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Date: 24 Feb 2008 00:44:27
From: Offramp
Subject: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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I did not know until Andy Soltis pointed it out that Akiva Rubinstein beat S Tarrasch 8-0 with 12 draws, over the years 1911 to 1924-ish. I suppose there are a few not-so-famous lop-sided results like that from chess history - I mean Kasparov v Shirov and many others are too well-known to mention. Short v Ljubojevic was highly in favour of the four-eyed kebab-cruncher for a long time. Any other less-well-known ones that anyone knows? I might do a Fritz-generated .pdf of the R v T games; if anyone has annotations to any of the games I'd like to see them.
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Date: 24 Feb 2008 11:38:34
From:
Subject: Re: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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On Feb 24, 1:20 pm, Offramp <[email protected] > wrote: > On Feb 24, 2:07 pm, [email protected] wrote: > > > > > > > On Feb 24, 3:44 am, Offramp <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > I did not know until Andy Soltis pointed it out that Akiva Rubinstein > > > beat S Tarrasch 8-0 with 12 draws, over the years 1911 to 1924-ish. > > > > I suppose there are a few not-so-famous lop-sided results like that > > > from chess history - I mean Kasparov v Shirov and many others are too > > > well-known to mention. Short v Ljubojevic was highly in favour of the > > > four-eyed kebab-cruncher for a long time. > > > > Any other less-well-known ones that anyone knows? > > > Where did you find Soltis mentioning Rubinstein-Tarrasch? In his > > book "Chess Lists" (2nd edition, McFarland & Co, 2002), he had a > > section titled Difficult Opponents, in which he listed some of the > > more lopsided career records: Janowski-Chigorin (+17 -4 =3D4), Korchnoi-= > > Tal (+13 -4 =3D27) and eight others. But he did not mention the > > Rubinstein-Tarrasch imbalance. That was one of the omissions I > > mentioned in my review of the book at ChessCafe (http://www.chesscafe.co= m/text/review348.pdf). That list: > > > Capablanca-shall (+22 -2 =3D28) > > Steinitz-Blackburne (+28 -10 =3D7) > > Rubinstein-Duras (+10 -2 =3D1) > > Larsen-Najdorf (+8 -2 =3D2 ) > > Botvinnik-Boleslavsky (+7 -1 =3D6 ) > > Botvinnik-Keres (+8 -3 =3D9) > > Korchnoi-Polugaevsky (+21 -8 =3D30) > > Petrosian-Taimanov (+8 -2 =3D10) > > Pillsbury-Mason (+7 -0 =3D1) > > Polugaevsky-Gligoric (+7 -1 =3D5) > > Portisch-Miles (+7 -1 =3D13) > > Polugaevsky-Seirawan (+5 -1 =3D3) > > Polugaevsky-Tal (+4 -0 =3D1) > > Smyslov-Euwe (+7 -1 =3D0) > > Korchnoi-Szabo (+6 -0 =3D6) > > Rubinstein-Tarrasch (+8 -0 =3D12) > > Tartakower-shall (+7 -1 =3D11) > > Teichmann-Spielmann (+13 -3 =3D12) > > Vid-Bogolyubov (+5 -1 =3D4) > > > Most of these are equally or more lopsided than most of those Soltis > > lists. > > > It's interesting how two players of nearly equal strength can have > > such different records against the same opponent. For example, > > shall served as punching bag for Lasker, Capablanca and Tarrasch, > > who scored +12 -2 =3D11, +22 -2 =3D28, and +13 -7 =3D18 against him > > respectively, a collective +47 -11 =3D57. Yet Rubinstein barely had a > > winning record against shall, +11 -9 =3D16, while holding his own > > quite well vs. Lasker (+1 -2 =3D4) and Capablanca (+1 -1 =3D7), and > > clobbering Tarrasch. > > Rubinstein also had a pretty tough time with Nimzovitch (+7 -6 =3D10) > > while Capa did not (+5 -0 =3D6). Capa, on the other hand, had some > > trouble with Tarrasch (+2 -1 =3D3). Spielmann played Capa even (+2 -2 > > =3D8), while Rubinstein had a good plus score (+17 -13 =3D10). > > That is a great post. Thank you very much. Thank you for your courteous rek. It was not all that hard, since I had already written much the same thing when reviewing the book in 2002. > There is a lot to think about.. A first thought is that final career > totals don't give the whole idea; the whole drama. True. There are going to be some lopsided results for more or less random reasons; for example, IM X, rated 2500, and GM Y, rated 2750, might by pure chance get paired over several tournaments only in the last few rounds, when Y had already clinched and was happy to make short draws. So X ends up with a career even score against Y even though he's not at all as good. Age differentials matter a lot. Janowski had big career pluses against Steinitz (+5 -2), Winawer (+10 -2), Blackburne (+6 -2 =3D4), Chigorin (+16 -5 =3D5) and Burn (+11 -3 =3D3) in large part because he caught them on the downside of their careers. In turn, against the younger Rubinstein, Spielmann, Vid, Nimzovitch, Reti et al he did poorly. > What I like is where the player rated the same or within 100 points > less is scoring massively 'higher than expectation'. > A good example is Steinitz v Pillsbury in 1896, where Steinitz is > really totally and utterly at the end of his career, and Pillsbury is > a young man at the start of his victorious career, but WS walks all > over the great player. Well, Steinitz wasn't really quite washed up in 1896. After the St. Petersburg tournament to which you refer, he had plus scores at Nuremberg 1896, New York 1897, Vienna 1898, and Cologne 1898. Only in his last event, London 1899, did he have a minus