I Play against Pieces - Svetozar Gligoric, 2003.pdf

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Gligoric - I Play against Pieces.pdf
I Play against Pieces
Svetozar Gligoric
Translated by
Bijana and Zoran li c
B.T. Batsford Ltd, London
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First published in 2002
© Svetozar Gligoric, Biljana and Zoran IIic 2002
Reprinted 2003
Foreword
ISBN 0 7134 8770 4
n invitation to write for
the respected Russian
series 'Famous chess
players of the world',
which included books
on world champions and
other top grandmasters in history,
was an honour one could not reuse.
And in 1981, my book with 105
selected games was published in
Moscow with a printing of 100,000
copies. It was called I Play Against
Pieces-words taken from an
interview I gave to the editor.
The unusual title referred to chess
as an art and a clean struggle of
ideas, thereby trying to ignore the
less dignified influence of psychol­
ogy and personal conlicts.
The second updated edition in
Serbo-Croat (with 120 games)
appeared in Belgrade in 1989, with
a printing of 3,000 copies.
Now here is a urther enlarged
edition in English with 130 selected
games, covering the period 1939-
2001. To make the reader's task
easier, the games are classiied by
openings, in chronological order.
This is to help the reader utilise the
commentaries more effectively and
hopeully also gain a deeper under­
standing of the opening lines under
discussion.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is
available from the British Library.
A
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be
reproduced, by any means, without prior penission
of the publisher.
Printed in Great Britain by
Creative Print and Design (Wales), Ebbw Vale
for the publishers
B T Batsford
The Chrysalis Building
Bramley Road
London WIO 6SP
An imprint of ChysalifsookS Group pic
A BATSFORD CHESS BOOK
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Contents
Age makes it a Time to Talk:
A Chess Autobiography
Age makes it a Time to Talk: A Chess Autobiography
King's Gambit
Vienna Game
Petroff Defence
Ruy Lopez
French Defence
Pirc Defence
Sicilian Defence
Caro-Kann Defence
Queen's Gambit Accepted
Tarrasch Defence
Queen's Gambit Declined
Slav Defence
Semi-Slav Defence
Queen's Pawn Game
Queen's Indian Defence
Bogoljubow Indian Defence
Catalan Opening
Nimzo-Indian Defence
Budapest Gambit
King's Indian Defence
Old Indian Defence
Grinfeld Defence
Modem Benoni Defence
Czech and Old Benoni Defences
English Opening
Bird's Opening
Dutch Defence
My Theoretical Contributions to the Openings
Index of Games
7
13
20
23
27
41
50
53
64
66
79
86
93
99
108
109
III
114
117
15 1
153
198
200
226
252
257
265
266
267
287
Born: On the 2nd February 1923
in Belgrade, the only child.
Europe heading for catastrophe);
outdoor sports (I stopped playing re­
creational football as a 'youngster'
of 76); crazy about chess between
the ages of 13 and 15.
Family: Poor. My father Dragoje
Gligoric ( 32 ) died when I was 9, my
mother, Ljubica, bon Rakic ( 37),
when I was 17. I was let on my
own some ive months before Hit­
ler's surprise attack on Yugoslavia.
Beginnings: My parents knew
nothing about chess. I was late in
leaning the rules of the game and
started to compete a little when I
was 13. The following year, in
1937, I became the champion of
Belgrade for juniors under 14, and
in 1938, when 15, for juniors under
18. At the beginning of 1939 I won
the adult championship of the
Belgrade Chess Club, the strongest
in the country. This resulted in the
publication of my schoolboy photo
in the leading daily. Pleased with
my excellent academic results at
school-which was the thing she
cared for-my mother paid no
attention to my new found fame and
reacted equally indifferently when I
created another sensation in those
days by winning the national master
title at 16, in Zagreb, in summer
1939. Ater two years of illness her
life was cut short on November I,
1940.
My early hobbies: Reading
world literature; devouring
Hollywood ilms and musicals (a
welcome contrast to the reality of
Survival: In November 1940,
alone and in the inal class of the
middle school, I was given shelter in
the family of University professor
Dr.Niko Miljanic. Like the oldest of
his three sons-this warm-hearted
surgeon played chess and knew me
well.
In early spring 1941, the whole
big group of us, male and female,
escaped from Belgrade. During the
short 'April War' in 1941, for
reasons of safety, we undertook an
adventurous jouney to Montenegro
where the 'Miljanic tribe' had its
origins. In August 1942, with the
growth of the resistance movement,
we left fo r the deserted mountain
region where there were no roads,
water, electricity...
