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Garry Kasparov
Kasparov 
Photograph courtesy of kasparovagent.com.  

Number of games in database: 2,465
Years covered: 1973 to 2024
Last FIDE rating: 2812 (2783 rapid, 2712 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2851
Overall record: +695 -107 =709 (69.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 954 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (192) 
    B30 B31 B50 B40 B33
 Ruy Lopez (104) 
    C92 C84 C97 C67 C80
 Queen's Gambit Declined (91) 
    D37 D35 D31 D38 D30
 Nimzo Indian (91) 
    E32 E34 E21 E20 E46
 Queen's Indian (78) 
    E12 E15 E17 E16
 Slav (61) 
    D10 D18 D15 D11 D17
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (350) 
    B90 B84 B80 B93 B83
 King's Indian (158) 
    E92 E97 E80 E60 E86
 Sicilian Najdorf (113) 
    B90 B93 B96 B92 B97
 Grunfeld (104) 
    D85 D97 D76 D87 D78
 Sicilian Scheveningen (78) 
    B84 B80 B83 B81 B82
 English (35) 
    A15 A10 A11 A13
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Kasparov vs Topalov, 1999 1-0
   Karpov vs Kasparov, 1985 0-1
   Kasparov vs Portisch, 1983 1-0
   Kasparov vs Karpov, 1990 1-0
   Kasparov vs Kramnik, 1994 1-0
   Kasparov vs Anand, 1995 1-0
   Karpov vs Kasparov, 1993 0-1
   Kramnik vs Kasparov, 1994 0-1
   Adams vs Kasparov, 2005 0-1
   Kasparov vs Karpov, 1986 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match 1984/85 (1984)
   Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match (1985)
   Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Rematch (1986)
   Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Match (1987)
   Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Match (1990)
   Kasparov - Short PCA World Championship Match (1993)
   Kasparov - Anand PCA World Championship Match (1995)
   Kasparov - Kramnik Classical World Championship Match (2000)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Banja Luka (1979)
   World Youth U26 Team Championship (1981)
   USSR Junior Championship (1977)
   Sokolsky Memorial (1978)
   Niksic (1983)
   Baku (1980)
   World Junior Championship (1980)
   Tilburg Interpolis (1989)
   Belfort World Cup (1988)
   Intel World Chess Express Challenge (1994)
   Belgrade Investbank (1989)
   Linares (1999)
   Hoogovens Group A (1999)
   USSR Championship (1981)
   Valletta Olympiad (1980)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Kasparov The Killer!! by chezstartz
   Kasparov The Killer!! by Zhbugnoimt
   Kasparov The Killer!! by wvb933
   Kasparov The Killer!! by rpn4
   GK Collection on the move to Fredthebear's den by fredthebear
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 66 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 166 by 0ZeR0
   Power Chess - Kasparov by Anatoly21
   Selected Games of Kasparov’s Chess Career by Cosmo Fan
   Garry Kasparov's Best Games by feifo
   Garry Kasparov's Best Games by alip
   Garry Kasparov's Best Games by Sergio X Garcia
   Garry Kasparov's Best Games by rpn4
   Garry Kasparov's Best Games by KingG

GAMES ANNOTATED BY KASPAROV: [what is this?]
   Kasparov vs Karpov, 1987
   Kasparov vs I Ivanov, 1978

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Champions Showdown 9LX
   Kasparov vs Aronian (Oct-31-24) 0-1, unorthodox
   Caruana vs Kasparov (Oct-31-24) 1-0, unorthodox
   Kasparov vs Sevian (Oct-30-24) 1-0, unorthodox
   G Oparin vs Kasparov (Oct-29-24) 1/2-1/2, unorthodox
   Kasparov vs Shankland (Oct-29-24) 1-0, unorthodox

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Garry Kasparov
Search Google for Garry Kasparov
FIDE player card for Garry Kasparov

GARRY KASPAROV
(born Apr-13-1963, 62 years old) Russia
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

One of the greatest players of all time, Kasparov was undisputed World Champion from 1985 until 1993, and Classical World Champion from 1993 until 2000. Known to chess fans world wide as the <Beast From Baku> on account of his aggressive and highly successful style of play, his main early influence was the combative and combinative style of play displayed by Alexander Alekhine.

