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 Capablanca
 José Raúl Capablanca
Lasker vs Capablanca 1921
Havana

Jose Raul Capablanca was regarded as a chess prodigy,[1] yet his father wanted him to maintain the "even tenor of the average boy's way in his youth."[2] Capablanca moved to the USA in 1904 to complete his education. However, he left Columbia University in 1910 without a degree and pursued a career in chess.[3] His first international success was his clear win (+8 -1 =14) over the former world championship challenger in Capablanca-Marshall (1909). After that, he was considered a worthy contender for the title of world champion,[1] and reigning champion Emanuel Lasker commented "Capablanca has shown himself to be a great player."[4]

Capablanca's admirers had suggested a title challenge as early as 1908.[5] Even prior to his first European tournament, León Paredes had suggested to Lasker that he play a match with Capablanca,[6] but Lasker declined.[7] Capablanca himself remained cautious.[5] The hype surrounding Capablanca made Lasker admit that the subject got "on his nerves."[8] Capablanca made his international tournament debut at San Sebastian (1911). He unexpectedly won 1st prize, a result even he hadn't anticipated.[9] About seven months after this success, he challenged Lasker to a title match.[10]

Lasker published the proposed conditions,[11] but Capablanca replied in a private letter that they were unacceptable.[12] After Lasker had published a commentary on the conditions in the press,[13] Capablanca issued a statement to him asking "But why should he not play me on the same terms that he has granted to all other aspirants for his title?"[14] Lasker replied to Capablanca's first letter, complaining that the Cuban wanted to impose his own rules on him and called for Walter Penn Shipley to act as arbiter.[15] Both Amos Burn[16] and the British Chess Magazine[17] sided with Capablanca, since the proposed conditions were obviously in favor of Lasker. The world champion accused Capablanca of having "aimed a deliberate blow against my professional honor,"[18] and when Shipley did not side with him, Lasker broke off the negotiations.[19] Most people considered Lasker's treatment of Capablanca to be unjust.[20] The Cuban would later assess Lasker's chances in a title match in 1911 to "have been excellent."[21]

Akiba Rubinstein challenged Lasker for the title in August 1912 and after negotiations, the match was scheduled for the fall of 1914.[22] The outbreak of World War I led to the cancellation of the match. Capablanca suggested a world championship tournament[23] and hoped for a match in 1915.[24] During St. Petersburg (1914), won by Lasker ahead of his former challenger, Capablanca drew up a new set of rules for the world championship.[25]

After the war, Capablanca considered himself, Lasker and Rubinstein to be the strongest players.[25] Capablanca began negotiations with Lasker in January 1920,[26] and published My Chess Career to convince the public of his right to a challenge.[27] Yet Rubinstein still had a contract and felt left out. He proposed an official body to administer the world championship, and suggested a triangular tournament as a compromise to determine the champion. But Rubinstein had lost his basis of financial support in post-war Europe,[28] and Capablanca was left as Lasker's chief rival. Capablanca declared that, should he win the title, he would accept a challenge from Rubinstein.[25]

On January 23, 1920 Lasker and Capablanca agreed to a title match to begin no earlier than 1921.[26] In June, Lasker suddenly resigned, declaring Capablanca the new world champion.[29] The Cuban didn't want to become champion that way,[30] so he managed to convince Lasker to play a match. Lasker agreed, although he insisted on being regarded as the challenger.[31] The match was held in Havana from March 15 to April 27, 1921.[32] The winner would be the first to 8 points, draws not counting. If neither player reached that goal, the one with more points after 24 games would win. There would be five play days a week, with one session of play lasting 4 hours. The time limit was 15 moves per hour, and the referee was Alberto Ponce. Lasker would receive $11,000 and Capablanca $9,000 of the $20,000 purse. An additional $5,000 was donated after five games had been completed, with $3,000 going to the winner and $2,000 to the loser.[33] After his win in game 14, with the score now +4 -0 =10 in the Cuban's favor, Lasker gave up and Capablanca was declared the new world champion.[32]

