Is this position re-constitutable?
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbi ... 382&type=3
And I wonder if the great man is playing it, or observing?
Revolutionary chess position
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Re: Revolutionary chess position
Without doubt, observing.
Writing is the antidote to confusion.
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It's not "how smart you are", it's "how are you smart".
Your brain doesn't work the way you want, so train it!
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Re: Revolutionary chess position
The name of the Jimenez' opponent ends with "i" or "ki".
...and yes, I think that the position is re-constitutable, with little effort !
After a short Google search : was it Capablanca Memorial 1962, the opponent could be Spasski (who finished 2nd) and the game was drawn (is the re-constituted position equal ? )
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Re: Revolutionary chess position
It was definitely Capablanca Memorial 1962 (other photos are available).chrisw wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 7:51 pm Is this position re-constitutable?
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbi ... 382&type=3
And I wonder if the great man is playing it, or observing?
The games PGNs can be found at
https://zanchess.wordpress.com/2016/07/ ... look-look/
But the Jimenez opponent was not Spasski (Jimenez had Black against him, contrary to the photo).
Could the opponent be Polugaevski ? The Jimenez-Polugaevski PGN does not show the position seen on the photo.
So, mystery ! And the opponent obviously has left the table, even his chair is not visible...
So maybe Jimenez is just doing some unrelated analysis, by himself...
Or Che was really playing with Jimenez, outside the tournament, in a friendly game !!!
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Re: Revolutionary chess position.
Hello:
I have read that Jiménez was not awarded as International Master until 1963, so it should not be the 1962 Capablanca Memorial (MI means 'Maestro Internacional' in Spanish, which translates into 'International Master').
Furthermore, I think I have found the correct game. Ché Guevara was a spectator as in many other Cuban tournaments (I was not even aware that he was a chess enthusiast!) and the game is from the first round of the 1964 Capablanca Memorial against Carlos Bielicki (the two final letters of the surname are 'ki' indeed):
Jiménez 0-1 Bielicki (1964 Capablanca Memorial, Round 1).
The position from the photograph looks the same than after 13.- ..., Kxg7 and before 14.- O-O-O.
Regards from Spain.
Ajedrecista.
I have read that Jiménez was not awarded as International Master until 1963, so it should not be the 1962 Capablanca Memorial (MI means 'Maestro Internacional' in Spanish, which translates into 'International Master').
Furthermore, I think I have found the correct game. Ché Guevara was a spectator as in many other Cuban tournaments (I was not even aware that he was a chess enthusiast!) and the game is from the first round of the 1964 Capablanca Memorial against Carlos Bielicki (the two final letters of the surname are 'ki' indeed):
Jiménez 0-1 Bielicki (1964 Capablanca Memorial, Round 1).
The position from the photograph looks the same than after 13.- ..., Kxg7 and before 14.- O-O-O.
Regards from Spain.
Ajedrecista.
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Re: Revolutionary chess position.
Thanks! General stats on chess players amongst the political leaders of the last century would be ‘interesting’. I think there are games from Trotsky, Che, Fidel, Lenin, but I know none from the non-revolutionary opposition. No Hitler, Churchill, Roosevelt, Chamberlain, Franco, Mussolini and so on, or are there?Ajedrecista wrote: ↑Tue Sep 08, 2020 9:43 pm Hello:
I have read that Jiménez was not awarded as International Master until 1963, so it should not be the 1962 Capablanca Memorial (MI means 'Maestro Internacional' in Spanish, which translates into 'International Master').
Furthermore, I think I have found the correct game. Ché Guevara was a spectator as in many other Cuban tournaments (I was not even aware that he was a chess enthusiast!) and the game is from the first round of the 1964 Capablanca Memorial against Carlos Bielicki (the two final letters of the surname are 'ki' indeed):
Jiménez 0-1 Bielicki (1964 Capablanca Memorial, Round 1).
The position from the photograph looks the same than after 13.- ..., Kxg7 and before 14.- O-O-O.
Regards from Spain.
Ajedrecista.
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Re: Revolutionary chess position.
Tricky to make this chess position out. Doubts if that is lenin. Not checked if there are similar doubts on Hitlerchrisw wrote: ↑Wed Sep 09, 2020 12:38 amThanks! General stats on chess players amongst the political leaders of the last century would be ‘interesting’. I think there are games from Trotsky, Che, Fidel, Lenin, but I know none from the non-revolutionary opposition. No Hitler, Churchill, Roosevelt, Chamberlain, Franco, Mussolini and so on, or are there?Ajedrecista wrote: ↑Tue Sep 08, 2020 9:43 pm Hello:
I have read that Jiménez was not awarded as International Master until 1963, so it should not be the 1962 Capablanca Memorial (MI means 'Maestro Internacional' in Spanish, which translates into 'International Master').
Furthermore, I think I have found the correct game. Ché Guevara was a spectator as in many other Cuban tournaments (I was not even aware that he was a chess enthusiast!) and the game is from the first round of the 1964 Capablanca Memorial against Carlos Bielicki (the two final letters of the surname are 'ki' indeed):
Jiménez 0-1 Bielicki (1964 Capablanca Memorial, Round 1).
The position from the photograph looks the same than after 13.- ..., Kxg7 and before 14.- O-O-O.
Regards from Spain.
Ajedrecista.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/cul ... Lenin.html
An extraordinary etching of a young Adolf Hilter playing chess against Vladimir Lenin has come to light. The art work is by Hilter's Jewish art teacher Emma Lowenstramm who witnessed the game Credit: Photo: BNPS
https://en.chessbase.com/post/did-lenin ... che-board-
The image is said to have been created in Vienna by Hitler's art teacher, Emma Lowenstramm, and is signed on the reverse by the two dictators
– A controversy is raging in the news media over a picture being put on sale by the British auction house Mullock’s. It depicts Hitler and Lenin playing chess, in 1909, when they are supposed to have met in Vienna. The etching, by Hitler's Jewish art teacher, has a preliminary price of £40,000. But is it genuine? The chess historian Edward Winter introduced us to the topic some years ago.
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Re: Revolutionary chess position.
Bravo, Ajedrecista !!!Ajedrecista wrote: ↑Tue Sep 08, 2020 9:43 pm Hello:
I have read that Jiménez was not awarded as International Master until 1963, so it should not be the 1962 Capablanca Memorial (MI means 'Maestro Internacional' in Spanish, which translates into 'International Master').
Furthermore, I think I have found the correct game. Ché Guevara was a spectator as in many other Cuban tournaments (I was not even aware that he was a chess enthusiast!) and the game is from the first round of the 1964 Capablanca Memorial against Carlos Bielicki (the two final letters of the surname are 'ki' indeed):
Jiménez 0-1 Bielicki (1964 Capablanca Memorial, Round 1).
The position from the photograph looks the same than after 13.- ..., Kxg7 and before 14.- O-O-O.
Regards from Spain.
Ajedrecista.
Just to compare with the photo, here is the position you found :
[d] r1bq1r2/1p2ppkp/5np1/p3n3/3Np2P/2N2P2/PPPQB1P1/R3K2R w KQ - 0 1