José Raúl Capablanca

José Raúl Capablanca

Capablanca in 1931
Full name José Raúl Capablanca y Graupera
Country Cuba
Born (1888-11-19)19 November 1888
Havana, Captaincy General of Cuba, Spanish Empire
Died 8 March 1942(1942-03-08) (aged 53)
New York City, New York, United States
World Champion 1921–27

José Raúl Capablanca y Graupera (19 November 1888 – 8 March 1942) was a Cuban chess player who was world chess champion from 1921 to 1927. Considered one of the greatest players of all time, he was renowned for his exceptional endgame skill and speed of play. He was exceptionally difficult to beat, losing only 35 first class games in his entire career.

Born in Havana, he beat Cuban champion Juan Corzo in a match at the age of 13 years. His defeat of Frank Marshall in a match in 1909 earned him an invitation to the 1911 San Sebastian tournament, which he won ahead of players such as Akiba Rubinstein, Aron Nimzowitsch and Siegbert Tarrasch. After several unsuccessful attempts to arrange a match with the then world champion Emanuel Lasker, during which he had a strong series of tournament results, he finally won the title from Lasker in 1921. Capablanca was undefeated from February 10, 1916 to March 21, 1924, which included the world championship match with Lasker.

Capablanca lost the title in 1927 to Alexander Alekhine, who had never beaten Capablanca before the match. After unsuccessful attempts to arrange a return match over many years, relations between them became bitter. Capablanca continued his excellent tournament results in this period but withdrew from serious chess in 1931. He made a comeback in 1934, with some good results, but also showed symptoms of high blood pressure. He died in 1942 of "a cerebral hemorrhage provoked by hypertension".

Capablanca excelled in simple positions and endgames; Bobby Fischer described him as possessing a "real light touch". He could play tactical chess when necessary, and had good defensive technique. He wrote several chess books during his career, of which Chess Fundamentals was regarded by Mikhail Botvinnik as the best chess book ever written. Capablanca preferred to not present detailed analysis but focused on critical moments in a game. His style of chess was influential in the play of future world champions Bobby Fischer and Anatoly Karpov.

Biography and career

Childhood

José Raúl Capablanca, the second surviving son of a Spanish army officer,[1] was born in Havana on November 19, 1888.[2] According to Capablanca, he learned the rules of the game at the age of four by watching his father play, pointed out an illegal move by his father, and then beat his father twice. At the age of eight he was taken to Havana Chess Club, which had hosted many important contests, but on the advice of a doctor he was not allowed to play frequently. Between November and December 1901, he narrowly beat the Cuban Chess Champion, Juan Corzo, in a match.[2][3][4] However, in April 1902 he only came in fourth out of six in the National Championship, losing both his games against Corzo.[4] In 1905 Capablanca passed the entrance examinations with ease for Columbia University in New York City, where he wished to play for Columbia's strong baseball team, and soon was selected as shortstop on the freshman team.[3] In the same year he joined the Manhattan Chess Club, and was soon recognized as the club's strongest player.[2] He was particularly dominant in rapid chess, winning a tournament ahead of the reigning World Chess Champion, Emanuel Lasker, in 1906.[2] He represented Columbia on top board in intercollegiate team chess.[5] In 1908 he left the university to concentrate on chess.[2][3]

According to Columbia University, Capablanca enrolled at Columbia's School of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry in September, 1910, to study chemical engineering.[6] Later, his financial support was withdrawn because he preferred playing chess to studying engineering. He left Columbia after one semester to devote himself to chess full-time.

Early adult career

Young Capablanca

Capablanca's skill in rapid chess lent itself to simultaneous exhibitions, and his increasing reputation in these events led to a USA-wide tour in 1909.[7] Playing 602 games in 27 cities, he scored 96.4% – a much higher percentage than, for example, Géza Maróczy's 88% and Frank Marshall's 86% in 1906. This performance gained him sponsorship for an exhibition match that year against Marshall, the US champion,[8] who had won the 1904 Cambridge Springs tournament ahead of World Champion Emanuel Lasker and Dawid Janowski, and whom Chessmetrics ranks as one of the world's top three players at his peak.[9] Capablanca beat Marshall by 15–8 (8 wins, 1 loss, 14 draws) – a margin comparable to what Emanuel Lasker achieved against Marshall (8 wins, no losses, 7 draws) in winning his 1907 World Championship match. After the match, Capablanca said that he had never opened a book on chess openings.[2][10] Following this match, Chessmetrics rates Capablanca the world's third strongest player for most of the period from 1909 through 1912.[11]

Capablanca won six games and drew one in the 1910 New York State Championship. Both Capablanca and Charles Jaffe won their four games in the knock-out preliminaries and met in a match to decide the winner, who would be the first to win two games. The first game was drawn and Capablanca won the second and third game. It is incorrectly said in Golombek's book on Capablanca that Capablanca won all seven games.[12] After another gruelling series of simultaneous exhibitions,[7] Capablanca placed second, with 9½ out of 12, in the 1911 National Tournament at New York, half a point behind Marshall, and half a point ahead of Charles Jaffe and Oscar Chajes.[12][13] Marshall, invited to play in a tournament at San Sebastián, Spain, in 1911, insisted that Capablanca also be allowed to play.[14]

According to David Hooper and Ken Whyld, San Sebastián 1911 was "one of the strongest five tournaments held up to that time", as all the world's leading players competed except the World Champion, Lasker.[15][16] At the beginning of the tournament, Ossip Bernstein and Aron Nimzowitsch objected to Capablanca's participation because he had not fulfilled the entry condition of winning at least third prize in two master tournaments.[2] Capablanca won brilliantly against Bernstein in the very first round, more simply against Nimzowitsch,[7] and astounded the chess world by taking first place, with a score of six wins, one loss and seven draws, ahead of Akiba Rubinstein, Milan Vidmar, Marshall, Carl Schlechter and Siegbert Tarrasch, et al.[2] His loss, against Rubinstein, was one of the most brilliant achievements of the latter's career.[17] Some European critics grumbled that Capablanca's style was rather cautious, though he conceded fewer draws than any of the next six finishers in the event. Capablanca was now recognized as a serious contender for the world championship.[7]

World title contender

In 1911, Capablanca challenged Emanuel Lasker for the World Chess Championship. Lasker accepted his challenge while proposing 17 conditions for the match. Capablanca objected to some of the conditions, which favored Lasker, and the match did not take place.[18][19]

In 1913, Capablanca won a tournament in New York with 11/13, half a point ahead of Marshall.[12][20] Capablanca then finished second to Marshall in Capablanca's hometown, Havana, scoring 10 out of 14, and losing one of their individual games.[12][21] The 600 spectators naturally favored their native hero, but sportingly gave Marshall "thunderous applause".[21][22] In a further tournament in New York in 1913, at the Rice Chess Club, Capablanca won all thirteen games.[7][12]

