0-1

Italian Game, Delayed Fried Liver Attack (C50) 1-0 Dovetail #
P Vasic vs D Ristovski, 2003 
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 20 moves, 1-0

Giuoco Pianissimo. Italian 4Knts (C50) 0-1En prise+ clears file
J Thompson vs Morphy, 1857 
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 0-1

Evans Gambit. Main Line (C51) 1-0 Notes by J. Lowenthal
Morphy vs H A Kennedy, 1859  
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Main Line (C51) 1-0 Black castles into the fire
Anderssen vs J Kipping, 1857 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Main Line (C51) 0-1 Q sac attack!
D Martinez vs Steinitz, 1882 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 0-1

Evans Gambit. Accepted (C51) 1-0 Discovered Double Checkmate
Morphy vs A Morphy, 1849 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Morphy Attack (C51) 1-0 Seize open lines
Blackburne vs A Steinkuehler, 1862  
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Paulsen Variation (C51) 1-0 Spearhead on long dia
Tarrasch vs S Mendelsohn, 1880 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Slow (C52) 1-0 Greek gift, P thrust
Chigorin vs K Rosenkrantz, 1897 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Slow Variation (C52) 1-0Diagonal & f-file attack
Chigorin vs A Weber, 1898 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Compromised Def (C52) 1-0Pupil wins
G Neumann vs Anderssen, 1860 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Classical. Center Holding Var (C53) 0-1 Spearhead
E Talvik vs Rubinstein, 1906 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 0-1

Italian, Classical. Greco Gambit Traditional (C54) 1-0 Unpin
C Garcia Fernandez vs G Yanez Acin, 2001
(C54) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 9: 500 Master Games - Book 1 (Tartakower/du Mont)
Spielmann vs Duras, 1907 
(C54) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 8 in Richard Réti's Best Games by Harry Golombek
N Pesitz vs Reti, 1912 
(C54) Giuoco Piano, 21 moves, 0-1

G45 in 500 Master Games of Chess by S. Tartakower & J. DuMont
Taubenhaus vs E Schallopp, 1890 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Italian Game: Two Knights Def (C55) 1-0 Greco's Mate
Koltanowski vs Meyers, 1941
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Two Knights Def. Modern Bishop's Opening (C55) 1-0 Ng7?! fails
B Carlier vs R Burton, 1987 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Two Knights Def. Open Variation (C55) 1-0 14.?
A Sokolsky vs Navrodsky, 1944 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack(C56) 1-0 7 of last 8 are checks
C Hartlaub vs Lasker, 1904 
(C56) Two Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Two Knights. Order up a Fried Liver attack if Black dares Nxd5
Polerio vs Domenico, 1610 
(C57) Two Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Two Knights Def. Ulvestad Variation 5...b5?!(C57) 0-1 See notes
K Burger vs Zweiburg, 1964 
(C57) Two Knights, 21 moves, 0-1

February 24: +10=0-0 -Montreal clock simul
Fischer vs D Allan, 1964 
(C57) Two Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Two Knts Def. Fritz Var (C57) 0-1Anastasia's Mate
K Patzl vs M Albano, 1976 
(C57) Two Knights, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Bird Var (C61) 0-1 Action packed Kside assaults
I A Zaitsev vs I Timchenko, 1956 
(C61) Ruy Lopez, Bird's Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Steinitz Def (C62) 1-0 Child makes threat
S Polgar vs J Kontra, 1982 
(C62) Ruy Lopez, Old Steinitz Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Schliemann Def. Dyckhoff Var (C63) 0-1 Two problems
Shirov vs Shabalov, 2001 
(C63) Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Schliemann Def. Dyckhoff Var (C63)0-1 W charge thwarted
R Enjuto vs J Gomez Trigo, 2002 
(C63) Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Classical, Central Var (C64) 1-0...d5 blunder, f7 crush
Smyslov vs Barcza, 1952 
(C64) Ruy Lopez, Classical, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Classical, Zukertort Gambit (C64) 1-0 VT was 11 yrs old
Topalov vs D Marholev, 1986 
(C64) Ruy Lopez, Classical, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Berlin Def (C65) 0-1 Devastating Discovered+
H C Mees vs J Davidson, 1910 
(C65) Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Berlin Defense (C65) 0-1 Pile on the pin!
E Schallopp vs G Neumann, 1864 
(C65) Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Berlin Defense (C65) 0-1 Tactical massacre
Chigorin vs Janowski, 1897 
(C65) Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Berlin Def. Hedgehog (C66) 0-1 N fork
J Mieses vs Lasker, 1904 
(C66) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish, Berlin Improved Steinitz (C66) 0-1 15 captures in 21 m
Capablanca vs D W Pomeroy, 1909 
(C66) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 0-1

