Monday, August 11, 2025

2025 Quick Tournament Champ Crown - and Speaking of Winners


<<<John Curdo

The winner of our first annual Quick Tournament was Thomas Valenzuela. And if that name sound familiar, it should! He won the last club tournament also. The young man is dominating the Dojo right now!

Thomas finished with a 4-0 score. Dr. Ken and your humble scribe finished tied for 2nd at 3-1. Thanks to all that participated.

Speaking of tournament winners, let’s look at some remarkable tournament accomplishments!

Vera Menchik, 59-0 during the Women’s World Championships, 1931-1940

Gustav Neumann, 34-0, Berlin, 1865

Bobby Fischer, 20-0, during a Candidates Qualifier

Harry Atkins, 15-0, Amsterdam, 1899

Jose Capablanca, 13-0, New York, 1913

Alexander Beliavsky, 13-0, Alicante, 1978

Alexander Alekhinen, 11-0, Moscow, 1919

William Lombardy, 11-0, World Juniors, Toronto, 1957

Bobby Fischer, 11-0, US Championship, New York, 1963

There are a dozen more with scores of 10, 9, and 8 and zero! 

What about most tournament games without a loss; Magnus Carlsen 125, Vladimir Kramnik 99 and Mikhail Tal with a paltry 86 game streak without a loss against the best players on the planet.

Most tournament wins? Are you ready for this: 

John Curdo 1009 USCF certified tournament wins.

Your humble scribe will never win 1009 of anything, let alone certified chess tournaments!

By the way, our next free Club Tournament will the Rapid Tournament! Game time limit is 10 minutes with a 5 second delay! Not sure of the start date, but probably after the Labor Day weekend.

The tournament will play two rounds a night, starting around 6:30pm. The tournament will go at least 4 rounds.

Hope to see you there for this fun and FREE event!

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between

4pm thru 10pm

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'.

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

Friday, July 25, 2025

LCCC 2025 Quick Tournament Starts Monday - And a List of Chess Prodigies

 


Sammy Reshevsky

Our next Club Tournament starting in happening this Monday, July 28. It is the Quick Tournament! Game time limit is 15 minutes with NO delay or increment!

The tournament will play two rounds a night, starting around 6:30pm. The tournament will go 4 rounds. This is an exciting event and one of the favorites at the Club.

Hope to see you there for this fun and FREE event!

Now lets talk chess prodgies shall we?

Meet the megabrats who make headlines but embarrassing very good to great chess players at very young ages.

In 1987 an article in The Times featured a ten-year old Adragon Eastwood DeMello (distantly related to Clint Eastwood by the way). Adragon had ‘mastered’ chess at two and a half, but we are told abandoned chess for mathematics and nuclear physics. There are no games by this prodigy so we have only this article to go by. But, if true, he would be the youngest.

The youngest that is documented – and well documented I might add is Jose Raul Capablanca. He learned chess at the age of four, not be being taught, but simply by watching his father and uncle play. When he snickered at a move his uncle made, young Jose was instantly forced to challenge his uncle. Jose beat him handily.

His father then took the young boy to the Havana Chess Club where Jose gave queen odds to a senior member there and won in 38 moves!

The next boy wonder would be the American Sammy Reshevsky. In the early 1920’s he was giving simultaneous exhibitions throughout the United States and Europe at the ages of six thru eleven! At the age of ten Sammy beat David Janowsky, who had challenged for the Chess World Championship twelve years earlier!

For the strongest twelve year old, we have to go back to the 1850’s and the great American Paul Morphy. At that age, Paul beat Johann Lowenthal in a match 2-0-1 where Paul gave his opponent a draw in the last game when his opponent made an obvious blunder.

The strongest 15-year old was yet another American you may have heard of. His name is Bobby Fischer. He became a World Championship contender at that age, and had won the “game of the century” a year earlier.

The strongest 16 year old is another American, Gata Kamsky. Immigrating from Russia at 15, his rating zoomed to number 5 in the world at age 16.

