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David Janowski
Janowski 
Photograph Getty Images.  

Number of games in database: 913
Years covered: 1891 to 1926
Overall record: +406 -299 =184 (56.0%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 24 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Queen's Pawn Game (94) 
    D02 A46 D00 D05 A40
 Ruy Lopez (77) 
    C67 C66 C65 C82 C78
 Orthodox Defense (46) 
    D50 D60 D51 D63 D55
 Queen's Gambit Declined (45) 
    D30 D35 D37 D31 D06
 Four Knights (44) 
    C49 C48 C47
 French Defense (21) 
    C12 C11 C10 C14 C00
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (108) 
    C79 C87 C77 C78 C67
 Queen's Pawn Game (37) 
    A46 D04 D02 D00 D05
 Queen's Gambit Declined (35) 
    D31 D37 D39 D30
 Orthodox Defense (33) 
    D63 D60 D51 D55 D61
 Sicilian (32) 
    B45 B40 B23 B32 B88
 Four Knights (30) 
    C49 C48
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Janowski vs Saemisch, 1925 1-0
   Janowski vs Ed. Lasker, 1924 1/2-1/2
   Janowski vs Alapin, 1905 1-0
   Janowski vs Tarrasch, 1905 1-0
   Janowski vs NN, 1895 1-0
   Janowski vs E Schallopp, 1896 1-0
   Chigorin vs Janowski, 1895 0-1
   Janowski vs Schlechter, 1899 1-0
   Janowski vs Gruenfeld, 1925 1/2-1/2
   Janowski vs A Nimzowitsch, 1914 1/2-1/2

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Lasker - Janowski World Championship Match (1910)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Janowski Exhibition Series at Manhattan Chess Club (1899)
   13th DSB Congress, Hanover (1902)
   Jaffe - Janowski 1917/18 (1917)
   London (1899)
   Cambridge Springs (1904)
   Ostend (1905)
   Scheveningen (1913)
   Vienna (1898)
   Ostend (1906)
   Monte Carlo (1901)
   Monte Carlo (1902)
   Nuremberg (1896)
   9th DSB Congress, Leipzig (1894)
   Prague (1908)
   Paris (1900)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 50 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 49 by 0ZeR0
   Challenger Janowski by Gottschalk
   American Chess Bulletin 1916 by Phony Benoni
   Janowski vs. Showalter Matches by Phony Benoni
   American Chess Bulletin 1918 by Phony Benoni
   Vienna 1898 by Mal Un
   Vienna 1898 by suenteus po 147
   Vienna 1898 by JoseTigranTalFischer
   Ostend 1905 by suenteus po 147
   London 1899 by JoseTigranTalFischer

GAMES ANNOTATED BY JANOWSKI: [what is this?]
   Janowski vs Steel, 1893


Search Sacrifice Explorer for David Janowski
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DAVID JANOWSKI
(born Jun-07-1868, died Jan-15-1927, 58 years old) Poland (federation/nationality France)

[what is this?]

David (Dawid) Markelowicz Janowski was born in 1868 in Wolkowysk, Poland, and circa 1890 he relocated to France. His chess career began in Paris when he won the city championship, and in the late 1890s he started receiving a steady stream of invitations to international events. Janowski finished in third place in the Vienna tournament of 1898 and second at London the following year. In 1905, he was equal second with Tarrasch behind Maroczy at the huge master tournament Ostend (1905).

In 1902, Janowski succeeded S. Rosenthal as chess editor of 'Le Monde Illustre' after the latter's death.

For the next twenty years he was a consistent participant in major tournaments, and, backed by Leo Nardus (with support from friend and past challenger Frank Marshall to the champion) in 1909, he played a ten-game training match with World Champion Emanuel Lasker. Janowski had drawn a shorter exhibition match with Lasker just months before, but in the ten-game match (see Lasker - Janowski (1909) for further details of those two matches) he lost by the score of +1 =2 -7. He managed to secure enough financial backing for a Lasker - Janowski World Championship Match (1910) less than two years later, but lost this one also.

