The King Hunt in Chess Compress
The King Hunt in Chess Compress
The King Hunt in Chess Compress
KING�HUNT
IN CHESS
W. H. Cozens
INTRODUCTION BY
Irving Chernev
New York
Copyright© 1970 by G. Bell and Sons, Ltd.
All rights reserved under Pan American and
International Copyright Conventions.
Page
AUTHOR'S NOTE
The tradition that White occupies the bottom of the diagram is an essential
par t of the algeb raic notation used in most countries. Th roughout the
present book, however, we make use of the freedom of the English notation
and follow a more natural convention-that the bottom of the diagram
always represents the winning side, regardless of c olour.
INTRODUCTION
That king
Treading the purple calmly to his death,
While round him, like the clouds of eve all dusk,
The giant shades of fate, silently flitting
Pile the dim outline of the coming doom;
And him sitting alone in blood while friends
Are hunting far in the sunshine.
Robert Browning
THE KING-HUNT
HOFFMAN PETROV
Casual Game. Warsaw 1844
Giuoco Piano
15 . . . Kt-B5ch
1 6 K-Kt4 Kt x KP
17 Kt x Kt
After this move Black mated in
four by :
17 . . . B x Ktch
18 K-Kt5 R-B4ch
19 K-Kt4 P-R4ch
20 K-R3 R-B6 mate
At move 17, however, White had
a more tenacious defence in
Position after 12 Kt x BP P-Kt3, guarding his KB4 and
KR4. The finish then might
have been 17 . . . , Kt x Ktch;
12 . . . 0-0! ! 18 K-Kt5, R-B4ch; 19 K
This completely unexpected re Kt4, R-B3ch; 20 K-R4, R
source leaves White with nothing B5ch; 21 K-Kt5, Kt-K3ch;
better to do than take the Queen, 22 K-R5, P-Kt3ch; 23 K
after which his King will be R6, R-R5ch! 2 4 P x R, B-K6
hunted down by four black pieces mate. In this mating position,
and inevitably mated. thirteen moves after the diagram,
Black is still virtually a whole
13 Kt x Q B-B7ch Queen down.
2
In the 1 840s English chess was dominated by Howard Staunton
(born 1810), a social lion but also a considerable scholar-not by any
means only in the field of chess-who had read all the known litera
ture of the game. His style in. match play was, like that of many a
master since, careful to the point of dullness ; but he visited many
provincial chess clubs and did great work for the game by exhibition
play in a very different style.
Here is a Muzio Gambit, typical of the time. This obsolete open
ing remains the best standard example of advantages in space and
time being more than adequate to overcome superiority of dead
pieces.
THE KING-HUNT 7
STAUNTON AMATEUR
Exhibition Game, about 1850
Muzio Gambit
20 . . . K x Kt
Or 20 . . . , K-Kt4; 21 Q-B4ch,
K-R4; 22 Q-Kt4ch, K-R3;
23 Q-R4 mate.
Position after 13 . . . Q-Kt2
21 P-B4ch K-Q5
virtually none (see diagram! )
21 . . . , K-K3 would have given
this sort o f luxury i s permissible.
a little more trouble. Perhaps
14 . . . P-Q4 22 P-Q4!, (threatening P-Q5
Now Black's position is demol mate) Q x QP; 23 Q x BPch, K
ished by a further double sacri Q3; 24 R-B6ch, K-B4; 25 Q
fice. Though a Rook and Bishop K7ch, K x P; 26 P-Kt3ch, K
ahead he is given no chance to Kt4 ; 27 P-R4ch, K-R4; 28
move anything except his King. Q-Klch, Q-Kt5; 29 Q-K5ch,
P-Kt4 ; 30 Q-B7 mate.
15 B x P! P xB
16 R x Ktch! K xR 22 Q-Q6ch K-K6
17 Kt x Pch K-K3 23 Q-B4ch K-K7
1 7 . . . , K-Bl would be followed Or 23 . . . , K x P; 24 R-Ql ch
by 1 8 Q-Q6ch, K-Ktl ; and 25 Q-Q2 mate.
19 Kt-K7ch, K-B l ; 20 Q
QS mate. 24 R-B2ch K-K8
25 Q-Q2 mate.
18 Q-K4ch K-Q2 This pursuit right across the
Had the black Queen interposed board to the eighth rank recurs
she would have been lost for many times in the course of this
nothing after 1 9 R-B6ch. book.
3
Ernest Falkbeer (born 1829) is, like Petrov, remembered by a defence
which is still played today: 1 P-K4, P-K4; 2 P-KB4, P-Q4.
He was a Hungarian but lived many years in England. The follow
ing game, in which he does not employ the Falkbeer Counter Gambit,
shows him trifling with weak opposition; but the breathless nine
move chase, introduced by a Queen sacrifice, is far too good a King
Hunt to be omitted.
THE KING-HUNT 9
MATSCHEGO FALKBEER
Casual Game, Vienna 1853
Kieseritzki Gambit
5 ... Kt-KB3
6 Kt-QB3
A developing move but not a
good one, for the Knight on K5
will now be driven to a poor
square. 6 P-Q4 is better; and
another good move would be
6 B-B4 attacking KB7.
6 ... P-Q3
7 Kt-B4 B-K2
8 P-Q4 Kt-R4
Black defends his forward KB
pawn, attacks the KR-pawn, and 17 . . . Q x Ktch!!
opens what is in fact nothing less Introducing one of the most
than a mating attack. remarkable finishes on record.
The white King is drawn into the
9 B -K2 B x Pch cordon of black pieces, and the
10 K-Q2 Q-Kt4 whole of the nine-move King
11 K-Q3 Hunt runs like clockwork. Every
Apparently the only way to avoid white move is absolutely forced.
disastrous loss of material after It might almost be a comp� sed
1 2 . . . , P-B6 dis. eh. ending in the style of the per10d.
10 THE KING-HUNT
18 K xQ Kt-B3ch 23 K x P R-R4ch
19 K-B4 B-K3ch 24 K x Kt B-Q4ch
20 K-Kt5 P-R3ch 25 K-Q6 Kt-Kl
21 K-R4 P-Kt4ch mate.
22 Kt x P P x Ktch
4
Yet another 19th-century master whose name is immortalized by an
opening is Max Lange (born 1832). His famous attack, which can
arise by transposition in half a dozen different ways, kept the analysts
busy for half a century. He was a very strong player, a match for
most of his contemporary masters. The following game, however, is
played against an amateur and Max Lange gives full rein to his
imagination.
20 P-KB3!?
The idea of sacrificing the Queen
in order to open the KB-file is
beautifully conceived and appar
ently quite sound; but Black is
under no compulsion to fall in
with White's scheme. There
seems no reason why he should
not retire the Bishop, leaving
White with the onus of finding his
win.
20 . . . RxQ 27 Kt-B3! !
Black cheerfully takes the Queen Threatening 28 R-Rlch with
and waits to see what will the twin sequels 28 . . . , K-Kt7;
happen. The rest of the game is 29 R-R2 mate or 28 . . . , K
beautiful to watch. The four Kt5; 29 Kt-K4 mate. At the
white pieces cordon off the black same time he defends the Rook
12 THE KING-HUNT
on K2. But when Black takes 29 R-Rlch Kt-R7
the Knight he brings a Bishop to 30 R x Ktch! K xR
B3 instead and the net is drawn 31 R-Kl Resigns.
tight. For now R-Rl mate is inevit
able. Compare Game 43 in which,
27 . . . P x Kt a century later, Popov's King
28 B x P Kt-Kt5 found itself in much the same
Still Black finds an answer to the situation against Penrose.
threat of 29 R-Rl mate.
5
Paul Morphy (born 1837) is at once the most glamorous and the most
baffling figure in the whole history of chess. The story is well known:
his prodigious powers as a teenager; his defeat of all comers in
Europe and America by the age of 21; his subsequent horror of the
taint of professionalism ; his eventual revulsion from chess and his
abandonment of it when he was about 30; then the shadows closing
in upon his last fifteen years up to his death at the age of 47.
Almost the whole of Morphy's serious chess is to be found in one
tournament (New York 1857) and two major matches (against
Harrwitz and Anderssen) and it is here that one must look in making
any attempt to assess his stature as what would now be called a
grandmaster. But his fame rests almost equally upon some three
hundred other encounters--exhibition games, most of them played
blindfold--odds games and miscellaneous friendlies. We select an
odds game-a mere trifle.
MORPHY AMATEUR
Odds Game, New Orleans 1858
Two Knights Defence
First the white Q-Rook is re Morphy's day. Black has several
moved from the board. Then play playable moves here : 5 . . . , Kt
begins : QR4 ; or 5 . . ., Kt-Q5 ; or 5 . . . ,
P-Kt4.
1 P--K4 P-K4
2 Kt-KB3 Kt-QB3 6 Kt x BP
3 B-B4 Kt-B3 6 P-Q4 is even more forcing,
4 Kt-Kt5 P-Q4 keeping the Knight sacrifice
5 PxP Kt x P? dangling over Black's head.
A well known mistake, allow
ing the Fegatello sacrifice which 6 K x Kt
was known many years before 7 Q-B3ch K-K3
THE KING-HUNT 13
The whole point of the variation Rook odds. But he will never get
is that this King move is Black's round to using his odds; the rest
only way of preventing a com of the game is headlong flight.
plete disaster by losing the
Knight on his Q4, so a King
Hunt is already in full swing. It
does not often end as decisively
nor as prettily as in the present
case.
8 Kt-B3 Kt-Q5?
The best way of making a real
fight of it would have been
8 . . . , Kt-Kt5; 9 Q-K4, P
B3 ; 10 P-QR3, Kt-R3; 11 P
Q4, Kt-B2, etc.
6
Adolf Anderssen (born 1818} was one of the game's greatest natural
players. In his insatiable zest for play and in creative imagination
he is to be compared only with Labourdonnais before him and with
Alekhine and Tal since. He was a Breslau mathematician, and the
wonder is that he remained very little known outsid e his own country
until he was over 40. In those days there was no official world
championship but there is no doubt that after Morphy's withdrawal
from chess Anderssen was the strongest player in the world. When
he was nearly 50 he narrowly lost a match to Steinitz, whose whole
approach to the game was more scientific.
Over seven hundred of Anderssen's games are on record and to play
through them leaves the brain reeling at his inexhaustible fertility.
His opponent in the following game-Baron Kolisch-was, unlike
14 THE KING-HUNT
the losers of our five games so far, himself of master strength. The
game was one of several played during Anderssen's visit to Paris in
April, 1 860. It develops into a gigantic King-Hunt, with the black
King hounded over seven files and all the eight ranks.
10 . . . P-KR3 17 . . . PxB
1 1 B-R4 P-Kt4 18 Kt-B6ch!
1 2 B-Kt3 The enemy King was always
In addition to his backward Anderssen's priority. In any case
development Black now has a 18 Kt x R would have been not
seriously weakened K-side. only petty but decidedly bad, for
There is bound to be trouble in Kolisch would not have missed
store. the opportunity of playing 18 . . .
,
THE KING-HUNT 15
Q-R5! 1 9 P-KR3, B x Pch; Rooks but also preparing Q
20 K-Rl, B x RP!-knockout! KKt3 with another subtle
battery aimed at the undefended
18 ... K-Kt2 black Queen. He was a con
1 9 Q-Q3 sistently far-seeing player in the
The first mating threat appears. tactical rather than the strategic
sense.
19 . . . R-Rl
20 B-R5 24 . . . R-Bl
White puts on the pressure and 25 QR-KBl R-B2
clears the K-file for possible Rook 26 Q-KKt3!
action. 20 Kt x P would again Anderssen now threatens to open
have allowed the deadly Q-R5; his two batteries with successive
this is presumably why Kolisch sacrifices, thus: 27 Kt-R7ch,
deliberately refrained from 19 . . . , R x Kt; 28 R x Pch, B x R; 29
P x Pch. Q x Qch. Kolisch apparently
missed the threat; in any case
20 . . . B-K3 the white attack is bound to win
21 Q x Pch K-Bl through before long.
26 R-B5
22 Q-K5
Typical of Anderssen's style was
his subtle use of prepared batter 27 Kt-R7ch! K-Kl
ies. In the present position the 28 Q-Kt7
Knight on B6 is screening poten Attacking the Rook, putting a
tial attacks against KB7 and fourth attack on the KB-pawn,
KR8. and at the same time casually
defending his own Q-pawn. Some
22 . . . Q-B2 thing has to go.
23 Q-K3 Q-Q3
24 R-B4 28 . . . R x Kt
Given the initiative and some 29 Q x R R xP
targets to shoot at, the most Black also lays a battery, hope
complex winning schemes pro fully threatening to win both
liferated in Anderssen's brain. Rooks by 30 . . . , R x Reh. But
Here he is not only doubling now comes the King-Hunt.
16 THE KING-HUNT
30 B x Pch B xB coming at table-tennis tempo.
31 Q x Bch K-Ql
32 Q-Kt8ch K-B2
33 R-B7ch K-B3
34 Q-K8ch K-B4
35 K-Rl! R-KR5
Anderssen having prudently
spared one move to safeguard his
own King, Kalisch defiantly con
tinues with a mating threat of
his own. But now the pursuit is
resumed in earnest and a blaze of
eleven consecutive checks brings
the game to an end.
40 Q-K2ch!
36 R-Blch R-B5 One Rook will be enough.
37 P-Kt4ch K xP
Or 37 . . . , K-Q5; 38 Q-KR8ch! 40 ... K xR
41 R-Kt3ch K-B8
38 R-Ktlch K-R6 42 Q-Klch K-B7
39 R-B3ch K xP 43 Q-Ktlch K-Q7
No craven resignations in those 44 R-Q3ch K-K7
days ; they were game to the end. 45 Q-Qlch K-B7
By now the moves were probably 46 R-B3 mate.
7
Wilhelm Steinitz (born 1836) bestrode the second half of the 19th
century like a colossus. After beating the ageing Anderssen 8-6
in a match which had gone 4-all, 5-all and 6-all he proclaimed himself
World Champion and defied all challengers for twenty-eight years,
yielding at last, at the age of 58, to Emanuel Lasker, thirty-two years
his junior. Steinitz found chess a happy-go-lucky game to be
played by the light of nature ; he left it a thorough-going science.
What is not so well remembered today is the fact that he had his
own romantic period as a young man in Vienna, where he gloried in
the name of 'The Austrian Morphy'. The following game was played
in an exhibition in London and nothing annoyed Steinitz more than
its attribution to Morphy by several chess writers.
THE KING-HUNT 17
STEINITZ RocK
Exhibition Game, London 1863
Evans Gambit
K t x B ; 13 Q x Kt, Q x P, etc.
defence which was tantamount to
In any case it is Black's only
a refutation as far as tournament
hope ; the alternative 1 1 . . . , K
play was concerned.
Q2 is hopeless : 12 B-Kt5ch,
P-B3; 13 P x Pch, P x P; 14 Q x
4 ... B xP
5 P-B3 Pch, etc. However, as in many
B-R4
chess brilliancies, someone has
6 0-0 Kt-B3
been taking too much for
7 B-R3 granted.
In the Evans Gambit the stan
dard attacking moves P-Q4,
0-0, B-R3 or Kt2 Q-Kt3,
etc., can be transposed in a
bewildering number of ways,
providing plenty of chances for
Black to go wrong. 7 B-R3, as
played here by Steinitz, is less
forcing than 7 P-Q4 but it
succeeds brilliantly because
Black allows his King to be
caught in the centre.
7 ... B-Kt3?
7 . . . , P-Q3; followed soon by
0-0 should give Black a safe 12 P x B! !
game. A game won b y Staunton from
Cochrane some twenty years
8 P-Q4 P xP before (which may have been
9 Q-Kt3 P-Q4? known to Steinitz) ran, after
1 0 KP x P Kt-QR4 White's 6 0-0 above : 6 ., · ·
8
We revert now to Anderssen and one of his greatest chess friends
Carl Mayet (born 1810)-who was one of the group of seven Berlin
masters known as 'The Pleiades'. Anderssen and Mayet used to visit
one another in Berlin and Breslau and they must have played
hundreds of light-hearted games together. Their last meeting was
in Breslau in August, 1867, and the following game is possibly the
last they ever played. It is an exhibition of glorious skittles, not to
be j udged by the standards of tournament chess. At the finish Mayet
is three pieces up, with his King mated on QB8.
THE KING-HUNT 19
ANDERSSEN MAYET
Casual Game, Breslau 1867
Evans Gambit
8 B x Pch
A move which Anderssen would
make without a second thought. Compare this position with
In view of the state of Black's Anderssen-Mayet : it is even
game it is perfectly justified. more remarkable. Although this
game is by no means a King
8 ... K xB Hunt its finish is well worth
9 Kt-K5ch K-K2 playing through : 12 P x P; Q x
10 P x P Q-Kl Pch; 13 K-Bl, Kt-KR3 ;
1 1 Q-R4 P-QKt3 14 Kt-K6ch, B x Kt; 15 P x B,
12 Kt-QB3 P-B3 Q-K5; 16 B-Kt5ch, K-B l ;
13 P-B4 1 7 P-K7ch, Kt-Kt5; 18 B x
What an attack! And Black still Ktch, P x B; 19 Q x Pch, Q x Q;
has every piece (except his King! ) 20 P-K8(Q) mate.
on the edge of the board. Back now to Anderssen
Mayet:
13 . . . P-Q3
1 4 B-R3 K-Ql (See diagram on page 20)
20 THE KING-HUNT
Anderssen has a chance to dem
onstrate his famous skill with the
Knights.
21 Kt-Q4! Kt-Kt2
Had Black taken the Knight the
sequel would have been 22 Kt x
Pch, K-Kt3; 23 Q-B7ch, K x
Kt; 24 R-Ktlch, K-R5;
25 Q-B2ch, K x B; 26 Q
Kt2ch and 27 Q-Kt4 mate.
But Black might have tried
21 . . . , Kt-B5.
Position after 14 . . . K-Ql
22 Kt-K4 Kt-B3
1 5 Kt-B3 B-Q2
Development at last!
16 QR-QI K-B2
The King is being hunted at long Kt x P
23 Kt-Kt5
range and is already on the run.
24 Kt-B5 B xP
Black has been busily picking off
17 P-Q5! pawns and now has a colo� sal
White is still a clear Bishop in majority of 4-1 on the Q-s1de;
arrears, but no doubt quite but the time of reckoning is near.
happy. He now proceeds to
break open the position before 25 KR-KI B x Kt!
Black can mobilize his dormant Well played; by now Mayet must
K-side pieces. have had hopes of turning the
tables after all, for he is still a
17 . . . P-B4 Bishop and two pawns ahead.
18 Q-B2 P-QKt4
When Black wins an Evans 26 Q x B Kt-K2
Gambit it is usually because of his 27 Kt-K6ch K-Kt3
Q-side pawn majority. The black
pawns are potentially quite
dangerous, and already he seems
to be threatening 19 . , P-Kt5.. .
1 9 P-K5! P-QR3
On second thoughts Mayet
decides that his 'threat' of P
Kt5 had better not be carried out!
