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William Lombardy
Lombardy 
 

Number of games in database: 815
Years covered: 1953 to 1994
Last FIDE rating: 2435
Highest rating achieved in database: 2540
Overall record: +326 -146 =341 (61.1%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 2 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (64) 
    B50 B40 B51 B31 B81
 English (39) 
    A15 A10 A16 A13 A12
 King's Indian (34) 
    E60 E80 E71 E70 E63
 Nimzo Indian (33) 
    E46 E21 E42 E26 E40
 Ruy Lopez (23) 
    C77 C97 C64 C73 C75
 King's Indian Attack (22) 
    A07 A08
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (96) 
    B94 B96 B42 B92 B32
 Ruy Lopez (41) 
    C96 C84 C95 C70 C77
 King's Indian (40) 
    E69 E95 E80 E62 E67
 Sicilian Najdorf (27) 
    B94 B92 B96 B90 B93
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (22) 
    C96 C84 C95 C93 C98
 Nimzo Indian (18) 
    E59 E24 E26 E45 E43
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   M Gerusel vs Lombardy, 1957 0-1
   Lombardy vs Polugaevsky, 1978 1-0
   Lombardy vs Quinteros, 1973 1-0
   Reshevsky vs Lombardy, 1958 0-1
   Timman vs Lombardy, 1974 0-1
   Lombardy vs E Winslow, 1976 1-0
   A Planinc vs Lombardy, 1974 0-1
   Lombardy vs E Schiller, 1971 1/2-1/2
   Lombardy vs R J Gross, 1966 1-0
   Lombardy vs J Mayer, 1963 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   World Junior Championship (1957)
   Manhattan CC-ch 5556 (1955)
   Mar del Plata (1958)
   63rd US Open (1962)
   Pan-American Championship (1958)
   67th US Open (1966)
   Netanya (1969)
   Mar del Plata (1957)
   Reykjavik (1978)
   Ourense (1975)
   Manila (1973)
   72nd US Open (1971)
   United States Championship (1972)
   56th US Open (1955)
   Haifa Olympiad (1976)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   0ZeR0's Favorite Games Volume 63 by 0ZeR0
   Manila 1973 by Tabanus
   US Championship 1957/58 by suenteus po 147
   US Championship 1957/58 by shankartr2018
   US Championship 1972 by Phony Benoni
   US Championship 1975 by suenteus po 147
   US Open 1963, Chicago by Phony Benoni
   Vestmannaeyjar 1985 by Tabanus
   IV World Junior championship by gauer
   World Junior Championship, Toronto 1957 by FSR
   US Championship 1968/69 by suenteus po 147
   US Championship 1958/59 by suenteus po 147
   US Championship 1960/61 by suenteus po 147

Search Sacrifice Explorer for William Lombardy
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WILLIAM LOMBARDY
(born Dec-04-1937, died Oct-13-2017, 79 years old) United States of America

[what is this?]

William James Joseph Lombardy was born in the Bronx, New York on December 4, 1937. He became a National Master at age 14. In 1954, at age 16, he won the New York State Championship, becoming the youngest champion up until that time.

Lombardy tied for first at the Canadian Open Chess Championship in 1956. That same year, at age 18, he narrowly lost a match to Samuel Reshevsky (3.5-2.5), the best match result that anyone had achieved against Reshevsky up to that time.

The following year, Lombardy became the first American to win the World Junior Championship (1957). He remains the only player in the 55 times the event has been held to win it with a perfect score (11-0). FIDE awarded him the International Master title for this victory.

1960 was an eventful year for Lombardy. He led the U.S. team to an upset victory over the Soviet Union in the 1960 Student Team Championship in Leningrad. He scored 12/13, winning as Black against future World Champion Boris Spassky in their individual game, and winning the gold medal for the best result on first board. He played second board for the United States team at the Leipzig Olympiad, drawing as Black in his game against the recently dethroned World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik. In the same year, FIDE awarded Lombardy the Grandmaster title.

Lombardy tied for second in the 1960-61 U.S. Championship, behind Robert James Fischer. That result qualified him to play in the Stockholm Interzonal (1962). However, he declined the invitation and entered a Jesuit seminary. He convocated as a priest from CCNY (previous studies included biochemistry, in hopes of entering medicine) and was ordained in 1967.

Lombardy won the U.S. Open in 1963, and tied for first with Pal Benko in both 1965 and 1975. He also represented the United States in seven Olympiads (1958, 1960, 1968, 1970, 1974, 1976, and 1980) and served as Fischer's second during the Spassky - Fischer World Championship Match (1972).

In 1974, Lombardy left the priesthood, having lost faith in the Catholic church, which he felt was too concerned with amassing wealth. Soon after, while competing in the Amsterdam IBM (1974) tournament, he met and married a Dutch woman, Louise van Valen, who moved to Manhattan to live with him. Their son, Raymond, was born in 1984. The couple divorced in 1992 after Lombardy's wife returned to the Netherlands with their son.

