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      Home  >  General News • Major Tournaments  >  Victory through cumulative effect

      Victory through cumulative effect

      Aronian, Boris Gulko, NY Sun, Van Wely


      Flights of Imagination

      Chess
      By BORIS GULKO and GABRIEL SCHOENFELD
      February 29, 2008


      William Steinitz, the first world chess champion, was the great expositor of positional play, the idea that the steady acquisition of small and subtle advantages would lead to victory from their cumulative effect.

      As influential as this school of thought has been over the 20th century, an alternative strategy has continued to flourish. It consists of striving to create an irrational position on the board and then employing superior imagination and calculation to triumph over one’s opponent.

      The winner of the Corus tournament in Wijk aan Zee, Levon Aronian, is an exponent of the latter style. His final-round encounter with Loek Van Wely, the decisive game in the event, is a spectacular illustration of the imaginative approach in action.

      ARONIAN VS. VAN WELY
      (White) (Black) Slav Defense

      Click here to see the full analysis.

      Posted by Picasa
      Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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      1 Comment

      1. Anonymous Reply
        February 29, 2008 at 5:05 pm

        Steinitz is the greatest German WC ever.

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