After 19 :, P-Kt5 ; 20 B x P!,
. .
THE KING-HUNT 21
9
All our examples so far have been casual or exhibition games.
Tournament chess is made of sterner stuff and only rarely produces
the really big King-Hunt; nevertheless most of the games to come are
tournament games. The next is a historic one which played a
decisiye part in the great international congress at Baden-Baden in
1870. This was a double-round tournament of nine heavyweights.
Andcrssen, now aged 52, scored his greatest triumph by winning it
with a. score of 1 1 /16. When his last round game against Louis
Paulsen--one of the very greatest of all defensive players-began to
look drawish Anderssen cheerfully staked his chances of first prize on
an intuitive sacrifice of the Exchange, and won.
But what pleased him most, no doubt, was his cracking pair of wins
against Steinitz, who had recently defeated him in match play for the
World C hampionship. Both games were very fine but in the second
one Steinitz was made to suffer as few World Champions have ever
done. He had to watch helplessly while his King performed a lively
dance over fourteen of the sixteen squares in his quarter of the board
with the old assassin from Breslau shooting at his feet all the way.
STEINITZ ANDERSSEN
Baden-Baden 1870
Vienna Game
6 P xP
Unnecessarily releasing the ten
sion. H e could have continued
to build up with 6 P-Q3.
6 ... P xP
7 Q-K2 19 . . . P-R6!
He cannot win the pawn : 7 Kt x This move involves the sacrifice
P?, Q-Q5. of a piece but White is to be given
no peace for the working out of
7 ... QKt-Q2 his plans. He might as well have
8 P-Q3 P-QKt4 taken this pawn. If Black then
Anderssen begins a big Q-side continued with 20 . . ., Q-Kt6 he
action which leads eventually to a could play 21 P-Q4. He prefers
breakthrough in this sector, the to believe either that Anderssen
white King being meanwhile has made an oversight or else
unable to castle. that he is treating him too
cheekily.
9 B-Kt3 P-QR4
10 P-QR3 Q-Kt3 20 P-QKt4 B x KtP!
11 Kt-QI P-R5 The positional piece sacrifice was
12 B-R2 0-0 part of Anderssen's stock-in
13 Kt-K3 B-R3 trade-against the World Cham
14 Kt-B5 pion or anyone else. There is
Steinitz has aggressive intentions going to be a King-Hunt.
of his own on the K-side but
Anderssen keeps him too busy 21 P x B Q x Pch
elsewhere. 22 K-K2
Since 22 B-Q2 would be met by
14 . . . P-Kt5! 22 . . . , Q-Kt7 the King's travels
15 P x P Q x Pch begin.
16 P-B3 Q-R4
Since h e goes to Kt3 two moves 22 . . . P-R7!
THE KING-HUNT 28
36 . . . Q-K4ch
37 K-R4 P x Ktch
By a neat piece of play Black has
contrived to take the Knight with
check. White cannot reply 38 B x
R because of the reply Q x Bch;
39 K x P, Q-Kt5 mate.
All part of the typical Steinitz 38 K x P R-Kt6ch
defensive scheme. Not only is the And now if 39 B-Q3 Black wins
Q-pawn s afeguarded but the black the Knight by R-B5!
Knight is disarmed as well; but
what he has not foreseen is : 39 P-Kt3 R-B5!
The same move is still playable.
26 . . . R-Ktl!!
Thus Anderssen achieves in full 40 Kt x Pch K-Bl
his long-range object of outflank 41 Q-B4
ing the stranded King on the
Q-side and now, absolutely in (See diagram on page 24)
24 THE KING-HUNT
But his sufferings are not yet
over.
41 . . . R-R5ch!!
42 K-Kt2
If 42 K x R, Q-R4 mate!
42 . . . R x RPch!
43 K x R Q x Pch
44 K-Rl Q-R6ch
45 K-Ktl R-Kt6ch
Steinitz resigned. The end of the
Position after 41 Q-B4 dance would have been 46 K
B2, R-Kt7ch; 47 K-Kl, Q
Steinitz has somehow managed to Kt6ch; 48 K-B l, Q-B7 mate
conjure up a double threat of his -with White still threatening his
own : 42 Q x P mate or 42 Q x R. mate in one.
10
Another of the game's most famous players now appears as victim of
the hunt. Tarrasch was in fact not yet twenty years of age. He
reappears as the hunter in a famous chase in No. 21.
Fritz Riemann (born 1859) was only three years older than
Tarrasch who far outstripped him as a player in later years. In the
present game, however, Riemann certainly shows to great advantage.
RIEMANN TARRASCH
Casual Game, Breslau 1880
King's Gambit Declined
3 Kt-KB3 P-Q3
4 P-B3 5 ... B x Kt
Equally playable is 4 Kt-B3, 6 B xB Kt-QB3
a line in which White has the 7 P-Q3 Kt-B3
option of eliminating the black 8 Q-K2 0-0
K-Bishop by Kt-QR4. 9 P-B5
THE KING-HUNT 25
This constricting advance is often 13 . . . P-R3
used by White in the K-Gambit 1 4 Kt-R3 Q-Q2
Declined and Vienna Openings. Encouraged by this removal of
In the present case it would one guard from the square KKt5
seem to achieve little since Black Riemann now decides to sacrifice
has already exchanged his white two pawns for one and then try
square Bishop, but in fact it for an immediate mating attack
works out very well. on the KR-file.
WARE WEISS
Vienna Tournament 1882
Stonewall Attack
1 P-Q4 P-Q4 8 .
. . 0-0
2 P-KB4 9 P-QR3
These two pawn moves, together Now he has seven pawns on
with the supporting moves P black squares.
K3 and P-QB3, form the Stone
wall, which can be used either 9 ... P-QKta
by White or by Black. It was 10 P-R3 B-Kt2
with this same pet opening that 11 B-Kl Kt-K5
Ware succeeded in winning a 12 QKt-Q2 Kt x Kt
marathon game against Steinitz. 13 Q x Kt Kt-R4
Black's Knight play is unfortun
2 P-K3 ate. First he gratuitously ex
3 Kt-KB3 Kt-KB3 changed off the one which was a
4 P-K3 B-Q3 key man in his defence at KB3;
5 B-Q3 P-B4 now he starts a pointless raid
6 P-B3 Kt-Ba with the other one. The threat
7 0-0 P-QR3 of Kt-Kt6 is an empty one,
8 B-Q2 White having time to evade it,
In an opening which sets six ' while at QB5 the Knight will be
white pawns on the black squares out of play. He would have
the problem piece is the Q been wiser to play this remaining
Bishop, which would seem to Knight across to the deserted
have no prospects at all. Ware K-side.
used to tackle the problem
methodically, playing the Bishop 14 R-Ql Kt-B5
outside the pawn chain through 15 Q-K2 Kt-R4
the one gap which remains 16 B-R4
to KR4. With the problem of this piece
28 THE KING-HUNT
solved White now has a powerful 20 . . . R-B4
K-side attack in the making. 21 Q x KPch R-B2
22 Q-Kt6
16 . . . Q-B2 Now the threat is 23 Q-R7ch,
17 Kt-Kt5 K-Bl; 24 Q-R8 mate.
The fortress of the black King is
now certain to be destroyed. 22 . . . K-Bl
White could even have played 23 Q-R7 K-Kl
17 B x Pch at once, but the way
Only by flight can the King
he conducts this phase is both avoid mate.
strong and elegant.
25 P-B5 K-Q2
26 B x R Kt x KP
So the Knight achieves his am
bition at last. The Exchange will
be regained, but the King is
homeless.
27 B-K6ch K-B3
28 Q-Kt6! B-Q3
Desperately trying to improvise a
new shelter. But this in turn will
be violently destroyed .
19 Kt x KP! P x Kt
Since he finds himself forced to 29 KR-Kl Kt x R
retmn the Exchange almost at 30 R x Kt P-B5
once he might as well have let it Black has emerged only a pawn
go now, keeping a pawn on KB2. down, and now he tries to delay
But in any case he has little hope the opening of files on the Q-side.
now of surviving, with the white
Rooks ready to j oin the attack.
(See diagram on page 29)
20 Q-Kt6! 31 B x Pch!!
Threatening 21 Q-R7ch, K With a new and fatal extension
B2; 22 B-Kt6 mate. The black of the King-Hunt Ware brings
square Bishop turns out to be a the game to its close. The black
very powerful factor in the Q-Rook never has a chance to
attack. show that it even exists.
THE KING-HUNT 29
31 . . . K xB
32 Q-K6ch K-B3
33 Q x Pch K-Q2
34 Q-K6ch K-B3
All the time the Bishop on KR4
is playing its part.
35 P-Q5ch K-Kt4
36 Q-K2ch K-R5
37 Q-B2ch K-Kt4
38 P-R4ch Resigns.
38 . . . , K-R4; 39 P-Kt4ch,
B x P; 40 P x Bch, K x P; 41 B
Position after 30 . . . P-B5 Klch, K-R6; 42 R-Rl mate.
12
Our next game introduces one of the most original · and creative
players i n the whole of chess history-Mikhail Chigorin (born 1850).
His full strength developed late, and few games remain even from his
twenties ; but eventually he came to challenge many of the more
dogmatic aspects of the teachings of Steinitz. At about the age of
40 he played much superb match chess, including two good attempts
at the World Championship and a drawn match with Tarrasch.
DoRRER CmGORIN
Played by mail during 1884 : the game lasted eight months
Steinitz Gambit
6 Kt-B3 P-KKt4
7 Kt-Q5
This i s usually one theme of
White's play in the Steinitz
Gambit. The early move of the
black Queen has left QB2 un
defended. In some variations 17 . . . P-Q5ch!
Black p ermits the fork. This is the trouble with using the
King in mid-board. In any
7 ... K-Ql hands but those of Steinitz him
8 P-KKt3 QKt-K2 self (and sometimes even in his)
Black prepares to expel the it gets too hot to hold.
Knight and then to break up the
white centre pawns, letting the 18 K x P
gambit pawn go. To 18 K x Kt Black replies
18 . . . , P-B4! threatening 19 . . . ,
9 Kt x Kt B x Kt B-B4ch followed by mate next
10 P x P P-Kt5 move.
1 1 Kt-Kl Kt-B3
12 B-Kt2 P-Q4 18 . . . B-KB4
First assault on the centre pawns. 19 B x Kt R-Qlch
20 B-Q5 P-B3
13 P-K5 Kt-K5 21 P-Kt4 P-Kt4
14 K-K3 With the white King on Q4 and
Quite i n the spirit of the gambit. all the long-range black pieces
'The King is a strong piece,' said still on the board Black of course
Steinitz. plays to break up the position.
Chigorin is in his element in this
14 . . . P-KB3 sort of game. Watch his Queen
Second assault on the centre. play.
15 P-B4 P x KP 22 K-B3 P xB
1 6 QP x P K-Kl! 23 P-B5
This move bears all the marks of Dorrer plays to keep the lines
correspondence chess. Chigorin closed.
THE KING-HUNT 31
23 . . . Q-R6!
24 Q-Bl P-Q5ch
25 K-B2 Q-R3!
26 B-Q2 Q-K3!
Threatening to win a piece by
27 . . . , Q-B5ch.
27 K-Kt2 Q-B5
28 Kt-Kl P-Q6
29 R-Bl Q-Q4
30 Kt-Kt2 B-K3
Now the threat is 31 . . . , Q x
RPch; 3 2 K-B3, Q-Kt6 mate.
Position after 35 P-QR3
31 R-Rl P-QR4!
R x Bch! ; 37 Q x R, Q x Kt ;
Reinforcements are arriving all
the time. Since White cannot while 3 6 B x P creates self
play 32 P-QR3 because of mate interference: 36 . . . , Q-Kt6ch;
in two by 32 . . . , Q-Kt6ch, nor 37 K-Bl, R-B5ch.
32 P x P because of 32 . . . , B x P
36 K-B2 R x B!
Black is bound to get the QR
37 P x R Q-Kt6ch
file for his Rooks.
38 K x P Q-Kt7ch
39 K-K3 Q-B6ch
32 Q-B2 P xP 40 K-K4 B-B4ch!
33 B x P R-Rl 41 K-Q5
Black is now threatening to win If 41 K x B Black replies 41 . . . ,
the Queen by 34 . . . , R x Pch. Q-Q6ch and then brings the
Rook into play. But it makes
34 K-Ktl R-R5 little difference now.
35 P-QR3
41 . . . Q-Q6ch
(See diagram in next column) 42 K-B6 Q-Q2ch
35 . . . P-Q7! ! 43 K-Kt6 B-Qlch
Clearing the lines beautifully 44 K-R6 Q-B3ch
for the finish. If now 36 Q x P 45 K-R7 B-K5
the Queen is overloaded : 36 . . . And mate next move.
13
Jean Taubenhaus, Polish born (1850), spent most of his life as a chess
professional in Paris, competing in a dozen tournaments between 1885
and 191 4 . Here he has a rare old set-to with Pollock, who appears
again as the winner of Game 14. First White has his King driven to
the third rank and both Rooks captured by the black Queen; then
the tide of battle turns and the black King has to start running. A
32 THE KING-HUNT
skittle? Not a bit of it: this was an important international tourna
ment game!
TAUBENHAUS POLLOCK
Nottingham Tournament 1886
Allgaier Gambit
8 B-B4ch P-Q4!
THE KING-HUNT 33
14 . . . Kt-B3! 21 . . . Q x R?
1 5 P-K5 Kt-K5! ! Finally wrecking his game, so
Threatening 16 . . ., Q x RPch well begun. He could have ex
with mate to follow. White must changed Queens, remaining with
take the Knight. Rook against two pawns. Care
would have been needed still
16 Q x Kt Q x Pch against the strong white centre
17 K-Q2 Q-B7ch pawns but the extra piece should
18 K-B3 Q xR have carried the day. Instead,
Black is now a Rook ahead and with a greedy impulse rare indeed
seems to have a won game. If, in Pollock, Black takes the other
for instance 19 Q-Kt6ch, K Rook, and in the process tucks
Q l ; 20 Q-B6ch, K-Bl; 21 Q x his Queen away out of play. The
R, then Q x Pch; 22 K-Kt3, rest of the game is all King-Hunt.
Kt-R4ch; 23 K-R4, Q x Bch;
24 K x Kt, P-Kt3 mate.
19 B-K3!
Taubenhaus begins a desperate
rescue operation involving the
loss of his other Rook.
19 . . . Q-K8ch
A natural enough continuation
in the heat of battle, but it lets
the game slip. When a player has
conducted his attack in the
brilliant vein of Pollock thus far
it seems somehow ungracious in 22 Q-Kt6ch K-Ql
the annotator to point out, after 23 Q-B6ch K-Bl
quiet analysis, what he should 24 Q x R K-Q2
have done; but Black could 25 Q-R7ch B-K2
surely have won here by the 26 P-K6ch B xP
subtle 19 . . . , B-KB4!, shutting 26 . . . , K-Kl ; 27 Q-Kt8ch,
out the white Queen. After B-Bl; 28 Q-B7ch, K-Ql ;
20 Q x B, Q x Bch, or 20 Q 29 Q-Q7 mate. Or 26 . . . , K
B3, Q-R7, Black would retain Q3; 27 Kt-K4 mate.
his Rook advantage and kill the
white attack. 27 B x Bch K xB
28 P-Q5ch
20 Kt-Q2 P-Kt8{Q) Taubenhaus is playing the closing
21 B x Q? phase powerfully. When he un
When one's opponent has two willingly played 18 K-B3 he
Queens one hurries to annihilate could hardly have foreseen that
one of them, but this, neverthe his own King would ten moves
less, is too hasty. Now was the later be playing a useful part in
golden opportunity for Q the encirclement of the black
Kt6ch. one.
34 THE KING-HUNT
:� Q-B5ch �t
xP
K4
Forced. 29 . . . , K-Q3 leaves
\ 31
32
33
Q xB
Q-K6ch
P-R4ch
Q xB
K-Kt4
K xP
White a choice of three mates on 34 Q-Kt3ch K-R4
the move. 35 Kt-B4ch K-R3
36 Q-R4 mate.
30 Q x Ktch K-B3
14
W. H. K. Pollock, loser of that remarkable slugging match with
Taubenhaus, now reappears in another battle royal, this time as the
winner. He was an Englishman (born 1859) but played most of his
chess i n Ireland and America. Though too inconsistent to make a
good tournament player he produced many brilliant games, defeating
Tarrasch, Pillsbury and even Steinitz, as well as most of his other
contemporaries at one time or another during his short life.
His opponent here, Jackson Showalter, was several times champion
of the U.S.A., and also played some good chess in Europe in the late
1890s. For the first half of this game Showalter made all the running
but at move 33 he met such a thunderbolt that he might well have
resigned. Instead he played on, piloting his King perilously up to
the eighth rank and part of the way back, finally wriggling out of the
mating attack, only to be left with a lost ending.
SHOWALTER Po':.LOCK
7th Match Game, Kentucky 1891
King's Gambit
9 ... P xP
10 P x P QKt x QP
11 Kt x Kt Kt x Kt
12 Q-R4ch Kt-B3
13 Q-KB4
No doubt this was his aim; but
Black easily frees himself.
Position after 20 KR-Bl
13 . . . B-B4ch
14 K-Rl B-K3 21 P-Kt5 Kt-K2
15 Kt-Q2 Q-B2 22 B-Kt4
16 Kt-B3 0-0-0 The white pressure grows with
On the K-side Black probably every move. Pollock keeps a
feared the active white Bishops cool head and proceeds to force
and the open KB-file. But on the off the Rooks.
Q-side he will also be in consider
able danger. Showalter imme 22 . . . R-QBl
diately transfers his attention to 23 B-Q6ch K-Rl
the King' s new address, where he 24 Q-R3 R x Rch
also has an open B-file. 25 R x R R-QBl
26 R x Rch Kt x R
The removal of all the Rooks
17 Q-QR4 P-KR3 relieves Black considerably, but
Presumably with distant ideas Showalter still has the initiative
of a general pawn advance, but and now first regains his sacri
White keeps him much too busy ficed pawn and then wins an
for any such thing. other.