Two dandy sacrifices many would not consider
A W Fox vs H E Bauer, 1900 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Berlin Def. Zukertort Var (C67) 1-0 Exchange sac
Zukertort vs V Knorre, 1866
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Berlin Defense. Rio Gambit Accepted (C67) 0-1
W F Harrison vs E Watson, 1912 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Exchange. Gligoric Var (C69) 1-0 Qside B&N
J Barendregt vs Sliwa, 1961 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Grandmaster Secrets: Winning Quickly at Chess by Nunn
Fischer vs Spassky, 1992 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Morphy Def. Norwegian Var (C70) 0-1 Q+ removes K guard
A Matanovic vs J H Donner, 1965 
(C70) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Morphy Defense (C70) 1-0 Remove the Guard next
O K Lie vs Olsen, 1985 
(C70) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Cecil Valentine de Vere (1846-1874) - Born on Valentine's Day
C De Vere vs Paulsen, 1870 
(C77) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Morphy Def. Bayreuth Var (C77) 0-1 Bayonet charge!
H Karner vs A Bandza, 1985 
(C77) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Morphy Def (C78) 1-0 Open e-file, uncastled K
Carlsen vs E Blomqvist, 2001 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Simul Tour (1964) Spanish Game: Morphy Def(C78) 1-0 Bxh6 attack
Fischer vs E Travis, 1964 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Open. Riga Var (C80) 0-1 Greek gift declined, K walk
M Vallet vs J Lebon, 2001 
(C80) Ruy Lopez, Open, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Open. Open Var (C80) 0-1 Intruding knights
K Erdeky vs Torre, 1924 
(C80) Ruy Lopez, Open, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Open. Dilworth Var (C82) 0-1 Sac Attack!
P Sternberg vs C Bloodgood, 1959 
(C82) Ruy Lopez, Open, 21 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Open. St. Petersburg Var (C82) 1-0 Master of sacs
Tal vs I Miglans, 1950 
(C82) Ruy Lopez, Open, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish Open, St. Pburg Var (C82) 0-1 3 piece # pattern
B Lengyel vs Mikhalevski, 1993 
(C82) Ruy Lopez, Open, 22 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Closed (C88) 1-0 Nxf7 opened the door for more
R Ramesh vs G B Joshi, 2000 
(C84) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 21 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Morphy Def. Breyer Def Quiet Var (C94) 1-0 hitting f7
A Planinc vs L M Kovacs, 1970 
(C94) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Uncommon King's Pawn Opening (B00) 1-0 No mate this time
E Zemgalis vs P Troeger, 1946 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 1-0

Scandinavian Defense: Modern Var (B01) 1-0 Pawns jump forward
Anand vs L Galego, 1993 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

3...Qa5 Cntr Cntr Def: Bg4 Lasker Var (B01) 1-0 Fails to castle
J Polgar vs C Herrera, 1990 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Scandinavian: Icelandic-Palme Gambit (B01) 0-1 Castled K wins
D Phillips vs I Lindam, 1995 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 0-1

Scandinavian 3...Qd8 Ilundain Var (B01) 1-0 battery on e-file
Nakamura vs J Shaw, 2016 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Scandinavian Def: 3...Qd6 Bronstein Var (B01) 1-0 Nxe6 mauling
Ponomariov vs Fressinet, 1999 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def. 4.Bc4 Nb6 5.Bb3 c5 (B02) 0-1 0-0 vs 0-0-0, Exch S
M Morgan vs Yermolinsky, 1990 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Alekhine Def: Two Pawn Attack. Lasker Var (B02) 1-0 Castled opp
I Nikolayev vs A Yakunov, 1989 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

B15: Caro-Kann, Gurgenidze system 1-0 Blasting Rooks!!
L Christiansen vs I Foygel, 2002 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: General (B07) 1-0 He musta been daydreaming
Chandler vs M Wahls, 1990 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

Lion Defense: Bayonet Attack (B07) 1-0
Ganguly vs M Basencyan, 2012 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def: Austrian Attack. Unzicker Attack (B09) 1-0 16.?
J Curdo vs V Frenklakh, 1993 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: Austrian Attack. Weiss (B09) 0-1 Turn the tables
Karjakin vs T L Petrosian, 2005 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Accelerated Panov Attk. Modern (B10) 1-0 Q fork
Korchnoi vs Salov, 1991 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Accelerated Panov Attack. Modern Var (B10) 1-0
A Greenfeld vs T Michalczak, 2010
(B10) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def: Acclrated Panov Attk. Modern Var (B10) 1-0 17.?
Lenderman vs S Zierk, 2012 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Maroczy Variation (B12) 1-0 wife swap
J Gallagher vs J Bellin, 1984 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def: Adv. Van der Wiel Attk (B12) 1-0 Stockfish; 18.?
Nunn vs Sosonko, 1982 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def: Maroczy 0-0-0 vs 0-0 (B12) 1-0 Dazzling!
R Saptarshi vs V Nagpal, 2017 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

C-K Def. Advance Var. Botvinnik-Carls Def (B12) 1-0
Xiong vs E Karavade, 2018 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Karpov Variation (B17) 1-0 16.?
I K Sukandar vs T Hoang, 2014 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Karpov. Smyslov Variation (B17) 1-0
Matulovic vs N Ristic, 1995 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Classical. Flohr Variation (B18) 0-1 18...?
Zherebukh vs Nakamura, 2017 
(B18) Caro-Kann, Classical, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Wing Gambit. Carlsbad Var (B20) 1-0
Spielmann vs Colle, 1925 
(B20) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Morphy Gambit. Andreaschek Gambit (B21) 1-0 neato
J Bosch vs J Algra, 2001 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Smith-Morra Gambit. Accepted Scheveningen Formation (B21) 1-0
I Nikolayev vs Aleksandr Rusakov, 1978
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Morphy Gambit. Andreaschek Gambit (B21) 1-0 teens
I Nikolayev vs Aleksandr Troitskiy, 1979 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: McDonnell Attack (B21) · 0-1
Tartakower vs H van Kerkoerle, 1935
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 0-1

Birchbeer cross: double-pin, win, bishop rake mate threat looms
K Hjortstam vs Genestier, 1995 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Alapin. Smith-Morra Declined (B22) 0-1 Weak squares
Cory Riegelhaupt vs A Fishbein, 2011 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Alapin. Barmen Def Modern Line (B22) 1-0
I Nikolayev vs A Vlaskov, 1989
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Closed Nc3, Bg2, f4, Nf3 (B25) 1-0 long diagonal opens
D Pavasovic vs M Appleberry, 1994 
(B25) Sicilian, Closed, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Closed. Traditional (B25) 1-0 Up the exchange
R Thollin vs P Hughes, 2008
(B25) Sicilian, Closed, 21 moves, 1-0

Sic Hyperaccelerated Dragon (B27) or 2.c3 Alapin 1-0 Q trap
Fressinet vs M Al-Modiahki, 2014 
(B27) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Nimzowitsch. 3.Bb5?! (B29) 1-0 Foxwoods fast one
D Shevelev vs C Bennett, 2004 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Nimzowitsch. Advance Variation (B29) · 1-0
H Bouwmeester vs A Pomar, 1962 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 1-0

Old Sicilian 4.c3 (B30) 0-1 Crosspin
Brosztel vs Charousek, 1892 
(B30) Sicilian, 21 moves, 0-1

