Swindling
Swindling
LEV ALBURT
Test and Improve Your Chess
YURI ΑVERBAΚH
Chess Endings: EssentialΚnowledge
JULIAN HODGSON
Chess Travellers Quiz Book
DANIELΚING
How Good is Υour Chess?
DANIEL KOPEC et al
Mastering Chess
NEIL McDONALD
Modem Chess Miniatures
Positional Sacrifices
NIGELPOVAH
Chess Training
SIMON WEBB
Chess for Tigers
Ali Mortazavi
CADOGAN
UΚ/EUROPE/AUSTRALASIA/ASIA/AFRICA
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Preface 6
τime Trouble 25
The Endgame 35
Although the cover or the title may not necessaήly suggest it, there are
some seήous points in this book. Probably the most important factor to
consider is that blunders, bad moves and 'imperfection' as a whole are
what makes the modem game of chess. The harsh reality is that if both
players were to play the best moves, the result of each game would be
a draw. It is only because human beings are 'imperfect' that we can
appreciate masterpieces such as the Immortal Game and the attacking
genius of Kasparov and Tal. Perhaps this is the reason that many top
chess players dislike the emergence of the computer. It is not so much
that the silicon monster can beat them but more the fact that computers
take the fantasy and the absurd out of chess.
Ι agreed to wήte this book in September 1993, since when there
have been enormous changes in chess. Ι find that knowledge of
openings is even more important than it was in 1993. Most players
hark back to the mid 1 980's to talk of the good old days when 'chess
players were real chess players' but even in three short years, the extra
computational power of the PC has changed the nature of chess.
Many players hardly make it to an even middlegame and this book is
in many ways dedicated to them. Ι would like to thank lM Neil
McDonald, lM Byron Jacobs and Mauήce Johnson for their valuable
contήbutions to this book. Ι hope that the book has struck the ήght
balance between the seήous and not so seήous aspects of the game and
wish all the readers the best of swindling !
Ali Mortazavi
London 1 996
1 lntroduction:
Understanding Compensation
lsolated Pawns
Pawn lslands
One of the tools that the grand
master uses for a snap assessment
on a given position is to see how
many pawn islands each side has.
1) Good compensation
2) Enough compensation
Finally, Kasparov plays his 3) Not enough compensation
pawn break after reaching the
best setup for his minor pieces. For the rest of this chapter, Ι
42 exf4 have tried to categoήse into posi
42 . . . 1Σee8 43 l.taf2 with the tional and tactical forms compen
idea of f5 would be crushing. sation though invariably you will
43 l2Jgxf4 .fιteS come across many positions
44 l2Jxg6! :xn which do not fit into any of these
45 'ii'xfl 1:ιχe4 ήgid categoήes.
46 dxe4 �xg6
Black has managed to get two Long-term and
minor pieces for a rook but at the Positional Compensation
cost of his kingside being blown It was tempting to create two
wide open. In any case, the separate sections for long-term
knight on a5 is a completely re and positional compensation but,
dundant piece. having gone through various ex
47 :n 'ife8 amples, Ι soon realised that long
48 eS! dxeS term compensation is nearly al
If 48 . . . 'ii'xe5, 49 .:.e2 wins. ways based on a positional motif.
49 1:ιf6+ �g7 Long-term compensation is per
50 J:ιd6 1-0 haps the hardest of all the various
Α crushing victory for the forms of compensation to evalu
World Champion. ate. The reason for this being that
Introduction: Understanding Compensation 15
Hodgson-Psakhis
Metz Open 1994
Englίsh Openίng
8 d4! exd4
ι c4 e5 9 cxd4 'ii'xd4
2 lΔc3 .i.b4 10 'iWcl
3 g3 .i.xc3 Α further pawn sacήfice by
4 bxc3 d6 White. Exactly how much and
5 .i.g2 f5 what type of compensation does
6 c5! White have for his two pawns?
Α very imaginative pawn sacή Although White has secured the
fice which Black could hardly two bishops, which can be con
have expected ση move six! strued as a positional advantage,
White sacήfices a pawn but in his compensation can only be
Introductίon: Understandίng Compensatίon 19
1)
Spassky-Tal
Moscow 1 97 1
14 e4!
Note that although White has
developed all of his pieces to at
tacking positions, it is still not
enough to crack Black's de
fences. With this move, White
opens another front in the shape
of an open e-file to harass Black
further. Black to play. The obvious
14 Ο-Ο move is l li:Jfd7 but White
...
compensation.
2)
Polugayevsky-Petrosian
Moscow 1983
4)
Gross-Mortazavi
Cappelle la Grande 199 1
6)
- Mortazavi-Regan
Oakham 1 990
8)
Botvinnik-Pachman
Oberhausen 1 96 1
7)
The next two diagrams show
backward pawns. What is the dif
ference between them, if any?
22 The Fίne Λrt of Swίndlίng
let him dσwn, and this is where against the Vienna, and after 3 f4,
the swiηdler will get his σppσrtu replies with 3 ... d5 . Here, hσw
nity. The fσllσwing eηtertaining ever, Black must take the pawn
game demσnstrates time-trσuble, ση f4 at sσme time and play a
swindliηg and intuitiση at their dangerσus vaήatiση σf the King's
best. Gambit.