In September 1913, Capablanca accepted a job in the Cuban Foreign Office,[2] which made him financially secure for life.[16] Hooper and Whyld write that, "He had no specific duties, but was expected to act as a kind of ambassador-at-large, a well-known figure who would put Cuba on the map wherever he travelled."[23] His first instructions were to go to Saint Petersburg, where he was due to play in a major tournament.[7] On his way, he gave simultaneous exhibitions in London, Paris and Berlin, where he also played two-game matches against Richard Teichmann and Jacques Mieses, winning all his games.[2][7] In Saint Petersburg, he played similar matches against Alexander Alekhine, Eugene Znosko-Borovsky and Fyodor Duz-Chotimirsky, losing one game to Znosko-Borovsky and winning the rest.[2]

The St. Petersburg 1914 chess tournament was the first in which Capablanca played Lasker under normal tournament conditions.[7] This event was arranged in an unusual way: after a preliminary single round-robin tournament involving 11 players, the top five were to play a second stage in double round-robin format, with total scores from the preliminary tournament carried forward to the second contest.[7] Capablanca placed first in the preliminary tournament, 1½ points ahead of Lasker, who was out of practice and had made a shaky start. Despite a determined effort by Lasker, Capablanca still seemed on course for ultimate victory. However, in their second game of the final, Lasker reduced Capablanca to a helpless position and Capablanca was so shaken by this that he blundered away his next game to Siegbert Tarrasch.[7] Lasker then won his final game, against Marshall, thus finishing half a point ahead of Capablanca and 3½ ahead of Alekhine.[2][24] Alekhine commented:

His real, incomparable gifts first began to make themselves known at the time of St. Petersburg, 1914, when I too came to know him personally. Neither before nor afterwards have I seen – and I cannot imagine as well – such a flabbergasting quickness of chess comprehension as that possessed by the Capablanca of that epoch. Enough to say that he gave all the St. Petersburg masters the odds of 5–1 in quick games – and won! With all this he was always good-humoured, the darling of the ladies, and enjoyed wonderful good health – really a dazzling appearance. That he came second to Lasker must be entirely ascribed to his youthful levity – he was already playing as well as Lasker.[25]

After the breakdown of his attempt to negotiate a title match in 1911, Capablanca drafted rules for the conduct of future challenges, which were agreed by the other top players at the 1914 Saint Petersburg tournament, including Lasker, and approved at the Mannheim Congress later that year. The main points were: the champion must be prepared to defend his title once a year; the match should be won by the first player to win six or eight games, whichever the champion preferred; and the stake should be at least £1,000 (worth about £26,000 or $44,000 in 2013 terms[26]).[19]

During World War I

World War I began in midsummer 1914, bringing international chess to a virtual halt for more than four years.[7] Capablanca won tournaments in New York in 1914, 1915, 1916 (with preliminary and final round-robin stages) and 1918, losing only one game in this sequence.[27] In the 1918 event Marshall, playing Black against Capablanca, unleashed a complicated counter-attack, later known as the Marshall Attack, against the Ruy Lopez opening. It is often said that Marshall had kept this secret for use against Capablanca since his defeat in their 1909 match;[28] however, Edward Winter discovered several games between 1910 and 1918 where Marshall passed up opportunities to use the Marshall Attack against Capablanca; and an 1893 game that used a similar line.[29] This gambit is so complex that Garry Kasparov used to avoid it,[30] and Marshall had the advantage of using a prepared variation. Nevertheless, Capablanca found a way through the complications and won.[16] Capablanca was challenged to a match in 1919 by Borislav Kostić, who had come through the 1918 tournament undefeated to take second place. The match was to go to the first player to win eight games, but Kostić resigned the match after losing the first five games.[2][31] Capablanca considered that he was at his strongest around this time.[7][32]

World Champion

Capablanca in 1920

The Hastings Victory tournament of 1919 was the first international competition on Allied soil since 1914. The field was not strong,[7] and Capablanca won with 10½ points out of 11, one point ahead of Kostić.[27]

In January 1920, Emanuel Lasker and Capablanca signed an agreement to play a World Championship match in 1921, noting that Capablanca was not free to play in 1920. Because of the delay, Lasker insisted that if he resigned the title, then Capablanca should become World Champion. Lasker had previously included in his agreement before World War I to play Akiba Rubinstein for the title a similar clause that if he resigned the title, it should become Rubinstein's.[33] Lasker then resigned the title to Capablanca on June 27, 1920, saying, "You have earned the title not by the formality of a challenge, but by your brilliant mastery." When Cuban enthusiasts raised $20,000 to fund the match provided it was played in Havana, Lasker agreed in August 1920 to play there, but insisted that he was the challenger as Capablanca was now the champion. Capablanca signed an agreement that accepted this point, and soon afterwards published a letter confirming it.[33]

The match was played in March–April 1921; Lasker resigned it after fourteen games, having lost four games and won none.[33] Reuben Fine and Harry Golombek attributed the one-sided result to Lasker's being in mysteriously poor form.[27][34] Fred Reinfeld mentioned speculations that Havana's humid climate weakened Lasker and that he was depressed about the outcome of World War I, especially as he had lost his life savings.[7] On the other hand, Vladimir Kramnik thought that Lasker played quite well and the match was an "even and fascinating fight" until Lasker blundered in the last game. Kramnik explained that Capablanca was twenty years younger, a slightly stronger player, and had more recent competitive practice.[35]

Edward Winter, after a lengthy summary of the facts, concludes that, "The press was dismissive of Lasker's wish to confer the title on Capablanca, even questioning the legality of such an initiative, and in 1921 it regarded the Cuban as having become world champion by dint of defeating Lasker over the board."[33] Reference works invariably give Capablanca's reign as titleholder as beginning in 1921, not 1920.[36][37][38] The two challengers beside Capablanca to win the title without losing a game are Kramnik, in the Classical World Chess Championship 2000 against Garry Kasparov,[39] and Magnus Carlsen in the World Chess Championship 2013 against Viswanathan Anand.

The score sheet of Capablanca's defeat by Richard Réti in the New York 1924 chess tournament, his first loss in eight years

Capablanca won the London tournament of 1922 with 13 points from 15 games with no losses, ahead of Alexander Alekhine on 11½, Milan Vidmar (11), and Akiba Rubinstein (10½).[40] During this event, Capablanca proposed the "London Rules" to regulate future World Championship negotiations: the first player to win six games would win the match; playing sessions would be limited to 5 hours; the time limit would be 40 moves in 2½ hours; the champion must defend his title within one year of receiving a challenge from a recognized master; the champion would decide the date of the match; the champion was not obliged to accept a challenge for a purse of less than US $10,000 (worth about $260,000 in 2006 terms[41]); 20% of the purse was to be paid to the title holder and the remainder divided, 60% going to the winner of the match, and 40% to the loser; the highest purse bid must be accepted.[42] Alekhine, Efim Bogoljubow, Géza Maróczy, Richard Réti, Rubinstein, Tartakower and Vidmar promptly signed them.[43] Between 1921 and 1923 Alekhine, Rubinstein and Nimzowitsch all challenged Capablanca, but only Alekhine could raise the money, in 1927.[44]