score. Also, we can't be sure what the impact was of Pillsbury's contracting syphilis at StP 1895-96. That disease was incurable then, and I can imagine Pillsbury's composure might well have been badly shaken when he found out during the tournament that he had contracted it. It certainly could not have helped. > Thanks again for your list, which really gives a lot to think about. BTW, here is Soltis' full "Difficult Opponents" from Chess Lists: Janowski-Chigorin +17 -4 =3D4 Korchnoi-Tal +13 -4 =3D27 Pillsbury-Schlechter +8 -2 =3D9 Bogolyubov-Reti +19 -7 =3D4 Geller-Botvinnik +4 -1 =3D5 Capablanca-Nimzovitch +5 -0 =3D6 Boleslavsky-Kotov +7 -1 =3D5 Smyzlov-Szabo +6 -1 =3D10 Vid-Tartakower +10 -4 =3D14 Stein-Taimanov +4 -0 =3D6 However, all but two of these are wrong, especially Vid- Tartakower, where the actual score was +11 -9 =3D17, hardly lopsided at all. The others are off by smaller amounts; here are the correct figures, as far as I could determine: Janowski-Chigorin +16 -5 =3D5 Korchnoi-Tal +13 -4 =3D28 Bogolyubov-R=E9ti +23 -8 =3D5 Geller-Botvinnik +4 -1 =3D7 Boleslavsky-Kotov +9 -1 =3D7 Smyslov-Szabo +6 -1 =3D11 Stein-Taimanov +5 -1 =3D7 The best source for this sort of information is "Life Maps of the Great Chess Masters" by Nathan Divinsky (ICE, 1994). It's not perfect, but nobody else has done anything remotely comparable, as far as I know.
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Date: 24 Feb 2008 10:21:36
From: Offramp
Subject: Re: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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Soltis mentions it in his book "Why Lasker Matters".
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Date: 24 Feb 2008 10:20:54
From: Offramp
Subject: Re: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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On Feb 24, 2:07 pm, [email protected] wrote: > On Feb 24, 3:44 am, Offramp <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I did not know until Andy Soltis pointed it out that Akiva Rubinstein > > beat S Tarrasch 8-0 with 12 draws, over the years 1911 to 1924-ish. > > > I suppose there are a few not-so-famous lop-sided results like that > > from chess history - I mean Kasparov v Shirov and many others are too > > well-known to mention. Short v Ljubojevic was highly in favour of the > > four-eyed kebab-cruncher for a long time. > > > Any other less-well-known ones that anyone knows? > > Where did you find Soltis mentioning Rubinstein-Tarrasch? In his > book "Chess Lists" (2nd edition, McFarland & Co, 2002), he had a > section titled Difficult Opponents, in which he listed some of the > more lopsided career records: Janowski-Chigorin (+17 -4 =3D4), Korchnoi- > Tal (+13 -4 =3D27) and eight others. But he did not mention the > Rubinstein-Tarrasch imbalance. That was one of the omissions I > mentioned in my review of the book at ChessCafe (http://www.chesscafe.com/= text/review348.pdf). That list: > > Capablanca-shall (+22 -2 =3D28) > Steinitz-Blackburne (+28 -10 =3D7) > Rubinstein-Duras (+10 -2 =3D1) > Larsen-Najdorf (+8 -2 =3D2 ) > Botvinnik-Boleslavsky (+7 -1 =3D6 ) > Botvinnik-Keres (+8 -3 =3D9) > Korchnoi-Polugaevsky (+21 -8 =3D30) > Petrosian-Taimanov (+8 -2 =3D10) > Pillsbury-Mason (+7 -0 =3D1) > Polugaevsky-Gligoric (+7 -1 =3D5) > Portisch-Miles (+7 -1 =3D13) > Polugaevsky-Seirawan (+5 -1 =3D3) > Polugaevsky-Tal (+4 -0 =3D1) > Smyslov-Euwe (+7 -1 =3D0) > Korchnoi-Szabo (+6 -0 =3D6) > Rubinstein-Tarrasch (+8 -0 =3D12) > Tartakower-shall (+7 -1 =3D11) > Teichmann-Spielmann (+13 -3 =3D12) > Vid-Bogolyubov (+5 -1 =3D4) > > Most of these are equally or more lopsided than most of those Soltis > lists. > > It's interesting how two players of nearly equal strength can have > such different records against the same opponent. For example, > shall served as punching bag for Lasker, Capablanca and Tarrasch, > who scored +12 -2 =3D11, +22 -2 =3D28, and +13 -7 =3D18 against him > respectively, a collective +47 -11 =3D57. Yet Rubinstein barely had a > winning record against shall, +11 -9 =3D16, while holding his own > quite well vs. Lasker (+1 -2 =3D4) and Capablanca (+1 -1 =3D7), and > clobbering Tarrasch. > Rubinstein also had a pretty tough time with Nimzovitch (+7 -6 =3D10) > while Capa did not (+5 -0 =3D6). Capa, on the other hand, had some > trouble with Tarrasch (+2 -1 =3D3). Spielmann played Capa even (+2 -2 > =3D8), while Rubinstein had a good plus score (+17 -13 =3D10). That is a great post. Thank you very much. There is a lot to think about.. A first thought is that final career totals don't give the whole idea; the whole drama. Polugaevsky mentions his problems with Hort. What he was talking about was a win each with about 8 draws over 16 years - but Polugaevsky obviously thought he should have scored much more. In the end it was 3-2 with 16=3D to Polu. Also, Short-Ljubo ended up 11-5, with 9 draws. but I think there was a series where Ljubo was struggling to get =BD a point. What I like is where the player rated the same or within 100 points less is scoring massively 'higher than expectation'. A good example is Steinitz v Pillsbury in 1896, where Steinitz is really totally and utterly at the end of his career, and Pillsbury is a young man at the start of his victorious career, but WS walks all over the great player. Thanks again for your list, which really gives a lot to think about.
