Marshall vs Levenfish, part 1
Frank Marshall

Marshall vs Levenfish, part 1

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By G. Goodson and D Joyner

Frank Marshall and Grigory Levenfish were both attacking players, so the two times they met
over the board were exciting games. Part 1 deals with their game from 1911, while part 2 from 1925.

Grigory Levenfish (1889-03-?? to 1961-02-09) was born in what is now Poland to a father whose business kept him away from home most of the time and a teacher mother. While his parents may have been of Jewish descent, he was baptized in the Russian Orthodox Church the same year as his first marriage, in 1913 at the age of 24, when he took the name Grigory (his birth name was Gershlik).
He trained as a chemist for years but because the Russian revolution occurred the year his degree was to be defended, his degree was not awarded. He was put to work under the Soviet system without a degree, eventually ending up working in a glass factory. Unfortunately, he was fired from that job for reasons he seemed to be innocent of in 1932 (see the translator's note on page 99 of [1]). This began his full-time chess career, but one without the stipend that top chess players received. His peak competitive results in the 1920s and 1930s. He was twice Soviet champion, in 1934 (tied with Rabinovich) and 1937. In 1937 he drew a match against future world champion Mikhail Botvinnik. In 1938, he was refused permission by the Soviet authorities to travel to the AVRO chess tournament in Hollard. (It appears he was the only top Russian chess player not given permission.)
He turned to writing chess books, editing the first (Russian) encyclopedia of chess openings.
In 1950, when FIDE first awarded the Grandmaster title, Levenfish was among the first recipients. (For example, Emanuel Lasker and Frank Marshall, who each died before 1950, never received the title.)
[1] G. Levenfish, Soviet Outcast, Quality Chess, 2019. (translated from the Russian original by
Douglas Griffin)

Frank James Marshall (1877-08-10 to 1944-11-09) was born in New York City to a flour mill
salesman father. Marshall won the 1904 Cambridge Springs International Chess Congress (scoring 13/15, ahead of World Champion Emanuel Lasker). In 1915 Marshall opened the Marshall Chess Club in New York City and appeared to make his living primarily on prize money from tournaments and from teaching and exhibitions. He was the U.S. Chess Champion from 1909 to 1936, but this was before the championship was a more-or-less annual event.

These two greats first played in the Carlsbad 1911 chess tournament, in the Czech Republic. This was a large round-robin tournament, with all the top players in the world, except for Emanuel Lasker and Capablanca. The 26 participants played from 20 August to 24 September 1911. In the end, Teichmann was the tournament winner.

[White "Marshall Frank J (USA)"]
[Black "Levenfish Grigori Y (RUS)"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C66"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bb5 d6 5. d4 Bd7 6. O-O Be7
7.Bg5


This move defines the Ruy Lopez, Berlin variation, but is also a variation of the Four Knights Game.
7 … exd4 8. Nxd4 O-O 9. Re1 h6 10. Bh4 Nh7 11. Bxe7 Nxe7
12. Bxd7 Qxd7 13. Qd3 Rfe8 14. Rad1 Nf6 15. h3 Rad8
16. Qg3 Kh7 17. e5 dxe5 18. Nf3 Qf5 19. Rxd8 Rxd8 20. Qxe5 Rd7
21. Qxf5+ Nxf5 22. Re5 Ne7 23. Kf1 Ned5 24. Nxd5 Nxd5
25. Re4 c5 26. a3 f5 27. Re5 g6 28. g3 b6
29. Re6 g5

This is a blunder. 29 … Kg7 is better
30. c4 Ne7
The computer says the best move was 30... Nc7. However, white’s reply Rf6 seems strong, so we’re not inclined to agree.
31.Ne5 Rc7
32. b4
The computer says the best move was 32. Rf6. While probably true, b4 is also good.
32... Ng8
To us, 32 … Kg7 seems much better. Now the knight is stuck protecting the h6 pawn, which
isn’t moved until move 47.
33. f4 Re7 34. Rc6 cxb4 35. axb4 Kg7
36. Rg6+ Kf8
The best move was 36... Kh7
37. c5
The best move was 37. Kf2
37... bxc5 38. bxc5 gxf4 39. gxf4 Rc7



To us, 39 … h5 seems better, allowing the knight on g8 to move.
40. c6 a5
Again, 40 … h5 seems better.
41. Nd7+ Kf7 42. Ne5+ Kf8 43. Nd7+ Kf7 44. Ne5+ Kf8
45. Ke1 a4 46. Kd2 Ra7 47. Kc2 h5
Finally!
48. Kb2 Ne7
49. Re6
The best move was 49. Rd6 but white is winning.
49... Ke8
The computer says the best move was 49... a3+ but Black is clearly lost.
50. Ka3 h4
51. Rh6
The best move was 51. Ng6
51... Kd8 52. Rxh4 Kc7 53. Rh7 Kd6
54. h4 Ra8
While 54 … Nxc6 looks tempting, it loses a piece to 55 Rh6+.
55. Nc4+ Kc5 56. Rxe7 Kxc4 57. c7 Kc5 58. h5 Kc6 59. h6 1-0

Mathematicians who play(ed) chess

This post is copied from my earlier post here.

 

  • Conel Hugh O’Donel Alexander (1909-1974), late British chess champion. Alexander may not have had a PhD in mathematics but taught mathematics and he did mathematical work during WWII (code and cryptography), as did the famous Soviet chess player David Bronstein (see the book Kahn, Kahn on codes). He was the strongest English player after WWII, until Jonathan Penrose appeared.
  • Adolf Anderssen (1818-1879). Pre World Championships but is regarded as the strongest player in the world between 1859 and 1866. He received a degree (probably not a PhD) in mathematics from Breslau University and taught mathematics at the Friedrichs gymnasium from 1847 to 1879. He was promoted to Professor in 1865 and was given an honorary doctorate by Breslau (for his accomplishments in chess) in 1865.
  • Magdy Amin Assem (195?-1996) specialized in p-adic representation theory and harmonic analysis on p-adic reductive groups. He published several important papers before a ruptured aneurysm tragically took his life. He was IM strength (rated 2379) in 1996.
  • Gedeon Barcza (1911-1986), pronounced bartsa, was a Hungarian professor of mathematics and a chess grandmaster. The opening 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 is called the Barcza System. The opening 1.e4 e6 2.d4 c5 is known as the Barcza-Larsen Defense.
  • Ludwig Erdmann Bledow (1795-1846) was a German professor of mathematics (PhD). He founded the first German chess association, Berliner Schachgesellschaft, in 1827. He was the first person to suggest an international chess tournament (in a letter to von der Lasa in 1843). His chess rating is not known but he did at one point win a match against Adolf Anderssen.
  • Robert Coveyou (1915 – 1996) completed an M.S. degree in Mathematics, and joined the Oak Ridge National Laboratory as a research mathematician. He became a recognized expert in pseudo-random number generators. He is known for the quotation “The generation of random numbers is too important to be left to chance,” which is based on a title of a paper he wrote. An excellent tournament chess player, he was Tennessee State Champion eight times.
  • Nathan Divinsky (1925-2012) earned a PhD in Mathematics in 1950 from the University of Chicago and was a mathematics professor at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. He tied for first place in the 1959 Manitoba Open.
  • Noam Elkies (1966-), a Professor of Mathematics at Harvard University specializing in number theory, is a study composer and problem solver (ex-world champion). Prof. Elkies, at age 26, became the youngest scholar ever to have attained a tenured professorship at Harvard. One of his endgame studies is mentioned, for example, in the book Technique for the tournament player, by GM Yusupov and IM Dvoretsky, Henry Holt, 1995. He wrote 11 very interesting columns on Endgame Exporations (posted by permission).
    Some other retrograde chess constructions of his may be found at the interesting Dead Reckoning web site of Andrew Buchanan.
    See also Professor Elkies’s very interesting Chess and Mathematics Seminar pages.
  • Thomas Ernst earned a Ph.D. in mathematics from Uppsala Univ. in 2002 and does research in algebraic combinatorics with applications to mathematical physics. His chess rating is about 2400 (FIDE).
  • Machgielis (Max) Euwe (1901-1981), World Chess Champion from 1935-1937, President of FIDE (Fédération Internationale des Echecs) from 1970 to 1978, and arbitrator over the turbulent Fischer – Spassky World Championship match in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1972. I don’t know as many details of his mathematical career as I’d like. One source gives: PhD (or actually its Dutch equivalent) in Mathematics from Amsterdam University in 1926. Another gives: Doctorate in philosophy in 1923 and taught as a career. Published a paper on the mathematics of chess “Mengentheoretische Betrachtungen uber das Schachspiel”.
  • Ed Formanek (194?-), International Master. Ph.D. Rice University 1970. Retired from the mathematics faculty at Penn State Univ. Worked primarily in matrix theory and representation theory.
  • Stephen L. Jones is an attorney in LA, but when younger, taught math in the UMass system and spent a term as a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton NJ. He is one rung below the level of International Master at over the board chess; in correspondence chess, he has earned two of the three norms needed to become a Grandmaster.