18 B-Q2 K-Ktl 27 B-B8! B-KB4
19 P-QKt4 B-Kt3 28 B x P B-K5
20 KR-Bl 29 B-K2 P-Q5
The white attack gathers mo 30 B x P P-Q6
mentum, and Black looks to be Showalter has wiped out the
in trouble. 21 P-Kt5 is threat black K-side, establishing a
ened. majority of 3-1. Meanwhile Pol
lock has at last been able to
(See diagram in next column) undertake some aggression of his
20 . . . Q-Q2 own; his far-advanced Q-pawn is
Pollock defends well, not only now a factor to be reckoned with.
safeguarding his Queen but
counter-threatening 21 . . . , Kt x 31 B-Ql Q xP
KP and also clearing the way to 32 Q-B8 Q-B5
challenge Rooks on the QB-file. With two Queens and four
36 THE KING-HUNT
Bishops in action the tactical threats at one stroke, and at the
possibilities multiply. White's same time makes a fighting
last move threatened the KB weapon of the KR-pawn.
pawn and also the Knight (with
mate) . Black's reply guards both 34 . . . B x Kt!
of these and draws a bead on the 35 P x B
white QR-pawn. White now If 35 B x Q Black forces mate :
makes the tempting reply which 35 . . . , P-Q8(Q)ch; 36 K-R2,
protects his QR-pawn and appar Q-Kt8ch; 37 K-Kt3, Q x Pch;
ently wins the black KB-pawn, 38 K-B4, Q-Kt5 mate.
for the black Queen cannot desert
the Knight. But Showalter has 35 . . . Q-KB8ch
not realized j ust how much 36 K-R2 Q-B7ch
dynamite the position contains. 37 K-R3 Q x BPch
38 K-R2
33 B-Kt3 Black has a draw for the taking,
but of course wants to press on
with the King-Hunt. He cannot
do it entirely with checking
moves and therefore now re
collects that he is himself threat
ened with mate in one!
38 . . . K-Ktl
39 B x QP Q-B7ch
The black Q-pawn did not
achieve promotion, but it has
cost White a piece. Showalter
now pins his hopes to his passed
KR-pawn and fights on with
33 . . . P-Q7!! spirit.
A stunning move which not only
brings the pawn within reach of 40 K-R3 Q xB
promotion but also gives the 41 Q x P Q-K6ch
black Queen access to KB8 and 42 K-Kt4 Q xP
QB8. What is White to do? 43 P-R5 B-B2
If 34 B x Q Black mates in three Pollock threatens 44 . . . , Q
by 34 . . . , P-Q8(Q)ch. If Kt6ch; 45 K-B5, Kt-Q3ch;
34 Kt x P, Black mates in three White can avoid this threat and
by 34 . . . , Q-QB8ch. If 34 B x P, at the same time reach the sixth
Black mates in two by 34 . . . , rank with his pawn, but the
Q-KB8ch. And these last two defencelessness of his King must
mates are threatened in any case. be fatal in the end.
Showalter might well have des
paired, but he succeeds in finding 44 P-R6 P-R3!
a move which puts up a real fight. The wisest plan. With a safe
black-square flight for his King
34 P-KR4! Black can now bring the Knight
Thus he destroys all the mating across to attempt a mate.
THE KING-HUNT 37
45 Q-Kt8 A respite in the checks in order to
This plan White promptly coun threaten mate in one instead.
ters, at the same time threaten 50 Q-Kt7 Kt-Q3ch
ing P-R7-R8. But now the 51 K-Q7 Q-Qlch
barrage of checks is resumed. 52 K-K6 Q-Klch
53 Q-K7 Q x Qch
45 . . . Q-Kt6ch At last it is possible for Black
46 K-B5 Q-B5ch to exchange Queens and win the
Not 46 . . . , Q x Q; 47 B x Q, pawn.
Kt-K2ch; 48 K-K6, Kt x B ;
49 P-R7! 54 K x Q Kt-B4ch
55 K-B6 Kt x P
47 K-Kt6 Q-K5ch 56 B-K6!
48 K-B7 Q-B4ch There is this one last shot in
49 K-K8 Showalter's locker. He stale
Not the first King in this selection mates the Knight and even now
to reach KS-nor yet the last. threatens to draw by 57 K-Kt5,
winning the Knight and rema�n
ing with Bishops on opposite
colours. Pollock's reply ex
tinguishes the hope.
56 . . . B-B5!
57 P-R4
Reluctant to resign after such a
struggle.
57 . . . K-B2
White resigns. This hammer and
tongs match was won by Show
49 . . . Q-B3 alter 6l-5l.
Karl Schlechter (born 1874) was possibly the greatest player who
never held the World Championship. He came within a hair's
breadth of it in 1910 when Lasker j ust saved his title by halving a
challenge match 1-1 with 8 draws.
Schlechter in his prime was so nearly unbeatable that they called
him 'The Drawing Master' but his magnificent tournament record
and string of brilliancy prizes bear witness to his devastating power of
attack. When it came to hunting a King he was as happy as the
next man.
D
38 THE KING-HUNT
SCHLECHTER MARCO
Vienna Jubilee Tournament 1898
Queen's Gambit Declined
16 P-Q6! 26 . . . B-Q4
A powerful interpolation, prob 27 P-QKt4 Kt-Kt2
ably overlooked by Marco. The
black Queen is driven back and a
most uncomfortable wedge is
forced momentarily into the
black lines. The pawn is re
linquished almost at once but
White gains time for a decisive
K-side attack.
16 . . . Q-Ktl
17 Q x B R-Ql
18 Kt-K5!
En route for KKt4 with deadly
invasion on the black squares.
28 P-R4ch!
Black would have been in far less
At the cost of this pawn two more
danger with a Bishop on KKt2 pieces are enabled to join the
instead of QKt2. hunt and mate is in sight.
18 . . . R xP 28 . . . KxP
19 Kt-Kt4 Q-Ql 29 B-B2ch K-R6
20 Kt-R6ch K-Bl 29 . . ., K-Kt4 ; 30 B-Q3ch
21 Q-R8ch K-K2 would lead to a similar finish.
22 Q x P Q-KBl
To prevent 23 Q x BP mate; but 30 R-Rlch K-Kt7
now the Rook is guarded only by 31 Q-Q4ch! K xB
the King, who must therefore 32 Q-Q3ch K-Kt7
resume his headlong flight. 33 Q-R3ch K-B7
34 R-Blch K-Q7
23 R xR K xR 35 Q-B3ch K-K7
24 Kt x Pch K-B3 . . . and White has the embarrass
25 Kt-K5ch K-Kt4 ing choice of five mates on the
26 Q-R4! move.
\, 16
Emanuel Lasker was unique among World Champions. Chess was
no consuming passion with him; he was able and willing to leave the
game alone for years at a time. He founded no school, had no dis
ciples, was no pioneer of new openings ; yet his mastery of middlegame
and endgame has seldom been approached. There is something
40 THE KING-HUNT
almost visionary about the way he extracted wins from barren or even
downright bad positions. Yet he himself described his methods
incredibly-as 'common sense' .
LASKER LEE
London Tournament 1899
Caro-Kann
19 P-KKt3! Q-Bl
20 P-Kt4! P-K4
21 P x P Kt x KP
25 Kt x Pch!
For the utter destruction of
·
Black's King-shelter a Knight is
a small enough price to pay.
26 . . . P x Kt
26 Q x P Kt-R6
27 Q-R5ch!
Not fearing the cross-check.
22 B-K3!!
A typical Lasker position. He 27 . . . K-Kt2ch
suddenly produces bewildering 28 B-B5!
multiple threats: Q x Pch, B x Threatening 29 Q-Kt6ch and
Pch, R x B , P-B5. Lee decides 30 Q-R7 mate. Meanwhile the
to eliminate the troublesome outlying black Knight on QR6
QB-pawn and it is difficult to find is left, apparently unheeded,
anything better for him to do. until in due course-at move 34
But now he is in the hands of the its time comes to be captured
greatest of all masters of mid with check.
game complications.
28 . . . B xB
22 . . . Kt x P 29 P x B R xR
23 B x Pch K-B2 30 Kt x R
24 R-Q4! There has been a lot of blood
Now 24 . . . , Kt-Kt3 would letting but White still has all the
allow 25 B x Ktch, K x B ; 26 Q material he needs for the final
R5 mate; and 24 . . . , Kt-K4 hunt of the black King from
would be no better: 25 Kt x Kt, QKt2 to his destiny on KR7.
B x Kt ; 26 Q-R5ch and mate
next move. 30 . . . Q-Ql
After 30 . . . , Q-Rl White would
24 . . . P-QKt4 play 31 P-B6ch, K-Ktl ;
32 Q-Kt6ch, K-Bl ; 33 Kt
(See diagram in next column) B5, mating on K7 or Q6.
42 THE KING-HUNT
31 P-B6ch K-Bl 35 R-Ql! Q-Kt3
32 Q-R8ch K-B2 36 Kt-B3ch K-K3
33 Q-R7ch K-Q3 If 36 . . . , K-K5 White mates on
Now at last White can take the the move with 37 Q-Q3.
Knight with check; but Black
had no option: K-B l ; 34 Q K-B 4
37 Q-Q6ch
Kt7 mate.
38 Q-Q3ch K-Kt5
After 38 . . . , K-K3 he would be
34 Q x Ktch
quickly mated after 39 R-Klch.
Black is two pawns down and
could now resign with a clear
conscience. Instead he continues 39 Kt-K5ch
to watch with fearful fascination And Lee resigned in face of the
the march of his King to execu unavoidable 39 . . ., K-R6; (or
tion. 39 . . ., K-R4 ; 40 Q-B3ch and
mate next move) 40 Q-Blch,
34 . . . K-Q4 K-R7 ; 41 Q-Rl mate.
Karel Treybal (born 1885) was a Czech master who seldom ventured
far from his native land. He competed in a dozen international
tournaments over a span of thirty years and was seen in England at
the Folkestone Olympiad in 1933. No less a judge than Alekhine
described him as 'conspicuously endowed with the imaginative sense'·
Treybal was only nineteen years old when he played the following
game at a Prague chess club.
KURZ TREYBAL
Casual Game, Prague 1 904
Salvio Gambit
6 B xP Q-R5ch
7 K-Bl
The necessity for this move,
both here and in the Bishop's
Gambit (3 B-B4) seems to
spoil one primary object of the
opening-the use of the K
Bishop's file for attack. In prac
tice the loss of time by the black
Queen often allows White to get
quick counterplay with his minor Position after 11 Kt-B3
pieces.
11 . . . P-B6!
7 ... Kt-KB3 Sooner or later this move usually
Black i nvites White to take the means the break-up of the white
KB-Pawn, either with Bishop or K-side in the Salvio Gambit.
with Knight. He could, of course,
have defended by 7 . . . Kt 12 P-KKt3
KR3. White's headache is that It is difficult to know what to do.
he must constantly watch the He might have had better
possibility of sudden black chances of survival by bringing
attacks by P-B6 or P-Kt6. his outlying Bishop back into the
One of the liveliest forms of the game at QB4 disputing the
gambit is 5 . . . , Q-R5ch; 6 K diagonal of the black Q-Bishop
Bl, P-B6; the Cochrane Gam from his QR3 to KBS.
bit.
12 . . . Q-R6ch
8 B x Pch K-Ql 13 K-B2
The addict of the K-Gambit The white King begins another
cares little, as a rule, for the fatal journey to the eighth rank.
safety of his own King : his He has no option, for 13 K-Kl
interest is exclusively in the other is followed by 13 . . . , Q-Kt7;
one. 14 R-Bl, B-QR3.
21 K x B Q-Kt3ch
22 K-B8 K-Q2
mate.
A royal mate. Compare similar
finishes by Morphy (Game 5)
17 K x Kt Edward Lasker (Game 20} and
There is nothing better; Black Day (Game 45) .
'"'
18
The careers of the two players in our next game, Ossip Bernstein
(born 1 882) and Milan Vidmar (born 1885) run curiously parallel.
Both were players of undoubted grandmaster strength but both were
strong-willed enough to relegate chess firmly to second place in
their very successful careers-Bernstein as a financial lawyer, Vidmar
as an electrical engineer. Both went for years at a time without
playing any public chess at all. Both lived to old age, and both
played again in their quiet later years.
The tournament of San Sebastian 1911, is memorable for the
meteoric first appearance of Capablanca in Europe. What is not so
well remembered is that Vidmar finished only a half-point behind
him. In his game with Bernstein Vidmar chased the black King out
from his position at KKtl, across to QB2 and then back, after a
thirteen-move hunt, to his starting point.
THE KING-HUNT 45
VIDMAR BERNSTEIN
San Sebastian Tournament 1911
Sicilian
24 . . . K-Kt2
25 Q-R6ch K-B3
The black King must take to the
road: if 25 . . ., K-Ktl; 26 Q
R8 mate.
26 R-B3ch K-K2
27 Q-R4ch K-Q2
Or 27 . . . , K-B l ; 28 Q-R8ch,
19 Q-R6! K-K2 ; 29 Q-B6ch, K-B l ;
At the cost of a pawn, and 30 Q x KtP!
although all the minor pieces
disappear from the board, Vid 28 Q-R4cht
mar now engineers a winning A spectacular piece of agility,
King-Hunt, based entirely on switching to a white diagonal
the one weakening pawn move and also preparing R-Ql.
in front of Bernstein's King.
28 . . . K-B2
19 . . . Kt x B 29 R-B6
20 P x Kt Q x KtP Giving added weight to the threat
21 R-Q3! of R-QL
Virtually the winning move: the
KR-pawn cannot now be de
fended. Black is welcome to 29 . . . P-QKt4
take another Q-side pawn, for 30 Q-R5ch K-Q2
after 21 . . . , Q x KtP; 22 R-Kl The return journey begins!
the white attack would obviously
be stronger still. 31 P-QB4! Q x BP
32 R-Ql K-K2
21 . . . P-K4! He cannot save both Q-pawn
B ernstein finds an ingenious way and KB-pawn.
of giving his King a flight square.
If now 22 P x P e.p., Black re 33 R(6) x QP K-B l
takes with the Queen. The
incidental threat of mate by (See diagram on page 47)
23 . . . , Q-K8ch then compels Bernstein's King is back in his
White to waste a move, where- home, Black is a pawn ahead, and
THE KING-HUNT 47
White is still in some danger of King at last, and prevention of
mate on the back rank. How is the defence 36 . . ., Q-KB5.
the game to be won?
36 . . . QR-B I
37 Q-B6ch K-Ktl
Back to the base from which he
set out at move 23.
38 P-R4
The assault on the last barricade.
38 . . . Q-KKt5
39 R-Q7 Q-K3
40 Q-Kt5 R-B5
41 R(I )-Q6
This is the crisis. If the black
Queen now moves away to R6
Position after 33 K-Bl White mates by 42 R x Pch.
34 Q-R3! 41 . . . Q-Kt5
Threatened discovery-always a Thus he guards the Kt-pawn; but
potent weapon. White is ready with a different
knockout.
34 . . . K-Kt2 42 R-Q8!
35 Q-KB3 P-R4 Black resigns, for 42 . . ., Q x Q
With reawakened hope Black loses a Rook, while 42 . . . , R
actually tries to capitalize on his QB 1 loses the Queen. The best
pawn-snatching by pushing his that Black could do would be
majority. But the King-Hunt 42 . . . , R-KB l ; but then; 43 R x
still has the last word. Reh, K x R; 44 R-Q8ch, K
Kt2 ; 45 Q x KPch, P-B3; (or
36 P-KKt3 45 . . ., K-R2; 46 R-R8 mate)
There are two useful points to 46 Q-K7ch, K-R3; 47 R-RS
this move : a loophole for the mate.
19
In the Karlsbad Tournament, held a few months after San Sebastian,
there occurred another example-like Game 10--of a minor master
scoring a spectacular victory against an admittedly much greater
player. In this mammoth tournament of twenty-six players Oscar
Chajes (born 1873) finished in bottom place. Yet against Tartakower
he showed superb form, first winning material and then returning it
in order to drive the black King across to QB2 and back again-as
48 THE KING-HUNT
i n Game 18 but by an even longer route-to be mated on his starting
square, KKtl.
Tartakower himself never lost his boyish relish for a good King
Hunt; once thoroughly outplayed he was often willing to give his
opponent the pleasure of mating him. He probably thought it was
the least he could do for the unfortunate Chaj es ; one imagines him
watching the process with a professional detachment and thinking
how he might perhaps have done it better himself.
CHAJES TARTAKOWER
Karlsbad Tournament 1911
King's Indian
30 B x KRP P-B6
31 Q-B4
36 . . . Q-B2ch
37 P-Kt3 R-R2
38 Q-Kt6ch K-Bl
Position after 31 Q-B4 If Black tries 38 . . . , R-Kt2
White can reply 39 B x R after
32 B-Kt5 followed by Q-R4ch which 39 . . . , Q x B allows 40 Q
and B-B6 with a mating attack. K6ch and 41 Q x R, while 39 . . . ,
On the other hand the black P-B8(Q) leads to 40 R x Q, win
QB-pawn has reached the sixth ning at once.
rank, with three major pieces
well placed to support it. 39 Q x P
Again Black has a threatened dis
31 . . . P-B3 covery hanging over his head.
Tartakower prevents 32 B This time he makes his new
Kt5 and 33 Q-R4; but by Queen.
shutting off the Queen he per
mits vVhite to play the same 39 . . . P-B8(Q)
moves in reverse order. Black 40 R x Q Q xR
is doomed.
32 Q-R4! P-B7
33 B-Kt5ch K-Kt2
34 Kt-B5ch!!
Black t hought that by guarding
the KB-pawn twice he had
prevented the breakthrough, but
this sacrifice deflects the KKt
pawn so that after 35 Q-R6ch
the KB-pawn will fall. Chajes
has played throughout in master
ly form, outwitting Tartakower
first on the Q-side and now on
the K-side. Black cannot refuse The position is still fascinating.
the Knight : 34 . . . , K-B l ? ; For the moment Black has two
3 5 Q-R8ch, K-B2; 3 6 Q Rooks against Bishop and three
Kt7ch, K-K l ; 37 Q-Kt8 mate. pawns. White cannot afford to
Or 34 . . . , K-Ktl?; 35 B x P play 41 B-Kt2ch, R-B2, etc.
with much the same result. And he certainly cannot play
THE KING-HUNT 51
41 Q x R(7), R-B7 mate! But moves earlier the black King
he can make better use of his dis could have run out to the Q-side
covered check: via Q3. Chajes has preferred to
confine him where the white
41 B-B3ch! centre pawns can have their
Cutting Black's communications effect. It must be remembered
on the QB-file so that if now that all this time Black is threat
41 . . . , R-B2 White can play ening mate on the move.
42 Q x R(8)ch.
46 . . . K-Kl
41 . . . K-K2 47 Q-Kt8ch K-K2
White could now play 42 Q x 48 P-Q6ch K-Q2
R(7)ch, but this is his day and 49 Q-Kt4ch!
he is not going to be satisfied Subtly confining the King within
with anything less than the most the cordon. If now 49 . . . , K
precise play. He draws his B3 Black loses both his pieces!
cordon tight around the fleeing
King and still gets his Rook with 49 . . . K-Ql
check five moves later on. 50 B-B6ch K-Kl
51 Q-K6ch K-Bl
42 Q-K6ch K-Ql 52 Q-K7ch K-Ktl
43 B-B6ch K-B2 Home!
44 B-K5ch K-Ql
Just as in the previous game the 53 Q-Kt7 mate.
black King begins his return Black threatens mate in one!
journey. Similar strings of forcing moves
while under threat of mate may
45 Q-Kt8ch K-Q2 be seen in Game 21 (Nimzovitch
46 Q x R(7)ch Tarrasch) and in Game 30 (Yan
Had White played this five ofsky-Dulanto).
