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Max Euwe Tournament In Amsterdam

Max Euwe Tournament In Amsterdam

SonofPearl
| 13 | Chess Event Coverage

Max Euwe1 cropped.jpgPRESS RELEASE
Max Euwe Tournament, 13 – 20 November 2011
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Live Games on www.euwetoernooi.nl

On 26th November it will be thirty years since former World Champion Dr Max Euwe passed away. To honour his memory two groups of four will play a double round robin tournament from 14th to 20th November.
 
The organisation has brought together an international field of male and female players both young and old: grandmasters Fridrik Olafsson, Paul van der Sterren, Zhaoqin Peng, Pia Cramling, Stuart Conquest, Monica Socko, Keti Arakhamia and Robin van Kampen.
 
Grandmaster Jan Timman will open the event on 13th November by giving a simul. Additionally, there will be lectures in the evening throughout the week about Max Euwe, computer chess and artificial intelligence. On Wednesday afternoon there will be a fun children’s chess session with Jennifer Shahade and a viewing of “Long Live the Queen”, a chess film directed by Euwe’s granddaughter Esmé Lammers.
 
The Max Euwe Chess Tournament looks back on a wealth of chess history but keeps a firm view towards the future too, as is reflected in the participants. The round robins and other events will connect us with important men and women from the chess world and with these great talents we shall celebrate the life of chess promoter Euwe.

Biography

When grandmaster Machgielis (Max) Euwe (1901 – 1981) became world champion in 1935, he thought the most important aspect of his victory was that “the game of chess has won support”. After the match the number of members of the Dutch chess union rose from 4,000 to 12,000 and many new chess clubs were founded.

Euwe beat chess professional Alexander Aljechin in a match over twenty games which were played in different Dutch towns. After the last game, in the Amsterdam Bellevue Theatre, the Leidseplein square was flooded with enthusiastic fans. Euwe’s victory came as a surprise. Although he was considered to be a world class player (after narrowly losing a match against the very same Aljechin in 1927) he remained an amateur.

In 1928 he became world amateur champion and he is the only amateur ever to become overall world champion. There had already been many national achievements: in 1921, at the age of twenty he won the Dutch national championship for the first time and in the period 1921 -1956 he would win the title twelve times in all.

Starting in 1918 Euwe studied mathematics at the University of Amsterdam. In 1923 he obtained his degree with honours. He taught maths at a secondary school in Rotterdam and later on at a girls’ school in Amsterdam. In 1926 he attained a doctorate, again with honours. After 1950, Euwe dedicated his working life to the new science of informatics.

In 1956 he became a scientific advisor to the American firm Remington Rand, where he contributed to the development of the computer. From 1959- 1963 he was director of the Study Centre for Automatic Data Computation. In 1964 Euwe became professor at the Catholic University of Tilburg and affiliate professor at the Economic University of Rotterdam. He was the very first professor in the Methodology of Information Computation.

After Euwe had to surrender the title in 1937 to Aljechin, he continued to promote the sport of chess. Euwe wrote countless chess books and articles, which have been published all over the world. Well-known titles are: Uncle John teaches his nephew to play chess (1936); Judgment and planning in chess (1952); Chess master vs. Chess Amateur (1963) and his 12 volume series of opening theory.

From 1970-1978 Euwe was president of world chess federation FIDE. In this capacity he was instrumental in saving the famous match between Robert Fischer and Boris Spassky in Reykjavik in 1972. He made a great number of visits abroad to promote interest for chess. The number of countries joining the world chess federation increased rapidly, especially with new adherents from Asia and Africa.


Program of events:

 Sunday 13th November
 14.00 – 17.00 hrs  opening: simultaneous display Jan Timman
 Monday 14th November
 13.00 – 19.00 hrs  1st round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 Tuesday 15th November
 13.00 – 19.00 hrs  2nd round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 20.00 hrs  lecture Hans Ree on Euwe
 Wednesday 16th November
 13.00 – 19.00 hrs  3rd round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 14.00 – 17.00 hrs  chessclinic with Jennifer Shahade
 20.00 hrs
 lecture Jos Uiterwijk on artificial intelligence
 Thursday 17th November
 rest  no progam
 Friday 18th November
 13.00 – 19.00 hrs  4th round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 Saturday 19th November
 13.00 – 19.00 hrs  5th round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 Sunday 20th November
 11.00 – 17.00 hrs  6th round matches (14.30 hrs live commentary)
 17.00 hrs  closing ceremony and party at De Kring

 


Press release, picture, biography and program of events from the official tournament website.

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