Janowski was invited as a leading player to the elite "Grandmaster" event St. Petersburg (1914). He did badly, however, being knocked out in the preliminary cycle (+2 -5 =3) sharing 9-10th place with the veteran Blackburne.

After being interned as a Russian subject by the German authorities at 19th DSB Congress, Mannheim (1914), Janowski managed to make his way to Lausanne, Switzerland in September 1914. Seeing no future in war-torn Europe, he was able to secure papers and a passage to New York disembarking on 11th January 1916. He almost immediately played (17th January 1916) in the Rice Memorial (1916).

He had to rebuild his career which he did with energy also supplementing his income with Bridge. On the 25th February 1916, he began a match with Jaffe at Marshall's Chess Divan which he narrowly won by 7 to 6 - Jaffe - Janowski (1916). He also wrote to Capablanca offering him to name his terms for a match. Nothing came of this.

He was defeated by 5.5 to 2.5 in Janowski - Marshall, 5th Match (1916) June 1-15 1916 at the Manhattan Chess Club in New York City

He defeated Showalter in a match Janowski - Showalter, 4th Match (1916) in December 1916 and then drew up a challenge, addressed to F.J.Marshall, the United States champion, for a match of twenty games, draws not counting, for a purse of not less than $500.

The match did not come to fruition. Instead in January 1917, Janowski once again took on Jaffe - Jaffe - Janowski (1917/18). Janowski, agreed to concede his opponent odds of four games up in a match of ten but still overwhelmed Jaffe by 10 to 4 wins.

Janowski unexpectedly lost a match to Oscar Chajes, March-May 1918 - (Chajes, 7; Janowski, 5; drawn, 10) - Chajes - Janowski (1918). Janowski underrating his opponent, played his openings carelessly and was far from being in his best form

He participated in New York (1918), but came a disappointing fifth of seven. He did considerably better at the eighth American Chess Congress (Atlantic City, 1921) which he won.

His form was patchy, however, he divided the bottom prize with Jacob Bernstein, Horace Bigelow, and a ten-year-old Samuel Reshevsky (to whom he lost - Janowski vs Reshevsky, 1922) at Chess Club International in New York City in October 1922. Yet, at the strong 9th American Chess Congress (1923) (Lake Hopatcong, August 1923), he came a very close third a mere half point behind Marshall and Kupchik.

In his final international tournaments his results were poor. He was last at New York (1924) (+3 -13 =4) ; 14th out of 16 at Marienbad (1925) (+3 -7 =5); 7th out of 10 at Hastings (1925/26) (+1 -4 =4) and 10th out of 18 at Semmering (1926) (+7 -7 =3).

Janowski died in a nursing home in Hyeres, France of tuberculosis.

The Janowski Indian opening is: 1. d4 ♘f6 2. c4 d6 3. ♘c3 ♗f5.

Wikipedia article: Dawid Janowski

Last updated: 2025-01-28 17:40:57

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 37; games 1-25 of 913  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Janowski vs A Goetz 1-0311891Cafe de la Regence-chC54 Giuoco Piano
2. A Goetz vs Janowski  1-0271892Cafe de la Regence-chC77 Ruy Lopez
3. S Sittenfeld vs Janowski 0-1341892Paris itD02 Queen's Pawn Game
4. A Clerc vs Janowski  1-0391892Cafe de la Regence-chC50 Giuoco Piano
5. S Sittenfeld vs Janowski  1-0361892Janowski - SittenfeldC82 Ruy Lopez, Open
6. Janowski vs S Sittenfeld  1-0451892Janowski - SittenfeldC62 Ruy Lopez, Old Steinitz Defense
7. Alapin vs Janowski  0-1231893ParisC20 King's Pawn Game
8. Janowski vs Steel 1-0261893ParisD37 Queen's Gambit Declined
9. Janowski vs R Steel  1-0341893Cafe de la RegenceC25 Vienna
10. L Didier vs Janowski 1-0221893Club GameC46 Three Knights
11. Janowski vs F Malthan 0-1441894CC Int TtC74 Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense
12. Janowski vs Lipke 0-13718949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC47 Four Knights
13. Janowski vs J Berger 1-03618949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC67 Ruy Lopez
14. Schlechter vs Janowski ½-½7218949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC72 Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense, 5.O-O
15. A Zinkl vs Janowski 0-14618949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC72 Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense, 5.O-O
16. Janowski vs Teichmann 1-03118949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC14 French, Classical
17. von Scheve vs Janowski  0-13318949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC30 King's Gambit Declined
18. Janowski vs K de Weydlich 1-02918949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC10 French
19. C Walbrodt vs Janowski  1-06818949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC71 Ruy Lopez
20. Janowski vs J Mieses 1-02618949th DSB Congress, LeipzigB06 Robatsch
21. H Suechting vs Janowski 1-05418949th DSB Congress, LeipzigD30 Queen's Gambit Declined
22. Janowski vs P Seuffert 1-02218949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense
23. Tarrasch vs Janowski 1-03318949th DSB Congress, LeipzigD37 Queen's Gambit Declined
24. Janowski vs Mason 1-05518949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC67 Ruy Lopez
25. Janowski vs Blackburne 1-04518949th DSB Congress, LeipzigC62 Ruy Lopez, Old Steinitz Defense
 page 1 of 37; games 1-25 of 913  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Janowski wins | Janowski loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 1 OF 5 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-27-03  Benjamin Lau: He was a famous player a long time ago who loved bishops so much that a pair became known as the Jans. Janowski was infamous for his preference for bishops even in closed positions. His contemporaries often exploited this weakness.
Nov-19-03  Resignation Trap: Here's a book about him:

http://www.chessdate.com/shop.php?p...

Nov-20-03
Premium Chessgames Member
  Honza Cervenka: I have that book. It is a superb source containing not only Janowski's best and/or most important games, but also many interesting informations and documents about him as well as about chess life in the period since 1890s till 1920s. Of course, it's necessary to know Russian, if you want to read it, but I can recommend it to everybody, who likes chess history.
Nov-21-03  fred lennox: Aethetically his games has a golden touch for me. Bold and restrain, solid and airy, with a classical elan rarely found in a proir GM except Morphy.
Jan-15-04  Pawn Ambush: Janowski and g4!!!

Has anyone ever noticed how many times Janowski play g4 in his games.

Mar-27-04  electricknight: "His contemporaries often exploited this weakness."

EM Lasker remarked that he thought Janowski was a just positional Player gone wrong he crushed him in a match with a score of 8-3 in 1910. This guy was extremely stubborn he
would press so hard in the wrong
direction no matter what the cost.
I wouldn't want him as a General
on a battlefield.

Mar-30-04  Lawrence: Janowski and Daniel "Abe" Yanofsky (Canadian GM) have exactly the same surname. The vagaries of spelling.
Apr-05-04  capanegra: David Janowski always reminded me Don Quijote fighting against mills, with the only difference that he would have never permitted to have Sancho Panza as his body-guard (instead he chose the chimerical Nardus, who also had the disgrace to be his financial supporter). He was blindly convinced that he could beat any player in the world due to his superiority as a tactician. When he lost his first match against Marshall, immediately called for a rematch, and said that the latter result didn’t reflect his better potential. What is more, he offered Marshall not to count his two first wins!! (finally, Marshall accepted –with no such odds, of course- and lost that second match). But his biggest chimera was when, after loosing badly (+7 =2 –1) against Lasker for the world title in 1909, he challenged the champion for a rematch in 1910, with absolute conviction that the could revert the defeat he had suffered just one year before. At this time, his collapse was even worse (+8 =3 –0), but that probably didn’t change Janowski's mind about his greatness.
May-21-04  fred lennox: Janowski was a bit of a Don Quijote after 1900 or shortly after. His decline is not as mentioned as Rubinstein's but it is real, for differant reasons. He could still played brilliantly, yet had trouble sustaining the flame. Perhaps he did not fufill the promise he'd shown in the nineties. According to the book edited by Sid Pickard, Janowski's record against Steinitz is 5-2-0 in his favor.
Dec-08-04  matvanw: Hey,

