Chess For Life

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ONTENTS

Contents
Symbols
Preface
About the Authors
Introduction

4
5
7
8

GM Pia Cramling
Interview with Pia Cramling
Pia Cramling: Cool and Consistent

14
15
19

GM John Nunn
Interview with John Nunn

36
37

Jose Raul Capablanca


Capablanca: Classical Inspiration

51
52

Interview with Judit Polgar

71

Interview with Terry Chapman

76

Interview with Jon Speelman

84

GM Tony Miles
Tony Miles: The Rebel

92
93

GM Sergei Tiviakov
Interview with Sergei Tiviakov
Sergei Tiviakov: Always Building

110
111
116

Interview with Ingrid Lauterbach

137

Interview with Nigel Short

140

GM Nona Gaprindashvili
Gaprindashvili: Willpower

147
148

GM Yasser Seirawan
Interview with Yasser Seirawan
Seirawan: Blitz Demon

158
159
165

GM Keith Arkell
Interview with Keith Arkell
Keith Arkell: Finding a Style You Love
Keith Arkell: Rook and Pawn Endings

173
174
179
200

Conclusions

215

Index of Themes
Index of Players
Index of Openings

220
221
223

YASSER SEIRAWAN

GM Yasser Seirawan
Date of birth: 23th March 1960
Place of birth: Damascus, Syria
Highest Elo: 2658 (age 51)
Quote:
My style is based around provocation and counter-punches. I like waving a red flag at the opponent!

Career highlights include:


World Junior Champion 1979
4-times US Champion
Dutch Open Blitz Champion 2011 and 2012
Publications include:
Winning Chess series
Chess Duels: My Games with the World Champions, 2010

Interview with Yasser Seirawan


GM Yasser Seirawan grew up in America, learnt chess at age 12 and became World Junior Champion at the age of 19. Yasser was long-time editor of Inside Chess magazine and is a popular chess
commentator including for the Chess24 website. In this interview, given at the 2015 Tata Steel tournament in Wijk aan Zee, Yasser describes how chess has changed during his lifetime and illustrates
this with some interesting games.
How did your chess comeback
in 2011 come about?
I put myself in self-mate! In 2003
I announced my retirement from
chess. Chess was in trouble as we
didnt have a unified chess world.
For the next few years I played just
Dutch League but no tournament
chess.
Around 2011 I was very impressed
by what the St Louis Chess Club
had done for US chess. Before, the
centre of US Chess had always been
Manhattan. The idea that in 2011
the centre of the US chess scene had
moved from Manhattan to Missouri
was as random as... a world chess
champion from Norway! The St
Louis Chess Club had rescued the
US Championship, which now was
a professional event with an excellent prize fund. I wrote a nice email
to the directors thanking them on
Photograph by Natasha Regan
behalf of chess grandmasters for
what they had achieved, saying I
hoped one day to thank them in person.
That was the self-mate. I straightaway got an email back saying we accept your invitation, please
come and play and tell us what you think!
I played in the US Championship and it felt strange, like everything was wrong. The first problem was my jetlag in round 1 against Christiansen. I was seeing ghosts, getting mixed up and
played an awful game.
I soon realized my openings were really poor. I had never been great at openings they were always a bit soft you could say, no topical Grnfelds or Sicilians I just wanted positions to play. At the
US Championship all these guys were preparing well beyond me. This also affected my clock handling. In my career I had never been afflicted by time-trouble but here I was always behind on time.
On the plus side, however, the longer the games went on, the better I felt. I was warming up!