The strongest teenager of all time at nineteen was Garry Kasparov, the future World Champion with the longest reign in history.

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between

4pm thru 10pm

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'.

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

Sunday, July 6, 2025

LCCC 2025 Fischer 960 Champion Crowned - Next Club Tourney is....

 


Congratulations to Thomas Valenzuela who won the 2025 LCCC Fischer 960 Chess Championship! He bested 13 other entries on way to the title. He drew a determined Pete Bruder to win it with a 3.5/4 score. Pete and Dr. Ken Tack finished in a tie for second place with a 3/4 score. Well done guys. And thank you to all who participated.

Which leads us to our next Club Tournament starting in the last weeks of July. It is the Quick Tournament! Game time limit is 15 minutes with NO delay or increment!

Probably July 21 and July 28 will be the dates of tournament play. But this is not carved in stone yet.

The tournament will play two rounds a night, starting around 6:30pm. The tournament will go 4 rounds. This is an exciting event and one of the favorites at the Club.

Hope to see you there for this fun and FREE event!

Now for some more chess quotes;

Chess is a beautiful enough thing to waste your life on. – Hans Ree

Chess is the most interesting game that exists. – Lothar Schmid

Chess is the fairest of all games. – Bashevis Singer

Chess is imagination. – David Bronstein

Chess is a struggle against error. – Johannes Zukertort

Chess is fun. – Luke McShane

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between

4pm thru 10pm

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'.

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

Monday, June 2, 2025

We are Back This Monday. And Our 2025 Fischer Random Tournament is Next Week.

 


Sorry for the delay in posting. Life gets in the way of chess writing. Kid’s baseball games, spring yard work and an early family golf outing burned your humble scribe’s time.

Our next free club tournament will be the 960 Fischer Random Championship starting June 9th. Our tournament director wanted to give everyone a “warm up week” after our Memorial Day hiatus. So see you at the club tonight!

The tournament will be run over 3 or 4 weeks, depending on the number of entries. Entry is always free! The time control will be Game in 45 minutes per player with a 5 second delay.

Hope to see a good turnout for this fun event! Chess is always fun, but if you have never played 960 chess, here is your chance to try it. Come on into the Club this week and try it. I think you will get hooked on it as a nice change of pace.

Most chess players now have a 960 app on their phones just in case! With the pieces mixed up on the back row, it takes all opening preparation and throws it out the window. This lends itself to possible upsets.

Now for some chess quotes;

Chess is first of all, art. – Mikhail Tal

Chess is an art. – Gary Kasparov

Chess is everything. Art, a science and a sport. – Anatoly Karpov

Or the other view;

Chess is just a game. – Lajos Portisch

Chess is only a game and not to be classed with science or the arts. – Emanuel Lasker

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between

4pm and 10pm

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'.

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

Monday, April 28, 2025

2025 Duck Chess Champion Crowned - New Format Here - And Chess Quotes

 

This chart is a little old since it was calculated before our new world champion, India's Gukesh Dommaraju was crowned.  But it is where the chess computers ranked the other world champions by chess accuracy.

The shock placements to me are how high Kramnik, Tal and Botvinnik are. I personally would have thought to place Kramnik below Capablanca, Tal below Euwe and Botvinnik below Morphy. But data talks, and opinions can just take a walk!

Hello Chess Fans from all over the world! And, yes we do get readers from all over the world. And the Club thanks each and every one of you!

Your humble scribe is changing the format here. The customary Club information will now be displayed at the end of the article. It finally dawned on your not so smart scribe that readers looking ONLY on their phones may only see the same “beginning” every time and not know the content has changed!

It's a phone world now. Not a tablet, laptop or desktop world anymore. So, hence the change.

With that acknowledgement out of the way, congratulations to LCCC’s first Duck Chess Champion, Pete Bruder! He bested a field of fourteen players with a perfect 3-0 score.

