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offramp
Member since Aug-16-03 · Last seen Jan-15-26
Some chess books that I think are outstanding:

1. <Fundamental Chess Endgames>, by Müller & Lamprecht, reprinted 2020. 400pp+, £25.

2. <Secrets of Practical Chess>, by Dr Nunn. 256pp (the USUAL 256pp!, i.e. the usual 2^8). £20.

3. <Capablanca's Best Chess Endings>, Irving Chernev's best work. 300pp. £15.

4. <107 Great Chess Battles 1939-1945>, written by Alexander Alekhine, but edited by Edward Winter. 256pp, £15.

5 (a) <Petrosian Year by Year Volume 1 (1942-1962)>, and - Karolyi & Gyozalyan, 484pp.
(b) <Petrosian Year by Year Volume 2 (1963-1984)> - Karolyi & Gyozalyan, 516pp.
They are £34 each. I bought one, then a few months later, the other volume.
They are available in Kindle format!

6. <The Queen's Gambit Accepted: A Sharp and Sound Response to 1. d4> by Chris Ward.
Ward wrote a superb book about the QGD, many years ago. I think this is useful for a book about the QGA. A total antidote to 1. d4, 2. c4.

And now some total clinkers. NOT those well-known garbage chess books.

The following are really bad chess books.

1. <Capablanca: A Compendium of Games, Notes, Articles, Correspondence, Illustrations and Other Rare Archival Materials on the Cuban Chess Genius Jose Raul Capablanca, 1888-1942> by Edward Winter. 360pp. c. £35. The title is the best thing.

2. <Larsen: Move by Move> - Cyrus Lakdawala
Paperback, 488pp.

3. <Emanuel Lasker Volumes 1, 2 & 3 - Forster, Negele & Tischbierek>. £55 each.
This book is unbelievably boring and tedious. Just look through it, then forget about it.
AT THIS SAME TIME a totally superb book has just come out: <Emanuel Lasker All Games Volume 1 & 2: 1889-1940 (2 books)>, £55 for two books:
Volume 1 covers the time Lasker became World Champion and played matches against Steinitz (twice for the World Championship), Bird and Blackburne amongst others. He also took part several famous tournaments including Hastings 1895, St Petersburg 1895-96 and Nuremberg 1896.

Volume 2 covers the time Lasker played matches against Marshall, Tarrasch, Janowski, Schlechter and Capablanca for the World Championship. He also took part several famous tournaments including St Petersburg 1914, New York 1924, Moscow 1935 & 1936 and Nottingham 1936.

Hardbacks, 388 and 342 pages, Russian Chess House. A real bargain.

4. <Pal Benko : My Life, Games and Compositions>, £140. Who is the most famous chess player out of Benko and Fischer? Who published the most plush, most opulent book? Benko.

.....
Here are another 7 books:

<He received a letter from his bookseller, informing him that only seven copies had been sold, and concluding with a polite request for the balance.
Scythrop <[SKI-throp]> did not despair. <Seven copies,> he thought, <have been sold. Seven is a mystical number, and the omen is good. Let me find the seven purchasers of my seven copies, and they shall be the seven golden candlesticks with which I will illuminate the world.>.>

>> Click here to see offramp's game collections.

Chessgames.com Full Member
   Current net-worth: 1,436 chessbucks
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   offramp has kibitzed 25194 times to chessgames   [more...]
   Jan-15-26 Tata Steel Masters (2026)
 
offramp: This tournament is going to be one of the best <EVER>. I suddenly had an idea that the World Champion, <Gukesh>, would win it. I think he is going to fully show his huge mettle. I think that he really has gird up his loins to show the Indians, and the whole world, that ...
 
   Jan-15-26 Giri vs Niemann, 2025
 
offramp: Giri said... <"Before the game I visualized a victory against Niemann. There's this technique.... I saw myself win. Then I went a bit too far and I started thinking about who would be in my team for the Candidates' - and that's when I realized I had gone too far."
 
   Jan-15-26 offramp chessforum
 
offramp: <𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗚𝗥𝗘𝗔𝗧 𝗢𝗙𝗙𝗥𝗔𝗠𝗣 𝗣𝗥𝗘𝗗𝗜𝗖𝗧𝗜𝗢𝗡 𝗧𝗔𝗧𝗔 𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗘𝗟 𝗠𝗔𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗥𝗦 𝗖𝗢𝗡𝗧𝗘𝗦𝗧 is taking place HERE from 14:00, 17th January 2026 to 1st February 2026. ...
 
