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Vladimir Petrov
Petrov 
 

Number of games in database: 346
Years covered: 1922 to 1942
Overall record: +163 -78 =102 (62.4%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 3 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Queen's Pawn Game (20) 
    D02 D04 D05 E00 A40
 Catalan (16) 
    E02 E01 E06
 Sicilian (16) 
    B58 B29 B40 B74 B25
 Slav (15) 
    D17 D15 D12 D13 D18
 Orthodox Defense (11) 
    D52 D64 D63 D60 D65
 King's Indian (10) 
    E60 E67
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (30) 
    B74 B56 B80 B72 B84
 French Defense (22) 
    C10 C01 C17 C14 C11
 Queen's Pawn Game (20) 
    D02 D04 A45 A40 A46
 Slav (14) 
    D19 D10 D15 D18 D13
 Sicilian Dragon (11) 
    B74 B72 B73 B70
 French (9) 
    C10 C11 C13 C00
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Petrov vs R Grau, 1939 1-0
   Stahlberg vs Petrov, 1938 0-1
   L Rellstab vs Petrov, 1937 0-1
   Petrov vs Alekhine, 1938 1-0
   G Page vs Petrov, 1933 0-1
   Petrov vs I Strazdins, 1926 1-0
   J Turn vs Petrov, 1929 0-1
   Petrov vs T Bergs, 1929 1-0
   K Richter vs Petrov, 1936 1/2-1/2
   Petrov vs Stahlberg, 1937 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Rosario (1939)
   Kemeri (1937)
   Margate (1938)
   Lodz (1938)
   non-FIDE Munich Olympiad (1936)
   Buenos Aires Olympiad Final-A (1939)
   Hamburg Olympiad (1930)
   Moravska Ostrava (1933)
   Kemeri (1939)
   Stockholm Olympiad (1937)
   Podebrady (1936)
   USSR Championship (1940)
   Prague Olympiad (1931)
   Warsaw Olympiad (1935)
   Folkestone Olympiad (1933)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Vladimirs Petrovs Tournaments/Matches 1923-1942 by jessicafischerqueen
   Vladimirs Petrovs Chess Biography by jessicafischerqueen
   Hero of the Pre-War Olympiads, GM Vladimirs Petr by nizmo11
   Buenos Aires Olympiad 1939 (Petrov's games) by jessicafischerqueen
   Stockholm Olympiad 1937 (Petrov's games) by jessicafischerqueen
   Lodz 1938 by jessicafischerqueen
   Kemeri 1939 by jessicafischerqueen
   Kemeri 1939 by plerranov
   Warsaw Olympiad 1935 (Petrov's games) by jessicafischerqueen
   Munich Unofficial Olympiad 1936 (Petrovs' games) by jessicafischerqueen
   Sverdlovsk 1942 National Tournament by jessicafischerqueen
   3rd Latvian Chess Congress 1930-1931 by jessicafischerqueen
   Bad Harzburg 1938 by jessicafischerqueen


Search Sacrifice Explorer for Vladimir Petrov
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VLADIMIR PETROV
(born Sep-27-1907, died Aug-26-1943, 35 years old) Latvia

[what is this?]

Vladimir Petrov (Latvian spelling: Vladimirs Petrovs) was born in Riga, Latvia, on 27th September 1907 (some sources list 1908 as the birth year).* Although he joined the ranks of the world chess elite in 1937, he is perhaps less well known than he should be, due to his being arrested by the NKVD in 1942 and imprisoned for the rest of his life.(1) He was subsequently expunged from Soviet chess history. Most of Petrov's colleagues in the Soviet bloc, with the notable exceptions of Alexander Koblents and Paul Keres, avoided publishing his games, or even mentioning his name in public.(2) Consequently, little was heard about Petrov in the west until long after his career and life had ended. The political turmoil of the USSR kept him from being as well known as he deserved. He notched a lifetime 50% score against both Alexander Alekhine and Jose Raul Capablanca, and defeated an impressive list of international masters including Alekhine, Keres, Samuel Reshevsky, Reuben Fine, Rudolf Spielmann, Isaac Boleslavsky, Gideon Stahlberg, Savielly Tartakower, Grigory Levenfish, Erich Eliskases, Vladas Mikenas, Karel Treybal, Georgy Lisitsin, Vladimir Makogonov, and Alexander Kotov.