' 20
The illustrious name of Lasker has sometimes been the cause of con
fusion in the chess world. Emanuel was the great World Champion
who reigned from 1894 to 1921. Berthold, his brother, was eight
years older and although he never took chess very seriously a few of
his games are in print. Edward was also a German but has been an
American citizen ever since the First World War. He was not related
to the others but was a friend and admirer of Emanuel although
eighteen years his j unior. He played in several international
tournaments, but the following game-perhaps his best known one
-was only a skittle. It was played in the City of London Chess
Club just a few hours after Lasker arrived in England from Germany,
and he understood so little of the English language that he was not
52 THE KING-HUNT
aware of his opponent's name until after the game. Mr. Thomas
later to become Sir George-was at the time and for many years
after one of England's strongest players. Both these masters, now
octogenarians, retain their interest in the chess world.
2. . . Kt-KB3
:3 Kt-B3 P-K3
4 B -Kt5 B-K2
5 B x Kt
White's plan is quite simple-to
force P-K4 without making a
gambit out of it.
10 Q-R5!
5 . • . B xB Lasker threatens 11 Kt x Bch,
6P-K4 P xP P x Kt; 12 Q x P mate. There is
7Kt x P P-QKt3 a sufficient defence by 10 . . . ,
Although Black's position looks KB x Kt, for the sacrifice 1 1 Kt
solid he is in arrears with devel B6ch would lead to nothing:
opment and the leisurely fian Black recaptures with the Rook,
chetto makes the situation peril making a flight on KBl .
ous. Thomas, however, prefers a
THE KING-HUNT 53
subtle and apparently satisfac- 13 Kt( 5)-
tory defence : Kt4ch K-Kt4
14 P-R4ch K-B5
10 . . . Q-K2 Every move is forced, just as in
The idea is that after 11 Kt x Bch the Falkbeer game, No. 3.
Black recaptures with the pawn,
and the KR-pawn then stands 15 P-KKt3ch K-B6
guarded by the Queen. What 16 B-K2ch K-Kt7
only Lasker has seen is: 17 R-R2ch K-Kt8
18 K-Q2 mate.
1 1 Q x Pehl! K xQ Thus every white piece partici
12 Kt x Bch K-R3 pated in the King-Hunt, the
He has no choice : 12 . . . , K-Rl ; whole black army being mean
13 Kt-Kt6 mate. while cut off from the battlefield.
NIMZOVITCH TARRAS CH
St. Petersburg Tournament 1914
Queen's Gambit Declined
9 ... B-Kt2
1 0 R-Bl Q-K2
11 BP x P
Black was threatening to ex
change off the white Q-Bishop
by 11 . . . , BP x P and 12 . . . ,
B-R6. 18 . . . P-Q5
A sharp reminder that Black '.1lso
11 . . . KP x P has a Bishop on the long diag
12 Kt-R4 onal: the pawn move simultan
This is subtle and logical. The eously opens the line of the black
threat of Kt-B5 induces Black Bishop and closes the line of the
to play P-Kt3, weakening the white one. Worse still, Black has
black squares and making the two Bishops, as Nimzovitch soon
white Q-Bishop a potential game has cause to regret.
winner. Nimzovitch considers
the loss of time a good invest 19 P x P B x Pch!
ment. 20 K x B Q-R5ch
21 K-Ktl B x P!!
12 . . . P-Kt3 The white King is so isolated
13 Kt(4)-B3 QR-QI from all his forces that Tarrasch
14 P x P can afford to immolate both
The power of the fianchettoed Bishops to expose him. If now
Bishop is now clear, but it is 22 K x B Black plays 22 . . . ,
Black who will have the better Q-Kt5ch followed by 23 . . . ,
pawn control in the centre. The R-Q4. So the King prepares to
clash of two ideas makes fascinat make a bolt for it.
ing chess.
22 P-B3 KR-Kl
14 . . . P xP Mercilessly cutting off the K-file
15 B-Kt5 escape route. If now 23 K x B
The white-square Bishop intends Black wins at once by 23 . . . ,
to augment the effect of his R-K7ch.
black-square colleague by re
moving the Knight which guards 23 Kt-K4 Q-R8ch
the central black squares. 24 K-B2 B xR
The unkind point is that after
15 . . . Kt-K5 25 R x B the white Queen would
1 6 B x Kt B xB be lost by 25 . . . , Q-R7ch;
THE KING-HUNT 55
so now the hunt is really on. Queens. He chooses a neater way
which involves allowing White to
25 P-Q5 achieve his ambition of occupying
White reopens the long diagonal, that long black diagonal.
hoping that even yet he may
make something of his threats of 2 6 Q-B3
Q-B3 and Kt-B6ch. Nimzovitch at last gets in his
attack, threatening 27 Q-Kt7
mate. But it is too late: Black is
ready with a forced finish.
26 ... Q-Kt7ch
27 K-K3 R x Ktch!
28 P xR P-B5ch!
29 K xP R-B lch
30 K-K5 Q-R7ch
31 K-K6 R-Klch
32 K-Q7 B-Kt4
mate.
A pure mate ends the King-Hunt.
Had White played 32 K-B6
the mate would have been 32 . . . ,
25 . . . P-B4! Q-R5. Meanwhile Nimzovitch
Tarrasch could have won crudely has been threatening mate in one
but safely enough by Q-Kt7ch for the last seven moves. Com
followed by the exchange of pare Games 19 and 30.
"'- 22
In the next game a World Champion-indeed the most forceful of
them all-is handled very roughly by the British champion Yates.
F. D. Yates (born 1884) was a stolid Yorkshireman. He was slow to
mature, not making any great stir in the chess world until his late
twenties, but after this he became more and more a menace to the
continental grandmasters and scored many fine victories.
His style of play curiously echoed the pattern of his own career
slow in the initial build-up period, with no attempt at wild play, but
powerfully aggressive in the middlegame. Alekhine always found
Yates a handful, losing two tournament games to him and having
several frights at other times.
In the present game Alekhine's King is smoked out by a fine sacri
ficial combination and undergoes a fifteen-move hunt all within a
little square 3 x 3. For the ultimate in close chasing like this see
Game 4 1 , Ivkov-Byrne, Varna 1962.
56 THE KING-HUNT
ALEKHINE YATES
Karlsbad Tournament 1923
King's Indian
7 P-Q5 Kt-Ktl
8 P-K4 QKt-Q2
9 0-0 P-QR4
With an eye to the future he
safeguards the square QB4 16 . . . Q-Q3!
against the possibility of P A diabolically subtle reply. Upon
QKt4 by White. 17 P-B4 Black now intends
THE KING-HUNT 57
1 7 . . . , Kt-Q6; 18 B x B, Q 25 Q-K6ch K-Rl
B4ch! 1 9 K-Rl, Kt-B7ch· 26 P-B3 Q-Kt4ch
20 K-Ktl, Kt-R6ch; 21 K__'._ 27 K-Rl R-Q3
Rl, Q-Kt8ch! ; 22 R x Q, Kt 28 Q-R3
B7 mate . This was evidently By a devious route the white
Yates's day. Queen has found her way to the
threatened sector; but the black
17 B-B l B xB pieces are converging ominously,
18 R x B with invasion points at K4 and
The biter bit! It is the white KB5 which the white Knight is
K-side which has been weak powerless to cover.
ened.
28 B-K4
18 . . . P-QB4 29 R-K2 R(3)-KB3
Undeterred, Yates lays another 30 Kt-Ql R-B5
snare : the en passant capture 31 Kt-K3
would now be answered by 19 . . . , The Knight is now within range
Q x B!! 20 Q x Q, Kt-B6ch win of defensive points at Kt2 and
ning a piece. Kt4 but Black's initiative keeps
him one vital move ahead all the
time. He now expels the white
19 B x Kt Q xB Queen from the immediate vicin
20 Q-Kt3 QR-Ktl ity.
21 Q-Kt5 P-B4
Alekhine was of course a master R-R5
31
of ewry phase of the game.
32 Q-K6
Yates on the other hand excelled From this point the white Queen
particularly in the late middle
never returns; but it is an un
game, and here he is in his ele avoidable desertion. (32 Q
ment. Three-quarters of the
Kt2, R x Pch.)
minor pieces have gone; he has an
excellent Bishop and good
32 . . . Q-R4
c�ances of · ::i- breakthrough with
Threatening destruction by 33 . . . ,
his Rooks m the recrion of the
R x Pch; 34 K-Ktl, R-R8ch;
white King. In rese�ve he also
35 K-B2, Q-R5ch; 36 K
has a Q-side majority of pawns,
Kt2, Q-R7 mate.
but for the moment his interest is
elsewhere.
33 Kt-Kt4
Whit? totters on the brink, and
22 QR-Kl P-KB5!
yet his defence seems to hold, for
23 Q-Q7 QR-QI
he not only protects the R-pawn,
24 P x P Q x BP
and prepares to over-protect it
White is now obviously in danger
by R( l)-B2 but also threatens
from the heavy pieces. He can
to smash the attack at once by
hardly take the K-pawn, for
Kt x B.
after checking on Kt5 and B6
Black would continue with QR
33 . . . R x Kt!!
Kl and penetrate with the
Rooks. (See diagram o n page 58)
58 THE KING-HUNT
white square to another, ob
structing the King still more.
40 . . . Q-R8ch
41 K-Kt3
In reply to 41 R-R2 Yates gave
41 . . ., Q-B6ch; 42 K-R4,
B-B3ch; 43 P-Kt5, Q-B5ch;
44 K-R3, B-K4!; 45 R-Kt2,
Q-B6ch; 46 K-R4, Q-R4
mate.
47 R-B3 Q-Kt8ch
Of course Yates is not interested
in exchanging his triumphant
Bishop for the miserable Rook.
This is a King-Hunt and it must
move to its predestined end.
48 K-R3
46 . . . Q-Q8!! 48 K-B3, Q-B7 mate.
Now the Rook cannot return to
the K-side without producing a
48 . . . Q-B8ch
fatal self-block; e.g. 47 R-R2,
Q-K8ch; 48 K-B3, Q-K6ch; 49 K-Kt3
49 K-Kt2, Q-B7ch; 50 K 49 K-R2, B-Kt8ch.
RI, Q-B8 mate. Or 47 R
Kt2, Q-K8ch; 48 K-B3, Q 49 ... B-B7ch
K6 mate. Alekhine might have 50 K-B3 B-Kt8ch
tried 47 Q-B7 (Q x R? ? ; 48 Q 51 K-Kt3 Q-B 7ch
B8 mate) but Yates would simply 52 K-R3 Q-R7
have played 47 . . ., Q-Q6ch mate.
winning the Rook with check The black K-pawn has never
(if 48 Q-B3, B-K4ch). moved!
� 23
F. J. Marshall (born 1 877) held the championship of the U.S.A. for
twenty-seven years and seldom played a dull game. This last state
ment could be applied also to his present opponent, who appears later
on (Game 28) as the hunter.
60 THE KING-HUNT
MARSHALL BoGOLYUBov
New York Tournament 1924
Queen's Gambit Declined (in effect)
6 P xP KP x P
7 Kt-B3 Q-R4
Half the strength of the Cam
bridge Springs consists in the 16 Kt-K5! B-Q3
latent attack against the white 17 P-B4 P-B4
Bishop on KKt5. After the 1 8 B-Ktl B-Q2
exchange of pawns this no longer 19 Q-QB2
exists and the Queen move in the The Turton manceuvre with
present position achieves noth Queen and Bishop, already seen
ing. in Game 16 (Schlechter-Marco),
puts strong pressure on KR7,
8 B-Q3 Kt-K5 introducing the threat of 20 Kt x
9 Q-B2 Kt x B QP!
10 Kt x Kt P-KR3
11 Kt-B3 B-K2 19 . . . B-B3
12 0-0 0-0 20 P x P B xP
13 P-QR3! 2 1 K-RI
The awkward position of the Once the black Knight is dis
black Queen allows Marshall to lodged from his KB3 the white
THE KING-HUNT 61
attack must break through. One Q6 mate) 33 B-R7ch, K-Rl ;
threat is Kt-Kt4, but Marshall 34 B-Kt6ch, K-Ktl ; 35 Q
also frees the K-pawn for ad R7ch, K-Bl ; 36 Q x P mate.
vance to K4-K5.
30 K-Ql
21 . . . R-Kl 31 Q-B6ch R-K2
22 P-K4 B-Q5
23 Kt x B P x Kt
24 P-K5 Kt-Kt5
25 Q-R7ch
Thus White's main aim is ach
ieved. But meanwhile Bogolyu
bov has made an escape route for
his King and the mate is not yet
in sight. In fact the black King
will be mated on QR5!
25 . . . K-Bl
26 P-KKt3
Black also has his threat-Q
R5! 32 P-K6!
The black Rook has pinned itself
26 Q-Kt3 and Marshall takes crushing ad
27 B-B5 vantage of its helplessness. 32 . . .,
Attacking the Knight but also B x R is now met by 33 P x P!
covering Q7 in readiness for the and the pawn promotes.
inevitable King-Hunt.
32 . . . B-Q5
27 . . . Kt-B7ch 33 P x P!! B xQ
28 R x Kt 34 P-B8(Q)
Alekhine called this an unneces The Queen does an amusing
sary sacrifice, and recommended vanishing trick from B6, in
28 K-Kt2. The idea that stantly reappearing at B8 and
sacrificial lines should be played making a Rook profit on the deal.
only when necessary comes
strangely from Alekhine of all 34 . . . K-B2
people. In any case, the sacrifice 35 R x Rch B xR
of the Exchange in order to gain 36 Q x R
a tempo for the attack is quite in The game is as good as over, for
Marshall's style. White is Knight and pawn up and
threatening 37 Q-B8ch. Black
28 BxR might have resigned, but he lets
29 Q-R8ch K-K2 us see the elegant finish of the
30 Q x KtP! hunt.
The hunt is really on; Black
cannot stop to take the Rook 36 . . . K-Q3
without being mated in six by 37 Q-R8!
31 Q-B6ch, K-Bl ; 32 Q x White threatens 38 Q-K5ch,
RPch, K-Ktl; (K-K2 ; 33 Q- K-B4; and either 39 Q x Bch
62 THE KING-HUNT
or ag Kt-R4ch winning the 39 Kt-R4ch K-B5
Queen. Black avoids both threats 40 Q-B3ch K-Kt4
but is summarily mated. 41 B-Q3ch K x Kt
42 Q-B2 mate.
37 . . . Q-Ql Marshall announced this mate
38 Q-K5ch K-B4 after Black's 37th move.
24
One of the great tacticians of the 20th century is Kurt Richter of
Berlin (born 1900). Apart from the tournament at Podebrady in
1936 he has been content to remain inside Germany, quietly enjoying
his chess and writing many attractive books in the process. The
following game is phenomenal-studded with sacrifices and showing a
King-Hunt from Kl to KS.
RICHTER KRETSCHMAR
Berlin Championship 1925
Richter's Opening
15 P-KR4t· 21 Kt x Kt
P-KB4 · · ·
22 Q x P Q-Kt3
16 P-K5 P-K3
p p P xP 23 Q-Kt6ch . K-K2 .
� .
The primary obJ ect is attamed :
��R R7 R;-KKt�
. vigour Rich Black cannot castle. The per-
With characteristic
petual check is a 1ready ava1'lable
·
19 P-Q5!! .
This type of sacrifice-m d eed 25 R x P! !
this very move-occurs fre Throughout the attack Black has
quently in Richter's gan_ies. H . t ne move short
seemed t? be JUS
0
extends the range of his Ro � of salvat10n-a not u nusual state
and vacates a square for �.is for Richter's opponents.1 White
64 THE KING-HUNT
therefore burns his boats and goes and indeed it is difficult to see
in for the kill. He is certain to how White is going to prevent
regain a minor piece, for 25 . . . , him. Black still threatens mate
Q x R removes a guard from the m one.
Knight, while 25 . . . , Kt x R
removes one from the Bishop.
However, he will remain a Rook
down, and still the win is not
forced.
25 . . . Q xR
Or 25 . . . , Kt x R; 26 R x Bch.
But Black might have done best
to refuse the offer by 25 . . . ,
QR-KB l ; for White could not
then play 26 R-Q6 in view of
the reply 27 . . . , Q-Kt8ch, etc.
Rudolf Spielmann (born 1883) was known in his day as 'The Last
Prophet of Romanticism', nobody foreseeing the advent of Mikhail
Tal! Spielmann loved a King-Hunt, kept a sharp eye open for it at
THE KING-HUNT 65
every stage of the game, and devoted a whole chapter to the subject
in his book Richtig Opfern.
His opponent here is not the great Akiba Rubinstein but his son, a
comparatively minor master. Whether Spielmann would ever have
dared to treat Akiba quite like this is doubtful, but the method is
absolutely typical of him. In the first fourteen moves he sacrifices
two pieces-not for mate nor for any forced winning line but seeing
only, as he admitted, that he could get the black King on the run.
SPIELMANN S. RUBINSTEIN
Trebitsch Memorial Tournament, Vienna 1933
Queen's Gambit Declined
1 P-Q4 Kt-KB3
2 P-QB4 P-K3
3 Kt-QB3 P-Q4
For the opening stages compare
Game 1 6 (Schlechter-Marco) and
particularly the note at White's
8th move.
4 Kt-B3 B-K2
5 B-Kt5 0-0
6 P-K3 P-QKt3
7 B-Q3 B-Kt2
8 B x Kt! B xB
9 P xP P xP Position after 10 P-B4
1 0 P-KR4!
All this is exactly as Marshall
played at Paris 1900. Both Burn to be sure, but the rest is not so
and Marco continued 10 . . . , simple. If Black plays the best
P-Kt3 and were demolished defence-and he does-there is
forthwith by 11 P-R5. The no mate. White has to invest a
alternative defence 10 . . . , P second piece and develop a great
KR3, provoking 1 1 P-KKt4, lateral hunt which eventually
does not look any more inviting. embraces all eight tiles.
Rubinstein decides to leave the
K-side alone and counter classic 11 . . . K xB
ally against the white centre 1 2 Kt-Kt5ch
not a bad idea if only the K-side Black has evidently foreseen that
will hold. he has just one reply which keeps
the game alive. Not 12 . . . , B x
10 . . . P-B4 Kt; 13 P x Bch. Not 12 . . . , K-
Ktl ; 13 Q-R5, with immediate
(See diagram in next column) mate. Not 12 . . . , K-Kt3;
1 1 B x Pch! 1 3 Q-Q3ch, K-R4; 14 Q
A hackneyed enough beginning, R7ch, K-Kt5 ; 15 P-B3ch,
66 THE KING-HUNT
K-Kt6· 16 R-R3ch, K x P; lines. He may even have re
17 Q-B 2ch, K-Kt8; 18 Q garded the advanced pawn as the
R2 mate, another hunt to the spearhead of an eventual att�ck
8th rank. He therefore plays : of his own, but if so he was bemg
far too optimistic : from now on
12 . . . K-R3! he will have to give his undivided
13 Q-Q3 attention to the survival of his
Threatening 14 Q-R7 mate. own King.
18 Q-K2 K-K2
13 . . . P-Kt3
He cannot play 13 . . . , R-Rl 19 P-B4 B-B3
because of the King-Queen fork;
but now he intends K-Kt2
followed by R-Rl with a ten
able position.