   Jan-15-26 Julien Song
 
offramp: Here are the details at LiChess. It doesn't quite add up... <Dates 15 Jan - 16 Jan Format 14-game Match <𝗧𝗶𝗺𝗲 𝗰𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗿𝗼𝗹 𝟵𝟬 𝗺𝗶𝗻 + 𝟯𝟬 𝘀𝗲𝗰 / 𝗺𝗼𝘃𝗲> Location Madrid, Spain Star players Levy Rozman, ...
 
   Jan-15-26 Dickson
 
offramp: Someone asked, "What the dickens??" The answer is "No."
 
   Jan-15-26 S Rosenthal vs Count Isouard, 1871
 
offramp: "Is You Is or Is You Ain't Isouard?"
 
   Jan-14-26 Keymer vs Carlsen, 2023
 
offramp: Keymer Rouge.
 
   Jan-14-26 Garry Kasparov (replies)
 
offramp: <Petrosianic>. I dislike stories about the 3rd Reich... Kasparov was expounding about Molotov and Stalin and the Germans. I could have followed the details but I <hate> checking WWII facts on Google because you get sucked into a whirlwind of right-wing horror. So I am ...
 
   Jan-14-26 J Puccini vs J P Gomez, 2015 (replies)
 
offramp: Good pun and a good game. The final move is hard-to-spot! I was expecting some hay-maker final blow, but it is a quiet move. In fact, that last move, 19. Qd2, could be a <CREEPING MOVE>. Creeping moves can only made by queens; Spassky specialised in them.
 
   Jan-13-26 C Gilberg vs Dickson, 1866 (replies)
 
offramp: That's a great pun, and the game has a really good ending! BTW, Sally Simpson, instead of referencing the Washington Bridge, would you be interested in buying the Brooklyn Bridge?
 
(replies) indicates a reply to the comment.

Ye Olde Offrampe Predicktions

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 52 OF 86 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Oct-19-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: <offramp> Mr. Assange sent me an email to pass on to you, per the winning entry:

"Not that one, the OTHER one you numbskull, the one by <OhioChessFan>. Sheesh."

Oct-19-18  Count Wedgemore: Your email arrived too late, <OCF>. I've already picked up the package at the post office. It was sent through SuperSonic Express Delivery, so I received it about five minutes after the announcement.

The steps looked really great, but unfortunately, I managed to lose them on the bus on my way back home, silly me. Guess I just have to wait for the next Double-C (Caption Campetition). But that's life.

Oct-19-18  thegoodanarchist: < offramp: Julian Assange writes:

<... The winner is User: Count Wedgemore.>>

I was robbed! Mine was clearly better. <CW> and <offramp> colluded to affect the vote! Putin must be involved!

I am appealing. I am taking this to the International Court of Internet Crimes, in The Hague. No, not that "The Hague", the other "The Hague". The one in New York! Oops, I meant "Hague".

Anyhow, <CW> you're a filthy cheat!

Also, before I forget, congratulations to <CW> - well done!

Oct-19-18  thegoodanarchist: Anyway, it's good to see the Ukronian brass Stinkies fund go up.

How many Stinkies do I need for bus fair? (Or bus fare, for that matter)

Oct-19-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Clearly my offering was the best. Also, my bribe was the best. I'm the best on the internet.
Oct-20-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: <the Good Anarchist > I’ll need to know how much your bus fare normally is.
Oct-20-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I’ve always thought that chess and tennis had a lot in common. The score of 6-0 comes to mind.

Now the scoring has become even more congruent.

At Wimbledon, in the final set, a tiebreak will be played in the final set if the score reaches 12-12.

Almost exactly like chess!!

Oct-22-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Tinker, Tailor, Shepherd, Spy.
Oct-28-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: A possible game of the year.
R Praggnanandhaa vs T S Ravi, 2018
Oct-30-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: <From the Gospel of Thomas:>

There was a certain captive Syrian in the garden who was in such a deep sleep that Asenath, the Jebusite, could not wake him for seven years.

Then Asenath shouted, "The hand shall be against the present at the guard. And Jehovah that is in the selfsame day from the sight on the bones of the lively."

Then the Syrian awoke and found favour with the LORD, and his fathers' fathers hath taken from him the name of Sodom, and begat sons of the two sons.

And all the men turned aside and wept.

Oct-31-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: While reading an article last night about fathers and sons, memories came flooding back to the time I took my son out for his first pint.