Genesis of a Master

Petrov's father ran a modest cobbler's shop in Riga, while his mother worked as a housekeeper. In 1919, Petrov was accepted at the prestigious Lomonosov High School, where he received a first rate liberal arts education. In that same year, the streets of Riga were barricaded as nationalists fought Bolshevik and German armies to retain Latvian independence, which had been declared in 1918. Such concerns seemed far from Petrov's mind, however, as he enjoyed a vibrant school life centered largely around music, soccer, and gambling at cards with his friends. He and his friends grew bored with cards, and were introduced to chess by Viktors Rosenbergs , who offered to help hone their skills. Petrov soon challenged him to a 100 game chess match, which he ultimately won. In 1923, he won the school championship and joined the Riga-2 chess club, and a year later went on to win the reserves section of the first Latvian Chess Congress, earning the first category title. His optimism and spark in almost everything he tried earned him the nickname "Successful like Petka," and he was indeed successful in gaining admission to the Riga School of Jurisprudence in 1925, although he would not graduate for another 16 years. In 1926, he won the strong Riga City Championship, which prompted him to devote almost all of his time to a quest to become a chess master.

Chess Olympian

Setting law books aside, Petrov instead immersed himself in the games of Latvia's strongest players, Hermanis Mattison and Fricis Apsenieks. In his own games, he favored Mattisons' positional style, and soon became an expert at knowing exactly when to trade down to a winning endgame, a characteristic he would retain throughout his career. His star rose quickly as he finished shared second in the 1926 Latvian Chess Congress, and earned his Latvian master title by winning the 1930-1931 Latvian Chess Congress. Petrov played third board for Latvia at the inaugural FIDE Chess Olympiad at The Hague 1928, and went on to play for Latvia in all the Chess Olympiads up to 1939, garnering a gold medal on third board at Prague 1931, and a bronze medal on first board at Buenos Aires 1939. He won his first Latvian Championship in 1930, and tied with Apsenieks in the 1934 edition. Petrov had his heart set on playing first board for the Olympic team, so instead of a playoff match to decide the Latvian championship, Petrov struck a deal with Apsenieks: he would concede the title in exchange for first board in all subsequent Chess Olympiads.

Joining the Elite

Petrov won another Latvian championship in 1935, and gave a creditable performance on first board at the Warsaw 1935 Olympiad, scoring 55% and defeating both the Lithuanian and Argentine champions, Vladas Mikenas and Roberto Grau. On the strength of these results, Petrov was invited to his first major international tournament, the Czech Championship in Podebrady (1936). Despite a disappointing 10th place finish, Petrov was included in another top event, this time in his home city of Riga. At Kemeri (1937) he stunned the chess world by finishing shared first with Reshevsky and Salomon Flohr, ahead of both Alekhine and Keres. Reshevsky and Flohr decided that it was most fitting that Petrov should accept the tournament prize from Latvian president Karlis Ulmanis. In addition, he was awarded a silver cup donated by the Aron Nimzowitsch family, honoring the "best result by a Latvian against a foreign master" for this brilliancy with the black pieces- L Rellstab vs Petrov, 1937. Petrov also earned the title of Grandmaster, due to a widely recognized convention in European chess at this time that if a home town player won a tournament in which at least six foreign Grandmasters participated, then that player would also be recognized as a Grandmaster. Petrov's surprise victory at Kemeri created a stir among European chess journals, which then began referring to him as a "Latvian Grandmaster."(3) He also received laudatory notices from prominent peers such as Max Euwe, Emanuel Lasker and Alexander Alekhine.

More invitations to premier events were forthcoming, but Petrov lacked consistency at the top level and he logged uneven international results from 1937-1939. He finished dead last at Semmering/Baden (1937) against a very tough field, featuring Capablanca, Keres, Fine, Reshevsky and Flohr. Petrov fared much better at Tallinn 1938 in the Latvia-Estonia team match, leading his side to victory by defeating Keres 1.5-.5 on first board. He then finished a respectable third at Margate (1938), surprising Alekhine by almost checkmating him in the middle of the board- Petrov vs Alekhine, 1938. After disappointing his Latvian fans with a dismal eighth place at Kemeri 1939, Petrov rebounded yet again with a bronze medal performance on first board at the Buenos Aires 1939 Olympiad. He scored 71% without losing a game, prompting Harry Golombek to remark "Petrov played the best chess at Buenos Aires."