In 1922, Capablanca also gave a simultaneous exhibition in Cleveland against 103 opponents, the largest in history up to that time, winning 102 and drawing one – setting a record for the best winning percentage ever in a large simultaneous exhibition.[45]

After beginning with four draws, followed by a loss,[7] Capablanca placed second at the New York 1924 chess tournament with the score of 14/20 (+10 −1 =9), 1½ points behind Emanuel Lasker, and 2 ahead of third-placed Alekhine.[40] Capablanca's defeat at the hands of Richard Réti in the fifth round was his first in serious competition in eight years.[12][46] He made another bad start at the Moscow 1925 chess tournament,[7] and could only fight back to third place, two points behind Bogoljubow and ½ point behind Emanuel Lasker. Capablanca won at Lake Hopatcong, 1926 with 6 points out of 8, ahead of Abraham Kupchik (5) and Maroczy (4½).[47]

A group of Argentinian businessmen, backed by a guarantee from the president of Argentina, promised the funds for a World Championship match between Capablanca and Alekhine in 1927.[48] Since Nimzowitsch had challenged before Alekhine, Capablanca gave Nimzowitsch until January 1, 1927 to deposit a forfeit in order to arrange a match.[49] When this did not materialize, a Capablanca–Alekhine match was agreed, to begin in September 1927.[50]

In the New York 1927 chess tournament, played from February 19 to March 23, 1927,[51][52] six of the world's strongest masters played a quadruple round-robin, with the others being Alekhine, Rudolf Spielmann, Milan Vidmar, Nimzowitsch and Marshall,[47] with Bogoljubow and Emanuel Lasker not present.[16] Before the tournament, Capablanca wrote that he had "more experience but less power" than in 1911, that he had peaked in 1919 and that some of his competitors had become stronger in the meantime;[7] however, he finished undefeated, winning the mini-matches with each of his rivals, 2½ points ahead of second-place Alekhine, and won the "best game" prize for a win over Spielmann.[47]

In December 1921, shortly after becoming World Champion, Capablanca married Gloria Simoni Betancourt. They had a son, José Raúl Jr., in 1923 and a daughter, Gloria, in 1925.[53] According to Capablanca's second wife, Olga, his first marriage broke down fairly soon, and he and Gloria had affairs.[54] Both his parents died during his reign, his father in 1923 and mother in 1926.[53]

Losing the title

Alekhine vs. Capablanca

Since Capablanca had won the New York 1927 chess tournament overwhelmingly and had never lost a game to Alekhine, the Cuban was regarded by most pundits as the clear favorite in their World Chess Championship 1927 match.[7] However, Alekhine won the match, played from September to November 1927 at Buenos Aires, by 6 wins, 3 losses, and 25 draws[49] – the longest formal World Championship match until the contest in 1984–85 between Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov.[55] Alekhine's victory surprised almost the entire chess world.[49] After Capablanca's death, Alekhine expressed surprise at his own victory, since in 1927 he had not thought he was superior to Capablanca, and he suggested that Capablanca had been overconfident.[25] Capablanca entered the match with no technical or physical preparation,[2][7] while Alekhine got himself into good physical condition,[56] and had thoroughly studied Capablanca's play.[57] According to Kasparov, Alekhine's research uncovered many small inaccuracies, which occurred because Capablanca was unwilling to concentrate intensely.[58] Vladimir Kramnik commented that this was the first contest in which Capablanca had no easy wins.[35] Luděk Pachman suggested that Capablanca, who was unaccustomed to losing games or to any other type of setback, became depressed over his unnecessary loss of the eleventh game, a long, gruelling endgame, featuring errors by both players.[59][60]

Immediately after winning the match, Alekhine announced that he was willing to give Capablanca a return match, on the same terms that Capablanca had required as champion – the challenger must provide a stake of US $10,000, of which more than half would go to the defending champion even if he was defeated.[61] Alekhine had challenged Capablanca in the early 1920s but Alekhine could not raise the money until 1927.[44] After Capablanca's death, Alekhine wrote that Capablanca's demand for a $10,000 stake was an attempt to avoid challenges.[25] Negotiations dragged on for several years, often breaking down when agreement seemed in sight. Their relationship became bitter, and Alekhine demanded much higher appearance fees for tournaments in which Capablanca also played.[56][62]

Post-championship and partial retirement

Giving a simultaneous display on thirty boards in Berlin, June 1929

After losing the World Championship in late 1927, Capablanca played more often in tournaments, hoping to strengthen his claim for a rematch.[63] From 1928 through 1931, he won six first prizes, also finishing second twice and one joint second.[12] His competitors included rising stars such as Max Euwe and Isaac Kashdan,[64][65] as well as players who had been established in the 1920s, but Capablanca and Alekhine never played in the same tournament during this period, and would next meet only at the Nottingham, 1936 tournament, after Alekhine had lost the world title to Euwe the preceding year.[63][66][67] In late 1931, Capablanca also won a match (+2 −0 =8) against Euwe,[12][67] whom Chessmetrics ranks sixth in the world at the time.[68]

Despite these excellent results, Capablanca's play showed signs of decline: his play slowed from the speed of his youth, with occasional time trouble;[16] although he continued to produce many superb games, he also made some gross blunders.[7][16][67] Chessmetrics nonetheless ranks Capablanca as the second strongest player in the world (after Alekhine) from his loss of the title through to autumn 1932, except for a brief appearance in the top place.[11]

After winning an event at New York in 1931, he withdrew from serious chess,[12] perhaps disheartened by his inability to secure a return match against Alekhine,[67] and played only less serious games at the Manhattan Chess Club and simultaneous displays.[69] On 6 December 1933, Capablanca won all 9 of his games in one of the club's weekly rapid chess tournaments, finishing 2 points ahead of Samuel Reshevsky, Reuben Fine and Milton Hanauer.[69]

It is from this period that the only surviving voiced film footage survives. He is with Max Euwe and Dutch radio sports journalist Han Hollander. Hollander asks Capablanca for his views on the upcoming world Championship match between Euwe and Alekhine in October of that year (1935). Capablanca replies: "Dr. Alekhine's game is 20% bluff. Dr. Euwe's game is clear and straightforward. Dr. Euwe's game—not so strong as Alekhine's in some respects—is more evenly balanced." Then Euwe gives his assessment in Dutch, explaining that his feelings alternated from optimism to pessimism, but in the previous ten years, their score had been evenly matched at 7–7.[70]

Return to competitive chess

At first Capablanca did not divorce his first wife, as he had not intended to remarry. Olga, Capablanca's second wife, wrote that she met him in the late spring of 1934; by late October the pair were deeply in love, and Capablanca recovered his ambition to prove he was the world's best player.[54] In 1938 he divorced his first wife and then married Olga on October 20, 1938,[54] about a month before the AVRO tournament.[71]

