Zandvoort international chess tournament :: Zandvoort 1936

[ Competition summary || Crosstable || 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th || Information | Tournament Review ]


Crosstable

pos. name flag 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 pts + = -
1. Fine, Reuben USA ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 6 5 0
2. Euwe, Machgielis NED ½ ½ 1 0 1 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 5 5 1
3.-4. Tartakower, Ksawery POL 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 3 7 1
3.-4. Keres, Paul EST 0 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 5 3 3
5.-6. Bogoljubow, Efim GER ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 1 0 ½ 1 1 6 4 4 3
5.-6. Maróczy, Géza HUN 0 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 6 3 6 2
7.-9. Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 9 1
7.-9. Spielmann, Rudolf AUT ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 9 1
7.-9. Landau, Salomon NED 0 ½ 0 0 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 4 3 4
10. Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 0 1 4 1 6 4
11. Becker, Albert AUT 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 3 1 4 6
12. Prins, Lodewijk NED 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 0 0 ½ 0 3 8





Round by round results

1st round — 18th July 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER 1 - 0 NED Prins, Lodewijk
Euwe, Machgielis NED ½ - ½ POL Tartakower, Ksawery
Fine, Reuben USA 1 - 0 HUN Maróczy, Géza
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ - ½ AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Keres, Paul EST 1 - 0 AUT Becker, Albert
Landau, Salomon NED 1 - 0 NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
1.-4. Fine, Keres, Bogoljubow, Landau — 1; 5.-8. Euwe, Tartakower, Grünfeld, Spielmann — ½; 9.-12. Maróczy, Van Doesburgh, Becker, Prins — 0;



2nd round — 19th July 1936
Becker, Albert AUT ½ - ½ NED Prins, Lodewijk
Keres, Paul EST 0 - 1 NED Euwe, Machgielis
Maróczy, Géza HUN 1 - 0 NED Landau, Salomon
Spielmann, Rudolf AUT ½ - ½ USA Fine, Reuben
Tartakower, Ksawery POL ½ - ½ AUT Grünfeld, Ernst
Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED ½ - ½ GER Bogoljubow, Efim
1.-3. Fine, Euwe, Bogoljubow — 1½; 4.-9. Tartakower, Keres, Maróczy, Grünfeld, Spielmann, Landau — 1; 10.-12. Van Doesburgh, Becker, Prins — ½;



3rd round — 20th July 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER ½ - ½ HUN Maróczy, Géza
Euwe, Machgielis NED ½ - ½ AUT Becker, Albert
Fine, Reuben USA 1 - 0 POL Tartakower, Ksawery
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ - ½ EST Keres, Paul
Landau, Salomon NED ½ - ½ AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Prins, Lodewijk NED 0 - 1 NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
1. Fine — 2½; 2.-3. Euwe, Bogoljubow — 2; 4.-9. Keres, Maróczy, Grünfeld, Spielmann, Landau, Van Doesburgh — 1½; 10.-11. Tartakower, Becker — 1; 12. Prins — ½;



4th round — 22nd July 1936
Becker, Albert AUT 1 - 0 NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
Euwe, Machgielis NED 1 - 0 AUT Grünfeld, Ernst
Keres, Paul EST 0 - 1 USA Fine, Reuben
Maróczy, Géza HUN ½ - ½ NED Prins, Lodewijk
Spielmann, Rudolf AUT 0 - 1 GER Bogoljubow, Efim
Tartakower, Ksawery POL 1 - 0 NED Landau, Salomon
1. Fine — 3½; 2.-3. Euwe, Bogoljubow — 3; 4.-6. Tartakower, Maróczy, Becker — 2; 7.-11. Keres, Grünfeld, Spielmann, Landau, Van Doesburgh — 1½; 12. Prins — 1;



5th round — 23rd July 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER ½ - ½ POL Tartakower, Ksawery
Fine, Reuben USA ½ - ½ NED Euwe, Machgielis
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ - ½ AUT Becker, Albert
Landau, Salomon NED 0 - 1 EST Keres, Paul
Prins, Lodewijk NED 0 - 1 AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED ½ - ½ HUN Maróczy, Géza
1. Fine — 4; 2.-3. Euwe, Bogoljubow — 3½; 4.-8. Tartakower, Keres, Maróczy, Spielmann, Becker — 2½; 9.-10. Grünfeld, Van Doesburgh — 2; 11. Landau — 1½; 12. Prins — 1;