FOR FURTHER READING:
How Capablanca Became World Champion, Edward Winter (2004)
Lasker on the 1921 World Championship Match, Edward Winter
Capablanca's Reply to Lasker, Edward Winter.

click on a game number to replay game 1234567891011121314
Capablanca½½½½1½½½½11½½1
Lasker½½½½0½½½½00½½0

FINAL SCORE:  Capablanca 9;  Lasker 5
Reference: game collection WCC Index [Lasker-Capablanca 1921]

NOTABLE GAMES   [what is this?]
    · Game #10     Lasker vs Capablanca, 1921     0-1
    · Game #11     Capablanca vs Lasker, 1921     1-0
    · Game #5     Capablanca vs Lasker, 1921     1-0

FOOTNOTES

  1. Wiener Schachzeitung August 1909, pp.236-239. In ANNO / Österreichische Nationalbibliothek
  2. J R Capablanca, Munsey's Magazine October 1916, pp.94-96. In Edward G Winter, "Capablanca: a compendium of games, notes, articles, correspondence, illustrations and other rare materials on the Cuban chess genius José Raúl Capablanca, 1888-1942 (McFarland 1989), p.2
  3. Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.10-12
  4. Emanuel Lasker, The Evening Post. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.17
  5. Edward Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.55
  6. L Paredes (President of the Havana Chess Club) Crónica de Ajedrez May 1911, p.12. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.33
  7. Emanuel Lasker, New York Evening Post 15 March 1911. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.33
  8. American Chess Bulletin April 1910, p.88. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.32
  9. Olga Capablanca, Chessworld May-June 1964, pp.20-37. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.32
  10. Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.56
  11. Emanuel Lasker, The Evening Post 22 November 1911. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.56-57
  12. Winter, Capablanca (McFarland, 1989), pp.57-59
  13. Emanuel Lasker, The Evening Post. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.59-61
  14. American Chess Bulletin February 1912, p.31. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.61-62
  15. Emanuel Lasker, The Evening Post 20 January 1912. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.62
  16. A Burn, Liverpool Courier 19 January 1912, p.3. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.63
  17. British Chess Magazine, February 1912, pp.51-52. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.63
  18. Emanuel Lasker in a letter to Shipley, 20 February 1912. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.64
  19. Emanuel Lasker, The Evening Post 15 May 1912. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.64-65
  20. Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.66
  21. J R Capablanca, The Windsor Magazine December 1922, pp.86-89. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.4-8
  22. John Donaldson and Nikolay Minev, The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein - Volume 1: Uncrowned King, 2nd edition (Russell Enterprises 2006), pp.290-295
  23. American Chess Bulletin July 1912, p.147. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.65-66
  24. Glasgow Weekly Herald, 10 October 1914. In Edward Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.83
  25. The Observer, 24 August 1919, p.9. In Winter, Capablanca" (McFarland 1989), pp.97-98
  26. American Chess Bulletin March 1920, pp.45-46. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.108-109
  27. Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.105
  28. Donaldson and Minev, pp.370
  29. American Chess Bulletin July-August 1920, p.126. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.109
  30. British Chess Magazine October 1922, pp.376-380. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), pp.112-115
  31. American Chess Bulletin September-October 1920, p.141. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.110
  32. Edward Winter, How Capablanca Became World Champion 2004
  33. The World's Championship Chess Match Played at Havana between Jose Raul Capablanca and Dr. Emanuel Lasker 1921 (New York 1921), p.39. In Winter, Capablanca (McFarland 1989), p.111