26 The Fine Art of Swindling
10 'ii'f2 !
Far better than 10 e5, which
gains a useless tempo and under
mines the knight on d5. Again, Ι
'felt' this rather than analysed it,
partly because Ι only had 45 min
utes left on my clock and was
sure that Ι would need these later
on in the game and partly because
Ι simply was not able to fathom
out all the complications. After
the game, Miles said he also felt
it! 16 eS! !
10 �c6 And fmally White has achieved
11 �f4! full compensation! Although he
Α slightly strange move as is a piece for a pawn down and a
White should really be avoiding seήes of exchanges have taken
the exchange of pieces when he is place, he is fully developed in
a piece down. However, the contrast to Black's stationary
bishop on d6 is Black's best piece army.
and must be removed. Both play 16 fS
ers were down to the last twenty The only move as 16 ... fxe5
minutes or so by this stage and would open too many lines.
I'm sure that apart from avoiding 17 1lad1 'iie7
the numerous cheapos which ex 18 1Wc3 �h6
ist in the position, all analysis had 19 'iih3 'iigS
28 τhe Fίne Art of Swίndlίng
21 1:tg6?!
Failing tσ adjust tσ the changes
iη the pσsitiση. My initial cσm An incredible turn σf eveηts.
pensatiση in this game was a tac Black has set up mating threats
tical σηe with seήσus threats against my king and his king has
against the black king but after 16 fσund the safest square ση the
e5! ! , the pσsitiση had 'turned' bσard, a6! .
and my cσmpensatiση was mσre 32 'ifc7 �b7
pσsitiσηal than tactical. 2 1 1Σg6?! 33 lLie7 Ilh8
lσσks gσσd but is in fact a cheap And ησw fully develσped,
shσt. Ι had by ησw reached the Black wins by fσrce.
dreaded five minute mark. Miles, 34 <itιb2 'i'f4+
meanwhile, was slightly ahead ση 35 <itιb1 We4
the clσck with seveη σr eight 36 Φh2 lLig4+
minutes. 37 <ifi!b1 :xh3
21 'ife7! 0-1
22 'iib5 hxg6 Α fiηe example σf σpeηing
23 1i'xh8+ preparatiση, swindling, cσunter
I've fmally managed tσ 'get at' swindling and time-trσuble.
the black king but in dσing sσ Ι
am fσrcing it tσ a safe haveη ση τime-Trouble Tactics
the queenside. It is σf the utmσst impσrtance that
23 <itιd7 the swindler cσηducts himself in
24 lLixg6 1i'c5+ the apprσpήate fashiση wheη his
25 Φb1 Φc7 σppσηeηt is ίη time-trσuble. Ι am
26 h3 lLie3 ashamed tσ say that ίη my career,
27 lle1 1i'xc2 Ι have swindled many many σp
28 IΣg1 1i'e4 pσηeηts whilst they ηervσusly
τime Trouble 29
twitched with seconds on their game, Ι was lost out of the open
clock. Along the way, however, Ι ing on move eight and spent my
have learnt some very useful les allotted two hours cursing myself
sons: for not learning opening theory.
With little over five minutes left
to make 32(!) moves, Ι responded
with a move which Ι saw lost by
force. My opponent missed his
chance and Ι was able to escape
with only a completely lost posi
tion instead of a 1 -0 result.
The interesting point was that
at first, my opponent was playing
reasonably slowly when Ι had
four minutes left on my clock. Ι
remember trying to analyse
variation after variation as
The above posιtιon is taken quickly as possible but my clock
from the game Tozer-Mortazavi, situation would not allow any
Oakham 1 990. Black is clearly concrete assesm s ents - Ι was
doing well thanks to his active seeing ghosts. As my clock situa
two bishops. Furthermore, White tion became more and more
had approximately 20 seconds or acute, my opponent started to
even less on his clock to reach the speed up and instinctively Ι
time control while Black had over started playing good moves. On
an hour left. The game continued: move 40, Ι made my fmal move
1 . 1Η8?? 2 d6+ 'iith8 3 'i'xf8
.. in a winning position.
mate and that, unfortunately, was The moral of the story is that
the end of that. very few people can analyse
Of course every chess player calmly and logically in time
will at sometime in his career trouble. Nature simply does not
blunder hoπendously. However, allow the body to relax. Although
a few months after the game, a there is an overwhelming need to
dose of honesty brought to the play quickly in a lost position
unhappy conclusion that my when your opponent is short of
swindling teclmique in time time, Ι have rarely seen any
trouble was flawed - Ι was play player making the best decision
ing far too quickly in my oppo under time pressure.
nent's time-trouble. It was not Ensure that you take your time
until a game Ι had later on that and enjoy making your opponent
year that Ι completely reviewed suffer!
