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Miguel Najdorf
Najdorf 
 

Number of games in database: 1,768
Years covered: 1928 to 1996
Overall record: +802 -219 =700 (66.9%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 47 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 King's Indian (124) 
    E64 E62 E60 E95 E67
 Nimzo Indian (108) 
    E54 E34 E59 E41 E55
 Orthodox Defense (60) 
    D58 D55 D52 D63 D51
 Queen's Gambit Declined (53) 
    D37 D31 D30 D06 D38
 Queen's Indian (46) 
    E19 E14 E17 E12 E15
 Queen's Pawn Game (44) 
    A46 D05 A40 A41 E00
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (205) 
    B92 B80 B83 B84 B51
 King's Indian (175) 
    E67 E60 E69 E94 E95
 Sicilian Najdorf (63) 
    B92 B91 B99 B90 B95
 English (59) 
    A15 A16 A10 A14 A17
 Nimzo Indian (58) 
    E33 E53 E42 E54 E59
 Sicilian Scheveningen (46) 
    B80 B83 B84 B81 B85
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Glucksberg vs Najdorf, 1930 0-1
   Taimanov vs Najdorf, 1953 0-1
   Najdorf vs Gliksberg, 1929 1-0
   B Larsen vs Najdorf, 1968 0-1
   Najdorf vs NN, 1942 1-0
   Najdorf vs NN, 1942 1-0
   Najdorf vs Fischer, 1966 1-0
   Najdorf vs Stahlberg, 1953 1-0
   Najdorf vs Portisch, 1962 1-0
   Najdorf vs Tal, 1970 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Mar del Plata (1942)
   Mar del Plata (1947)
   Mar del Plata (1946)
   Amsterdam (1950)
   Mar del Plata (1944)
   Argentine Championship (1955)
   Argentine Championship (1960)
   Capablanca Memorial (1962)
   Mar del Plata Zonal (1969)
   Havana (1952)
   Mar del Plata / Buenos Aires Zonal (1954)
   Mar del Plata (1953)
   Mar del Plata (1957)
   Argentine Championship (1975)
   Montevideo (1954)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Life and Games (Najdorf/Mikhalchishin/Lissowski) by Qindarka
   Life and Games (Najdorf/Mikhalchishin/Lissowski) by igiene
   Miguel Najdorf by Aaron Wang
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 74 by 0ZeR0
   book: Zurich Candidates Tournament of 1953 (Bron by Baby Hawk
   WCC Index [Zurich 1953] by Scotsgeek
   Zurich International Tournament (Bronstein) by DrOMM
   WCC Index [Zurich 1953] by Atsa
   Zurich International Tournament (Bronstein) by Qindarka
   WCC Index [Zurich 1953] by suenteus po 147
   WCC Index [Zurich 1953] by TigerTiger
   Zurich International Tournament (Bronstein) by passion4chess
   WCC Zurich 1953 by Pawn N Hand
   Zurich International Tournament (Bronstein) by smarticecream


Search Sacrifice Explorer for Miguel Najdorf
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MIGUEL NAJDORF
(born Apr-15-1910, died Jul-04-1997, 87 years old) Poland (federation/nationality Argentina)

[what is this?]

Moishe Mendel (Mieczysław) Najdorf (NIGH-dorf) was born in Warsaw. He was a pupil of Savielly Tartakower. At the age of 20, he had become a Polish National Master. He played for Poland in the Chess Olympiads of 1935, 1937, and 1939. Najdorf was playing at the Buenos Aires Olympiad in 1939 when World War II broke out, and decided not to attempt to return home, taking Argentine citizenship (1944) and adopting the first name Miguel. His family members died in German concentration camps. In 1950, he was one of the 27 players to whom FIDE first awarded the official International Grandmaster title.

In 1943, he set the record for simultaneous games played. He played 202 players, scoring +182 -8 =12. In 1947, he played 45 games simultaneously blindfolded, then a record, scoring +39 -2 =4.

In the late 1930s and 1940s he established himself as one of the world's best players. He won Budapest (1936) (tied with Lajos Steiner), Buenos Aires (1939) (tied with Paul Keres), Buenos Aires Circulo (1941) (tied with Gideon Stahlberg), Mar del Plata (1942), Mar del Plata (1943), Mar del Plata (1944) (tied with Herman Pilnik), Mar del Plata (1946) (three points ahead of Stahlberg), Prague (1946), Rio de Janeiro (1946), Mar del Plata (1947), and Venice (1948). In 1949, he drew matches against both Reuben Fine (each scoring +2 =4 -2) and Petar Trifunovic (each scoring +1 =10 -1).

