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David Bronstein
Bronstein 
Photo courtesy of Eric Schiller.  

Number of games in database: 2,411
Years covered: 1938 to 1997
Last FIDE rating: 2432
Highest rating achieved in database: 2590
Overall record: +894 -338 =1103 (61.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 76 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (216) 
    B31 B20 B90 B50 B32
 Ruy Lopez (135) 
    C77 C97 C78 C69 C92
 Nimzo Indian (84) 
    E41 E55 E32 E59 E21
 French Defense (70) 
    C07 C15 C18 C02 C05
 King's Indian (64) 
    E67 E80 E86 E90 E61
 Queen's Pawn Game (59) 
    A46 D02 A45 D01 D00
With the Black pieces:
 French Defense (128) 
    C07 C16 C15 C09 C01
 King's Indian (108) 
    E67 E80 E60 E92 E69
 Ruy Lopez (93) 
    C76 C63 C99 C69 C92
 Caro-Kann (93) 
    B16 B10 B13 B15 B14
 Sicilian (87) 
    B92 B32 B90 B51 B59
 English (59) 
    A13 A15 A10 A16 A17
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Bronstein vs Ljubojevic, 1973 1-0
   Bronstein vs Geller, 1961 1-0
   Bronstein vs Keres, 1955 1-0
   Pachman vs Bronstein, 1946 0-1
   F Zita vs Bronstein, 1946 0-1
   Efimov vs Bronstein, 1941 0-1
   N Bakulin vs Bronstein, 1965 0-1
   J Kaplan vs Bronstein, 1975 0-1
   Bronstein vs M20, 1963 1-0
   Bronstein vs Botvinnik, 1951 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Botvinnik - Bronstein World Championship Match (1951)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Moscow Championship (1946)
   Saltsjobaden Interzonal (1948)
   Moscow - Prague (1946)
   URS-sf Moscow (1945)
   Budapest Candidates (1950)
   Gothenburg Interzonal (1955)
   Moscow Championship (1953)
   Belgrade (1954)
   Asztalos Memorial (1966)
   Moscow Championship (1961)
   USSR Championship (1949)
   USSR Championship 1964/65 (1964)
   Yerevan Seniors (1981)
   USSR Championship (1957)
   Amsterdam Interzonal (1964)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Challenger Bronstein by Gottschalk
   LDB told secrets to Assiac Isa24 by fredthebear
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by hought67
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by doug27
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by plerranov
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by Ziiggyy
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by rpn4
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by pacercina
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by Parmenides1963
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by kaspi124
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by Qindarka
   Sorcerer's Apprentice (Bronstein) by isfsam
   Match Bronstein! by amadeus
   Match Bronstein! by docjan


Search Sacrifice Explorer for David Bronstein
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DAVID BRONSTEIN
(born Feb-19-1924, died Dec-05-2006, 82 years old) Ukraine
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

David Ionovich Bronstein was born February 19, 1924 in Bila Tserkva, Ukraine.1

Chess and Checkers Club

When Bronstein was six, his grandfather taught him how to play chess. Later, when his family moved to Kiev, he joined the city "Chess and Checkers Club" and soon won the Kiev "Schoolboy's Championship."1 At age fifteen he was invited to play in the 11th Ukrainian Championship in Dnepropetrovsk, where he finished 8th.2 On the strength of this result he was invited back for the 12th Ukrainian Championship in Kiev. He placed 2nd to Isaac Boleslavsky, 3 which garnered him both the Soviet national master title and a place in the USSR Championship Semifinal in Rostov-on-Don.1,4 The semifinal was never finished due to the German invasion of Russia on June 22, 1941, and Bronstein did not play any serious chess for the next three years.1

Two Grandmaster Titles

By February 1944 the Germans had been driven back to the Dneiper River, and Bronstein joined the USSR Championship Semifinal in Baku.1 His 4th place finish qualified him for the final and drew the interest of Boris Vainstein, who quickly became an avid promoter of Bronstein's chess career. Vainstein was an influential member of the Soviet administration (though not an actual Communist Party member), and he managed to have Bronstein relocated to Moscow from his job rebuilding a steel factory in the ruins of Stalingrad.1 Bronstein managed only 15th place at the USSR Championship (1944), but he was hardly disgraced, since he won his game against the incumbent "Absolute Soviet champion": Bronstein vs Botvinnik, 1944. 5 Bronstein's 3rd place in the USSR Championship (1945) earned him a spot on the Soviet team in international matches, where he posted good results. Though he was not yet a grandmaster, FIDE invited him to the Saltsjöbaden Interzonal (1948), which he won.6 He was immediately made a Soviet grandmaster,7 and in July 1949 FIDE awarded him the international grandmaster title.8