14 P-R5! !
This second piece sacrifice i s the
key to the combination, whether
Spielmann saw it or not. One
can well believe that he did not,
for over the board he was pre
pared to sacrifice by intuition
and the look of the position, as
he himself often admitted. The 20 P-K4!
threat now is 15 Kt x BPch!! Spielmann opens the centre fear
after which 15 . . . , R x Kt would lessly, so that his little army of
be answered by 16 Q x P mate. four pieces may decisively over
run Black's force of six. The
14 . . . B x Kt threat is 21 P-K5, with an
15 P x Pch K-Kt2 avalanche of pawns.
16 R-R7ch K-B3
The black King must keep run 20 . . . P xP
ning. If 16 . . . , K-Ktl there 21 Kt x P K-Q2
follows 17 P x Pch!, ·18 Q Level exchanges would of course
Kt6ch and mate next move. suit Black admirably; but un
fortunately for him 21 . . . , B x
17 0-0-0! Kt would not have been a level
White, still two pieces down, exchange, for after 22 Q x .�h
quietly castles, tucking his King the Q-Rook would go as weif.
away and mobilizing the second
Rook. Meanwhile Black has two 22 P-Q5 Kt-R3
pieces right out of the game, still At last! But the Knight is
unmoved. hardly more 'developed' here
than on Ktl.
17 . . . P-B5
Rubinstein gains a tempo and 23 P-Kt7 R-KKtl
prevents the opening of more 24 R-R6!
THE KING-HUNT 67
After this White is bound to Black rearranges his forces clev
begin winning back material. erly, but in vain. His misplaced
If 24 . . . , B-K2 White plays King cannot escape the white
25 P-Q6, winning the Bishop Queen and Rook.
and opening the game still
further. Rubinstein chooses, per
32 Q-B6 R-QBl
haps a little more promisingly, to
let his Queen go. For it he will 33 Q-Q5 R-Ql
have Rook and two Bishops 34 Q x P R-Q2
normally more than equivalent 35 Q-Kt8ch K-Kt2
and also removes the advanced 36 Q-Q5ch K-Ktl
KKt-pawn. 37 Q-B6
The seventh successive Queen
24 . . . B x KtP move-and there are still four to
25 R-Q6ch K-B2 come-threatens to win one of
26 Q x Pch! the black pieces by 38 P
Masterly precision. The black QKt4.
King still takes precedence over
the Queen as a target. Now he 37 . . . P-R4
is forced to shut in his Q-Rook. 38 Q x Pch Kt-Kt2
39 Q-B6 R-Ql
26 . . . K-Ktl 40 Q-B7ch Resigns.
2 7 R x Qch R xR Thirty moves ago the hunt
28 K-Ktl started on KR2. The end of the
Black was threatening to return long trail would be 40 . . . , K
the compliment with 28 . . . , R2; after which White could con
R-QBl . tinue by simply taking the
Bishop or, more conclusively,
28 ... Kt-B2 by 41 R-Q5 threatening 42 R x
29 P-Q6 Kt-K3 P mate; then 41 . . . , K-R3;
30 P-B5 B x Ktch 42 Q-B6ch, K-R2 ; 43 R-Kt5
31 QxB Kt-B4 forcing mate.
""- 26
The next game shows a World Champion in the bud-Botvinnik
at the age of 24. The fact that this devastating win, played in a
great international tournament, is not even included in Botvinnik's
own selection of his hundred best games, 1926-46, is an eloquent
comment on the standard of his play during those years.
68 THE KING-HUNT
BoTVINNIK CHEKHOVER
Moscow Tournament 1935
Reti's Opening
17 . . . B-Kt2
18 Q-K2 Kt-Ill
Black over-protects his KR2 so
that the displacement of his other
Knight would not be so serious; Position after 21 .. . P-R3
but a Knight on KBl does have
the tactical disadvantage of mak 22 . . . P x Kt
ing the defence of KB2 rather 23 P x P Kt(l )-Q2
more awkward-as Chekhover He dares not move the other
presently finds to his cost. Knight and let in the white
Queen. But now comes :
19 Kt-Ql
With all deliberation Botvinnik 24 Kt x P! !
starts walking his Knight round I n the true spirit o f the King
from QB3 to KB2 whence it will Hunt. The fact is that Black has
be able to proceed either to been so thoroughly out
KKH or else via R3 to KKt5. man<l!uvred that White has
several ways of winning; e.g.
19 . . . R-R2 24 Kt x Kt, Kt x Kt; 25 R x P! !
Presumably to protect the K-side
along the second rank. But there K x Kt
24 . . .
is an awful lot of wood in
25 P-Kt6ch! K-Ktl
between.
25 . . . , K-Bl looks more hope
20 Kt-B2 Q-Ktl ful. Then 26 Q x P would not be
21 Kt-R3 P-R3 check and Black could try 26 . . . ,
Played to prevent 22 Kt-Kt5. Kt-K4 hoping after 27 P x Kt
This, however, is one of the not to be able to unleash a violent
infrequent cases where it is attack of his own by 27 . . . ,
found on further inspection that B-B4ch; 28 K-Rl B x Pehl,
the preventive move does not in etc. ,
fact prevent. But Botvinnik on that day s
form would no doubt have played
(See diagram in next column) not 27 P x Kt but 27 R x Ktch! !,
22 Kt-Kt5! P x R; 28 Q-R3 ! and still have
The sacrifice of this Knight (and had the last word.
only by taking it can Black
defend his KB2) is amply justi 26 Q x Pch K-Rl
fied by the powerful play it gives 27 Q-R3ch K-Ktl
to the Rooks. 28 B-B5!
70 THE KING-HUNT
Threatening mate in two by 29 32 . . . B xR
B-K6ch and 30 Q-R8 mate. 33 Q-R7ch K-Bl
34 R-Kl
28 . . . Kt-Bl Threatening Q-R8 mate.
29 B -K6ch Kt x B
30 Q x Ktch 34 . . . B-K4!
Chekhover is happy to see the What else? The K-file must be
forces reduced for he is still two closed and 34 . . . , B-K2 would
pieces up. The agony of the be a self-block. If now 35 R x B
King-Hunt awaits him neverthe of course Black would play
less. 35 . . . , Q x R with alacrity.
27
Chekhover (born 1 908) is out of luck in the present collection, for
he loses the next game too. It was played in a match between two
Russian masters best known as composers of endgame studies. In
this field their names are world famous, but both are also fine players,
THE KING-HUNT 71
a statement which is borne out by the fact that each has achieved the
considerable feat of reaching the final of the U.S.S.R. championship.
Kasparyan (born 1910) is particularly original in the middlegame and
the following exhilarating chase to the eighth rank is a fine example of
his play.
CHEKHOVER lCASPARYAN
Match Game, Erevan 1936
King's Indian
23 . . . B xB
24 K x B Q-R7ch
25 K-B3 B-R5
Threatening mate by Q-Kt6.
26 R-KKtl Q-R6ch
27 K-B4 R-Kl
28 Kt-Kt4 Kt-K3ch
29 K-K5 Kt-Kt4ch
Kasparyan, a great master '?f
Position after 17 Q-Kt2 the mating study, crosses his
fingers and hopes for 30 K-B4,
17 . . . R x B!! to which he will reply 30 . . . ,
A fine positional sacrifice. The Q-B6ch!! ; 31 P x Q, Kt-R6
Rook can be taken three ways, mate, and be happy for t�e rest
and in all of them the diagonal of his life. But Chekhover is also
of the black K-Bishop opens with a master of the study. He avoids
devastating effect: 18 Q x R, both this and 30 K-B6 (R-K3
Kt(3)-K5 ; or 18 Kt x R, Kt mate), and continues his head
Kt5. long flight.
20 Kt x Kt B x P!
21 R-B l
There is nothing better to do than
mobilize the reserves. White
cannot keep his winnings by
21 B x B, for after 21 . . ., Q x B
Black can still win the pinned
Knight by R-KL
21 . . . B x Kt
22 Q-B2 B xP
The white King stares destruc Another neat little study · has
tion in the face, and seems likely arisen and Chekhover finds it too
to be mated where he stands. In interesting to be resigned. Kas
fact he will make a journey to paryan rises to the occasion by
KB. offering the second Exchange and
demonstrating that Queen and
23 Kt x P Knight are sufficient for his _
Chekhover no doubt takes some needs.
THE KING-HUNT 73
32 Q x Ktch! Chekhover prevents one of them,
33 K x R Q-B lch 36 . . ., Q-Ql mate, but not the
34 K-K7 Q-B2ch other :
35 K-K8
If 3.5 K-B6 Kasparyan can 36 . . . Kt-Kt2
reply quietly 35 . . . , P-KR3!, mate.
threatening mate not only by Such finishes are the regular
Q-Q3 but also by Kt-R2. stock-in-trade of these men, two
of the world's greatest composers.
35 . . . Kt-K3! One imagines them now eagerly
This move also threatens two seizing the pieces and demon
mates. strating to one another all the
other fascinating things that
36 R-Ql nearly happened.
28
Effim Bogolyubov was one of the greatest of Russian grandmasters.
He was born in 1889 and reached his prime in the 1920s, his zenith
being the tournament of Moscow 1925 which he won, ahead of Lasker
and Capablanca. In 1929 and again in 1934 he tried unsuccessfully
to wrest the World Championship from Alekhine, another Russian
exile. For political reasons neither of these great players ever
returned to Russia; but whereas the Soviet writers have now offi
cially forgiven Alekhine and placed him high in their roll of honour
they are still loth to admit that Bogolyubov ever existed.
He became a naturalized German and spent the last twenty-five
years of his life in Germany. The following game was played in a
small all-German tournament. His opponent was little known
internationally so the game has not been much publicized; but the
elegance of the hunt, with one Knight being offered four times before
being finally accepted, makes it one of Bogolyubov's best productions.
MAcHATE B oaoLYunov
Bad Elster Tournament 1936
Giuoco Piano
8 Kt-Q5 Kt x Kt 15 . . . P-R5
9 B x Kt 0-0 16 B-B2 P-R6
10 P-B3 More than the average master
In the Giuoco Piano it is com Bogolyubov liked to spread his
mon practice to keep the oppon operations over the whole board.
ent guessing as to one's castling In typical fashion he has taken
intentions, but the trouble with the initiative on the Q-side, but
the present move is that it will it is still not easy to see how he
leave the white King uncomfort will manufacture his win. Both
able on either wing : it loosens the his Bishops have gone and there
Q-side and at the same time is no direct way of getting at t�e
permits Black to break up the exposed white King. Meanwhile
K-side. there is considerable potential in
the central white pawn-mass.
10 . . . B x Kt
11 P x B Q-B3 17 P-Kt4 P-B4
12 P-KB4 18 BP x P Q xP
Here White might have staked 19 P xP Q x P(4)
everything on 12 K-K2, with 20 B-Kt3 P-Q4
immediate use of the KKt-file. 21 P-Q4 Q-B3
Bogolyubov would no doubt have 22 P x P
reacted sharply in the centre, White's object is to engineer a
forcing P-Q4 without delay. concerted advance of the centre
pawns; a good idea but it might
12 . . . B xB have been better achieved by
13 P x B Kt-K2! 22 P-K5! with P-K4 to follow
This is the grandmaster getting soon.
to work to force the game, con
scious that the opposition is not 22 . . . Kt x P
quite up to his own class. He 23 P-B4
invites 1 4 B x KtP, after which
1 4 . . . , R-Ktl would give him a (See diagram on page 75)
powerful iniative; e.g. 15 B-Q5 For eight moves Bogolyubov �as
(not 15 B-R6? which loses a restrained himself from attackmg
piece after 1 5 . . . , P-Q4! ) Kt x in the region of the castled King.
THE KING-HUNT 75
29 . . . Q-R4ch 34 . . . Kt x KP!
Even the black QR-pawn, ad- It's that Knight again! If 35
76 THE KING-HUNT
R x Kt Black forks with 35 . . . , there is a threat of 37 . . . , R-R3
P-l35ch. mate.
29
The Olympiads, which draw together players with a wide range of
ability and varying styles and methods, never fail to produce plenty
of out-of-the-ordinary chess. (See Games 30, 40, 4 1 and 45.}
They are now held biennially and draw a huge entry which makes a
satisfactory method of organization very difficult to devise. Even
the Swiss System with all its well-known defects would be preferable
to the present group system under which some pairings are played
twice, even though many are not played at all.
The Munich Team Tournament of 1936 was an unofficial Olym
piad, interpolated between Warsaw 1935 and Stockholm 1 937. The
matches were contested on eight boards instead of the usual four, and
although there was a clash of dates with the grandmaster tourna
ment at Nottingham a wealth of good chess was played. The follow
ing game-yet another eight-rank hunt-is too good to be missed.
8 ... P-K4
Thus Black secures complete
freedom for his pieces.
9 PxP Kt x P
10 B-B4 Kt(3)-Q2
11 B-Kt2 0-0-0
The black pinned Knight is not
in danger: it can always be
sustained by P-KB3. Q-side
castling, however, is certainly
tempting providence, for two
white Bishops point that way,
and there are open files for both 17 P-R6! P-R5
Rooks. Euwe, a connoisseur of 18 P x Pch K-Ktl
this defence, won a fine game If Black plays 18 . . . , K x P
from Alekhine by refraining from White finishes beautifully :
castling until move 26, and then 19 Kt-Kt5!!, Q x Kt; 20 B x
choosing the K-side. Pch!, Q x B; 21 R x Pehl winning
the Queen, and mating before
12 Q-Bl P-B3 the black pieces can intervene.
13 0-0 P-KR4
This rapid opening of the KR 19 Kt-R4 PxP
file was no doubt Black's idea in Black also opens the Rook's file,
78 THE KING-HUNT
and appears to be not without 23 Q x Pch!! KxQ
chances of his own. 24 Kt-B5ch K-Kt3
24 . . . , K-Ktl is no better:
20 RP x P B-K5 25 R-R8ch, K-B2; 26 R
A strong move-indeed essential B8ch, K-Q3; 27 Kt x Bch, R x
-both for attack and defence. Kt; 28 P-Kt8(Q)ch, Q x Q;
The white K-Bishop is neutral 29 R-Qlch, K-K4; 30 R x Q,
ized. etc., leaves White a clear enough
wm.
21 Q-QB4! R-Q5
Black could have killed the 25 P-Kt8(Q)ch K x Kt
attack stone dead here by 21 . . . , The white Queen has reappeared
without delay, and the real
B x B ; 22 K x B, Q-Q4ch. He
probably did not like the look of sacrifice amounts to a Bishop for
a pawn-a small investm�nt
the resulting endgame. Rosselli
which has brought the black Kmg
decides to keep up the tension
to the fourth rank, with the
instead. He has foreseen the
certainty of further travels in
possibility of White's 22 Q-R6
the near future.
and is ready with what seems to
be a perfectly adequate reply.
26 Q-R7ch K-Q4
27 R-R5
22 Q-R6! Q-Kt4 Had Black interposed with 26 . . . ,
Forcing the Queens off and Q-Kt3 this same Rook move,
clearing up the position very with check, would still have won
satisfactorily--or so it seems. the Queen. Black could now
But chess is an unkind game : resign, but he lets us see the rest
Rosselli's ingenuity has in fact of the hunt.
let him in for an immortal King
hunt. 27 . . . B-QB4
28 R x Q P xR
29 Q-Q7ch B-Q3
30 B x Bch K xB
31 Q-K6ch B-K4
32 P-B4 P xP
33 R x Pch K-K6
34 Q-Kt3ch Resigns.
The black King will be driven
inexorably to the eighth rank to
be mated : e.g. 34 .. . , K-Q7;
35 Q-QB3ch, K x P; 36 R
B2ch, K-Q8 ; 3 7 R-Blch, K
K7; 38 R-Kl mate.
30
The Buenos Aires Olympiad of 1939 was in progress at the outbreak of
the Second World War. It is hard to believe that the game which we
select from it was the work of a schoolboy, Abe Yanofsky, playing
top board for Canada at the age of 14. At move 21 White's Queen is
attacked and it appears that any attempt to save it permits mate.
Black might have been excused for anticipating a win rather than a
King-trip to the eighth rank!
An even more prodigious performance, by an even younger player,
may be found in game No. 38.
5 Kt x P QKt-Q2
6 Kt-KB3 B-K2
7 Kt x Ktch Kt x Kt
. . . , B x Kt probably leads to
safer equality.
8 B-Q3 P-B4
9 PxP Q-R4ch 14 B x Kt B xB
1 0 P-B3 Q x P(4) 15 B x Pch
1 1 0-0 0-0 The most hackneyed sacrifice
12 R-Kl R-Ql of all, which nevertheless leads to
1 3 Kt-K5 an infinite variety of afterplay.
White opens his attack. Its Contrast, for instance, the sequel
80 THE KING-HUNT
to a very similar sacrifice played 22 R x Pch!!
by Spielmann in Game 25. If Without this key-move the whole
now 1 5 . . . , K x B White has the line of play would be false, for
familiar mating procedure 16 Q the white Queen is tied to the
R5ch, K-Ktl ; 17 Q x Pch, K Kt-file on pain of instant mate.
R2; 18 R-K3, etc.
22 . . . Kx R
15 . . . K-Bl 23 R-Klch
16 Q-R5 B x Kt Now the black King has four
There is little choice. If 16 . . . , flights. If 23 . . . , K-B4 White
P-Kt3 White can play 17 B x mates in three beginning with
P, P x B ; 18 Q-B3. 24 R-K5ch, w hile both 23 . . . ,
K-Q2 · 24 Q x Pch and 23 . . . ,
17 R x B Q-B2 K-Q4 ; 24 Q-Q4ch lead quickly
18 B-K4 B-Kt2 to the loss of the stranded black
Presumably this was why he Queen. He therefore tries :
played his Queen back to B2.
But it is the unfortunate position 23 . . . K-Q3
of the black Queen on Kt2 24 Q-B6ch K-B4
which plays an important part in Any other move and the black
the King-Hunt which now fol King and Queen are skewered by
lows. Yanofsky records that he Queen or Rook.
had planned it all, including the
superb Rook sacrifice at move
25 R-K5ch K-B5
22, before starting his attack with
14 B x Kt. 26 P-Kt3ch K-Q6
26 . . . , K x P would be met by
19 B x B Q xB 27 R-K7ch, picking up the
20 Q-R8ch Queen.
K-K2
21 Q x P R-KKtl
27 Q-Qoch K-B7
If 27 . . . , K x P White forces
mate by 28 R-K3ch followed
by 29 R-K2ch.
28 R-K2ch Resigns.
28 . . . , K x P allows mate in one
by 29 Q-Q2; while if he goes to
the eighth rank it is mate in two
by 29 Q-Q2ch, etc. The whole
chase has had to be conducted
with checks under threat of mate
in one.
31
The London 1946 Tournament marked the revival of international
chess after the sterile years of war. Medina came from Spain to
take part, and although he finished in the lower half of his section the
following game, in which he hounded Wood's king down to the eighth
rank and halfway back again, must have made his trip worth while.