In 1943, on my own inititiative, I
joined the guerrilla ighters. Being a
young intellectual with some know­
ledge of mathematics and geometry,
the partisan superiors proclaimed
me an expert in 'semi-heavy'
weapons, and entrusted me with the
command of a small unit with a
heavy mine-thrower and machine­
gun. With the good fo rtune of not
having been wounded, I ended my
military career with two war decora­
tions and the rank of captain. In
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8 A Chess Autobiography
A Chess Autobiography 9
1945, I felt happy to retun to
normal life in my home town after
four years absence.
at their best, in whatever calling,
between the ages of 33 and 36.
In 1960 I let 'NfN' and went to
work in Radio-Belgrade to have
more time for chess. I used my legal
right to retire and receive a pension
in 1978.
My long career: In the period
1945-1 975 I travelled and played
perhaps more than anyone else. If
one counts eveything from 1938 till
2002, the number of my tounament
games is probably four times higher
than that of world champions such
as Capablanca or Fischer. I am not
proud of it, this is damaging to
consistent high class play. The
remarkable writer and chief editor
of the Yugoslav chess magazine, the
late Vladimir Vukovic, made an
amazing revelation saying that
"Gligoric is in the group of world
grandmasters with the largest
number of anthology games".
Without the knowledgeable intena­
tional master from Zagreb, I would
be left unaware of such a consola­
tion for a lifetime's creative work.
In addition to my exaggerated
chess activity, I sent jounalistic
reports from intenational compet­
itions (Larsen used to do the same)
and occasionally lost games on
Sundays as a result of feeling
indisposed ater very prolonged
phone calls to Belgrade media late
on Saturday nights.
Like many of my colleagues,
before 1972 I frequently gave
tiresome simultaneous displays to
compensate for low tounament
prizes. In 1952 I visited 16 towns
(having twice faced the record
numbers of 59 and 61 players) in
the USA, another time in Holland I
gave 26 exhibitions one after the
other, and in 1959 in Switzerland I
played a total of 220 simultaneous
games with the result +167, = 14,
-12, which gives a picture of my
past lifestyle.
among other things, I won a touna­
ment in Warsaw in 1947 (7 wins,
two draws), as it happened two full
points ahead of the second-placed
giants-Smyslov and Boleslavsky.
In 1950 I was irst in the traditional
intenational at Mar del Plata
(Argentina) and then the following
year I also won the zonal in Bad
Pyrmont (Germany) and the Staun­
ton Memorial (England).
Nevertheless my theoy about
one's best years was proved: I
peaked in my chess career between
1956 and 1959. After a medium
success in the Olympiad in Moscow
1956 (+6, -3, =7 on top board), I felt
strangely self-conscious of only
having used just a part of my chess
strength. Indeed, in the subsequent
strong Alekhine Memorial, also held
in Moscow 1956, I achieved a high
fourth placing, ahead of Bronstein,
Najdorf, Keres... In the USSR­
Yugoslavia match, Leningrad 1957,
against well-known Soviet grand­
masters I scored an 'impossible' 6
points from 8 games. Then in the
elite tounament at Dallas 1957 I
shared irst prize with Reshevsky
and in the Olympiad at Munich
1958 I had the best score on irst
board (12 points out of 15 games)
ahead of the world champion Bot­
vinnik. In the Interzonal tounament
at Portoroz 1958 I was second, half
a point behind the winner Tal. All
this was crowned the same year
with my election (among all popular
sports) as Sportsman of the Year in
Yugoslavia. Bronstein claimed that I
was world No.3 player in that year.
In High Society: I was unable to
keep up the pace of such successes
for long, yet my respectable scores
in important tournaments allowed
me to be among the top 10-20
grandmasters in the coming years.
In chess-again: Back in early
1940 and 1941, I had won the
championship of the Belgrade Chess
Club a second and third time. But
after the ire of World War Two had
reached my country I did not have
the opportunity for the real
challenge of participating in the
national championship with masters
and grandmasters. Hitler's war
practically took away six years of
my chess career and later Tal said
that this had had a bearing on the
sporadic irregularity of my play in
the post-war years.
I began playing chess again in
1945 and took second place in Novi
Sad in the irst championship of
'greater Yugoslavia'. I must have
had a funny character then as after
each one of my ive defeats, over
and over again I vowed to win every
game for the rest of competition.