my 'technique' . In this particular Αvoid the obvious move:
30 The Fίne Art oj Swίndlίng
Kasparov-Karpov
Amsterdam 199 1
Kasparov-Sbort
London 1 993
There are only two vaήations:
'Th.is is the position after 45 47 a5 .:lc3+ 48 �e2 �xe4 49 a6
moves in game nine of the 1993 l:tc8 and the rook is ίη time to
World Championship match. For block the pawn; and 47 l:ta3 1lc4
a long time Short had been lin- 48 a5 1txe4 49 a6 %Η4+ 50 �e3
The Endgame 41
1Η8 and again the rook returns in cording to Botvinnik, the Dutch
time to head off the pawn. Instead supporters were cheeήng on their
of 46 e4 ?? , White could have man Euwe, convinced that he was
played either 46 'ιte2 'ιte4 47 about to achieve a fine victory
Iifl ! activating the rook with :f4 over a fellow pretender to the
next move (which is of course the crown of the recently deceased
answer to 47 ... :xa4) or 46 :a2 Alekhine. Euwe himself was also
'ιitf5 47 e4+ 'ιte5 48 Φe3 11a8 49 looking quietly confident. White
a5 11h8 50 11f2. These vaήations is apparently lost, since he is in
are given by Kasparov in lnfor zugzwang: either he retreats his
mator 59. king and allows the black king to
I'm sure that if the endgame at advance, or he retreats his rook
move 45 had been reached when and allows the passed pawn to
the score in the match was say 5- advance. But Botvinnik did both
5 rather than 4-0 to Kasparov, the and drew!
World Champion wouldn't have 41 <itιe3 <itιeS
been so careless. And Short 42 11c2! ! c3
seemed a little punch drunk: his 43 Φd3!
demise contrasts sadly with the
fierce rearguard action we see
from Kasparov in bad positions.
Here is another example of
over-confident play and this time
there is no happy ending.
Fortress Positions
Here is a simple example σf a
fσrtress (see followίng dίagram).
Believe it σr ησt (and Ι didn't
believe it the first and last time Ι
fell fσr it) Black cannσt win this
type σf pσsitiση. The white rσσk,
sσlidly defeηded by the b2 pawn,
which ίη tum is sσlidly defeηded
by the king, pivσts betweeη a3 Kir. Georgiev-Anand
and c3. Black's king can ηever Las Palmas 1993
get at the b2 pawn σr the white
The Endgame 43
White's king has to cross over the Chess For Blood Edward Lasker
d-file at once to approach the b reminisces that after playing the
pawn, before its passage over the move 90 ... J:g3! Ί left the room at
d-file is cut off by the black rook this stage to stretch a little and
after 87 . . /JΊie7. was congratulated upon my vic
87 1ic8 tory by Bogolyubov and others
88 g7! who were in the Press room and
White plans to sacήfice his g told me the story was ready to be
pawn to deflect the rook from the released. However, when Ι re
c-file and allow his king to con tumed to the table, a rude shock
tinue its joumey. awaited me. '
88 'ite6 91 lba4 �fS
89 g8(i!t') 1:txg8 92 'ιtb4 c;ιιχr4
90 Φc4 .:tg3! Here Black was still feeling the
delight of approaching victory.
He had calculated that after 93
�a3 �e4 94 lbc5+ �d4 95
lbxb3+ Φc4 he wins the pinned
knight.
93 lbb2!
But this is the unpleasant sur
pήse alluded to above. lt turns
out that although White cannot
win the passed pawn, neither can
the black king approach to sup
port it and eventually push it past
the white pieces. The only avenue
It looks as though this clinches of approach is the sixth rank, but
the game. White was hoping for can the black king pass over it
90 . . . 1:b8? when 9 1 �c3 followed without interfeήng with the
by lbd3, c;ιιb2 and lbc l wins the pawns defence by the rook?
passed pawn. And as we know, a According to Edward Lasker,
knight against a rook is an easy at this point he rushed back to the
draw, unless there are exceptional Press room and told them to kill
circumstances. But with any story about him beating the
90 . . . .J:g3! Black prevents White former World Champion!
playing �c3 and, it appears, get 93 <it>e4
ting his king in front of the pawn. 94 lba4 <it>d4
So what can White do in this po 95 lbb2 J:f3
sition, while Black takes the f 96 lba4 J:e3
pawn and bήngs up his king? 97 lbb2 <it>e4
ln his book Chess For Fun and 98 lba4 �f3
46 The Fine Art of Swindling
white king would have been free However, he was in for a shock!
to enter Black's position through 4 hxg3!
the many white square holes. 5 fxg3
Smyslov would surely have had
to resign after 2 1:te8.
2 :.xg7
3 tΔxg7 Φχg7
4 g4
This is White's idea. He
block's the kingside and prepares
to march his king to c4, attacking
the vulnerable queenside pawns.
Shereshevsky gives the vaήation
4 ... Φf7 5 Φe2 Φe6 6 Φd3 Φd6 7
Φc4 a5 8 f3 ! Φd7 9 Φc5 Φc7 10
c3 bxc3 1 1 bxc3 Φb7 12 Φd6
Φb6 1 3 c4 Φb7 14 c5 5 g4! !
Black not only gives White the
chance to create an outside
passed pawn, he forces him to!
6 h4
If 6 hxg4 then 6 . . . <itg6 7 �e2
Φh6 and White can't do anything
active since if his king moves
away Black is ready to munch up
the kingside, beginning with Φg5
and �xg4.