The World Championship

Bronstein wasted no time proving that if someone wanted to unseat world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, they'd have to go through him. He shared 1st in both the USSR Championship (1948) and the USSR Championship (1949). He went on to tie Boleslavsky for 1st in the Budapest Candidates (1950), and won the subsequent playoff match. Bronstein now had the right to face Botvinnik in a championship match. Botvinnik had played no chess in public since he'd won the FIDE World Championship Tournament (1948), which Bronstein thought was a deliberate ploy to hide his opening preparation.9 Bronstein opened game one with the Dutch Defence, one of the champion's favorite systems. Botvinnik later characterized this strategem as "naive."10 The match was closely fought, and by game 22 Bronstein led by a point and needed only win once more, or draw twice in the last two games, to become world champion. The stage was set for a climactic final game in which Bronstein needed a victory, since the champion would retain his title in the event of a drawn match. This game proved somewhat controversial because Bronstein accepted Botvinnik's draw offer after only 22 moves: Bronstein vs Botvinnik, 1951. This engendered speculation that the Soviet government had ordered him not to beat Botvinnik. In a 1993 interview Bronstein explained that "There was no direct pressure (to lose deliberately)... But... there was the psychological pressure of the environment..." in part caused by his father's "several years in prison" and what he labeled "the marked preference for the institutional Botvinnik." Bronstein concluded that "it seemed to me that winning could seriously harm me, which does not mean that I deliberately lost."11

Cold Warrior

The NKVD12 had arrested Bronstein's father in 1935 because he had "tried to defend peasants... who were put under pressure by corrupt officials."13 His father was released after serving seven years in a gulag, and only pardoned for any wrongdoing in 1955. Bronstein never joined the Communist Party, nor any organisations associated with it, such as the Communist Youth Party, the USSR Writer's Union, or the USSR Journalist's Union.13 Nevertheless, for decades Bronstein remained a prominent member of the Soviet chess team. He played in four successive chess olympiads, winning the bronze medal on 3rd board in Helsinki 1952, the silver medal on 3rd board in Amsterdam 1954, and the gold medal on 4th board in both Moscow 1956 and Munich 1958.14 In the USSR - USA Radio Match (1945) Bronstein faced Anthony Santasiere on 10th board, scoring +2 -0 =0 in a 15½ - 4½ Soviet rout of the Americans. In a 1946 USSR-USA match in Moscow, the Soviets won again, with Bronstein splitting a pair of games against Olaf Ulvestad on 10th board. He again helped defeat the USA in two ideologically charged matches in 1954 and 1955. The first was slated for New York in 1953, but Cold War politics got in the way. The Soviet team were on the verge of boarding a ship from Cherbourg when a jittery US State Department abruptly tightened their visa restrictions. Moscow declared this a "violation of all the rules of international hospitality and civility," but the Soviets did manage to play the Americans the following year in New York, and again in Moscow 1955.15 In New York Bronstein played 2nd board and beat Arthur William Dake in one game, and then proceeded to win three straight from Dake's replacement, Arnold Denker. In Moscow he faced Larry Melvyn Evans on 3rd board, scoring +1 -0 =3. The USSR won both events.16

Golden Age

Although Bronstein never again played a world championship match, he enjoyed a long period of success in strong chess events.1 He came close to a title rematch with Botvinnik when he finished shared 2nd at the Zurich Candidates (1953), two points behind Vasily Smyslov. Bronstein wrote a book about the event, which has become a classic in chess literature: Zurich International Chess Tournament, 1953. He won the Gothenburg Interzonal (1955) in fine style, but finished behind Smyslov and Paul Keres in the Amsterdam Candidates (1956). He would never compete in another candidates event, though he did play in the Portoroz Interzonal (1958), Amsterdam Interzonal (1964), and the Petropolis Interzonal (1973). After 1949 he appeared in fifteen more USSR Championships, with his best results coming in 1957 (2nd to Mikhail Tal) ; 1958 (3rd to Tal); Nov-Dec 1961 (3rd to Boris Spassky) ; and 1964/1965 (2nd to Viktor Korchnoi) . He won or shared 1st in the Moscow Championship in 1946, 1947, 1953, 1957, 1961, and 1968.17 Bronstein also won or shared 1st in a series of international tournaments, including Hastings (1953/54), Belgrade 1954, Gotha 1957, Moscow 1959, Szombathely 1966, East Germany 1968, Sarajevo 1971, Hastings 1975/76, and Jurmala 1978.18

