Jan Van Reek - Grand Strategy 60 Games by Boris Spassky PDF
Jan Van Reek - Grand Strategy 60 Games by Boris Spassky PDF
Jan Van Reek - Grand Strategy 60 Games by Boris Spassky PDF
STES-41
ISBN 90-74827-41-1
Margraten 2000
Grand Strategy
Cover:
Taiso Yoshitoshi:
The late warlord Shingen sits on a golden cloud and plans
the prophylactic strategy for a campaign on Mount Fuji
Ando Hiroshige:
Snowy alley in Edo
Page 14:
Taiso Yoshitoshi:
Moonlight patrol
Page 130:
Ando Hiroshige:
Boris watches a rice field
Contents
1. Introduction 7
2. Struggle 15
3. Prophylaxis 79
A. Restraint 81
B. Consolidation 101
C. Counterattack 114
games.
When Boris failed for the second time in a crucial tournament, Bondarevsky
became his trainer. His home analysis of adjourned positions became more adequate
and his endgame technique was improved. When an elegant victory could not be
achieved, the game became a heavy and long drawn-out battle. Boris the Fighter
defeated Petrosian in a match.
The world championship became a turning point. Spassky never had the
intention of defeating everybody everywhere every time. He was only motivated by
important matches and tournaments. Otherwise, he preferred tennis to chess. The
great importance of chess for Soviet propaganda did not interest him at all. When he
lost his title to Fischer, the communist authorities started to bother him. In a process
lasting several years, he migrated to France. He was a top-ten player from 1955-
1985. Spassky has now been active as a professional player for half a century.
The Soviet school did not start from fascination by the game itself, but it was
founded as an instrument for Stalinist propaganda. Victories in tournaments and
matches were the aim. Privileges were the rewards for players. State professionalism
came into being.
Botvinnik developed training programs and analytical methods of a high
standard. An important purpose is to let the opponent play poorly. The trick is to lure
him into an unfamiliar position of direct combat, which the professional has studied
thoroughly during home analysis. Later Kasparov refined the technique by the use of
computers. Although the method is rational, it lacks scientific depth. The
understanding of hypermodern play is limited. Only Boleslavsky differed.
A captivation by chess leads to intuitive understanding. The pioneer is
Chigorin. He gives his opponent a fighting chance in a real struggle. it seems that an
intuitive player simply knows what to do. 'Hand' Smyslov is a great example, because
he ·only has to reach out and a good move is made'. He is able to play hypermodern
chess, although he cannot rationalise its principles.
8 Grand Strategy
However, the intuitive approach is far from irrational. Tactical calculations and
evaluations of positional features are important during a game, and planning is based
on reasoning.
In Spassky's intuitive approach, there are two key stages during a game of
chess: plan and crisis. A plan (or conception) has to be developed after the opening.
Play continues ('the fruit ripens') until the crisis (crucial moment or critical position) is
reached. Only one solution leads to the planned aim or the escape from doom.
Grand Strategy
William Cluley wrote about the main principle of chess strategy in 1857: "If we
consider the two parties at the onset of a game, we see an exact balance of power,
position, territory, and liberty of action. The first player usually threatens a destruction
of this balance, while the second constantly seeks to maintain it, neither party gaining
an advantage as long as it is conserved. Thus we recognise the Law of Equality, or
of drawn game. All legitimate play, how long a game may be extended, or however
varied, must end in a draw."
Steinitz only applied the ideas brilliantly, Lasker attributed the theory to him. Ken
Whyld corrected this mistake.
Theory about chess strategy made a leap forward in 1927, when Euwe wrote
sagacious articles about pawns in the centre and the attack on the king (§ 2A-B), and
Nimzowitsch published his system of prophylaxis (chapter 3). Van Reek completed
(§ 2A, § 2C-D and chapter 4), clarified (chapter 3) and combined these approaches
into a general theory for human and computer chess in 1997.
The general movement of chessmen is described by strategy. Principles of
strategy are easy to understand and difficult to apply, like the rules of chess for the
specific movement of a chessman.
Strategy typifies how the two opposing lines move forward. 1) Chessmen
move directly forward during an attack in the centre or an attack on the king. 2)
Movement is indirectly forward in a flank attack or encirclement. 3) The opponent's
scope is restricted, before forward movement begins during restraint. 4) Control over
one's own territory is the aim of consolidation; forward movement might be restricted
to a sortie. 5) Both sides move forward during a counterattack.
The application of strategic concepts has substantial restrictions:
the description consists of an inexact interpretation;
there have to be two opposing lines; therefore, strategy does not apply to a
middlegame melee or to some endings with few chessmen;
long-term movement only might occur in the mind of by a player; the response
of the opponent may limit the implementation of a plan to one ply on the board.
Before we present the theory of strategy, two cases of steamrollering are
shown. Sometimes an unprepared attack decides the game immediately.
Steamrollering
When a professional plays with an amateur, the game often ends in a quick
mate. lt looks to the master as if the beginner helps by playing weakening moves.
The fool's mate (1. g4 e5 2. (3 ¥*'h4#) ends the game in the quickest way. A mate
on the seventh rank occurs more often (1. e4 e5 2. iic4 <8c6 3. 'tWhS liJf6 4. '&xf7#;
the scholar's mate). Quick losses are rare in tournament play, but sometimes the
defender is steamrolled easily. We give two examples.
1.1. Bent Larsen - Spassky 10 .ilxf6 '&xf6 11. li:Jc3 or 10. li:Jc3.
.
Belgrade 1970
10. f2-f4??
l. b2-b3 e7-e5
2.. �.cl-b2 li:Jb8-c6
3. c2-c4 li:Jg8-f6
4. li:Jg1-f3 e5-e4
5. li:Jf3-d4 .¥Lf8-c5
Spassky plays naturally against the
slight provocation.
6. li:Jd4xc6 d7xc6
7. e2-e3 �.c8-f5
8. "i!Yd1-c2 �d8-e7
9. �fl-e2 0-0-0
Proper development continues with
Introduction 11
The king's side is opened for the A knight and rook have been
entrance of Black's pieces. sacrificed in order to make a move
10. ...... tLJf6-g4! similar to the fool's mate.
11. g2-g3 17. we1-d1 g2xfl�t
Less resistance is offered by 11. White resigns, because Black can
0-0 .!:txd2! (even better than 11. .. deliver mate in three.
'+Wh4) 12. tiJxd2 tiJxe3. 0-1
1 1. ...... h7-h5
12. h2-h3 This game shows Spassky at his
The normal continuation 12. tiJc3 is best. Play in the middle game is
punished by 12. .. .!:txd2! 13. '+Wxd2 razor-sharp. A great combination
he3. concludes the game at once.
12. ...... h5-h4!
13. h3xg4
A beautiful variation is 13. bg4 1.2. Spassky - Klaus Darga
.b:g4 14. hxg4 hxg3 15. .!:tg1 .!:th1! Varna 1962
16. .!:txh1 g2 17. .!:tgl 'Y!¥h4t 18. rJ.;>e2
(18. rJ.;>d1 'Y!¥f2) 18. .. �xg4t 19. rJ.;>f2 1. e2-e4 c7-c5
'l!Vf3t 20. we1 �e7! 2. tLJg 1-f3 tiJb8-c6
13. ...... h4xg3 3. d2-d4 c5xd4
14. nh1-g1 4. tiJf3xd4 e7-e6
5. tiJb1-c3 'i¥r'd8-c7
6. ii.c1-e3 a7-a6
7. a2-a3 b7-b5
8. �fl-e2 ii.c8-b 7
9. f2-f4 tiJg8-f6
10. �e2-f3 d7-d6
11. 0-0 tLJc6-a5?!
12. 'i!Yd1-e2 tiJa5-c4?
Black has chosen the Taimanov.
The knight's manouevre is known
from the Scheveningen variation
(with a bishop on d7). This should
be preceded by 12. .. ii.e7 and 13. ..
Four white pieces are clustered on
0-0, or 12. .. .!:tc8.
the queen's side. Black can take
advantage of the dislocation with
14. .. �h4.
14. ...... .!:th8-h1!
This sacrifice is even stronger and
decides the game immediately. A
major piece is sacrificed for the
opening of a diagonal.
15. .!:tg1xh1 g3-g2
16. .!:th1-fl
The continuation 16. .!:tg1 'i!Yh4t 17.
wd1 'Y!¥h1 is hopeless too.
16. ...... �e7-h4t
12 Grand Strategy
White opens the centre. A vigorous The continuation 22. .. <;t>e7 23.
attack begins. '!Wh4t <;t>e8 24. 'lWg4 'lWc6 25. 'lWxg7
13. e4-e5! tt:lc4xe3 transposes to the game.
Euwe mentions the tactical point 23. 'lWa4-g4 'lWb5-c6
13. .. dxe5? 14. tt:ldxb5! axb5 15. 24. 'lWg4xg7
tt:lxb5 'lWc8 16. hb7 'lWxb7 17. The invasion of the seventh rank is
'lWxc4. decisive.
14. 'lWe2xe3 d6xe5 24. ...... .l:l:h8-f8
15. f4xe5 tt:lf6-d7 25. .l:l:flxf8t �c5xf8
16. �f3xb7 'iWc7xb7 26. 'iWg7xh7
17. 'lWe3-f4 tt:ld7-b6 Black is helpless.
18. na1-d1 26. ...... .l:l:a8-c8
A quiet move intensifies White's 27. 'flfh7-g6t
influence in the centre. l-0
18. ...... tt:lb6-a4 ?! There might follow 27. .. we? 28.
Black has to reorganise his defence .:td6 'flfc4 29. 'lWh7t we8 30. 'lWd7
with 18 . .. nd8 19. tt:le4 tt:lc4 20. b3 mate.
tt:lxa3 21. c3 1:1: d7, but his position
remains poor.
19. tt:lc3xa4 b5xa4
20. <;t>g1-h1
The last preparatory move is made.
20. ...... �f8-c5
diagram of analysis
Preparation
Jan van Reek has been working with computers since 1966. He has written
150 publications about mortality, smoking behaviour and heart diseases. In chess, he
is known as a composer of endgame studies. His rating is 2325. Three times he has
been Dutch champion in war games. During the 1990's, he wrote chess books about
studies, over-the-board endings and strategy.
He regards the moves of a game as the tip of the iceberg. Many tactical
calculations, positional evaluations and considerations lie underneath. Although
chess is a mainly tactical game, it is useful when someone looks into its strategy
seriously every seventy years. After he had demonstrated that computers are able to
calculate the key moves of a chess strategy, he searched for a way to popularise the
general theory, as a labour of love for chess.
When Van Reek had studied Spassky's style thoroughly, he found the games
highly suitable as examples of strategy. Great educational value can be found in the
relatively simple plans, wonderful combinations and stubborn defence. Fifty wins,
draws and losses by Spassky were selected. As a result, the great playing strength
of Tal, Petrosian, Fischer, Karpov and Kasparov could also be demonstrated over a
long period of time. Furthermore, an thorough book about Spassky's games was
lacking. The first meeting was arranged by the diplomacy of Geurt Gijssen. At the
end of 1998 Boris and Jan decided to cooperate.
Previous publications about the selected games were collected, including
analyses by Spassky (kept unchanged for game 3.19). Boris added unpublished
analyses for the games 2.19, 2.24 and 3.11 and new research on a Spassky-Portisch
endgame (of 2.25). Arend Booij did the literature search in the Royal Library of The
Hague. All previous analyses were corrected and rewritten. In the most severe test,
HIARCS 7 got ten minutes per ply on a 500 MHz Pentium Ill (the strength is
comparable to a 2700 rated player who gets three minutes per ply). Tactics were
checked with Fritz 5 and hypermodern ideas were examined with MChessPro 8. The
combined effort of a literature search, calculations by three programs and two
analysts led to a six-brain-system. A human is still able to add new analyses. For
instance, 28. it:lh5! in the Santa Monica gem (game 2. 2) was found by Van Reek.
Earlier analyses by Euwe, Keres, Fischer, Botvinnik, Bondarevsky, Karpov,
Kasparov and Spassky were valuable but needed correction. Most other analyses
were useless. This critical attitude was appreciated by Boris.
Some matters were treated by correspondence. Many analytical corrections
were seriously investigated during a long weekend in Margraten. Boris showed great
tactical wit. Jan taught him computer analysis.
Three different types of analyses have been applied: tactical bursts of critical
positions, long technical calculations in the endgame and strategic descriptions.
Texts and moves were checked by Rogier van Egmond and Jacques
Vermeulen. John Beasley gently improved the English grammar.
A biographic appendix was added to the second edition.
Struggle 15
2. Struggle
Russian intuition and Dutch science are two sides of one coin
trug g l e is the credo of L asker. Ste i n itz h as the same i ncli nati o n. A n
attack is prepared b y forcing weaknesses and acquiring strengths.
Positional weaknesses are , e. g . weak p awn s , a p assive k n i g h t , bad
bis h op and weake ned ki ng' s side. Positional stre ngths are , e.g .
p assed p aw n s , stro ng pawn centre , p awn maj o rity o n t h e q ueen' s
side, c o n t r o l o v e r op e n f i l e s , ranks and d i ag o n a l s , p a i r of bishop s and a stro ng ki n g .
W h e n e n o u g h advantages are acc u m u lated , the attack is started .
T h e di rection of move ment d u r i n g the attack is s i mp l e: straig htfo rward o r
ro u n d a corner - t h r o u g h the centre or by the flanks . Fam i l iar t e r m s f o r the sp ecific
strategi es are attack i n the centre and attack on the ki ng (di rect attacks ) , flank attack
and e n ci rc l e me n t ( i n d i rect attacks) :
A. Uti l iz ati o n of the central positi o n is the goal of an attack in the centre. T h e
assault is led by p awns. Hosti le forces a r e sp l i t i n two sides b y central
manoeuvri ng. Thereafter each side i s defeated piece meal .
B. C o ntrol of the centre i s us ually the fi rst aim o f an attack on the king. W h e n t h i s
g o a l i s achieved , the orie ntation re mains strai g h t forward , o r bears off towards
the real target : the king.
C. If t h e centre and king are wel l-p rotected, the weakest p oi n t of t h e opp o n e nt
may l i e on a flank, us ually the q ueen' s side. I n this cas e , the attacker has to
c h oose an i n d i rect app roach in stead of a fruitless attack on t h e ki ng. A flank
attack w i l l beg i n.
D. A d o u b l e flank attack or encirclement is a favou rite m i l itary strategy. Famous
examp les are the envelop m e n t of the Romans at C a n nce by H an n i bal's troop s
and the ri ng around Stal i ng rad by Marshal Z h u kov' s R u ssians. A n attack o n
both wi ngs i s comparab le i n chess.