Our next free club tournament will be the 960 Fischer Random Championship starting in early June. Probably the first Monday after Memorial Day. Hope to see a good turnout for that fun event!

Now for some chess quotes as people try to define the best game in the world;

Chess is an earnest exercise of the mind. – Thomas Cogan

Chess, like love, is infectious at any age. – Salo Flohr

Chess is a beautiful mistress. – Bent Larsen

Chess is a very sexy game. – Sally Beauman

But chess also has it’s detractors!

Chess is one long regret! – Stephen Leacock

Chess is a sad waste of brains! – Sir Walter Scott

Chess is a foolish expedient for making idle people believe they are doing something very clever. – George Bernard Shaw

Your humble scribe believes that all seven people are all correct!

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between

4pm and 10pm

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'.

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!


Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Duck Chess Tournament April 7th, 2025 and a Warning to Never Blindly Follow Grandmasters!


The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

A reminder that next week our 1st Annual Duck Chess Tournament will begin. Be there by 6pm or so to sign up for FREE! The time limit for the tournament will be 45 minutes for each player with a 5 second delay. The tournament round will begin around 6:30 pm.

For those of you not familiar with Duck Chess, the rules can be found on-line. It is a variant of chess where after a player moves, he must also move “the duck” to any un-occupied square on the board. And the Duck Chess Rules will be available for all participants the night of the tournament, so no worries there.

The tournament will go 1 round per week for 3 rounds or maybe 4, so keep that in mind when signing up. Playing in every round of the tournament gets you an entry into our drawing for that beautiful wood chess set valued at over $150!


Now for a little lesson for all chess players, but especially for all you “advanced beginners”.

What is an Advanced Beginner you might ask? Well, your humble scribe defines one as a player that knows how the pieces move and knows the basic strategies of ‘developing your pieces’, ‘protecting the king by castling’ and ‘controlling the center.’

What normally happens at this point is the player wants to learn some “openings” that he hears veteran players talk about that are played. Thais an 'advanced beginner.'

While it is a good idea to learn some openings, you don’t want to just memorize them. You need to know the reason and/or strategy behind the moves. If you don’t do that, you can walk yourself into bad situations.

As an illustration, I first need to explain what a book called the Chess Informant is. 

It is a book series that captures almost all of the games played in major tournaments since the last issue was published. It used to be the bible for all Grandmasters as they poured over the games of their future opponents, and to see if there were any new opening theory nuggets to be tried.

Well in 1987, this game was played and placed in the Informant book; GM Miles – GM Christensen, San Franscisco Open:

1.  e4 , e5   2. Nf3 , Nf6   3. Nxe5 , d6   4. Nf3 , Nxe4   5. Nc3 , Bf5 – (see diagram) with the Informant giving Black’s last move as an (N) for Novelty! The game went on for another 15 lazy moves before the players agreed to a draw.

What was not mentioned in the book (and how would they know anyway?) was that Miles and Christensen had agreed to a draw before the round started.

Well, the young future world junior champion - and future World Champion, - GM Viswanathan Anand did not know that either! And computers were not used to analyze positions yet before publishing, as computers were not yet as good as the best players at that time.

So, without checking, Anand played this opening with Black against GM Alonso Zapata in Beil, 1988 -  to hopefully surprise and scare his opponent with this ‘Novelty’. 

Well Zapata played 6. Qe2 in less than a minute!

Anand instantly saw that 6. ….Qe7 loses to 7. Nd5 and that 6. …d5 loses to 7. d3. So, the future chess world champion, Anand, resigned on the spot!

History was made. This gave the world the shortest loss ever by a GM in a tournament game!

So even the best, have lost by not knowing why certain opening moves are played. The moral is to learn and not memorize.


Monday, March 17, 2025

2025 Speed Champs Crowned - And a Bonus For Our Tournament Participants!

 The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

The winners of our 2025 Speed Tournament were Vince Valente and Mike Nikitin – who both managed to score 2.5 out of three. 

Thank you to all 14 participants who entered in the tournament.