Marriage: When in the early
spring of 1947 I met in the street a
certain 18 year old girl whom I had
known since she was 10, being the
little sister of my schoolmate, I
surprised her with my sudden
inspiration to propose to her. I was
24, a very thin youngster who had
no reason to be vain, and took it for
kindness that she did not say no but
promised to give me the answer on
the next day. It happened that
Danica's mother liked me, and
when told about her son's friend's
wish to marry her youngest
daughter, she slapped her hesitant
girl twice (I hope-gently, Danica
had beautiful cheeks) saying:
"You've got to marry himl"
My future lady knew nothing
about chess, she thought I was just a
jounalist. She realised that J was
better known for something else
when I came back from the touna­
ment in Warsaw and brought her
gifts. We married on June 3, 1947.
Her generous mother sufered much
from the miseries of war. In spite of
her hope to live with us, she died
soon, ive weeks ater the formal
ceremony where two obligatory
witnesses were our only company.
My wife was intelligent and very
friendly by nature, loved chess and
people in it, knew the rules sponta­
neously but never played the game.
She was 65 when she died in 1994,
ater 47 years of having been my
life companion.
Journalism: After that champion­
ship in 1945 I was promptly offered
a job in a well-known daily
newspaper. I wrote about anything,
not only chess. I worked there for
nine years. In 1954 I moved to the
leading weekly magazine as the
commentator on foreign news,
sometimes also writing travel
essays. In those seven years I was at
the peak of my jounalistic activity.
I was praised highly for my style by
our Nobel Prize winner for literature
Ivo Andric, who used to read
everything he laid his eyes on. At
the vey same time I had the best
period of my chess career. How did
I find the energy for two entirely
different jobs and to be among the
top ten in the world of chess? My
explanation is that many people are
At my best: Without any oficial
proposal, I was granted the grand­
master title by acclamation at the
FIDE Congress in 1951.Before that,
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10 A Chess Autobiography
A Chess Autobiography 11
In Zirich 1959 I was runner up to
Tal, ahead of Fischer, Keres,
Larsen, Unzicker etc. I won Hast­
ings for the fourth time in 1960/61.
In Zurich 1961 I was third behind
Keres and Petrosian, in Bled 1961 I
shared third prize with Petrosian and
Keres, etc.
1970, West Berlin (West Gemany)
1971, Sparks open (USA) 1971,
Lone Pine open (USA) 1972, Los
Angeles (USA) 1974, Montilla
(Spain) 1977, Osijek 1978, Lone
Pine open (USA) 1979, Vienna
open (Austria) 1982, Sochi (USSR)
1986 (with Beliavsky and Vagan­
ian), Donner Memorial in Amster­
dam 1994 (with Smyslov and
Unzicker).
the first board together with Spassky
in the European Team Champ­
ionship, Bath 1973; I played top
board for the Yugoslav national
team for 30 years.
Creator of the Mar del Plata
Variation and of many novelties in
the theory of chess openings (see
the article at the end of this book).
Author of more than twenty
books, including the world best­
sell er about the Fischer-Spassky
match, Reykjavik 1972, in 400,000
copies, translated from English into
ive more languages. (My writing
may have been irrelevant to my
playing career but it did take a
significant part of my time and
energy.)
my regular habits and to spend 2-3
hours each moning in preparation
for the game in the aftenoon. It was
like a prophecy of how chess
players behave nowadays, where
preparation can offer a 90% guaran­
tee of success.
I have always been a disciplined
fellow and also agreed to spend an
hour before lunch, in swimming
trunks, walking barefoot along the
endless sandy Tunisian beach. I was
tense but it enough to inish the
tounament as the only undefeated
player.
My tactics were like balancing on
the brink of a threatening abyss-if
1 lost a single game. It did happen in
my next match with Tal who, in
1968 said that for several reasons
Belgrade as a playing site was a
handicap to me. I was leading ater
ive games and both Tal and his
second Koblentz believed that I was
going to win the match (see Game
10 ) . Then in the 6th game, stupidly
iritated by journalistic comments
on the "monotony of our duel", I
shocked myself with a sudden
decision at the board to make a 3'd
move as White for which J was
unprepared. After that defeat I
collapsed. If one could explain it-I
must have been tired of the situation
with no tranquillity. Among other
things, the playing hall was across
the street from where I lived
downtown with my wife and this
was like an open invitation. to ben­
evolent visitors to frequent our
place. However I was fortunate with
my temperament and did not regret
one bit my lost chance.
