Dennis M's Chess Site

This is a blog for chess fans by a chess fan. I enjoy winning as much as anyone else, and I've had a reasonable amount of success as a competitor, but what keeps me coming back to the game is its beauty. And that, primarily, is what this site will be about! All material copyrighted.

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Fischer-Kovacevic

In the comments to my "More Fun with Pachman" post, BabsonTask and a subsequent anonymous poster note that Fischer's ethically dubious assistance to Sanchez was (more than) recompensed by what happened to him in 1970, against the Yugoslavian IM Kovacevic.

The story, according to Mike Fox and Richard James, in their The Even More Complete Chess Addict, is that Fischer has made his move, setting a trap in what is an objectively bad position, and has gone for a little walk while awaiting his opponent's move. Viktor Korchnoi and Tigran Petrosian are watching the game see the trap and discuss the solution. Petrosian's wife is there too, and as her hubby is trailing Fischer in the standings, she actually walks over to Kovacevic and whispers the solution to him! Kovacevic plays the right move and crushes Fischer, though the latter went on to win the tournament by a two point margin even so.

As far as I know, the source of this anecdote is Korchnoi, and in light of his long-time enmity towards Petrosian, it's possible that the story is bunk. Further, while Kovacevic's 18th move was a nice one, it wasn't beyond the capacities of a strong IM, later a GM, to find such a move. In any case, here's the game:

Fischer,Robert James - Kovacevic,Vlatko [C15]
Rovinj/Zagreb Zagreb (8), 21.04.1970
[Monokroussos,Dennis]

1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.a3 Bxc3+ 5.bxc3 dxe4 6.Qg4 Nf6 7.Qxg7 Rg8 8.Qh6 Nbd7 9.Ne2 b6 10.Bg5 Qe7 11.Qh4 Bb7 12.Ng3 h6 13.Bd2 0-0-0 14.Be2 Nf8 15.0-0 Ng6 16.Qxh6 Rh8 17.Qg5 Rdg8 18.f3


Black's position is beautifully coordinated for a kingside attack, and if White doesn't do anything special Black will roll him off the board. White's last move is a nice try: he's hoping to shut down the Bb7's diagonal (pre-f3, Black threatened, among other things, some combination of ...Nh4, ...e3 and ...N/Bxg2) and to open the f-file for his own use. 18...e3! This keeps the f-file closed, and now, despite the two pawn deficit, Black's attack is unstoppable. [18...Nh4 looks crushing: the queen moves away, and then 19...exf3 destroys the White kingside. However: 19.fxe4! Rxg5 20.Bxg5 puts a stop to Black's attack, and after 20...Nf5 (forced) 21.Nh5 Rg8 22.Bxf6 Qf8 23.Rf4 Ne3 24.Ng3 the position is unclear.; 18...exf3? 19.Bxf3 is clearly better for White, as Black has serious problems along the f-file.] 19.Bxe3 Nf8! 20.Qb5 Nd5 Not just hitting e3 and c3, but cutting the white queen off from the kingside. 21.Kf2 a6 22.Qd3 Rxh2 23.Rh1 Qh4 24.Rxh2 Qxh2 25.Nf1 Rxg2+ 26.Ke1 Qh4+ 27.Kd2 Ng6 28.Re1 Ngf4 29.Bxf4 Nxf4 30.Qe3 Rf2


Black is threatening 31...Nxe2 32.Rxe2 Rxf1, 31...Ng2 and 31...Bxf3 - too much! 0-1

4 Comments:

  • At 4:50 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    This reminded me of another similar story from Belgrade 1969. In his penultimate tournament before retiring, Botvinnik relates how in the game Sahovic-Botvinnik he sets a final trap at move 22, hoping for 23.Ng5xf7?? Nxf7 24.Bg6 Ng3! Sahovic reaches for his knight on g5 when another player, also involved in the fight for 1st place, and standing right behind Botvinnik (who in turn is standing behind Sahovic) - exclaims 'You're pretty cunning, aren't you!' which makes Sahovic move his rook instead and a draw is agreed.

    Botvinnik doesn't mention the name of the loudmouth, just remarks: 'with this game I didn't just lose a valuable half point but also something even more valuable - a friend.'

    (from 'Botvinnik om Schack' in swedish translation, originally '15 partij i ich istorija' - not sure what the english translation is called). Anyway, anyone here who knows who the former friend was?

     
  • At 7:06 PM, Blogger Naisortep said…

    Regarding this incident Korchnoi says::
    During this tournament I witnessed an incident which I would never have dreamed could happen. On a free day Fischer was playing his postponed game with Kovacevic. Play was held in a hall to which there was an adjoining café. Petrosian, his wife and I were sitting in the café following the game from a distance. Kovacevic playing Black had managed to seize the initiative. Fischer, who was defending, set his opponent a clever trap, which I managed to see through. ‘How interesting!’, I said aloud. ‘ Fischer is allowing him to win his queen, but if Kovacevic takes it, then he may even lose!’Great was my astonishment when Petrosian’s wife announced that she was going to tell Kovacevic about this trap. And indeed, as Kovacevic was walking about waiting for Fischer to move, she went up to him and ‘enlightened him’. On the whole, Kovacevic played this game extremely well, and had no doubt worked out the complications himself. But it is no accident that, back in Curacao in 1962, the controllers had reprimanded Petrosian’s wife for trying to prompt her husband, by telling him the press centre’s opinion of his position. (Chess is My Life (1977) pg. 71)

     
  • At 8:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    There is also a similar story known about Euwe counting moves loudly for Flohr, who was in time pressure, in Nottingham.

     
  • At 4:03 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    The following link turned out to also deal with the game S-B 1969, identifying 'two suspects'...

    chessgames.com

     

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