6 c5
7 Φe2
Opposite-Coloured Bishops
Sometimes it is possible to swin-
τhe Endgame 49
Fischer-Donner
Saηta Mσnica 1 966
L. Bronstein-Yusupov
Luceme Olympiad 1982
move 35 (our fιrst diagram posi J:.d 1 + and eventually play 11117 or
tion) Zaitsev, a member of the f5 if appropήate. But instead of
Soviet entourage, asked him his this slow approach, Hίibner
opinion of Yusupov's chances. jumped in irnmediately with 1
Kasparov replied ' Artur 'ιttf6? After l . .. �xf4 2 J:.xt7
(Yusupov) obviously stands 1Σχt7 + 3 'itiιxt7
worse, but Ι think he is intending
to win. ' And win he did! Clearly
Kasparov understood that at a
cnsιs point in the game,
Yusupov's sheer determination
and drive, to say nothing of his
talent, would overcome his oppo
nent's resistance.
30 1Σχf8+ Jlxf8
31 fxe4 dxe4
32 'i'e3 Jld8
Tai-Filip
Portoroz 1 958
Το threaten 32 ... .i.f6. But
Tal is ίη big trouble here since Black has made a fatal tactical
the bishop on d2 is attacked, and oversight. He could play
if he moves it, e.g. 28 .i.e3, then 32 ... .:d7, or the ingenious
28 . . . 1:txd 1 29 %Σ.χd 1 1Σχd 1 + 30 32 ... 'ii'g7! when White must reply
.i.xd 1 tbxe4 3 1 'ifxe5 tbxf2+ 33 'i'f4, since 33 'ifxe7? 1:tg8 al
wins a pawn. lows mate on g2, and 33 1:tg 1 is
Tal finds a good fighting answered by 33 ... .i.d6! ! 34
chance. He moves the bishop to J:.xg7 + Φχg7, and the white
h6! queen is trapped ίη mid-board!
28 .i.xh6 gxh6 Now, would that be a swindle (a
29 'ifxeS .i.e7? lucky defensive feature ίη the
Taken aback, Black immedi position) or a natural way of re
ately goes wrong. 29 . . . 'ii'e7 was futing an unsound sacήfice?
better, when 30 'iff4 tbh7 3 1 After 32 ... 'ifg7 33 'iff4 .l:tg8 34
'ii'xh6 'iff6 leaves Black ίη con 'i'f3 the fight would be pro
trol. longed.
30 1:td4! 33 f6! tbxf6
Beginning a similar plan to that 34 'iffS+ <it>h8
caπied out against Smyslov ίη 35 eS
the previous game. Tal is a piece White has been allowed to un
down, so he needs some help leash his bishop, and there is no
from his pawns. With this move longer a defence.
Attack is the Best Form of Defence 59
tisch!
Pσrtisch was reησwned fσr
haviηg a fiηe grasp σf pσsitiσηal
chess. If he had a wealrness, it
was ίη the realm σf calculatiση.
He teηded tσ becσme slightly
fazed in melees. Musing ση this,
Tal decided ση the speculative
14 �xc4?!
but was sσση lσsiηg
15 �xc4 cxd5
16 � d4
Oηce again Tal has sacήficed a
35 'iWg7 piece aηd is planniηg tσ be res
36 exf6 i.xf6 cued by his pawns. Eηtirely
37 %:tg1 i.g5 hσpeless wσuld be 16 ... �e4 17
38 f4 �xd5 .
and Black resigηed. 17 �xa8 'ifxa8
18 �cb5 %:tc8
19 'i'd1 �4
Portisch-Tal
Arnsterdam 1964
Black's build up lσσks impres
White played sive, but aη extra rσσk is wσrth a
14 b4 little trσuble!
gainiηg space ση the queenside 20 f3 a6
and appareηtly fσrcing the knight 21 �xd4 'i'd5
ση a5 tσ retreat tσ a passive 22 i.e3 %:tc3
square. Tal didn't faηcy the prσs 23 �dc2?
pect σf dσur defeηce after Pσrtisch is bemused by all his
14 . . . �b7, especially against Ρσr- extra pieces. The greedy 23 fxe4
60 τhe Fίne Art of Swίndlίng
38 Ac3 44 l2Jg3+!
39 i.d4+ i.xd4 45 hxg3 'ifhS+
40 'it'xd4+ �h7 46 'ifh2 'iff3+
41 %lg1 47 J:g2 'it'd1+
and the draw was agreed.
Note that if Black's king were
ση h7 then after 45 . . . 'ifh5+ 46
'iih2 the black queen would have
been pinned against the king.
That's why 4 l . .. �g8 was such a
subtle move.
Although Kasparov was never
actually losing this game, he still
had to display the qualities of
tactical resourcefulness requisite
to a swindle. And all would-be
swindlers should try to remember
Ruling out 4 1 . . . l2Jg3+ intend- the drawing mechanism at the
ing to answer 4 1 . . . l2Jxf4 with 42 end!
'ikf6 J:xd2 43 'ifxti+ �h8 44 Here is a 100% swindle.