Starting his comeback at the Hastings tournament of 1934–35, Capablanca finished fourth, although coming ahead of Mikhail Botvinnik and Andor Lilienthal.[72] He placed second by ½ point in the Margate tournaments of 1935 and 1936. At Moscow 1935 Capablanca finished fourth, 1 point behind the joint winners,[72] while Emanuel Lasker's third place at the age of 66 was hailed as "a biological miracle."[73] The following year, Capablanca won an even stronger tournament in Moscow, one point ahead of Botvinnik and 3½ ahead of Salo Flohr, who took third place;[72] A month later, he shared first place with Botvinnik at Nottingham, with a score of (+5 −1 =8), losing only to Flohr. The loss to Flohr was because of being disturbed while in time trouble by the bystander Max Euwe.[74] Alekhine placed sixth, only one point behind the joint winners.[72] These tournaments of 1936 were the last two that Lasker played,[75] and the only ones in which Capablanca finished ahead of Lasker, now 67.[76] During these triumphs Capablanca began to suffer symptoms of high blood pressure.[32] He tied for second place at Semmering in 1937, then could only finish seventh of the eight players at the 1938 AVRO tournament,[77] an élite contest designed to select a challenger for Alekhine's world title.[78][79] Capablanca's high blood pressure was not correctly diagnosed and treated until after the AVRO tournament, and caused him to lose his train of thought towards the end of playing sessions.[32] In 1940, Capablanca was found to have extremely dangerous hypertension of 210 systolic/180 diastolic (hypertensive crisis is 180/120 or above, and even after treatment Capablanca had 180/130).[80]

After winning at Paris in 1938 and placing second in a slightly stronger tournament at Margate in 1939, Capablanca played for Cuba in the 8th Chess Olympiad, held in Buenos Aires, and won the gold medal for the best performance on the top board.[81] While Capablanca and Alekhine were both representing their countries in Buenos Aires, Capablanca made a final attempt to arrange a World Championship match. Alekhine declined, saying he was obliged to be available to defend his adopted homeland, France, as World War II had just broken out.[82] Capablanca announced in advance that he would not play Alekhine if their teams met.[83]

Death

Capablanca's grave at Colón Cemetery

Not long before his death, his familial hypertension had shot up to the ultra-hazardous 200–240/160+. The day before his fatal stroke, his vascular specialist Dr A. Schwarzer strongly advised him that his life was endangered unless he totally relaxed, but Capablanca said that he couldn't because his ex-wife and children had started court proceedings against him. The doctor blamed Capa's death on "his troubles and aggravation."[84] Capablanca's great rival Emanuel Lasker had died in the same hospital only a year earlier.[85] Capablanca was given a public funeral in Havana's Colón Cemetery on March 15, 1942.[84]

On 7 March 1942, Capablanca was observing a skittles game and chatting with friends at the Manhattan Chess Club in New York City, when he asked for help removing his coat, and collapsed shortly afterward. Eminent physician Dr Eli Moschcowitz administered first aid then arranged an ambulance. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he died at 6 a.m. the next day. The cause of death was given as "a cerebral hemorrhage provoked by hypertension", in particular a hypertensive thalamic hemorrhage. The hospital admissions report stated:

When admitted to Mt Sinai Hospital, the examination showed: Patient critically ill in deep coma, unreceptive to nocioceptive stimuli, unequal pupils with the left one dilated (fixed and unresponsive to light), left facial palsy, left hemiplegia, globally depressed tendinous reflexes and arterial tension 280/140. A lumbar puncture was performed which showed hemorrhagic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) with a pressure of 500 mm of water.[86]

The full autopsy, by Drs Moschcowitz, Prill, and Levin, showed that the right thalamus almost totally destroyed, and in its place was a hematoma 2 inches wide and 2 inches high. The whole ventricular system and cisterna magna were flooded with blood. The gyri were flattened and sulci narrowed, consistent with years of extreme hypertension. His heart was enlarged, 575 g instead of the normal 300–350 g, including 3 cm hypertrophy of left ventricle wall. This wall had a number of subendiocardial hemorrages, which was later proved to be common in patients with severe intercranial hypertension. This caused the release of a large amount of vasoactive substances into the bloodstream, including acetylcholine and noradrenaline that caused these hemorrhages.[87][88]

The lumbar puncture was a bad idea, since intracranial hypertension is now a well-known contraindication, because it releases the pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid that was counteracting the herniating force of the hypertension. However, it made no difference, because present-day Cuban neurosurgeon Dr Orlando Hernández-Meilán (1948– ) states that Capablanca could not have been revived even if the best modern medicine had been available.[86]

Tribute

His old rival Alekhine wrote in a tribute to Capablanca:

… Capablanca was snatched from the chess world much too soon. With his death, we have lost a very great chess genius whose like we shall never see again.[25]

Emanuel Lasker once said: "I have known many chess players, but only one chess genius: Capablanca."

An annual Capablanca Memorial tournament has been held in Cuba, most often in Havana, since 1962.[89]

Assessment

Playing strength and style

As an adult, Capablanca lost only 34 serious games.[85] He was undefeated from February 10, 1916, when he lost to Oscar Chajes in the New York 1916 tournament, to March 21, 1924, when he lost to Richard Réti in the New York International tournament. During this streak, which included his 1921 World Championship match against Lasker, Capablanca played 63 games, winning 40 and drawing 23.[46][90] In fact, only Marshall, Lasker, Alekhine and Rudolf Spielmann won two or more serious games from the mature Capablanca, though in each case, their overall lifetime scores were minus (Capablanca beat Marshall +20 −2 =28, Lasker +6 −2 =16, Alekhine +9 −7 =33), except for Spielmann who was level (+2 −2 =8). Of top players, only Keres had a narrow plus score against him (+1 −0 =5).[91] Keres' win was at the AVRO 1938 chess tournament, during which tournament Capablanca turned 50, while Keres was 22.[92]

Statistical ranking systems place Capablanca high among the greatest players of all time. Nathan Divinsky and Raymond Keene's book Warriors of the Mind (1989) ranks him fifth, behind Garry Kasparov, Anatoly Karpov, Bobby Fischer and Mikhail Botvinnik – and immediately ahead of Emanuel Lasker.[93] In his 1978 book The Rating of Chessplayers, Past and Present, Arpad Elo gave retrospective ratings to players based on their performance over the best five-year span of their career. He concluded that Capablanca was the strongest of those surveyed, with Lasker and Botvinnik sharing second place.[94] Chessmetrics (2005) is rather sensitive to the length of the periods being compared, and ranks Capablanca between third and fourth strongest of all time for peak periods ranging in length from one to fifteen years.[95] Its author, the statistician Jeff Sonas, concluded that Capablanca had more years in the top three than anyone except Lasker, Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov – although Alexander Alekhine had more years in the top two positions.[96] A 2006 study stated that Capablanca was the most accurate of all the World Champions when compared with computer analysis of World Championship match games.[97][98] However, this analysis was criticized for using a second-rank chess program, Crafty, modified to limit its calculations to six moves by each side, and for favoring players whose style matched that of the program.[99] A 2011 computer analysis by Bratko and Guid using Rybka 2 and Rybka 3 found similar results to the 2006 Crafty analysis for Capablanca.[100]