Early Years

Originally named Garry Kimovich Weinstein (or Weinshtein), he was born in Baku, in what was then the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic (now the Republic of Azerbaijan), and is the son of Klara Shagenovna Kasparova and Kim Moiseyevich Weinstein. At five years old, young Garry Weinstein taught himself how to play chess from watching his relatives solve chess puzzles in a newspaper. His immense natural talent was soon realized and from age 7, he attended the Young Pioneer Palace in Baku (where for some time he was known as "Garry Bronstein".*). At 10, he began training at the Mikhail Botvinnik Soviet chess school. He was first coached by Vladimir Makogonov and later by Alexander Shakarov. Five years after his father's untimely death from leukemia, the twelve year old chess prodigy adopted the Russian-sounding name Garry Kasparov (Kas-PARE-off) a reference to his mother's Armenian maiden name, Gasparyan (or Kasparian).

Championships

Junior Twelve-year old Kasparov won the Soviet Junior Championship, held in Tbilisi in 1976 scoring 7/9, and repeated his success in 1977, winning with a score of 8½ of 9. The next several years were spent marking his rise as a world-class talent. He became World Junior Champion in 1980 in Dortmund, the same year he earned the grandmaster title.

National He first qualified for the Soviet Chess Championship at age 15 in 1978, the youngest ever player at that level. He won the 64-player Swiss system tournament at Daugavpils on tiebreak over Igor Ivanov, to capture the sole qualifying place. He was joint Soviet Champion in 1980-81 with Lev Psakhis ** and in 1988 Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov tied in the Super-Soviet Championship***. In 2004, Garry Kasparov won the Russian Championship Superfinal (2004) with a stunning +5 score.

World On the basis of his result in the 1981 Soviet Championship, which doubled as a zonal tournament for the USSR region, he earned a place in the 1982 Moscow Interzonal tournament, which he won, to qualify for the Candidates Tournament matches that were held in 1983 and 1984. At age 19, he was the youngest Candidate since Robert James Fischer, who was 15 when he qualified in 1958. At this stage, he was already the #2-rated player in the world, trailing only world champion Karpov on the January 1983 list. These Candidates matches were the first and last Candidates matches Kasparov contested, as he declined to participate in the Candidates held under the auspices of the PCA in 2002 to decide a challenger to his successor as classical World Champion, Vladimir Kramnik. Kasparov's first Candidates match in Moscow was a best-of-ten affair against Alexander G Beliavsky, whom he defeated 6–3 (+4 -1 =4). After much political ado, Kasparov defeated Viktor Korchnoi in London in the best-of-12 semi-final match by 7–4 (+4 -1 =6), and in early 1984 in Vilnius he defeated former World Champion Vasily Smyslov in the best-of-16 finals played by 8.5-4.5 (+4 =9 -0) to earn his challenge against Karpov. By the time the match with Smyslov was played, Kasparov had become the number-one ranked player in the world with a FIDE rating of 2710. He became the youngest ever world number-one, a record that lasted 12 years until being broken by Vladimir Kramnik in January 1996 and again by his former pupil, Magnus Carlsen in 2010.

