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| From | Message | Posted by andy94 goclub.org
10/30/2008 10:42:19 Play online chess | Subject: The Magician from Riga.
Message: Mikhail Tal is been one of the greatest chess player ever, of course. What do you want to remember of him? His playing style, his character, his quotes, his sacs or his wonderful games?
I know some quotations on chess by him.
"There are two kinds of sacrifices: sound ones and mine."
"To play for a draw, at any rate with White, is to some degree a crime against chess."
"They compare me to Lasker, which is an exaggerated honor. He made mistakes in every game and I only in every second one!"
Referring to his piece sacrifices: "They can only take them one at a time!"
"If playing chess were made illegal by law, I would become an outlaw."
And about Bobby Fischer: "It is also important to remember that Bobby Fischer was a real chess gentleman during games. He was always very fair and very correct."
Unfortunately he suffered from bad health. He was a heavy drinker and a chain smoker.
In 1962, in Curaçao, while he was admitted to hospital, he received a famous visit by Bobby Fischer.
Anyway, I'm sure health problems destroyed Tal's career, but the question is: how much?
| Posted by ionadowman goclub.org
10/30/2008 12:18:47 Play online chess | I have long thought...
Message: ... that Mischa Botvinnik wouldn't have beaten a Tal in good health in 1961. It seems that Tal's health problems affected his kidneys, and I vaguely recall reading somewhere a suggestion that one of the effects of this was to make his play fidgetty and impatient - or at least that he had to exercise a high level of self control to prevent this. If I'm right about this (and my memory on this is very vague), it would go far to explain why occasionally Tal lost control of some of his games.
Ever since back in 1971 when I read P.H. Clarke's book "Tal's Best Games of Chess (1951-1960)" I have been a Tal fan. Over 100 years ago, H. N. Pillsbury once remarked that when making combinations, you make sure that "when the fire was out, it isn't out!" Well, Tal seemed to be able to ignite the dampest lump of vegetable matter at will. How I wish I could play as he did!
I liked what little I've heard of his sense of humour as well. Sometime during the 1980s, Mischa won the World Blitz Championship. In receiving his prize, Tal welcomed the opportunity once more of becoming "ex-World Champion".
In an interview for a chess magazine on one occasion, the subject of Tal's fondness for fiery fluids was touched upon, though rather obliquely. When asked whether he would play for a Russian team or the "Vodka" team, Tal rather thought he would choose the latter.
Tal's caveat notwithstanding, probably he stands best in comparison with Em. Lasker than with anyone else. In Lasker's view, Chess was neither a science, nor an art, but a fight. I'm sure Tal approached the game in the same way.
Such are my impressions of my all-time favorite player.
Cheers,
Ion
| Posted by tag1153 goclub.org
10/31/2008 12:14:34 Play online chess | An example of his magic.....
Message:
gameknot.com ——— Vishy Anand saves his strength before world match with Veselin Topalov — Vishy Anand, who defends his world title against Veselin Topalov at Sofia in April, kept his powder dry in his warm-up chess event at Corus Wijk where the Indian, 40, played at full force in only a few games. In contrast Topalov, 34, has played hard in almost every game this week at the Linares elite chess tournament in Andalusia, where he won first prize with 6.5/10, half a point ahead of Russia's Alex Grischuk. The Bulgarian squeezed points from tiny advantages and by round six had regained the world No1 spot on the live chess ratings from Magnus Carlsen. These daily updated rankings have a huge following and their prestige is now not far short of ...
Posted by ionadowman goclub.org
10/31/2008 14:18:25 Play online chess | Hi Thomas...
Message: I recall P.H. Clarke's comment on this game:
'Just one round after the positional triumph over Khasin came one from a different mould. It amonf the first of Tal's games that I ever saw, and I well remember being amazed by its sheer ferocity.
'Furthermore it illustrates very clearly, even starkly, ... practical approach to the opening, attacking inclination, and wonderful skill on one side; on the other carelessness, lack of technique and overindulgence in combinative play and fantasy. And all the time you can feel [Tal's] spirit, determination and exuberance coming through. A game full of life and excitement.' P.H.Clarke "Mikhail Tal's Best Games of Chess".
One regrets that a long time addiction to alcohol and tobacco - and morphine as well it seems - did so much to depreciate Tal's talent, finally to cut it short well before Tal reached 60 years of age. I recall with horror Tal crashing and burning at the Leningrad Interzonal in 1973, after having posted a record to rival Fischer's contemporaneous 20 World Championship cycle wins in a row. Tal had gone 80+ (83 I think) Master level games without a defeat. But then, maybe the sort of person who plays chess like that is the sort of person who is going to ply himself with dangerous organic chemicals. Who knows?
Just as an aside, I guess in the world of sport we sometimes have to take the rough with the smooth. Though never a John McInroe fan, I could not help but admire his fighting qualities. Sure, his ranting and raving on the court was embarrassing and unpleasant to watch and hear. Yet it has always seemed to me that what within McInroe that made him capable of extraordinary winning or saving shots was also responsible for his flying off the handle when he misliked an umpire's call. McInroe called on a good deal of emotion in his play. That was his style.
What the connection might be between Tal's fiery chess play, fantasy and imagination and his overindulgences, I wouldn't have the foggiest. I'll leave that to the psychoanalysts.
Cheers,
Ion
——— A Match All About the Sicilian — An unusual chess match is being held in South Carolina. It pits Judit Polgar of Hungary, the strongest woman chess payer in history, who is now ranked No. 46 in the world, but once was in the top 10, against Gregory Kaidanov, a Ukrainian-born American grandmaster, who is ranked No. 261. The match is four games and has an interesting twist: Each game begins with a different variation of the Sicilian Defense. The first game was on Monday and was won by Kaidanov, who had White, and featured the Sveshnikov. The second, which was won by Polgar, was on Tuesday and was a Dragon. The third chess game, which is being played on Wednesday, and can ...
Posted by ionadowman goclub.org
11/02/2008 01:06:35 Play online chess | In a game I recently annotated...
Message: ... under the title of "Swindle!" a comment was made in respect of a famous and extraordinary game played between Lajos Portisch and Mikhail Tal in the Amsterdam Interzonal, 1964. In that game Tal just went berserk, giving away nearly all his pieces but somehow managed to emerge from the wild affair with a draw. Fantastic game. At any rate, I thought I might annotate that game as well. You'll find it in the annotated games under my profile.
For a game just as wild and of the same stamp, I would commend you to an earlier annotated game in my list: "Die Hard: It's always too early to resign" between ian_want and nathanman22. To be sure there are several mistakes in the game, but there are some brilliant moves as well that shine all the brighter(especially White's astonishing endgame Q sac that ought at least to have saved the game). But for sheer overall entertainment it's a hard game to go past.
Cheers,
Ion ——— The f-pawn, part 2: is f5 the answer here? — Does White have a better option than moving the f-pawn? Continuing our look at the chess equivalent of route one football – the f-pawn advance... RB Well, let's see what happens when we push – 1 f5. The answer comes back faster than Manchester United on the break, not much. Black is under no compulsion to take the pawn and can instead centralise with 1…Nd4 or even 1…Qd4, or start getting the queen's rook into play with 1…Rac8, and 1…Nb4, hitting the d-pawn, would be irritating. All right, let's try to be logical. What's wrong here is that even if we could swap off pawns on the f-file, the f1-rook would remain blocked by the bishop. Let's ...
Posted by ccmcacollister goclub.org
11/02/2008 13:56:14 Play online chess | ION ....
Message: Then again, alcohol is a diuretic and helps pull the fluid from your system (and I don't know what the stock of dialysis machines in like in Riga !?), the morphine helps kill the pain from stones which also promote frequent kidney infections when present and adding some unpleasantness; tho nephritis is much the worse culprit than that for breaking the concentration, except of course when both exits get obstructed. Then its all about the same.
Tobacco? Well its nice to relax after a day of someone poking a cold plastic tube ... lets rephrase that and just say you'd just about rather have the stones stay IN, even if it is like sliding a jagged jellybean .... well never mind again there. Suffice to say, the steady knaw may be ignored, its those totally untimed stilletto-like pokes of back to front joy that play havoc with the analysis tree :)) ——— Big Surprises in Europe — Europe has been a center of chess activity over the last month with a series of major open tournaments. The first was the Gibtelecom Chess Festival in Gibraltar, which ran from Jan. 26 through Feb. 4. Among the world-class chess players who competed were Etienne Bacrot of France, Sergei Movsesian of Slovakia, Francisco Vallejo Pons of Spain, Michael Adams of England, and Gata Kamsky of the United States. The chess tournament ended in a nine-way tie for first, with Adams winning a four-person playoff to take the title. The Moscow Open, which overlapped with Gibtelecom and ended on Feb. 7, was divided into four sections — A, B, C and D — with ...
Posted by ccmcacollister goclub.org
11/02/2008 14:12:58 Play online chess | PS ...
Message: I too love those Tal games. If you study enough of em, it DOES kind of rub off. Last time I did, I offered like three pieces en prise on the same move of the Iowa Postal Champ. (Well yeah, I actually Did Intend To, in this particular case :) What's more, the sac was "wrong"! I think he could have equalized by taking the right piece and largely snuffed the attack into drawishness. This made me feel all the more Tal-like (There are correct sacs, or mine...") , and its about my favorite game. }8-)
——— Topalov Closes In on Linares Title — After eight rounds, Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria, the top seed, holds a one point lead in the annual Ciudad de Linares chess tournament in Spain. Alexander Grischuk of Russia, the defending champion, is in second place after beating Vugar Gashimov of Azerbaijan in Round 8 on Sunday. Levon Aronian of Armenia is in third, having managed, like Topalov, not to have lost a game in the chess tournament. Unlike Topalov, who has won three games, Aronian has not won a game either. So far, 25 percent of the games have been decisive, but that does not mean that the other 75 percent have been dull. Quite the contrary. The games have mostly been hard fought and exciting, even ...
Posted by ionadowman goclub.org
11/02/2008 20:38:31 Play online chess | Craig...
Message: ... it sounds like you know what you are talking about - I was only guessing. I'm not really inclined to pass judgement. I smoked habitually myself for over 20 years, until I quit (cold turkey) 31st March 2003. I haven't smoked since: haven't dared, though the actually quitting wasn't all that hard. I have a feeling that restarting would be too easy!
But what you say does seem to confirm my earlier guess about why Tal seemed sometimes to lose control of his pieces.
Cheers,
Ion
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