Boris Spassky, World Champion from 1969 to 1972, considered Capablanca the best player of all time.[101] Bobby Fischer, who held the title from 1972 to 1975, admired Capablanca's "light touch" and ability to see the right move very quickly. Fischer reported that in the 1950s, older members of the Manhattan Chess Club spoke of Capablanca's performances with awe.[102]

Capablanca excelled in simple positions and endgames, and his positional judgment was outstanding, so much so that most attempts to attack him came to grief without any apparent defensive efforts on his part. However, he could play great tactical chess when necessary – most famously in the 1918 Manhattan Chess Club Championship tournament (in New York) where Marshall sprang a deeply analyzed prepared variation on him, which he refuted while playing under the normal time limit (although ways have since been found to strengthen the Marshall Attack).[16][103] He was also capable of using aggressive tactical play to drive home a positional advantage, provided he considered it safe and the most efficient way to win, for example against Spielmann in the 1927 New York tournament.[104][105]

Influence on the game

Capablanca founded no school per se, but his style was very influential in the games of two world champions: Fischer and Anatoly Karpov. Botvinnik also wrote how much he learned from Capablanca, and pointed out that Alekhine had received much schooling from him in positional play, before their fight for the world title made them bitter enemies.

As a chess writer, Capablanca did not present large amounts of detailed analysis, instead focusing on the critical moments in a game. His writing style was plain and easy to understand.[106] Botvinnik regarded Capablanca's book Chess Fundamentals as the best chess book ever written.[106] Capablanca in a lecture and in his book A Primer of Chess pointed out that while the bishop was usually stronger than the knight, queen and knight was usually better than queen and bishop, especially in endings – the bishop merely mimics the queen's diagonal move, while the knight can immediately reach squares the queen cannot.[107][108] Research is divided over Capablanca's conclusion: in 2007, Glenn Flear found little difference,[109] while in 1999, Larry Kaufman, analysing a large database of games, concluded that results very slightly favored queen plus knight.[110] John Watson wrote in 1998 that an unusually large proportion of queen and knight versus queen and bishop endings are drawn, and that most decisive games are characterized by the winning side having one or more obvious advantages in that specific game.[111]

Personality

Early in his chess career, Capablanca had received some criticism, mainly in Britain, for the allegedly conceited description of his accomplishments in his first book, My Chess Career. He therefore took the unprecedented step of including virtually all of his tournament and match defeats up to that time in Chess Fundamentals, together with an instructive group of his victories. Nevertheless, his preface to the 1934 edition of Chess Fundamentals is confident that the "reader may therefore go over the contents of the book with the assurance that there is in it everything he needs."[106] However Julius du Mont wrote that he knew Capablanca well and could vouch that he was not conceited. In du Mont's opinion critics should understand the difference between the merely gifted and the towering genius of Capablanca, and the contrast between the British tendency towards modesty and the Latin and American tendency to say "I played this game as well as it could be played" if he honestly thought that it was correct.[2] Capablanca himself said, in his author's note prefacing My Chess Career: "Conceit I consider a foolish thing, but more foolish still is the false modesty that vainly attempts to conceal which all facts tend to prove." Fischer also admired this frankness.[102] Du Mont also said that Capablanca was rather sensitive to criticism,[2] and chess historian Edward Winter documented a number of examples of self-criticism in My Chess Career.[106]

Despite his achievements Capablanca appeared more interested in baseball than in chess, which he described as "not a difficult game to learn and it is an enjoyable game to play."[112] His second wife, Olga, thought he resented the way in which chess had dominated his life, and wished he could have studied music or medicine.[54]

Capablanca chess

Main article: Capablanca chess
abcdefghij
8a8 black rookb8 black knightc8 black princessd8 black bishope8 black queenf8 black kingg8 black bishoph8 black empressi8 black knightj8 black rook8
7a7 black pawnb7 black pawnc7 black pawnd7 black pawne7 black pawnf7 black pawng7 black pawnh7 black pawni7 black pawnj7 black pawn7
6a6b6c6d6e6f6g6h6i6j66
5a5b5c5d5e5f5g5h5i5j55
4a4b4c4d4e4f4g4h4i4j44
3a3b3c3d3e3f3g3h3i3j33
2a2 white pawnb2 white pawnc2 white pawnd2 white pawne2 white pawnf2 white pawng2 white pawnh2 white pawni2 white pawnj2 white pawn2
1a1 white rookb1 white knightc1 white princessd1 white bishope1 white queenf1 white kingg1 white bishoph1 white empressi1 white knightj1 white rook1
abcdefghij
Capablanca chess. Archbishop (bishop+knight compound) is placed between knight and bishop on the queen's side, chancellor (rook+knight compound) on the king's side.[113]

In an interview in 1925 Capablanca denied reports that he thought chess had already currently reached its limit because it was easy for top players to obtain a draw. However he was concerned that the accelerating development of chess technique and opening knowledge might cause such stagnation in 50 years' time. Hence he suggested the adoption of a 10x8 board with 2 extra pieces per side:

He thought this would prevent technical knowledge from becoming such a dominant factor, at least for a few centuries.[114]

Capablanca and Edward Lasker experimented with 10x10 and 10x8 boards, using the same expanded set of pieces. They preferred the 8-rank version as it encouraged combat to start earlier, and their games typically lasted 20 to 25 moves.[113] Contrary to the claims of some critics, Capablanca proposed this variant while he was world champion, not as sour grapes after losing his title.[115]

Similar 10x8 variants had previously been described in 1617 by Pietro Carrera and in 1874 by Henry Bird, differing only in how the new pieces were placed in each side's back row. Subsequent variants inspired by Capablanca's experimentation have been proposed, including Grand chess (which uses a 10x10 board and has pawns on the third rank), Gothic Chess, and Embassy Chess (the Grand chess setup on a 10x8 board).

Notable chess games

Writings

Tournament results

The following table gives Capablanca's placings and scores in tournaments.[12][27][40][47][63][66][67][72][77][117] The first "Score" column gives the number of points out of the total possible. In the second "Score" column, "+" indicates the number of won games, "−" the number of losses, and "=" the number of draws.