6th round — 25th July 1936
Becker, Albert AUT 0 - 1 HUN Maróczy, Géza
Euwe, Machgielis NED ½ - ½ NED Landau, Salomon
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ - ½ USA Fine, Reuben
Keres, Paul EST 1 - 0 GER Bogoljubow, Efim
Spielmann, Rudolf AUT ½ - ½ NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
Tartakower, Ksawery POL 1 - 0 NED Prins, Lodewijk
1. Fine — 4½; 2. Euwe — 4; 3.-6. Tartakower, Keres, Bogoljubow, Maróczy — 3½; 7. Spielmann — 3; 8.-10. Grünfeld, Van Doesburgh, Becker — 2½; 11. Landau — 2; 12. Prins — 1;



7th round — 26th July 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER 1 - 0 NED Euwe, Machgielis
Fine, Reuben USA 1 - 0 AUT Becker, Albert
Landau, Salomon NED ½ - ½ AUT Grünfeld, Ernst
Maróczy, Géza HUN ½ - ½ AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Prins, Lodewijk NED 0 - 1 EST Keres, Paul
Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED ½ - ½ POL Tartakower, Ksawery
1. Fine — 5½; 2.-3. Keres, Bogoljubow — 4½; 4.-6. Euwe, Tartakower, Maróczy — 4; 7. Spielmann — 3½; 8.-9. Grünfeld, Van Doesburgh — 3; 10.-11. Landau, Becker — 2½; 12. Prins — 1;



8th round — 28th July 1936
Becker, Albert AUT ½ - ½ AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Euwe, Machgielis NED 1 - 0 NED Prins, Lodewijk
Fine, Reuben USA 1 - 0 NED Landau, Salomon
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT 1 - 0 GER Bogoljubow, Efim
Keres, Paul EST 1 - 0 NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
Tartakower, Ksawery POL ½ - ½ HUN Maróczy, Géza
1. Fine — 6½; 2. Keres — 5½; 3. Euwe — 5; 4.-6. Tartakower, Bogoljubow, Maróczy — 4½; 7.-8. Grünfeld, Spielmann — 4; 9.-10. Van Doesburgh, Becker — 3; 11. Landau — 2½; 12. Prins — 1;



9th round — 29th July 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER ½ - ½ USA Fine, Reuben
Landau, Salomon NED 1 - 0 AUT Becker, Albert
Maróczy, Géza HUN 1 - 0 EST Keres, Paul
Prins, Lodewijk NED ½ - ½ AUT Grünfeld, Ernst
Spielmann, Rudolf AUT ½ - ½ POL Tartakower, Ksawery
Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED 0 - 1 NED Euwe, Machgielis
1. Fine — 7; 2. Euwe — 6; 3.-4. Keres, Maróczy — 5½; 5.-6. Tartakower, Bogoljubow — 5; 7.-8. Grünfeld, Spielmann — 4½; 9. Landau — 3½; 10.-11. Van Doesburgh, Becker — 3; 12. Prins — 1½;



10th round — 30th July 1936
Becker, Albert AUT 0 - 1 POL Tartakower, Ksawery
Euwe, Machgielis NED 1 - 0 HUN Maróczy, Géza
Fine, Reuben USA 1 - 0 NED Prins, Lodewijk
Grünfeld, Ernst AUT ½ - ½ NED Van Doesburgh, Gerrit
Keres, Paul EST ½ - ½ AUT Spielmann, Rudolf
Landau, Salomon NED 1 - 0 GER Bogoljubow, Efim
1. Fine — 8; 2. Euwe — 7; 3.-4. Tartakower, Keres — 6; 5. Maróczy — 5½; 6.-8. Bogoljubow, Grünfeld, Spielmann — 5; 9. Landau — 4½; 10. Van Doesburgh — 3½; 11. Becker — 3; 12. Prins — 1½;



11th round — 1st August 1936
Bogoljubow, Efim GER 1 - 0 AUT Becker, Albert
Maróczy, Géza HUN ½ - ½ AUT Grünfeld, Ernst
Prins, Lodewijk NED 0 - 1 NED Landau, Salomon
Spielmann, Rudolf AUT ½ - ½ NED Euwe, Machgielis
Tartakower, Ksawery POL ½ - ½ EST Keres, Paul
Van Doesburgh, Gerrit NED ½ - ½ USA Fine, Reuben
1. Fine — 8½; 2. Euwe — 7½; 3.-4. Tartakower, Keres — 6½; 5.-6. Bogoljubow, Maróczy — 6; 7.-9. Grünfeld, Spielmann, Landau — 5½; 10. Van Doesburgh — 4; 11. Becker — 3; 12. Prins — 1½;