'fixf4, while planning 42 d6.
41 <it>g8 ! !
Α quiet move that is the prel
ude to a drawing combination.
42 d6
There is nothing better.
42 .rtxd2!
43 'ifxd2 'iff3+
44 'ii'g2
τimman-Kasparov
Bugojno 1982
and the white queen finds itself a real shock for Korchnoi who
trapped. was ίη his habitual time-trouble.
28 �c2 32 IΣ.xf2+
There is nothing better. 33 <ittg3 l:ιxe7?
28 Jld2+
and Kasparov offered a draw,
which was accepted.
This draw offer is another
noteworthy swindle technique:
τimman is ίη shock at losing his
queen, and so grasps the chance
to teπninate play. If Kasparov
hadn't made his offer, Timman
may have found 29 <ittxd2 'iixe8
30 lbd5, when still he has a good
position.
Here is our final example of
the World Champion ίη swindle Panic ίη time pressure.
mode. 33 ... 1i'a8 ! threatens 34 . . .'ii' a 3+
and obliges White to play 34
l:xe8+ 'ifxe8 when the attack is
easily defeated.
34 f6! lbg6
Black would even lose after
34 ... g6? 35 'iih6 'iif8 36 lbxe7+.
35 lbxe7+
Kasparov-Korchnoi
Brussels 1 986
'ifxg7+ 'ifi>c8 40 'ifxb7 is matel try to enjoy his chess. And sacή
36 'ifxh7 �xf6 ficing pieces and launching big
Black would be mated as in the attacks is great fun. But he must
vaήation above after 36 . . . lbxe7. be prepared for the occasional
37 lbxg6+ fxg6 short, sharp defeat against a
38 'ιtxf2 'i!t'b6+ player he regards as an infeήor
39 'itιg2 'iνb2+ (in chess terms, of coursel). The
40 �h3? opponent won 't always come to
his rescue with a blunder, as the
next couple of examples indicate.
40 JlxgS?
Both sides were in time pres
sure. Here 40 . . . Jle5 was danger Tai-Bhend
ous, so White should have played Zuήch 1 959
40 �f3.
41 'ifxg6 'iff6 Here the simple 22 lbf4, ex
42 'ifxf6+ changing off bishops, gives
and a draw was agreed. The White a very slight advantage.
opposite-coloured bishops negate But that wasn't the young Tal's
any winning chances after way of playing. lnstead he
42 . . . Jlxf6 43 �xb7. speculate with
22 Jlxg6!?
The Perils of a S harp Style Hoping for 22. . . hxg6 23 lbe7 !
The following is a reminder that when the threat of 24 'it'h4 will be
those who live by the sword also decisive, e.g. 23 ... �e5 24 'iνh6
ήsk dying by the sword. If the mate or 23 ... .:.f5 24 'ifh4+ :h5
reader wishes to adopt an ultra 25 lbxg6+ and 26 'i'xh5 . Black
aggressive style and make finds the only move.
speculative sacήfices, then fmel 22 JlxdS!
Unless he is a professional player Now both 23 cxd5 hxg6 and 23
with a mortgage to pay he should 'ifh5 Jlg8 1 leave White a piece
66 The Fine Art of Swindling
35 1tee1! !
Tal-Gligoric But this alters the picture! The
Candidates match, 1 968 threat of mate ση hl turns a lost
position into a winning one.
White has a most imposing at 36 'ifxt7+
tacking fonnation and not sur White has nothing to do but
pήsingly Tal continued in typi simplify into a lost endgame.
calLy aggressive fashion. 36 �xt7
31 'ifh5 37 liJxd6+ Φe6
The threat of 1th8 mate looks 38 1Σg6+ �d5
unstoppable: all Black can do is 39 liJf5 J:b7
give a couple of checks, and then 40 liJe3+ %Σχe3!
he must resign. Gligoήc was also 41 fxe3 1Σc7
in bad time pressure. The game
now went
31 'ii'xc1+
32 Φh2 �d6+!
33 .1:txd6 'iff4+
34 .1:tg3 'ii'xd6
35 liJf5
Black has found a way to stave
off the immediate mate, but what
now? If 35 . . . 'i'c7 36 liJxg7 (36
'ifh6?? 'ii'xg3+! would be a swin
dle and a half, but there may be
other wins here) 36 ... 'ii'x g3+ 37
fxg3 <J;xg7 38 'ifxc5 results in an Gligoήc has simplified clev
easily winning endgame for erly. The passed pawn is unstop
White. pable.
68 The Fine Art of Swindling
turbed his opponents. Others ac the battle began he stood objec
cused him of more sinister prac tively worse failed to perturb
tices: Ίt is remarkable and de Lasker. Perhaps that is why Pol
serves special attention, that the lock said 'it was by no means
great masters, such as Pillsbury, easy to reply to Lasker's bad
Maroczy, and Janowsky, play moves! ' The opponent never
against Lasker as though hypno seems to have the type of position
tised,' wrote Marco in the early he wants.