Life as a Soviet Master

Shortly after a harrowing return journey from Buenos Aires through mine-filled seas, the Olympic bronze medalist was faced with a new challenge. Not only was Europe at war, but in 1940 the Soviet Union invaded Latvia and established a puppet communist government. No more would Latvia field Olympic teams, and Petrov was no longer allowed to participate as an organizer of Latvian chess events. At first, however, Petrov was guardedly optimistic about this upheaval. Although he had always been dubious and wary about the Bolshevik life in Russia, he and his wife Galina had long been members of what might be termed Latvia's Russian cultural intelligentsia. Though both considered themselves Latvian, they were steeped in Russian music, literature, theatre, and dance, and frequently attended such cultural events in Riga. Even better, after Latvia became the Latvian SSR (Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic), Petrov was awarded the title of Soviet master and seeded into the 12th USSR Championship (1940). Petrov did well to finish in the middle of the field, behind future world champions Mikhail Botvinnik and Vasily Smyslov, but ahead of Grigory Levenfish, who had won the 1937 USSR Championship, and Alexander Kotov, who had finished second in the 1939 Championship. In addition, he defeated both Levenfish and Kotov in their individual games. Petrov also drew both of the event's co-winners, Andre Lilienthal and Igor Bondarevsky.

On his return to Riga to rejoin his family and play in the inaugural Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) Championship, Petrov found his wife worrying about the current Bolshevik regime. She reported that availability of food and other materials in Riga was already scarce, and even worse, local government purges and general deportations were well under way. Petrov, now employed by the Soviet TASS news agency, had experienced no particular trouble during his trip to Russia, and he tried to assuage her fears. Nonetheless, as he left again for the USSR Championship Semi-finals in Rostov-on-Don, she pressed a photo of herself and their child into his palm for "good luck." He never saw either of them again. After six rounds of the semi-finals had been completed, in Petrov's section only Alexander Tolush had a better score, and it seemed that he was destined to qualify for his second USSR Championship.(4) However, the Semi-final was abandoned on 23 June 1941 when news reached the tournament that the Germans had invaded the Soviet Union. There was a mad rush as the players attempted to reach home. Petrov, accompanied by Latvian chess colleagues Alexander Koblents and Janis Fride, was halted at a customs station near Abrene, in the Latvian district of Latgale. They were informed that they could travel no further, as the German army had already overrun Latvia. Petrov was forced to return to Moscow, but soon left for Gorky to volunteer in the Russian-Latvian Rifle Division. He was summoned back to Moscow in the winter of 1941, where he finished second to Isaak Mazel, ahead of Vasily Panov and Vladimir Alatortsev in the Moscow City Championship. Petrov then took a position as Assistant Commandant in the Moscow council "Dynamo," devoted to organizing logistics and defense in a city many feared would soon be under siege. Despite the German advance into the heart of Russia, however, the Soviet Chess Section still managed to keep organizing tournaments. At the Moscow national tournament in 1942 Petrov finished second behind Bondarevsky, ahead of Alatortsev, Mikenas, and Panov. Evacuated to Sverdlosk in 1942, Petrov competed in another national tournament, finishing second to Viacheslav Ragozin, ahead of Alexey Sokolsky, Boleslavsky, and Georgy Ilivitsky.

Gulag

Characteristically, Petrov had a habit of speaking frankly to friends and colleagues about his impressions of life in Soviet Latvia and Russia, some of which were critical of the Bolshevik regime. According to both Galina Petrova and Russian historian Sergey Voronkov, three fellow chess masters denounced Petrov to the authorities.(5) After Sverdlovsk, Vladas Mikenas recalls that he expected to see Petrov participate at the next major tournament in Kuibishev, but he never showed up. On August 31, 1942, Petrov was arrested and questioned for two weeks in Moscow at Lubyanka prison for violating "Article 58," a catch-all law that forbade any kind of anti-Soviet statements or activities. He was subsequently transferred to Moscow's notorious Butyrka jail for a further five months of detention and interrogation. On February 3, 1943 Petrov was sentenced to ten years in Vorkuta Gulag for criticizing decreased living standards in Latvia after the Soviet annexation of 1940. According to a death certificate released by the KGB in 1989, Petrov died of pneumonia in, or en route to, the gulag on August 26, 1943.(5)

Rehabilitation

Galina Petrova lost contact with her husband in 1942, and spent the rest of her life trying to find out what happened to him. Galina was given conflicting reports of his arrest and detention, so she moved to Siberia in an attempt to find any record he had been at a gulag. After Stalin's death in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev rehabilitated the names of thousands who had died during "The Terror," but the conviction against Petrov was upheld. It would not be until the era of Glasnost that Mikhail Gorbachev finally rehabilitated Vladimir Petrov's name, with an official pardon in March 1989.