Chess Theory

Bronstein made many contributions to theory in openings such as the Ruy Lopez, King's Indian, and Caro-Kann (e.g. the Bronstein-Larsen variation 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.♘c3 dxe4 4.♘xe4 ♘f6 5.♘xf6 gxf6). He helped revive the King's gambit,1 and also wrote a popular book on one of his favorite weapons: Bronstein On the King's Indian. Although Bronstein preferred some systems over others, the following recollection from biographer Tom Fürstenberg is worth keeping in mind: "David explained many times that he doesn't play openings - he just starts to create an attack... from the first move! ...That is why he does not have a specific opening repertoire. He just plays everything!"1

Devik

Bronstein, known affectionately as "Devik" by his friends, married three times, but it was his third marriage to Isaac Boleslavsky's daughter Tatiana in 1984 that seems to have given him the most lasting and satisfying partnership.19 In her memoir, she recalls meeting him several times as a young girl, noting his humour, generosity and, "above all, his gentle smile."19 She also ruefully explains that although Bronstein's patron Boris Veinshtein was indeed a powerful man, he could do nothing to prevent the Soviet Chess Federation from banning him from almost all foreign tournaments for thirteen years.19 Bronstein was banned after Viktor Korchnoi defected in 1976, and Bronstein refused to sign a group letter condemning him. Despite the fact that Boris Gulko, Spassky, and Botvinnik also refused to sign this letter, it was only Bronstein who received this draconian punishment. Foreign tournaments were prized by Soviet masters as a crucial source of income, because they generally paid out prizes in "hard currency." Bronstein had to support himself during this period by writing for "Isvestiya."1 He believed his punishment was so severe because he had helped Korchnoi during the Karpov - Korchnoi Candidates Final (1974). 20 In 1990, after the Soviet Union collapsed and the borders opened, Bronstein contracted cancer, but an operation proved successful, and he lived another sixteen years. He spent much of this remaining time touring Europe, glorying in his new freedom by traveling from tournament to tournament, meeting old friends and making new friends. In his typically light hearted manner, Bronstein explained that "...amazed that I was still alive, chess clubs began showering me with invitations"21 He died on December 5, 2006.22

A Magical Fire

"The art of a chess player consists in his ability to ignite a magical fire from the dull and senseless initial position."23

--David Ionovich Bronstein

Notes

1 David Bronstein and Tom Fürstenberg, "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" (Cadogan 1995), p.263-271

2 Rusbase [rusbase-1]

3 Rusbase [rusbase-2]

4 Rusbase [rusbase-3]

5 Though Cafferty and Taimanov do not recognize the USSR Absolute Championship (1941) as a bona fide USSR Championship, the winner Botvinnik was nonetheless considered the Soviet champion at the time. Bernard Cafferty and Mark Taimanov, "The Soviet Championships" (Cadogen 1998), pp.48-51

6 Kotov and Yudovich, "Soviet Chess School" (Raduga Publishers 1982), pp.77-78

7 "Tidskrift för Schack" nr.8-9 (Aug-Sept 1948), pp.180-181. Translation by User: Tabanus

8"Tidskrift för Schack" nr.7-8 (July-Aug 1949), p.159. Translation by User: Tabanus

9 Bronstein and Fürstenberg, pp.16-17

10 Mikhail Botvinnik "Match for the World Championship- Botvinnik Bronstein Moscow 1951" Igor Botvinnik ed. Ken Neat transl. (Edition Olms 2004), p.16

11 "Revista Internacional de Ajedrez" (Mar 1993), pp.38-42. In Edward Winter, Chess Note 4753: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/...

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

13 Bronstein and Fürstenberg, p.269

14 "Men's Olympiads" http://www.olimpbase.org/

15 Andrew Soltis, "Soviet Chess 1917-1991" (McFarland 1997), pp.221-227

16 Gino Di Felice, "Chess Results 1951-1955" (McFarland 2010) pp.422, 522-23

17 1946 [rusbase-4] 1947 [rusbase-5] 1953 [rusbase-6] 1957 [rusbase-7] 1961 [rusbase-8] 1968 [rusbase-9]

18 <Hastings 1953-1954> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1951-1955," p.317); <Belgrade 1954> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1951-1955," p.333); <Gotha 1957> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1956-1960," p.129); <Moscow 1959> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1956-1960," p.342); <Szombathely 1966> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1964-1967," p.429); <East Germany 1968> (Di Felice, "Chess Results 1968-1970," p.12 <Sarajevo 1971> (http://www.365chess.com/tournaments... <Hastings 1975/76> http://www.hastingschess.com/previo... -<Jurmala 1978> (http://archive.today/JMAt)