Najdorf was a strong contender to be included in the FIDE World Championship Tournament (1948), particularly since he had won Prague (1946), which had been conceived of as a qualifying tournament for the world championship, but he was not invited. Chessmetrics ranks him the No. 2 player in the world in March 1948, behind only Botvinnik and ahead of the other four participants: Paul Keres (#4), Max Euwe (#6), Vasily Smyslov (#7), and Samuel Reshevsky (#12).

In the 1950s Najdorf competed in several major international events, including two Candidates tournaments. He won the Argentinian championship eight times (1949, 1951, 1952, 1955, 1960, 1964, 1967, 1975) and he continued to promote chess in his adopted country until his death in 1997.

Shortly before his 60th birthday, he was still strong enough to play ninth board for the World team in the USSR vs. Rest of the World (1970) match. He tied former world champion Tal, each scoring +1 =2 -1.

A profound theorist, he contributed many opening ideas, notably one of the most popular chess openings of all time, the Sicilian Najdorf (1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6), which is played in about 3% of all games.

Wikipedia article: Miguel Najdorf
Chessmetrics March 1948 rating list: http://www.chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/...

Last updated: 2023-04-21 08:34:28

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 71; games 1-25 of 1,768  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Najdorf vs M Frenkel 1-0201928LodzB70 Sicilian, Dragon Variation
2. A Szpiro vs Najdorf 0-1221928Lodz ChD60 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
3. Najdorf vs T Regedzinski  1-0371928Lodz-chB84 Sicilian, Scheveningen
4. Najdorf vs Margolin  1-0251929Warsaw Association TtC13 French
5. D Daniuszewski vs Najdorf 0-1281929LodzA47 Queen's Indian
6. Najdorf vs Gliksberg 1-0211929LodzC10 French
7. M Czerniak vs Najdorf 0-1481929Match game 3E60 King's Indian Defense
8. Glucksberg vs Najdorf 0-1221930WarsawA85 Dutch, with c4 & Nc3
9. Najdorf vs P Frydman  1-0411931WarsawD05 Queen's Pawn Game
10. L Kremer vs Najdorf  0-1351931WarsawE11 Bogo-Indian Defense
11. L Kremer vs Najdorf  0-1381933Warszawi Klub Szachistow ClubFoundationD92 Grunfeld, 5.Bf4
12. Najdorf vs L Kremer  1-0351933Warszawi Klub Szachistow ClubFoundationE17 Queen's Indian
13. Najdorf vs P Frydman  1-0361933Warszawi Klub Szachistow ClubFoundationA47 Queen's Indian
14. Najdorf vs L Kremer  ½-½571934Warsaw 6PlayersD02 Queen's Pawn Game
15. O Karlin vs Najdorf  0-1341934MatchA04 Reti Opening
16. Najdorf vs Spielmann ½-½421934WarsawE23 Nimzo-Indian, Spielmann
17. Najdorf vs Pilz 1-0291934WarsawE38 Nimzo-Indian, Classical, 4...c5
18. Najdorf vs H Scheier  1-0321934POL Team-ch02D05 Queen's Pawn Game
19. Najdorf vs T Regedzinski  1-0341934POL Team-ch02A47 Queen's Indian
20. Najdorf vs Shlomo Tirsztejn 1-02019342nd Polish Team ChampionshipE60 King's Indian Defense
21. J Jagielski vs Najdorf 0-1361934Warsaw Club ChE12 Queen's Indian
22. Najdorf vs I Aloni  1-0351935Polish ChampionshipE19 Queen's Indian, Old Main line, 9.Qxc3
23. J Kolski vs Najdorf  0-1161935POL-ch03A47 Queen's Indian
24. Najdorf vs S Kohn  1-0411935POL-ch03A46 Queen's Pawn Game
25. Najdorf vs F Sulik 1-0321935Polish ChampionshipD46 Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav
 page 1 of 71; games 1-25 of 1,768  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Najdorf wins | Najdorf loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 5 OF 10 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jun-27-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  cu8sfan: <Hes an important player. One of the biggest contributors to chess knowledge and a true star.> Is he really? I don't want to belittle his accomplishements I just wonder if anyone would have said that if his name wasn't attached to the most popular chess opening of the last 40 years or so.
Jun-27-05  jamesmaskell: 1,454 games played and played up till his death. He played chess for so long. True his name is the main reason why he is well known but with that many games its no suprize hes well known.
Jun-27-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  WannaBe: <chesswonders> june 16th. I had a 'dumb' comment that day. :-) Here, let me repeat it. <Never heard of this guy. Why is he qualified as player of the day?!> :-))
Jun-27-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Eric Schiller: It is a pity that most of you never got to meet Najdorf. He was one of the great story-tellers, up there at the Koltanowski level. Hanging out with him at tournaments was a tremedous pleasure. True, he was quite loose with facts, often claiming to have played whatever novelty appeared on the board decades earlier, but he told the tales with such skill that the audience was enthralled. He played many great games and was a worthy Grandmaster, but he is treasured for his inimitable presence.

