My Chess  Presents and a Christmas Quiz

My Chess Presents and a Christmas Quiz

Only Chess

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
06 Jan 16

Me with my presents. (I was dragged out bed a jersey
pulled over my pyjamas and a Santa hat placed on my head,)

A book review of 'The History of Chess in 50 moves.'
Actually very few moves. It's 50 chapters.

***STOP***
What do you think are the 3 most famous moves in Chess History?
I give my three. Think of yours before you visit the blog.
***OK Continue Reading***

A DVD. The wrong DVD!! and a book on the Scandinavian.
So you get a selection RHP Scandinavians played badly.

Then a mini quiz featuring 3 questions that cropped up
on University Challenge. All three were answered incorrectly.

Blog Post 284

Mister Why

San Carlos, CA

Joined
21 Feb 12
Moves
6039
06 Jan 16

You reversed the Arabian and Anastasia's mate.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
06 Jan 16

Well done byedidia, that was part of the other Quiz.

I've decided to remove the other quiz and put them the correct way round.

🙄

Secret RHP coder

on the payroll

Joined
26 Nov 04
Moves
155080
06 Jan 16

Originally posted by greenpawn34
What do you think are the 3 most famous moves in Chess History?
I give my three. Think of yours before you visit the blog.
I had Qg3. For the other ones, I thought of Rd7 in Steinitz-von Bardeleben and Qf6 in the Immortal Game. But yours are more famous.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
06 Jan 16

Hi Big Dog.

There is another contender and it's bugging me. (I'm sure I've forgotten
this move before when I was once asked the same question years ago.).

Lasker's 4.Bxc6 v Capablanca at St. Petersburg 1914.
(that's not the one that is bugging me but it is another choice.)

The drunk knight

Stuck on g1

Joined
02 Sep 12
Moves
59234
06 Jan 16

Your first 2 picks were also 2 of mine, but I would have also gone for Deep Blue's "non-computer-like move" vs Kasparov in game 2.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
06 Jan 16

Hi 64,

I know of the game and the move but I cannot quite recall what it was.

(and anyway, I could not possibly have a computer move as the most famous.)

State of Confusion

Lancashire

Joined
04 May 08
Moves
842388
08 Jan 16

The first time I came across the BxRP manoeuvre to get a Bishop trapped was reading C.H.O'D.Alexander's book Fisher v. Spassky Reykjavik 1972.
In his note to that move (29) he wrote...a beginner's blunder;everyone knows the danger of the Bishop being shut in...in these positions.
Until I saw that I didn't know.
I could write a book about things everyone knows that I don't.

Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12466
08 Jan 16

Originally posted by greenpawn34
There is another contender and it's bugging me. (I'm sure I've forgotten this move before when I was once asked the same question years ago.).

Lasker's 4.Bxc6 v Capablanca at St. Petersburg 1914.
(that's not the one that is bugging me but it is another choice.)
How about Lasker's Bxh7 and Bxg7 against Bauer?

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
09 Jan 16

Hi Shallow Blue,

Yes that is another one to be considered.

Lasker - Bauer, Amsterdam 1889.

Joined
08 Apr 12
Moves
68553
09 Jan 16
1 edit

Hi greenpawn. I had 24. Nb1 in Karpov–Spassky 1974 candidates:



and 17. Rd8 from Morphy– Duke of Brunswick/Count Isouard.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
10 Jan 16

Yes these two another couple of candidates.
Karpov's Nb1 appears in a lot of books.