At one stage during the Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match (1984/85), Kasparov trailed 5-0 in the first-to-win-6 match. He then fought back to win three games and bring the score to 5–3 in Karpov's favour after 48 games, making it the longest world championship match ever. At that point, the match was ended without result by the then FIDE President, the late Florencio Campomanes, with Karpov thus retaining the title. Further details can be found in the match link at the head of this paragraph. Kasparov won the best-of-24 games Karpov - Kasparov World Championship Match (1985) in Moscow by 13–11, winning the 24th and last game with Black. He was then 22, the youngest ever World Champion, and broke the record held by Mikhail Tal for over 20 years. Karpov exercised his right to a rematch, the Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Rematch (1986), which took place in 1986, hosted jointly in London and Leningrad, with each city hosting 12 games. Kasparov won 12½–11½, retaining the title. The fourth match, the Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Match (1987) was held in Seville. Karpov had been directly seeded into and won the final match of the Candidates' Matches to again become the official challenger. Kasparov retained his title by winning the final game and drawing the match 12–12. The fifth and last championship match between the two, Kasparov - Karpov World Championship Match (1990), was held in New York and Lyon in 1990, with each city hosting 12 games. Kasparov won by 12½–11½. In their five world championship matches, the combined game tally was +21 -19 =104 in Kasparov's favour.

Kasparov subsequently defended his title against Nigel Short under the auspices of the PCA in 1993, and against Viswanathan Anand in 1995. Five years later, in 2000 (Kasparov - Kramnik Classical World Championship Match (2000)), Kasparov finally relinquished his crown to his former student, Vladimir Kramnik, who was granted the right to challenge without having to qualify, the first time this had happened since 1935, when Alexander Alekhine selected Max Euwe as his challenger. Subsequently, Kasparov remained the top rated player in the world, ahead of both Kramnik and the FIDE World Champions, on the strength of a series of wins in major tournaments.

Under the "Prague Agreement" which was put together by Yasser Seirawan to reunite the two titles, Kasparov was to play a match against the 2002 FIDE World Champion Ruslan Ponomariov in September 2003. But this match was cancelled when Ponomariov was dissatisfied with the terms of the contract. Subsequent plans for a match against 2004 FIDE World Champion Rustam Kasimdzhanov, to be held in January 2005 in the United Arab Emirates, fell through due to lack of funding. Shortly after this, Kasparov announced his retirement from competitive chess.

In an interview in 2007, Kasparov said that <…my decision in 1993 to break away from the world chess federation, FIDE, with Nigel Short was the worst mistake of my career. It was a serious miscalculation on my part. I thought we could start fresh with a professional organisation, but there was little support among the players. It led to short-term progress in commercial sponsorship for chess, but in the long run hurt the game...> ****

Classical Tournaments

In 1978, Kasparov won the Sokolsky Memorial tournament in Minsk as a wild card entry, a victory which convinced Kasparov he could aim for the World Championship. He played in a grandmaster tournament in Banja Luka, Yugoslavia in 1979 while still unrated, due to Korchnoi's withdrawal. He took first place with an undefeated record, two points ahead of the field. Game Collection: Banja Luka 1979 He emerged with a provisional rating of 2595, immediately landing at world number 15, a feat only surpassed by Gata Kamsky in July 1990. His first win in a superclass-level international tournament was scored at Bugojno, Yugoslavia in 1982, and his win in Linares in 2002 was the tenth victory in a row, a record for the most consecutive victories in super tournaments: Linares 4 (1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, Wijk aan Zee 3 (1999, 2000, 2001), Sarajevo 2 (1999, 2000) and Astana 1 (2001). Kasparov also holds the record for most consecutive professional tournament victories, placing first or equal first in 15 individual tournaments from 1981 to 1990. It started with the 1981 USSR Championship and finished in Linares in 1990. His five epic title matches against Karpov were held during this period. Subsequently, Kasparov won Linares again in 1992, 1993, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2005, the latter being his swan song from the game.

Olympiads

Kasparov played in eight Olympiads. He represented the Soviet Union four times, in 1980, 1982, 1986 and 1988, and Russia four times: in 1992, 1994, 1996 and 2002 playing board 1 on each occasion apart from 1980 (2nd reserve) and 1982 (2nd board). In 82 games, he scored (+50 =29 -3), for 78.7% and won a total of 19 medals, including 8 team gold medals, 5 board golds, 2 performance golds, 2 performance silvers and 2 board bronzes. Kasparov also represented the USSR once in Youth Olympiad competition at Graz in 1981, when he played board 1 for the USSR board 1, scoring 9/10 (+8 =2 -0), the team winning the gold medal.

