International Chess Tournament Vienna 1882
03.01.2005
– 122 years ago a great tournament ended. In round three Wilhelm Steinitz drew after 36 moves, the first time he had conceded a draw in nine years. The first world champion ended the 18-player double round robin with 24/30, equal first with Szymon Winawer. Read all about it in this article from ChessBase Magazine 103.
|
|
Advertisement
ChessBase 11 Download
Start your personal success story with ChessBase and enjoy your chess even more. Let ChessBase11 show you which variations are really being played nowadays. Find your next opponent’s weak points and exploit the advantage of well targeted preparation. Spice up your repertoire with new tricks and traps. More... |
|
The Second International Chess Tournament, Vienna 1882
By Johannes Fischer
This article appeared together with all the games of Vienna 1882 in ChessBase
Magazine 103.
When Wilhelm Steinitz and George Henry Mackenzie drew after 36 moves of their
game in round three of the Second International Chess Tournament in Vienna
on the 12th of May 1882, it was the end of the longest winning run in the history
of chess. For the last 25 games, Steinitz had gone from victory to victory
– the last draw he had conceded having been nine years earlier on the
3rd of August 1873 against Philipp Meitner in the Vienna tournament, which
Steinitz had won after a tie-break against Blackburne.
But after this success, Steinitz withdrew from active chess playing. In 1876
he played a match against Blackburne, which he won 7-0, and then he concentrated
on his work as a chess journalist. But since his reputation as the best player
in the world was endangered by the long pause, Steinitz decided in 1882 to
return to the tournament arena and to take part in the Second International
Chess Tournament in Vienna. At that point this was the strongest chess tournament
of all time. It had first been held on the occasion of the 25th anniversary
of the Vienna Chess Society, and sponsored by Ignaz von Kolisch, a strong chess
player who had become rich as a banker, and Baron Albert Rothschild, the richest
man in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The patron was the emperor Franz-Joseph,
who also donated a special prize.
Joseph Henry Blackburne, nicknamed "The Black Death";
Louis Paulsen, theoretician and blindfold player
This tournament underlined the importance of chess in Vienna at the time.
In Luftmenschen: Die Schachspieler von Wien (Aerial Spirits: the chess
players of Vienna), Michael Ehn writes: “After the foundation of the
‘Vienna Chess Society’ [in October 1857] the game of chess had
finally penetrated the ‘better’ social circles of Vienna. Committee
members from the nobility, the upper middle class and the higher reaches of
the civil service made the club appear exclusive, and this exclusivity was
kept up by means of a restrictive rule book and high membership dues.... In
1872 Baron Albert Rothschild ... became president and patron of the chess society,
which soon turned into one of the intellectual poles of the city, over and
above the chess activity. It was an exclusive club of about 200 people built
on the English model, and playing chess was no longer the only reason for going;
it was a suitable arena for political discussion as well as discussing business.”
(Luftmenschen, pp. 27-28)
As befitted the prestige of the Vienna Chess Society, Vienna 1882 was a mammoth
double round all play all with eighteen contestants, beginning on the 10th
May and ending on the 24th June. The rules were hard: “From the beginning
to the end of the tournament, each participant must play a game every day against
the opponent allocated to him by the drawing of lots, with the exception of
Sundays and holidays. The games begin at 10.00 a.m. and continue until 2.00
p.m. At this time, either player can request a break of at the most two hours.
The game must be resumed at 4.00 p.m. at the latest and played to a finish
without any break. However, if the game is not finished by midnight, either
player may request an adjournment and the committee will decide when the game
shall be resumed. Thinking time is set at 15 moves per hour, with the player
carrying forward any unused time.... During an adjournment any consultation
or analysis on a board is strictly forbidden and will be punished by exclusion
from the tournament.”
And the tournament rules demanded commitment on the part of the players: “Each
participant is required to play all of his games to the best of his ability.
All private arrangements which might influence the result of the game are forbidden
and will be punished by exclusion from the tournament.” (From the original
report in the Österreichische Lesehalle, January 1882, pp. 11-12,
quoted in the tournament book, The Second Vienna International Chess Tournament).
The participants did not let the organisers down: the rate of draws was a low
30% and the games lasted on average 39 moves, with the drawn games even averaging
46 moves.
Participants
The field was composed of the very top international players and the best
Austro-Hungarian players. Here is an alphabetical list of the participants
with short biographical notes based on the Oxford Companion to Chess by David
Hooper and Kenneth Whyld.
-
Henry Bird, (1830-1908). Bookkeeper. One of the strongest
English players and all his life a habitué of the chess cafés
of London.
-
Joseph Henry Blackburne, (1841-1924). Nickname: The Black
Death. Legendary for his consumption of whisky and his attacking games.