Off we went to our local pub only two blocks from our cottage.

I got him a Guinness. He didn't like it, so I drank it.

Then I got him a Kilkenny's, he didn't like that either, so I drank it.

Finally, I thought he might like some Harp Lager. He didn't. I drank it.

I thought maybe he'd like whiskey better than beer so we tried a Jameson's. Nope!

In desperation, I had him try that rare Redbreast, Ireland's finest. He wouldn't even smell it.

What could I do but drink it!

By the time I realized he just didn't like to drink, I was so drunk I could hardly push his stroller back home!

Nov-01-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Non-chess players may like their Simpsons and Civil War chess sets, or Lord of the Rings - things like that.

Relatives of chess players will be like Holden Caulfield's mum, looking around a chess shop for hours and hours and choosing a totally inappropriate like this piece of poopoo:
http://coolmaterial.com/wp-content/... (This is a good site:
http://thorsdoor.blogspot.com/2011/... ,
it has some awful chess sets.)
Of course, our hearts sink when we open the box. The set will be used once, then consigned to oblivion.

Chess players prefer sets based on the Jacques/Staunton style. Fischer liked his Dubrovnik chess set:
https://chessbazaar.s3.amazonaws.co...

I think that the furthest one can deviate from Stanton and still be acceptable to a chess player is the Berliner chess set:
http://www.thechesspiece.com/indian...

Nov-03-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: An up and down game from the Rashid Nezh Memorial recently. Two knight beat two bishops. It's a game that goes opening - middle game - endgame - middle game.

[Event "40th Nezhmetdinov Mem"]
[Site "Kazan RUS"]
[Date "2018.09.21"]
[Round "9.32"]
[White "Maneluk, Daniil"]
[Black "Garifullina, Leya"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C67"]
[WhiteElo "2170"]
[BlackElo "2053"]
[PlyCount "177"]
[EventDate "2018.09.13"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[SourceTitle "The Week in Chess 1246"]
[Source "Mark Crowther"]
[SourceDate "2018.09.24"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2018.09.24"]
[SourceQuality "2"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. d4 Nd6 6. Bxc6 dxc6 7. dxe5 Nf5 8. Qxd8+ Kxd8 9. Nc3 Bd7 10. Rd1 Kc8 11. Ne4 h6 12. b3 b6 13. Bb2 c5 14. c4 Be6 15. h3 Kb7 16. Ne1 g5 17. Nf6 a5 18. Rd3 Ne7 19. a4 Ng6 20. Rad1 Bg7 21. Nf3 Nf4 22. R3d2 Raf8 23. Nd5 Ng6 24. Ne3 Kc8 25. Kf1 Rd8 26. Ke1 Nf4 27. Rxd8+ Rxd8 28. Rxd8+ Kxd8 29. Kd2 Bc8 30. Ne1 Bb7 31. f3 Bf8 32. Nd3 Ng6 33. Ke2 Nh4 34. Kf2 Kd7 35. Ng4 Ke6 36. Nf6 Bc6 37. Nh5 Nf5 38. g3 Nd4 39. Bxd4 cxd4 40. g4 Bb7 41. Ke2 c6 42. Kd2 Ba6 43. f4 gxf4 44. Nhxf4+ Kd7 45. Ne2 c5 46. Nef4 Be7 47. Ke2 Bd8 48. Nd5 Bb7 49. Kf3 Kc6 50. Ke4 Bc8 51. N3f4 Kd7 52. Nh5 Bb7 53. Ng7 Bg5 54. Nf5 Ke6 55. Ng7+ Kd7 56. Nf5 Ke6 57. h4 Bd8 58. Ng7+ Kd7 59. Nf5 Ke6 60. g5 hxg5 61. Ng7+ Kd7 62. h5 g4 63. h6 g3 64. Kf3 d3 65. h7 d2 66. Ke2 g2 67. h8=Q d1=Q+ 68. Kxd1 g1=Q+ 69. Kc2 Qf2+ 70. Kb1 Qe1+ 71. Ka2 Qe2+ 72. Kb1 Qe4+ 73. Ka2 Qxe5 74. Qh3+ Kc6 75. Qh6+ f6 76. Nh5 Qe2+ 77. Ka3 Qd1 78. Kb2 Qd4+ 79. Ka2 Qf2+ 80. Ka3 Qg1 81. Kb2 Qg2+ 82. Ka3 Qg5 83. Qh8 Qc1+ 84. Ka2 Qc2+ 85. Ka3 Qb1 $4 86. Qe8+ Kd6 87. Qxd8+ Ke5 88. Qxf6+ Ke4 89. Qg6+ (89. Ng3+ Kd3 90. Qc3#) 1-0

And how's that for a complete game header!

