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  1. "Aron Nimzowitsch: A Reappraisal" by Keene
    < The digital form of the notes of this book has been kindly provided to Chessgames.com by Ray Keene.>

    INTRODUCTION

    Aron Nimzowitsch was the great chess thinker as well as aspirant for the world championship in the late 1920s and early 1930s. His influence on subsequent generations of players has been enormous and his espousal of his own defence, the Nimzo-Indian, 1 d4 ♘f6 2 c4 e6 3 ♘c3 ♗b4, helped it to become, perhaps, the most popular and effective weapon against 1 d4.

    Study of Nimzowitsch's games will be of immense benefit to the chess student who wishes to follow a thematic strategic line. By doing so, it is possible to prepare such plans for one's own chessboard battles and then carry them out, secure in the knowledge that the intellectual spadework has been done well in advance by a master of the art.

    Games which are particularly valuable in this sense are the thematic dark-square domination against Maroczy from Bled 1931, the superlative demonstration of good knight against bad bishop against Henneberger at Winterthur 1931, the strangulation against Tartakower in Nimzowitsch's greatest tournament triumph at Carlsbad 1929, and the ruthless exploitation of doubled pawns against the two times world championship challenger Bogoljubow from that same tournament. An absolute masterpiece of planning was his game against Levenfish. It has inspired many subsequent generations of masters and grandmasters.

    23 games, 1882-1995

  2. 2002 Capablanca memorial (elite)
    Held at Havana, Cuba from May 5-17, 2002. Single round-robin: 10 players; 9 rounds. Lazaro Bruzon Batista finished clear first.

    table[
    Player Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Totals 1 Lazaro Bruzon Batista ½b6 ½w2 Wb0 ½b7 ½w3 ½w5 Ww9 ½b8 Ww4 6 2 Leinier Dominguez Perez ½b0 ½b1 ½w3 Lb5 ½w9 Wb8 ½w4 Wb6 Ww7 5½ 3 Jesus Nogueiras ½b4 ½w6 ½b2 Ww1 ½b1 ½b7 ½w5 ½b9 ½w8 5 4 Reynaldo Vera ½w3 ½b5 ½w9 Wb8 ½w7 Ww6 ½b2 ½w0 Lb1 5 5 Walter Arencibia Rodriguez ½b8 ½w4 Wb6 Ww2 Lb0 ½w1 ½b3 Lb7 ½w9 4½ 6 Igor-Alexandre Nataf ½w1 ½b3 Lw5 Wb9 ½w8 Lb4 Ww7 Lw2 ½w0 4 7 Hannes Stefansson ½b9 Ww0 Lb8 ½w1 ½b4 ½w3 Lb6 Ww5 Lb2 4 8 Alonso Zapata ½w5 Lb9 Ww7 Lw4 ½b6 Lw2 Wb0 ½w1 ½b3 4 9 Ivan Morovic Fernandez ½w7 Ww8 ½b4 Lw6 ½b2 Lw0 Lb1 ½w3 ½b5 3½ 10 Arthur Kogan ½w2 Lb7 Lw1 Lb3 Ww5 Wb9 Lw8 ½b4 ½w6 3½ ]table

    [ FIDE Archive: Tournament report July 2002 - http://ratings.fide.com/tournament_... ]

    45 games, 2002

  3. Anand-Carlsen WCC 2013
    10 games, 2013

  4. Anand-Gelfand WCC 2012
    16 games, 2012

  5. Anand-Shirov 2000
    Games of the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2000).
    4 games, 2000

  6. Carlsen Anand WCC 2014
    11 games, 2014

  7. Colors-Reversed Openings
    In all of these games, White loses a tempo, and achieves a well known opening position, with the colors reversed.
    9 games, 1907-2001

  8. Games of historical interest.
    Some of the games found in our database are not so much instructional, as they are historical. Here are some such games.
    12 games, 1809-2002

  9. Manchester 1890
    [ ( The following research was graciously provided by User: rookhouse. )]

    The Manchester (England) Chess Club had been a prominent foundation throughout the 1800's and was the meeting place in 1890 for the formation of a larger chess organization that consisted of 24 Cheshire and Lancashire chess clubs. In the early part of 1890, the recently reformed British Chess Association was reportedly speculating on having their Sixth Chess Congress in conjunction with the Manchester Chess Club. Debates ensued over each entity putting up half of whatever prize money was to be awarded.