Now for a notice of a nice extra bonus! As most of the readers know our Club tournaments are played for fun and bragging rights. No prizes of any significant value are awarded.

But now our club has recently been gifted a brand new ebonized Russian wood chess set (valued at over $100) to use "as the Club President saw fit.”

Well, the Club President knew it was too nice a set to use just as a club set. So, he has signed an ‘executive order’ declaring that if a player plays and finishes the last round of any Club Tournament, that player’s name will go in the drawing to win the chess set!

The winner will be chosen by none other than the Michigan Lottery Keno drawing to be held once we have eighty names filled in.

After we have the eighty names, at the NEXT Club meeting the following Monday, the first Michigan Keno drawing on or after 6:30 pm (by the Club President’s watch) will determine the lucky number! The first number drawn by the State of Michigan Keno Screen will be the winner of the chess set!

The players that have played in the Dice and Speed tournaments have already been given random numbers and are in the drawing already.

Our next Club Tournament will start in the first or second week of April and it will be the Duck Chess Tournament!

So get quacken!


Thursday, March 6, 2025

2025 Speed Tournament This Week! - Boris Spassky Passes Away


GM Boris Spassky

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

LCCC would also like to announce that our 2025 Speed Tournament will kick off on March 10th. There is no cost to enter. The entire tournament will be played on this one evening! We normally start the first round about 6:30 pm, so be there for the fun!

Now some really sad news

Former World Chess Champion GM Boris Spassky died on February 28th, 2025 at the age of 88. 

One of the finest chess players to ever live and a true sportsman in every sense of the word. Even Bobby Fischer, who hated the Russians, praised Spassky as a true champion and great man. I have personally played over many of Spassky’s games and am amazed at his talent.

I have played over Paul Morphy’s games, Mikhail Tal’s games and Bobby Fischer’s games and do eventually see the path to victory. They simply over-powered their opponent with brutal tactics. 

But when I play over Boris Spassky’s games, I cannot find the thread of his genius until much, MUCH later in the game! He seems to sneak up on you, hitting a weakness you had that no one else could detect. His opponent would lose not knowing he was ever in danger.

Bobby Fischer lost to Boris Spassky in the first game of the biggest World Chess Championship the world had ever seen. This match occurred during the height of the Cold War. USA vs USSR. Capitalism vs Communism. Which system was better?

Fischer being Fischer, did not show up for game two.  He claimed there was too much noise in the playing hall from the television cameras, and did not show up for Round 2. This results in a forfeit and now Spassky leads 2 – 0.

Fischer demanded that from now on, the games be played in what was basically a closet off the main stage for privacy and silence. This of course was out of the question to the sponsors, the organizers and of course the Russian government! It looked like Spassky would go up 3 – 0 and probably win the match on forfeit. All Spassky had to do to remain world champion was show up at the chessboard on the stage as scheduled, and the match would be over.

But Spassky told them all, and the world, that he would not win that way. He would play Fischer in that back room! Not only making everyone in the communist Soviet Union mad at him but defying the KGB! The Russian secret police! 

The Soviet Union wanted and needed this victory over the West as proof that communism was a better system than capitalism. Spassky was actually putting his life on the line, in order to beat Fischer over the board!

Fischer won that game in that tiny back room. Now it was Spassky who demanded they return to the stage for the rest of the match.

Fischer now agreed. 

Fischer went on to dominate the rest of the match against a now frazzled opponent. How different the world, and the chess world would be if Spassky was not a true gentleman and sportsman? We will never know.

Walter Dobrich (Vlad to his friends), is no stranger to Canadian chess. Vlad is a master level player. But more important, Vlad was an excellent chess promoter and organizer.  He disappeared into the world of backgammon in the late 1970’s and became a great player there also! In recent times But today Vlad has opened a club in Toronto and he organizes blitz tournaments every week and writes this tribute to Boris Spassky:

I’ve had some personal interaction with him when he was World Champion. He played in the Canadian Open in Vancouver in 1971. I was there as well, and we both arrived at round six with 5-0 scores and consequently were paired for round six. Showing no respect, I played what I later learned was his pet line in the Nimzo-Indian against him.. After some 30 or so moves I was ready to resign but I saw a chance for a futile attack where I would get to check him once or twice – I could one day tell my grandchildren “I checked the world champion Boris Spassky! I saw I would have to resign after four moves.