This is a battle royal.
MEDINA G. Woon
London Tournament 1946
Ruy Lopez
1 1 QKt-Q2 B-K2
lar by Euwe's predilection for it 12 Q x P 0-0
about this time. But White soon 13 P-Kt4 Kt-R4
sidetracks him from the well 14 Q-Kt3 Q-Kl
analysed lines. 15 P-Kt5 P xP
16 P x P
6 P-Q4 P-QKt4 With his Q-side majority estab
7 P-Q5 lished and the wedge on QB6
A decidedly unusual move in cuttin'g off the black pieces, it
place of the natural and normal looks as though White will have
7 B-Kt3. things all his own way on the left
flank·' but it is notoriously dang
7 ... P xB erous to put too much reliance on
Black gratefully accepts the in Q-side pawns while the opponent
vitation to remove a piece which has a majority of pieces on the
is often the mainstay of White's other wing, as seems to b� the
attack in the Ruy Lopez. case here. One would estimate
Black's chances as rather the
8 P x Kt P-Q3 better at the moment.
Probably this is the best treat
ment of White's opening. There
are interesting prospects for both 16 ... B-K3
sides. 17 Q-B2 P-B4
18 P-QR4 B-B3
9 R-Kl Kt-B3 19 B-Kt2 Kt-B5
P-B4
10
Most unusually for the Ruy (See diagram on page 82)
82 THE KING-HUNT
deadly. If, for instance, 26 . . . ,
Q-R6 trying for mate, White
saves himself by 27 R x Pch,
K-Rl ; 28 R x BPch!, K-Ktl ;
(or 28 . . . , R x B ; 29 P
Kt8(Q)ch) 29 R-Kt7ch, K
Rl ; 30 P x Kt, R x B; 31 R
Kt3, winning the Queen or
making a new one.
26 . . . P xB
27 Kt x P Kt-R6ch
28 K-Bl R x BP
Position after 19 . . . Kt-B5 29 Q-Kt2 R-QKt1
Black is a Bishop ahead, has
The two attacks take shape with blocked one of the pawns, and
unusual clarity. One would say still has threats on the K-side.
that if there is to be any King
hunting it is Black who will do it. 30 R(3)-K3
White turns his attention to the
20 P-R5 Q-Kt3 K-file, threatening to destroy
21 P-Kt3 the blockader by 31 R-K8ch.
A forced weakening, and a serious Black could have closed the file
matter with no Bishop to cover by 30 . . . , B-K5. Instead he
the white squares. seized a tactical chance to remove
the menacing pawn once for all.
21 . . . B-Q4
It might have been wiser to 30 . . . R xP
devote all his energies to forcing White cannot take the Rook
P-KB5. because of the reply 31 . . . , R
B8ch, winning the Queen. But
22 P-Kt6 Q-Kt5 he is not to be outdone.
23 P-Kt7 R-R3
The only hope is to blockade the 31 R-Q7
terrible pawns. He needs only a Intending to meet 31 . . . , R x Q
few moves respite to make his with 32 R-K8 mate.
own attack irresistible.
31 . . . B-B5ch
24 R-R3 32 K-Kl B-B2
A useful move, combining de 33 Q x R Q-QB5
fence with attack. Now Black Black threatens mate beginning
throws everything into an with Q-QB8ch; but now White
attempt at a mating attack. can begin to check, and with the
help of an Exchange sacr�fice �e
24 . . . P-K5 gets his King-Hunt gomg m
25 B x B P x Kt earnest.
26 R-K7
The threat against KKt7 is now (See diagram on page 83)
THE KING-HUNT 83
Black threatens both 45 . . . ,
R x P and mate in two by 45 . . . ,
R-R8ch. But the hunt begins
again.
45 Q-B4ch K-Kt7
46 Q x BP K xP
47 Q-R7ch K-Kt8
48 Q x P R-R8ch
Not to be denied a little hunting
on his own account.
36 Q-K8ch K-Kt2
37 R-K7ch K-R3
38 Q-B8ch K-R4
39 R x Pch K-Kt5
40 R-R4ch K x Kt
41 R x Q R xR
The first phase of the hunt has
ended with the white Queen 52 Q-B3!
opposing black Rook and Knight. With a pawn waiting at QR7
White has also a threatening QR White can cheerfully indulge in
pawn. Black, however, has his Queen sacrifices.
meagre forces quite aggressively
disposed and he has a pair of 52 . . . R-R3
united passed pawns in the back 53 K-B2 P-B5
ground . He has no intention of 54 K-Ql Kt-B8
resigning, and his King will be White's precious pawn is in
subjected to a great deal more directly protected all the time by
hunting yet. the threat of a Queen check on
the black diagonal.
42 P-R6 Kt x P
43 P-R7 Kt-K5 55 Q-Kt7ch K-B7
Forestalling the white promotion 56 Q-QKt2ch K-Kt6
check, so that if 44 P-R8(Q) 57 K-Kl
he can reply 44 . . . , R-B8 mate. Threatening the Knight and once
more indirectly protecting the
44 Q-R6 R-R5 pawn.
84 THE KING-HUNT
57 . . . Kt-K6 64 Q x P Kt-R7
58 Q-B2ch K-R6 65 Q-K5
59 Q-B3ch K-R5 The pin is always a potent
60 P-R8(Q) weapon in Queen endings. The
At last! final zugzwang cannot be far
away now.
60 . . . R xQ
61 Q x R K-Kt6 65 . . . Kt-Kt5
Black has only Knight and two 66 Q-B3ch Kt-K6
pawns against the bare Queen, 67 Q-QB6 Kt-Kt7
but he is evidently enjoying this 68 Q-KB3ch K-R7
remarkable struggle. While there The 16th and last move of a
are pawns there is hope. gallant King. Now it is mate in
three.
62 K-K2 P-Q4
63 Q-Kt8ch Kt-Kt5 69 K-B2 Resigns.
32
The London Tournament had broken the ice, but the first real en
counter of international heavyweights since 1939 came just a few
months later across the North Sea at Groningen in Holland. This
was during the interregnum after the death of Alekhine, and the line
up contained enough talent to make it stronger than the triennial
Interzonals of the present day. Botvinnik, who was to become
World Champion two years later, took top place, half a point ahead
of e:x-champion Euwe.
The Second World War was particularly cruel to the career of Euwe
(born 1901) swallowing the years which should have marked the very
peak of his achievements. The following game, in which Euwe
mercilessly pursues the Hungarian grandmaster S zabo, is probably
the most spectacular he ever played. It is the only one in the present
collection in which the King is made to traverse all eight files as well as
all eight ranks.
SZAB6 EuwE
Groningen Tournament 1946
Queen's Gambit Accepted
4 P-K3 Kt-KB3
5 BxP P-K3
6 0-0 P-B4
7 Q-K2 Kt-B3
8 R-Ql P-QKt4
9 B-Kt3 P-B5
Position after 18 . . KR-Ktl
Black establishes a Q-side pawn
.
_ .
ma1or1ty, but the real motive of
this move is tactical-namely to With Queen, two Rooks and two
exchange off the white K-Bishop. Bishops readily available Black
has a tremendous attack, and in
view of all the open lines it is
10 B-B2 Kt-QKt5 doubtful if White's game could
11 Kt-B3 Kt x B possibly be saved. The black
12 Q x Kt B-Kt2 King is safest in the centre.
13 P-K4
Understandably White wants to Q-Q4
19 Kt-Kl
make something out of his centre B-Q3
20 P-B3
pawns, but this advance is pre Q-KR4
21 K-Rl
mature, as . Euwe immediately R-Kt6
22 P-KR3
shows. White had at his dis K-K2
23 B-K3
posal here a combination which R( l)-KKtl
24 Q-Bl
has won many games in similar
25 P x P
positions of the Q-Gambit Ac
For ten moves this pawn has
cepted (e.g. Reshevsky-Vidmar
stood unmolested, both sides
Nottingham 1936): 13 P-Q5 : having been too busy to do any
P x P ; 14 P-K4! ; with danger
thing about it. White takes it
ous play against the black King
now, having literally nothing
and Queen. better to do. But the white
barricades are bound to be over-
13 . . . P-Kt5! run.
1 4 P-K5
Practically forced. 25 R x KtP!
26 Q x R
14 ... P x Kt If 26 Kt x R, Black wins by
15 P x Kt KtP x P Q x Pch; 27 K-Ktl, B-Kt6.
16 Q-R4ch Q-Q2
17 Q x BP R-Bl 26 . . . R xQ
18 Q-K2 KR-Ktl 27 K x R
34 . . . B x Pch
35 K-Kt4 K-Q2
A forgotten ally comes across to
complete the mating net; but this
scheme is not without risk, for
White-though one may have
forgotten it-still possesses two
potentially dangerous Rooks.
Position after 27 K x R They have the Q- and QKt-files
already at their disposal and
White has managed to get two
now Szabo deliberately gives up
Rooks for his Queen, but the
another pawn to open the QB
hunt is only just beginning. file as well. Black will have to be
careful not to give the Rooks a
27 . . . Q-Kt3ch
single chance to enter.
28 K-B2 B-Kt6ch
29 K-K2 B x Kt!
The hide-bound classicist may 36 P-B4 Q x BPch
be surprised to see the Bishop 37 K-R5 Q-B6ch
pair squandered in this way, 38 K x P B-B5ch
but, as Euwe himself has pointed 39 K-Kt7 Q-Kt6ch
out, the presence of Bishops on 40 B-Kt6 Q-B6ch
opposite colours is a distinct asset The whole of this ending has
to the side which is attacking the been a superb exhibition of the
King. Certainly he now demon lateral and diagonal powers of
strates that he has all the attack the Queen.
ing material he needs with Queen
and the unopposable Bishop on 41 K-Kts B-R3!
the white squares. Now White allows himself one
consolation check but mate must
30 R xB Q-Kt7ch follow.
31 K-Q3 B xP
32 P-QR4 B-K5ch 42 KR-Qlch K-Kl
33 K-B4 Q-QB7 White resigns; 43 K-B7, Q
34 P-Q5 Kt2ch; 44 K-Q6, Q x B mate.
33
Here is another example of Euwe's vigorous play at this period.
The redoubtable and well-loved Tartakower is unfortunate in this
selection, appearing for the second time as the victim.
THE KING-HUNT 87
TARTAKOWER Eu wE
Venice Tournament 1948
Giuoco Piano
1 P-K4 P-K4 13 Kt x B P x Kt
2 Kt-KB3 Kt-QB3 14 Q-Kt3ch Kt-K3
3 B-B4 B-B4 15 Q x P
4 P-B3 B-Kt3 This is the critical position.
This move and Black's next two Black has maintained his firm
constitute the strongpoint system base in the centre and is about to
of defence in the Giuoco Piano. strike viciously at the K-side.
Black avoids exchanging his K White has won a pawn, but his
pawn, keeping it well protected Queen is away on QKt6. Twenty
instead as a permanent feature eight moves later this Queen,
of his game. still unmoved at QKt6, has the
option of being lost or forming a
5 P-Q4 Q-K2 self block in her own King's
Now that the black Bishop has mating net!
retreated from QB4 the exchange
of pawns is no longer compulsory. 15 . . . P-Kt4!
For comparison see Game No. 1 1 6 B-QB4 P-R3
17 P-R4 K-R2
6 0--0 P-Q3 18 RP x P RP x P
White is at liberty at any time to 19 P xP QP x P
play P-Q5 or P x P, but either 20 B-K3 R-Rl
of these moves would open a 2 1 P-KKt3 K-Kt3
diagonal for the black K-Bishop. 22 K-Kt2
Both sides have cleared the way
7 P-KR3 Kt-B3 for their Rooks to occupy the
8 R-Kl 0-0 R-file and White intends, no
9 Kt R3
- Kt-Ql doubt, to exchange off one pair at
Euwe conceives a remarkable once. He is one move too late:
plan in the Steinitz manner, the lightning strikes.
withdrawing both Knights to the
back rank in order to have P
QB3 and P-KB3 available.
Whether the fact that it involves
the loss of a pawn was accidental
or a really superb decoy of the
white Queen only the master
himself could tell. But with
Euwe in the dazzling form of this
game one can well believe that it
was the latter.
10 B-Bl Kt-Kl
11 Kt-B4 P-KB3
12 P-QR4! P-B3 22 . . . Kt-B5ch!!
88 THE KING HUNT
23 P x Kt B-R6ch 30 K x R Kt-Q3ch
24< K-Kt3 31 K-Q3
White must return the piece in Anything else is worse. For
this way, for if 24 K-Ktl, instance 31 K-B4, Q-B4ch;
Black continues 24 . . . , KtP x P 32 K-Kt3, Q-R6ch; K-B4,
threatening Q-R2 or Q-Kt2 Q x Kt mate. Other moves lose
with immediate destruction. the outlying Queen either by a
fork or a discovered check.
2� . . . KP x Pch
25 B x P Q-Q2! ! 31 Q-B4ch
Euwe' s conduct o f the attack is 32 K-Q4 Q-B5ch
the essence of perfection. After 33 K-Q3 Q x Bch
this surprising finesse White's 34 K-B2 B x Kt
only way to avoid mate in two At last White has a moment's
or three moves is to retire his respite to bring his Queen back
Knight to the pathetic square into the game, but now that
KR2. Black has picked up two minor
pieces he can hardly invite the
26 Kt-R2 P x Bch exchange. He decides instead to
27 K x P R-R5ch make an escape route for his
28 K-K3 B-Kt7 King to get away to the QR-file
Black threatens 29 . . . , R x KP via the black squares.
mate, but this is easily prevented.
After his next move White prob
ably saw visions of rallying his 35 P-Kt3 B-K5ch
forces and getting away with his 36 K-Kt2 Q-Q6
two extra pawns after all. The non-checking moves are
always the difficult part of a
29 Kt-B3 King-Hunt. Now White can give
a check or two.
37 R-Ktl ch K-B2
38 QR-QBI
He decides against the second
check. After 38 Q-B7ch, K
K3 his Queen would be more
remote than ever, and in no less
danger. For instance: 39 QR
QBI , Q-Q7ch; 40 K-R3?, Kt
Kt4ch!
38 Q-Q7ch
39 K-R3
29 . . . R x Pch! !
Black forces a renewal o f the
hunt. Now the white King will (See diagram on page 89)
stand in the centre of the board, For the third time the game
exposed to the full power of coruscates into brilliance. The
Black's four remaining pieces. white King has been driven into
THE KING-HUNT 89
Q-Rook and the game ends with
successive sacrifices of Knight
and Rook, reminiscent of Black
burne-Lipschutz, New York
1889. Every chessmaster hopes
to create one immortal game in
his lifetime. This is Euwe's.
39 . . . Kt-B5ch!!
40 P x Kt R x Pch!!
41 K x R Q-R7ch
42 K-Kt4 Q-Kt7ch
White resigns, for 43 K-B5
Position after 39 K-R3 loses the Queen by 43 . . . ,
the line of fire of the unmoved I Q x KBPch, and the only altern
ative is 43 K-R5, Q-R6 mate.
\. 34
Vassily S myslov (born 1921) won the World Championship in 1957
but held it for one year only. He is one of the giants of the game;
the massive style which marks his maturity alarms even his fellow
grandmasters. The following game, played in his twenties, is not
really typical. It shows another King being driven straight across
the board to be mated on the eighth rank.
SMYSLOV FLORIAN
Moscow v. Budapest, Team Match 1949
Grunfeld Defence
10 0 -0 P xP
P xP
11 Q-R4
12 P-QR3
This move indicates not a timid
player but a resolutely aggressive
one in the present position, for it
prevents 12 . . . , Q-Kt5 after
which White would either have to
exchange Queens or else retreat
with loss of time and initiative. Position after 17 . . . K-B3
AVERBAKH KoTov
Zurich. Candidates Tournament 1953
Old Indian
16. . . Kt x Kt
Q x Kt
17 P-B4 30 . . . Q x Pch!!
18 K-R2 K-Rl 31 K x Q R-R3ch
19 Q-B2 Kt-Ktl 32 K-Kt4
20 B-Kt4 Kt-R3 Now the white King is in a box,
21 B x B Q xB and there is no way out. But
22 Q-Q2 Kt-Ktl how to mate him is another
23 P-KKt4 P-B4 matter. The trouble with sacri
Now the battle for the K-side ficing a whole Queen is that the
is really on. White's King's field opponent can always afford to
is considerably weakened but he give back even two pieces and
is hoping his Rooks will take still win the endgame.
control.
32 . . . Kt-B3ch
24 P-B3 B-K2 33 K-B5 Kt-Q2
25 R-KKtl R-KBI This threatens mate in three by
26 QR-BI R-B2 34 . . . , R-KBich; 35 K-Kt4,
27 KtP x P P xP R-KKtlch; 36 K-B5, R-B3
28 R-Kt2 P-B5 mate. But 3 4 . . . , Kt-Kt5!
At his own chosen moment would have been even stronger,
Kotov seals the K-side as well, preventing White's next move.
and prepares to assault the KRP. The Knight could not have been
taken by King or Rook or pawn
29 B-B2 R-B3 on pain of mate in one or two
30 Kt-K2 moves.
In view of the threatened 30 . . . ,
R-R3 White must defend the 34 R-Kt5! R-Blch
KR-pawn. The Knight comes 35 K-Kt4 Kt-B3ch
across, making an incidental 36 K-B5
threat of 31 Q x RP, to which Black needs time to work out his
White expects the reply 30 . . . , mating procedure so, with a
P-Kt3 as a matter of course. whole range of discoveries at his
Then 31 Kt-Ktl and everything disposal he now makes use of
is under control. The fantastic some see-saw checks to catch up
idea that Kotov would forestall on the clock.
him by one move could never
have entered Averbakh's head. 36 . . . Kt-Ktlch
THE KING-HUNT 93
37 K-Kt4 Kt-B3ch sarily mean checks. He now
38 K-B5 Kt x QPch threatens 45 . . . , R-Kt2ch;
It is a little risky to give the 46 K-B5, R-B3 mate. White
white Queen a possible point of must concede a piece, but this he
entry, but Black dares not risk a can well afford.
draw by repetition of position.
45 B-R4 R-Kt3ch
39 K-Kt4 Kt-B3ch 46 K-R5 R(2)-Kt2
40 K-B5 Kt-Ktlch Threatening 47 . . . , R-R3 mate.
41 K-Kt4 Kt-B3ch
42 K-B5 Kt-Ktlch 47 B-Kt5 R x Bch
43 K-Kt4 B xR 48 K-R4 Kt-B3!
Now Kotov is ready to try again White still has a Queen against
to find the decisive line. His Rook and two pawns but Kotov
precious pieces are being thinned
plays inexorably for mate. Now
out: only Knight and two Rooks he threatens 49 . . . , R-R4 mate.
are left to finish the job. White
is still a vast amount of material
ahead and he needs only a move 49 Kt-Kt3
or two of respite from the checks This propitiatory sacrifice C!f
to get it into action . another piece is forced, and it
brings the material situation to
44 K x B something like equality. But
Black will not be denied his mate.
49 . . . R x Kt
Not 49 . . . , P x Kt of course, for
White would be only too pleased
to play 50 Q x R. Now for one
moment Black does not threaten
mate in one, and the white Queen
can make a despairing effort to
get into the game.
50 Q x QP R(6)-Kt3
51 Q-Kt8ch R-Ktl
Resigns.
44 . . . R-B2 Certainly the most spec�acular
Black must operate with forcing King-Hunt ever seen m the
moves, but this does not neces- World Championship series.
36
The Russian Championship i s b y far the strongest national cham
pionship in the world-stronger than many international events.
When a nineteen-year-old Latvian found his way into the final in
94 THE KING-HUNT
January, 1956, there was some surprise. When he finished one point
behind the winners there was astonishment. We who know the
subsequent history of Mikhail Tal (born 1936) tend to take the sheer
fantasy of his early games as a matter of course; at the time the
veterans could hardly believe their eyes, but decided to wait for
another tournament to see whether he could keep it up.
TAL SIMAGIN
XXIII Championship of the U.S.S.R., Leningrad 1956
Caro-Kann
1 P-K4 P-QB3 11 Q x B
2 P-Q4 P-Q3
Tal's reputation had preceded
him. Whether it was wise for
Simagin-an experienced master,
nineteen years senior to Tal-to
adopt not merely the con
servative Caro-Kann but this
patent, ultra-conservative ver
sion of it is doubtful. Probably
nothing could have pleased Tal
better.
3 Kt-QB3 Kt-B3
4 P-B4 Q-Kt3
5 Kt-B3 B-Kt5 11 . . . P-KR3
6 B-K2 QKt-Q2 The master calls the youngster's
7 P-K5 bluff, forcing him to choose
True to his temperament Tal between sacrifice and ignomin
opens battle without waiting to ious retreat. The idea that any
castle or complete the develop one should ever have provoked
ment of his minor pieces. The Tal by confronting him with such
black K-side is cluttered up and a choice is now hardly believable.
White has no intention of giving Without more ado the hunt is on.
him time to play P-K3 or P
KKt3 and release his Bishop. 12 Kt x BP! K x Kt
13 P-B5! P x KP
7 ... Kt-Q4 14 BP x Pch K xP
8 0-0 Kt x Kt A Knight is a reasonable enough
To Tal, at least at this stage of price to pay for a King on K3
his career, doubled pawns meant while the white heavy pieces
merely another open line for a have plenty of open lines at their
Rook. disposal. White seems to have a
choice of inviting continuations.
9 P x Kt P-K3
10 Kt-Kt5 B xB (See diagram on page 95)
THE KING-HUNT 95
19 Q-Kt3! B-K2
20 Q x Pch K-Q3
21 P x Pch Kt x P
22 R-Qich K-K3
23 Q-Kt3ch K-B4
24 R-Blch K-K5
25 R-Klch K-B4
26 P-Kt4ch!
Tal's resources are inexhaustible.
Position after 14 . . . KxP If this pawn is taken either by
King or Knight 27 Q-K6ch
15 R-Ktl!! wins a piece, and soon mates.
This fantastic move, which would
not have crossed the mind of 26 . . . K-B3
most players, is recognizable 27 R-Blch K-Kt3
today as pure Tal. If Black 28 Q-K6ch K-R2
refuses the Rook, White has Simagin resigns himself at last to
simply placed it in play with gain the loss of a piece. 28 . . . , B-B3
of tempo, and after taking the would not save it: 29 Q-B5ch,
K-pawn will soon be cutting K-B2; 30 Q x Kt!
Black to pieces on the centre
files. 29 Q x Kt KR-Kl
30 R-B7! B-Bl
15 QxR 31 Q-B5ch K-Ktl
16 Q-B4ch! Castled at last? Black finally
The point is that the black King gets his Rooks into play, and
must now move to a black square, the tempo of the game slackens.
after which the black Queen will But White is now comfortably
be lost by a discovered attack. ahead and soon forces a won
ending :
16 . . . K-Q3
17 B-R3ch K-B2 32 K-B2 B-B4ch
18 R x Q B xB 33 K-Kt3 R-K6ch
For one moment Black seems to 34 K-R4 QR-Kl
have obtained Rook, Bishop and 35 R x Pch!
Knight for his Queen, but the Even at this late stage Tal
key to the whole combination is takes the elegant way. In return
the double threat contained in for the desperado Rook he g�ts
White's next move, which leaves the Bishop and one of the Q-s1de
Black the choice of giving up the pawns. The resulting passed
Bishop or allowing the King pawn, coupled with the � xposure
Hunt to start all over again. of the black King, gives the
To the delight of the reader he Queen an easy win against the
chooses the latter course and Tal two Rooks.
96 THE KING-HUNT
35 K xR 41 Q-Q8ch K-K5
36 Q x B R( l)-K3 42 P-R6 K-B6
37 Q x RPch K-Kt3 43 P-R7 R-K7
38 Q-R8 K-B3 A last hope: 44 P-R8(Q), R x
Black cannot even snatch the P mate!
QB-pawn; 38 . . . , R x P ; 39 Q
Kt8ch, K-B3; 40 Q-R8ch and 44 Q-Q3ch R(3)-K6
41 Q x R. 45 Q x R(3)ch! Resigns.
An appropriate finish to this
39 P-R4 game, which has been played
This is the winner. throughout with such magnifi
cent verve. Whichever way
39 . . . K-K4 Black re-takes, the R-pawn
40 P-R5 K-Q4 queens next move.
37
The next game must surely be unique among King-Hunts. Bot
vinnik is the winner, and just as in Game No. 26, played twenty-one
years earlier, he chases the black King from KKtl to QKt7. The
difference is this : that whereas the 1935 result was obtained by
means of a barrage of checks, the present hunt is carried out, from
beginning to end, without a single check! Playing it over, one catches
a whiff of brimstone in the air and gets a strong impression that some
sort of black magic is involved.
BoTVINNIK GLIGORIC
XII Olympiad, Moscow 1956
English Opening
8 P-R5
With the black Knight on KB3
it would have been much more
difficult to force this advance.
8 ... B-Q2
9 B x Kt B xB Position after 9 . . RP x P in the
.
10 P x P RP x P Morra-Suttles game
11 B-Kt2
12 R x Rch B xR
13 Q-R6 B x Ktch
Black has virtually no choice, for
White threatens not only Q x B
but also Kt-KKt5. This latter
move is not prevented by 13 . . .,
B-B3, for after 14 Kt-KKt5
Black could not capture.
14 P x B P-K3
15 Kt-Kt5
Flohr, the perfectionist, sugg
11 Q-Bl!! ested that 15 K-Q2 would have
Thus the Queen forces her way been still better, inducing Black
into the black game. to defend with 15 . . ., Q-K2,
An interesting echo of all this and only then 16· Kt-Kt5.
occur:red in the game Morra The idea is that Black would have
Suttles at the Tel-Aviv Olympiad been deprived of the defensive
eight years later: 1 P-K4, P resource which he now employs.
KKt3; 2 P-KR4, B-Kt2; 3 Kt
-QB3, Kt-QB3; 4 P-R5, P 15 . . . K-K2!
Q3; 5 B-B4, Kt-Q5 ; 6 P-Q3, Thus the black Queen is given an
Kt-R3; 7 B x Kt, B x B ; s KKt avenue to the K-side. Neverthe
-K2, B-Kt5; 9 P x P, RP x P; less, this voluntary move of the
(see next diagram) 1 0 Q-Bl!, black King is the first of a long,
B-R4'· 1 1 P-B4 P-K4· long trail.
12 Kt ; Kt, B x P; rn' 0-0, B ;_
Q; 1 4 B x Pch, K-Q2; 15 B 16 K-Q2 B-Kl?
K6ch, K-Kl ; 16 B-B7ch, etc. But this is a fatal change of plan.
Draw. But Botvinnik has no 16 . . ., Q-Rl would have elimin
intention of settling for perpetual ated the worst of the danger.
check. Now the Queen is enclosed again.
98 THE KING-HUNT
17 Q-Kt7 K-Q2 pawn ; so the King continues his
From now on the black King is travels.
the hare, keeping one jump ahead
of the hounds. 26 P-R4 K-R4
27 Q-Kt5 K xP
18 P-B4 Q-K2 As no reasonable defensive
19 R-Rl Kt-Ql scheme presents itself Black de
This agglomeration of black cides at least to give himself a
pieces will result before long in passed QR-pawn! But from this
not only the King but also the excursion the King will never
Queen being in danger of check return.
mate! 28 R-Rl!
This rapid transfer from the
20 Kt-K4 K-B2 north-east for service in the
21 R-R8 B-B3 south-west recalls the finish of the
22 Kt-B6! K-Kt3 fine game Alekhine-Chajes, Karls
If 22 . . . , B x B White does indeed bad 1923.
checkmate the black Queen by
23 R-K8. The tract of territory 28 . . . K-Kt6
chosen by the black King is the Into the jaws of death. But if
safest part of the board for the 28 . . . , K-R4 there follows 29
moment-but it is not safe Kt-Q5!!, Q x Q ; 30 R-Rl mate.
enough!
29 Q-R4 K-Kt7
23 B x B Kt x B 30 P-Kt4 Resigns.
24 R-R7 Kt-Ql Mate is inevitable. Probably the
25 Q x KtP! K-R3 most original game in this collec
After 25 . . . , P x Q; 26 R x Q tion, epitomizing the genius of
White soon picks up a second Botvinnik.
""' 3 8
We who live in mid-20th century have been privileged to witness
the emergence of the greatest chess prodigy of all time in Robert
Fischer. He has eclipsed the fabulous exploits of Morphy, Capa
blanca, Reshevsky, Yanofsky and Pomar, at least in point of age.
The greatest of these, Capablanca and Reshevsky, only entered the
international arena seriously at about twenty-three years of age after
being infant prodigies. Fischer was already an international grand
master at 1 5 ; while still in his 'teens he wore the battle honours of
Portoroz, Mar del Plata, Zurich, Bled, Belgrade, Leipzig, Stockholm
and Varna, to name only the most important events.
In one thing only has he been outdone. Tal won the World
Championship before his 24th birthday, but Fischer, by abstaining
THE KING-HUNT 99
from the 1964-66 and 1967-69 series, has deferred his earliest chance
of winning it until 1972, by which time he will be 29.
It is unlikely that Fischer will ever play a better game than one of
the earliest of his ever to be recorded, the win against Donald Byrne
in the Rosenwald Tournament when he was thirteen years old. Move
after move is astonishingly unexpected, and Byrne's King is event
ually chased for fourteen moves, all but one of them back and forth
along his own back rank.
D. BYRNE FISCHER
Rosenwald Tournament, New York 1956
Grurifeld Defence
6 Q-Kt3 P xP
7 Q x BP P-B3
8 P-K4 QKt-Q2
9 R-Ql Kt-Kt3
10 Q-B5
Already the game is taking an
original shape. White should 11 . . . Kt-R5!!
have played Q-Kt3 or Q-Q3 This Knight cannot be taken :
and followed with B-K2 and 12 Kt x Kt, Kt x P and then
0-0. Now his Queen has ven (i) 13 Q x KP , Q x Q;
tured too far afield. 14 B x Q, KR-Kl , etc.
(ii) 13 Q-Kt4 , Kt x B ;
10 . . . B-Kt5 14 Kt x Kt, B x R ;
Black is in sight of complete 1 5 K x B , B x P, etc.
freedom by means of KKt-Q2, (iii) 13 Q-Bl, Q-R4ch;
soon forcing P-K4. 14 Kt-B3, B x Kt, etc.
11 B-KKt5 12 Q-R3 Kt x Kt
White hopes thus to prevent 13 P x Kt Kt x P!
Black's KKt-Q2, but he is now Black's moves look like over
given cause to regret his delay sights, but he is seeing every
in getting his King into safety. thing.
100 THE KING-HUNT
14 B x P Q-Kt3! White takes the Queen and
Even the Exchange is taboo : awaits his fate. For the next
15 B x R, B x B!; 16 Q-Kt3, twenty-four moves we are treated
Kt x QBP! ; 17 Q x Kt, B-Kt5. to a very convincing King-Hunt
So White makes one last attempt by the black minor pieces.
to get castled.
18 B x Q B x Bch
15 B-B4 Kt x QBP! 19 K-Ktl Kt-K7ch
If the Knight is taken this time Black proceeds to use a string of
Black regains the piece by KR see-saw checks to pick up some
Kl with a winning game; or if material, at the same time gain
16 B x R he gets the advantage ing some useful time on the
by 16 . . . , R-Klch. But he has clock.
another move which surely Black
has overlooked: 20 K-Bl Kt x Pch
21 K-Ktl Kt-K7ch
16 B-B5 22 K-Bl Kt-B6ch
Apparently a complete refuta 23 K-Ktl P xB
tion, for White is now attacking 24 Q-Kt4
Queen, Rook and Knight; but Still Black has only two Bishops
now comes the final ferocious and two pawns for the Queen.
kick of the combination. 24 . . . , Kt x R would be answered
by 25 Q x B with chances of
survival.
24 . . . R-R5!
On this day Fischer could do no
wrong. The only way now for
White to guard his Rook would
be 25 Q-Q6, but then follows
25 . . . , Kt x R; 26 Q x Kt, R x P
with immediate destruction by
by 27 . . . , R-R8. White must
therefore concede the Rook, after
which his game is lost on material
alone; but he chivalrously---0r
16 . . . KR-Klch stubbornly-plays on, and lets us
17 K-Bl B-K3!! see how a won game is won.
An utterly fantastic position.
The combination works without a 25 Q x P Kt x R
flaw: 26 P-KR3 R xP
(i) 18 Q x Kt, Q x B! ; 27 K-R2 Kt x P
1 9 P x Q , B x Q, etc. 28 R-Kl R xR
(ii) 18 B-K2, Kt-Kt4, etc. 29 Q-Q8ch B-Bl
(iii) 18 B x B, Q-Kt4ch; 30 Kt x R B-Q4
19 K-Ktl, Kt-K7ch; 31 Kt-B3 Kt-K5
20 K-Bl, Kt-Kt6ch; 32 Q-Kt8 P-QKt4
21 K-Ktl, Q-B8ch! ; Black could, if he so wished,
22 R x Q, Kt-K7 mate. march right ahead with this
THE KING-HUNT 101
\"" 39
Tal's elders prophesied that his zest for happy-go-lucky chess would
lead him to disaster in the international arena. They were stunned
when he won the Interzonal in 1958, the Candidates in 1959 and the
World Championship in 1960. His prodigious genius was now un
deniable.
The following game against the Argentinian grandmaster Oscar
Panno is a good illustration of the rich complexity of his style at this
time.
TAL PANNO
Interzonal Tournament, Portoroz 1958
Ruy Lopez
35 Q-B6!
Tal threatens instead to win two
pieces by 36 Q-Kt5ch, K-B6;
37 Q x Bch, K-K7; 38 Q x Ktch.
35 . . . P-R3
36 Q-K5
Now the threat is 37 Q-K2
mate. What a Queen!
Position after 27 . . . B-Kt3
36 . . . R-K5
37 Q-Kt7ch K-B6
29 B-R6ch! K xB 38 Q-B3ch Kt-K6
30 Q x Reh K-Kt4 39 K-Ktl B-Kt5
31 P x Kt P xP 40 P x Kt P-KR4
31 R x P looks more natural; 41 Q-Kl
presumably Panno wanted to .
-Yet another threat of mate in
prevent 31 . . . , Q-Q8ch. Black one: 42 Q-B2 mate. Tal has
still has his Rook and two minor used the black self-blocks with
pieces against the bare Queen, great virtuosity.
but the exposure of his King
always paramount in Queen end 41 . . . R xP
ings-now tells heavily against
Black still has hopes of maki!1-g
him. White's King and pawns something of the encl.osed wh�te
also play a vital part. King, but the terrible white
Queen gives him no chance.
32 P-Kt3! B-K5
Black takes the opportunity to 42 Q-Blch K-K5
threaten something on his own 42 Q x Pch K-B6
account : 33 . . . , R-Q8ch; 34 K 44 Q-Blch K-K5
R2, R-R8 mate. 45 Q x P .
This is the last straw: White
33 P-R4ch K-Kt5 proposes to make a second Queen!
Still threatening mate ; and after
34 Q-B4ch, K-R6 Black wins 45 . . . K-Q5
at once. Surely he would have had more
of a sporting chance by 45 . · .,
40
Many players who never normally play in master tournaments get
their chance in the Olympiads. Namshil of Mongolia put up a good
fight at Leipzig against the Hungarian grandmaster Szabo (born
1917), but was worn down and finally succumbed to a ten-move
mating combination introduced by a double Rook sacrifice.
NAMSHIL SZABO
Leipzig Olympiad 1 960
King's Indian
study and announce that this is opening of the long black diag
pre�ature. Szabo himself said onal for the Bishop would be
that White should have con cheaply bought at the price of a
solidated his game by R-Bl pawn. On second thoughts White
and Kt-QI. But such patience is of the same opinion.
is not possessed by every chess
player. 21 Kt-K2 P-R5
22 Kt-Kt2 Q-R4
12 . . . Kt-Kt3 23 P x P B xP
13 P-Kt3 24 Kt x B Q x Kt
This is certainly unwise; it is the The breach has been made, but
sort of move which Steinitz the black attack is running out of
roundly condemned eighty or steam with three of his pieces
ninety years ago-the voluntary away on the K-side.
weakening of one's K-position
when there is not an absolute 25 B-B4 Kt-Q2
need to do so. 26 B-Kt3 Q-R4
27 R-B6 Kt-B4
13 . . . P-Kt5 By cutting off the Rook's retreat
1 4 B x Kt Q xB in this way Black induces White
1 5 Kt-R4 Q-R4 to sacrifice the Exchange present
16 B-B4 B-Q2 ly, and by doing so Namshil gets
17 Kt-Kt2 B x P! some counterplay. After the
The sort of combination which game Szabo said that Black's
the grandmaster takes in his correct strategy would have been
stride. The Bishop, apparently to play 27 . . . , P-B4, opening a
interested only in QR5, swings file on the K-side.
casually over to KKt5. It cannot
be captured, for after 18 . . . , 28 Kt-Bl P-B4
Kt x KP; 19 Q moves, Kt 29 Q-QB2 P xP
B6ch the combined powers of the 30 P x P R-B6
Knight, Queen and newly re 31 R x Kt!
leased K-Bishop would end the Undoubtedly the only policy for
game very quickly. White. Black's pressure is be
coming intolerable, with threats
18 B-Q3 B-Q2 of R-QB6 and B-R3.
19 Kt-B4 Q-B4
Black makes room for the QR 31 . . . P xR
pawn to advance and make a 32 P-Q6ch K-Rl
breach for the Rooks. 33 Q-B4 R-B6
34 Q-K6 Q-R3!
20 R-QBl The beginning of an elegant com
Threatening to discover on the bination. The threat of 35 . . . ,
black Queen by 21 Kt x KP. P-B5 compels White to vacate
QKt3 for the pawn advance.