    On July 27th a meeting of the British Chess Association council was held at the British Chess Club. At this meeting, it was officially decided (under the presidency of George Newnes) to have the tournament at the halls of the Manchester Athenaeum. The total prize money was to be £300 (pounds), with each organization contributing half of the sum. Manchester Chess Club president J.P. Reyner would host the event and would also chair the Executive Committee for the tournament.

    The tournament was slated to take place Monday, August 25th through Monday, September 8th and to consist of eighteen players. In the weeks leading up to the tournament, several names were rumored to have committed to playing in Manchester, but did not make the trip for various reasons. This list of known masters included Jackson Showalter, Mikhail Chigorin, Jacques Mieses, Emanuel Lasker, Amos Burn, Curt von Bardeleben, Max Harmonist, Johann Hermann Bauer, Max Weiss, and Alphonse Goetz.

    World champion Wilhelm Steinitz was retired from tournament play in 1890, so he would not be making an appearance. Joseph Henry Blackburne had been ill with bronchitis, but still committed to play. Henry Edward Bird was fighting old age and a serious case of gout, yet was still rumored to attend. The American champion, Captain George Henry Mackenzie, had been ill with cancer for quite some time and had not played competitively since taking second at Bradford in 1888. He even missed the Sixth American Chess Congress in his hometown of New York the previous year. Word was getting around that Mackenzie was feeling better and that he would be leaving New York for Manchester at the end of July.

    The overwhelming responses of players wanting to compete at Manchester forced the Tournament Executive Committee to eventually expand the field to twenty players. The final roster of competitors was as follows:

    [unknown player] (St. Petersburg), Isidor Gunsberg (London), William Gunston (Cambridge), Francis Lee (London), Charles Locock (London), James Mason (London), James Mortimer (London), Oscar Mueller (London), John Owen (Liverpool), Emil Schallopp (Berlin), Theodor von Scheve (Berlin), Jean Taubenhaus (Paris), Siegbert Tarrasch (Nuremberg), Edmund Thorold (Bath), Samuel Tinsley (London), Louis van Vliet (London), [unknown player] (London), plus the aforementioned [unknown player] (Manchester), George Mackenzie (New York), and Henry Bird (London).

    The prize money was to be divided accordingly: 1st Place (£80), 2nd Place (£60), 3rd Place (£50), 4th Place (£40), 5th Place (£30), 6th Place (£20), and 7th Place (£10). The Manchester Examiner & Times offered up £10 for the "best game played" and Mr. E.N. Frankenstein (a well-known British player and chess problem composer) contributed £5 for the "most brilliant game" of the tournament.

    The format for the tournament was not for the weak of heart. Daily game times would be 12:00pm – 4:00pm and 6:00pm – 10:00pm, with Sundays being an off day. Three games would be played every two days, with the evening session of the second day being reserved for the completion of adjourned games. Each player would play everyone once, for a total of nineteen games in thirteen days of play.

    The Manchester Athenaeum was an impressive building, housing several different types of organizations and managed by a board of directors. Chess contests previously held there included the 1882 Counties Chess Congress and the matches between Yorkshire & Lancashire in both 1884 and 1889.

    The opening ceremony of the tournament took place on the same day as the first round was to begin, Monday, August 25th. Nearly all of the players were present at an early hour in the concert room of the Manchester Athenaeum, as well as several spectators. The drawing of numbers commenced at 11:30am and subsequent pairings were announced. Shortly after this, Mr. Bird arrived at the room to a thunderous applause. Bird was the well-known veteran and a definite crowd favorite. Opening play would begin later than planned (at approximately 12:30pm), due to lengthy speeches and the drawing of numbers.

    After the first four rounds, Mason and Bird were the leaders at 3 ½ points and scheduled to face each other in the fifth round. Tarrasch, Mackenzie, and Blackburne were all close behind with 3 points each. Mason would eventually prevail over Bird in their fifth round matchup against his opponent's Sicilian Defence, leaving him in sole possession of first place. The loss was the start of a three game losing streak for the elderly Bird, who quickly fell off the lead. Mason would not suffer his first defeat until the eighth round, at the hands of the also unbeaten Tarrasch.