Notes

(*) There are conflicting sources on the birth year of Vladimirs Petrovs. The Russian Wikipedia article, for example, gives *both* 1907 and 1908 as the birth year: Wikipedia article: Петров, Владимир Михайлович (шахматист) In the kibitzing section below, one can read a detailed account of which sources favor which birth year.

(1) The NKVD (Peoples Commissariat for Internal Affairs) was a predecessor of the KGB.

(2) Andris Fride <Vladimirs Petrovs: A Chessplayer's Story - From Greatness to the Gulags>, Caissa Editions, 2004.

(3) Vladimir Dedkov, ed. <Star Extinguished Before its Time> Riga, 2008

(4) At Rostov-on-Don 1941, the USSR Championship semifinal was organized into four separate sections. When the tournament abruptly ended, Petrov sat second in his section, a half point behind Tolush.

(5) Alexei Shirov, with Sergey Voronkov and Vladimir Dedkov <"Restoring the Annals of Latvian Chess History"> (ru) http://chess-news.ru/node/5341

Sources

Andris Fride <Vladimirs Petrovs: A Chessplayer's Story - From Greatness to the Gulags>, Caissa Editions, 2004.

Vladimir Dedkov, ed. <Star Extinguished Before its Time> Riga, 2008

Sergey Grodzensky <The Lubyanka Gambit>, Olympia Press, Moscow 2004

Alexei Shirov, with Sergey Voronkov and Vladimir Dedkov <"Restoring the Annals of Latvian Chess History"> (ru) http://chess-news.ru/node/5341

Biographical Game Collection

1.Game Collection: Vladimirs Petrovs Tournaments/Matches 1923-1942

Last updated: 2024-05-10 04:54:52

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 14; games 1-25 of 346  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. V Rosenbergs vs Petrov 1-0151922Blitz MatchB10 Caro-Kann
2. Petrov vs A Strautmanis ½-½381925Match Russian Secondary - City Gymnasium C80 Ruy Lopez, Open
3. H Mattison vs Petrov  ½-½441926Incognito Match Riga Ch.Club - Latvian Univ.B44 Sicilian
4. F Apsenieks vs Petrov  0-13919261st Riga ChampionshipB32 Sicilian
5. S Meiers vs Petrov  1-0641926Match Latvia Univ.-Liepaja Chess ClubB56 Sicilian
6. Petrov vs I Strazdins 1-02219262nd Latvian congressD60 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
7. T Bergs vs Petrov  1-07219262nd Latvian congressA48 King's Indian
8. Petrov vs Udo Vitte 1-0241928Riga Chess Club championshipD52 Queen's Gambit Declined
9. N Elisons vs Petrov  1-0541928Riga Chess Club championshipA00 Uncommon Opening
10. Petrov vs J Turn  1-0641928Match Riga University - Tartu UniversityB02 Alekhine's Defense
11. M Feigin vs Petrov  0-1311928Olympic selection tournamentC14 French, Classical
12. Petrov vs K Makarczyk 1-0481928The Hague OlympiadD64 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
13. Petrov vs O Karlin  1-0361928The Hague OlympiadB40 Sicilian
14. Petrov vs J Rejfir  ½-½321928The Hague OlympiadD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
15. Petrov vs W Schelfhout  ½-½261928The Hague OlympiadD92 Grunfeld, 5.Bf4
16. Petrov vs T Bergs 1-02819281st Reiner Cafe tE21 Nimzo-Indian, Three Knights
17. Petrov vs F Apsenieks  0-15519282nd Reiner Cafe tD43 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
18. J Turn vs Petrov 0-1311929Match Tartu University - Riga UniversityD35 Queen's Gambit Declined
19. Petrov vs J Turn  ½-½651929Match Tartu University - Riga UniversityD52 Queen's Gambit Declined
20. Petrov vs T Bergs 1-02419293rd Reiner Cafe tB13 Caro-Kann, Exchange
21. Petrov vs Gerz Gladstein  1-03519291st Match Riga - KaunasD06 Queen's Gambit Declined
22. A Asgeirsson vs Petrov  0-1141930Hamburg OlympiadB56 Sicilian
23. Tartakower vs Petrov 0-1321930Hamburg OlympiadA45 Queen's Pawn Game
24. M Scheinberg vs Petrov  0-1271930Hamburg OlympiadA46 Queen's Pawn Game
25. Petrov vs S Takacs ½-½271930Hamburg OlympiadD78 Neo-Grunfeld, 6.O-O c6
 page 1 of 14; games 1-25 of 346  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Petrov wins | Petrov loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 52 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Dec-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: Here are both parts of a truly excellent article on <Vladimirs Petrovs> by Dmitry Kryakvin:

"The Hero of the Pre-War Olympics" (part one) http://www.russiachess.org/news/rep...

