Woodpecker Method - Easy Excercise
Hamppe – Steinitz, Vienna 1860
Steinitz – Wilson, London 1862
Steinitz – Dubois, London (6) 1862
Green – Steinitz, London (1) 1864
13. Isidor Gunsberg – Wilhelm Steinitz, New York (2) 1890
14. Wilhelm Steinitz – Mikhail Chigorin, Havana (8) 1892
16. Wilhelm Steinitz – Reyne, Haarlem (simul) 1896
17. Wilhelm Steinitz – Falk, Moscow 1896
18. Wilhelm Steinitz – T.J.D. Enderle, Haarlem (simul) 1896
19. Jackson Showalter – Wilhelm Steinitz, Vienna 1898
| Emanuel Lasker The combination player thinks forward; he starts from the given position, and tries the forceful moves in his mind. Lasker’s Manual of Chess (1927) |
20. Emanuel Lasker – C.R. McBride, USA (simul) 1902
21. Emanuel Lasker – E.W. Witchard, Gloucester (simul) 1908
22. Carl Hartlaub – Emanuel Lasker, Germany 1908
23. Emanuel Lasker – Dawid Janowski, Berlin (1) 1910
| Jose Raul Capablanca Chess is a very logical game and it is the man who can reason most logically and profoundly in it that ought to win. |
26. Jose Raul Capablanca – C.E. Watson, Schenectady 1909
27. Jose Raul Capablanca – E.B. Schrader, Saint Louis (simul) 1909
29. Jose Raul Capablanca – T.A. Carter, Saint Louis (simul) 1909
31. Jose Raul Capablanca – Luis Piazzini, Buenos Aires 1911
32. Jose Raul Capablanca – Rasmussen, Copenhagen (simul) 1911
33. Jose Raul Capablanca – Will Randolph, New York 1912
35. Albert Beauregard Hodges – Jose Raul Capablanca, New York 1915
36. Jose Raul Capablanca – Einar Michelsen, New York (simul) 1915
37. Jose Raul Capablanca – N.N., New York 1918
38. Jose Raul Capablanca – J. Birch, Glasgow 1919
39. Jose Raul Capablanca – G.H. Hadland, Thornton Heath 1919
40. Jose Raul Capablanca – Milan Vidmar, London 1922