4 5 . a6-a7 .!:!.a 1 xd 1
4 6 . a7-a8'i!¥ .!:!.d 1 -e 1
0- 1
The advance of the d-pawn has
become a complete success.
diagram of analysis
3 9 . w f4-e 3 ? !
3 9 . �d 5 is more persistent, without
fear of 39 . . . g 5 t 40. hxg 5 t l£Jxg 5
4 1 . .tg8 ! , and Black is unable to
prevent a breakthrough of White's
king to the queen's side.
So far the broad centre has been playing 12. �e4 J:!. xf4 13 . tt:ld3 !
the winner in the example s . This bf2t 14 . J:!. xf2 J:!. xf2 1 5 . ii..x h 7 t .
shows Spas sky as a noble fighter in 12. tt:le 5 xc6 �d 7xc6
the middle game . Usually a broad 1 3 . '1W d1-e2 '1Wd8-e 7
centre is difficult to maintain. If Speelman's move 13 . . . tt:le4 is more
the opponent succeeds in breaking aggressive.
up the centre by an exchange or a 14. J:!. a1-e1 J:!. a8-e8
forced advance, drastic weakening Quiet play has resulted in equality.
is likely. 1 5 . �f4-g3 a 7-a6
The vulnerability of a broad centre 16. a2-a3 '1We 7-f7
is shown in the next game. 17. b2-b4 �c 5 -d4
18. �g3 - e 5
The battle for the centre continues.
2. 5. Spassky- Tigran Petrosian 18. . . . . . �d4xe 5
1 gth game World Championship 19. '1W e2xe 5 tt:lf6-d7
Moscow 1966 2 0 . 'iW e 5 -g3 e6-e 5 !
Black has achieved a slight
l. e2-e4 e 7-e6 advantage, because he might stage
2. d2-d4 d7-d5 a king's side attack.
3. tt:lb 1-c3 tt:lg8-f6 2 1 . f2-f3 '1Wf7-f4 ? !
4 . e4-e 5 tt:lf6-d7 A useful move in t h e safe haven is
5 . tt:lg1-f3 c 7- c 5 21. . . J:!. e6 .
6 . d4xc 5 tt:lb8-c6 2 2 . '1Wg3xf4 J:!. f8xf4
7.�c1-f4 .itf8xc 5
8 . �f l -d 3 f7-f6
9 . e 5 xf6 tt:ld 7xf6
10. 0-0 0-0
In a closed pawn centre both sides have two i m m o b i l e co n nected pawns i n the
centre . One pawn i s placed o n the fifth ran k .
E u w e descri bes the fo u r static fu nctions of the closed centre. H e uses the
pawn structu re d4 -e5 vers u s d5 -e6 as example.
1. A means to control important squares. The disadvantage of a closed centre for
W h ite i s the lack of control of an i m po rtant sq uare o n the fifth ran k ( B l ack
holds sq uare f5).
2. A shelter for the captured area. Safe havens fu nction exce l l ently i n closed
posit i o n s, because tempi are of no g reat i m po rtance. S u fficient space is
essential fo r manoeuvri ng the pi eces to the most desirable sq uare s . The
avai lab i l ity of the t h i rd rank in the next exam ple is most usefu l. lt can be used
for ai m i ng pi eces at the hosti le k i n g ' s or q u een's side.
3. A group of pawns requiring protection. The pote ntial attack on t h e weakness
d4 is l i m ited by the closed centre .
4. An obstacle to the player's the own pieces (especially the bishop}. The
obstructive effect o n b i s hops is man ifest i n closed pawn centres . I f a bishop
had re mained on c8, it would not have been able to partici pate i n the game.
1 . e 2 -e4 c 7-c6
2. d 2 -d4 d7-d5
3. e4-e 5 .tc8-f5
4. h 2 -h4 h7-h5
5. c 2 -c4 .tf5xb 1
6 . .ll a 1 xb l e 7-e6
Black loses the queen by 6 . . . �a S t
7 . lii. d2 \Wxa 2 8 . .ll h 3 ! \Wa6 (8 . e6 9 .
. . .
E uwe's theory abo ut t h e broad pawn centre is very usefu l for o u r perception of
an attack i n t h e centre . We broaden the app roach by exam i n i ng pawn structu res wit h
o n e o r n o n e centre pawns:
I. The invulnerable centre pawn
11. The vulnerable centre pawn
Ill. The vanished pawn centre.
l . e 2 -e4 e 7-e 5
2. lLlg 1 -f3 cob 8-c6
3. �f l -b 5 a7-a6
4 . �b 5 -a4 cog8-f6
5 . 0-0 .tf8-e7
6 . It f l -e 1 b7-b 5
7 . �a4-b3 0-0
8. c2-c3 d7-d6
9. h 2 -h3 coc6-a5 The usual move in this variation of
1 0. �b 3 - c 2 c7-c5 the Closed Ruy Lopez is 1 3 . . . Wfc7.
1 1 . d 2 -d4 lLlf6-d7 1 3 . ...... e 5 xd4? !
1 2 . cob 1 -d 2 c 5xd4 Black opens u p the centre, and
1 3 . c 3 xd4 thus weakens his d-pawn.
Struggle 33
a win, he has to choose the risky found. White can play 2 3 . t2Jd4 t2Jb 7
line 1 6. �d 3 exd 5 1 7. e 5 ! ? 2 4 . � e 5 t2Jc 5 2 5 . h3 and the attack
1 6 . �c4xd 5 ! goes on.
White has an invulnerable centre 2 1 . d 5 -d6!
pawn. The home analysis is left, The centre pawn is unstoppable.
and the struggle begins in earnest. 2 1 . ...... � c8-d8
1 6. ...... t2Jc6-a 5 ? 2 2 . d6-d7 'i!fa2 -c4
Euwe played i n a similar position 2 3 . 'tlrf4-f5 h 7-h6
against Alekhine [The Hague 1 9 3 7 An assault on h7 is prevented.
( 1 8)]: 1 6 . . . � e 7 1 7. 'i!ff4 � fe 8 . Black 2 4 . � d 1 -c 1 �c4-a6
survived a difficult defence. 2 5 . � c 1 -c 7 b 6-b 5
1 7. � d 2 - f4 'i!Vd8-c 7 2 6 . t2Jf3 -d4 �a6-b6
1 8 . � f4-f5 ! 2 7. � c 7-c8 !
Petrosian smells a rat and starts to
think.
1 8. ...... ..tb 7xd 5
1 9 . e4xd 5
diagram of analysis
Th e last game shows two phases i n an attack on the k i n g : a stru g g l e for the
centre and a charge at the o bjective. H e reafter, we turn our attention to E uwe' s
thoug hts a b o u t the positional means.
The s u ccess of an attack on the king is dete r m i ned by the stre ngth of the
p rotecti n g pawns and the abi lities of defe n d i ng and attacking pieces. M o b i l ity i s h i g h l y
i m portant f o r the defe n d i n g pi ece s . This feat u re depends o n the positi o n of othe r
chessmen, a n d especially u p o n the place of hosti le pawns. I mportant facets f o r t h e
Struggle 41
attac kers are t h e avai lab i l ity of open files (for rooks ) , open d i agonals (for bishops)
and stro ng sq uares close to the obj ective (for knights and q uee n ) .
E uwe s u m m arises h i s ideas about t h e attack o n t h e king i n fou r positional
facto rs:
a. P rotect i o n of t h e th reatened king by pawns (for the defence)
b. Availabi l ity of useful sq u ares (fo r defend i n g p i eces)
c. O p e n files and d i agonals (fo r attacking pi eces ) .
d. Availabil ity of sq uares n e a r the target ( f o r t h e attackers)
These factors are i l l u strated by means of two games.
his novelty. Later analysis reveals 'i'l¥xg 7 0-0-0! The position has been
23 . �xh 7t �xh 7 24. exd 7 11ad8 2S.
. consolidated. Black has kept a
<8g5! ( 2 5 . ttJxd8 'f&'g6 t draws) 2 5. . . material advantage.
'IJ' fS t 26. w h4 'iJ!f4 t 2 1. g4. B. Keres continues with the
Ill. A fine move is 1 7. e6!? A better choice 18. �xe6t wd8 19.
critical position in the attack on the .111 J 5 . Pressure is maximised in the
king is reached. The e-file will be centre. 19 . .. �c6 20. � e 7 t weB 2 1.
opened ( factor c), and square f7 is 'flt'xg 7. His sugge stion 2 1 . e6? is too
available for the knight (factor d). hasty, due to 2 1 . . . :t d 8 ! 2 2 . J::!. xd 1
Black tries to give perpetual check: ttJf6 2 3 . �xd 8 t wxd8 24 . �e S t w e ?
.
diagram of analysis
So far we have looked into the aim and means of an attack on the king.
Now we turn our attention to the techniques. There are two types of attack:
a. the pieces go in fron t
b. t h e pawns avalanche.
If the opponent has a weakness on the king' s side, an attack can be
carried out with pieces only. This seems to be very simple, but the
application of this idea can be most difficult. Three brilliant examples follow.
move s in twenty minutes. Pre ssed Two creative persons play a n open
for time, he blunders. Spas sky and romantic game . A rook and a
expects 15. .. exf1 �t 16 . .l:!. xf 1 knight are sacrificed.
�xd6! 1 7 . 'ilf h 7 t >t>f8 18. cxd6 1 7. . . . . . . . �c8-fS
A. His calculations continue If Black captures the knight, it ends
with 1 8 . . . cxd6 1 9 . 'ilfh8 t we7 20 . like a I 7 1 h century game by Greco
.l:!. e 1 t <Lie S 2 1 . Wkxg7 .l:!. g8 ! 2 2 . 'ilfxh6 from Calabria: 1 7 . . . >t>xf7 1 8 . <Lle S t .
'&b6! 2 3 . �h 1 ..te6 2 4 . dxe S . The The second battery opens fire . 1 8 .
finale 2 4 . . . '/W f2 2 S . exd 6 t �xd6 2 6 . . . � g 8 1 9 . 'ilfh 7 t ! <Llxh 7 2 0 . �.b 3 t
'ilf f4 t � e 7 2 7. '/Wb4 t <it>f6 ends in �h8 2 1 . <Lig6 mate.
perpetual check
B. An error is 18 . .. <Llf6? 19.
"i\Vh8t <Lig8 20. <Li e S f6 2 1. �h7 �e6
diagram of analysis
1 5 . ...... tLlf6xg4
Active play in the centre gives 1 5 . . .
e 5 ! ? 1 6. tLlf5 exf4 ! ? 1 7. �xf4 � e 5
1 8 . J:!. f l . However, Petrosian avoids
moves which weaken his position.
1 6 . 'lfl d 2 -g2
Spassky calculates for twenty
minutes before he moves . The
outcome is normally known, when
a sacrifice is made. Now he doubts
and notices 1 6 . J:!. g 1 ?! 'lfl h 5 ! 1 7.
'ilt'g2? tLle6.
1 6. ...... tLlg4 -f6
H6 will become a target. Both sides
In this case 1 6 . .. 'lfl h 5 ? ! is not so
make two consolidating moves
good due to 1 7. J:!. d3 and 1 7 . . . e 5 ?
before the action begins.
1 8 . J:!. h3 tLle6 1 9 . J:!. exe 3 fail s.
1 3 . �c4-b 3 J:!. f8-e8
1 7. J:!. e 1 -g 1 !
1 4 . >t>c 1 -b 1 �e 7-f8
White calmly improves the position
of his pieces .
1 7. . . . . . . �c8-d7
1 8 . f4-f5 �g8-h8 !
The king has to leave the diagonal
a2-g8. See the lines 1 8 . .. J:!. ac8? 1 9 .
fxe6 fxe6 2 0 . tLlf5 ! and 1 8 . . . exf 5 ? !
1 9. exf5 b 5 2 0 . � g 6 !
1 9 . J:!. d 1 -f l
Sometimes an attack o n the king starts with an avalanche of pawns. When the
k i n g i s well p rotected i n a fortress, an advance of pawns can create weaknesses .
The positional obj ectives of a pawn avalanche can be characterised by fo u r facto rs :
a. Open files and diagonals for attackers
b. D i s lodge defenders or control t h e i r vital sq uares
c. S u pport attacking pieces
d. E l i m i nate p rotecti ng paw n s .
1 3 . ...... 0-0-0
14. 0-0-0 "tl¥ d 7- e 7
1 5 . tLld4-b 3 �c 5 -b6
1 6. g 2 -g4 J:!. d8xd 1 t
1 7. J:!. h 1 xd 1 h7-h5
1 8 . h2-h3 h 5 xg4
1 9 . h3xg4 J:!. h8-h2
Boris occupies his favourite central
position. Tigran lurks at a distance .
2 0 . tLlb 3 -d4 a 7-a6
2 1 . J:!. d 1 -d2 J:!. h2 -h8
C. Flank attack
S o m etimes king and centre are wel l - p rotected . I n that cas e , a d i rect attack i s
doomed . I f a weakness is spotted o n the f l a n k , the attacker has fou nd a d iffe rent
target. Strateg i sts call t h i s approach the indirect attack.
T h e paradox 'many battles are won by marching ' describes t h e fi rst stage of a
f l a n k attack . Fo rward move ment veers off towards the weakness . E m pty territory i s
occ u p i ed with l ittle effo rt . M a o ' s g u id e l i n e 'hit the enemy a s hard a s possible a t the
weakest place !' descri bes the second stage of a flank attack. W h e n the assault
succeed s , the final stage wi l l consist of a m o p - u p .
Th ree types of flank attack w i l l be i l l u strated by means of exam ples :
I. I n a minority attack, pawns open u p a flank for pieces ( game 2 . 1 9 )
11 . I n a majority attack, the s u rp l u s of pawns is uti l i sed as a strength (game 2 . 20 )
Ill. I n Fischer 's strategy for White, the defender experiences g reat d ifficu lties o n
the attacked f l a n k . When Black's cou nter-play beg i n s , the aim of attack changes t o
the centre . T h i s s u b l i m e strategy is applied i n the g a m e s 2 . 2 1 a n d 2 . 2 2 .
4 . ttJb 1 -c 3 ll.f8 - e 7
5 . ll.c 1 -g 5 0-0
6. e 2 - e 3 h7-h6
7 . .tg 5 -h4 b 7-b6
8. c4xd 5 ttJf6xd 5
9 . ..th4xe 7 ft'd8xe7
1 0. ttJc3xd 5 e6xd 5
1 1 . .!:!. a 1 -c 1
In the Tartakower, White directs his
pieces to the queen's side.
1 1 . ...... �c8-e6
1 2 . 'iW d 1 -a4 c7-c 5
1 3 . "t\fa4-a3 .!:!. f8-c8
An endgame study composer will
comment: 'The rook is dominated
on the h-file'.