Nov-03-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp:
[Event "43rd Olympiad 2018"]
[Site "Batumi GEO"]
[Date "2018.09.24"]
[Round "1.89"]
[White "Conhoff, David"]
[Black "Kourakoumba, Florent"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "A40"]
[PlyCount "141"]
[EventDate "2018.09.24"]
[EventType "team"]
[EventRounds "11"]
[EventCountry "GEO"]
[SourceTitle "The Week in Chess 1246"]
[Source "Mark Crowther"]
[SourceDate "2018.09.24"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2018.09.24"]
[SourceQuality "2"]
[WhiteTeam "US Virgin Islands"]
[BlackTeam "Central African Republic"]
[BlackTeamCountry "CAR"]

1. d4 e6 2. f4 d5 3. e3 Nf6 4. Bd3 Bd6 5. Nf3 Nc6 6. Nbd2 Bd7 7. Ne5 a6 8. Ndf3 Ne4 9. Bxe4 dxe4 10. Ng5 Bxe5 11. dxe5 Nxe5 12. Nxe4 Nc6 13. O-O Qe7 14. Bd2 O-O 15. a3 Rfd8 16. Bc3 f6 17. Qf3 Na7 18. Bb4 Qf7 19. Nc5 Bc6 20. e4 Nb5 21. c3 a5 22. a4 Nd6 23. Ba3 b6 24. Nb3 Bxe4 25. Qg3 c5 26. Nd2 Bb7 27. Rad1 Nf5 28. Qh3 Rd7 29. Nc4 Ra6 30. Rd2 Bd5 31. Qd3 Nd6 32. Nxd6 Rxd6 33. Qxa6 g6 34. Bxc5 Bb7 35. Qe2 Rxd2 36. Qxd2 bxc5 37. Qd8+ Kg7 38. Qxa5 Qe7 39. Qa7 Qc7 40. a5 Qc6 41. Rf2 Kh6 42. b4 cxb4 43. cxb4 Ba6 44. Qe3 f5 45. Rf3 Kg7 46. Qe5+ Kf7 47. b5 Bxb5 48. Rc3 Qe8 49. a6 Bxa6 50. Rc7+ Qe7 51. Rxe7+ Kxe7 52. Qg7+ Kd6 53. Qxh7 g5 54. fxg5 Bc4 55. g6 e5 56. g7 f4 57. g8=Q Bxg8 58. Qxg8 Kc5 59. Qd8 e4 60. Qd1 Kc4 61. h4 e3 62. h5 Kc3 63. h6 Kc4 64. h7 Kc3 65. h8=Q+ Kc4 66. Qh4 Kc3 67. Qxf4 Kb2 68. Qc4 e2 69. Qdxe2+ Kb1 70. Qcc2+ Ka1 71. Qb2# 1-0

Nov-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: https://www.spectator.co.uk/2018/11...

<In the year since it opened, the Bridge has given us the following: a harmless Karl Marx comedy by Richard Bean; a modern-dress Julius Caesar with Ben Whishaw playing Brutus as a frowning existentialist; a dreary rustic soap opera written by newcomer Barney Norris; and an enjoyable NHS romp by Alan Bennett. Not quite the string of triumphs everyone had expected from Nicholas Hytner who used to produce two dozen shows a year at the National but now manages one every three months at his bankside garret.

Time on his hands. But not enough to script-edit the efforts of fashionable wags like Martin McDonagh whose silly, mean-spirited skit about Hans Christian Andersen is a humiliating low point in the Bridge’s short history. The setting is Copenhagen. Hans Christian Andersen, played as a bumptious egomaniac by Jim Broadbent, nurtures a terrible secret. In a cage in his loft, he keeps a one-footed female pygmy (a dignified performance from Johnetta Eula’Mae Ackles) and he uses her folk memories as the source for his world-famous tales.

He also enjoys taunting her physical frailties. ‘You’re like a tinier Tiny Tim but African and not as amusing.’ This gag, which typifies the show’s level of humour, rests on two assumptions. First, the audience will consider a disabled child such as Tiny Tim funny. Second, they will regard another invalid as a less fertile source of mirth because she’s Congolese. These are very grating, puerile sentiments. Which of us believes, as McDonagh appears to, that every instance of human adversity, penury or impairment has been laid on by providence to keep us amused in our theatres?

