...are featured in this article from The Chess Drum.
Showing posts with label The Chess Drum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Chess Drum. Show all posts
Monday, January 7, 2013
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Morris Giles, 1953-2012
Story on The Chess Drum. I am just stunned. FM Morris Giles was a genius and a gentleman: I will miss him.
Much more to follow. For now, here's Giles's masterpiece (and arguably the most brilliant game ever played by a Chicagoan): he beats six-time U.S. Champion Walter Browne on Browne's home turf, the Najdorf Sicilian, with a positional piece sacrifice for an enduring light-square attack, then a queen sacrifice leading to a smothered bishop mate.
Giles,Morris (2451) - Browne,Walter (2617) [B98]
U.S. Open, Boston, 1988
[GM Robert Byrne]
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5
The most aggressive attack against the Najdorf Sicilian is 6 Bg5, which inhibits the original intention of this sharp, counterattacking defense - 6...e5? - which would yield White a hammerlock on the center after 7 Nf5. Nevertheless, the criterion of 6 Bg5 is whether it leads to more victories than the almost-as-ambitious 6 f4 or 6 Bc4 or the conservative 6 Be2 or 6 Be3 or 6 a4. The verdict is not yet in.
6...e6 7.f4 Be7 8.Qf3 Nbd7
Developing with 8 . . . Nbd7?! has been considered so bad that the leading texts on the Najdorf refuse to analyze it. The unanimous opinion is that Black must prevent the potent 9 Bc4 by 8...Qc7 Yet Browne had played it at least twice before, against the grandmaster Nick DeFirmian in last year's [i.e., 1987's] United States invitational championship and also against the international master Patrick Wolff in Philadelphia last year. It is remarkable that on both occasions, his opponents chose the forgiving 9 O-O-O, allowing him to reach regular lines of play with 9 . . . Qc7.
9.Bc4
Giles was not so generous, but played 9 Bc4 with the intention of breaking up the black formation.
9...h6
9...Qc7 10.Bxe6 fxe6 11.Nxe6 followed by 12 Ng7 and 13 Nf5. On 9 . . . h6, Giles, of course, could not make any immediate sacrifice.
10.Bxf6 Bxf6
Browne could not recapture with 10...Nxf6 11.f5 e5 12.Nde2 which gives White a hammerlock on the d5 square.
11.0–0–0 Qb6
12.Nxe6!? fxe6 13.Bxe6
It is more than likely that Browne had prepared and relied upon 10 . . . Bf6 11 O-O-O Qb6 to get him through the opening without incident. But he must have minimized Giles's sacrifice with 12 Ne6!? fe 13 Be6, opening the black king position and achieving a powerful grip on the light squares.
13...Nf8
Browne could not play 13...Ne5, as 14.Qh3 Nd7 15.e5 Be7 16.Nd5 is overwhelming.
14 Bb3 Be6
What is remarkable is that even after Browne had plugged the worst gaps in his position with 13...Nf8 and 14...Be6, Giles was still coming.
15.e5! dxe5 16.fxe5 Bg5+ 17.Kb1 Rd8 18.h4 Be7
19.Ba4+!
A devastating shot, one point being that 19 . . . Bd7? would be smashed by 20 Rhf1 Qg6 21 h5!
19...Nd7 20.Nd5 Qa5
It was futile to play 20...Bxd5 21.Qxd5 Qc7 because 22.e6 b5 leads to mate after 23.Qh5+.
21.Rhf1 Rf8 22.Qh5+ Rf7 23.Bb3 g6 24.Qxg6 Nf8
Now Giles abruptly ended the struggle:
25.Nc7+! Qxc7 26.Qxf7+
In the face of 26 . . . Bf7 27 Bf7 mate, Browne gave up.
1–0
Giles,Morris (2451) - Browne,Walter (2617) [B98]
U.S. Open, Boston, 1988
[GM Robert Byrne]
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5
The most aggressive attack against the Najdorf Sicilian is 6 Bg5, which inhibits the original intention of this sharp, counterattacking defense - 6...e5? - which would yield White a hammerlock on the center after 7 Nf5. Nevertheless, the criterion of 6 Bg5 is whether it leads to more victories than the almost-as-ambitious 6 f4 or 6 Bc4 or the conservative 6 Be2 or 6 Be3 or 6 a4. The verdict is not yet in.
6...e6 7.f4 Be7 8.Qf3 Nbd7
Developing with 8 . . . Nbd7?! has been considered so bad that the leading texts on the Najdorf refuse to analyze it. The unanimous opinion is that Black must prevent the potent 9 Bc4 by 8...Qc7 Yet Browne had played it at least twice before, against the grandmaster Nick DeFirmian in last year's [i.e., 1987's] United States invitational championship and also against the international master Patrick Wolff in Philadelphia last year. It is remarkable that on both occasions, his opponents chose the forgiving 9 O-O-O, allowing him to reach regular lines of play with 9 . . . Qc7.
9.Bc4
Giles was not so generous, but played 9 Bc4 with the intention of breaking up the black formation.
9...h6
9...Qc7 10.Bxe6 fxe6 11.Nxe6 followed by 12 Ng7 and 13 Nf5. On 9 . . . h6, Giles, of course, could not make any immediate sacrifice.
10.Bxf6 Bxf6
Browne could not recapture with 10...Nxf6 11.f5 e5 12.Nde2 which gives White a hammerlock on the d5 square.
11.0–0–0 Qb6
![]() |
White to play |
It is more than likely that Browne had prepared and relied upon 10 . . . Bf6 11 O-O-O Qb6 to get him through the opening without incident. But he must have minimized Giles's sacrifice with 12 Ne6!? fe 13 Be6, opening the black king position and achieving a powerful grip on the light squares.
13...Nf8
Browne could not play 13...Ne5, as 14.Qh3 Nd7 15.e5 Be7 16.Nd5 is overwhelming.
14 Bb3 Be6
What is remarkable is that even after Browne had plugged the worst gaps in his position with 13...Nf8 and 14...Be6, Giles was still coming.
15.e5! dxe5 16.fxe5 Bg5+ 17.Kb1 Rd8 18.h4 Be7
19.Ba4+!
A devastating shot, one point being that 19 . . . Bd7? would be smashed by 20 Rhf1 Qg6 21 h5!
19...Nd7 20.Nd5 Qa5
It was futile to play 20...Bxd5 21.Qxd5 Qc7 because 22.e6 b5 leads to mate after 23.Qh5+.
21.Rhf1 Rf8 22.Qh5+ Rf7 23.Bb3 g6 24.Qxg6 Nf8
Now Giles abruptly ended the struggle:
![]() |
White to play |
In the face of 26 . . . Bf7 27 Bf7 mate, Browne gave up.
1–0
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
"Chicago's Ron Washington, 1951-2012"
Daaim Shabazz remembers Ron (click to read) .
Ron in 2007; swiped from The Knights of Castle Kimbark
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Daaim Shabazz remembers Tom Fineberg
![]() |
Barack Obama was not the first Alinskyite radical community organizer in Hyde Park: in 2003, Tom Fineberg led a chess sit-in in Harper Court |
Monday, November 14, 2011
"Masters of the Game and Leaders by Example"
Left to right: James Black Jr., Justus Williams and Joshua Colas
Richard Perry for The New York Times
Fewer than 2 percent of the 47,000 members of the United States Chess Federation are masters — and just 13 of them are under the age of 14.
Check out this great story in The New York Times.
Among that select group of prodigies are three black players from the New York City area — Justus Williams, Joshua Colas and James Black Jr. — who each became masters before their 13th birthdays.
And let's work together to create some competition for the New Yorkers.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Chicago Southside Classic (gotta love the logo)
Check out Daaim Shabazz's website The Chess Drum for details on the Chicago Southside Classic, to be held at the world-famous Mosque Maryam (7351 S. Stony Island) on Saturday, August 27th!
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Chess Drum on Chicago Open
International Masters Farai Mandizha of Zimbabwe and Oladapo Adu of Nigeria
Photo: Daaim Shabazz
The Chess Drum visits a suddenly-old friend from Jules Stein's Chicago Chess Center and takes some cool photos.
Friday, June 18, 2010
"Chess under attack in Bay Area"
Chicago native Daaim Shabazz reports in The Chess Drum.
I think the comparison between Market Street in San Francisco and Harper Court in Chicago's Hyde Park is apt. Chess is integral to the urban landscape: it shouldn't be confined to the lakefront.
I think the comparison between Market Street in San Francisco and Harper Court in Chicago's Hyde Park is apt. Chess is integral to the urban landscape: it shouldn't be confined to the lakefront.
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