For some reason he appeared to be lost in concentration before making his next move which was forced. I looked up, “Why is he looking? This is trivial.” At which point I saw his eyes were bright red! I thought, ”I am insulting him when he is clearly tired from last night.” His next two moves were slightly different from what I expected, and I was forced to resign in three moves instead of four!

Some ten minutes later, in the post mortem room, we played out the opening where he told me that I had misplaced my bishop at which point I looked up to see his eyes were bright white. I said, ”Boris, your eyes were red like a rabbit’s 10 minutes ago, now they’re white again! His answer was “Caruso was a great singer, he sang beautifully, effortlessly. But in between performances he always had to change his shirt!” What a compliment to me! Especially when I recall that he played sitting sideways to the board as if he had only a passing interest in the position.

A day or two later we were walking the UBC campus and entered the student’s common room where there was a group of some dozen or so crowded around a chess board going over the days game from the tournament. Boris casually squeezed into the group and suggested some play. At that point, whoever was the chief expounder on the game swatted him away as if he were some annoying fly. Smiling broadly, Boris retreated. The students never knew who it was that tried to make a suggestion!

After the tournament, we happened to be strolling a main avenue in Vancouver. I said “We have a major tournament in Toronto this weekend (the Labour Day Open at the CNE) perhaps you would like to play?”

“Unfortunately, my flight goes from here to Ottawa and then to Moskva” said Boris.

”Well, we can always change the ticket at a travel agency” said I, just as we approached a travel agency!

“You can do that?” said Boris.

Ten minutes later we were leaving the travel office with a rerouted ticket by way of Toronto.

“This will not cause some problem for you?” said I.

“The KGB has 100 files on me, 101 will make no difference.” said Boris.

And so, we ended up having a great Labour Day Open with five other GMs as well as the reigning World Champion. The GMs were (if I recall) Larsen, Benko, Browne, Byrne and Biguire. There was a tie for first with Spassky and several of the GMs. I was the tournament director and can say that I directed the only weekend swiss tournament in the history of chess to boast a reigning world champion as a participant!

Walter (Vlad) Dobrich


Tuesday, February 18, 2025

2025 Dice Tourney Winner and Speed Tourney Date Announced - Also World Championship History


Mikhail Botvinnik

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

The first LCCC Dice Chess Championship was crowned as Thomas Valenzuela won it with a perfect 3 – 0 score!

A beautiful shoestring wreath with 3 car mirror dice hanging from it was the trophy. Shocking, but this work of art has not been worn to the club since it was ceremoniously placed around his neck. Hard to believe.

LCCC would also like to announce that our 2025 Speed Tournament will kick off on March 10th. There is no cost to enter. There will be 2 rounds of two games per opponent with a time limit of 5 minutes with no delay or increment. 5 minutes is all there is! We normally start the first round about 6:30 pm, so be there for the fun!


Speaking of Championships, how about a little World Chess Championship history? Sure, not as glamorous as the LCCC bling, but let’s learn something anyway.

Alexander Alekhine’s death in Portugal in 1946 confronted the chess world with an unprecedented situation. Never before had the chess world champion die while holding the crown. The long chain of almost 100 years was broken.

The decision was made by the world chess body FIDE, to hold a 6 person tournament, each playing each other 4 times. The winner of this tournament would be the new world champion.

Dr. Euwe was the last champion still alive as Jose Capablanca had passed on. So Dr. Euwe was an obvious choice.

Equally obvious were Mikhail Botvinnik and Paul Keres from Russia.