3 7. ...... .!:!. h 1 -g 1 t
In the line 3 7 . . . .txe6 3 8 . .txh 1
.tg8 3 9 . �e4 a 4 40. h 7 .txh 7 4 1 .
..txh 7 a 3 4 2 . ll.b 1 , White i s just in
time .
3 8 . �f3 -g2 !
Again the rook i s dominated.
38. ...... .!:!. g 1 -c 1
3 9 . h6-h7 .!:!. c 1 xc 3 t
40. 'it>g3-h2 ll.d 7xe6
4 1 . h 7-h8� t Fischer follows the game Furman
The pawn maj ority queens. Geller, Moscow 1 9 70 .
4 1 . ...... 'it>d8-e 7 1 4 . �f l -b 5 ! ? a 7-a6?!
4 2 . d4- d 5 Black' s pawn structure is slightly
1 -0 weakened. Later Geller played 14 . . .
When the black king castled on the 1Wb 7 ! ? Timman found out that his
queen's side, White started a flank recommendation 1 5 . dxc 5 bxc 5 1 6 .
attack with the pawns in front of .!:!. xc 5 ? .!:!. xc 5 1 7. �xc 5 was refuted
his king. by 1 7 . . . ttJa6! 1 8 . �a6 1!¥xa6 in
Hilversum 1 9 7 3 .
1 5 . d4xc 5 b6xc 5
2 . 2 1 . Bobby Fischer - Spassky 1 6 . 0-0 .!:!. a8-a7?!
61h game World Championship This leads to passivity. Donner
Reykj avik 1 9 7 2 advises 1 6 . . . ttJc6! Timman tries to
refute this by 1 7 . .txc6 .!:!. xc6 1 8 .
1 . c2 -c4 ttJ e 5 .!:!. c 7 1 9. ttJd3 , but Black can
The first move is an enormous play 1 9 . . . .!:!. ac 8 ! with a secure
surprise. Long Rus sian preparation position.
is avoided. 1 7. �b 5 - e 2
1 . ...... e 7-e6 White switches h i s strategy from
2 . ttJg 1 -f3 d 7- d 5 an attack on the queen's side to an
3. d2 -d4 ttJg8-f6 action in the centre .
62 Grand Strategy
1 7. . . . . . . ct:Jb8-d 7
Geller played 1 7. .. a 5 in 1 9 70.
Furman gained a large advantage
by 1 8 . l:t c 3 .
1 8 . ct:Jf3 -d4 ! '1W e 7-f8
A better choice than passivity is
lacking.
1 9 . ct:Jd4xe6 f7xe6
20. e 3 -e4! d 5 -d4?
It would have been better to
continue pas sively with 2 0 . .. ct:Jf6.
The opponent is allowed to make a
positive change of strategy. 26. f4-f5 ! e6xf5
2 7. J:t f l xf5 ct:Jf8-h7
28. J:t c 1 -f l � e 7-d8
29. '1Wh3 -g3 l:t a 7-e 7
3 0 . h2 -h4 J:t b8-b 7
3 1 . e 5 -e6 J:t b 7-c 7
32 . '1Wg3-e 5 '1Wd8-e 8
Black' s helplessness allows active
consolidation. White is able to
strengthen his position, before the
attack begins.
3 3 . a2 -a4 '1We8-d8
3 4 . J:t f l -f2 "i!V d8-e8
White takes the opportunity to 3 5 . n f2-f3 '!We8-d8
restrain the centre. The hinterland is protected. As a
2 1 . f2 -f4 ! '1Wf8-e7 consequence, the attack on the
2 2 . e4-e 5 J:t c8-b8 king can begin.
2 3 . �e 2 -c4 36 . .te 2 - d 3 ! '!Wd8-e8
Blockade of the backward c-pawn 3 7. '!W e 5 -e4
by the bishop is an important Threatens 38 . .l:!. f8 t .
element of the restraint. 3 7. . . . . . . ct:Jh7-f6
2 3 . ...... ..t>g8-h8
24 . '1W a 3 -h 3 ct:Jd7-f8
Tal mentions 2 4 . . . l:t xb 2 . The
answer can be a capture on e6 by
the queen or bishop, with a big
advantage in both cases.
2 5 . b 2 -b 3
Black's centre is immobilised and
the blockader is protected.
2 5 . ...... a6-a5
Now White ' s strategy changes to an
attack on the king's side.
Struggle 63
D. Encirclement
A p l ayer can start an e n c i rclement when he has a g reater control and m o b i l ity
o n both flanks, and l ittle activity i s possible i n the centre . The balance between t h e
wing attacks is d i ffic u lt t o determ i n e . I n t h e examples, the centre i s closed .
4 3 . b 2 -b4!
This strong move changes the
course of the game :
1. It brings c 5 under control, a
key square for Black
2. The queen's side closes and
Black can no longer play b 5 -b4
3. Suddenly black pieces are
badly placed. "This is a crucial point, because my
This shows how important it is to position needs the best conception.
consider 43 . . . cxb 3 44. l:!. xb 3 When Laj o s made his mistake, I
noticed the winning advantage
immediately. But I could not calm
down my excitement and lost a
sense of reality.
Let's look at some features of the
position in order to develop a plan.
The king's side is a vulnerable part
of my army. Black can double the
rooks on the g-file, his only
potential activity. If I redeploy one
rook on the h-file, I can use it for
defensive and active functions. The
diagram of analysis rest of my army (knight and second
rook) are on Black's broken up
Black does not like it. A capture on queen's side. The main action
c3 costs a piece (44. .. l:!. xc 3 4 5 . starts where I am stronger. Now we
l:!. xc 3 ttJxc 3 4 6 . l:!. a ? o r 4 4 . . . ttJxc3 can easily find the correct plan: 4 5 .
4 5 . J:!. a 7). In an opened-up position, Ji.xa4 bxa4 46. f3 ! ! Let ' s play che s s :
72 Grand Strategy
diagram of analysis
3. Prophylaxis
A. Restraint
Nimzowitsch warns against the misconception that each move should achieve
something special. Some players are constantly seeking for threats. That approach is
completely wrong. Positional moves usually involve no threats or defences against
threats. They are useful improvements of the position in a higher sense.
An essential principle is to strive the player's own pieces to have unrestricted
influence on important squares. The beneficial effect might be the prevention of an
adverse attack. Restraint has the aim of restricting the opponent's abilities. lt is easy
to define and hard to apply. We mention two reasons:
1. Usually restraint begins when the game is even and no target for strategic
movement is apparent.
2. The strategy of restraint has two phases. During the first phase, the
opponent's mobility is restricted. The intention is to start an attack when the enemy is
paralysed. In this case, restraint becomes a postponed movement forwards. If the
restraint is insufficiently successful, the strategy changes to consolidation.
Complete control over the board is the final goal of restraint. According to
Berliner in his book The System, board control is an immensely important criterion,
immediately after material and king safety, and before pawn structure and mobility.
Philidor applied the most aggressive type of restraint. He sacrificed pieces in
order to demolish obstacles for steamrolling pawns. A splendid application of this
idea follows.
Black starts an attack on the king's but Black will play wb8-a8, '&c8,
side. and . . f6 with advantage . The text
1 2. . . . . . . h7-h6! allows an immediate gain of
1 3 . b2-b 4 ! g7-g 5 ! control over the centre.
The p awn sacrifice i s ignored. 24. . . . . . . tLJd 7xe 5 !
14. it.f4-g 3 h6-h5 Philidor lives again! Matter is
1 5 . h2-h4?! g 5 xh4? ! sacrificed to create a steamroller.
B o t h sides choose a n aggressive 2 5 . tLJh2xg4 h 5 xg4
move instead of the positional 1 5 . The Black pawns are reconnected.
h3 and 1 5 . . . g4 . 26. e 3 -e4?!
1 6 . it.g3 - f4 More prudent is 26. �d4 .i;,d6 27.
After 1 6 . tLJxh4 hh4 1 7 . .,txh4 , �b6, but Spas sky plays for a win.
pawn e 5 has lost its protection. 26. . . . . . . .tf8-d6
1 6. ...... 0-0-0 A grave blunder is 2 6 . . . dxe4? due
1 7 . a2-a4? ! to 27 .. �xe 5 �xe 5 ? and mate.
A serious alternative i s 1 7 . bxc 5 2 7 . Wt"d2-e 3
bxc S . Tal regards �b8-a8 and tLJb6 The expected continuation is 2 7.
as favourable for Black. .�e 3 tLJd 7 .
1 7. . . . . . . c 5 -c4 ! 2 7. . . . . . . tLJc 5 -d 7 ? !
The s trategy of restraint begins B l a c k is able to w i n b y 2 7 . . . dxe4 .
with a paradox: closing the queen's Polugaevsky and Tal try to refute
side allows a blockade on d4. this move by 28 . r!.d4 .>M S 29 .
1 8 . �d3 - e 2 a7-a6 r!.xe4 .�xe4 3 0 . �xe4 , but 30 . . . �b 8
For both sides, the queen's side has will triumph. The consensus in the
become impregnable. press room about the second win
1 9 . wg 1 -h 1 rtd8-g8 by 2 7 . . . g 3 is right.
2 0 . .i'tf l -g 1 l1g8-g4 28 .. U4xd6 'B'c 7xd6
2 1 . 'f'Hd 1 -d2 r!. h8-g8
22. a4 -a5 b6-b 5
23 . rta 1 -d 1 .lie 7-f8
The exchange has decreased the A forced win is missed for the
pressure on the centre. Black can second time.
utilise this change by the further 3 7. 'lt>g l -h l ?
Prophylaxis 91
1. e 2 -e4 e 7 -e 5
2. tLlg 1 -f3 tLlb8-c6
3. il.. f l -b 5 il..f8 - c 5
4. c2-c3 f7-f5
5. d2 -d4 f5xe4
diagram of analysis
1 . e 2 -e4 c7 - c 5
2 .ct:lgl-f3 d 7-d6
3 .. �f l -b 5 t .tc8-d7
4 . ..ib 5xd 7 t �d8xd 7
5 . c 2 -c4 e7-e5
A I though S p a s sky leads in the
During the exchanges, White has
match, Byrne opens the game
reinforced the queen's side. He can
without ambition.
undertake very little, despite his
6 .ct:lb 1 -c 3 ct:lb8-c6 good b ishop.
7 . d 2 -d 3 g 7-g6
22. ...... f7-f6
8. a 2 - a 3 .�f8-g7 Black chases a passive defence . He
9 . lla 1 -b 1 ct:lg8-e7 could have played 22 . . . f5, because
1 0 . b 2 -b4 b 7-b6
2 3 . exf5 gxf5 2 4 ..�"g 5 'it>f7 2 5 . .0-.d8
1 1 . 0-0 0-0
e4 is favourable for him.
1 2 . ct:lc 3 - d 5 ct:le 7xd 5
2 3 . 'it>g l -f l �g 7-f8
1 3 . c4xd 5 ct:lc6-d4 �f8 - e 7
2 4 . a3 -a4
1 4. ct:lf3xd4 c 5 xd4 2 5 . >t>f l -e2 >t>g8-f7
26 . .�c 1 -d2 f6- f 5 ?
A continuation of t h e pas sive
consolidation draws without any
difficulty. Byrne ' saw' 26 . . . g S , .. h 5
and 'it>g6 . Later h e cannot explain t o
Kavalek why h e d i d n o t play i t . The
error allows a phase of p aralysi s .
2 7. e4xf5 ! g6xf5
2 8 . w e 2 - d 3 .�e 7-f6
2 9 . f2-f3 ! h7-h5
3 0 . a4-a5 'it>f7-e8
3 1 . a 5 -a6! we8-d7
96 Grand Strategy
diagram of analysis
5 1 . d 5 -d 6 ! 7. CiJd4 -b 3
An entry is forced. The prudent 7. a3 was played in
5 1 . ...... wc8-d7 Spassky-Darga, Varna 1 9 6 2 (game
52. �f2xc 5 �f6-d8 1 .2).
53 . .itc 5 -b4 �d7-e6 7.· ·· · · · liJg8 -f6
5 4 . �d3 -c4 �d8-f6 8. f2 -f4 jJ8 -b4
5 5 . �b4-c 5 �f6-d8 9. �f l -d 3 0-0
56. �.c 5 -d4 1 0. 0-0
Black has to move ! A successful struggle consists of
56. ...... we6xd6 three stages: a) development, b)
5 7. �d4-e 5 t wd6-e6 weakening and c) destruction. At
58 . .ite 5 -b8 �e6-d7 this point the first phase transfers
59. �c4-d 5 into the second.
1 0. ...... .�b4xc 3
1 1 . b2xc3
The defender has weakened the
attacker. Therefore Spassky has to
go all out on the king's side.
1 1 . ...... d 7-d6
1 2 . nf 1 -f3 e6-e 5
1 3 . f4 -f5 d6- d 5
B. Consolidation
In the adj ourned position, Black is All preparations have been made
unable to consolidate against the for the decisive action.
attack by maj or pieces. The other 5 8 . �h8-f8 t ? !
king i s save in a little fortres s . Chechover found 5 8 . g 4 (threatens
4 6 . � d6-f4 t g 5 ) hxg4 5 9 . \Wf8 t w f6 60. fxg4
White avoids 4 6 . � d 8 t � e 7 4 7 . A. 60 . . . n e6 6 1 . n c 3 ! n e4 6 2 .
�xd 5 .!::txg 2 t ! and a perpetual. n f3 t we6 6 3 . g 5 , or
46. . . . . . . �e6-f5 B. 60 . . . .!::t c 6 6 1 . n e8 ! n c 2 t 6 2 .
47. �f4-h6 wf6-e7 wf3 n c 3 t 6 3 . wf4 \Wc 7 t 6 4 . n e s ,
The benefit o f controlling g 5 is and the encirclement i s completed.
clear from 47 . . . �xf3 48. � g 5 t . 58. . . . . . . we 7-f6
4 8 . �h6-f8 t we 7-f6 5 9 . n c8-e8 .!::t d 6-e6
4 9 . � f8-g 7 t wf6 - e 7 60. � f8-h8 t wf6-f5
5 0 . .!::tg 8-a8 ! 6 1 . \Wh8-h6 ..t>f5 -f6
White brings new life to his attack. 6 2 . \Wh6-h8 t 'it>f6-f5
50. ...... �f5-d7 6 3 . n e8-d8?
The checks 5 0 . . . � f4 t 5 1 . 'it> h 3 Correct play proceeds with 6 3 . �h6
�f5 t 5 2 . 'it>g3 a r e no good. wf6 64. n g8 ! w e 7 6 5 . �g 5 t n f6 66.