After his victory in the British championship 1868-69, he turned professional
and earned his living by simultaneous tours in England. Distinguished composer
and solver of problems.
-
Berthold Englisch, (1851-1897). Austrian master, then
one of the best players in the world.
-
Bernhard Fleissig, (1853-1931). Austrian master.
-
Vincenz Hruby, (1856-1917). Czechoslovakian chess player
who worked as a teacher in Trieste and who scored good results in 1882
and 1891 in matches against leading Austrian players.
-
George Henry MacKenzie, (1837-1891). Born in Scotland,
MacKenzie served as a soldier in Ireland and India and fought on the side
of the North in the American Civil War. At the end of his military career,
he devoted himself to chess intensively and quickly became one of the best
players in the USA.
-
James Mason, (1849-1905). Born in Ireland, he emigrated
to the USA. A brilliant chess journalist and highly gifted player, who
was among the best in the world in the 1880s. But his too great consumption
of alcohol stopped him ever really reaching the top.
-
Philipp Meitner, (1836-1910). A strong amateur who lived
in Vienna and was a student friend of Steinitz.
-
Josef Noa, (1856-1903). Hungarian master.
-
Louis Paulsen, (1833-1891). Important theoretician and
excellent player of blindfold chess. Born in Germany in 1833, he emigrated
to the USA in 1854 in order to help with his brother's tobacco firm. There
he became one of the best players in the country.
-
Adolf Schwarz, (1836-1910). Strong amateur Hungarian
player, who had settled in Vienna in 1872.
-
William Steinitz, (1836-1900). Born in Prague, Steinitz
lived for some time in Vienna, till he moved to England and later to the
USA as a professional chess player and journalist. First official World
Champion, and founder of the scientific method of positional play.
-
Mikhail Chigorin, (1850-1908). In 1882 the top Russian
player was at the start of his international career. He had played in his
first international tournament in Berlin in 1881 and by 1883 he was already
amongst the top players in the world.
-
Preston Ware, (1821-1890). An American player who came
to notice because of his original treatment of the opening. For example,
a variation to which his name was given begins with the moves 1.a4 e5 2.a5
d5 3.e3 f5 4.a6.
-
Miksa Weiss, (1857-1927). Born in Hungary, Weiss was
amongst the strongest players in the world between 1880 and 1890. The he
decided to limit his chess in order to continue his successful career as
banker in the Rothschild bank.
-
Szymon Winawer, (1838-1920). Polish businessman, who
was amongst the best players in the world from the end of the 1860s till
the beginning of the 1880s..
-
Alexander Wittek, (1852-1894). A Viennese architect,
who scored some good tournament results between 1880 and 1882, but then
concentrated on his profession as an architect.
-
Johann Hermann Zukertort, (1842-1888). One of the most
brilliant players in the history of chess, Zukertort was particularly gifted
in blindfold chess and as a journalist. At the end of the 60s, he edited
together with Anderssen the Neue Berliner Schachzeitung; together
with Leopold Hoffer, he later published the English chess magazine Chess
Monthly.
The course of the tournament
Of course the tournament favourite was Steinitz. But after his long absence
from tournament chess, it was not known if he would play as strongly as he
had ten years previously. As a matter of fact, he was somewhat rusty. He did
start off with two wins, but then, after the aforementioned draw with MacKenzie,
he lost three games in a row – against Zukertort, Hruby and Ware, and then
after defeating Fleissig in round 7 he lost once more to Wittek in round 8.
Especially bitter was the defeat by Zukertort, then the greatest rival of Steinitz
for the title of world chess number one. But in round 9, Steinitz got back
into his rhythm and at the end of the first series of games he sat on 11.5
points, one point behind the tournament leader Mackenzie (12.5), and half a
point behind Winawer in second place with 12 points. Blackburne and Mason both
had 10 points to show for their efforts and were followed by Englisch, Hruby
and Zukertort each with 9.5 points.
Johann Hermann Zukertort, one of the most brilliant players in history;
George Henry MacKenzie was leading after the first series of games
This order was disappointing for Zukertort especially, since he wished to
show in Vienna that he was superior to Steinitz. But, just like Mason, he was
able to step up a gear in the second series and, five rounds before the end,
things looked as follows at the top: Mason led from Steinitz with 20.5 to the
latter's 20; then came Winawer and MacKenzie both with 19.5 and Zukertort with
19. Blackburne, in sixth place with 17 points, two points behind the leading
group, was practically out of the running.
It was Winawer who had the easiest games to come and the strongest final sprint.