20 . . . P-QR4!
Szabo cheerfully ignores the 35 B-Q5
threat. If White cares to win the
K-pawn he is welcome to it. The (See diagram on page 106)
106 THE KING-HUNT
King to be mated on his KR4.
37 K x R B-R3ch
38 K-Ql Q-Q6ch
39 K-Kl B-Q7ch
Here Namshil resigned ; but as
the rest of the King-Hunt is
forced we take the liberty of
including it.
40 K-B2
If 40 K-Ql Black mates in two .
41
Bora Ivkov (born 1933) became Junior World Champion in 1951 and
looks like becoming the natural successor to Gligoric as leader of
Yugoslav chess. In the Varna Olympiad of 1962 he won a remarkable
game which did not receive much publicity, being :. little too long for
most of the magazines and columns. Robert Byrne, brother of
Fischer's opponent in Game 38, was battered by the young grand
master to such effect that he had to make no fewer than twenty-five
King-moves, almost all in the little triangle KR2, KR3, KKt2.
IvKov R. BYRNE
Varna Olympiad 1962
French Defence
27 Q-K7ch K-Kt3
28 Q-B6ch K-R2
29 Q-B7ch K-R3
30 P-Kt4!
Nicely timed : 30 . . . , Q x BP;
20 Kt x BP! R x Kt 31 P-Kt5 mate!
21 Q-Kt5ch K-Bl
22 R x Rch K xR 30 . . . P xP
23 Q-B6ch 31 Q-B6ch
This is evidently the position The next stage is to win the Kt
which White had visualized. pawn with check.
Whenever he checks from KB6
or on the back rank the black 31 . . . K-R2
King is tied to the defence of his 32 Q-B5ch K-R3
Rook, and White can do a fair 33 Q-Kt5ch K-R2
amount of damage with his 34 Q-R5ch K-Kt2
checks. But the situation re 35 Q x Pch K-R2
mains quite tricky, for White has Now the ideal plan for White
only two pieces and one of them would be to drive the black
is right out of play. If he is to King on to the Kt-file and then
achieve more than a perpetual play K-Q2, threatening R
check he must mobilize the Rook, KKtl with check. This proves to
and any roundabout method of be an impossibility, but the series
doing so would allow Black to of exploratory checks which fol
bring Queen and Knight into lows serves the incidental purpose
action. I vkov has set himself an of gaining moves as the time
intriguing problem and his solu control draws near.
tion to it provides one of the most
fascinating passages of play in 36 Q-B5ch K-R3
this book. 37 Q-Kt5ch K-R2
38 Q-R5ch K-Kt2
23 ... K-Ktl 39 Q-Kt4ch
24 Q x KtPch K-Bl The position is identical with
25 Q-B6ch K-Ktl that on move 35. No doubt
26 Q x Pch K-Kt2 Black is keeping a sharp look-
THE KING-HUNT 109
out for the draw by repetition of 47 Q-B4ch K-R2
position. 48 Q-B5ch
No harm in gaining a little more
39 . . . K-R2 time.
40 Q-B5ch
Now it is identical with move 36. 48 . . . K-R3
49 R x R QxR
40 . . . K-R3 50 P-K6
4 1 Q-K6ch K-R2 The threat of P-K7 and Q
42 Q-K7ch K-R3 KB8 brings the end in sight.
43 Q-Kt5ch K-R2
44 K-Q2! 50 . . . Q-Kt2
Black, of course, has resolutely 51 Q x P
refused to quit the R-file, so The cruel annexation of a fourth
Ivkov takes the plunge. The and then a fifth pawn simply
Rook is to come across, even underlines Black's helplessness.
though not with check. This
means that Byrne now has one 51 . . . Q-B3
precious move at his disposal for 52 Q x P Q x BPch
strengthening his defence. After all he has gone through
Black probably found consider
44 . . . Q-Kl able satisfaction in this check,
45 R-KKtl though it does him little good:
Each side now has Queen and the white King has an even
Rook in action but still there is better shelter on QKt2.
no peace for the black King.
Mate in one is threatened, and as 53 K-Bl Q-B5ch
soon as the black Rook emerges it He must attend to rescuing his
will be exchanged off. The wretched Knight.
white pawns will then prove too
much for the black Knight. The 54 K-Kt2 Kt-B2
White Queen is retained for 55 P-K7 Resigns.
harrying the enemy King: in The Knight which has j ust made
the absence of Queens the black its second move (out of 54!) is
King would suddenly become a now lost. The way in which a
strong piece. denuded King can paralyse a
whole game could hardly be
45 . . . R-Ktl better illustrated than in this en
46 Q-B5ch K-R3 counter.
42
Chess played by post is far from being the long-drawn-out dull affair
some players imagine. The chance to consult books (this is perfectly
legitimate) lends precision to the opening and ending stages, while the
opportunity of analysing by moving the pieces to one's heart's content
llO THE KING-HUN T
brings about deep and surprising combinative play which would
be difficult to handle over the board. We had one example in Game
12. Here is another, in which a brilliant sacrificial attack sweeps the
black King right down to the eighth rank to be mated.
l\fosER UNDERWOOD
Played by Mail in Canada during 1962
Sicilian
8 B-Q3 Kt-KB3 21 Kt x P!
9 0-0 0-0 If Black takes this Knight the
THE KING-HUNT Il l
22 . . . K-Bl
If 22 . . . , K x Kt White mates in
two by 23 P-Kt6ch and 24 Q
R8.
23 Q-R8ch K x Kt
24 P-Kt6ch! K xP
25 R-Kt2ch!!
All this is beautifully played. If
Black refuses the Rook by 25 . . . ,
Position after 20 . . . Kt-Kt3 K-B4 White has 26 Kt-Q6
(double check again), K-B3;
attack will soon win through; 27 Q x P mate. If, on the other
e.g. 21 . . . , K x Kt ; 22 Q x P, hand, he plays 25 . . . , Kt x R then
R-Rl ; 23 Kt-Q6 eh! B x Kt; the white Bishop is freed from
24 B x Ktch, K-K2; 25 Q x Pch attack and a discovered single
and 26 Q x Reh. But Black has check from it is playable.
a promising-looking resource:
25 . . . Kt x R
21 . . . Kt x P 26 Kt-Q6ch K-Kt4
This way he will at least destroy If 26 . . . , K-B3 White's other
the white-square Bishop--0r so Rook comes across.
it seems.
27 Q x Pch K-R5
22 Q x Pch!! 28 Q-R6ch K-Kt5
The postman innocently drops a 29 B-K2ch B-B6
grenade through Mr. Under 30 B x Bch K xB
wood's letter-box. If Black takes 31 R-Blch K-K7
the Queen, White simply plays If 31 . . . , K-Kt5 White mates in
23 Kt-B6, and although there two by 32 P-R3ch and 33 Kt
are two ways of interposing to K4.
the Bishop, one way of capturing
the Bishop and three ways of 32 R-B2ch K-Q8
capturing the Knight, all are 33 Q-Bl mate.
equally invalid. It is double Or 32 . . . , K-Q6; 33 Q-Q2
check and therefore mate. mate. Another advantage of
But this is not all: Moser's postal chess is that when you get
letter proceeds to announce that a lovely forced sequence like
he now mates in twelve! The this your opponent doesn't get a
rest of the letter, which Under- chance to resign!
43
Jonathan Penrose (born 1934) has been one of the most successful of
all British champions-a worthy successor to Atkins and Yates. In
the 1963 Enschede Tournament of seventeen competitors he finished
just one point behind the winner, Gligoric. The most spectacular
of his ten wins was scored against Popov of Bulgaria, the black King
having to make a thirteen-move trek from KKtl to QR7.
PENROSE PoPov
Enschede Tournament 1963
Sicilian
13 K-Rl Kt-K2
14 P-B4
A shrewd move. If Black should
push P-Q5 White gets an ex
cellent square for his Knight at
K4. On the other hand if Black
refrains from this advance the
threat to open the QB-file will
make it out of the question for
him to castle Q-side; and if he
castles K-side White is nicely
poised for an attack with pieces.
THE KING-HUNT 113
14 . .
. 0-0 assume that it was accidental.
15 Q-R5
As usual the absence of a Knight 21 . . . B-Q2
from KB3 brings immediate dan Black has almost equalized. He
ger. now intends 22 . . . , B-Kt4,
destroying the white Bishop and
15 P-R3 remaining with a tenable major
16 R-B3 P xP piece ending.
17 Kt x P
22 P-QR3 Q-R5
The Knight threatens to pene If Black had had any inkling of
trate powerfully to Q6. A plaus what was in Penrose's mind he
ible defence would be 17 . . . , would certainly have played
R-Ql so as to answer 18 Kt 22 . . . , Q-K2. But he is deter
Q6 with R x Kt (19 P x R, Q x Q). mined to play 23 . . . , B-Kt4.
But White could simply retire
18 Q-R4 which not only unpins
his K-pawn but pins the black
Knight and enforces Kt-Q6.
17 . . . Kt-B4
18 B x Kt Q x Kt
Black has escaped the danger
from the Knight but the pressure
from three pieces in the region
of his King is still serious.
19 B-Q3 Q-Kt5
20 R-Kt3!
White threatens Q x RP, and 23 R x P!!
the obvious defence 20 . . . , Q x The dramatic start to one of the
BP would only invite 21 R most spectacular King-Hunts of
KBl , after which the black recent years. It is interesting to
King's position would rapidly know from Penrose himself that
be over-run by the combined he had considered the combina
weight of four pieces. Black tion two moves previously, when
takes the only alternatin : his Queen stood on R5. Being
unable to see his way through all
20 . . . K-Rl the complications he dismissed
21 Q-K2 the whole idea as unplayable in
A puzzling retreat : perhaps he such an important game. (This
was hoping to force his Queen to was a zonal tournament with a
K4 later on. At any rate the bearing on the World Champio_n
move conceals a vicious trap : ship.) Post-mortem analysis,
21 . . . , Q x BP; 22 R-Kt4!, however, established that at
checkmating the black Queen in move 21 the sacrifice would have
mid-board. But the offer of the been even stronger than it is at
pawn is so blatant that Popov move 23.
could hardly be expected to In view of the fact that Popov
114 THE KING-HUNT
is now threatening to draw any 33 Q-Kt7ch, K-Kl ; 34 Q
way by exchanging the Bishops, K7 mate, but also 32 Q-R6ch,
and since the Rook sacrifice can K-Kl ; 33 Q-R8 mate ; or
hardly yield less than a perpetual 32 . . . , K-Ktl ; 33 B x Rch,
check, Penrose now starts his K x B; 34 Q-Kt7ch, K-Kl ;
hunt, and conducts it triumph 35 Q-K7 mate. The attempt
antly across all eight files and 31 . . . , B-Kl is no defence :
seven ranks. White still mates in three by
32 Q-R6ch, etc.
23 . . . K xR
2 4 Q-Kt4ch K-Rl 31 . . . P-K4
25 Q-R4 By creating a flight on K3 Black
The threat of 26 Q x Pch and just contrives to escape the mat
27 Q-R7 mate now compels ing variations given above; but
Black to shed two more pawns, now he starts on his journey
after which the sacrifice of a down the white diagonal, straight
whole Rook looks a little less as an arrow from KKtl to QR7.
vast.
32 Q-R6ch K-Ktl
33 B x Rch K xB
25 . . . P-B4
34 Q-Kt7ch K-K3
2 6 P x P e.p. R-B2
35 Q-K7ch K-Q4
27 Q x Pch K-Ktl
Here he had the option of doub
28 Q-Kt6ch K-Bl
ling back by 35 . . . , K-B4; but
29 Q-R6ch
then would follow: 36 Q x Pch,
These last two checks not only
K-Kt3; 37 Q-Kt5ch, K-B2.
gain useful time but also give
Now there is no black K-pawn ;
Black the opportunity of trying
therefore 38 R-Kl!, R-KKtl ;
to run a�ay by 29 . . ., K-Kl,
39 R-K7ch, K-Bl; 40 Q
after which 30 Q-R8ch, R
R6ch and mate next move.
B l ; 31 B-Kt6ch would win
two pieces. 36 Q x Pch K-B5
Or 36 . . . , K-B3; 37 R-B lch,
29 . . . K-Ktl K-Kt3 ; 38 Q-B5 mate.
Thus White is assured of his
perpetual check; but how is he to 37 R-Blch K-Kt6
win? Or 37 . . . , K-Q6; 38 R-B3ch,
K-Q7; 39 Q-K3ch, K-Q8 ;
30 Q-Kt5ch K-Bl 40 R-Bl mate.
31 B-Kt6!
This is the winning move. Pen 38 Q-B3ch K-R7
rose threatens not only 32 B x R, 39 P-QKt4 Resigns.
after which K x B would allow He is mated by R-Rl .
44
Victor Korchnoi (born 1931) and Leonid Stein (born 1934) each won
the U.S .S.R. Championship three times during the period 1960-67.
These two fine players have thus between them taken this strongest
national championship six times in eight years-Petrosyan and
Spassky taking the other two.
The following game was played not in the actual Soviet Cham
pionship but in the Soviet Zonal Tournament of seven top contenders
for world honours which was played during the early months of 1964.
On this occasion it was Stein's turn to get the better of a rousing
encounter.
STEIN KoRCHNOI
Soviet Zonal Tournament, Moscow 1964
Sicilian
12 B-B2
This excellent retreat not only
defends the Q-Knight but threat
ens to win a piece by 13 R-Ktl,
Q-R6; 1 4 Kt-Q5!, Q x Q;
1 5 Kt x Bch!
23 Kt-Kt5
12 . . . Q-Kt5 With the magnificent threat
13 P-K5 P xP 24 R x Kt, Kt x R; 25 B x Kt.
14 P x P Kt-Kl Black's only way then to save
He cannot play 14 . . . , Kt-Q4 King and Queen appears to be
because of 15 Kt-B5!, P x Kt; 25 . . . , Q-Kt3ch; 26 K-Rl,
16 Kt x Kt and again White P-KR4; but after that comes
will win the Bishop on Black's 27 Q x P!!, P x Q; 28 B-R7
K2. mate. With Steinitzian skill
Korchnoi returns both his extra
1 5 B-Q3 Q-R4 pawns to demonstrate that his
1 6 Kt-K4 position is still tenable.
This is the way it usually works
out. 'Stein has a six-piece attack 23 . . . P-K4!
against the black King while the 24 B x KP P-R3!
black Q-side pieces are as yet 25 B x Kt P x Kt
untouched. Yet Korchnoi's de 26 Q x P Kt x B
fensive skill brings him within an 27 R x Kt Q-Q5ch
ace of survival. 28 K-Rl Q-KKt5
Black has achieved what looks
16 . . . Kt-Q2 very like equality. The point
1 '7 Kt-KB3 P-KKt3 KKt3 is protected against sacri
1 8 B-Q4 Kt-Kt2 fice, and he is ready to complete
THE KING-HUNT 117
31 R x B!!
And suddenly it's a King-Hunt.
43 Q-Q6ch!
31 . .
. p xR The elegant finishing touch to a
32 R-K3! Q-Kt2 masterpiece.
33 Q-R4 Q-R8ch
34 K-R2 KR-Kl
43 K xB
yet again Korchnoi has managed
to save both King and Queel?-, 44 R�B3ch K-Kt4
but now he is at the end of his Or 44 . . . , K-K5 ; 45 Q-Q3ch
:
resources. His Queen and o�e K-K4 ; 46 R-B5ch, K-K3
Rook are in the corners, and his 47 Q-Q5ch, K-K2 ; 48 R x p
mate.
King is now hunted across to
QB3, back to KR4 and finally
home again to be mated o!1 the 45 Q-B4ch K-R4
square which he now occupies. 46 P-Kt4ch K-Kt3
Or 46 . . . , K-R5; 47 Q-R6
35 R-Kt3ch K-Bl mate.
36 Q-R6ch K-K2
37 R-K3ch K-Q2 47 Q x Pch Resigns.
38 B x Pch K-B2 The finish might have been 47 . . . '
39 Q-B4ch K-B3 K-R3; 48 Q-R5ch, K-Kt,2;
49 R-B7ch, K-Ktl (Home. ) ;
Or 39 . . . , K-Kt3; 40 Q-Kt4ch, 50 Q-R7 mate.
45
For our last game we return once more to the Olympiads. Since
their beginning in London in 1927 these great biennial gatherings
have produced something over twenty thousand games-a vast
reservoir of chess at every conceivable opening, played by every
grade of player from World Champions to unashamed skittlers.
PRINS DAY
Lugano Olympiad 1968
Sicilian
22 P x Kt
But there was no need for White
to accept the offer. He could
simply defend his K-pawn by
22 Q-Q3 with a playable game.
22 . . . P xP
17 Kt x KtP! ? 23 Kt-Kl?
Regaining his pawn. After Now he really is lost. Steinitz
White's forthcoming 18 Kt-B3, would certainly have relin
attacking an undefended Bishop quished his winnings by 23 K
on KR2 and simultaneously pin B2 with fair chances still. The
ning a Knight on QB5, he is attempt to keep the piece is
certain to get his piece back. fatal.
The idea is ingenious and tactic
ally sound. Positionally, how 23 . . . R-R8ch
ever, it is questionable, as soon 24 K-B2
appears.
17 . . . Q x Kt
18 Kt-B3 Q-B3!
Unpinning the Knight and also
preventing 19 Kt x B because of
the reply Q x Pch. But White
still regains his piece.
19 B x Kt! B-B5!
All fascinating. Black now
threatens both 20 . . . , Q x B and
20 . . . , B x R.
20 B-K3 24 . . . P-Kt6ch!
This saves everything and is the Did Prins oYerlook this? Or
only way to do so. What Prins Black's next?
failed to foresee, however, when
starting his Q-side diversion with 25 K x P R x Kt!
his 1 6th and l 7th moves was how 26 Q x R Q x Pch
vulnerable his King would now 27 K-B4
be. Black is able to wreck the Or 27 K-R4, Q-R7ch; 28 K
defences and start a murderous Kt5, P-B3ch; 29 K-Kt4, P
King-Hunt. B4ch; 30 K-Kt5, Q-R3 mate.
120 THE KING-HUNT
27 . . . P-Kt4ch 30 K-Kt7 Q-Kt3ch
28 K-K5 (�-K5ch 31 K-R8 0-0-0
And White resigned quickly to mate!
spare his King the ultimate in A neat partner to Game 5 in
dignity of: which Morphy, l l O years earlier,
played 0-0 mate.
29 K-B6 Q-B4ch
W.H.Cozens
THE KING-HUNT
IN CHESS
With its wide-open style of play, often breathtaking sacrifices,
and bold assault, the King-Hunt offers chess players one of the
most dramatic situations possible in the game of chess. When a
King is forced from a secure stronghold into the middle of the
board, the ensuing bombardment can he withering. This collection
of 45 games brings together some of the best attacks in the annals
of chess. Ranging in time from 1844 to 1968, the games exhibit
different styles of play and will be highly instructive for any reader
who wants to improve his own attacking skill.