Team chess

Kasparov made his international teams debut for the USSR at age 16 in the 1980 European Team Championship at Skara and played for Russia in the 1992 edition of that championship. He won a total of five medals including at Skara 1980, as USSR 2nd reserve, 5½/6 (+5 =1 -0), team gold, board gold and at Debrecen 1992, Russia board 1, 6/8 (+4 =4 -0), team gold, board gold, performance silver.

Matches

<Computer> Kasparov defeated the chess computer Deep Thought (Computer) in both games of a two-game match in 1989. In February 1996, he defeated IBM's chess computer Deep Blue (Computer) with three wins and two draws and one loss. In 1997, an updated version of Deep Blue defeated Kasparov 3½–2½ in a highly publicised six-game match. The match was even after five games but Kasparov lost Game 6 - Deep Blue vs Kasparov, 1997 - to lose the match. This was the first time a computer had ever defeated a world champion in match play. In January 2003, he played and drew a six game FIDE Man - Machine WC (2003) match against Deep Junior (Computer). In November 2003, he played and drew a four-game Man - Machine World Chess Championship (2003) against the computer program X3D Fritz (Computer) X3D Fritz, although he was constrained through the use of a virtual board, 3D glasses and a speech recognition system.

<Human – classical> Kasparov played several matches apart from his matches in the World Championship cycles. Full details can be seen at Game Collection: Match Kasparov!.

<Human – rapid> In 1998, Kasparov played a blitz match against Kramnik in Moscow, that match being drawn +7-7=10. He fared better in the 2000 internet blitz match against Judit Polgar, winning one and drawing one. The following year, he played a blitz match against the many times Greek speed chess champion Hristos Banikas of Greece, winning 5 and drawing one. In his 2002 blitz against Elisabeth Paehtz in Munich, he won 6-0. Later in 2002, Kasparov lost a four game rapid match (+1 -2 =1) over two days in December 2002 in New York City against Anatoly Karpov. In 2009 in Valencia, Spain, he again played Karpov, and won the Kasparov - Karpov Rapid Match (2009) 3-1 and the Kasparov - Karpov Blitz Match (2009) by 6-2. In 2011, as part of his Chess In Schools campaign, he played a two game Kasparov - Lagrave Blitz Match (2011) in Clichy France, winning by 1.5-0.5. A few months later in October 2011, he won the Kasparov - Short Blitz Match (2011) 4.5-3.5 (+3 -2 =3), breaking the deadlock after game 7 by winning game 8 to win the match.

<Simuls> In 1985, Kasparov played his first simul against a team, the Hamburg Bundesliga team lead by GM Murray Chandler, and lost 3.5-4.5, the first and only time he lost a simul against a team. In 1987, he played a simul against the same albeit slightly stronger team, but this time he was prepared and crushed the Hamburg players 7-1; later in 1987 he also crushed the Swiss team: Game Collection: Kasparov vs Swiss Team Simul by 5.5-0.5, drawing only with former World Junior Champion Werner Hug. In 1988 he played a simul against the French team in Evry (Game Collection: Kasparov vs French Team Simul), winning 4, drawing one and losing one; he played the French team again in 1989 (Game Collection: Kasparov vs French Team Simul 1989), this time winning three and drawing 3 games. Also in 1988 he played a simul against a group of powerful US Juniors, and won by 4-2 (+3 -1 =2)*****. In 1992, Kasparov played a clock simul against the German team ( Game Collection: Kasparov vs German National Team Simul) which included former title contender Vlastimil Hort with whom he drew, winning 2 and drawing 2. He played a simul against the Argentinean team (Game Collection: Kasparov vs Argentinian Team Simul) winning (+7 -1 =4); in 1998 he played the Israeli team (Game Collection: Kasparov vs Israeli National Team Simul) winning 7-1, and in 2001 he played the Czech team (Game Collection: Kasparov vs Czech National Team Simul) in Prague, winning by +4 -1 =3.

Rating

Kasparov's ratings achievements include being rated world #1 according to Elo rating almost continuously from 1986 until his retirement in 2005. He was the world number-one ranked player for 255 months, a record that far outstrips all other previous and current number-one ranked players. Kasparov had the highest Elo rating in the world continuously from 1986 to 2005. However, Vladimir Kramnik equaled him in the January 1996 FIDE ratings list, technically supplanting him because he played more games. He was also briefly ejected from the list following his split from FIDE in 1993, but during that time he headed the rating list of the rival PCA. At the time of his retirement, he was still ranked #1 in the world, with a rating of 2812. In January 1990 Kasparov achieved the (then) highest FIDE rating ever, passing 2800 and breaking Bobby Fischer's old record of 2785. On the July 1999 and January 2000 FIDE rating lists Kasparov reached a 2851 Elo rating, which became the highest rating ever achieved until surpassed by Magnus Carlsen in 2013. There was a time in the early 1990s when Kasparov was over 2800 and the only person in the 2700s was Anatoly Karpov.

Other

Under Kasparov's tutelage, Carlsen became the youngest ever to achieve a FIDE rating higher than 2800, and the youngest ever world number one. Kasparov also assisted Anand's preparation for the Anand - Topalov World Championship Match (2010) against challenger Veselin Topalov. Since his retirement, Kasparov has concentrated much of his time and energy in Russian politics. He is also a prolific author, most famously his <My Great Predecessors> series. His politics and authorship are discussed at some detail in the wiki article and at his official website cited below. In 2007, he was ranked 25th in The Daily Telegraph's list of 100 greatest living geniuses and has won 11 Chess Oscars.

Kasparov has been married three times: first to Masha, with whom he had a daughter, Polina (b. 1993), before divorcing; to Yulia, with whom he had a son, Vadim (b. 1996) before their 2005 divorce; and to Daria, with whom he also has a daughter, Aida (b. 2006).

Biography: http://www.kasparovagent.com/garry_... Kasparov's official website: http://kasparov.com/ Kasparov Chess Foundation: http://www.kasparovchessfoundation....

* http://timkr.home.xs4all.nl/chess2/... ** [rusbase-1] *** [rusbase-2] **** [rusbase-3] ***** http://www.chessbase.com/newsprint....

Wikipedia article: Kasparov

Last updated: 2022-02-28 10:27:37

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 99; games 1-25 of 2,465  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Kasparov vs O Vasilchenko 1-0401973KievC03 French, Tarrasch
2. Kasparov vs S Muratkuliev 1-0321973Baku tt U18C77 Ruy Lopez
3. L Zaid vs Kasparov 1-0381973URS-chT JuniorsE61 King's Indian
4. E Magerramov vs Kasparov 0-1351973BakuB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
5. E Kengis vs Kasparov ½-½541973URS-chT JuniorsB88 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack
6. Kasparov vs O Privorotsky 1-0381974Azerbaijan Team ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
7. R Sarkisov vs Kasparov  0-1391974City Team ChampionshipB56 Sicilian
8. R Sarkisov vs Kasparov 0-1351974City Team ChampionshipE90 King's Indian
9. Kasparov vs Averbakh 1-0481974Moscow clock simC69 Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation
10. V Gazarian vs Kasparov 0-1561974Baku Schools Team ChampionshipD86 Grunfeld, Exchange
11. O Pavlenko vs Kasparov 0-1341975Baku Cup FinalE71 King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3)
12. Romanishin vs Kasparov 0-1321975LeningradA02 Bird's Opening
13. Kasparov vs Smyslov 0-1301975Team GM/Young PioneersC60 Ruy Lopez
14. Kasparov vs Polugaevsky ½-½251975LeningradA07 King's Indian Attack
15. Karpov vs Kasparov 1-0451975LeningradB92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
16. Dvoirys vs Kasparov ½-½451975USSR Junior ChampionshipB89 Sicilian
17. Z Einoris vs Kasparov 0-1421975USSR Junior ChampionshipB59 Sicilian, Boleslavsky Variation, 7.Nb3
18. Kasparov vs V Sokolov 1-0321975USSR Junior ChampionshipB67 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...a6 Defense, 8...Bd7
19. Kasparov vs E Kengis ½-½271975USSR Junior ChampionshipB52 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
20. Vladimirov vs Kasparov ½-½301975USSR Junior ChampionshipE17 Queen's Indian
21. Rizvonov vs Kasparov 0-1371975USSR Junior ChampionshipE17 Queen's Indian
22. Kasparov vs Yermolinsky 0-1481975USSR Junior ChampionshipB05 Alekhine's Defense, Modern
23. Kasparov vs S Gorelov 1-0581975USSR Junior ChampionshipC61 Ruy Lopez, Bird's Defense
24. Kasparov vs Yurtaev 0-1441975USSR Junior ChampionshipB39 Sicilian, Accelerated Fianchetto, Breyer Variation
25. Kasparov vs B Kantsler 1-0321975Junior competitionA07 King's Indian Attack
 page 1 of 99; games 1-25 of 2,465  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Kasparov wins | Kasparov loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 34 OF 34 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Dec-15-23  Cassandro: "Toto, I've got a feeling we're not in Kan Variation anymore."

"I'm gonna make him a draw offer he can't refuse."

"Play it again, Sam! Play "As Time Trouble Goes By.""

Mar-06-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: BBC Radio 4 news just reported Kasparov has been put on the dissident list by Putin. That does not sound good.
Mar-06-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: When did Garry go sour on Putin? He was pro-Gorbachev and Yeltsin in the early stages of their presidencies. Or were Putin's KGB credentials a red flag from the start?
Mar-06-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: Kasparov went public with his anti-Putin stance back about 2009 I think... he started "Other Russia" and got beaten up at a protest.
Mar-06-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  Williebob: Okay, 2005-6 according to Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_O...
The name, Other Russia, has since been co-opted by the remnants of the Bolsheviks into a political party that has no clout and little participation.
Apr-13-24  Ifanivan: Happy birthday one of the best chess player,Garry Kasparov! You are one of the player that inspire me to play chess.
Apr-13-24  Damenlaeuferbauer: Congratulations to the best chess player in the history of the royal game! The fact, that Putin put him on the list of "foreign agents", is absurd and says a lot of today's Russian government. Garry Kimovich Kasparov did much more for Russia and the Soviet Union than Vladimir Putin!
Apr-13-24  amitjoshi79: Happy birthday garry kasparov
Apr-13-24  mk volkov: 13. Happy birthday to the greatest chess player ever / soviet Alekhine.
Apr-13-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  0ZeR0: Happy birthday, Garry Kimovich Kasparov, the ne plus ultra of chess.
Jun-04-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  DrNyet: Russia threatens to charge chess great Kasparov for ‘heading a terrorist society’ BY NICK ROBERTSON - 06/02/24 4:55 PM ET https://thehill.com/policy/internat...
Jun-04-24  Damenlaeuferbauer: This says a lot about today's Russia and its government: Garry Kasparov, who is without doubt the greatest Russian and Soviet chess player of all times, achieved nothing else than honor and glory for the Soviet Union and Russia, because he won 8 chess olympiad team gold medals (La Valetta 1980, Lucerne 1982, Dubai 1986, Thessaloniki 1988, Manila 1992, Moscow 1994, Yerevan 1996, and Bled 2002) and 2 European team championship titles (Skara 1980, and Debrecen 1992) for his countries, which is by far uncompared in history. It is a great shame especially/even for a patriotic/nationalistic government to accuse and prosecute such a person!
Jun-05-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  sakredkow: Attempting to distract from Putin's evil war.
Jun-05-24  FM David H. Levin: <sakredkow: Attempting to distract from Putin's evil war.>

I don't have the reference handy, but within the last couple years, Angela Merkel acknowledged publicly that as early as the 2014 Minsk Accords, Ukraine's military (with the encouragement of the US and several of its European allies) has been killing civilians in the southeast of the country. The goal was to provoke Russia into a war that the US administration (e.g., Undersecretary of State Victoria Nuland) believed would eliminate Russia as a rival and permit multinational corporations to raid that country's resources.

In light of the above, "Putin's evil war" seems a misnomer.

Jun-05-24  fabelhaft: <The goal was to provoke Russia into a war>

That rarely takes much, it’s probably enough that the Ukrainians don’t call gays terrorists.

Jun-05-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: < FM David H. Levin: <sakredkow: Attempting to distract from Putin's evil war.> I don't have the reference handy, but within the last couple years, Angela Merkel acknowledged publicly that as early as the 2014 Minsk Accords, Ukraine's military (with the encouragement of the US and several of its European allies) has been killing civilians in the southeast of the country. The goal was to provoke Russia into a war that the US administration (e.g., Undersecretary of State Victoria Nuland) believed would eliminate Russia as a rival and permit multinational corporations to raid that country's resources.

In light of the above, "Putin's evil war" seems a misnomer>

Either you are a dupe and a moron, or you are a liar.

Everything in your post is false.

Here is Merkel on Putin's war.

<"It's an objective breach of all international laws and of everything that allows us in Europe to live in peace at all. If we start going back through the centuries and arguing over which bit of territory should belong to whom, then we will only have war. That's not an option whatsoever.">

Here is Merkel on the Minsk accords.

<Merkel said the Minsk agreement — a 2014 deal she helped broker to ease the conflict between government forces and Russian-backed separatists — while not entirely palatable to the Ukrainians, bought important time for Ukraine.

"This agreement was commended, approved, welcomed by the EU. This agreement has been incorporated into a UN Security Council resolution, so it has the character of international law," she said.

"At the time, it brought calm and gave Ukraine, for example, a lot of time, seven years, to develop into what it is today."

Merkel conceded that there could have been a harsher response to Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea, but that serious steps had been taken. She cited Russia's exclusion from the Group of Eight (Leading Industrial Nations) and NATO's stipulation that members spend 2% of GDP on defense.

By the end of her chancellorship, it was clear that Russia was moving in the direction of conflict, she said. And that Russia was finished with the Normandy format talks [between Germany, France, Ukraine and Russia].

"I don't blame myself for not having tried hard enough," Merkel responded to a question about how much she could have done to prevent an escalation with Russia. "I tried sufficiently. It is a great sadness that I did not succeed.">

https://www.dw.com/en/angela-merkel...

Jun-07-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: Returning to this topic, just because it enrages me so much. People who reject "mainstream narratives" on subjects like the war in Ukraine pride themselves on their tough-mindedness and independent judgment.

But in this case, <FM David H. Levin> willingly swallowed a narrative in which Angela Merkel is a silent accomplice to a monstrous, and extremely stupid, war crime -- the deliberate mass murder of civilians in order to trigger a war, the objective of which is to destabilize a nuclear power. And then as soon as she's out of power, Merkel, without any compulsion whatsoever, confesses to the whole scheme!