He got 4.5 out of the last five games, one by walkover against Fleissig who
had quit the tournament after round 21, four rounds after Noa who had thrown
in the towel after the first series of games. Steinitz, however, managed 4
points out of the last five rounds, whereas Mason and MacKenzie stumbled. Mason
could only score 50% from the final five games, including a walkover against
Noa. MacKenzie managed three points, also including a walkover.
A tiebreak was played between Winawer and Steinitz to decide the winner
The final round could not have been more dramatic. Steinitz led with 23 points,
Winawer stood on 22.5, but still had an adjourned game from round 32, in which
he had the better position against Weiss, after managing to turn round a completely
lost endgame. In the last round, Steinitz was to play Bird and Winawer faced
Englisch. Bird had conceded his games in the previous four rounds because he
was suffering from a severe case of gout, but he pulled himself together to
face Steinitz. The latter protested to the arbitration committee about this
behaviour, but in the long run he had to play. Whilst Winawer had an easy win
over Englisch, Steinitz found it hard to get the full point from his superior
position against Bird. In fact, shortly before the finish, the convalescent
Englishman could have saved the draw with a tactical resource – this would
have left Steinitz in second place. But after Bird missed this opportunity,
everything depended on the adjourned game between Winawer and Weiss, which
was not played until the end of round 34. Steinitz was saved after 142 moves:
it was a draw, meaning that first place was shared between Steinitz and Winawer.
Third was Mason with 23 points. MacKenzie and Zukertort shared places four
and five with 22.5 points each. The special prize for the best performance
against the top three went to Zukertort.
Click for a
full crosstable
For his shared first place, Winawer could thank above all
his capacity for scoring points against the weaker participants. Whereas he
could only take 7.5 points from 16 games against the players in places 1 to
9, he got 16.5 out of 18 against the players in positions 10 to 18. The sharp
and double-edged nature of his play can also be seen from the low drawing ratio
(only four of his games were drawn) and the rich imagination which helped him
save himself from difficult positions (e.g. in the games Hruby-Winawer [round
4] and Weiss-Winawer [round13] he had dubious positions just after the opening,
but went on to win both games).
MacKenzie was let down by his weakness with the black pieces.
Whereas with White he won 13, drew 4 and lost none, he only scored five full
points with Black (one of them a walkover), drew five times and lost no less
than seven games. Nor was Steinitz convincing with Black. He won 14 games with
White, drew two and lost only one, but he only won six with Black (including
two walkovers), drew six and lost five.
The sharing of first place between Steinitz and Winawer brought about a tie-break
for victory in the tournament and the first prize. It was to be two games.
Should the tie-break also end in a draw, the prize would be shared. In the
first game, Steinitz played all out for a win and after a dubious opening launched
a speculative attack with sacrifices of material. But Winawer managed to beat
off the attack and win the game.
In the second game, Steinitz steered play along more peaceful lines. He accepted
a cramped position in order to secure long term positional advantages. Finally,
he reached an advantageous endgame, which Winawer lost after a few inaccurate
moves. So Steinitz and Winawer ended the Vienna Tournament of 1882 as joint
winners. This was the greatest success in Winawer's career, but only a year
later he withdrew from competitive chess.
Steinitz, on the other hand, had strengthened his reputation
as the best player in the world – although his position at the top was
not as unchallenged as it had been. But the Vienna Tournament of 1882 marked
another important point in Steinitz' career, for a totally different reason.
While he was playing in Vienna and sending weekly reports on the tournament
to The Field, the magazine which Steinitz had helped achieve fresh
fame in the chess community with his columns since 1873, a plot was being hatched
there against him in his absence. That came to a head after the Vienna Tournament
in a spiteful article, which praised the efforts of the English participants
and those of English origin in Vienna but disparaged the tournament victory
of Steinitz and Winawer in a xenophobic way. Steinitz stopped working for The
Field, to be succeeded by Leopold Hoffer, a close friend of Zukertort
and a sworn enemy of Steinitz. After that Steinitz did remain for long in England,
the country in which he “had felt himself a foreigner for 20 years”.
At the start of 1883 he emigrated to the USA and gave new impetus to the chess
scene in that country.
All 308 games of the Second International Chess Tournament, Vienna 1882
are included on the CBM
103 CD.
Sources
- Christiaan M. Bijl, (ed.), Das II. Internationale Schachmeisterturnier
Wien 1882, Zürich: Edition Olms, 1984.
- Michael Ehn, Luftmenschen: Die Schachspieler von Wien, Wien: Sonderzahl
1998.
- Thorsten Heedt, William Steinitz: The first World Chess Champion, ChessBase
Monograph, 2003.
- David Hooper & Kenneth Whyld, The Oxford Companion to Chess, Oxford,
New York, Oxford University Press, 1996.
- Kurt Landsberger, William Steinitz, Chess Champion, McFarland 1993.
|