Archive for July 24th, 2025

All games played by those above ELO 2700 with three rooks offered up in nine moves are easy enough to follow, right! But the first instance, a full on rook sac by Karpov, is far too above your average club player like me.

Karpov plays 20. Rxe6 here.

https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1069169

This game is described as Karpov’s immortal game in several places, and the tournament victory is considered one of his best, if not the best. Unsurprisingly, the move above and the game itself constitutes entertainment only for most of us.

MJM

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I managed to find a picture of the St. Albans team that came runners up of British Schools Chess Championships of 1978.

I was only 6 then, and so I don’t know any of the team personally. The less than flattering team result can be found in the S.C.C.U Bulletin of that year too.

An account of the route to the final can be found in the school yearbook below.

MJM, Colombia

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GM Reshevsky is the subject of my most treasured trivia question, that being ‘who is the only player to have played both Lasker and Karpov in classical chess?’ (factor in simuls and Botvinnink can be counted also), as no one ever knows the answer.

Anyway, here GM Reshevsky plays a move that I interpret as being provocative, having had an Austrian FM play something very similar against me once during a blitz tournament, in hope I would burn up time in trying to refute it (which I did). Blitz permits such risky moves to some degree but classical chess?

Here, GM Reshevsky plays 12. Kg3.

Unsurprisingly, he doesn’t last very long given the strength of his opponent. The game can be found here: https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1145474

A detailed analysis can be found in ‘The Mammoth Book of The World’s Greatest Chess Games’.

MJM

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J. M. Craddock was British Boys (U-18) champion 1929-1931. I take particular interest in his games because for a while in the 50’s he lived in Dunstable and played for Bedfordshire. Here he dismantles British champion Mir Sultan Khan, who brought it on all himself in my opinion. The move below played by him is either extremely brave or downright foolhardy, one of the two -not a move I would dare play. Castling long, looks natural on one level as black has king safety issues, but that said, Khan is subject to an attack which he has no answer for, making castling long look premature perhaps?

Mir Sultan Khan plays 15. 0-0-0.

Given white has prised open black’s king almost, it seems like a good move in principle but is either premature or just unprepared I think. Why? White never gets an attack going himself and struggles to hold on before capitulating in a horrendous position.

Position after 33. …e4. Does it look like castling long got him into a spot of bother or was it mishandled thereafter?

https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1956229

It’s often been said that amateur players have a tendency to castle mechanically but Mir Sultan Khan was hardly that, having beaten Capablanca in fine style a few years previously. Perhaps he took Craddock all too easily, switched off for a moment then paid the price for doing so? Understandable if so but not quite what you would expect from the reigning British champion.

MJM

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