27-time champion was formidable even in old age
Saturday, July 5, 2008 3:06 AM
By SHELBY LYMAN

How strong a player was Emanuel Lasker, who was world champion for 27 years (1894-1921)?

A young Bobby Fischer obscured Lasker’s legacy when he wrote in 1964 that he “was a coffeehouse player” who “knew nothing about openings and didn’t understand positional chess.”

For many, Fischer’s famous statement has been the final word. But he apparently reversed himself later when he told fellow grandmaster Pal Benko that “Lasker was a truly great player.”

A measure of Lasker’s ability was his performance at age 67 in the 1935 Moscow International Tournament. He finished in third place, only a half-point behind Mikhail Botvinnik and Salo Flohr but ahead of Jose Capablanca, the acknowledged chess genius who had wrested away Lasker’s world title 14 years earlier.

Capablanca regarded Lasker — even as the latter neared 70 — as the most dangerous player in the world in a single game. No other contemporary, he thought, surpassed the former world champion in his ability to evaluate a position and find the correct strategy.

Lasker was notable for his lack of fear and his willingness to take on new challenges. Siegbert Tarrasch wrote: “Lasker occasionally loses a game, but he never loses his head.”

His friend Albert Einstein offered an impressive non-chess tribute: “I shall remember with gratitude the pleasing conversations I enjoyed with that incessantly eager, truly independent and yet most modest of men.”

Source: Columbus Dispatch

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