Information

Zandvoort international chess tournament
Dates: 18th July - 1st August 1936
City: Zandvoort (Netherlands)
Venue:
Organizers:
Chief Arbiter:
Players participating: 12
Games played: 66
Competition format: Round Robin
Tie-breaks: none
Time control: 36/2h
PGN game file: it-zandvoort1936.pgn






Tournament Review

In the summer of 1936, sandwiched between the tournaments at Moscow and Nottingham, an international tournament was organized in Zandvoort, The Netherlands from July 18th to August 1st.

Although World Champion Max Euwe was playing, the star turned out to be the 21 year old Reuben Fine who won the tournament undefeated. This win would be the first of many successes for Fine.

Fine was younger than his main rival Reshevsky and was considered by some to be even more promising. He had already chalked up a some good results: 2nd at Lodz 1935 behind Tartakower, a plus score on board one at the 1935 Warsaw Olympiad and first ahead of Flohr at Hastings 1935-36.

Tartakower had this to say about Fine: “Lately it has become clear that the best tournament players have been Reshevsky and Fine, both avoiding refined opening theory and exhibiting the triumph of common sense over flashes of ‘creativity’. The main subject of discussion in Zandvoort was determining the style of Fine, whose wins are somehow unnoticeable, while he saved his other games with numerous daring salto mortales. The experts were finally able to conclude that Fine's style is based on the lack of one.”

At the age of 19, Keres got a chance to prove himself in Zandvoort where he filled in for Botvinnik who had turned down his invitation. Three losses (Euwe, Fine and Maroczy) relegated him to third place.

The tournament was held at the Grand Hotel in the seaside resort town of Zandvoort and was the first important international tournament in Holland since 1928 when the amateur world championship was held in The Hague.

Euwe was rushed to the tournament by car after his last exam and was hoping to use this tournament to get in shape for the upcoming Nottingham tournament which was to start a few weeks later. Euwe wanted to play like a true world champion at Nottingham and so Zandvoort was important for him.

At the same time, Euwe didn’t want his supporters to gets their hopes up and told them. “I am a better match player than a tournament player. I am not pessimistic but not optimistic either. I believe it’s better to warn people whose expectations of me are too high.”

The tournament was opened by the mayor of Zandvoort and the press began asking questions about how Euwe had managed to defeat Alekhine and Bogoljubow stated that it was because of Euwe’s youth and greater tactical (!) talent. That was an odd statement because when it came to tactics, with a few exceptions, Euwe never surpassed Alekhine.

Fine assumed the lead early on and was never really challenged and was the only player to go through the schedule undefeated, though he had a close call in his game with Euwe.

When they met in round 5 Fine got into a horrible position, but Euwe slipped up and only drew. That left Fine a half point ahead which he increased to a full point in round 6 when Euwe made an horrific blunder against Bogoljubow and lost. After that Fine sailed to an undefeated first a full point ahead of Euwe.

Asked to explain his blunders against Fine and Bogoljubow, Euwe said, “Tiredness, nothing else.” He went on to state that people expected too much of him. Exams had just finished and he had no chance to prepare and he had no chance to recover from his “extraordinarily tiring time at school.” He also believed that though the tournament helped get back into his stride, it would have been wiser for him not to participate at Zandvoort, but that would have been too much of a disappointment to the organizers.

Some have considered that Max Euwe won the world championship by accident and that he was the weakest of all the world champions, but that is unfair. While Euwe may not have dominated his contemporaries, they didn't demonstrate any clear superiority over him, either. He had excellent results prior to defeating Alekhine in 1935 and when he lost the title in 1937 the match was actually quite close until very near the end.

The tournament featured some exciting and instructive games and many are worth looking at. One game, Keres vs. Euwe, featured a struggle around the advanced white P on e5 and Euwe’s attack on Keres’ King is well known and was included by Fine in his book The World’s Great Chess Games. Hans Kmoch also used it as an example of levers in Pawn Power In Chess.

/ taken from tartajubow.blogspot.com /