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La caída de un campeón en el ocaso radiante del juego ciencia
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«El conflicto se retoma en toda esta experiencia» – ANRed
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Former world champion Wilhelm Steinitz was born in Prague, achieved fame in the 1860s as the “Austrian Morphy” in Vienna, spent some time in England and lived the last 17 years of his life in New York. His successor, Emanuel Lasker, was born in what is now Poland, earned the title as a German, left Nazi Germany for the Soviet Union in the mid-1930s, and wound up, like Steinitz, living out his final years in the Big Apple.
David Janowski, a contemporary of both men, was born in 1868 in what is now Belarus, emigrated to France as a young man, and even spent nearly a decade in the U.S. before returning to Paris. He lost badly to Lasker in his one title match, but was a dangerous opponent in every tournament he played. His win over rival Siegbert Tarrasch at a 1905 event was a convincing crush of an opponent at the height of his considerable powers.
On this DVD GMs Rogozenco, Marin, Müller, and IM Reeh present outstanding games, stunning combinations and exemplary endgames by Alekhine. And they invite you to improve your knowledge with the help of video lectures, annotated games and interactive tests
Siegbert Tarrasch was born in Wrocław on 5 March 1862. At the age of 15, as a grammar school pupil, he learned to play chess and transmitted his enthusiasm to his classmates. Eventually they got so strong at the game that they competed with adult players at the Fischer & Busch chess café on Königsplatz. Tarrasch soon became one of the best players in Wrocław.
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After 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Black can spoil White s intentions to play the Ruy Lopez, the Scotch Game, the Giuoco Piano or the Evans Gambit by answering with 2. . d6. In a first article on this topic I described that the former World Champion Alexander Alekhine (1892 - 1946) played the Philidor Defence several times and was very successful with it. Since the article met with lively interest and some ChessBase readers also provided interesting hints, I would like to go into some more details and present some more exciting games with this opening.
Edward Lasker vs Alekhine - a positional masterpiece
The 15-year-old Alexander Alekhine played an interesting game against Edward Lasker in Dusseldorf (Germany) in 1908. Again he chose the Hanham variation, in which Black defends e5 by 3. . Nd7 instead of giving up the the centre by exchanging pawns or risking Philidor s hazardous counterattack 3. . f5?!. Through skilful manoeuvring Alekhine reduced the white KB to an ext
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