5 1 . �g7-f8 t we 7-f6 n a8 ! � b 7 67. n a2 � c 6 6 8 . �e S t
5 2 . .!::t a 8-a6 t .!::t e 2 -e6 w f8 6 9 . .!::t a 5 . White wins a p awn
5 3 . 't!f f8-h 8 t wf6-e 7 and keeps the initiative .
5 4 . .!::t a 6-a8 .!::t e 6-e l ? ! 63. ...... � d 7-c6
A return to the second rank is 64 . .!::t d 8-c8 �c6-a6
preferable. Now White can improve
his position.
5 5 . w h 2 -g 3 ! h7-h 5 !
Tal analyses 5 5 . . . � c 7 t 5 6 . wf2
� c 2 t 5 7. wxe l � c l t 5 8 . wf2 't!fd2 t
5 9 . wg3 't!f e l t 60. wg4 f5 t 6 1 . wg5
� e 3 t 62. f4 � g 3 t 63. 'it>h6 �xh4 t
64. w g 7 � f6 t 6 5 . wxh 7 � h4 t 6 6 .
wg8 , a n d White's king h a s escaped
from perpetual check.
5 6. \t>g3 -f2 .ld.e l -e6
57 . .!::t a 8-c 8 ! n e6-d6
1 04 Grand Strategy
3 7. g4xf5 t2Jg7xf5
38. �.e 2 -g4 $.c6-d 7
3 9 . �b2xb 7 .il. d 7-e6
40. �b 7-b l t2Jf5xd6
4 1 . .il.g4xe6 � g6xe6
42 . .\ll . e 5 xd6 � e 6xd6
4 3 . '*fb l xe4 l:i c8-b8
44. l:i f l xf7 wg8xf7
4 5 . �e4-h 7 t wf7-e8
46. l:i c l -f l '*f d6-e6
47. h2-h3 l:ib8-c8
4 8 . 'I!Vh7-g7 �. d8-e 7
4 9 . l:i f l -f 5 ! .�.e 7-d6
The black position is divided in two
50. 1:l. f5 -f6
camps by the white forces. A
Keres faces 50 . . . � e 5 5 1 . J:t f8 t .
mopping-up begins.
1 -0
36. . . . . . . i. a4-c6
When Fischer prepared for the 1 972 match, he faced two great problems:
A. The world champion had beaten him tactically, and played at the same level
positionally. Spassky had defeated him in the brilliant style of Morphy (a quick
development aims at control of the centre, the next target is the hostile king , and a
combination in a crucial position decides the game). " Bobby has less sense of the
critical position", Boris explained to Jan.
B. An eminent Soviet team of opening experts researched Fischer's opening
repertoire thoroughly and worked on novelties.
Usually Fischer applied Boleslavsky's strategic approach. As White, he tried to
achieve a small advantage with 1 . e4 . As Black, he frequently applied prophylaxis by
playing the Sicilian, GrOnfeld (games 2. 2 and 2 3 ) and King's Indian Defence. This
.
time he applied a similar approach with different openings. As White, he strived for a
plus with 1 . c4 (game 2. 1 2). As Black, he chose the Benoni, closed Nimzo-lndian,
Alekhine and Pirc. His scores were 3 points out of 4 games for 1 . c4 as White, 4 out
of 5 for prophylaxis as Black, and S V2 out of 1 2 for the other games. So it was highly
rewarding to apply the general approach in a different way.
During the match preparation of nine months the ' Russians' made two errors :
A. They did not recognise Fischer's knowledge of prophylaxis. Even Petrosian
did not mention it in his letter to comrades Baturinsky and Averbakh (published in
'Russians versus Fischer ) . This notion can be reconstructed from analytical notes in
'My sixty memorable games' and articles on the match Steinitz- Dubois 1 862 in Chess
Life 1 964. Bobby writes about blockade (in the meaning of restraint), overprotection
and consolidation. When he analyses the game Larsen- Fischer, Monaco 1 967, he
even mentions Nimzowitsch by name. This ' Russian' blunder shows a great defect in
the Soviet school : the abstract properties of prophylaxis are not understood.
B. They did not even notice the strong similarity between Boleslavsky's and
Fischer's strategic approach. Tal, Keres, Smyslov and Bondarevsky failed to mention
this in their letters (published in the book 'Russians versus Fischer ) .
Prophylaxis 1 07
1 . e 2 -e4 c 7-c6
2. d 2 -d4 d 7- d 5
3 . iUb 1 -c 3 d 5 xe4
4 . iU c 3 xe4 .ii.c8-f5
5. iUe4-g3 �f5-g6
6. iUg 1 -f3 iUb8 - d 7
7. �f l -d 3 e 7-e6 White has a superior position by
8 . 0-0 iUg8-f6 virtue of his space advantage and
9. c 2 -c4 �f8-d6 advanced passed pawn.
1 0. b 2 -b 3 2 5 . iUf3 - d 2 ?
Spas sky centralises in a quiet line More active is 2 5 . 't!Vb 5 b 6 2 6 . iUd2 .
of the C aro-Kann. 2 5 . ...... 'llf g 4xe 2
1 0. ...... 0-0 2 6 . J:. e 1 xe 2 l:t d8 - c 8 !
1 1 . �c 1 -b 2 't!Vd8-c7 Black faces no difficulties in the
Karpov e qualised with 1 1 . . . c 5 in endgame.
the 2 n d game. 2 7. iUd2 -e4
1 2 . �d 3 xg6 h 7xg6 2 7. iUc4 $.g 5 ! 28. a4 f6 is similar.
1 3 . 't!V d l -e 2 .!H8-e8 2 7. . . . . . . �f6-d8
1 4 . iUg3 -e4 iUf6xe4 28. g 2 -g4
1 5 . 't!V e 2 xe4 �d6-e 7 ! The f-pawn is restricted.
Black reorganises his defence line. 28. . . . . . . f7-f6
1 6. l:. a 1 -d 1 J:. a8-d8 Active consolidation begins.
1 7. J:. fl -e l � c 7-a 5 ! ? 29. �g 1 -g2 c;;. g 8-f7
The natural continuation o f Black's 30. J:. d 1 -c 1 �d8-b6
plan is 1 7 . . . �f6 or 1 7 . . . iUf6. 3 1 . J:. e 2 - c 2 l:. c8xc2
1 8 . a2-a3 � a 5 -f5 3 2 . J:. c 1 xc 2 wf7-e6
1 9 . �e4-e2 g6-g5 Black pieces quietly move to good
2 0 . h2 -h3 squares .
White neutralises the advance on 3 3 . a 3 -a4 a7-a5
the king's side. 3 4 . �b 2 - a 3
20. . . . . . . g 5 -g4 The p a s s e d p awn i s overprotected.
2 1 . h 3 xg4 � f 5 xg4 34. . . . . . . l:. e8-b8!
2 2 . d4-d 5 ! Preparation of an advance by the b
Both sides play for a win. pawn i s t h e next step.
22. ...... c6xd 5 3 5 . J:. c 2 -c4 �b6-d4
2 3 . c4xd 5 e6-e 5 ! 36. f2 -f4 ! g 7-g6
Prophylaxis Ill
4 1 . �a3-b2 b 7-b6
4 2 . �b 2 -d4?
Botvinnik advises the remarkable
escape 42 . .l:!. c 3 .l:!. xc 3 t 43 . .txc 3
A. 43. 00 wxd6 4 4 . b 4 ! b 5 ! ? 4 5 .
bxa 5 bxa4 4 6 . ..tb4 t wc6 4 7. wf3
wb 5 48. �e 7 c;t>xa 5 49. 'itt e 4 'itt b 5 5 0 .
wds
B. 43. 00 tO e S 4 4 . <>t>f3 coxb 3 4 5 .
d 7 ! <>t>xd 7 4 6 . .txf6
Karpov suggests 4 2 . .l:!. h8 , but this
00
4 3 . .\!l,d4-c3 n c6-c 5
3 7. 'Lle4-g 3 !
A less promising continuation is 44. 'itt g 3 -g2 .l:!. c 5 -c 8 !
The knight threatens to jump into
3 7 . fxe 5 .txe 5 38 . .l:!. c 7 b6! due to
action.
the threat 38 . . . .l:!. h8 .
3 7. . . . . . . 4 5 . wg2-g3?!
e 5 xf4 ! ?
After 4 5 . �e l tO e S 4 6 . .l:!. d4 .l:!. c6 4 7.
Karpov analyses 3 7. 00 b 5 3 8 . fS t
�f2 'itt d 7 ! or 4 5 . wf3 'Ll c 5 4 6 . .t:�. d l
gxf5 3 9 . gxfS t <t> d 5 40 . .l:!. c 7 b4 4 1 .
.t:!. d8 White's position has become
.\11x b4 .l:!. xb4 4 2 . .l:!. xd 7 .l:!. xb 3 . Black
precarious .
seems to have very good chances,
45. cod7-e 5 !
but White escapes by 43. coh5 ! e4
000000
4 6 . �c 3xe 5 f6xe 5
44 . .l:!. e 7 and continued exchanges.
Active consolidation has changed
38 . .l:!. c4xd4 f4xg3
to an attack in the centre.
A favourable exchange has brought
47. b 3 -b 4 ! ?
new life to the game.
White chooses a desperate defence .
3 9 . <>t>g2xg3 .l:!. b8-c8
The natural move is 4 7. w f 3 1:l. d8
4 0 . 1:!. d4-d3 g6-g5
A. If White plays 4 8 . c;te4 n xd6
4 9 . .l:!. xd 6 t c;t>xd6 50. wf5 w d 5 5 1 .
<t>xg 5 e4 5 2 . wf4 wd4, the pawn
ending is lost, as White will finally
lose his queen.
B. Analysts praise 48. b4, but it
is refuted by 4 8 . 00 axb4 ! 4 9 . .t:!. b 3
n fS t ! s o . w e 2 n f4 .
Interesting counter-play starts with
4 7 . wf2 ! n d8 48 . .l:!. f3 . Black wins a
pawn by 4 8 . 00 .l:!. xd6 49 . .l:!. f5 :t d 3
5 0 . .l:!. xg 5 .l:!. xb 3 . After 5 1 . .l:!. g6 t
The adj ourned position is difficult w d 5 5 2 . g 5 the battle will become
for White. His precious pawn has fierce.
become the focus point o f the few 4 7. .oooo• e 5 -e 4 !
remaining pieces . A decisive tempo is gained.
1 12 Grand Strategy
l . e2 -e4 e 7-e6
2. d2 -d4 d 7-d 5
3 . l2Jb 1 -c 3 Jl.f8-b4
4 . e4-e 5 c 7-c 5
5 . a2-a3 Ji.b4xc 3 t
6 . b2xc3 l2Jg8 - e 7
7 . 'tlf d 1 -g4
The queen makes a sortie in the
Winawer.
7. ...... 'tlfd8-c7
diagram of analysis 8 . 'tl¥g4xg 7 ll h8-g8
9. 'tl¥g 7xh 7 c 5xd4
Black has to respond aggressively:
51. .. e3! 52. ll f5t. 5 2 . >t>f3 ll f8 t
leads to a l o s t p awn ending. 52.
>t>e4 53. ll xg5 ll xd6 .
A. 5 4 . ll g8 .ll d 1 5 5 . ll e8 t >t>d3
56. ll d8 t >t> c 2 5 7. ll c8 t >t>d2 5 8 .
.ll d8 t '>t>e 1 5 9 . ll a8 e2 60. ll xa 5
.ll d 3 t ! 6 1 . >t>f4 <>t>f2 6 2 . ll e 5 ll f3 t
6 3 . <>t>g5 ll e 3 and wins
B. 5 4 . ll xa 5 ll d 1 5 5 . ll a8 e 2 5 6 .
ll e8 t >t>d3 5 7. n xe 2 wxe 2 5 8 . wf4
>t> d 3 5 9 . 'it> e 5 ll g 1 60. wf5 wd4 6 1 .
Prophylaxis 1 13
2 1 . ...... cuc6xb4
2 2 . 'i!Vb 3xb4 cua4-c 5
Five moves by the queen have 2 3 . wc 1 -d2 a 7-a6?
resulted in the gain of a pawn. Black wastes time and misses 23 . . .
White's position i s solid because he cue4 t 2 4 . �.xe4 dxe4 2 5 . we3 W«xc 2
completely controls the first three 2 6 . � d 6 t wa8 2 7. W«xd7 : hd8 2 8 .
ranks and his advanced pawn � b 5 J:t d 3 t 2 9 . >t>f2 . The sacrifice
hinders invaders. 29 . . . �xe 2 t 3 0 . wxe 2 J:t c 2 t secures
1 4 . cue2-g3 the draw.
Spassky plays a novelty. The usual 2 4 . J:[ g 1 -b 1 d 5 -d4
moves are 1 4 . J:t b 1 and 1 4. J:t g l . 2 5 . cue2xd4 J:t h8-d8
1 4. ...... J:t g8-h8 26. 'i!Vb4-b6 cuc 5xd3
Black has no obvious plan. He 2 7. c2xd3 �d7-a4
chooses to become active on the 2 8 . w d 2 - e 3 � c 7xb6
flanks. 2 9 . J:t b 1 xb 6 J:t c8-c3
1 5 . �c 1 -d 2 J:t d8-g8 3 0 . J:t h 1 -b 1 �a4-b 5
1 6 . 0-0-0 3 1 . cud4xb 5 J:t d8xd 3 t
A good alternative is 1 6 . J:t b 1 , but 3 2 . w e 3 - e 2 a6xb 5
Spas sky wants to continue his 3 3 . J:t b6xb 5 J:t d 3 - d 7
development. 3 4 . J:t b 5 -b 3 J:t c 3 - c 2 t
1 6. . . . . . . wc8-b8 3 5 . we2 -f3 J:t d 7-d2
1 7. �f l -d 3 cue 7-c8 ! ? 36. J:t b 3xb 7 t >t>b8-c8
The action on t h e other flank 3 7. g 2 -g3
begins. 1 -0
1 8 . J:t d 1 -g 1 A sortie from a fortre ss gained a
A more energetic move i s 1 8 . � c 5 , pawn. Black had some pres sure
but Boris s ticks to his plan. and staged an attack. White played
1 8. ...... cuc8-b 6 solid moves . The game was over
1 9. � c 3 -b 3 J:t g8-c8 when Black wasted a tempo in a
20. cug3 - e 2 cub6-a4 ! critical position.
1 14 Grand Strategy
C. Counterattack
The second player has t o react when the first player threatens t o achieve a
substantial advantage. Cluley mentions counteraction as a method to maintain the
balance. In a strategy of struggle, the result is a fierce battle. A leading example is
the reciprocal attack on the king after castling on opposite sides .
When the second player is unable to consolidate the position, the reason for
counteraction is prophylactic. A counteraction is started as the last resort. The best
known examples in warfare are the frontal cavalry charge and the human wave or
banzai to honourable death. Successful strategies are less courageous and more
subtle. A weak point in the attacker's rear is charged. .