1900s. So there is nothing new in Let's look at some of Lasker's
Benko donning thick dark glasses swindles. They really do range
to stop Tal hypnotising him at the from the sublime to the ridicu
1959 Candidates toumament, nor lous.
Emanuel Lasker: The Master Swindler 71
Lasker-Showalter
Paήs 1900
his sleeve.
26 'ii'g3! ! ...b8
Black lσses the exchange after
26 ... 'ifxg3 27 liJf6+! gxf6 28
:xd8+ σr 27 ... �f8 ! ? 28 :Xd8+
<it>e7 29 :e8+! . Or if he wants an
early bath he can lσse the ex
change and be mated: 26 . . . 'ii'xb2
27 liJe7+ <it>f8 28 1txd8+ Φχe7 29
'ii'd6 mate. Altematively, if
26 . . . :e8 27 'ii'xe5 1Σχe5 28 liJxb6
aηd White bσth threatens mate
74 The Fine Art of Swindling
Lasker-Aiekhine
St Petersburg 1 9 1 4
29 'i!fxe5. But ησw Lasker's idea crete calculatiση, shσuld σpt fσr
is revealed: it. Lasker had shrewdly assessed
28 lbe2+! his σppσηeηt!
This must have set Reti thiηk Tarrasch pσints σut what hap
iηg ! pens after the cσπect 29 'ίth l :
Νσ dσubt he saw quickly that 29 ... l2Jd4 30 'i'xe5 l2Jxb3 3 1 l2Jb6
29 J:xe2 lσses the exchange: 'ii'c 3 32 'ii'xc3 bxc3 33 l2Jxa8 c2
29 . . . 'i'xd6 ! aηd if 30 l2Jxd6? 34 h3 ! c l'ii' 35 1txc l tbxc l 36
.:tc 1 + is theη a back rank mate. l2Jb6 and White remains a pawn
As we saw abσve, Shσwalter had up. He wσuld still face Lasker's
the same prσblem with his back excelleηt eηdgame technique, but
rank against Lasker sσme tweηty we wσuld expect Reti, whσ cσm
years earlier! pσsed many eηdgame studies, tσ
Sσ if he can 't take the knight, be able tσ clinch victσry. And ίη
theη he must mσve his king. But aηy case, eveη if Reti σnly drew
shσuld it gσ tσ hl σr g l ? Reti he wσuld finish equal first in the
chσse wrσηgly, aηd came secσηd tσurnameηt.
rather than fιrst in the tσurna 29 l2Jd4
meηt. 30 'i'xeS l2Jxb3
31 l2Jb6 l2Jd2+!
29 Φn
It lσσks mσre ηatural tσ gσ this The pσint! With the white king
way, since White rules σut any ση hl this wσuldn't be check.
further back-rank ideas, attacks 32 Φgl l2Jc4!
the knight a secσηd time and Black has gaiηed a vital tempσ
bήηgs his kiηg clσser tσ the ceη by checking ση d2 and it cσm
tre fσr aηy cσmiηg eηdgame. Sσ it pletely alters the balance σf the
is ησt surprising that a pσsitiσηal struggle. Black avσids material
player like Reti, relyiηg ση his lσss and ησw has a strσηg passed
strategical feel rather than cση- pawn which eveηtually decides
Emanuel Lasker: The Master Swίndler 79
35 b3
36 e6 fxe6
37 %Σdxe6 :rs
38 We5 'i'c2 Lasker-Euwe
39 f4 b2 Nottingham 1936
40 .:.e7 'ii' g6
41 f5 1i'f6 Euwe was the reigning World
42 1i'd5+ Φh8 Champion at the time of this
43 .1Σb7 Wc3 game, while Lasker was in the
twilight of his career. So the
Dutchman was eager to win the
game, especially since he was
fighting for first place ...
Lasker was aware of this and
had played very solidly, not giv
ing his opponent any chance to
complicate the struggle. The re
sult: a win for Lasker!
Euwe' s sense of danger was
dulled, and he blundered a piece:
23 Jιa5??
24 b4! Jιxb4
80 τhe Fίne Art of Swίndlίng
ίη the art σf swindling shσuld σb Black tries tσ preveηt this with
serve carefully. At ftrSt sight, 27 .. .'fic7, theη 28 J.xd5 ! J:txd5
there seems tσ be ησ reasση why 29 .:Σχd5 exd5 30 b4 ! ? lσσks gσσd
Black shσuld waηt tσ prσvσke fσr White.
White ίηtσ advancing his queeη 27 lΔb4!
side pawns. Hσwever, Lasker 28 1'Σf3?
knσws that in the future there We begiη tσ see the value σf
may be a situatiση where a white Black's 21st mσve. Lasker has
weakness ση the queenside wση the psychσlσgical battle: he
prσves crucial. Α gσσd swindler has lulled Euwe ίηtσ a false sense
isη't a Mr Micawber figure, whσ σf security with his dσur defeη
merely hσpes sσmething will turn sive play, and ησw prσvσkes him
up tσ his advantage: he dσes all ίηtσ launching a rash attack ση
he caη tσ push the pσsitiση in the the kingside. The result is that he
desΠed directiση. Eveη if sσme lσses cσηtrσl σf the d-file, aηd ...
times the push is a barely percep well, all will sσση be revealed.
tible ηudge ... Instead σf the game mσve, Euwe
22 b3 J.d7 shσuld play ίη the same spmt as
23 a4 lΔdS Lasker: 28 :dd l ! In dσing sσ he
24 �d3 11bc8 wσuld lσse sσme face, but ησt the
25 �c4 �c6 game.