Rueben Fine and Sammy Reshevsky from the USA were also obvious.

The last spot was given to a young Russian player Vasily Smyslov due to his impressive 3rd place victory in the Russian Chess Championship, behind Botvinnik and Keres.

It was intended to hold the first half of the tournament in The Hague in Holland and the second half in Moscow. But Fine declined to play stating publicly that he was working on his doctorate degree. But privately he stated that he did “not want to spend 3 months of his life watching Russians throw chess games to each other.”

Bobby Fischer would make a similar declaration in public some 20 years later.

With Fine out, it was decided that the five players would meet each other 5 times; ten rounds at The Hague and 15 rounds in Moscow.

Mikhail Botvinnik won easily with a score of 14 points to Smyslov’s 11. Keres and Reshevsky had 10.5 and Euwe 4.5. 

This proved that Botvinnik was as far ahead of his rivals in 1948 as Alekhine was over his in 1931. 

This tournament proved also to be a coming out party for Smyslov, as he would later win the world championship.

 And it was also the sign off for Dr. Euwe, who never again regained his world class form.


Wednesday, January 29, 2025

2024 Dice Chess Championship This Monday - And Meet the Man Who Would be Champion

 


Carl Schlechter

The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

The first LCCC Dice Chess Championship will conclude this coming Monday. Tom V will take on your humble scribe. Don’t tell my opponent, but I have been rolling dice all week to get ready for this match.

Meanwhile he is probably doing something silly like having a life and playing chess to get ready. We will see who’s preparation was better.

Now for another installment of: Great Chess Players You Probably Never Heard Of

Carl Schlechter

This man had the World Championship in the palm of his hand. Why he failed to grab the glory we will see in a minute.

He was a shy, timid man, but was lucky enough to be born Viennese. And the Vienna Chess Club was proud of their grandmaster. And another member of this chess club was Baron Rothschild, and he was not the only wealthy member of this club.

Back in those days, not only did you have to win the right to challenge the current champion, but the challenger had to find the sponsors to pay for the match and prize fund. This was no problem for Schlechter.

The length of the match was debated for some time. Carl was know as the “draw wizard”, so a match to a certain number of wins (like 8 wins as was the condition for the last championship) scared the sponsors and the older Champion Lasker.

Finally, it was decided that the 1910 Chess Championship would be a ten-game match. The first five in Vienna and the last five in Berlin. 

Schlechter’s nickname was well founded. To get a draw from Carl was very easy to do, even in a losing position. And he offered draws to opponents who looked out of sorts or sickly. If his opponent was late to the board, he would subtract that amount of time from his own clock. Bu he was also the most resourceful defender the chess world had ever seen.

With this match being of such a short variety, it was expected that a single win could decide the winner.

Game 1 and 2 were both draws but neither were timid games. And it was actually Schlechter taking the risks and putting on the pressure.

Games 3 and 4, were all Lasker. The champion, always a slow starter in matches or tournaments, now seemed to find his form. But Schlechter, as was his reputation, was nearly impossible to defeat. These games too ended in draws.

Then the last game in Vienna, for once Lasker got a solid advantage and held the winning advantage. But on move 54, maybe from fatigue, the World Champion made a rare blunder and Schlechter seized the opportunity. Later deep analysis showed that a crazy queen sacrifice from Lasker would of made a draw, but instead he ended up in a mating net.

So, as they moved to Berlin, most thought the world had a new champion. Surely the King of Draws could conjure up five more.

Games 6, 7 and 8 were draws, but fighting draws as Lasker threw every surprise and attacking idea he has at Schlechter, but Carl held firm as always.

Then came Game 9. And for the second time in the match, Lasker had a real strong advantage. But in a time-crunch for both players, it was Lasker who slipped, and the edge disappeared into another draw.

The tenth and final game lasted through two adjournments, 71 moves and took 3 days to finish. This was the most dramatic chess game in history to that point and may still be.

