Great Players of the Past: Géza Maróczy
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- Опубліковано 8 чер 2023
- Check out Ben's Chessable courses here! www.chessable.com/author/BenF... GM Ben Finegold discusses the games of Geza Maroczy as part of the Great Players of the Past series. This lecture was recorded November 20, 2018 at CCSCATL in Roswell, Georgia.
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This should be titled "Great Video from the Past of Great Players of the Past: Géza Maróczy"
Almost a contemporary of Em Lasker but survived past ww2 and therefore seems much closer to us in time -- until recently, someone (Pomar) was alive who had played him. And yet Geza had played Blackburne -- a man born in 1841 and was playing chess during the American Civil War. And Geza played Tchigorin, a player also from antique times.
You could also have used the same thumbnail picture for a lecture about Korchnoi.
Plot twist: Géza Maróczy never played Maróczy Bind himself...
31:50 "Very strange game. You wouldn't see this in a Carlsen - Caruana match."
So true, and I'm so happy Carlsen declined and we got Ding Liren - Nepomniachtchi.
thank you!
About Kamsky 41:20, it's because he wanted to win on the other side of the board. :)
Immortal Sacrifice game is like 90 years after this tho lul
25:30 ommg back to ego
"It was a Nein Round Tournament" 🙄
The norway chess tournament was exactly what gm ben finegold was always saying magnus is the goat of draws, while fisher and kasparov dominated their tournments and won by massive diffrences so calling magnus the goat is just stupid statement.
+0=8-1 in the classical portion. He drew Tari. What's wrong with him?
He had 1 bad tournament after taking time out of playing chess to play poker, and voluntarily giving up the WC title because he wants to relax a bit. Even after this poor result he's still about 50 points higher than anyone else in rating. By comparison, in 1999, the year when Kasparov achieved his peak rating, he had a lead of just 31 points over the second-highest rated player Anand.
Who you think is the GOAT depends on what you take the term to mean. If it's the biggest lead over their contemporaries at their peak, it's Morphy, or Fischer if you exclude the pre-WCC era. If it's domination over a long period of time, it's Kasparov without a shadow of a doubt. But if you took all the GOAT candidates at their peak, put them in a time machine and got them to play against each other, my money's on Carlsen coming out on top.
As for why he's not dominating tournaments like Kasparov and Fischer, well, I honestly doubt anyone will ever have a run like that again. Computers have profoundly changed the landscape of classical chess and achieving that amount of decisive games is exponentially more difficult in today's game. Carlsen's opponents are armed to the teeth with deep computer lines in every major opening that are designed to kill the position and achieve a draw - Fischer and Kasparov never had to play against a 3500 rated opponent for the first 15-30 moves of every game.
Finally, you may note that Kasparov himself is not in the "Carlsen is overrated" camp. It's a fun bit of irony that the guy you put forward as GOAT disagrees with your opinion.
You seem like a real Student of the game ... so you would probably enjoy Magnus Carlsen's book...
DRAW YOUR WAY TO A 2882 CLASSICAL CHESS RATING
@@12jswilson nothing wrong with him, he is human, he has his own boring, sphere of interest and so on
@@rickdynes Every player is lower rated than Carlsen. Every time he draws, he loses rating. The fact that he has achieved the highest ever rating is the only proof that's needed to show that he does not, in fact, draw every game.