26 lΔxc6 bxc6 28 11c7
29 b4 1'Σcd7
30 hS 'ilgS!
Black's pieces gradually take
up dσminating pσsitiσns.
31 J:tcel 11d4
39 .ie2 tbd4
The knights in the ceηtre are
aesthetically very pleasing.
40 .tf3 lLixf2
41 'i!fc4 liJd3
42 :ιι lLie5
43 'ilb4 lLiexf3+
44 gxf3 lLie2+
45 'it>h2 liJf4+
The queeη has beeη dήveη to 46 'itth 1 %Ud4
an ignominious square. But isη't 47 "ii'e7 riiιg7
the threat σf 35 tbe4 quite awk
ward ησw? Lasker respσnse is
based ση the well knσwn maxim
'the-best way to answer a threat is
tσ ignσre it' .
34 lLic2!
35 lLie4 "ii'xe5!
Α spleηdid queeη sacήfice that
leaves White with three hope
lessly uncσσrdinated pieces.
White is ησw dήveη back in coη
fusioη.
36 liJf6+ 'ilfxf6
37 1:.xf6 lLixf6 Black prepares tσ utilise the h
38 .1:r.c1 lbe4! file fσr the fmal attack.
The knight that has slept ση e8 48 'ilfc7 %X8d5
for most of the game suddenly 49 :eι 1Xg5
Emanuel Lasker: The Master Swjndler 83
and now blunders the exchange. would have been so much easier
Emanuel Lasker: τhe Master Swindler 87
to have had a quiet life after and there is still the threat of
1 3 . . . 'flxd2. 22 ... h6 or 22 ... f6. (ln fact
2 l ... 'fld5 ! is much stronger, when
The purpose of our fmal exam Black has an excellent position.)
ple is to show that Lasker was 22 1:tg3 h6
human after all. 23 lbc4!
C. Torre-Lasker 23 'ii'dS?
Moscow 1925 Black is convinced he is win
ning the piece and is oblivious to
Lasker had been gradually out the looming trap.
playing his young opponent. Al τhis is extraordinary careless
ready he has the better pawn ness for a Lasker. As Euwe points
structure and the white knight on out, Black could probably have
a3 is badly placed. Here Lasker drawn after 23 . . . hxg5 24 lbxd6
played 20 . . . 1i'a5 ! , hitting the rook 'ii'g6 25 'flxg6 lbxg6 26 lbxb7
on e l and also threatening to win %ιeb8 etc.
the pinned bishop with ... h6 or 24 lbe3 'ii'bS?
. . . f6. White seems to be close to a The last chance would be
loss. Τοπe played 24 . . . 'ii'xd4, when White has a
21 b4! winning attack after 25 i.xh6
which is virtually the only an lbg6 26 i.g5 threatening 27 :h3
swer to the double threat of the according to Euwe. But perhaps
black queen. Here 2 l . . . 'ii'xb4 22 25 ... g6 would be a better drawing
.:.b ι 1i'a5 23 lbc4 gives White chance than 25 ... lbg6, since the
some counterplay, so Lasker re queen can in some lines retreat to
plied g7 or h8. In any case, if there was
21 1i'f5 one man you would bet on to
which looks decisive, since the save such a position, it would be
other rook on d3 is now attacked, Lasker. But even his great defen-
88 The Fίne Art oj Swindling
Chajes-Capablanca
New York 1 9 1 6
Rubinstein-Capablanca
Berlin 1 928 Threatening to win at once
with 22 1Wg5, so Black's reply is
White has good winning forced.
92 τhe Fίne Λrt of Swίndlίng
36 f3!
Α clever interference move. If
now 37 Axf3 then 37 ... :tb8 and
38 . . . :b2 wins.
37 il.n :tb8
The a2 pawn is now fixed un 38 11xf3 1itb2+
der the powerful gaze of the 39 Φg3 :txa2
bishop on e6. 40 :tc3 :aι
32 g4? and White resigned.
Still 32 f5 should save the
game. But White obstinately re Here is an example of the sav
fuses to give back the pawn. In ing pawn clause in a more com
other words, he is in a perfect plicated setting.
state of mind to allow himself to
be swindled!
32 gS!
This breaks up White's king
side and leaves him fatally weak
on the dark squares.
33 'iff2
In his book, Harry Golombek
gives the nasty vaήation 33 f5 (or
33 fxg5) 33 . . . 'ife5+ 34 �g 1 :tc 1 +
35 :td 1 'ίi'd4+ ! .
33 'ii'xf2
34 :txf2 gxf4
35 :tf3 :ta8 Capablanca-Nimzowitsch
36 :tf2 Bad Kissingen 1 928
Capablanca and Alekhine 95
25 li:)g3!
Ghastly is 25 'iiff l .1xe4 26
'ii'xe4 'ii'h 3+ 27 <it>e 1 'ii'x c3+ 28
'iiff l 1:Σ.fg8 etc. Also bad is 25
·
Capablanca-Burn
San Sebastian 1 9 1 1
Ouch l
But no player is totally immune
from lapses of concentration. Το
Capablanca and Alekhίne 99
Α Brilliant Attack
or a Swindle?
In the case of Capablanca, the
need to swindle showed that
something had gone wrong with
his intended game plan. He nor
mally avoided any obscuήty,
aiming instead for a small ad Alekhine-Bogolyubov
vantage and a clear strategy. Οώy Nottingham 1 936
when he was in seήous trouble
did he resort to setting traps, in Here Alekhine played
which case he could fight with 20 t2Jf6+
exceptional bήlliance. Alekhine, which he descήbes in the book
on the other hand, often plunged of the tournament as 'rather bold,
into a complicated tactical strug but in the circumstances the most
gle. This was a far ήskier ap promising chance of attack. '
proach than Capablanca's, but on 20 �xf6
the other hand Alekhine had great 21 exf6 �d7
powers of calculation, the help of 22 .te3?
deep opening preparation and a Α blunder: Alekhine says he
flair for tactics that usually out should have continued 22 .ta3 !
witted his opponent. Hence in with a pin on the knight and the
1 00 The Fίne Art of Swίndling
47 'ird7+
And here was the last chance to
go wrong: 47 'i'xe6?? 1i'e4+ 48
38 liJf6 :g2 'ife l+ 49 :g ι 'ii'e4+ is a
39 i.xf6 'ii'g4+ draw by perpetual check.
40 l:ιg2 'irfS Black resigned, since it is mate
in two.
So was this a swindle? Alek
hine thought he had won bήl
liantly, and only Kotov's analysis
many years later found the flaw -
a flaw both of the players had
missed duήng the game, and
what's more, Alekhine had
missed when wήting his notes for
the tournament book! The imagi
nation, flair and fighting spiήt
Alekhine revealed in this game
was a world away from a simple
41 i.eS swindle (such as those pointed
Here Alekhine points out a out at moves 4 1 and 47 above).
swindle he could have fallen into: But what does the reader think?
4 1 'ii'c4 'ii'c 5+! and Black wins!
41 •.. <it?g8 His First Swindle
42 :tf2 'ii'g4+ The following game is given for
43 �h1 hS its histoήcal interest. lt was
44 IΣg1 'ii'h4 Alekhine's first ever swindle in
Capablanca and Alekhine 103
26 �f8
Alekhine-Rosanov 27 :eι 1i'd7
Moscow 1 907 28 'ii'g5+ Φc7
29 1te3! Φb7
Th.e fifteen-year-old Alekhine 30 l'Δa4 1te8
had gradually been out-played, 31 ]Σb3+ Φa8
and now after 22 . . . :h5 or 32 1i'g3!
22 . . . lbe4 23 l'Δxe4 dxe4 Black
would have a clear advantage due
to his grip ση the white squares.
Instead he thought he could
win the white queen with
22 l'Δg4
when there seems no answer to
the threat of 23 . . . :h5 . However,
Alekhine had prepared a little
surpήse.
23 1te6! <ifiιxe6
Th.ere is no refusing, since
23 . . . :h6 24 :.fe 1 leaves Black
defenceless: White threatens 25 Th.e queenside will prove no
h3 ! and the knight has ηο good safer than the centre for Black's
retreat. king. Alekhine prepares to trans
24 'ifxg6+ Φd7 fer his queen there to make the
25 1i'xf5+ <itd8 attack overpoweήng.
26 1i'xg4 32 lth6
White regains his mateήal and 33 'ti'd3 1the6
has an overwhelming attack. He 34 .tes
made no mistake in what follows. Shutting out any potential
1 04 Tht Fine Art of Swίndlίng
tactical genius, and tήes to keep mateήal for the queen and threat
solid control of the position. ens c8. However, White gets a
19 'iixf2 ? .txe3 nasty surpήse when Black moves
20 -.xe3 %Σ.χe3 the bishop to safety!
21 lbxdS
23 .th3!!
lt is no wonder that White was It should be mentioned that
tempted along this false trail. He White's combination was in any
attacks the rook ση e3 directly, case flawed since Black could
and also threatens 22 lbf6+ and have forced a draw by perpetual
22 lbb6. White already has a two check after 23 ... :.xg2+ and
pieces for the queen. How can 24 ... 'ii'e2+. But Alekhίne's move
Black stop him adding a rook? is a far nastier sting ίη the tail.
21 .1:te2! White is suddenly lost, because
This attacks not one but two 24 .txh3 allows mate ίη three
bishops, as the sequel demon after 24 . . . fie3+.
strates. Now 22 lbf6+ gxf6 23 24 1Σd8+ fixd8
1:xd7 .txd7 is bad for White. 25 .txh3 Wxa8
22 lbc7 fie7 and White resigned.
23 lbxa8 Right until the end of his ca
This looks very strong, since reer Alekhine was a supreme
White has more than enough fighter.
7 Don 't get Swi n d led
So remember, no position is
winning until it is won!
7
Λ
9 41 055