160

CHESS FOR LIFE


Yasser Seirawan Ray Robson
USA Ch, Saint Louis 2012

1 c4 f6 2 c3 g6 3 g3 d5 4 cxd5 xd5 5 g2 xc3 6 bxc3 g7 7 b1 d7 8 c4 0-0 9 f3


c5 10 0-0 b8 11 d3 b6 12 b2 xb2 13 xb2 b7 14 d2 c7 15 f4 xf4 16 gxf4 xf3 17
xf3 (D)

-t-+-tk+
z-+nzp+p
-z-+-+p+
+-z-+-+-+P+-Z-+
+-+P+L+PT-+PZ-Z
+-+-+RM-

The position is pretty equal out of the opening. Now Yasser starts to get into his stride!
17...fc8 18 g2 e6 19 a4 a5 20 fb1 f8 21 f1 e7 22 e1 d6 23 d2 c7 24 e3 h6 25
h4 g8 26 g1 h5 27 d4 cxd4 28 exd4 d6 29 c3 gc8 30 gb1 e7 31 d3 d8 32 c6
(D)

-t-t-+-+
+-+nmp+-zL+p+p+
z-+-+-+p
P+PZ-Z-Z
+-+K+-+-T-+-Z-+
+R+-+-+-

32...f6 33 xd7 xd7 34 xb6 bd8 35 d5 f5 36 b7 xf4 37 xd7 xd7 38 d4 g5 39


hxg5 h4 40 b8 xg5 41 e5 exd5 42 g8+ h5 43 cxd5 h3 44 d6 f6+ 45 e6 h7 46 g1 h4
47 h1 g4 48 d7 h8 49 xf6 1-0
Sadly the US championship ended at just the wrong moment for me. I was warmed up!
I went back to my peaceful retirement world and then received an email inviting me to the World
Team Championship. I replied saying they had the wrong person; I had not played enough games to
even meet the activity criteria for selection so I wasnt even qualified to play. It turned out I was
qualified but did I want to go? In the end friendships swung it. My colleagues insisted they really
wanted me to go Gata Kamsky was especially persuasive.
One of my best friends, John Donaldson, was captain. What does a best friend do? Start me off
with three blacks in a row! It all turned out fine though.
How is it to play chess nowadays as an experienced player?
There was a tournament in Amsterdam with seniors against juniors. Whilst the youngsters were
winning the games, the professors were winning the post-mortems. Ljubojevi was brilliant at

YASSER SEIRAWAN

161

post-mortems. He would always give strong opinions, though would sometimes change his mind a
couple of minutes later.
Youngsters tend to be strong at analysing and their openings are better, the older have a good positional understanding as the games progresses.
Do you think that some players adapt better than others to long playing careers?
Walter Browne would beat me in my teenage years (6 losses and 1 draw). In later years I began to improve my score. My god what a calculator he was! He would analyse a position to the
nth degree, well beyond my horizon, and to a definitive purpose (he calculated until the position
was clear). He was like a volcano at the board, always intense and perpetually in time-trouble. I
thought that one day he must burn himself out. And that did happen as he had a decline in his
mid-40s.
Conversely Anatoly Karpov is a scary player. Why? His intuition is flawless. Strategically he is
so gifted. Pairing that talent with a really good opening repertoire made him World Champion. I
thought this guy would remain the world champion for 40 years!
I think of Garry Kasparov as the best player of all time but we tend to forget that in 1984 Karpov was leading 5-0 against him. If it had gone to 6-0 Kasparov may never have recovered. As it
was, it ended up derailing Karpov. Garry was still at his peak in 2005 when he stepped away from
chess. Garry had been a calculator like Walter Browne. A meteor-like force who defied gravity!
How does chess work now compare with your time as a full-time professional?
Ive done some work with two young players, Daniel Naroditsky and Wesley So.
Naroditsky is a child of the digital age. It is extraordinary for me to watch his use of computers
and how he manages to absorb so much information.
Wesley So also has a great knowledge of how to make use of computers. I always thought of
chess as pattern-recognition. The more patterns you are aware of, the more quickly ideas come to
you. When working with a computer on the 2D screen, somehow these patterns are very apparent.
Players can assimilate this information at a very rapid rate. Sometimes I see Nakamura looking up
into the air during the opening phase, and it seems to me as if hes replaying clicking on the screen
in his head!
I was helping Wesley to prepare for a tournament via Skype and trying to trick him in a position
of which I had very deep knowledge. I gave him a position and said I was not interested in calculation but wanted him to find and describe ideas. He did that and very well but then 15 minutes
into the 1-hour lesson, he also gave me a precise calculation line to resolve the position!
How would you describe your own playing style?
My style is based around provocation and counter-punches. I like waving a red flag at the opponent!
Which players have influenced you?
My style isnt exactly modelled on Korchnoi or Bent Larsen though these players are excellent
counter-attackers.
I was impressed by Tigran Petrosian. A lot of his play clicked with me. I see myself as a pretty
good strategic player, not especially an attacker but a counter-attacker.
Against Tal I have a good record. Its funny how it goes. Korchnoi remarked:
Keres tended to beat Korchnoi.
Tal would beat Keres.
Korchnoi beat Tal.
My own style worked well against Tal. He was an attacker and I knew the attack was coming, he
couldnt contain himself and blasted open the position. I was ready for it!
Tal was a long-time hero of mine. I had read and re-read his book Life and Games of Mikhail Tal
and his book on the 1960 World Championship match. On a first reading I just thought Wow! and
on a second reading I still have a lot to learn about chess.