 page 1 of 1; 14 games  PGN Download 
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Capablanca vs Lasker ½-½501921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
2. Lasker vs Capablanca ½-½411921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD37 Queen's Gambit Declined
3. Capablanca vs Lasker ½-½631921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchC66 Ruy Lopez
4. Lasker vs Capablanca ½-½301921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD61 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
5. Capablanca vs Lasker 1-0461921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
6. Lasker vs Capablanca ½-½431921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchC66 Ruy Lopez
7. Capablanca vs Lasker ½-½231921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
8. Lasker vs Capablanca ½-½301921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD12 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav
9. Capablanca vs Lasker ½-½241921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD33 Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch
10. Lasker vs Capablanca 0-1681921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD61 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack
11. Capablanca vs Lasker 1-0481921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
12. Lasker vs Capablanca ½-½311921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchC66 Ruy Lopez
13. Capablanca vs Lasker ½-½231921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchD63 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense
14. Lasker vs Capablanca 0-1561921Lasker - Capablanca World Championship MatchC66 Ruy Lopez
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2)  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 6 OF 6 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Mar-24-21  Whitehat1963: We are currently celebrating the 100th anniversary of this match, which I consider the real beginning of modern chess (but what do I know?).
Mar-25-21  Whitehat1963: Which of the draws in this venerable old championship match were wins that got away?

We should be analyzing the daylights out of this match during its 100-year anniversary!

Mar-25-21
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: On the topic of 'wins that got away', perhaps the strongest candidate of all was White's loss in Lasker vs Capablanca, 1921.
Mar-26-21  Whitehat1963: Yes, good point <Perfudious>. Lasker had a small advantage that he could have exploited to win, but it wasn’t exactly easy to see in that complicated position on move 17.
Mar-27-21  Whitehat1963: Obviously, I meant <perfidious>!
Mar-27-21
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: Him, too, lol.
Mar-21-23
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: The first game of this match was on 15th March 1921, 102 years and 6 days ago.
Lasker was the first World Chess Champion to renounce his title: in this match Lasker was the challenger and Capablanca was the holder of the title.

Nepomniachtchi - Ding World Championship Match (2023) will start in about 17 days. Both players will be challengers.

Jun-13-23
Premium Chessgames Member
  keithbc: sally simpson - the text or the diagramme is wrong as what you state is impossible.
Oct-21-24  Mathematicar: I am interested, is there a book on the Championship?

I remember watching the games on Agadmator's channel back in 2019 and they really have made an impact on me at the time. Lasker really played like a modern GM. Some say games were boring but I think they were quite revolutionary for the time.

Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  beatgiant: <Mathematicar>Of course there are books on this match. Here are a couple of examples easily available today.

https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Reco... - "Match Lasker-Capablanca pour le championnat du monde des échecs," Lasker, E., Paris, La stratégie, 1921 (in French, free online via the link above)

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=lasker+c... - "Lasker vs Capablanca. Havana 1921: World Championship Match," Capablanca, J.R., 2021 (about $12 paperback or $5 on kindle via the link above)

Oct-21-24  Mathematicar: I would like Lasker's version because Capa wasn't that good annotator: he was lazy (I wouldn't be too surprised he didn't make any new analysis when writing "My chess career" nor "Chess fundamentals". Fortunately, his style was pure and "simple" and so we haven't lost almost anything in that regard.

Lasker's examples and models, as well as clear and long-lasting explanations, really impressed me. What a duo, these two!

Thanks for help.

Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: Hi Mathematicar,

<I am interested, is there a book on the Championship? >

Save you money. The above intro has all the background you need, every one of the games on here has notes by Capablanca.

Download the lot, stick it the into WORD, put a space after each Capablanca's notes. Add in diagrams where the note carries analysis so you can play it out and go back to the game. Design a cover. Copy the lot onto a USB thingy, give it to a student who can get material printed for free. You have your book.

Hi Keithbc.

What is wrong with it. (White to play)


click for larger view

1.Nc7+ Nxc7 2.Ra8+ Nxa8 3.Kc8 Nc7 (only move) 4.Kxc7 and that is a won ending with either colour to move.


click for larger view

Oct-21-24  Mathematicar: <Sally Simpson>, thank you for your reply. I prefer paper over screen and, luckly, that somewhat slow way of learning is fine for patzers like me.
Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  beatgiant: <Mathematicar> In case you don't speak French and don't want to make a printout from the version I linked above, footnote 33 in the event description above cites an English version. You could try looking for it on worldcat.org to see if it's in any library available to you.
Oct-21-24  stone free or die: There was an English language edition published in the USA, so I looked for it on Google Books, and also Hathitrust.