Lombardy had been a lifelong New Yorker, but in 2016 moved to the Chicago area after being evicted from his Manhattan apartment. He died on October 13, 2017 while visiting a friend in Martinez, California.

Lombardy had a profound influence on Bobby Fischer, who was five years younger than Lombardy. They played hundreds of blitz games while they both lived in N.Y.C. Some consider Lombardy to have been strangely underappreciated.

He was still playing chess very strongly, including online, in his late seventies.

Wikipedia article: William Lombardy

Last updated: 2021-12-04 09:07:19

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 33; games 1-25 of 815  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. J W Collins vs Lombardy  0-1321953Practice GameB58 Sicilian
2. E Mednis vs Lombardy  1-026195354th US OpenC54 Giuoco Piano
3. A Mengarini vs Lombardy  1-023195354th US OpenD28 Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical
4. M Yatron vs Lombardy  0-132195354th US OpenB09 Pirc, Austrian Attack
5. Lombardy vs N Whitaker 1-070195354th US OpenD09 Queen's Gambit Declined, Albin Counter Gambit, 5.g3
6. W Grombacher vs Lombardy  0-134195455th US OpenA48 King's Indian
7. Lombardy vs A Sandrin 1-040195455th US OpenA07 King's Indian Attack
8. O Popovych vs Lombardy 1-021195455th US OpenB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
9. Lombardy vs M Harrow  ½-½60195455th US OpenA07 King's Indian Attack
10. A Krumins vs Lombardy 0-120195455th US OpenB32 Sicilian
11. A Pomar vs Lombardy  1-040195455th US OpenB32 Sicilian
12. Lombardy vs D Fischheimer  1-053195455th US OpenA09 Reti Opening
13. Lombardy vs J F Donovan 0-141195455th US OpenA07 King's Indian Attack
14. E Mednis vs Lombardy ½-½18195455th US OpenB88 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack
15. P Monsky vs Lombardy ½-½40195556th US OpenE60 King's Indian Defense
16. Lombardy vs A Chappell  1-029195556th US OpenA83 Dutch, Staunton Gambit
17. B Schmidt vs Lombardy  0-138195556th US OpenB83 Sicilian
18. Lombardy vs Santasiere  ½-½47195556th US OpenA07 King's Indian Attack
19. A Suhobeck vs Lombardy  0-128195556th US OpenB83 Sicilian
20. R Cross vs Lombardy 0-155195556th US OpenB88 Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack
21. Lombardy vs R Cross 0-150195556th US OpenA04 Reti Opening
22. J F Donovan vs Lombardy  0-149195556th US OpenA60 Benoni Defense
23. A Kaufman vs Lombardy  ½-½49195556th US OpenB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
24. Lombardy vs D Poliakoff 1-030195556th US OpenD50 Queen's Gambit Declined
25. Lombardy vs I Rivise 0-155195556th US OpenE87 King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox
 page 1 of 33; games 1-25 of 815  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Lombardy wins | Lombardy loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 25 OF 27 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Ghoulish exploitation......eff off.....wait....how much?
Jul-10-18  Howard: Well, what what YOU do with Lombardy's personal effects if you happened to have 'em? Keep 'em in your basement until your time came ?
Jul-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: I'd drip feed choice morsels to Winter - think how much that would annoy Urcan.
Jul-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: <RicNic> Think Lombardy is in the USCF Hall Of Fame, and they would surely appreciate you helping them with Lombardy Memorabilia!
Jul-10-18  zanzibar: <RicNic> inventory, pricelist (or bid info), and contact info?

Note: <RicNic> joined up just the other day to make this announcement. It's an example of another forum extension <CG> maybe should have... i.e. <MarketPlace>.

(<CG> should have a <FIDE> forum as well, that's for sure).

Jul-10-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Maybe there's a display area at the st louis chess club? You could photograph much of it and make a YouTube video, then send the originals to st louis or the uscf.
Jul-12-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Well, at least they had the decency to wait until Lombardy was dead:

<
US $2,000.00
Approximately £1,507.73

[...]

Incredibly unique one of a kind item. An early self publication copy of Bobby Fischer's "I was tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse" from the estate of Chess Grandmaster William Lombardy.

Historic item, appears to be a stapled early edition of Bobby Fischer detailing his mistreatment at the hands of law enforcement years after his World Championship title, the very copy given to his close friend and coach. Hand inscribed and signed as "Ex Libris W. Lombardy; Fischer's Official and only Coach at Reykjavik"

Stored carefully and in excellent condition, little of any damage to the pages. Original hand written and signed portions are pristine as well as the homemade stapled bindings>

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Tortured...