    At the halfway point of the tournament, Tarrasch and Mackenzie would have a memorable showdown of tournament leaders that ultimately led to an 80-move draw. This allowed Mason, with his tenth round win over Mortimer, to sneak back into a tie with the leaders. Blackburne would suffer a loss at the hands of Bird to drop back into fourth place by himself. The tournament standings (notwithstanding the timing of adjourned games and their completions) after the tenth round were as follows:

    1. Mason, Mackenzie, Tarrasch (8.0)
    4. Blackburne (7.0)
    5. Bird, Gunsberg (6.0)
    7. Schallopp, Von Scheve (5.5)
    9. Taubenhaus, Tinsley (5.0)
    11. Alapin, Mortimer, Mueller (4.5)
    14. Owen (4.0)
    15. Gunston, Lee, Locock, Thorold (3.5)
    19. Gossip (2.5)
    20. Van Vliet (2.0)

    Just past the midway mark, Tarrasch quickly took sole possession of the lead with victories in four of the next five rounds and started to distance himself from the field. Mason losses to Von Scheve (13th round) and Gunsberg (15th round), coupled with a Blackburne loss to Taubenhaus (14th round) would contribute to the German having a full two and half point lead after fifteen rounds.

    In addition to all of this, the strain of the tournament schedule seemed to finally catch up with the ailing Mackenzie. After being amongst the leaders for the first half of the tournament, he would suffer uncharacteristic losses to Lee (11th round), Tinsley (13th round) and the cellar dwelling Van Vliet (14th round).

    A Tarrasch win over Blackburne (16th round), combined with a Mason loss to Owen (17th round), clinched the tournament victory for Tarrasch, giving him a three point lead over the field with two rounds remaining. The final tournament standings played out as follows:

    1. Tarrasch (15.5)
    2. Blackburne (12.5)
    3. Mackenzie, Bird (12.0)
    5. Mason, Gunsburg (11.5)
    7. Alapin, Tinsley, Von Scheve (11.0)
    10. Taubenhaus (10.5)
    11. Schallopp (10.0)
    12. Gunston, Lee (9.0)
    14. Mortimer (8.5)
    15. Owen (7.5)
    16. Mueller (7.0)
    17. Thorold (6.0)
    18. Locock (5.5)
    19. Van Vliet (5.0)
    20. Gossip (4.0)

    After the conclusion of the tournament, Steinitz wrote an article in the October 1890 issue of International Chess Magazine called [Ground Swell from the Manchester Congress.] He wrote of the conditions of the playing hall at the Manchester Athenaeum:

    "For one thing, many of the players complain of the unfavorable climatic conditions of Cottonopolis* and the bad ventilation and awkward situation of the place of play."

    "It is true that Manchester is too often covered with a black pall of clouds and a drizzly rain falls, and it is certain that seventy-five weary steps had to be climbed in order to reach the tournament room, and that when it was reached, the atmosphere was hot and too often stifling."

    It is entirely possible that these playing conditions affected the aforementioned players with certain illnesses (Bird, Blackburne, Mackenzie).

    [* The term "Cottonopolis" is often used for the city of Manchester, England in reference to its metropolis of cotton and cotton mills.]

    <SUMMARY SOURCES:>
    Morgan's Shilling Chess Library (Book 7): A Selection of Games from the International Tournament Played at Manchester (25th August to 8th September 1890); British Chess Magazine (1890, 1891, 1892)
    The Chess Player's Chronicle (1890, 1891)
    The International Chess Magazine (September, October 1890)
    Deutsches Wochenschach (1890)

    <GAMES & NOTES (too many individual dates to list):>
    [Manchester Guardian Observer
    The Daily News
    Hamshire Telegraph & Sussex Chronicle
    Evening News and Post
    Bristol Times
    Bristol Mercury and Daily Post
    Manchester Times
    Leeds Mercury
    Modern Chess Brilliancies
    Knowledge 1890, 1891 (Gunsberg chess columns)
    The (London) Times
    The Belfast New Letter
    The Scotsman
    The Field
    Baltimore Sunday News
    Chicago Times
    Cincinnati Commercial Gazette
    The (New Orleans) Times-Democrat
    Daily (New Orleans) Picayune
    The (Philadelphia) Times
    Baltimore Sunday News
    Chicago Times
    New York Sun
    New York Times
    New York Daily Tribune
    ]

    98 games, 1890

  10. Sunday Puzzles
    These are among the hardest of the Chessgames.com daily puzzles.
    53 games, 1893-1999

  11. WCC Kramnik-Topalov Elista 2006
    16 games, 2006

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