Couldn't find a PD version (1921 is not Public Domain).

I was wondering why, but then I found this page that sold the book for $250:

https://postmarkedfromthestars.com/...

One of the views shows just how thin a book it is. Another shows that it was a limited edition of only 600 copies - which explains why it's so rare.

I think Harwig Cassell was involved, so I suspect the match book has a lot of overlap with the ACB coverage.

Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: I too prefer playing over a game off screen. You cannot feel it through a keyboard. Psychically making the exact same move as the players concerned give you a much better feeling of the game.

I think you will find most older players are the same. The three B's; Book, Board and Bedroom has a pedigree dating back over 200 years and it produced some exceptional players.

I'm into the lovely habit of playing over at least one game a day - often a few more on a full sized set from a book usually grabbed at random.

Oct-21-24  Mathematicar: <Sally Simpson>, never heard of "Book, Board and Bedroom" :). For me this is absolutely one of the most enjoyable way to spend my free time.

<beatgiant>, no, I don't know French. Sadly, I can't enter the online version you gave. I would really love to have English edition so if you don't mind the labor of copying and pasting the name of the book here in English. Thanks!

Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  paulalbert: Books on the match:
I have Lasker's book
Mein Wettkampf mit Capablanca

published by Walter De Gruyter & Co., Berlin and Leipzig, in 1922

My German is conversational only, German wife, so reading all Lasker's commentary on both games and his much broader discussion with full understanding would require a dictionary and help with the grammatical structure.

Being fluent in French I did look at the link to the french book at the Harvard library on the link provided by beatgiant.

It is a compilation of information and reports in contemporary news and magazines, many games annotated by Amos Burn in the Field magazine.

Burn's final colorful comment on the 14th game:

"A game very weakly played by Lasker, who simply threw himself out the window after having obtained a superior position"

A very interesting final paragraph of the French book reads as follows: " The 15th and last game of the match, a Queen's Gambit Declined, played one says on April 26th, consisted only of the beginning moves, Lasker giving up without the position having the least disadvantage, but probably to put an end to the struggle which for him was nevertheless impossible to hope for success".

I was not previously aware of just the token beginning of a 15th game.

Oct-21-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  beatgiant: Winter has a page on the match extensively quoting Lasker's writings on it and also going into the question of the 15th game, claimed to be 25 moves long.

https://www.chesshistory.com/winter...

Oct-22-24  stone free or die: <<Sally> The three B's; Book, Board and Bedroom>

I always thought the last "B" was Bathroom!

Oct-22-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: Hi Stone,

That is the modern version of the three B's: go to the Bathroom and put Beads up your Bum.

BTW I'm pretty sure the Edinburgh Club has a copy of that book you linked to. There is a long, a very long list of every book we have on a spreadsheet.

I'll see the lad who has it about getting it posted online....or maybe not, because then I'll only get plagued by chess historians (what is a collective term for chess historians?) wanting me to look up things.

Oct-22-24  Mathematicar: I see Edward Winter is not the most celebrated chess persona here. :)
Oct-22-24  sudoplatov: User: Sally Simpson

A Royal Rookery of Knights and Bishops suitable for Peons.

Oct-22-24  stone free or die: <sudoplatov> good one!
Nov-06-24  Mathematicar: You guys were right about Capablanca's notes on the match. Over screen it seems a bit better, but the book I bought is basically a brochure where the games are 95% of the content (excluding the introduction). Also, it's of very, very low quality (without indicated pages, with too small diagrams and font in comparison to the paper and with a lot of errors: in other words, a fiasco).

On the other hand, Alekhine's notes are maybe more important than the games themselves (in a sense). Lasker is always somewhere in between, but I find Lasker's Manual to be of quite high quality for the time, altough Alekhine's notes are maybe richer.

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