Date Location Place Score Notes
1910 New York State 1st 6½/7 +6 −0 =1 Capablanca won six games and drew one in the 1910 New York State Championship. Both Capablanca and Charles Jaffe won their four games in the knock-out preliminaries and met in a match to decide the winner, who would be the first to win two games. The first game was drawn and Capablanca won the second and third game.
1911 New York 2nd 9½/12 +8 −1 =3 Marshall was 1st ahead of Capablanca.
San Sebastián (Spain) 1st 9½/14 +6 −1 =7 Ahead of Akiba Rubinstein and Milan Vidmar (9), Frank James Marshall (8½)[117] and 11 other world-class players.[15] His only loss was to Rubinstein, and his win against Ossip Bernstein was awarded the brilliancy prize.[117]
1913 New York 1st 11/13 +10 −1 =2 Ahead of Marshall (10½), Charles Jaffe (9½) and Dawid Janowski (9)[117]
Havana 2nd 10/14 +8 −2 =4 Behind Marshall (10½); ahead of Janowski (9) and five others.[117]
New York 1st 13/13 +13 −0 =0 Ahead of Oldřich Duras
1914 St. Petersburg 2nd 13/18 +10 −2 =6 Behind Emanuel Lasker (13½); ahead of Alexander Alekhine (10), Siegbert Tarrasch (8½) and Marshall (8). This tournament had an unusual structure: there was a preliminary tournament in which eleven players played each other player once; the top five players then played a separate final tournament in which each player who made the "cut" played the other finalists twice; but their scores from the preliminary tournament were carried forward. Even the preliminary tournament would now be considered a "super-tournament". Capablanca "won" the preliminary tournament by 1½ points without losing a game, but Lasker achieved a plus score against all his opponents in the final tournament and finished with a combined score ½ point ahead of Capablanca's.[117]
1915 New York 1st 13/14 +12 −0 =2 Ahead of Marshall (12) and six others.[27]
1916 New York 1st 14/17 +12 −1 =4 Ahead of Janowski (11) and 11 others. The structure was similar to that of St. Petersburg 1914.[27]
1918 New York 1st 10½/12 +9 −0 =3 Ahead of Boris Kostić (9), Marshall (7), and four others
1919 Hastings 1st 10½/11 +10 −0 =1 Ahead of Kostić (9½), Sir George Thomas (7), Frederick Yates (7) and eight others[27]
1922 London 1st 13/15 +11 −0 =4 Ahead of Alekhine (11½), Vidmar (11), Rubinstein (10½), Efim Bogoljubow (9), and 11 other players, mostly very strong[40]
1924 New York 2nd 14½/20 +10 −1 =9 Behind Lasker (16); ahead of Alekhine (12), Marshall (11), Richard Réti (10½) and six others, mostly very strong[40]
1925 Moscow 3rd 13½/20 +9 −2 =9 Behind Bogojubow (15½) and Lasker (14); ahead of Marshall (12½) and a mixture of strong international players and rising Soviet players[47]
1926 Lake Hopatcong 1st 6/8 +4 −0 =4 Ahead of Abraham Kupchik (5), Géza Maróczy (4½), Marshall (3) and Edward Lasker (1½)[47]
1927 New York 1st 14/20 +8 −0 =12 Ahead of Alekhine (11½), Aron Nimzowitsch (10½), Vidmar (10), Rudolf Spielmann (8) and Marshall (6).[47]
1928 Bad Kissingen 2nd 7/11 +4 −1 =6 Behind Bogojubow (8); ahead of Max Euwe (6½), Rubinstein (6½), Nimzowitsch (6) and seven other strong masters[63]
Budapest 1st 7/9 +5 −0 =4 Ahead of Marshall (6), Hans Kmoch (5), Spielmann (5) and six others[63]
Berlin 1st 8½/12 +5 −0 =7 Ahead of Nimzowitsch (7), Spielmann (6½) and four other very strong players[63]
1929 Ramsgate 1st 5½/7 +4 −0 =3 Ahead of Vera Menchik (5), Rubinstein (5), and four others[66]
Carlsbad 2nd= 14½/21 +10 −2 =9 Behind Nimzowitsch (15); tied with Spielmann; ahead of Rubinstein (13½) and 18 others, mostly very strong[66]
Budapest 1st 10½/13 +8 −0 =5 Ahead of Rubinstein (9½), Savielly Tartakower (8) and 11 others[66]
Barcelona 1st 13½/14 +13 −0 =1 Ahead of Tartakower (11½) and 13 others[66]
1929–30 Hastings 1st 6½/9 +4 -0 =5 [118]
1930–31 Hastings 2nd 6½/9 +5 −1 =3 Behind Euwe (7); ahead of eight others[67]
1931 New York 1st 10/11 +9 −0 =2 Ahead of Isaac Kashdan (8½) and 10 others[67]
1934–35 Hastings 4th 5½/9 +4 −2 =3 Behind Thomas, (6½), Euwe (6½) and Salo Flohr (6½); ahead Mikhail Botvinnik (5), Andor Lilienthal (5) and four others[72]
1935 Moscow 4th 12/19 +7 −2 =10 Behind Botvinnik (13), Flohr (13) and Lasker (12½); ahead of Spielmann (11) and 15 others, mainly Soviet players[72]
Margate 2nd 7/9 +6 −1 =2 Behind Samuel Reshevsky (7½); ahead of eight others.[72]
1936 Margate 2nd 7/9 +5 −0 =4 Behind Flohr (7½); ahead of Gideon Ståhlberg and eight others.[72]
Moscow 1st 13/18 +8 −0 =10 Ahead of Botvinnik (12), Flohr (9½), Lilienthal (9), Viacheslav Ragozin (8½), Lasker (8) and four others[72]
Nottingham 1st= 10/14 +7 −1 =6 Tied with Botvinnik; ahead of Euwe (9½), Reuben Fine (9½), Reshevsky (9½), Alekhine (9), Flohr (8½), Lasker (8½) and seven other strong opponents[72]
1937 Semmering 3rd= 7½/14 +2 −1 =11 Behind Paul Keres (9), Fine (8); tied with Reshevsky; ahead of Flohr (7), Erich Eliskases (6), Ragozin (6) and Vladimirs Petrovs (5)[77]
1938 Paris 1st= 8/10 +6 −0 =4 Ahead of Nicolas Rossolimo (7½) and four others[77]
AVRO tournament, at ten cities in the Netherlands 7th 6/14 +2 -4 =8 Behind Keres (8½), Fine (8½), Botvinnik (7½), Alekhine (7), Euwe (7) and Reshevsky (7); ahead of Flohr (4½)[77]
1939 Margate 2nd= 6½/9 +4 −0 =5 Behind Keres (7½); tied with Flohr; ahead of seven others[77]

At the 1939 Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires, Capablanca took the medal for best performance on a country's first board.[77]

Match results

Here are Capablanca's results in matches.[12] The first "Score" column gives the number of points on the total possible. In the second "Score" column, "+" indicates the number of won games, "−" the number of losses, and "=" the number of draws.