  • Charles Kalme (1939-2002), earned his master title in chess at 15, was US Junior champ in 1954, 1955, US Intercollegiate champ in 1957, and drew in his game against Bobby Fischer in the 1960 US championship. In 1960, he also was selected to be on the First Team All-Ivy Men’s Soccer team, as well as the US Student Olympiad chess team. (Incidently, it is reported that this team, which included William Lombary on board one, did so well against the Soviets in their match that Boris Spassky, board one on the Soviet team, was denied forieng travel for two years as punishment.) In 1961 graduated 1st in his class at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering, The University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia. He also received the Cane award (a leadership award) that year. After getting his PhD from NYU (advisor Lipman Bers) in 1967 he to UC Berkeley for 2 years then to USC for 4-5 years. He published 2 papers in mathematics in this period, “A note on the connectivity of components of Kleinian groups”, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 137 1969 301–307, and “Remarks on a paper by Lipman Bers”, Ann. of Math. (2) 91 1970 601–606. He also translated Siegel and Moser, Lectures on celestial mechanics, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1971, from the German original. He was important in the early stages of computer chess programming. In fact, his picture and annotations of a game were featured in the article “An advice-taking chess computer” which appeared in the June 1973 issue of Scientific American. He was an associate editor at Math Reviews from 1975-1977 and then worked in the computer industry. Later in his life he worked on trying to bring computers to elementary schools in his native Latvia A National Strategy for Bringing Computer Literacy to Latvian Schools. His highest chess rating was acheived later in his life during a “chess comeback”: 2458.
  • Miroslav Katetov (1918 -1995) earned his PhD from Charles Univ in 1939. Katetov was IM chess player (earned in 1951) and published about 70 research papers, mostly from topology and functional analysis.
  • Martin Kreuzer (1962-), CC Grandmaster, is rated over 2600 in correspondence chess (ICCF, as of Jan 2000). His OTB rating is over 2300. His specialty is computational commutative algebra and applications. Here is a recent game of his:
    Kreuzer, M – Stickler, A
  • Emanuel Lasker (1868-1941), World Chess Champion from 1894-1921, PhD (or more precisely its German equivalent) in Mathematics from Erlangen Univ in 1902. Author of the influential paper “Zur theorie der moduln und ideale,” Math. Ann. 60(1905)20-116, where the well-known Lasker-Noether Primary Ideal Decomposition Theorem in Commutative Algebra was proven (it can be downloaded for free here). Lasker wrote and published numerous books and papers on mathematics, chess (and other games), and philosophy.
  • Vania Mascioni, former IECG Chairperson (IECG is the Internet Email Chess Group), is rated 2326 by IECG (as of 4-99). His area is Functional Analysis and Operator Theory.
  • A. Jonathan Mestel, grandmaster in over-the-board play and in chess problem solving, is an applied mathematician specializing in fluid mechanics and is the author of numerous research papers. He is on the mathematics faculty of the Imperial College in London.
  • Walter D. Morris (196?-), International Master. Currently on the mathematics faculty at George Mason Univ in Virginia.
  • Karsten Müller earned the Grandmaster title in 1998 and a PhD in mathematics in 2002 at the University of Hamburg.
  • John Nunn (1955-), Chess Grandmaster, D. Phil. (from Oxford Univ.) in 1978 at the age of 23. His PhD thesis is in algebraic topology. Nunn is also a GM chess problem solver.
  • Hans-Peter Rehm (1942-), earned his PhD in Mathematics from Karlsruhe Univ. (1970) then taught there for many years. He is a grandmaster of chess composition. He has written several papers in mathematics, such as “Prime factorization of integral Cayley octaves”, Ann. Fac. Sci. Toulouse Math (1993), but most in differential algebra, his specialty. A collection of his problems has been published as: Hans+Peter+Rehm=Schach Ausgewählte Schachkompositionen & Aufsätze (= selected chess problems and articles), Aachen 1994.
  • Kenneth W. Regan, Professor of Computer Science at the State Univ. of New York Buffalo, is currently rated 2453. His research is in computational complexity, a field of computer science which has a significant mathematical component.
  • Jakob Rosanes obtained his mathematics doctorate from the Univ. of Breslau in 1865 where he taught for the rest of his life. In the 1860s he played a match against A. Anderssen which ended with 3 wins, 3 losses, and 1 draw.
  • Jan Rusinek (1950-) obtained his mathematics PhD in 1978 and earned a Grandmaster of Chess Composition in 1992.
  • Jon Speelman (1956-) is an English Grandmaster chess player and chess writer. He earned his PhD in mathematics from Oxford.