When Spassky opens the game too optimistically, his position can become
indefensible. He hates losing and the Russian bear awakens . In the next examples
he is lost on one side of the board and starts an attack on the other.
Black has a s trong attack on the Even a future world champion does
king. Smyslov thinks about his not like to play 48 . .l:t e 1 �h2 t 4 9 .
sealed move for forty-five minutes. wh 1 .l:t f3 5 0 . e 5 ! .l:t xd 3 !? 5 1 . e 6 !
4 1 . .l:t c 2 -c 1 n xd4 5 2 . e 7 under time pressure.
Other choices are the peaceful 4 1 . 48. . . . . . . ii.d6xe 5
%!Vg8 t 'i1<h5 4 2 . 'i1<h3 tt:Jg 5 t 4 3 . 'i1<g2 49 . .td4xe 5 ti:Jg4xe 5
tt:Jf3 , and the violent 4 1 . 'i1<h 1 tt:Je 1 5 0 . 'i!V g 2 -e 2 t ? !
4 2 . .l:t g2 t tt:Jxg2 4 3 . e4 ! 5 0 . � d 5 is more active.
4 1 . ...... .l:t f7-f8 50. . . . . . . tt:J e 5 -f3 t
Black does not wish to e qualise by The move 5 0 . . . tt:Jg4 would give
4 1 . . . tt:Jxd4 . winning chances.
4 2 . 'tlfh8-g 7 t 'i1<g6-h 5 5 1 . wg 1 -h 1 ? !
4 3 . wg2-h 1 tt:Jf3 -g 5 ? ! White prefers passive defence
The queen i s threatened. A more instead of 5 1 . 'i1<g2 .
prom1smg continuation of the 5 1 . ...... .l:t f7-g 7
attack on the king' s side i s 43 . . .
n g 5 44. 'tlf d 7 tt:Jxd4 4 5 . exd4 n f2
4 6 . 'tlfh3 t wg6 4 7. n c6 'i1<h7.
44. h2 -h4 ! tt:Jg 5 -h3
Again Black avoids exchanges: 44 . . .
.l:t 5 f7 4 5 . hxg 5 hxg 5 draws.
4 5 . e 3 -e4 .l:t f5 -f7
Tactics are incredibly difficult for
over-the-board analysis. A mean
trick i s 4 5 . . . .l:t f4 ! ?
A. The trap i s 46 . .te 3 ? .!:t xh4
4 7. 'tlfxh6 t 'i1<g4 4 8 . 'i!V g ? t wf3
B. White has to play 46. e 5 Tired players make inaccurate
n xh4 4 7. exd6 tt:Jg 5 t 4 8 . 'i1<g2 .l:t g4 t move s . A far stronger move i s 5 1 . . .
and a repetition of moves .
.l:t f4 .
4 6 . 'i!Vg7-g2 tt:Jh3 -f2 t
5 2 . 1!V e 2 -f2?
4 7 . <ot>h l -g 1 tt:Jf2 -g4
A blunder costs the game. The
right move is 5 2 . .l:t f l !
A. 5 2 . . . .!:t g3 5 3 . 'tl¥e4 tt:Jg5 5 4 .
.!:t f5 ! is slightly better for White
B. 5 2 . . . .l:t gf7 5 3 . \W e 6 ! Both
sides have chances after 53 . . . .l:t f4
5 4 . d4.
5 2 . ...... n f8-f4 !
5 3 . .l:t c 1 -c4 .l:t f4xc4
5 4 . 'fkf2xf3 t
Exchanges by 5 4 . dxc4 .l:t g 1 t ! lead
to a lost ending.
54. ...... .l:t c4-g4
The black b ishop threatens to hunt 5 5 . wh 1 -h2 wh 5 xh4
the king. 5 6 . 'i!Vf3 -f6 t wh4-h5
48. e4-e 5 !? 5 7. 'fk f6-f3
Prophylaxis 117
8 . �c l -d 2 �f8-g7
9 . 0-0-0 � d8-f6 ! ?
1 0. f2-f4 0-0!?
Play is more quiet after 10 . . . d6!
1 1 . e4-e 5 � f6-e6
1 2 . 'tl¥ e 3 -e4 d 7-d6
1 3 . �f l -c4
The aggressive 1 3 . lt:JdS dxe S 1 4 .
COxc 7 'iWxa2 misfires completely.
1 3. ...... �e6-e8
Mikhalevski prefers 1 3 . . . \'t'fS 1 4 .
'WixfS �fS 1 5 . exd6 cxd6 1 6 . COb S
COd4 and White has a minimal diagram of analysis
advantage in the endgame.
1 4 . lt:J c 3 -d 5 ? ! The black attack is decisive. An
1 4 . exd6 ! cxd6 causes a weakne s s . aggressive continuation is 2 0 . �c 3
1 4. ...... �c8-f5 bxc4 2 1 . �d4 cxb 3 ! 2 2 . lt:J c 7 bxc2
1 5 . �e4-e3 2 3 . J::!. d 2 ? ! 'tl¥ b 7 !
B. 1 8 . �d3 ! ? give s insufficient
protection: 1 8. .. lt:Jxc 2 ! 1 9 . �fS
lt:Jxe 3 t 20. bc8 J::!. xc8 t 2 1 . �c 3
COxd l 2 2 . .!:t xd 1 exf4 ! Black has a
slight advantage in the endgame .
1 7. . . . . . . .!:t f8-e8
Square e 7 gets extra protection.
1 8. �d2 -c 3 lt:Jc6-d4!
1 9 . f4xe 5 ? !
Simplification b y 1 9 . � d 3 � d 3 2 0 .
'iWxd3 � c S ! 2 1 . fxe S �xd S 2 2 . wb l !
�e S 2 3 . �d4 �xg2 costs a p awn.
1 9. . . . . . . �c8xc4
White has developed an attack in
2 0 . 'iW e 3 xd4 'Wi c4xa2
the centre. He expects the passive
2 1 . "it'd4-h4
1 5 . . . J::!. c 8 . B oris becomes irritated
and starts a counterattack.
1 5 . ...... d6xe 5 !
1 6 . lt:Jd 5 xc 7 �e8-c8
1 7. CO c 7-d 5 ?
His name is Tal, but h e does not
play like Tal. The obvious choice
for an entertainer is 1 7. taxaB. The
answer 1 7. . . tad4 ! aims at c 2 .
A. Wild complications start with
1 8 . b 3 ? ! exf4 ! 1 9. � e 7 . Avoids 1 9.
'tl¥xf4?? lt:Je 2 t 2 0 . jv{e2 'tl¥xc2 mate.
The attack on the c-file is reopened
by 1 9 . . . b 5 !
1 26 Grand Strategy
1 5 . w e 2 -f3
"This i s a stronger reply than 1 5 .
t2le4 . A pos sible continuation could
b e 1 5 . . . .te6 1 6. �xc 5 �xc 5 1 7. 1 9 . f!V d 5xd6!
t2lxc 5 .txc4 t 1 8 . wf2 il.xf l 1 9 . <;t>xf1 "This i s the decisive blow, which
ld ac8, with Black's position not will most rapidly lead to a win . "
being worse than his rival. " 1 9. . . . . . . 'lif f6-g6t
1 5 . ...... �b6-f6 t 2 0 . .!::!. f4-g4 J::r e6-e 3 t
1 6 . wf3-g3 2 1 . �c 1 xe 3 '1W g6xd6 t
"It would be wrong to play 1 6 . .tf4, 2 2 . wg3 -f2 J::r a8-e8
in view of 1 6 . . . J:t e 3 t . " 2 3 . J::r g4-f4 J::r e 8 - e 7
1 6. . . . . . . .tc 5 - d 6 t 2 4 . .tc4-b 3 � d6-e 5
2 5 . J::r a 1 -e 1 g 7 - g 5
2 6 . :r f4 -f3 wg8-g7
2 7. J::1 e 1 -d 1 f7-f6
28. wf2 -g 1 g 5 -g4
29 . .te 3 -d4
1 -0
The aim of the novelty is to force a
premature crucial position: Black
sacrifices a piece for a strong
attack in the centre. White returns
less material for a direct and
decisive counterattack.
Pocket strategies 131
4. Pocket Strategies
become 1 2 . . . 8c8 1 3 . f4 !
1 2 . ...... 8b 6-c4
A. Prophylactic manoeuvre 1 3 . b 2 -b 3 ! ?
A quiet alternative i s 1 3 . �f4 , b u t
Boris grab s his l a s t fighting chance
4. 1 . Spassky - Bobby Fischer in the match.
1 gth game World Championship 1 3. ...... 8c4xe 3
Reykj avik 1 972
1 . e 2 -e4 8g8-f6
2 . e4-e5 8f6 - d 5
3 . d 2 -d4 d7-d6
4 . 8g 1 -f3 �c8-g4
Al though Fischer leads in the
match, he cho o s e s a hypermodern
opening.
5 .o>:L. f l - e 2 e7-e6
6 . 0-0 �f8-e7
7. h 2 -h 3 �g4 - h 5
8 . c 2 -c4 8d 5 -b 6 A prophylactic manoeuvre o f five
9 . tLlb 1 -c 3 0-0 knight moves causes a doub l e d
1 0 . ..tc 1 -e 3 d 6 - d 5 p awn, while Black ' s o w n p o s i t i o n
T h e d-pawn m a k e s a s e c o n d step i n remains consolidated.
o r d e r to lure t h e c-pawn forwards. 1 4 . f2xe 3 b7-b 6
1 1 . c4-c 5 Petrosian' s proposal 1 4 . . . 8c6 is a
S p a s s ky accepts the challenge. fine move, but Fischer s e e k s a
1 1 . ...... iili 5 xf3 direct confrontation in the centre.
1 2 . �,e 2 xf3 1 5 . e 3 -e4!
Keres mentions 1 2 . gxf3 . Nowadays T h e attack in the c e n t r e begins .
the main line o f the Alekhine has 1 5 . ...... c7-c6
1 32 Grand Strategy
diagram of analysis
B. Development sacrifice
1. e2-e4 c7-c6
2. ti:Jbl-c3 d7-d5
3. ti:Jgl-f3 �c8-g4
Spassky continues to play for a win 4. h2-h3 .lli.g4xf3
by an attack in the centre. 5. '1Wd1xf3 ti:Jg8-f6
30. ...... <t>g8-f7 6. e4-e5!?
Keres does not like 30. .. :�::txd6 31. The standard move in this variation
cxd6 '>t>f7 32. l::tcl, because White is of the Caro-Kann is 6. d3.
able to attack the a-pawn. 6. ...... ti:Jf6-d7
31. J::td6xc6 J::te6xc6 7. '1Wf3-g3!?
32. J::te1xe5 <t>f7-f6 Pressure on g7 and the advance of
33. J::te5-d5 wf6-e6 the f-pawn is preferred to the usual
34. J::td5-h5 h7-h6 7. d4.
35. '.t>hl-h2 J::tc6-a6 7. ...... e7-e6
36. c5-c6! 8..�fl-e2 �d8-c7?!
At last Boris has to steer toward a The natural development is 8. .. cS
draw. 9. f4 ti:Jc6.
36. ..... . J::ta6xc6 9. f2-f4 a7-a6
37. J::th5-a5 a7-a6 Black avoids 9. .. c5 10. ti:Jb5, and
38. wh2-g3 we6-f6 prepares the advance of the c
39. wg3-f3 J::tc6-c3t pawn.
40. <>ttf3-f2 J::tc3-c2t 10. b2-b4!?
A rook sacrifice has smashed the 'it>xd7 26. 'i\Yg4t 'i!fe6 27. tt::lb6t 'it>d6
defence line. 28. tt::lxc4t !
21. ...... �c7-d6 24. e6-e7 �f8xe7
During the preparation of the 25. 'i!Vg3xg4t tt::lb8-d7
manuscript we looked at 21. .. 26. tt::ld5xe7t 'it>c8-c7?!
tt::lf3t ! 22. "tWxf3 'i!Ve5. Black has Black misses his best chance. 26. ..
started a counterattack. Bacrot 'it>b8 27. �f4 li:Je5 28. 't'Nf5 ne2 29.
found the win 23. l!Vf7! �d6 24. nxb5 'iWxe7 would be a spectacular
�f4 l\Ve1t 25. 'it>h2 l:H8 26. Jxd6 climax.
nxf7 27. exf7 nxg2t! (27. .. tt::ld7
28. �g4) 28. 'it>xg2 'iWd2t A clear
way to win is 29. 'it>fl! �xd3t 30.
'it>e1 l!Ve4t 31. <it>d2 tt::ld7 32. n a1
�g2t 33. 'it>c1 and White takes over
the attack.
22. ..tc1-g5t 'it>d8-c8
A spectacular finish is 22. .. 'it>e8
23. l!Vxe5 l\Vxe5 24. it.h5 mate.
23. �d1-g4
diagram of analysis
The positional costs of the material A pawn is won after 44. ii.e6t wb8
gain are high: bS, dS and fS are 45. l:td7? �xd7 46. 1/xd?, but the
strong squares for White. ending 46. .. we? 47. �e8 h4 will be
33. l2lh4-f5 h6-h5? drawn.
Black should have played 33. .. 44. ...... 'iiid8-e8
�b4! (threatens .. bS) 34. �dS �c8 The point of the combination is 44.
35. �fdl �cS and a fierce battle .. 2.c7 45. �e6t . If Black plays 44. ..
will be fought. 'llif6 45. l:t7xb6 'lliflt 46. �a2 l't xc2
34. �dl-dS 47. l:!.xaS, the white advantage is
Now the black position is paralysed decisive.
by blockaders. 45. l:tb5xb6 �e8-elt
34. ...... 'llic5-c7 46. wbl-a2 l:!.h2xc2
35. �dS-bS b7-b6 47. l:tb6-a6 l:tc2-c7
36. tt:lf5-e3 �e5-d4 Black can sacrifice a pawn by 47...
37. ltJe3-d5 �dB 48. l:txd6t wc8, but White
The blockaders have moved to bS wins by 49. l:ta6 l:tc7 50. �b8t!
and dS. wd7 51. l:th8, as in the game.
37. ...... �c7-d8
38. �fl-f4 �d4-c5
Pawn b6 will be captured after 38.
.. �es 39. �c4.
39. �f4xf6 :de8-e2
40. l:!.f6-f7 l:!.e2-f2
41. l:!.f7-h7 l:!.f2xh2
l . d2-d4 lt:lg8-f6
2. c2-c4 g7-g6
A dynamic positional sacrifice
3. lt:lb1-c3 �f8-g7
follows.
4. e2-e4 d7-d6
14. ...... .l:!.f8xf4!
5. f2-f4
15. 'ilrd1-d5!
Keres chooses a risky opening,
Threatens to capture a rook or play
because he has to win the game in
16. e7t .
order to equalise the match.
15. ...... �g8-h8
5. ...... c7-c5
If Black returns the piece by 15. ..
6. d4-d5 0-0
�b7, his position will be horrible.
7. lt:lg1-f3 e7-e6
16. 'ilrd5xa8 lt:ld7-b6
8. �fl -e2 e6xd5
17. 'iWa8xa7
9. c4xd5 b7-b5
After 17. 'ilrb8?! lt:le3! 17. �f2 lt:lg4t
Boris worries about Paul's fine
White has to accept a repetition of
endgame technique and seeks
moves by 18. we1, because 18.
complexity in the middle game.
wg3? .l:!.xf3t! loses.
10. e4-e5
17. ...... �c8xe6
The justification of the last move
lies in Pachman's 10. .txb5 lt:lxe4!
11. lt:lxe4 'ilra5t 12. Kf2 "f!Hxb5 13.
lt:lxd6 'i!Yb6 14. lt:lc4 �a6 15. 'ilre2
�d7, when Black has a good game.
10. ...... d6xe5
11. f4xe5 lt:lf6-g4
12. �c1-f4
Keres plays a novelty. Familiar
lines are 12. .txb5 lt:lxe5 and 12.
�g5 'i!Yb6.
12. ...... lt:lb8-d7
13. e5-e6 f7xe6?!
A more solid move is 13. .. lt:lb6 The sacrifice of the exchange has
and 14. exf7t .l:!.xf7 or 14. .txb5 gained control over the centre, a
fxe6. lead in development, two bishops
14. d5xe6 and a displaced white queen.
Both players have achieved their 18. 0-0
aim of wild complications. A more promising variation seems
140 Grand Strategy
to be 18. l:!.d1! ..td4 19. ttJxbS ttJe3 ..t xb2. White replies 26. "tlfb8 t �g7
20. ttJbxd4 (later played in Pelikan 27. nn
Quinteros, Buenos Aires 1966).
Now the least evil is 20. .. cxd4 21.
�f2 ttJxd1t 22. l:!.xdl.
18. ...... tLlg4-e3
19. l:!.fl-f2
Some commentators regard 19.
bbS ttJxfl 20. l:!.xfl as winning,
but 20. .. ttJc4! will give Black active
piece play.
19. ...... b5-b4
diagram of analysis
diagram of analysis
l. d2xe3 f7xe6
2. e3xd4 e6xf5
3. d4xe5 f5xe4
4. e5xd6 e4xf3
5. d6xe7 f3xe2
6. e7-e8'*'
5. Biographical Appendix
A. My life unti11970
was born i n Len i n g rad i n 1 937. My father, Spassky Vasilij Vlad i m i rovich ( 1 906-
D
1 976 ) , was a building engineer by profession . He came from a fam i l y of
O rthodox priests i n the small town of Tim in the Kursk reg ion . My ancestors are
mentioned in the church arch ives from the end of the eig hteenth century.
My mother, Petrova Ekaterina Petrovna ( 1 905- 1 995) , was of peasant
stock. Her mother, lvanova Darja lvanovna, came from the vil lage of Rjad nevo ,
Pskov reg i o n . Her father, Kuprijanov And rej Kuprijanovich , was a rich man with a
huge fam i ly i n Pskov. According to the laws of I m perial Russia, my mother was an
i l leg itimate c h i l d . She received her name and patronymic ( P etrova, Petrovna) from
her godfather, Piotr Vassi l iev, a relative of her mother Darja. My mother was brought
u p i n his house at this village of Rjadnevo. My mother considered Piotr's childre n as
her brothers and sisters .
My parents married i n Len ingrad i n 1 93 2 . They had th ree children : Georg ij
( 1 934) , myself ( 1 937) and l raida ( 1 944 ) . During the war, my brother and I were
evacu ated from Leningrad to the Ki rov district. I learned the rules of chess at the age
of five , when I watched the games of older kids in the chi ldren's h o m e . In the
beg i n n i ng of 1 943, our parents escaped from besieged Len ingrad . At that time I was
dying from starvatio n . Their arrival probably saved m e . That was a crucial point in the
Opening of my life. From 1 943 until 1 946 our family l ived in Sverd lovka, 40 km from
M oscow . My parents divorced i n 1 944. D u ring the s u m mer of 1 946, the fam i l y of a
mother and three children retu rned to Len ingrad .
One day I was i n the park on the Kirov Islands, where I found a chess pavilion
with a Black Knight on top. lt bathed i n beautiful s u n l i g ht, leaves sti rred lang uorously
i n a breeze wafting from the Fin nish Bay , and had verandas contai n i ng glass-covered
chess tables. And no peopl e ! What a silent fai ry world ! I was completely hypnotised
by its beauty ! After that discovery I spent every day at the pav i l i o n . I had 1 5 kopecks
per day for travel expenses and one glass of water with syru p . I used to go home
with the last, overcrowded streetcar. Soldier's boots were my worst enemies. I n that
s u m mer my brother and I had no shoes. I stood beside the tables watc h i ng how the
visito rs played . Long queen moves fascinated me. I fel l i n love with the wh ite queen .
She was covered by new lacquer and smel led wonderfu lly. I dreamed about
caressi ng her i n my pocket, but I did not dare to steal her. Chess is pure for me. The
wondrous world can not accept such trivial ities .
Many days I watched the others play . I was very shy. Once my brother
entered me i n a bl itz tou rnament. I was mated on f7 i m med i ately and bu rst i nto tears .
The wondrous world had shown its real face . . . But my shyness had disappeared and
I had to play every day !
Biographical appendix 145
The chess pavi lion was closed in September. I became desperate and
searched a chess club all over the city, l i ke a hungry dog . I even wanted my mother
to help me, but had no luck! My mother had her own severe tro u bles. She was
digging potatoes and carrying heavy 40 kg sacks i n Pargolovo , 1 5 km from
Leningrad . She earned a few pounds of potatoes for this job. One day her back was
i nj u red and she was desperate : "Now I am an i nval id and cannot work anymore". She
even visited the famous saintly monk Serap h i m of Vi ritza, and asked for his s upport .
T h e old m a n looked a t my mother and said : " B e cal m , very soon everyt h i ng w i l l b e all
right !"
At the beg i n n i ng of November, I borrowed my mother's soldier's boots . They
nearly reached to my bel ly. I had no shoes for wet weather and no overcoat either.
But I was proud 'to joi n ' the chess section. Trembl i n g , I put a lot of docu ments i nto a
narrow wi ndow. H u rrah , I was listed in the section !
The Palace of Pio neers , formerly Anitchkov Palace, residence of Alexandre I l l ,
always looked terrific. The pleasant chambe rs with marble p i l lars , music, various
games, everything created the hol iday atmosphere. The chess c l u b was one of the
best i n the cou ntry . Famous players were i nvited , such as Botvi n n i k , Bronste i n ,
Bondarevsky a n d Levenfish . All Len i ng rad masters were there. Some of them
became g rand maste r, e . g . Tai manov, Tol u s h , Furman . I remember one particular
lectu re by Levenfi s h . By the way, Gregory Jakovlevich Levenfish was the g reatest
authority for many Len i n g raders, higher than Botvinnik. Levenfish was treated as a
man of Russian culture and i ntelligence. Botvi n n i k was regarded as a representative
of Komsomo l , a 30's man of Soviet culture . The lectu re was held in a new chess
room, the former Cabinet of Alexander I l l . As youngsters , we were watc h i n g the
game Alekh i n e-Yates, Hasti ng 1 925/26. A pawn majority attack, start i n g with b2-b4,
was very i nstructive.
u nfai r ! I bu rst into tears and play was suspended on 'techn ical grounds' for fifteen
minutes. This incident ended my career as a prodigy. lt taught me to refuse take
backs. The reward for my sufferi ngs was a fee for which I bought my fi rst winter
overcoat. I n M i nsk I became j u n i o r champion of the Al l-U nion Club 'Trudovye
Reservy' ( Labo u r Forces) in November 1 948.
Thanks to Zak and G .J. Levenfish I was given a scholars h i p of 1 200 roubles
per month i n 1 948/49 ! That was a tremendous su pport to o u r fam i ly. Recently I was
pleased to learn that the Russian Tzar, N icholas 11, gave scholars h i ps to the most
talented young people ( e . g . a pupil of I . E . Repin, K u l i kov, a painter who became a
winner at the international exhibition i n Liege, 1 903) .
Zak tried to give h i s pupils an all-round educati o n . So I joined the swim m i n g
and skating sections. H i g h j u mping started later, n o t a t the Palace o f Pio neers . W e
visited the operas Carmen b y Bizet a n d Delibes' Lakme. Z a k reco m m e nded me
chess books. I did not l i ke My system by N i mzowitsch because of the obscu rity of his
com ments. I preferred Alekhine. His thoug hts about chess were always sharp and
clear. My second favou rite was Chigori n . The depth of his concepts and his i nteg rity
were very attractive to m e . Both of them had a tragic life . They are i ncluded in my ex
l i bris ( reproduced on page 4 ) . I also liked the textbooks of Lasker, Capablanca and
Euwe.
D u ring this period I played positional chess by col lecting small advantages .
Tactics bothered m e . I was too reflective. Once a spectator said: "This boy plays like
an old man", but I did not care . My play was natural and reflected who I was.
At the end of 1 95 1 , Zak and I played in the quarter final of the Soviet
champio n s h i p . Suddenly I got an irrepressible sense for the initiative and tactics ! This
breakthrough i n side of me happened natu ral ly, without any provocatio n . My res u lt in
the tournament was moderate ( + 5 , -3, =7) , but the new quality of play was most
i m po rtant. Zak worried about it. He was afraid that I could lose my natu ral basis !
Soon he realised that I needed a strong player as a coach and went looking
for G .J. Levenfish . I did n't mind, but fate gave me A . K . Tol u s h . Poor Zak was mortal ly
i nsu lted , because he was against Tol u s h . After several years our relations were
restored and we remained on friendly terms.
When I g rew u p , Zak gave me all that he could offer. The years between 1 0
and 1 7 are a formative period for a young man . He gave me a good general di rection
and a financial , o rganisational and personal support . As a coach he supplied me with
a very effective opening weapo n . I chose the King's Gam bit from a good menu of
openings. In the hands of Tolus h , I started to use it like a sharp bayon et. I have
played forty King's Gam bits and never lost a single game ! I have used it against the
strongest players in the world . When 1 . e4 e5 occu rs in s i m u ltaneous exh ibitions, I
o n l y play 2 . f4 ! This led to thousands of gambits . Zak was paying attention to m e ,
besides h i s pri ncipal duties a s a s e n i o r coach of t h e Palace of Pio neers . H e behaved
like a kind father. When I left my cou ntry via Lening rad , my last visit was to Zak.
'Just expenses'
This is how A . K . Tolush (K.) Difi ned our alliance from the beg i n ning . He made
a remark about no payment, 'just expenses' and trouble for eight years . And he was
rig ht. At that time K. was 42 years old. He had a Slav appearance from a Russian
mother and Lith uanian father, was of med i u m heig ht, looked q u ite solid , was always
Biographical appendix 147
well d ressed , spoke with a deep baritone, was very accu rate and h ad l ively eyes .
Once a waite r brought h i m a cold, u n pleasant-looking ch icke n . He watched h i m : "Did
it die of old age , ha?" The last ' ha' was witheri ng .
K . had someth i ng of an old Russian barin (landlord ) and was offended by h i s
fate . H e l i ked alcohol but knew when t o stop. When depressed he someti mes started :
"How deep . . " followed by silence. One might add " . . the cou ntry has s u n k" . K . knew
the story about the C o m m u n i st terror and executions by the fi rst Revolutionary
Government in St. Petersbu rg . He never mentioned it, because political talks were
absol utely excluded d u ring our period of eight years.
H e gambled in games like cards, billiard and races. Chess s howed the
richness of his nature. H i s general approach was: a good result m u st be the
conseq uence of sound strategic play. "Never play for t h e chance, damaging your
position. . Never take a hundred to n i l that you can beat a person who cannot play
.
chess. Leave one for chance . . . " D u ri ng the war K. left a covered trench to u ri nate .
One m i n ute later a d i rect hit of a missile kil led all his friends. For chess players aged
30, 40, 50, 60, there was the wel l-known call "A pauper does not fear the fire, forward
Kasimirovich!"The fi rst part d isappeared , but the last piece s u rvived for decades.
I n m y view K 's main strength was his ability t o take t h e initiative a n d create an
attack in positions without a distinct character. An attack on the king was h i s
speciality. The main problem was t h e preparatio n . I n order t o g e t attacki ng positi o n s ,
one h a s to make positional a n d material concessions. K. knew h o w to take a risk.
When he created an attack, he never made a fuss. He was prudent and patient, but
brave and bold at the same time. I watched with delight how K. mobil ised rese rves ,
manoeuvred and created th reats . He knew how to find or create a weakness i n the
defence or to mobilize superior fo rces on a certain part of a front. H e sensed when
the position was ready for a decisive blow. H i s tactical i nsight was excellent. K . was a
strateg ist of the attack. I would rank h i m among masters of the attack l i ke Marshal!,
Spee l m a n , Alekh i n e , Geller, Tal and Kasparov.
But K. had an 'Ac h i l les hee l ' , just l i ke E . Geller. While prepari ng an attack he
could not stop a counterattack. I often watched with trembling heart, how K. was
attacked when the kings were castled on opposite sides. His own king was in m o rtal
danger, but K. took his papi rosa (cigarette) , moved it i nto the tube, coughed and
conti n ued his assault as if noth ing was wrong. The opponent's attack was stronger
and K . was dying . I had a sense of u ndescribable so rrow, but ad m i red h i m at the
same time. He preferred to be kil led rather than to give way to his opponent. H e
freely accepted t h e m o rtal blows. I d i d n o t have s u c h cou rage a n d K . gave me a n
excel lent example.
K. became my perso nal coac h . So he started to educate me, 'fu ndamentally' .
At the age of 15, I was absentm inded, forgetful and i naccurate . A small excuse is that
my fam i l y was living i n one roo m , a shared apartment of 14 m2. I could never prepare
my homework for schoo l , but spent my time at schoo l , sports, the Palace of Pioneers
(4-9 pm) and came home at about 1 0 p m . K. taught me how to eat with knife and
fo rk, how to knot and wear a tie, how to use a handkerchief and serviette , things l i ke
that. U nfortunately, he had no pedagog ical talent. He reproved me reg u larly, without
effect .
U s u ally o u r trai n i ng sessions were held i n K's new, two-room apartment. lt
was a reward from the city for his fi rst place i n the i nternational chess tou rnament of
Bucharest 1953 . We analysed the modern openings and played bl itz games to check
148 Grand Strategy
ideas. One day K. lost five games i n a row. "See you tomorrow". He did n't want
revenge ! ? This is a quality of a great player. In the analysis we l i ked to e njoy life,
sacrificing material and making jokes. K's ope n i ng repertoi re was of l ittle use to me. 1t
was too specialized ! But I used the Alekh ine attack in the G rOnfeld I nd i a n , which
gave m e victories over Fischer i n Santa Mon ica 1 966 and Siegen 1 970 (games 2 . 2
a n d 2 . 3 ) . O u r analyses o f adjou rned games were often i naccu rate . I could n o t trust
them . Good concentratio n d u ri ng the resumption helped me a lot, when I applied the
analytical ideas. So K. was not an analyst by nature but an i m p roviser. That was
exactly what I needed!
K. l i ked old chess books and players from the past. He ad m i red Alekhine and
paid personal respect to P. Keres, G. Levenfish and later Tal . He did not l i ke
Botv i n n i k or his ideological activity for the Komsomol or his style. He never told me
about it, trying to be loyal to a g reat player.
Our fi rst com m o n tou rnament was Bucharest 1 953. That was a festival for m e ,
l i ke the first b a l l f o r 1 6-year-old Natasha Rostov ! I looked with ad m i ration a t Smyslov,
Petrosian , Boleslavsky , Stoltz , Szab6, O'Kelly, Golombek, Filip, Ciocaltea,
Opocensky and M i lev. Later M i lev and Ciocaltea became good friends. lt was a l ittle
strange for a 1 6-year-o ld boy, when our Commissar Georgij Ga vrilovich Meshersky
read a te leg ram from the Soviet Sport Comm ittee d u ring a meeti ng of the Soviet
players : "Stop fighting each other, make draws , stop Szab6". At that time Szab6 was
lead i n g with 5 112 out of 6! Fortu nately I had al ready beaten Smyslov. This order
g uaranteed me d raws agai nst the other Soviet crocodi les ! The tou rnament brought K.
h i s g reatest success: fi rst prize and the title of i nternational g rand master. I finished
o n 41h-6th place with Boleslavsky and Szab6 and became an i nternational maste r.
1954 I won the All U n i o n Tournament of Masters and Candidate Masters ( + 1 0 , -0 ,
=5) and ach ieved 4'h place i n the sem i-fi nal of the 22"d Soviet Championship ( + 6 , -2 ,
= 1 2) . I entered the final !
1955 was a successful chess year for m e . I n the 22"d Soviet Championship I e nded
o n 3'd-6th place and qual ified for the l nterzo nal ! In April the Soviet student team took
1 ., place in Lyon . In August I won the Youth World Championsh i p in Antwerpen with a
score of +7, -0 , =2 i n the final . I n September I got the 71h-9th place i n the l nterzonal ,
Goteborg 1 955. I entered the Candidates tou rnament !
I n Apri l K. broke his leg and had to spend a long ti me i n hospital . My coach
joi ned me later in the i nterzonal Goteborg 1 955. The absence of K. had a very bad
consequences. D u ri ng the Youth Championship i n Antwerpe n , I asked com m i ssar
E . P . Soloviev : "Did Com rade Len i n suffer from sy p h i l i s ?" The eyes of my apparatchik
g l ittered dangerously. The consequence of my cu riosity was a severe i n q u i ry by the
deputy- m i n ister of the Soviet Sport Comm ittee, D.V. Postn i kov, i n the autu m n of
1 955. I was u nder th reat of beco m i ng "pol itically u n rel iable", which is worse i n a
Co m m u nist state than being a simple killer. Poor K ! He was i n n ocent but responsible
for my pol itical educatio n . The same person , D.V. Postnikov, saved m e . H e refused
to push my "po l itical case" to the Komso m o l , in spite of the very pol ite
reco m m e ndations by the secretary of the USSR Chess Federatio n , L.J. Abramov. If
Komsomo l , the C o m m u n istic Youth Organisati o n , had analysed my "case", I would
have had l ittle chance of s u rvival . D . V . Postn i kov was my g u ard ian ang e l . Fro m that
t i m e , I was always u nder s u rveil lance by the KG B and K. became a bad political
mentor. This ideological accident was the second crucial point in my life.
Biographical appendix 149
1956 My 3 'd -7 th place i n the 1 956 Candidates' Tournament was a big success. I
entered the world chess el ite . lt seemed that noth ing could stop my prog ress. I n
real ity there were ten years full o f u p and downs u ntil m y match agai nst T. Petrosian
i n 1 966.
People are probably condem n ed to com m it the majority of their stupidities in
his l ife between the age of 1 6 and 22. That is what happened to m e . K . played an
outstanding ro le i n secu ring me from many troubles. H e prepared my way to the
Olympus, but my tro u bles and problems rui ned and exhausted h i m.
But let's get back to my chess activities. From 1 955 I partici pated i n the Soviet
Championship ten times in a row! These tou rnaments were not the ideological but
the real Soviet Chess School . Even more: the Soviet C hess Academy ! The best
players of the cou ntry participated . Each championship was the strongest tou rnament
i n the world that year ! I recol lect all partici pants with deep gratitude.
Between 1 955 and 1 960, I was a student in the Department of Jou rnalism of
the Language Facu lty of Len i n g rad University . The six championships I played at that
time had fou r special featu res:
1. They were played i n Janu ary , the worst time for my health .
2 They coincided with my U n iversity exams.
3. I played u nder the s u rvei llance of K.
4. A t t h e e n d o f each championsh i p , I had tonsilitis, ru n n i ng a temperatu re o f
40°C .
My next and last championship would be after ten years i n 1 97 3 . I would take
1 st place ! In 1 976 I would leave my cou ntry for twenty years . . .
K . and I played together i n the championships of 1 956, 1 957 and 1 958. I n the
last rou n d of 1957, K . was Black against M. Tal. lt was the last chance for K . to
beco me a champion of the USSR. K. lost. I met him when he was drunk. H e said
halti ng ly: "Borja, a genius player has appeared . .. " That was a big compli ment to
Misha Tal . A g reat player showed his ad m i ration for another great player, losing his
last ch ance to beco me USSR Champion . . .
M y chess resu lts were unstable d u ring m y student' years. I lost to Misha Tal i n
t h e last ro u nd o f t h e 251h championship, Riga 1 958, and d ropped o u t o f t h e world
championship race for th ree years. During the same tou rnament, in my game agai nst
Sueti n , I decided to win at any cost. My opponent was u nder time-pressure and I
decided to set a trap.
150 Grand Strategy
I had s i n ned and would be punished. Tal was my headman . A young chess
player must have solid principles in chess as well as life. In chess, this pri nciple i s :
look for the best mo ve in the position. T h i s is a compass i n a stormy sea. Without this
com pass any chess player is lost. At the age of twenty-one I was sti l l a child. The
trials and m i sfortu nes would bri ng matu rity later on. In Bucharest 1 953 , the 60-year
old m aster fro m Czechoslovakia, Karel Opocensky, consoled me after a loss by
sayi ng: "You ngster, a man is being born i n a fight. . . "
Three years later I led the zonal tou rnament, t h e 28' h Soviet Champions h i p ,
M oscow 1 96 1 , a n d played bri l l i antly agai nst Polugaevsky . I saw a w i n i n two moves,
but changed m y m i nd at the decisive moment and made an i ncredible b l u nder! I lost
a w i n n i ng game and my nerves col lapsed . I could sti l l fight agai nst Leonid Stei n i n the
last ro u n d . The game was adjourned after forty moves i n a lost position for m e . I
resigned the game without res u m i n g . Again I lost three years! What had happened ?
This needs an explanatio n .
I n 1 956 t h e fam i l y ( m y mother and three chi ldre n ) had moved fro m a room of
1 4 m2 to a two-room apartment (28 m2) , from a s l u m to a palace . At that time one
could only i m p rove one's residence through the m u n ici pality . Cooperative housing or
rental apartments did not exist. lt is easy to u nderstand the long waiti ng list in the
mu nici pal ity! So we got a new apartment th anks to my chess successes.
I n 1 959 I married a student of the phi lological faculty, Nadejda Latyntzeva,
who was the same age as me. Our daughter Tanya was born in 1 960. Soon I
realized that our marriage had no future . We were bishops of opposite colo u rs. I
offered a d raw to my wife, a divorce. She objected and a war started. The only
solution was to find an exchange for the new apartment, where six people were living
o n 28 m2. I was stalemated . There was no solutio n . This was t h e third crucial point in
my life. The solution came from Cherkes Mikhail Jurjevich ( 1 909- 1 972 ) . H e was the
ch ief of the October Railway i n Leningrad and a great chess Maecenas . H e arranged
a one room apartment from the Sport club "Locomotive". My martial ex-wife moved to
the new place and peace was restored . This historical event took place in the
s u m mer of 1 96 1 . I will be g ratefu l to M i khail Ju rjevich till the last day of my life!
Biographical appendix 151
The previous year, 1 960, was also difficult for m e . I got kidney stones, a poor
add ition to tonsi litis.
I g rad uated from u n iversity. The subject of my paper was 'Shakhmatny Listok
1859-63, the first Russian chess magazine. ' U nexpected ly, it s haped my pol itical
educati o n . For this work I had to read jou rnals from the 1 860's . I saw the Russian
culture at that time. What a beautifu l city St . Petersburg was ! I was completely
shocked . When I left the N ational Library , I found myself i n the sleepy, d readfu l ,
provincial town o f Leni ngrad . What a n abyss when Russia collapsed !
During the s u m mer I played fi rst board for the Soviet student team . I n the
decisive m atch against the Americans, I lost to Bill Lombardy and the American team
took first place ! My personal result was okay (+9, - 1 , =2) , but that gave me l ittle
consolatio n .
A t the 271h championship o f t h e USSR , I scored my worst performance (place
9-1 0 ) . That year I played a lot: a shared fi rst place with Fischer i n Mar del Plata 1 960
(+ 1 2 , -0, =3) and fi rst place i n the championship of 'Trud' (+8, -0, =7) .
My problem was an i n secu re base , due to the divorce from my wife and split
from Kasimirovich.
I n Riga 1 958 K. was very upset with my fai l u re for the i nterzonal . He did not
like the g i rl I chose. H e even found me a bride in Riga! Poor good m a n , poor K! He
was right. His pred iction about me, "Ju nior will drop this g i rl", was correct. His general
concl usion was right as wel l! "Ju n ior is wanderi ng on the left ! " ( i nstead of being on
the right) . He was really suffe ring from my problems , which I created with each step.
During 1 952-60 K. was i nvolved i n my affai rs with the KGB, school , u n iversity, militia,
chess federation of Len i n g rad , chess federation of the USSR and finally my cou rt
affair. He was a powe rful shield, but h i s patience was l i mited . He slowly left m e ,
co mplai n i ng that I had become an ungu ided missile . H e became exhausted .
We met each other frequ ently later, but never touched o u r relationship d u ri ng
the period of 1 952-60 . I was waiting for it, but K. remained silent. His friendly
relations with Bondarevsky were broken off. Every time I met K., I felt that he was
i n s u lted , but did not l i ke to show it. During my match agai nst Petrosian in 1 966, I met
K. on the stai rs of the Estrada Theatre in Moscow. He was pale and breathing heavily
and h ad j ust su rvived a heart attack. Walking down he uttered: "The missi les
explode, closer and closer."
Thanks to K. my play became active over the whole board . My i magi nati o n ,
i ntuiti o n , sacrifices a n d tactics i m p roved . I had al most reached my g reatest strength ,
staying cool d u ring the crisis. Later ( i n the period of 1 963-70) this m ade me the
strongest middle game player. Yugoslav chess magazi nes gave me the flattering
name of "Shahovsky Pushkin", because of my harmonic and elegant style, I ass u m e .
The spirit o f i n itiative a n d enterprise played an important ro le i n my victory over
Petrosian i n 1 969. In the sacrificial 1 91 h game (2. 1 5 ) , 'K's can non roared ' , as E. Geller
wrote . K. died fo u r months before I became World Champi o n . At his fu neral h i s
widow, Valentina lvanovna, told me that he knew when he was g o i n g t o die. During
his last hours , he arranged everyt h i ng to do with his debts and other m atters . He left
this world courageously, without fuss, 'fu ndamentally', just as he used to attack over
the whole board .
K. was a complete , proud and independent person, un aristocrat de /'esprit. I
re member h i m with g reat tenderness and cherish his memory .
1 52 Grand Strategy
Father (F.)
I n the beg i n n i ng of 1 96 1 I started to cooperate with g rand m aster lgor
Zakharovich Bondarevsky ( 1 9 1 3-1 979) . I called h i m 'father'. D u ring the civil war, the
U krai nian i n s u rgent peasants gave their leader and hero Nestor Makhno this name.
The years 1 96 1 -69 were the best i n my life. F. became my friend, clever adviser,
excellent coac h , a good psychologist and , to a certain deg ree , my father. The age
difference of 24 years gave me respect. M i raculously, we found a sense of m utual
confidence. When I did someth i ng stu pid , F . never lectu red me, but remained silent. I
i m m ed iately realised what I had done. That was a pedagog ical talent and gift of God .
He did not pressu rize m e . I felt comfortable with F. He got me when I was 24.
K. watched over me at the worst age of 1 5 to 23, when a young man shapes
his personality. His qual ities were top leve l , but he could not find the right approach
to me. He was an i nteger person , but i nflexible. K. could not find an excuse for other
people's defects , because he did not have these fau lts h i mself. This i nteresti ng
observation was made by m aster Dmitrij Rovner ( 1 908- 1 986) .
F. was m o re flexible. Thanks to h i m , I always had a sense of g reat moral
support.
At the end of the 281h Championsh i p , Moscow 1 96 1 , F . had j ust retu rned from
the 1 960/6 1 H asti ngs tournament. My second i n the tournament was K . A . Klaman .
During the analysis of my adjou rned game against L. Ste i n , the three of us decided to
resign it. I started a new life.
At that time I was homeless ( M .J. Cherkes would save me d u ring the s u m mer
of 1 96 1 ) . F . gave me a home and food . He had a th ree-room apartment i n Leni ngrad .
H i s salary was m iserable. So we wrote some theoretical articles about ope n i ngs
(to u rnament s u rveys ) , which brought us small amou nts of money.
F . knew very well what I needed to make my character harder: endurance,
persistence and d isci pline. I got the o rder to play ti l l the last paw n . In order to
i m p rove my tech nique, F . collected typical endgame positions, gathered studies and
switched on the clock. He wanted to improve the rapidity and quality of my play. Here
fol l ows some of the fru its of o u r exercises .