Date Opponent Result Location Score Notes
1901 Juan Corzo Won Havana 7–6 +4 −3 =6 Corzo was the reigning champion of Cuba.
1909 Frank James Marshall Won New York 15–8 +8 −1 =14  
1912 Charles Jaffe Won New York 2½–½ +2-0=1  
1912 Oscar Chajes Won New York 1-0 +1-0=0  
1913 Richard Teichmann Won Berlin 2–0 +2-0=0  
1913 Jacques Mieses Won Berlin 2–0 +2-0=0  
1913 Eugene Znosko-Borovsky Drawn St. Petersburg 1–1 +1-1=0 The three matches against Russian masters were played for stakes.
Besides the stake-money there was a gold cup to be awarded for the series,
either to Capablanca if he won all his games,
or to the player who made the best score against him.
The cup went to Znosko-Borovsky.
1913 Alexander Alekhine Won St. Petersburg 2–0 +2-0=0
1913 Fedor Duz-Khotimirsky Won St. Petersburg 2–0 +2-0=0
1914 Ossip Bernstein Won Moscow 1½–½ +1-0=1  
1914 Savielly Tartakower Won Vienna 1½–½ +1-0=1  
1914 Arnold Aurbach Won Paris 2–0 +2-0=0  
1919 Boris Kostić Won Havana 5–0 +5 −0 =0  
1921 Emanuel Lasker Won Havana 9–5 +4 −0 =10 For the World Chess Championship.
1927 Alexander Alekhine Lost Buenos Aires 15½–18½ +3 −6 =25 For the World Chess Championship.
1931 Max Euwe Won Netherlands 6–4 +2 −0 =8 Euwe became World Champion 1935–1937.[119]