162

CHESS FOR LIFE

How are you finding the counterattacking style these days?


This style will always exist just like in boxing. Todays chess is vastly different though from the
Karpov era. Dynamic play is now dominant. When Karpov played, you couldnt take on a disadvantage such as an isolated pawn; he would accumulate small advantages and just beat you! Dynamic play, looking for resources even when defending is in the ascendancy. Players are defending
so much better. In the old days if you got an advantage, your opponent would collapse. Today there
are fewer wipe-outs and far more titanic struggles. When I was coming back and had the advantage
I had to exert myself much more than I used to.
In the recent Gashimov Memorial there was a good example of the fantastic defensive mentality
of the modern players:

Vladimir Kramnik Fabiano Caruana


Gashimov Memorial, Shamkir 2015
1 d4 f6 2 f3 g6 3 g5 g7 4 c3 0-0 5 bd2 d5 6 e3 bd7 7 e2 c5 8 0-0 b6 9 a4 a6 10 b4
b7 11 a5 cxb4 12 cxb4 b5 13 c1 e8 14 b3 d6 15 e1 c4 16 d3 a7 17 h4 a8 18
f3 f6 19 e2 e8 20 g4 ed6 21 g2 c8 22 bc5 (D)

l+q+-tk+
t-+-zpvp
p+-s-+p+
ZpSp+-+-ZnZ-+PV
+-+NZ-+-+-+QZLZ
+-T-+RM-

In the old days, players understood that if Kramnik has a knight on c5 against you, then you had
a duty to just collapse and lose! The modern players keep on fighting as if nothing has happened.
Look what Caruana did!
22...e8 23 g3 d8 24 cd1 e6 25 f3 e7 26 h1 h6 27 f4 b7 28 cd3 d8 29 e4
c6 30 exd5 xb4 31 dxe6 xd3 32 xd3 fxe6 33 e1 d8 34 h4 f7 35 g5 g7 36 h3 xf4
37 xf4 e5 38 g3 e4 39 d1 d5 40 e5 exf3 41 f2 xa5 42 g4 f8 43 d3 b4 44 g3
h5 45 gxh6 xh6 46 h2 d2 47 a1 e4 48 c2 xg3 49 xa6 e4 50 xf3 e1 51 b3+
h8 52 xe4 f2+ 53 h3 f1+ 54 g4 f4+ 0-1
In the World Team Championships, my team captain John Donaldson gave me Black again
against Ilya Smirin. It was a sharp line in the Caro-Kann Advance. Then the guy makes a sharp
move.
Im a pawn-grabber. Give me a pawn and Im in heaven! Of course he had certain compensation
but darn it I thought, that is a pawn. There are only a handful of examples where I have been offered
a pawn, not seen a concrete refutation, and not taken it. This time I didnt see a refutation and didnt
take the pawn. It was a draw.
Hed been playing quickly (30-45 seconds per move). He made the sacrifice quickly. I was intimidated. Since he was still in his preparation I was influenced not to take the pawn. In the postmortem my opponent said Im sorry Yasser: that was a fingerfehler! The pawn sacrifice had not
been deliberate and I had been intimidated.

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