Nikolai Grigoriev
Shakhmaty v SSSR 1 9 32
F. set up the position and switched
on the clock. After twenty minutes
I pointed to the g2 square. "Oho!
Bravo!" he said.
F. made a new plan . I n the beg i n n i n g of 1 963 he sai d : "The KGB is too curious
about you. Move to Moscow ! " I loved my native city, but it was time to leave and I did.
Thanks to "Locomotive" I got a 20 m2 studio ( room and kitchen) at Fabrichnaya
Statio n , 40 km from Moscow. When this happened, in 1 964 , I was happy ! Nobody
d i stu rbed me in my castle ! lt was 1 5 m from the statio n . When trai ns passed , my
castle trembled ( l i ke an asp leave , as the Russian saying has it) , but it did not disturb
me ! My climb of the Olympus started i n my castle at Fabrichnaya Statio n !
D u ring the match we lived i n one room of ' Moskva' Hote l . For l u nc h , I had to
queue for a buffet located on the same floor. In front of the buffet, there was a
strange slogan . ' Donneur is the best friend of patients . ' The mean ing of this bizarre
poster is sti ll an enigma to me. The boring atmosphere was depressive, but the
match for the world championship should be a festival of chess ! When Smyslov's
fam i l y offered me to l u nch with them, I was happy. Because of Nadejda Andreevna's
fine meals I was asleep d u ring the fi rst two hours of the game. I woke up somewhere
in the middle game. After twelve games of the matc h , my score was m i n u s two (5-7) .
I had equal ised after the n i n eteenth game (8V2-8Y2) . I was full of enthusiasm and
decided that I would win the m atch ! In reality I was i n mortal danger. The wou nded
Tiger was ready to kill or die !
We spent the free day together with V. Smyslov on a boat i n the s u n s h i n e . lt
was a hot Spring day . The next day I was bright red . F . asked me to take a timeout.
Although I had th ree ti meouts i n reserve , I refu sed . That was stupid ! P . won the 20'h
game eas i l y ! And the match . . .
At the banquet i n honour of P . , I respectfully said : " Before the m atch I
regarded the chess world as a democracy. Now I see it is a monarchy, and the king
is sitting near me" . . .
The effects o f the match were very positive and educational :
1. I got a fantastic experience
2. I got al most th ree years of free life without responsibilities or obl igations
3. I preserved my health and strength
4. I gai ned weight, j u mping from 72 to 78 kilos, which was not g reat
5. Such a match needs a professional organ isation
6. Such a m atch needs good ope n i ng preparation
7. Such a m atch needs mental preparatio n as wel l .
A challenger must fanatically believe in the inevitability o f his victory. I didn't
know this then .
Two months after the matc h , I won the g reatest tournament of my life, Santa
M o n ica 1 966. Fischer was second, Larsen third , U n zicker fou rt h and P. fift h . I won
$5000 and could pay my seconds. P . was reigning, I was ru l i ng . I was a good Soviet
citize n . The Soviet leaders could sleep qu ietly, because the monster Fischer had not
woken u p yet. During the whole year of 1 967, I was trave l l i n g , playing and enjoying
life.
The fol lowing year, 1 968, I entered the Candidates' matches di rectly, as a
final ist. I won them with relative ease :
the quarter-fi nal versus Geller: + 3 , -0, =5,
the semi-final versus Larsen : + 4 , - 1 , =3, and
the final versus Korch noi : +4, - 1 , =5.
Larsen called h i mself the n u mber one player i n the world at that time. For my
win over h i m , the g rateful Soviet authorities gave me the Badge of Merit. In 1 955 I
got a medal for 'valorous labour'. That's all I got.
start the fight outside the chess board , mostly agai nst the organizers. At that time I
felt stro nger than Fischer. I played better i n the middle game, and was more stable
psycholog ical ly. My nerves were in good shape.
In 1 969 I am an experienced match player. For three months I had done a
special preparation with F. and my new second, grand master N . Krog i u s . Thanks to
F. the o rganisational preparation was on a professional leve l . Our headquarters was
a rented house, 35 km from Moscow. My new wife , Larissa Spassky ( Soloviev) joi ned
us to m ake our l ife comfortable. We had married i n 1 966. We even had a car d river,
E. Lindgre n , who d rove us back and forth from the house to the playi ng hal l . My
fighting spi rit was prepared for a battle to the last pawn ! I will deal with the cou rse of
the m atch i n fou r parts :
1. Games 1 -9 , m y sprint and fatigue
2. Games 1 0 - 1 3 , I am a punch bag
3. Games 1 4- 1 7 , the turning point
4. Games 1 8-23, my final offensive .
reason. I was five minu tes late for According to the analyses o f Jan
the fi rst game and deserved van Reek, my adj ourned game i s
punishment. This persecuted me. It p robably l o s t . But F's 'chess n o s e '
happened eventually. predicted a practical e s c a p e .
I n game 2 and 3 , I pressed P . and ach ieved two d raws . I won game 4 and 5 ,
g a m e 6 a n d 7 were d raws . I n t h e game 8 P . blu ndered i n t h e middle g a m e a n d lost.
D u ri ng the fi rst eight games, I pressu red P . and held him i n tension. Both of us
considered game 4 game as my best ach ievement. P . writes about it: " I consider it
his best, because it was most typical of the strategy plan ned and rigorously carried
out by Spassky i n this matc h . What it entailed - active piece play, caref u l l y
mai ntained throughout the entire session - is n o t simple, si nce piece play is a
'perishable product' . Spassky displayed rare ski l l i n mai ntai ning the tension i n the
positio n , constantly finding ways to keep his opponent on edge" (The games of
Tigran Petrosian , vol u m e 2, pages 1 24 - 1 25) .
In the 9 ' h game P. gave me a fight. I target so close, I got t e rrib ly tired .
accepted it, although I fe lt already No doubt t h e match doctor would
very tire d . P. had missed his best have given me a certificate for a
chances i n a sharp fight, when we timeout.
reached the following p o s ition. To become World Champion,
should have u s e d a timeout for
Spassky - Tigran Petrosian analysing the winning position. I
9" game World Championship found this humiliating and rej e c t e d
M o s cow 1 96 9 t h e idea. During the analys e s I fel t
ill a n d w a s not confident a b o u t m y
succ e s s . I c o u l d not sleep well.
The game was resumed. I p l ayed
like a somnambulant.
4 1 . liJc4 liJh7 4 2 . �g2 �f8 43. J::t a2
J::t b7 44. 'it>c2 �.e 7 45. J::t b l �b8 46.
n ab2 liJaB 4 7. ::t a2 ?
T h e win is forced by 4 7 . a S ! J::t a 7
4 8 . ::t a 2 � d 8 4 9 . w d 3 ! � d 7 so.
axb6 nxa2 5 1 . �xa2 liJxb6 5 2 .
�.xc 5 ! liJxc4 5 3 . �xc4 dxc 5 5 4 . d 6 t .
4 7 . .. ..lil.dB! 48. wd3 �d7 49. n ba l
P. wro t e : " W h e n t h e g a m e was tUfB SO. wc2 .�e8 5 I . '@'e2 J;,c 7 5 2 .
adj ourned, i t was time for me to J::t fl .il.d8 5 3 . ::t aa l liJh7 5 4 . J::t g l
resign. As chess wits would say: tUfB S S . i..d2 4Jh7 56. J::t a3 liJfB 5 7.
"Black was the exchange down, but J::t ga l 4Jh7 5 8 . a S ? ! bxa S 59. liJxa S
he had a bad position to .�.xa S 60. J::t xa S liJc 7 6 1 . n b l 4Jf8
compensate . " 62 . . �e3 tUd 7 6 3 . � f2 wg7 64. wd3
I f I could w i n t h e game, t h e match wgB 6 5 . �a2 liJb6 'k '/2
would be over. The score o f + 3 and I n a better position, I o ffered a
my moral boost would have draw, which P. accepted. If P. had
overcome my fatigue . With the declined, I would not have survived
1 58 Grand Strategy
In game 9 I fai led to destroy my wou nded opponent and win the m atch ! lt
strongly affected me. F's action damaged me as wel l . I was exhausted physical ly and
m ental ly. My fighting spi rit was broke n . I needed time for recovery . At the other side
P . felt my weakness, recovered and was ready to fig ht! I was s i n king i nto a black
hole . . . My +2 score was not so i m po rtant as the moral factor.
I started a marathon as a sprint and nearly won the m atch as a ' B l itzkrieg ' . If
you can not develop and successfu lly fi nish the assau lt, everything goes against you !
T h i n k of the German army near Moscow i n 1 94 1 .
After game 9 I was handicapped , because I had made P . come to life !
F . was proud o f m y two-point lead . H e could not ( o r did not l i ke to) realize the
situati o n . This caused a distance i n our relations. This was the first critical moment o f
the match. And I could only rely on myself, a g reat pity !
If P . had won the game, I would have been i n a hard psychological situati o n .
That was t h e second critical point i n t h e match !
After d raws i n game 1 5 and 1 6 , we reached the decisive game 1 7 . The score
was equal at 8-8. My spirit and physical shape were good , but my base was dubious.
This needs an explanati o n . After my catastrophe i n game 9, I decided to be alone
more freq uently. I started to use my small apartment opposite the Butryrkaya Prison
and l isten to my favou rite music. I also didn't l i ke the hour of fast d rivi ng over 35 km
from our headquarter i n Krasnaya Pachre to the playing hall i n the ' E strada Theatre ' .
F . regarded i t a s a caprice. He d rew t h e concl usion that I was u ng ratefu l for
h i s organisational work i n our rental house. Two hours before the 1 71 h game, he
decided to clear u p the situation and declared his u ltimatu m : "You m u st follow my
reco m me ndations o r I will leave you". I can say to his credit that h e had never m ade
such strong moves before , but always took care of m e . Obviously, h e was worried
about the outcome of the matc h . His nerves collapsed . My response was : " F . , I w i l l
fol low the way that I co nsider a s t h e right o n e " . "Okay , it is up t o you !" So I lost my
coach before the game had started .
Now, let us look at the other side of the decisive battle. A word from P . : " I t h i n k
I lost the m atch i n g a m e 1 7 , a t t h e p o i n t w h e n I offered a draw. My position a t that
point was slig htly more pleasant, yet when I offered a d raw I was s u re that Spassky
wo u ld decl i n e . But the rejection of a draw usually i m poses certai n obligati o n s , and I
had reason to expect that Spassky would overreach h i mself".
F. did not leave me after the victory . During the game I was strongly convinced
that h e was on P . 's side, trying to punish m e ! I knew h i m very wel l , his strong and
weak sides and accepted h i m as he was . My respect for h i m was g reat and I don't
think I have the right to reproach h i m about anyth i ng !
Boris Spassky
Biographical appendix 161
B . Elegant attacks
Spassky is famous for his bri l liant attacks . His short wins are ideal material for
chess jou rnalists. Six examples from the period u ntil 1 970 are s hown in this sectio n .
H i s development was sti m u l ated b y h i s trai ner Tolu s h , w h o l i ked t o attack i n h i s own
games. In the fi rst example he beats a future software tycoon o n the way to his fi rst
world title.
When Bond arevsky became his Black has to chase the White king
trainer, Spas sky continued to play forward s .
attractively, like in the above game. 3 1 . . . '& e l t 3 2 . w g 2 '!W e 2 t 3 3 . o g 3
More demanding play was needed ttJf5 t 34. gxf5 '*Ye 1 t 3 5 . wf4 '*Y h4 t
in the Candidat e s ' matche s . 3 6 . we 5 'l!H g 3 t 3 7. f4! 'fHxe 3 t 3 8 .
wf6 '!Wxd4 t 39. ti:Je 5 1 - 0
Black is mated.
6.5. Spassky - Bent Larsen
1 '1 game of Candida tes ' se mi final
Malmo 1 9 6 8 6.6. Spassky - Victor Korchnoi
7h game of the Candida tes ' final
1 . d 4 .:tJf6 2 . t"tJf3 d 5 3 . c4 c6 4. Kiev 1 9 6 8
cxd 5 cxd 5 5 . �f4 ti:Jc6 6. ti:Jc 3 c\H5
7. e 3 e6 8 . . &.b 5 tLJd 7 9. 0-0 .il.e 7 1 0. 1 . d 4 ti:Jf6 2 . c 4 g 6 3 . ttJc 3 � g 7 4 . e4
n c 1 o-o 1 1 . h3 n c8 1 2 . . �d3 $.xd3 d6 5. f3 0-0 6. $,e 3 ti:Jc6 7. ti:Jge2 a6
1 3 . '&xd3 .:tJb6 1 4. �e2 a6 1 5 . ti:Je 1 8. ttJc 1 e5 9. d 5 ti:Jd4 1 0. ti:Jb 3 �b 3
:Uc4 1 6. 0.d 3 :Ub4 1 7. b3 �d3 1 8. 1 1 . '&xb 3 !
'M'xd3 tLJb6 1 9. f3 .�.d6 20. 1'Lle2 T h i s improves on 1 1 . axb 3 c 5 =
Spassky , the i ndependent spi rit of the Kh rushchev era became a n u isance for
the apparatc h i ks agai n . H e writes about his love sto ry :
"In November 1974 I met Marina Scherbatcheff in Moscow at an e vening party in the
apartment of a French diplomat. At that time I was a free man, living alone since
A ugust 1974. We started to live together in Marina 's apartment at the end of 1974.
Her residence was under the surveillance of the Soviet police. The Soviet authorities
did not like our lo ve affair and wanted Marina to lea ve the country. She worked in the
commercial office of the French Embassy and received the order through the French
authorities. She refused to lea ve and we decided to get married. Our lo ve story
became famous in the press. In 1974 Brezjne v L . l. had signed an agreement in
Helsinki. lt allowed more room to Soviet citizens in their contacts with Western
people, but our situation was quite unclear. Fortunately, the summit of Brezjne v and
Giscard d 'Estaing was planned for the autumn of 1975. The Soviet authorities
whished to a void any complications and 'generously ' ga ve us 'carte blanche ' to set a
date for our marriage. lt took place on the 3Cih of September 1975. A fter a lot of
formalities, I got a multiple visa within a year. We left the USSR in September 1976. "
Spassky did not qualify for the next Candidates' matches i n the l nterzonal
M a n i l l a 1 976. H e did participate anyway when he could take Fischer's place .
Hort was his opponent i n Reykjavik 1 977. The 1 2-game m atch was twice
extended by two games. Boris won game fifteen and the matc h .
Later he played Portisch i n Geneva. Agai n Spassky ended superiorly.
Althou g h he l ived i n France, Boris played as the hero of the Soviet- U n ion in
the Candidates' final , because his adversary was the ' renegade' Korch noi . V i ktor was
s u perior in the beg i n n i ng and won despite the turmo i l d u ring the remainder of the
m atc h .