See also

Notes

  1. "Jose Capablanca". Retrieved 2015-02-19.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Du Mont, J. (1959). "Memoir of Capablanca". In Golombek, H. Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 1–18.
  3. 1 2 3 Reynolds, Q. (March 2, 1935). "One Man's Mind". Collier's Weekly. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  4. 1 2 Hooper, D., and Brandreth, D.A. (1994). "The Corzo Match". The Unknown Capablanca. Courier Dover Publications. pp. 116–140. ISBN 0486276147. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  5. The Bobby Fischer I Knew And Other Stories, by Arnold Denker and Larry Parr, Hypermodern, San Francisco, 1995, p.5
  6. Columbia University: José Raúl Capablanca (C250 Celebrates Columbians Ahead of Their Time).
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Reinfeld, F. (1990) [1942]. "Biography". The Immortal Games of Capablanca. Courier Dover Publications. pp. 1–13. ISBN 0-486-26333-9.
  8. Hooper, D., and Brandreth, D.A. (1994). "Simultaneous Exhibitions". The Unknown Capablanca. Courier Dover Publications. p. 141. ISBN 0-486-27614-7.
  9. "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Frank Marshall". Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  10. Kasparov, Garry (2003). My Great Predecessors, part I. Everyman Chess. p. 232. ISBN 1-85744-330-6.
  11. 1 2 Sonas, J. "Chessmetrics Player Profile: José Capablanca". Retrieved 2009-06-01. (select the "Career Details" option)
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Golombek, H. (1959). "List of Tournaments and Matches". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 19–20.. Note: Edward Winter gives a list of errors in Golombek's book : Chesshistory document by Edward Winter
  13. "New York 1910". Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  14. "Chessville vignettes: José Raoul Capablanca y Graupera". Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  15. 1 2 David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld (1992). The Oxford Companion to Chess (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 67. ISBN 0-19-866164-9.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Fine, R. (1952). "José Raúl Capablanca". The World's Great Chess Games. André Deutsch (now as paperback from Dover). pp. 109–121.
  17. Kmoch, H. (1960). Rubinstein's Chess Masterpieces. Dover. pp. 65–67. ISBN 0-486-20617-3.
  18. Hooper & Whyld 1992, pp. 67–68.
  19. 1 2 "1921 World Chess Championship". January 20, 2005. Archived from the original on 2005-01-20. Retrieved 2008-11-21. This cites: a report of Lasker's concerns about the location and duration of the match, in New York Evening Post. March 15, 1911; Capablanca's letter of December 20, 1911 to Lasker, stating his objections to Lasker's proposal; Lasker's letter to Capablanca, breaking off negotiations; Lasker's letter of April 27, 1921 to Alberto Ponce of the Havana Chess Club, proposing to resign the 1921 match; and Ponce's reply, accepting the resignation.
  20. Hooper, D.; Brandreth, D. The Unknown Capablanca. R.H.M. Press. p. 170. ISBN 0890582076.
  21. 1 2 Marshall, F.J. (1960). Frank J. Marshall's Best Games of Chess. Dover. pp. 19–20. ISBN 0-486-20604-1. Page 19: "My two 1913 tournaments took a curious course. At New York, Capa beat me out by half a point, but a month later I reversed the procedure at Havana." P. 20: Marshall thought the crowd were "after my blood for defeating their idol and asked for an escort to my hotel. It turned out, however, that the good Cubans were just showing their sportsmanship and were cheering me!"
  22. Winter, E.G. (1989). "Rapid ascent". Capablanca. McFarland. ISBN 0-89950-455-8.
  23. Hooper & Whyld 1992, p. 68.
  24. Soltis, A. (1975). The Great Chess Tournaments and Their Stories. Chilton Book Company. pp. 96–103. ISBN 0-8019-6138-6.
  25. 1 2 3 4 Alekhine, A.; Winter, E.G. (1980). 107 Great Chess Battles'. Dover. pp. 157–158. ISBN 0-486-27104-8. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
  26. Using average incomes for the conversion; if average prices are used, the result is about £66,000. "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a U.K. Pound Amount, 1830–2006". Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  27. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golombek, H. (1959). "On the Way to the World Championship". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 59–86.
  28. "The Total Marshall". 15 April 2002. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  29. Winter, E.G. "The Marshall Gambit". Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  30. Silman, J. (2004). "Marshall Attack". Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  31. Winter, E. (1981). World Chess Champions. Pergamon Press. p. 58. ISBN 0-08-024094-1.
  32. 1 2 3 Capablanca, J.R (1939). "Capablanca Interviewed". El Gráfico (Edward G. Winter). Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  33. 1 2 3 4 Winter, Edward. "How Capablanca Became World Champion". ChessHistory. Retrieved 2008-06-05.. Winter cites: American Chess Bulletin (July–August 1920 issue) for Lasker's resignation of the title, the ACB's theory about Lasker's real motive and Havana's offer of $20,000; Amos Burn in The Field of 3 July 1920, the British Chess Magazine of August 1920 and other sources for protestations that Lasker had no right to nominate a successor; Amos Burn in The Field of 3 July 1920 and E.S. Tinsley in The Times (London) of 26 June 1920 for criticism of the conditions Lasker set for the defense of the title; American Chess Bulletin September–October 1920 for Lasker's and Capablanca's statements that Capablanca was the champion and Lasker the challenger, for Capablanca's statement that Lasker's contract with Rubinstein had contained a clause allowing him to abdicate in favor of Rubinstein, for Lasker's intention to resign the title if he beat Capablanca and his support for an international organization, preferably based in the Americas, to manage international chess. Winter says that before Lasker's abdication, some chess correspondents had been calling for Lasker to be stripped of the title. For a very detailed account given by Capablanca after the match, see Capablanca, J.R. (October 1922). "Capablanca’s Reply to Lasker". British Chess Magazine. Retrieved 2008-06-05.
  34. Fine, R. (1976). "The Age of Capablanca". The World's Great Chess Games (2nd ed.). Dover (first edition published by André Deutsch in 1952). p. 109.
  35. 1 2 Vladimir Kramnik. "Kramnik Interview: From Steinitz to Kasparov". Kramnik.com. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  36. Hooper, D.; Whyld, K. (1992). The Oxford Companion to Chess (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 67, 217. ISBN 0-19-866164-9.
  37. Golombek, H., ed. (1977). Golombek's Encyclopedia of Chess. Crown Publishers. pp. 58, 172. ISBN 0-517-53146-1.
  38. B. M. Kazić (1974). International Championship Chess: A Complete Record of FIDE Events. Pitman. p. 218. ISBN 0-273-07078-9.
  39. Byrne, R. (November 3, 2000). "Chess; A Draw by Kramnik Makes Kasparov the Ex-Champion". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  40. 1 2 3 4 5 Golombek, H. (1959). "World Champion". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 60–114.
  41. Using incomes for the conversion; if prices are used, the result is about $103,000. "Six Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a U.S. Dollar Amount, 1774 to Present". Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  42. Winter, E.G. "The London Rules". Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  43. Clayton, G. "The Mad Aussie's Chess Trivia: Archive #3". Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  44. 1 2 "Jose Raul Capablanca: Online Chess Tribute". chessmaniac.com. June 28, 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
  45. Damsky, Yakov (2005). The Batsford Book of Chess Records. London: Batsford. p. 253. ISBN 0-7134-8946-4.
  46. 1 2 34 losses out of 571 games, according to Young, M.C (1998). Guinness Book of World Records, 1999 (26 ed.). Bantam Books. p. 117. ISBN 0-553-58075-2. Edward Winter quotes page 565 of the 1988 edition, which does not include the number of games – "Chess Records". Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  47. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golombek, H. (1959). "Victory and Disaster". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 115–147.
  48. "Jose Raul Capablanca". chesscorner.com. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  49. 1 2 3 Cree, G. "1927 World Chess Championship". Archived from the original on 2005-01-25. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
  50. Alekhine, A. (1960). My Best Games of Chess 1924–1937 (2 ed.). Bell. pp. 38–53.
  51. Reti, R. "Introduction". In Tartakower, S., and Leach, C. New York 1927. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
  52. Alekhine, A. (1960). My Best Games of Chess 1924–1937 (2 ed.). Bell. pp. 28–33.
  53. 1 2 Winter, E.G. (1990). "5: Champion". Capablanca: A Compendium ... McFarland. ISBN 0-89950-455-8.
  54. 1 2 3 4 Winter, E.G. "The Genius and the Princess". Retrieved 2009-06-02.
  55. Byrne, R. (December 21, 1984). "Chess title match to become longest one in modern era". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  56. 1 2 Fine, Reuben (1952). "Alexander Alexandrovitch Alekhine". The World's Great Chess Games. André Deutsch (now as paperback from Dover). pp. 149–162.
  57. Pachman, L.; Russell, A.S. (1971). "Individual Style: Psychological Play". Modern chess strategy. Courier Dover. p. 306. ISBN 0-486-20290-9. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
  58. Kasparov, G.; Russell, H.W. (July 28, 2003). "Interview with Garry Kasparov: Part 2" (PDF). Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  59. Pachman, L. (1987). "World Championship 1927: Why Did Alekhin Win?". Decisive Games in Chess History. Courier Dover. pp. 86–90. ISBN 0-486-25323-6. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  60. Alekhine described the game as a "comedy of errors", and included it in his "Best Games" collection only because it was "the crucial point of the match": Alekhine, A. (1960). My Best Games of Chess 1924–1937 (2 ed.). Bell. pp. 41–45.
  61. Winter, E. "Capablanca v Alekhine, 1927". Retrieved 2008-06-09. Regarding a possible "two-game lead" clause, Winter cites Capablanca's messages to Julius Finn and Norbert Lederer, dated 15 October 1927, in which he proposed that, if the Buenos Aires match were drawn, the second match could be limited to 20 games. Winter cites La Prensa 30 November 1927 for Alekhine's conditions for a return match.
  62. Fine, R. (1983) [1958]. Lessons from My Games: A Passion for Chess. Dover. p. 80. ISBN 0-486-24429-6.
  63. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Golombek, H. (1959). "Attempts at Rehabilitation". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 148–170.
  64. Fine, Reuben (1952). "Max Euwe". The World's Great Chess Games. André Deutsch (now as paperback from Dover). pp. 192–200.
  65. Fine, Reuben (1952). "Isaac Kashdan". The World's Great Chess Games. André Deutsch (now as paperback from Dover). pp. 175–179.
  66. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Golombek, H. (1959). "1929 – A Rich Year". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 171–202.
  67. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golombek, H. (1959). "Prelude to Retirement". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 171–202.
  68. Sona, J. "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Max Euwe". Chessmetrics. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  69. 1 2 Winter, E.G. "Capablanca's clean sweep". Retrieved 2009-06-03. Based on reports in: American Chess Bulletin, January 1934, page 15; The New York Times, 7 December 1933, page 31.
  70. Han interviews Dutchman Max Euwe and Capablanca, Dutch Public Broadcasting archives, 18 May 2012
  71. Sonas, J. "Event Details: AVRO, 1938". Chessmetrics. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  72. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Golombek, H. (1959). "Triumphant Return". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 203–249.
  73. Fine, R. (1976). "The Age of Lasker". The World's Great Chess Games (2nd ed.). Dover (first edition published by André Deutsch in 1952). p. 51. ISBN 0-486-24512-8.
  74. Winter, E.G. (1989). "Rapid ascent". Capablanca. McFarland. ISBN 0-89950-455-8., p. 279.
  75. Hannak, J. (1959). Emanuel Lasker: The Life of a Chess Master. Simon and Schuster. pp. 284, 297.
  76. Fine, R. (1976). "The Age of Lasker". The World's Great Chess Games (2nd ed.). Dover (first edition published by André Deutsch in 1952). p. 50. ISBN 0-486-24512-8.
  77. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golombek, H. (1959). "The Final Phase". Capablanca's Hundred Best Games of Chess. G. Bell & Sons. pp. 250–267.
  78. Winter, E. "World Championship Disorder". Retrieved 2008-09-15.
  79. "AVRO 1938". Retrieved 2008-09-15.
  80. Capablanca's Death, chesshistory.com.
  81. "3rd Chess Olympiad: Hamburg 1930". Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  82. Winter, E.G. "4696. Capablanca and Alekhine in Buenos Aires, 1939". Retrieved 2009-06-03. See also Winter, E.G. "4742. Capablanca and Alekhine in Buenos Aires, 1939 (C.N. 4696)". Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  83. Winter, E.G. "4696. Capablanca and Alekhine in Buenos Aires, 1939". Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  84. 1 2 Winter, E.G. "Capablanca's Death". Retrieved 2009-06-04.
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Further reading

External links

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Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Emanuel Lasker
World Chess Champion
1921–27
Succeeded by
Alexander Alekhine
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