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Robert Cunningham

Number of games in database: 1
Years covered: 1994


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ROBERT CUNNINGHAM
(born 1962) United States of America

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 page 1 of 1; one game  PGN Download 
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. B Melvin vs R Cunningham 1-0251994Atlanta Action TournamentC19 French, Winawer, Advance

Kibitzer's Corner
Jun-14-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  TheAlchemist: Maybe this is Robert Cunningham, from the following game: (taken from: http://www.logicalchess.com/resourc...)

<The Immortal Mr. Magoo>

(Comments by: Bill Melvin)

Chess players often analyze their game with their opponents afterwards, but never have I seen any chess players discussing naming a game. Oh sure, we have the Evergreen Game and the Game of the Century. We even have the Game they Showered with Gold Pieces and the Immortal Zugzwang. Doubtless other games exist which are much less famous but have been given names. Presumably the winner or some magazine columnist comes up with the name.

I've never played a game which has been given a name, but recently had a magical hour in Atlanta where everything went better than planned. Hmmm... what to name it? Kyle Therrell gave me a shiny penny for my efforts, but Game they Showered with a Shiny Penny left something to be desired. Perhaps the character of the game itself can be used to come up with a name? The game, which was certainly extraordinarily brilliant, was not exactly planned. It seems that I did not see everything at the time of the crucial combinations and I was indeed quite fortunate that things worked out as well as they did. Yet, the combination was evidently quite sound as a strong computer played the same moves as I did starting with move 17 and considered me to be ahead by over a Pawn at all times.

This chess game reminds me of Mr. Magoo: the cartoon hero who is aware of little but always comes out of dangerous situations doing just fine. Everything that Mr. Magoo tries, no matter how reckless, turns out fine. Yet this is no doing of Mr. Magoo, he is just consistently in the right place at the right time. This time, the man was in the right place to get a chess game named after him! I now present: The Immortal Mr. Magoo.

Jun-14-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  TheAlchemist: [Event "Atlanta Action Tournament"]
[Site "Atlanta, Georgia"]
[Date "1994.05.09"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Melvin, Bill"]
[Black "Cunningham, Robert"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C19"]
[WhiteElo "2170"]
[BlackElo "2200"]

1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e5 Ne7 5.Nf3 c5 6.a3 Bxc3+ 7.bxc3 Bd7 8.Bd3 Ba4 (Okay, I admit it, I was out of book with 8.Bd3. Looks like I do not have too good a feel for this position as 8...Ba4 took me totally by surprise. Turns out I was supposed to play 8. a4. Why? I am not sure...perhaps to stop 8...Ba4? My danger sense went off around here and I felt that I was about to receive a lesson.) 9.O-O Qa5 10.Bd2 Nbc6 11.c4 Qc7 (This is action chess and I do not care to get crushed positionally by some French guru. The problem with big centers is: the bigger they are the harder they fall. Mine is about to fall. Unfortunately for my opponent, someone should have posted a sign that read: Danger: Beware of Falling Centers.) 12.cxd5 Nxd5 13.dxc5 Nxe5 14.Nxe5 Qxe5 (My position does not inspire confidence. Pawn structures do not get a lot worse than mine. But, I have a development lead and not a whole lot to lose so...) 15.Qg4 Bc6 16.Rae1 Qc7 17.c4 Nf6 (It looked necessary to kick the Knight back to f6 before taking the g-Pawn. Otherwise, black simply castles Queenside and mauls me down the g-file.) 18.Qxg7 (No turning back now!) 18...Rg8 19. Rxe6+ fxe6 (Well, shoot. I can not play 20.Qxc7 because of 20...Rxg2+ 21. Kh1 Rg7+ 22.Qxc6 bxc6 when I am down an Exchange. I did not see this when I played 18.Qg7 or 19.Rxe6+. If only I could block the g-file...) 20.Bg6+ Kd8 21.Qxf6+ Qe7 22.Ba5+ b6 23.Rd1+ Bd7 (Yikes. Everything is hanging with no way to break through. If 24.Qf3 then 24...Kc7 and I will soon be down a full Rook. Not exactly a storybook ending. If only Mr. Magoo were here... wait... what is that... it is, it is Mr. Magoo...) 24.cxb6 Qxf6 25.b7+ (Get a look at that final position! I am down a Queen and an exchange, but it is forced checkmate. The ending would have been) 25...Ke7 26.Bb4+! (another move I did not see until move 24) 26...Kd8 27.bxa8=Q Kc7 28.Ba5# (This was easily the best combination I have ever played. Incredibly, I still had around 15 of my original 30 minutes left on my clock. Somewhere Mr. Magoo is smiling...) 1-0

Jun-14-05  azaris: Looks like he hasn't had many Happy Days.
Jun-14-05  Resignation Trap: <TheAlchemist> I hate to disappoint you after your excellent posts, but the two games given by R Cunningham ,namely Adams vs R Cunningham, 1996 and Joel Benjamin vs R Cunningham, 1995 were both played by Robin J. Cunningham.
Jun-14-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  TheAlchemist: <Resignation Trap> That's ok, I was just guessing. I was never a lottery-winning kind of guy anyway :-)
May-19-11
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <Resignation Trap> The openings played by 'Robert' Cunningham in the 1995-96 games were exactly what he was playing in the mid 1990s. In one of my games with Robin at Philadelphia, I opened 1.Nf3 and steered play into a closed Catalan, which I rarely played, because I was familiar with his handling of the Tarrasch QGD.
May-19-11  MaxxLange: Robin Cunningham, as far as I know, is now out West...maybe Colorado? I think he still plays in USCF tournaments, but not many

He used to teach mathematics at the NC Science and Math high school, in Durham.....strong endgame player, nice guy

Nov-14-13  N0B0DY: I feel like if <Atlanta> had just tried a little harder it could have been a palindrome.

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