I would accuse <FM David H. Levin> of being a sucker for Putin's propaganda, but I don't think Putin ever pushed anything so ridiculous. The Russian line was that Merkel "confessed" that the Minsk Accords were a cynical maneuver to gain time for Ukraine. As well as being less fundamentally absurd, that particular lie at least bears some relationship to Merkel's actual words. But no, David (and many others like him) went well beyond anything even Putin thought he might swallow. David's story probably came from the likes of 4chan or Twitter.

Moral of the story: while you're rejecting mainstream narratives, make sure you're not falling for a fairy tale that wouldn't fool a reasonably intelligent six-year-old.

Oct-06-24  Nina Myers: "McFaul, former US ambassador to Russia, designed the AFU attack on the Kursk Oblast together with fugitive Russian liberals - US elites directly supervised the invasion: Readovka

The AFU attack on the Kursk region was developed with the direct involvement of NATO's Atlantic Council. In February, the organization held a military-strategic interactive, the participants of which tried to calculate Russia's reaction to the invasion.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul was invited to the event, along with co-conspirators such as Chubais, <Kasparov>, Albats and other former Russian liberals. The letter with the invitation was found in the leaked mail of the ex-diplomat.

After an agonizing brainstorming session, the analysts came up with several scenarios, including Putin stepping down, a revolution in Russia, and the use of nuclear weapons."

https://t.me/s/rocknrollgeopolitics...

Oct-29-24  fabelhaft: <Nina Myers> Oh, so now Kasparov is even planning the attacks of the evil Ukrainians, who started war on the peaceful Russians? The Russia Today commentator Escobar who claims this has to be quite legit, right? His suggestion that Ukraine should be divided between Russia and Poland, that the US is driven by Russophobia, that Spain is a permanent fascist state etc sounds like the views of an admirable intellectual.
Oct-29-24  fabelhaft: Kasparov started off the Chess960 event in S:t Louis with Caruana, Nakamura etc by winning impressively with black against Dominguez. In the following rounds he lost to So and drew against Robson.
Nov-10-24  fabelhaft: I asked ChatGPT to rank ten greatest chess players ever, and it came up with this list:

1. Kasparov
2. Carlsen
3. Fischer
4. Karpov
5. Capablanca
6. Botvinnik
7. Alekhine
8. Kramnik
9. Lasker
10. Morphy

After the top ten ChatGPT had Smyslov, Petrosian, Tal and Anand in the four following positions. The biggest surprises to me are that Kramnik is ranked as greater than Lasker (and pretty far ahead of Anand), and that Steinitz isn’t in the top 14.

Nov-20-24
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: There is a French made film/TV series about the Kasparov Deep Blue saga. It's a dramatization, 5 parts, 8 hours long. They have a young actor playing Kasparov, seems to have the right voice, right eye brows.

Has anyone seen this? It was streaming on a pay channel but might now be available on YouTube. I believe you can click to get audio in English, not just sub titles.

No Beth Harmon here but it might still be good

Jan-29-25
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <Feb-22-21 morfishine: Imagine a new person arrives at <CG> and thinks "This looks pretty cool" And when he sees the list of players, he thinks "What a great idea" And when he goes to the Fischer page, he's greeted by a bunch of graffiti crapped out by <harrylime>

He then leaves, never to come back

Thats the point>

<<Feb-22-21 MissScarlett: Only if that person has been living under a rock for the last 30 years. But if the site's so terrible, why are you here every day?>>

Evidently cut to the quick by <MissScarlett>'s gibe, <morfishine> never kibitzed again. He was last seen in these parts on March 1, 2021. Perhaps he fled the Chess Bookie, whom he owed 2,147,483,647 chessbucks.

Feb-11-25  Petrosianic: When Kasparov and Short played their world championship match outside of FIDE, both were removed from the rating list. Exactly how long were they off it? From when to when?
Feb-11-25  Nerwal: <When Kasparov and Short played their world championship match outside of FIDE, both were removed from the rating list. Exactly how long were they off it? From when to when?>

Olimpbase has all the old ratings list. Kasparov and Short were missing on the two 1994 lists.

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