With only needing a draw, for some reason it was Carl Schlechter going all out to win. He could force draws better than anyone in the world. But instead, it was he that went into very deep waters in the opening with a daring pawn push.

At the first adjournment, Schlechter had the advantage. The next day at move 34 he had a forced draw by choosing a line of play that traded down the material. Carl had to have seen it, but didn’t play it.

Instead, he played the better move. One that would bring him closer to a win. But two moves later, Carl missed the winning line. With that, Lasker wriggled out of mortal danger. Five moves after that, another forced draw line appeared for Schlechter and again he made the more aggressive move right before the 2nd adjournment.

The next day, Schlechter did not play like Schlechter, but Lasker played like Lasker and crushed Carl. The match ended in a tie and the title stayed with Lasker.

A proud and gallant man had the Chess World Championship in his hands and let it slip thru. 

Do you want to know how he died just 8 years later at age 44?

He died of starvation and exhaustion in the last year of World War One. There was very little money to be made by chess players in those times. He was much too proud to ask for help from anyone. One cold winter day he was found dead in his room with no coal in his stove and no food or money anywhere in the room.


Sunday, January 12, 2025

LCCC Back! New Club Tournament Announced and Chess Can Be a Problem!


The Livingston County Chess Club meets every Monday night between 

4pm and 10pm 

at the Buffalo Wild Wings in the Green Oak Mall in Brighton, MI. 

Stop in for some friendly chess, good food and 'refreshments'. 

Everyone of all ages and playing strength are welcome to attend. And free lessons to all beginners!

I want to open by thanking everyone for starting the official 2025 LCCC grand opening with a bang! Twenty-six players were here last Monday night. 

Hope to see everyone return again…..and again!

Just for fun, we will be having our first ever LCCC Dice Chess Championship starting next week. Don’t worry if you never played it before. Few of us have. 

The tournament is free to enter, and the simple rules are already posted here. Just type in the blog search box "Dice Chess" and the article will appear. And, of course the rules will be available at the Club for the duration of the actual tournament. 

So, don’t worry. Just play and have fun putting some gambling and “LUCK” into your chess match.

Now, some history about chess;

If you think chess has always been pure….or thought to be pure, your humble scribe has some news for you.

Chess has more skeletons in the closet than Bluebeard, Blackbeard, Machiavelli and Captain Kidd put together!

If you dig into the 6000 years of chess history you will find that the game itself was thought of as a menace to religion, morals, home life and politics.

In 1118, Zonares, Head of Justice for the Emperor wrote from his monastery that all clergymen who departed from virtue by playing chess shall be banned from the church!

His quote was, “"Because there are Bishops and clergy who depart from virtue and play chess, dice or drink to excess, the Rule commands that such shall cease to do so or be excluded; and if a Bishop or elder or deacon or subdeacon or reader or singer do not cease so to do, he shall be cast out: and if laymen be given to chess-playing and drunkenness, they shall be excluded."

He would not be in favor of our upcoming tournament!

French employers in the 1800’s would often require their apprentices to promise in writing that they would not play chess, either on the job or in their off time.

Chess may have gained a bawdy reputation because it was once used as a ruse by a suitor to gain access to his lady’s bedroom. Chess players and minstrels were permitted visit the maiden in her chambers in order to “entertain her” with game or music.

The ladies of the time pondered ways to obtain a knowledge of chess in order to be able to “be courted” more often.

Norsemen took it a step further. Prospective suitors for the hands of their daughters expected them to play chess with the men of the family in order to determine if he was a worthy prospect.

The game also made problems for families. Baldwin IX, Count of Flanders, beat up his wife when she beat him at chess. In revenge, she later refused to pay a fine for him for a small crime and let him stay in a dungeon to cool off…for 13 years!

Chess indirectly helped with the birth of the USA! George Washington it is said, won the Battle at Trenton because the British General Rahl was so deeply absorbed in a chess game, that he put a note warning him of Washington’s approach in his vest pocket and continued playing!

Playing chess can be a problem it seems.