Here is a remarkable game Tarrasch played against Gyula Breyer. Late in his career, the German met the Hungarian proponent of hypermodern play in Switzerland during "the Gothenburg tournament". The annotations here are Tarrasch's own from his book The Game of Chess.
Breyer is credited with creating a line for White in the King's Gambit Accepted. The line is known as the Breyer Gambit and is given as 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Qf3. Another memorable achievement of Breyer's is his victory over Max Euwe in 1921 (Vienna; Breyer had the black pieces).
Here is a remarkable game Tarrasch played against Gyula Breyer. Late in his career, the German met the Hungarian proponent of hypermodern play in Switzerland during "the Gothenburg tournament". The annotations here are Tarrasch's own from his book The Game of Chess.
Breyer is credited with creating a line for White in the King's Gambit Accepted. The line is known as the Breyer Gambit and is given as 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Qf3. Another memorable achievement of Breyer's is his victory over Max Euwe in 1921 (Vienna; Breyer had the black pieces).