He and I shared one type of experience. At Bugojno 1982, he was supposed to be the arbiter, but when one player couldn't make it he was drafted to play. Same thing with me at Reykjavik 1986! But as that was a Swiss (they had 73 players, I evened it out), I managed a respectable score. At Bugojno, the field was too strong, and Kasparov absolutely obliterated him. Kasparov vs Najdorf, 1982

Amazingly, he only has a few Bugojno 1982 games in the CG database, so someone should make sure all the games are there.

And we should all be so blessed to live a long time and play great chess to the end, for example: J Rosito vs Najdorf, 1991

Jun-27-05  Eopithecus: He didn't play Em Lasker did he?
Jun-28-05  iron maiden: No, never. By the time he began competing internationally, Lasker was already retired.
Aug-18-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Does anyone alse think that Miguel looks a lot like Voctor McLaglen? http://www.nndb.com/people/452/0000...
Aug-22-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sneaky: Actually I always thought he looked a bit more like Fred Mertz from "I Love Lucy"...

http://www.lutheransonline.com/lo/4...

Aug-22-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  WannaBe: I still can't win using his opening, it can't be my fault right?! :-)
Sep-04-05  teme: Today is his birthday.
Sep-04-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  WannaBe: see my comment on June 16th, and 27th. :-)
Sep-16-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: Miguel decided to stay in Argentina after the chess Olympiads of 1939, and lived a long life.Vladimir Petrov chose to go back to Latvia after the Olympiads,living long enough to see his country being annexed by the Soviets, and later dying in a gulag.
Dec-26-05  Jim Bartle: Seirawan wrote that at tournaments the young players would form long lines to play blitz with Najdorf, who dispatched them one after another with friendly insults like "these young guys, they read books but they don't know how to play CHESS."
Feb-16-06  Nikita Smirnov: WannaBe:I may teach you in Najdorf.My teacher Jan Ullen taught me to play Najdorf.Plus I study a dvd about Najdorf of Kasparov!
Apr-14-06  Resignation Trap: Najdorf shows us how to study and eat at the same time: http://ar.geocities.com/carloseadra... .
Apr-15-06  EmperorAtahualpa: According to chesscafe.com today it's his birthday, but over here it says it's September 4th!

Which of the two is right?

Apr-15-06  Chess Classics: <EmperorAtahualpa> chesscafe.com is right-chessgames.com, can you fix this? I know this because Najdorf used to hold a tournament on his birthday, and it always took place in April. Oh, and happy birthday Miguel Najdorf!!

Regards,
CC

Apr-23-06  Nikita Smirnov: Resignation Trap: Good picture!Great!Very fun but a question what is he eating?Well we see that it is soup but which soup is he eating?
Apr-23-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  James Demery: Does anyone know if Fischer disliked Najdorf? Their last game as opponents was 1970, but does Fischer`s dislike of Jews go back that far? I thought Fischer liked to play the Sicilian Najdorf, it seems so ironic.
Apr-23-06  Jim Bartle: Maybe a dumb question: Did Fischer's prejudices apply to individual players? What I mean, he rails against Jews in general, but did he let that affect his relationship with individual Jewish players?
Apr-23-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Open Defence: <Fischer and Najdorf> I remember reading somewhere I believe either from Szabo or Keres that Fischer apparently taught Najdorf some of the secrets in the variation bearing his name! Apparently Fischer's analysis in the Sicillian Najdorf was way ahead of the inventor himself...
Apr-23-06  Jim Bartle: Still, it wouldn't sound so exciting if it were known as the Sicilian Fischer...
Apr-23-06  acirce: I think like many anti-Semites he didn't hate Jews as much as he called people he hated Jews.
Apr-23-06  Jim Bartle: An intriguing thought, acirce.
Apr-23-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  James Demery: Good point Jim Bartle. It seems it would be harder to hate individuals. When you meet a nice person I would think it would be hard to hate them, even if you purportedly hate their race.
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