Game 970 in Chess Informant Best Games 901-1000
S Chanda vs S Himanshu, 2006 
(B31) Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Lasker-Pelikan. Sveshnikov Var (B33) 0-1
J Valencia Gomez vs J Salazar, 2002
(B33) Sicilian, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Kan. Knight Variation (B43) 0-1 U18
S Maltezeanu vs C Patrascu, 2016
(B43) Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Modern (B50) 1-0 Fredthebear share
I Nikolaidis vs V Koukouvinos, 2001
(B50) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Canal Attack (B51) 1-0 21.?
T Kosintseva vs A Galliamova, 2003 
(B51) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicil Scheveningen. Delayed Keres Attk 7.g4 (B81) 1-0 Blitz
Shirov vs Sasikiran, 2001 
(B81) Sicilian, Scheveningen, Keres Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Scheveningen. Tal Variation (B82) 1-0 19.?
Anand vs I B de Souza, 1984 
(B82) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Fischer-Sozin Attack. Flank Var (B87) 1-0 18.?
A Bezgodov vs M Zhunusov, 1994 
(B87) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Najdorf (B90) 1-0 Fredthebear isn't so short
Short vs A Zhigalko, 2004 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

Bobby was only 13 here, but he was Over The Hill!
L Hill vs Fischer, 1957 
(B92) Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Najdorf. Amsterdam Var (B93) 1-0 16.?
Svidler vs A Holst, 1991 
(B93) Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Najdorf Var (B94) 1-0 Impressive Demolition
Kotronias vs D Xiu, 2011 
(B94) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Nimzowitsch. Advance (B29) 1-0 Greco's Operation
Chiburdanidze vs A Goldmane, 1983 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: Austrian Attack. Weiss Var (B09) 1-0 Q sac
J Lechtynsky vs J Kubicek, 1968 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: Austrian Attack. Weiss Var (B09) 0-1 World U16
F Shafruddin vs Lagno, 2002 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian, Closed Variation (B25) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
J Davidsson vs O L Einarsson, 2015 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Najdorf. English Attack (B90) 1-0
Naiditsch vs A Brkic, 2005 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 21 moves, 1-0

Internal Server Error
S Savitskiy vs S Vokarev, 2014 
(B32) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Nimzowitsch Defense: El Columpio Defense (B00) 0-1 diabolical
E Knesevitch vs D Martin Tarrio, 2004 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 21 moves, 0-1

17...? a puzzle in the New York Post
Turov vs A Gaifullin, 2018 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Dragon. Yugoslav Attack (B76) 0-1
T Brookfield vs I Hakki, 2008 
(B76) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Panov Attack. Modern Def Czerniak Line (B13) 1-0
Gulko vs L Gonzalez Perez, 1996 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Hyperaccelerated Dragon (B27) · 1-0
Z Sturua vs K Krivolapov, 2001 
(B27) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Var (B13) 1-0 raging attack
J Sarfati vs R J Dive, 1984 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 21 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: General (B02) 1-0 Amsterdam University student
Euwe vs J de Koning, 1923 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Kan. Modern Var (B42) 1-0Remove Def., Pile on pin
T Heinemann vs G Walter, 1997 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: 150 Attack (B07) 1-0 Feasting Rook
H Richards vs W J Stirling, 2001 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

Game 28 in Boris Spassky's 400 Selected Games
Spassky vs S Kajan, 1955 
(B33) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Scandi Ilundain 3...Qd8 vs Bg7, Bb7 (B01) 1-0 Blitz Bxf7+
Carlsen vs P Maghsoodloo, 2020 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Kan. Knight Var (B43) 1-0 Clearance Sacrifice
Adorjan vs B Kurajica, 1967 
(B43) Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Paulsen. Normal (B45) 1-0 The sacrifice is next
A Lastin vs L Pushkarev, 2001 
(B45) Sicilian, Taimanov, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian, Dragon. Classical (B72) 0-1From one Knight to another
G Popilski vs I Porat, 2007 
(B72) Sicilian, Dragon, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Venice Attack (B56) 1-0White octopus traps BlackQ
T Lux vs D Rogosin, 1962 
(B56) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Dragon. Yugoslav Attk ML (B77) 1-0 Heavy pieces entry
Tal vs R Boardman, 1964 
(B77) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian, Dragon. Yugoslav Attk Early deviations (B75) 1-0N sac
J Becerra Rivero vs Shabalov, 2003 
(B75) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Najdorf. Amsterdam Var (B93) 1-0 Correspondence
F M Wren vs H Derring, 1961 
(B93) Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4, 21 moves, 1-0

