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The
father of Hypermodern Chess Theory” |
Aron Nimzovich was born on November 6, 1886 in Riga, Latvia,
one of the Baltic states, along with Lithuania and Estonia
and a former Republic of the USSR. His father was a merchant and
a man of considerable culture, a lover of the arts, a poet and an
excellent chessplayer. He taught Aron Nimzovich to play chess at
the age of 8. He grew up in an atmosphere redolent of
Chess, as
the players of Riga were known for their love of the game and their
enthusiastic hospitality to any master who passed through the town.
In later years the Riga players made
a great name for themselves in the Chess world for their fine endgame
compositions and their impressive success in correspondence play.
Nimzovich was 17 when he first began to take a really serious
interest in the game. At first his style was purely combinative,
as befits a youngster. But in any event, the accent on combinations
was quite logical for that time and place.
Steinitz's theories were still
strange to most players, and the brilliant sacrificial play of Morphy,
Anderssen and their more or less gifted imitators still held the
spotlight. Whatever Nimzovich was to learn, he had to learn by
himself. Chess books were few in number, good books fewer still.
The dashing but aging Tchigorin was still the idol of Russian players,
but he was a rebel who love the Chess of the good old days.
A turning point of his career came when his father sent him to
Germany for his university studies.
There he came in contact with a large
number of players and was able to participate in master tournaments.
He was a competitor in the "A" Tournament at Coburg in 1904, and in
the "B" Tournament at Barmen in 1905. Here he had his first
opportunity to see some of the immortals in action: Schlechter,
Maroczy, Tchigorin, Marshall and Janowski. In the tournaments in which
he played, he matched wits with other youngsters who were to become
famous: Spielmann, Vidmar, Duras, Bernstein, Tartakover, Rubinstein
and many others.
Nimzovich's showing in these two early tournaments was not impressive:
he did fairly well at Coburg, but he was a miserable failure at
Barmen. His enormous gifts for the game were quite obvious, but
he was too sensitive, too inexperienced, too unseasoned, too impetuous
and, some said, too temperamental. We are told that these
setbacks had a chastening effect on Nimzovich, and that it was at this
time that he evolved his system, or the rudiments of it.
However, it would be wrong to suppose
that the system emerged full-blown at the first attempt: it is
reasonable to assume that he realized that lack of positional
orientation was his great defect; that he went to work on his
weakness with all the determination, all the energy and all the
originality for which he later became famous.
By 1906, at age 20, Nimzovich had definitely become a master of
the very first rank.
That year, playing in a small
tournament in Munich, he was first, far ahead of such fine players as
Spielmann and Erich Cohn. But it was in 1907 that his genius was
displayed in a really impressive manner. At Ostend, in a
tournament with 29 players, he tied for third and fourth with Mieses,
only half a point behind the winners, Rubinstein and Bernstein.
The same year, playing in an even stronger event at Carlsbad, he tied
for fourth and fifth with Schlechter.
At Hamburg, 1910, Nimzovich started off brilliantly in a strong field,
but losses to Schlechter and Duras pushed him down to third. The
following year at San Sebastian (the tourney in which Capablanca made
his sensational debut), Nimzovich tied for fifth, sixth and seventh
with the veterans Schlechter and Tarrasch. In the great Carlsbad
tournament of the same year, he tied for fifth and sixth prizes with
Marshall. The following year, at San Sebastian, he tied with Spielmann
for second prize, right on Rubinstein's heels.
The outcome of the tournament was decided in the last-round struggle
between Rubinstein and Nimzovich. Both players were so nervous
that first Nimzovich and then Rubinstein missed a mate in two!
The year 1913 was a milestone in Nimzovich career, for he
published several articles on his system and unleashed a
powerful attack on the "modernism" of Tarrasch's Moderne
Schachpartie.
But Nimzovich's views made little
impression; some people sneered that he had invented a system in order
to conceal his ignorance of chess theory. The public apathy is
all the more remarkable when we realize that young players like
Alekhine, Reti and Tartakover, highly sympathetic to the new ideas,
were making their mark in tournament play.
Nimzovich's crass failure in the great tournament at St. Petersburg in
1914 was a severe disappointment to him.
The elimination feature of the rules
called for players with iron nerves, or better still, no nerves at
all. The coming of the World War put a stop to Nimzovich's
Chess activities until 1920. From that
time on, he made his residence in Copenhagen, where he was received
with heart-warming hospitality. In the following years, he
played a great deal of Chess in the
Scandinavian countries, and undoubtedly made a substantial
contribution to the development of a school of great masters in
Sweden.
During the period 1920-1924 Nimzovich was again playing himself into
form, and in 1925 began a series of impressive tournament performances
which at last gave his system a hearing. Published in the late
twenties in German and later translated into English, My
System has had enormous popularity and profound influence wherever
it has appeared. In the great Baden-Baden tournament of 1925,
Nimzovich resumed international play, and his success was limited to
playing several fine games.
Without exception, every great master who achieved success from 1925
on, showed definite traces of the Nimzovich influence. His
theories, his innovations, his emphasis on fighting
Chess, all combined
to create new possibilities for the game. His novel lines of play in
the Nimzoindian Defense, French Defense, Sicilian Defense, Caro-Kann
Defense, Nimzovich Defense, Nimzovich Attack, Dutch Defense and other
openings, have enriched the master play of the last 20 years to a
degree which is almost incredible.
Today we know that Nimzovich, by preaching his system all over the
chess world, saved chess from the danger of dying out under the
"scientific" influence of Tarrasch and Capablanca. Had the views
of these two masters not been opposed by Nimzovich, much of the charm
and joy of battle would have vanished, perhaps irrevocably, from
Chess. Nimzovich's death, like his life, was
full of tragic irony. He died on March 16, 1935, at the age of
48.
His death occurred during the great
Moscow Tournament, where many of his disciples from all over the
Chess world were distinguishing themselves.
He died at a time when he was at last recognized for the great man
that he was. Death snatched him from the reward that he was just
beginning to relish: the universal admiration and popularity that
would have compensated for the many years of crying in the wilderness.
Luckily for us, he left a lasting heritage, which will give future
generations as much pleasure as it caused him anguish.
-From
the book "My System"
Aron Nimzovich
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