| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Chess Boards and Pieces,Buy Chess Pieces and Boards Online,Wooden Chess... surgicalshop.com | Glove Compression Shorts W/Hole 1910 bracesupport.com | About Everlast - Established 1910 - Bronx, New York oldtimestrongman.com | Robert Bike, Class of 1910, Freeport High School, Freeport, Illinois bibleplants.com |
Emanuel Lasker faced Carl Schlechter in the 1910 World Chess Championship. It was played from January 7 to February 10, 1910 in Vienna and Berlin. The match was tied and Lasker retained his title.
[edit] ResultsBest of 10 games. The match was drawn, so Lasker retained the world title.
[edit] World Championship?The match is generally regarded as a World Championship match, but some sources have doubted this in view of its strange outcome. J.R. Buckley reported in the American Chess Bulletin that the 10-game match was not for the World Championship, and that its result suggested that "a contest on different terms, a match for the World Championship" should be played. But at the foot of this article the editor added that Lasker had told him, "Yes, I placed the title at stake."[1] In the "Encyclopaedia of Chess", Sunnucks describes the match as "a so-called championship match."[2] On the other hand, in its book "Le guide des échecs" the chess author Nicolas Giffard does not express the slightest doubt that this was a chess championship, but points out that in case Schlechter won, he would still need to win a revenge match before being called the World Champion.[3] [edit] Two-point margin?Lasker drew the match by winning the final game. It may be that Schlechter needed to win by a two-point margin in order to win the title, and so had no choice but to play for a win in the final game, in which he missed first a win, then a clear draw, before losing the game. Historians are divided over whether the two-point margin was required. Israel Horowitz, Nicolas Giffard and F. Wilson all write that a two-point margin was required.[3][4][5] The chess researcher Graeme Cree writes,
However Lasker himself wrote two days before the tenth game, "The match with Schlechter is nearing its end and it appears probable that for the first time in my life I shall be the loser. If that should happen a good man will have won the World Championship,"[7] which could imply that it really was a world title match and that there was no secret "two-game lead" clause. Other explanations have been advanced for the development of the last game. A report shortly after the end of the match appears to speculate that Schlechter threw the last game because a narrow victory for him would not have been in the financial interests of either player, as they would have had to play another match if Schlechter won narrowly, but they had not been able to get adequate financial backing for the 1910 match.[8] Journalist Larry Evans writes,
Luděk Pachman's explanation on the the outcome of the last game is that "both players were labouring under such nervous stress that their power of judgment was not working as well as it normally did."[10] It has even been suggested that Schlechter played to win the last game because he was too honorable to get the title by a fluke, having won the fifth game by a swindle in a lost position.[11] [edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |