Rook endgames’ drawish tendency
The mystery surrounding the 1962 Curacao Candidates Tournament had a lot to do with the suspicion raised by Bobby Fischer regarding a possible collusion by the Soviet players — Fischer even wrote an article for Sports Illustrated titled “The Russians Have Fixed World Chess”. But did this already start in the first round, when Tal surprisingly lost to Petrosian? Maybe we’ll never know.
Nonetheless, the adjourned position of the game Petrosian vs Tal seems to be drawish because rook endings are often drawish. Since 1962 the endgame has been extensively analysed, however, it still contains a lot of open questions and mysteries.
Rook endings indeed have a very large drawish tendency and this is no exception. As it was the first step on Petrosian's road to the World Championship title, chess history might be different had Tal used one of his chances. Zoran Petronijevic and Charles Sullivan again invested a lot of work to reach new results on this famous classic.
Even this seemingly simple-looking rook ending is very deep. And Tal could surprisingly have saved himself as late as move 54.
Again Zoran Petronijevic has burned a lot of midnight oil and reached the following conclusions:
Adjourned position is even.
- The move 42....h5 was criticized by Averbakh (Timman did not criticize it because he thought that Black is already lost). In fact, it isn't a mistake at all: the position is even. We should mention that the passive 42...Rb7 also leads to draw.
- Black’s 43...Rb7? is a mistake, after which the position is lost. The astonishing 43...Kg6!! leads to an even position.
- Very interesting is 45...Ra2 with a cunning idea — Ra8. However, after cautious play White should win.
- According to Timman, after 47...Rg5 “the rest is simple”. In fact, drama followed later. 50.h5? is a clear mistake by Petrosian, after which the position is even.
- Black’s 52...Kh7? is a mistake after which Black is lost.
- Petrosian did not exploit Tal’s mistake and after another mistake — 53.Re8? — he gave Tal one more chance to make a draw.
- The decisive mistake in this game was 54...Kh6?, after which the position is lost.
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On this DVD Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Oliver Reeh and Karsten Müller present the 8. World Chess Champion in video lessons: his openings, his understanding of chess strategy, his artful endgame play, and finally his immortal combinations.
In our replay board above there are a large number of functions you can use to really understand the game and the analysis. Recently we published a comprehensive tutorial plus video instructions which tells you about all the powerful features and buttons that make the ChessBase's replay one of the best replay experiences around.
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