"On a Par with Alekhine and Capablanca" (part two) http://russiachess.org/news/report/...

The article features many annotated brilliancies and a slew of rare photos of the ill-starred Latvian master.

It's in Russian, but you can easily read it with the Google Translator, which is getting better and better, especially with Russian to English.

I have archived all of the text of this article in English, and also the photos, in case it "disappears" as these links tend to do.

Dec-09-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <Vladimirs Petrovs> greatest achievement:

Kemeri (1937)

Dec-09-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: These pics of Vladimir Petrov compared to the one on this page look very different.

http://www.chessdom.com/wp-content/...

http://www.bidmonfa.com/petrov_vlad...

The ears and nose look different.

Dec-09-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <chancho> yes, he does seem a bit of a chameleon eh?

However, all three are bona fide.

In fact, the CG Profile photo and the second photo you linked are close in time. The Profile photo is cropped from a larger photo which includes <Alekhine>, and was taken in <Kemeri>. I'm pretty sure it's from the tournament. The second photo you linked is definitely from <Kemeri 1937>, it's cropped from a larger shot that shows <Petrovs> accepting a prize for sharing 1st in the tournament.

The first photo you linked, grimly, dates from 1941-42 and is believed to be the last ever taken of this benighted chess master.

Dec-10-12  USSR Championships: <chancho> yes, here's the uncropped original Profile photo:

http://www.chesspro.ru/_images/mate...

It's labeled "Alekhine and Flohr before the tournament in Kemeri." from this fascinating article by Vladimir Moshchenko: http://www.chesspro.ru/_events/2009....

It's in Russian but you can make sense of it with the Google Translator.

I think it's possible <Petrovs> had his hair really slicked down with Brylcream here. It appears that <Alekhine> does too. Perhaps this was the "fashion of the time," or the two masters were having a friendly "who can get the most oil in their hair" contest.

<Petrov's> hair does look a tad fuller in his Kemeri 1937 victory photo:

http://www.bidmonfa.com/petrov_vlad...

Of course, the provenance of such old photos is sometimes mysterious. Photos are frequently mislabeled.

However, I think the ears and nose might look different because of the profile vs. head on shot.

No doubt that all three photos are <Petrovs>.

Jan-22-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <stanleys>

<<stanleys: Sergei Voronkov writes "Petrov was betrayed by three masters from Moscow,who played several times in the Soviet championships".Unfortunately he didn't give their names Petrov's fault? In a private talk with these masters(apperently he considered them as friends), he expressed his dissatisfaction about the living conditions in Latvia after it became part of the USSR>>

<Sergey Voronkov> gives his reasons for not revealing these three names in this interview:

-Alexei Shirov, with Sergey Voronkov and Vladimir Dedkov <"Restoring the Annals of Latvian Chess History"> http://chess-news.ru/node/5341

Although he believes he has accurate information about the names of the three informers, who were first identified by Petrov's wife, Voronkov thinks that revealing the names now would do more harm than good. More specifically, he worries that it would harm the families of the three masters, all of whom are now dead.

Interestingly, Petrov's grandson <Vladimir Dedkov>, who is also part of the interview, says that he would still like to know those three names.

Jan-23-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen:

<uponthehill: That chessplayer was shipped to Siberia by Russians, shortly after reconquering Latvia from Germans at the end of 2WW, and there he died- some say that he was executed by NKWD, some say that he died of an exhausting. He was not as good player as Keres, to become forgivness from Stalin.>

<Petrov> was sent to a Gulag in 1943, the Russian Army did not begin recapturing Latvia until 1944.

Jan-24-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  GrahamClayton: A photo of Petrov and his wife Galina:

http://www.russkije.lv/media/1/p/pe...

