Pitching a Perfect Chess Game


Posted: 8/21/11 08:54 PM ET


Lubomir Kavalek

International Chess Grandmaster

Asked to name his best game, the legendary Bobby Fischer pointed to his encounter with Donald Byrne from the Rosenwald Trophy in New York in 1956, but admitted it wasn’t perfect. “There is no perfect game in chess,” he said. After all, we are human and we make mistakes. But according to the Hungarian writer and International Master Tibor Karolyi, Anatoly Karpov came close to playing a mistake-free game at the 1974 chess olympiad in Nice, France, and only a tiny error deprived him of creating a perfect game. It was played when we met on the top board of the USA-USSR match. It became one of Karpov’s most analyzed games.

Of the 17 games we played against each other in major competitions in the span of 13 years (photo above is from Buenos Aires in 1980), Karpov won four games, I won once and we drew 12 games. My victory came in our first encounter in Caracas 1970 and we played our last game in Hannover, Germany, in 1983.

In his prime, the former world chess champion Karpov played like the famed FC Barcelona soccer team. Beautiful one-touch passes, allowing the Barca players to keep possession of the ball most of the time, were similar to Karpov’s little chess moves that would deny his opponents the control of the game. He fought for every inch and giving him space was deadly. You can feel it from Karolyi’s work, published by Quality Chess. The 560-page first volume Karpov’s Strategic Wins 1 – The Making of a Champion covers years 1961-1985. The 576-page second volume Karpov’s Strategic Wins 2 – The Prime Years embraces years 1986-2010.

Karolyi dissects Karpov’s wins thoroughly and the books examine Karpov’s career in detail. It was a colossal undertaking and Karloyi spent several years studying his protagonist. He delivers a fascinating account of Karpov’s skills.

When I met Karpov in Nice, he was number two rated player in the world behind Fischer; I was number 10. It was the first time he played the top Soviet board and I felt the pressure with each of his moves. Still, I was able to keep his advantage to a minimum. The game was heavily analyzed, specially the concluding stage. Experts such as Mark Dvoretsky, Mihai Marin, Alexander Motylev, Karpov himself and others tried their hands in finding a logical conclusion. Karolyi devotes some 16 pages to it, showing most of the analysis and his improvements. He claims that Karpov made only one small inaccuracy. Was he pitching a perfect game?

This is hard to say because at a critical point I missed one move that could have saved me. True, I was pressed by time, but I should have found a pretty rook pin at the end of a logical sequence. The trouble was I had to move my rook backwards.

In the book “Invisible Chess Moves,” Emmanuel Neiman and Yochanan Afek talk about the problem. “Forward moves are easier to find than backward moves, “they write. “Human beings usually walk forward, they seldom walk backward and hardly ever horizontally.” In chess “we learn to move pawns (always forward) and to develop pieces toward the center and in the direction of opponent’s pieces. There is a general movement from the back to the front, and some players are even reluctant to go backward on principle.” It is an outstanding book, originally published in French and recently brought out in English by New In Chess.

Full article here.

Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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