I posted the question below on the steinitz page and <ughaibu> came up with Janowski. Of course I would never doubt the words of a respected chessgames.com member, but does anyone have a source confirming his statement ? Or does anybody else just happens to know that it was indeed Janowski who has said this.

(original post)
"

does anyone of you guys knows who said "there are 2 true chess geniuses, the other one is Steinitz." ?

I have absolutely no clue, I didn't find it anywhere on the net... Lasker seems too obvious ... thx Mathias

"

Dec-08-04  ughaibu: Matvanw: I think the quote is to the effect that there are only three chess players, Capablanca, Lasker "and the third I'm too modest to mention".
Jan-14-05  aw1988: chessgames: Janowski appears to have a notable game which he *lost* to Marshall.
Jan-14-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  chessgames.com: Thanks, I don't know why that happens but it does once in a blue moon. Call it a bug.
Jan-14-05  aw1988: I would be more inclined to call it a feature. :)
Jan-14-05  Minor Piece Activity: Only if you work for Microsoft. :)
Jan-14-05  aw1988: You mean Microsatan.
Jan-26-05  Javid Danowski: To Chessgames. The 1909 match between Lasker and Janowski to which you refer in your biographical note was not a world championship match, even though counted as one in many sources. It was actually just a ten-game exhibition series rather than a match proper (ie all ten games were played regardless of whether the match was already decided or not). The actual Lasker - Janowski world hampionship match took place in November - December 1910, about a year after the ten-game match, not two years after, as you state in your note. Cheers.
May-21-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: I read in Fine's book The world's greatest chess games that he(Janowski) asked a friend to hold his chess winnings from the tournament for fear of spending it in the casino,(Monte Carlo 1903)but the urge was too great, and Janowski,the gambling addict asked for his winnings back. When his friend refused, it turned into a bitter dispute and Janowski then sued his friend. LOL what a character.
Jul-26-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: Janowsky-"I detest the endgame! A well played game should be virtually decided in the middlegame".Frank James Marshall said of Janowsky.-"He was a man who could follow the wrong path with more determination than anyone I ever met".David Janowski never did grasp the need for Logic in chess.
Jul-26-05  FHBradley: According to Lasker, Janowski was nothing more than a reasonably talented positional player gone wrong; I find it sad that Janowski could always rely on Mr. Nardus for his operations on and outside the chessboard, whereas the likes of Schlechter and Rubinstein were barely capable of holding their heads above the water level.
Jul-26-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  ray keene: russian gm alexander cherniaev has co-authored a new book on janowski published in english by hardinge simpole-david janowski artist of the chessboard--it contains crosstables-64 annotated games and biographical material by william winter who knew him.
Nov-15-05  Saruman: I remember reading about Janowski and his contempt for players other than himself. Often he would call them coffeehouse-players or such. Once I believe he even offered someone knight odds!
Nov-24-05  percyblakeney: Rudolf Spielmann on how Janowski reacted after losses: <His conqueror was first called "coffee-house player of the worst sort", "duffer" or "domino-player" respectively. Then followed a likewise juicy irritation as to how it was possible to admit such a bungler to the tournament. And then came his famous offer: "With you I can only play at knight odds!", an offer which I and others also received in the tournament in Carlsbad, 1907.> (Quoted from Forster's book on Burn)
Nov-24-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: When asked who were the best players in the world. David Janowsky said, "There are only three,Capablanca, Lasker, and the third I am to modest to mention."
Jan-05-06  BIDMONFA: David Janowski

JANOWSKI, David
http://www.bidmonfa.com/JANOWSKI.htm
_

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