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Date: 24 Feb 2008 06:07:21
From:
Subject: Re: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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On Feb 24, 3:44 am, Offramp <[email protected] > wrote: > I did not know until Andy Soltis pointed it out that Akiva Rubinstein > beat S Tarrasch 8-0 with 12 draws, over the years 1911 to 1924-ish. > > I suppose there are a few not-so-famous lop-sided results like that > from chess history - I mean Kasparov v Shirov and many others are too > well-known to mention. Short v Ljubojevic was highly in favour of the > four-eyed kebab-cruncher for a long time. > > Any other less-well-known ones that anyone knows? Where did you find Soltis mentioning Rubinstein-Tarrasch? In his book "Chess Lists" (2nd edition, McFarland & Co, 2002), he had a section titled Difficult Opponents, in which he listed some of the more lopsided career records: Janowski-Chigorin (+17 -4 =4), Korchnoi- Tal (+13 -4 =27) and eight others. But he did not mention the Rubinstein-Tarrasch imbalance. That was one of the omissions I mentioned in my review of the book at ChessCafe ( http://www.chesscafe.com/text/review348.pdf ). That list: Capablanca-shall (+22 -2 =28) Steinitz-Blackburne (+28 -10 =7) Rubinstein-Duras (+10 -2 =1) Larsen-Najdorf (+8 -2 =2 ) Botvinnik-Boleslavsky (+7 -1 =6 ) Botvinnik-Keres (+8 -3 =9) Korchnoi-Polugaevsky (+21 -8 =30) Petrosian-Taimanov (+8 -2 =10) Pillsbury-Mason (+7 -0 =1) Polugaevsky-Gligoric (+7 -1 =5) Portisch-Miles (+7 -1 =13) Polugaevsky-Seirawan (+5 -1 =3) Polugaevsky-Tal (+4 -0 =1) Smyslov-Euwe (+7 -1 =0) Korchnoi-Szabo (+6 -0 =6) Rubinstein-Tarrasch (+8 -0 =12) Tartakower-shall (+7 -1 =11) Teichmann-Spielmann (+13 -3 =12) Vid-Bogolyubov (+5 -1 =4) Most of these are equally or more lopsided than most of those Soltis lists. It's interesting how two players of nearly equal strength can have such different records against the same opponent. For example, shall served as punching bag for Lasker, Capablanca and Tarrasch, who scored +12 -2 =11, +22 -2 =28, and +13 -7 =18 against him respectively, a collective +47 -11 =57. Yet Rubinstein barely had a winning record against shall, +11 -9 =16, while holding his own quite well vs. Lasker (+1 -2 =4) and Capablanca (+1 -1 =7), and clobbering Tarrasch. Rubinstein also had a pretty tough time with Nimzovitch (+7 -6 =10) while Capa did not (+5 -0 =6). Capa, on the other hand, had some trouble with Tarrasch (+2 -1 =3). Spielmann played Capa even (+2 -2 =8), while Rubinstein had a good plus score (+17 -13 =10).
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Date: 24 Feb 2008 12:52:02
From: John Townsend
Subject: Re: Rubinstein v Tarrasch and other lop-sided results
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>I did not know until Andy Soltis pointed it out that Akiva Rubinstein > beat S Tarrasch 8-0 with 12 draws, over the years 1911 to 1924-ish. Perhaps not that surprising if one reflects that Rubinstein was playing someone 20 years his senior, who would have been already about 49 by 1911. I think Tarrasch's best form was in the 1890s. Regards, John Townsend, Howard Staunton Research Project: http://www.johntownsend.demon.co.uk/index_files/Page324.htm
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