Jan-24-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <Graham> Nice one.
Jan-24-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <Vladimir Petrov Chess Biography>

Game Collection: Vladimir Petrov Chess Biography

This is a representative sample of many of Vladimir Petrov's best games over his career, arranged chronologically by event. He scored 50% from both Alexander Alekhine and Jose Raul Capablanca, with a victory over Alekhine at Margate (1938). Many of Petrov's best games have not yet been added to the database, notably his brilliancy against Savielly Tartakower at the Buenos Aires 1939 Olympiad, and several wins from his 1934 match against Rudolf Spielmann. I am currently compiling a list of about a hundred new games to submit to the database. Many of them will eventually make their way into this collection.

Jan-24-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <Vladimir Petrov Tournament List>

Game Collection: Vladimir Petrov Tournament List

This is not a complete list of every event Vladimir Petrov played in, but it covers all of his major tournaments and matches. The list spans a relatively short period from 1924 to 1942 because Petrov was arrested by the NKVD and died in a Soviet gulag in 1943. Still, he managed to win the Latvian Championship four times and won several international events, most notably Kemeri (1937). After the Russian annexation of Latvia in 1940, Petrov played only in Soviet tournaments and began to post more consistent results- results strong enough to suggest that this was a chess master who had been cut down in his prime.

Jan-25-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: Correction <Petrov> only won round one in his match against Spielmann, ultimately losing 4.5-3.5
Jul-26-13  tjipa: A somewhat crippled copy of Hans Ree article is here http://docs6.chomikuj.pl/1329552325... - yet, apart from some rambling on general historical topics, there is nothing about Petrov you wouldn't be able to find elsewhere.
Jul-26-13  BlackFront: Nobody ever accused Hans Ree of original research. You pay peanuts, you get monkeys.
Sep-05-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen: <tjipa> thank you for that updated link.

<BlackFront> heh...

Jan-02-14  thegoodanarchist: For whom was "Petrov's Defense" named? If it is this man, then I would say that he was successful in avoiding "disappearance" outside of the Soviet Union, at least.
Jan-02-14  Karpova: <thegoodanarchist>

Alexander Petrov

Jun-09-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Not a single Petrov's Defense, with either color, by Vladimir Petrov.
Jun-11-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Similarly, there are no games where Yehuda Gruenfeld played either side of a Gruenfeld Defense. But at least Eugenio Torre plays the Torre Attack, albeit without much success. http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches... But there are no games in the database where Carlos Torre, for whom the opening is named, played it.
Jun-17-14  GumboGambit: To clarify, there are a few ECO A46 Torre Attack games by Carlos Torre, including GOTD wins over Lasker and Saemisch.

Carlos Torre vs Lasker, 1925

Carlos Torre vs Saemisch, 1925

Jan-10-16  gars: <jessicafischerqueen> What about a ballot to choose the three chess masters from Moscow who turned Petrov in? My bets are Kotov, Baturinsky, Botvinnik, all of them very good communists.
Jan-10-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  roberts partner: Petrov's incautious free Latvia remarks were made at Sverdlovsk 1942, and none of the three names in gars post above played there.

The participants in finishing order were Ragozin, Petrov, Sokolsky, Ilvitsky, Boleslavsky, Vistaneckis, Mikenas, Poltoranov, Bastrikov, Poliak and P Ivanov.

Botvinnik's second Ragozin seems a prime suspect. Some of the others listed came like Petrov from Baltic states, so are unlikely. It isn't clear who were the other two informers.

Jan-10-16
Premium Chessgames Member
  roberts partner: After posting above I noticed that Voronkov had stated that the informers were Muscovites who had played in several Soviet championships. That narrows it down, though maybe too much.

Sokolsky was from Minsk, Bolesvaksy from Kiev, Vistaneckis and Mikenas from Baltic states. Poltanarov and Ivanov were unknowns who never played in USSR championships. Bastrikov seems to have been from Sverdlovsk. Ilivitsky too, though not clear if this was so in 1942. Poliak only played in the USSR ch final once, but maybe Voronkov is counting semi-finals. In summary: Ragozin fits the bill completely, others not clearly. My conclusion is that Ragozin plus two from Sokolsky, Ilivitsky, Bastrikov and Poliak were the informers who sent Petrov to his death.

Jan-10-16  visayanbraindoctor: <Ragozin fits the bill completely, others not clearly. My conclusion is that Ragozin plus two from Sokolsky, Ilivitsky, Bastrikov and Poliak were the informers who sent Petrov to his death.>

Such a tragic story. Betrayed by your fellow chess players, and sent your death for nothing more than personal political views.

Dec-08-16  stanleys: It is not sure that the above-mentionned three Moscovite masters have played in Sverdlovsk 1942.
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