First prizes: To save space, here
is a list of tounaments where I took
first prize, or shared it:
Qualiying tounament for
Belgrade Chess Club 1938,
Belgrade 1939, Zagreb 1939,
Belgrade 1940, Belgrade 1941,
Soia (Bulgaria) 1945, Ljubljana
1945/46, Belgrade 1946, Warsaw
(Poland) 1947, Mar del Plata
(Argentina) 1950, Bad Pyrmont
(West Gemany) zonal 1951, Staun­
ton Memorial (England) 1951, Hast­
ings 1951/52, Hollywood (USA)
1952, Hastings 1952/53, Mar del
Plata 1953, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)
1953, Montevideo (Uuguay) 1953,
Goteborg (Sweden) 1953, Stock­
holm (Sweden) 1954, Hastings
1956/57 (with Larsen), Dallas
(USA) 1957 (with Reshevsky),
Bognor Regis (England) 1957,
Hastings 1959/60, Santa Fe (Argen­
tina) 1960, Asuncion (Paraguay)
1960, Madrid (Spain) zonal 1960,
Hastings 1960/61, Leicester (Eng­
land) 1961, Sarajevo 1961 (with
Pachman), Torremolinos (Spain)
1961, Belgrade 1962, Sarajevo 1962
(with Portisch), Hastings 1962/63
(with Kotov), Belgrade 1963,
Enschede (Holland) zonal 1963,
Copenhagen (Denmark) 1965 (with
Taimanov and Larsen), Hague
(Netherlands) zonal 1966, Tel Aviv
(Israel) 1966, Dundee (Scotland)
1967, Manila (Philippines) 1968,
Belgrade 1969, Praia de Rocha
(Portugal) zonal 1969, Belgrade
Championships of Yugoslavia,
won by me: Ljubljana 1947 (with
Dr.Triunovic), Belgrade 1948 (with
Pirc), Zagreb 1949, Ljubljana 1951,
Skopje 1956, Sombor 1957, Saraje­
vo 1958 (with I vkov), ragujevac
1959, Ljubljana 1960, Vnjacka
Banja 1962, Titograd 1965.
An episode rom my tcomeback'
in 1967: After the Interzonal in
Portoroz 1958 I gave the impression
of being one of favourites in the
Candidates tounament 1959 of 8
participants, and I disappointed my
audience when I finished 5th.6th in
the company of a young grand­
master by name of Bobby Fischer...
I continued my 'going down' in the
Interzonals at Stockholm 1962 and
Amsterdam 1964, failing twice to
qualiy for the Candidates stage.
When I went to Sousse in 1967,
nothing spectacular was to be
expected from me.
At that time, 1 had some new
ideas for a safe opening repertoire
and intended, as usual, to rely on
my intuition during play. My plan
was not to lose a single game and to
gain the minimum number of wins
necessay for qualification-and
that I thought I could do.
I was 44 and it surprised me when
my new second, young Velimirovic,
treated me like a novice in intena­
tional chess. He forced me to break
Other memorable results: Mos­
cow 1963 ( 3'd behind Smyslov and
Tal), Interzonal in Sousse 1967
( 2ndAt h with Korchnoi and Geller),
Rovinj-Zagreb 1970 ( 2n d ·5th, behind
Fischer), Vinkovci 1970 ( 2 n d A t h ,
behind Larsen), San Antonio 1972
( 4 th , ahead of Keres, Hort, Mecking,
Larsen etc.), Vidmar Memorial in
Portoroz-Ljubljana 1975 ( 2nd,
behind Karpov); I was the best 2 nd
board in the European Team Cham­
pionships in Skara 1980 and in
Plovdiv 1983.
Best achievements: Warsaw
1947; Mar del Plata 1953 ( 16 points
out of 19 games); USSR-Yugoslavia
match in Leningrad 1957; Dallas
1957; Olympiad in Munich 1958;
Interzonal in Potoroz 1958; Inter­
zonal in Sousse (Tunisia) 1967;
three times among World Cham­
pionship Candidates in 1953, 1959
and 1968; 12 Olympic Medals (I
gold, 6 silver, 5 bronze); 5 Euro­
pean medals, with the best result on
Public recognition: On the occa­
sion of my 50 '1. birthday in 1973, the
mayor granted me the rare 'Golden
Sign of the Town of Belgrade'. In
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Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin