The tournament held at Groningen, Netherlands 13 Aug-7 Sept 1946, was a watershed in chess history. Not only was it the first major international tournament after World War II, it marked the first time the Soviet Union sent a team of players to a foreign event. Their results confirmed the growing recognition of the great strength of Soviet players: Smyslov finished third, Boleslavsky and Flohr tied for sixth; though Kotov finished out of the running, he defeated both of the top finishers. ... [more]
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Player: Herman Steiner
page 1 of 1; 19 games |
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Game |
| Result | Moves |
Year | Event/Locale | Opening |
1. H Steiner vs E Lundin |
 | 0-1 | 38 | 1946 | Groningen | D02 Queen's Pawn Game |
2. Smyslov vs H Steiner |
 | 1-0 | 34 | 1946 | Groningen | A51 Budapest Gambit |
3. H Steiner vs Vidmar |
| ½-½ | 30 | 1946 | Groningen | D59 Queen's Gambit Declined, Tartakower |
4. H Steiner vs Botvinnik |
  | 0-1 | 28 | 1946 | Groningen | A90 Dutch |
5. Denker vs H Steiner |
| 1-0 | 40 | 1946 | Groningen | D37 Queen's Gambit Declined |
6. H Steiner vs Boleslavsky |
 | 0-1 | 40 | 1946 | Groningen | E69 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line |
7. O'Kelly vs H Steiner |
 | 0-1 | 48 | 1946 | Groningen | C97 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin |
8. H Steiner vs O Bernstein |
 | ½-½ | 84 | 1946 | Groningen | D31 Queen's Gambit Declined |
9. Euwe vs H Steiner |
 | 1-0 | 38 | 1946 | Groningen | E49 Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Botvinnik System |
10. H Steiner vs G Stoltz |
| ½-½ | 52 | 1946 | Groningen | B32 Sicilian |
11. Flohr vs H Steiner |
 | ½-½ | 58 | 1946 | Groningen | D62 Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack |
12. H Steiner vs Tartakower |
| ½-½ | 41 | 1946 | Groningen | C10 French |
13. Kotov vs H Steiner |
 | 0-1 | 72 | 1946 | Groningen | D42 Queen's Gambit Declined, Semi-Tarrasch, 7.Bd3 |
14. H Steiner vs Yanofsky |
| 0-1 | 43 | 1946 | Groningen | D19 Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch |
15. C Kottnauer vs H Steiner |
| ½-½ | 57 | 1946 | Groningen | A27 English, Three Knights System |
16. H Steiner vs M Christoffel |
| ½-½ | 48 | 1946 | Groningen | E94 King's Indian, Orthodox |
17. C Guimard vs H Steiner |
| ½-½ | 44 | 1946 | Groningen | D04 Queen's Pawn Game |
18. H Steiner vs Najdorf |
 | 0-1 | 40 | 1946 | Groningen | E32 Nimzo-Indian, Classical |
19. Szabo vs H Steiner |
 | 1-0 | 83 | 1946 | Groningen | D02 Queen's Pawn Game |
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page 1 of 1; 19 games |
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Dec-20-12 | | Benzol: Blessed be the <cg librarian> indeed. The two missing games are now part of the collection. :) |
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Aug-30-13 | | nescio: I think it should be mentoned that the organizers of this tournament had a luxury problem before it started. After everyone had arrived (which was by no means a certainty a year after the second world war) it turned out there were 21 participants instead of 20. They could have extended the schedule with 2 extra rounds, even make it a 22-player tournament, for the head of the Soviet delegation was Gavriil Veresov, champion of Belarus. Unfortunately that was impossible, if I remember correctly because the Americans and the Soviets had to leave on schedule to arrive in time for a USSR-USA match. To ask a foreigner to withdraw was out of the question, and Lodewijk Prins didn't want to let go this chance to play against the world's best. When Euwe declared that he was ready to withdraw, the Soviets, in particular Botvinnik and Veresov, convinced Prins to withdraw by promising him an invitation to a tournament in Moscow in the near future. Needless to say, that invitation has still to come. |
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Feb-03-14
 | | GrahamClayton: Despite finishing only 11th, Kotov was the only player to defeat both the 1st and 2nd place finishers (Botvinnik and Euwe). |
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Apr-20-14
 | | FSR: <GrahamClayton> Shades of St Petersburg (1909), where Dus-Chotimirsky finished 13th with a -2 result, but beat the joint winners Lasker and Rubinstein. Those two wins were 40% of his five wins in the tournament! Lasker and Rubinstein mauled the field, each scoring 14.5/18. The only other game either lost was Lasker's loss to Rubinstein. |
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Apr-20-14
 | | plang: Kotov was a lot stronger player than Dus-Chotimirsky |
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Apr-20-14
 | | FSR: <plang> It's true, he did win the Stockholm Interzonal (1952) by 3.5 points, then a record. |
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Apr-21-14
 | | FSR: Er, make that three points. Counting is FUN-damental. |
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Apr-21-14
 | | perfidious: Pity that fine result availed him naught, come to Zurich Candidates (1953), where Kotov inflicted the only defeat upon Smyslov, the winner, though himself an also-ran. |
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Apr-02-21
 | | keypusher: Going in to the game against Kotov, Botvinnik had ten wins and three draws. He went 3-3 the rest of the way, and was lucky to win M Christoffel vs Botvinnik, 1946. |
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Apr-02-21
 | | keypusher: Should note that Botvinnik played some great games but had some good luck earlier in the tournament too, viz. Botvinnik vs Szabo, 1946 Botvinnik vs O'Kelly, 1946 (<nescio> called this win "one of the lowest points in his career", see Botvinnik vs Keres, 1948 (kibitz #64)) So the +10=3 stat is a bit misleading. |
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Apr-09-24 | | mk volkov: Botvinnik's great storm. |
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