19 Bronstein and Fürstenberg, pp.19-24

20 David Bronstein and Sergey Voronkov, "Secret Notes" Ken Neat, transl. (Edition Olms 2007), pp. 14-15

21 Bronstein and Voronkov, pp.12-13

22 Leonard Barden, David Bronstein obituary in "The Guardian" (7 Dec 2006) http://www.theguardian.com/news/200...

23 Bronstein and Voronkov, p.34

Wikipedia article: David Bronstein

Last updated: 2020-07-15 20:30:04

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 97; games 1-25 of 2,411  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Bronstein vs I Zaslavsky 1-0251938KievC43 Petrov, Modern Attack
2. Y Polyak vs Bronstein 0-1361938KievD10 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
3. B Vainshtein vs Bronstein 1-0151938Kiev000 Chess variants
4. Y Lembersky vs Bronstein 0-1371939URSC25 Vienna
5. L Kanevsky vs Bronstein  0-1341939Soviet UnionC46 Three Knights
6. Bronstein vs I Lipnitsky 1-0261939Kiev ChampionshipC19 French, Winawer, Advance
7. Bronstein vs Y Kaem 1-0281939Ukrainian ChampionshipC71 Ruy Lopez
8. Bronstein vs A Gaevsky  1-0481939Ukrainian ChampionshipC66 Ruy Lopez
9. Bronstein vs B Ratner 1-0351939Ukrainian ChampionshipB20 Sicilian
10. B Goldenov vs Bronstein  1-0321939Ukrainian ChampionshipA54 Old Indian, Ukrainian Variation, 4.Nf3
11. R Gorenstein vs Bronstein  ½-½191939Ukrainian ChampionshipC46 Three Knights
12. S Kotlerman vs Bronstein  1-0641939Ukrainian ChampionshipC01 French, Exchange
13. Bronstein vs R Gorenstein ½-½151940KievC29 Vienna Gambit
14. Bronstein vs L Morgulis 1-0341940?C26 Vienna
15. Bronstein vs R Piatnitsky 1-0151940Kiev jrC41 Philidor Defense
16. Bronstein vs S Zhukhovitsky 1-0321940Ukrainian ChampionshipC98 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin
17. I Appel vs Bronstein  0-1281940Ukrainian ChampionshipA85 Dutch, with c4 & Nc3
18. Efimov vs Bronstein 0-1121941Kiev URSC34 King's Gambit Accepted
19. Bronstein vs E Kuzminykh 0-1411941Ch URS (1/2 final)C79 Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defense Deferred
20. S Belavenets vs Bronstein 0-1241941Ch URS (1/2 final)E64 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System
21. Bronstein vs V Mikenas 1-0251941Ch URS (1/2 final)C40 King's Knight Opening
22. Bronstein vs Boleslavsky ½-½221944KievC16 French, Winawer
23. A Sokolsky vs Bronstein 1-0271944KievC52 Evans Gambit
24. V Makogonov vs Bronstein 1-0421944KievE90 King's Indian
25. Bronstein vs Flohr  ½-½531944KievB10 Caro-Kann
 page 1 of 97; games 1-25 of 2,411  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Bronstein wins | Bronstein loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 4 OF 45 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Aug-14-04  Swindler: OK thanks, it certainly seems worthwhile getting.
Aug-14-04  mack: It's a wonderful book - Bronstein is a quality writer who expresses advanced ideas in a simple, eloquent style. The fact that many of the games from the Zurich tournament are classics helps too - see Kotov's queen sac, for example. Dover have rather bizarrely rereleased the book in its original bare, scrappy typewriter format, but with long algebraic instead, and this is a somewhat inexplicable move, but it's a book every chess player must have.
Aug-14-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Zenchess: I agree; his discussion of the King's Indian in one game alone was worth the price of the book.

If you decide you like Zurich, you might also want to get "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" as well.

Aug-16-04  matrix: I've had Bronstein's 1953 book on the shelf for months, and finally got around to start going through it. Wow. Talk about effective writing. In an age of endless computer generated variations for each move, Bronstein's concise style and insight into the key positions is excellent, without overanalyzing every move. Excellent stuff!
Aug-28-04  ruylopez900: Bronstein=1953 Zurich Tournament Book :)

Does anyone know the actual name of the book? Thanks.