Jul-13-18  pazzed paun: Any copies of Lombardy book for sale?
Jul-13-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Try Amazon....jeeez...lol
Oct-30-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: About Lombardy's eviction:

<" I was surprised that Grandmaster William Lombardy was given money for “Veterans Support”. FIDE apparently did not realize that Lombardy also received $10,000 US from the “Professional Chess Players Health and Benefit Fund”. There is a report that Lombardy had nearly $100,000 in the bank when he died homeless last year, from donations he had received, but he had refused to pay his rent in New York out of pique.">

Did Lombardy leave any will, or was any post-death estate published?

Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Offramp, who said that quote?
Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Maybe it was a Kushner building?
Dec-04-18  Caissanist: The <Offramp> quote is from a report which Sam Sloan apparently sent to him regarding FIDE meetings at the time of the last Olympiad: Chess Olympiad (2018) .
Dec-04-18  Caissanist: I have a copy of <Title Chess> Burt Hochberg's book of the 1972 US Chess Championship. Even though Lombardy only tied for sixth in that tournament, to me he seems to have played the best chess of that tournament, with his relatively poor result seemingly due to his temperamental nature and the demands of his work. I wonder if that kind of thing was a pattern during his career.
Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: why would Fischer seek out an arrogant fellow like Lombardy? I know someone who saw Lombardy at a tournament in the 70s, said that he was just an embarrassing loudmouth, agitated a lot of people in the event. Drama queen.

Why wouldn't Fischer have sought out a quieter person with perhaps more skill than Bill, such as Robert Byrne or Pal Benko?

Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: <an embarrassing loudmouth, agitated a lot of people>

<HeMateMe has kibitzed 57512 times to chessgames>

Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: <MissScarlett: <an embarrassing loudmouth, agitated a lot of people>>

and, you're still a rude drama biitch.

Dec-04-18  Marmot PFL: Lombardy was capable and Fischer trusted him at least to some extent. Byrne was a reporter (probably not trusted), but Fischer also worked with Kavalek.
Dec-04-18  Caissanist: Bobby was famously stingy with his seconds--Larry Evans was his second during the candidates matches and according to Evans he was never paid at all for that. Evans was willing to continue with the same arrangement for the world championship but Bobby demanded that he not write about the match, even after the fact, so Evans walked: http://archive.is/20130102070650/ww....
Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: no question, fischer was a cheapskate. Byrne got further in the world championships than Lombardy ever did. I think Byrne got to the Candidates semi finals matches one year, where he then lost to Spassky. That may have been 1974.

Evans must have made some money completely ghost writing <Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess> and writing parts of M60MG.

Dec-04-18  john barleycorn: Evans? read the interview again. Evans suffered so much of not having received proper acknowledgements either from Fischer or the world outside. If, at all, he deserved them so much as he thought he would. But Evans knew how to handle the press (or Mr Parr). That Larry Evans is on "Parr" with Jeremy Schapp and other "journalists".
Dec-04-18  Caissanist: The 1972 US Championship was actually where Byrne pushed ahead of Lombardy for good; he tied for first and eventually qualified for the interzonal, while Lombardy of course fell short. If you play over their best games from that event though, Lombardy's best seem to be more impressive than Byrne's (to me, anyway). Of course this is a very old story in top-level chess, the great talent who is somehow never able to fully translate his talent into results, while the less profound but more disciplined and practical guy forges ahead.
Dec-04-18  Caissanist: <Bobby Fischer Teadches Chess> was written by Stuart Margulies and Donn Mosenfelder, so far as I know Evans had nothing to do with it. Evans of course did much better financially by writing about Bobby afterward than if he had agreed to Bobby's terms. Lombardy, on the other hard, seems to have honored Bobby's demand that Bill write nothing about him, and we all know how that turned out for him.
Dec-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Lombardy grumbled to me once that he [Lombardy] had frequently brought food to the home of invalid Jack Collins, the chess teacher, and cleaned up the place, whereas Fischer "did absolutely nothing for Collins."

Collins' home was a place that both Fischer and Lombardy frequented as kids or teens.

It surprised me not at all that Fischer did nothing for someone who had helped him. That's how Bobby Fischer lived his life.

Dec-04-18  Riverbeast: Happy Birthday and Rest In Power, Bill...I'm sure you're enjoying your journey

<It surprised me not at all that Fischer did nothing for someone who had helped him. That's how Bobby Fischer lived his life.>

I think you people should really cut out the slander, and stop believing everything you're told.

I recommend an article written in Chess.com entitled "Serendipity. An Unforeseen Friendship" written by a female Swedish chess player.

She tells of a chance meeting with Lombardy during the last days of his life, in San Francisco at the Mechanics Chess Club. She and Lombardy saw each other several times, struck up a friendship, and had some candid taks.

Anyway one of the less interesting stories in the article, but more relevant here, is that Fischer gave Lombardy $5000 after he moved to Iceland

If you want to get outraged, consider that the makers of the well budgeted movie 'Pawn Sacrifice' did not pay Bill a dime, even though they used his name and persona. And Bill was broke at the time.

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