The first rated chessplayer to lose to software. Opera Mate.
Mac Hack VI vs B Landey, 1967 
(B20) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sic Nezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attk. Fianchetto Var (B31) 0-1 blitz
M Bosiocic vs Carlsen, 2018 
(B31) Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: French Var (B40) 0-1 Harrwitz Bishops
McShane vs M Lagarde, 2021 
(B40) Sicilian, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Defense: Karpov. Smyslov Var (B17) 1-0 Correspondence
V Prokhorov vs R Suess, 1989 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

V Disawal vs M Anshuman, 2008 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Dragon. Yugoslav Attack (B77) 0-1 17...?
P J Morris vs C Ward, 1983 
(B77) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Defense: General (B06) · 1-0
Suetin vs Csom, 1968 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Scandinavian Defense: Modern Var (B01) 0-1 overworked defender
J Kipping vs Harrwitz, 1853 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 0-1

Internal Server Error
N Huschenbeth vs K Bischoff, 2018 
(B46) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Czech Defense: General 4.f4 Qa5 (B07) 1-0 Central pawn roller
J Johnson vs Y K Pang, 2016 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Alapin. Barmen Def (B22) 1-0 Stockfish notes
M Savic vs J Riff, 2005
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Scheveningen. Classical General (B83) 1-0
Tseitlin vs Z Sturua, 1978 
(B83) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Alapin. General / Big Clamp (B22) 0-1Zwischenzug+
F Borg vs Niemann, 2015 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Four Knights. Cobra Var (B45) 0-1 crossed-up
M Lu vs M van Foreest, 2022 
(B45) Sicilian, Taimanov, 21 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Accelerated Panov Attack (B10) 1-0She didn't 0-0
Hemant Sharma vs M Lee, 2018 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian 2.c3 Alapin. Barmen Def Modern Line (B22) 1-0 En prise
S Vysochin vs G Nagibin, 2009 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 21 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr 3...Qa5 Def: ML (B01) 1-0 Black doesn't get castled
D Brodsky vs Anish Kumar, 2022 
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Defense: Four Pawns Attack. Main Line (B03) 1-0 U12
P Venkatesh vs T Kvikvinia, 2016
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 21 moves, 1-0

DC3 The Arabian Mate, How to Beat Your Dad at Chess by Chandler
Parma vs M Damjanovic, 1960 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 26 moves, 0-1

Lion Def: Anti-Philidor. Lion's Cave (B07) 0-1 Don't Pin FTB
A Szieberth vs S Galdunts, 2002
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 0-1

Kavalek says this is a B41 Paulsen Sicilian in his column link
Gelfand vs Ponomariov, 2009 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: French Variation. Open (B40) 1-0 Tuned up
Z Gofshtein vs D Godes, 1993 
(B40) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Closed Variation (B23) 1-0 h-file attack
D Kolica vs T Leifsson, 2013
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 21 moves, 1-0

Lion's Jaw
Anand vs M Gurevich, 2005 
(B07) Pirc, 21 moves, 1-0

0-0-0 vs 0-0
Adams vs R Sheldon, 1997 
(B48) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 21 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def: Austrian Attk. Kurajica Var (B09) 1-0 Bxf7+ sets up N
J Cueto vs M Pardo, 1990
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 21 moves, 1-0

336 games

 » View all game collections by fredthebear PGN Download
 » Search entire game collection library
 » Clone this game collection (copy it to your account)
 » FAQ: Help with Game Collections
Home | About | Login | Logout | F.A.Q. | Profile | Preferences | Premium Membership | Kibitzer's Café | Biographer's Bistro | New Kibitzing | Chessforums | Tournament Index | Player Directory | Notable Games | World Chess Championships | Opening Explorer | Guess the Move | Game Collections | ChessBookie Game | Chessgames Challenge | Store | Privacy Notice | Contact Us

Copyright 2001-2025, Chessgames Services LLC