Aug-28-04  matrix: <Ruy> It's "Zurich International Chess Tournament 1953". The ISBN is 0-486-23800-8.
Aug-29-04  ruylopez900: <matrix> Thanks for that.
Aug-29-04  whiskeyrebel: The Zurich 1953 book I feel lives up to its billing. Acirce is right..Bronsteins comments are likely over the head of beginners. It seems to be as close to an "insider" book as came forth from the Soviet Union during that time period..which seems to likely work best for long term fans of the game. I sure don't claim to know it all when it comes to chess literature...but I know the book is one of my absolute favorite tournament books. It's definetly NOT the usual routine collection of game notes. Bronstein obviously strove for something better..and succeeded.VIVA BRONSTEIN.
Aug-31-04  PizzatheHut: Does anyone know of some other good tournament books in addition to Bronstein's "Zurich 1953"? Also, any suggestions on good match books other than "Tal-Botvinnik 1960"? Thanks for the help.
Sep-01-04  Helloween: <PizzatheHut> "Nottingham International Chess Tournament 1936" and "Sixty-Six Master Games Played in the London International Chess Tournament 1932" both by Alexander Alekhine, and "Carlsbad International Chess Tournament 1929" by Aron Nimzovich.

On the subject of matches and Bronstein, there is also a new book, "Moscow 1951 World Championship Match: Botvinnik v. Bronstein", scheduled for release this October.

Sep-01-04  PizzatheHut: <Helloween> Thank you for those recommendations. Have you read any of those books? What did you think of them?

<On the subject of matches and Bronstein, there is also a new book, "Moscow 1951 World Championship Match: Botvinnik v. Bronstein", scheduled for release this October.> I think that will definitely be worth taking a look at. I see it's written by Botvinnik. Why is being released over 50 years later? Was it just recently translated into English or something?

Sep-01-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Zenchess: <PizzatheHut> <Does anyone know of some other good tournament books in addition to Bronstein's "Zurich 1953"?> You could try Montreal 1979 written by Tal among others. It's got a pro-Karpov slant, just so you'll know. Also, there's "Second Piatagorsky Cup" from 1966, annotated by all the players.
Oct-04-04  Knight13: "Brostein is a genius computer fighter." -- Melvin Lin
Nov-02-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: In the 1950 Budapest Candidates Tournament, Bronstein tied for 1st with Boleslavsky; both had 12/18.

There was a playoff a match of 12 games. But that was also tied, 2-all with 8 draws.

So there was a mini-match which Bronstein won +1 =1.

That made him challenger but that was also tied: 5-all with 14 draws.

Neck-and-neck all the way!

Dec-04-04  Backward Development: If anyone hasn't bought Zurich 1953, and is considering it, i'm making a game collection of all of the games in the book to review. in addition i'll tack on some interesting annotations by Bronstein.
Dec-13-04  OJC: Good news if you're a fan of Bronstein's chess books. A new one, "David against Goliath: Fighting the Computer" is due out May 2005. Should be interesting! Clever name too.
Dec-23-04  Benzol: David Ionovich Bronstein
Born 19th February 1924 in Belaya Tserkov
Awarded the GM title 1950
Joint USSR Champion in 1948 and 1949.
He was also Moscow champion in 1946, 1953, 1957, 1961, 1968 (joint) and 1982 (joint).
Jan-11-05  whiskeyrebel: I can't wait for that new book. It's fun to see occasional current pictures of him at various websites. I wish he had one of his own where he could share his wisdom with us.
Jan-30-05  suenteus po 147: I am currently reading Bronstein's "Chess in the Eighties" and it's fascinating! Particularly about how it contrasts older tendencies of viewing and playing chess as an artform and the growing tendency around Fischer's rise and the development of the ELO to treat chess more and more as a competitive sport where winning is all that matters. Very topical for a book that was published over twenty years ago. Is there anyone else who has read it, or is reading it?
Jan-31-05  whiskeyrebel: Wow...I'll have to look for that one. I love books with attitude..especially from writers as talented as DB. What country was the book published in??
Jan-31-05  suenteus po 147: It was published in Russia and an English translation was published in the United States unless I'm mistaken. I will have to double check that later.
Jan-31-05  RookFile: I congratulate Bronstein for coming
clean and admitting in his memoirs
that the Candidates 1953 tournament
was fixed to prevent Reshevsky from
winning. Real men admit their mistakes.
Jan-31-05  ughaibu: He hasn't presented any evidence to support his claim.
Jan-31-05  euripides: <JR> sometimes they change their identity instead.
Jan-31-05  Eopithecus: I wonder, how much Bronstein was actually involved in his famous Zurich book? His later works are not very good. This makes me think it was ghosted by another player in the Soviet armada.
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