The play moves to London where Hans Christian Andersen billets himself on Charles Dickens. Phil Daniels plays the novelist as a colourless grouch who can’t stop saying ‘@#$%’, especially when Andersen mistakes him for Charles Darwin, as he does several times. The repetition of this gag is mirrored by another instance of replication when it emerges that Dickens, like Andersen, has secretly purloined all his stories from an African captive. At the heart of this muddled and idiotic play is an attempt to parrot the orthodoxy that the wealth of Europe is the plunder of a superior culture in Africa. Were McDonagh not a Hollywood bigwig, he would have struggled to find a home for this bleak, childish frivolity. On press night I was seated a few yards behind the author in a pew full of actors whose fruity cackles were obviously intended for his ears. And I had an unimpeded view of Phoebe Waller-Bridge, a fabulously gutsy comic writer, who laughed only sparingly at this. Brave of her. She’s the author’s girlfriend.>

Nov-05-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp:
Which of these five sports are most likely to be rigged:

1. Baseball
2. Snooker
3. Soccer
4. Crcket
5. Boxing.

Nov-05-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/...

The daughter of a shamed loyalist who sported a Swastika tattoo at a Somme centenary parade last weekend says her father deeply regrets his Nazi marking.

Rebecca Millar leapt to the defence of her dad Ricky Millar after he was pictured in Sunday Life with a Swastika on his neck, saying he didn’t get the tattoo for Nazi-related reasons.

However, east Belfast grandad Millar has previously boasted of his neo-Nazi credentials and even claims to be a member of the violent white supremacist gang Combat 18 while also being an ardent supporter of the state of Israel.

Brass-necked Hitler-loving Millar, who is normally prolific on his numerous social media sites, has been keeping his head down.

But he was widely condemned and ridiculed after the image of him parading in memory of the dead of the 1916 battle went viral on social media.

He was branded ‘Thicky Millar’ and a ‘knuckle-dragging contradiction’ after he was snapped marching in Belfast city centre last weekend with his Swastika clearly visible over his shirt collar.

Brazen Millar was also wearing a poppy on his lapel along with a badge of the UVF-linked sectarian murder gang the Red Hand Commando.

He walked with members of the procession who were wearing armbands of the original UVF, which formed part of the 36th Ulster Division of the British army, thousands of whom died at the Somme.

Responding to one Facebook commentator, Rebecca Millar posted: “He’s not proud of the tattoo and he regrets it deeply.”

In reply to another she wrote: “I don’t agree with most of his views but that’s him. He’s his own person.

Nov-05-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp:
CAPTION COMPETITION #7

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DrPjm_Q...

Provide a witty and pithy and above all urbane punchline to that cartoon, in 100 words or less.

Nov-06-18  thegoodanarchist: <I think that the furthest one can deviate from Stanton and still be acceptable to a chess player is the Berliner chess set: http://www.thechesspiece.com/indian...
>

IMO those knights are an abomination. The set is suitable only for casual games, not tournaments.

Nov-06-18  thegoodanarchist: <offramp:
CAPTION COMPETITION #7

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DrPjm_Q...

Provide a witty and pithy and above all urbane punchline to that cartoon, in 100 words or less.>

I propose the following caption:

"IMO those knights are an abomination. The set is suitable only for casual games, not tournaments."

Nov-07-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: An entry from <zanzibar>.

<"I like dogs, I like - but solve dogs in the field during the summer in the bandwidth!">

Nov-07-18  sceptic: "How come, when your kibitzers are all demanding the Grob, that you play 1.e4 ?"
Nov-08-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: ** Coming In a Few Hours! **

World Chess Championship 2018 Moves Prediction Contest. Conducted by the Legendary <chessmoron> and hosted at Graceland, home of Elvis. Click on Elvis for details.

Nov-09-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Everyone listen!!

I was watching my wristwatch ⌚️ today at both
11:11:11 and
12:34:56.
I made a wish at the former, of course, but when I saw the second I realised that this was a special day.

CARUANA is going to win today.

Nov-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: A <Caption Competition> entry from the estimable User: Richard Taylor:

<“One day I swore at everyone in my chess club, and in a violent rage I swept the pieces and also some coffee cups off the board! But that's another story...”>

Jump to page #   (enter # from 1 to 86)
search thread:   
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 52 OF 86 ·  Later Kibitzing>

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