
Chess: Remembering Robert Byrne (1928-2013)
Robert Byrne and his brother Donald belonged to a circle of New York players
around Jack Collins, who was the mentor of talented Americans that included
William Lombardy and Bobby Fischer. Both Byrne brothers became university
professors and didn't have a lot of time for chess. Robert decided to become
a professional player rather late - in his forties, when most of today's
top players think about retirement.
I witnessed his transition from teaching philosophy at the Indiana University
to professional chess. I saw his craft during his best years in the 1970s,
playing against him in the U.S. championships and international tournaments
and playing next to him in four Olympiads.

Robert Byrne was at the helm when the U.S.
team won the gold medal at the
1976 Haifa chess Olympiad. From the left: Larry Evans, Kavalek, R. Byrne
Our paths crossed frequently during that decade. In 1972 we shared first
place at the U.S. Championship together with Samuel Reshevsky before the
Fischer chess wave overwhelmed America and the world. We went to Reykjavik
to witness and report on the historical match Spassky-Fischer. Robert covered
it for the Chess Life and Review, at the same time preparing his
book Both sides of the Chessboard, co-authored with the Estonian
grandmaster Ivo Nei. From Reykjavik we traveled to Skopje for the chess
Olympiad.
October 10, 1972 was a memorable day for Robert Byrne. It changed his life
significantly. The New York Times appointed him as chess columnist and he
wrote his first weekly column from Skopje about my victory against Florin
Gheorghiu of Rumania. For the next 34 years, many chess readers enjoyed
his excellent analysis, vivid storytelling and thoughtful essays on the
game.
His most successful year was 1973. Byrne won the U.S. championship playoff
in Chicago and went on to finish third at the Leningrad Interzonal behind
Viktor Korchnoi and Anatoly Karpov, qualifying for the Candidates match
against Boris Spassky. He asked me to help him prepare for the match and
be his analyst of the adjourned games, but Spassky played too well in San
Juan in January 1974. In the next Interzonal in Biel in 1976, Byrne missed
the qualifying spot by a half point.
Robert and I played international tournaments together in Europe in the
late 1960s and became friends, exchanging letters before I came to the United
States in 1970. We analyzed openings and shared other chess secrets. He
was a deep thinker, inventing his own variations and lines in different
openings. He derived pleasure from original moves he prepared and injected
into his games.
He introduced me to America and its chess life. "Nothing here is close,"
he said when he drove me from Indianapolis to Chicago for my first open
tournament. By the end of the journey I knew far more about my new adopted
country than I could have imagined. He was a wonderful storyteller with
a great sense of humor, but he seemed to be teaching all the time, explaining
with patience the smallest details. He talked slowly, deliberately, weighing
every sentence. He was as methodical in his talk as he was in his play and
analysis. A heavy smoker, he treated his cigarettes with elegance. It was
the only way to know that he might be nervous. He looked calm during the
games, but behind those eyeglasses was a fierce competitor. He was a great
asset to U.S. Olympiad teams: poised and composed all the time, he brought
stability and confidence to the team.

Byrne was traveling to major chess events with his big typewriter. He transmitted
his articles to the New York Times by plugging his phone into it. In 1981
in Merano (photo above) we covered the world championship match Karpov-Korchnoi.
Those days, a plain small notebook, typewriter and phone was all you had.
Analysis had to come from your head. It was still the case when I began
writing for the Washington Post in 1986.
Byrne was a positional player and valued sound pawn structures. He was
also a stubborn defender, mastering Nimzowitsch's prophylaxis: anticipating
opponent's attacks ahead of time. But he sharpened his style, shed off the
Closed openings and in the 1970s became a dangerous king-pawn player. He
had an all-around understanding of the game, evident in his writing. Here's
what he said about combinations:
"The hardest facet of chess to grasp, not only for the beginner
but also for the master, is combinations. Unlike strategy, which is describable
in terms of abstract principles, combinations do not generally appear
in repeatable patterns.
It is quite true that developing an eye for combinations is as much
a visual matter as learning the moves of the pieces. Combinations are
complex sequences of elementary tactics, often branching out in many directions.
Because they are so concrete, so germane to the specific positions in
which they occur, they must be learned by example."
At the 1965 U.S. Championship, shortly after he became a grandmaster, Robert
Byrne created the following incredible combination.
Replay and check the LiveBook here |
Please, wait...
15.Bf6! gxf6 15...Nxf6 16.exf6 Rd8 16.Qh6 Qxe5 17.Nf5! exf5 18.Ne4! Bd2 18...fxe4 19.Rh3 18...Qxe4 19.Rg3+ Qg4 20.Rxg4+ fxg4 21.Bd3 19.Nxd2+- Qd4+ 19...Re8 20.Rg3++- 20.Kh1 Ne5 21.Rg3+ Ng4 22.h3 22.Bd3 Nc6 23.Nf3 Qb4 24.h3 Kh8 25.Rxg4+- 22...Qe5 23.Rf4! Qe1+ 24.Nf1 Qxg3 25.Rxg4+! Qxg4 26.hxg4 Nd7 27.Ng3 Kh8 28.Bd3 28.Nh5 Rg8 29.Bxf7 Rxg4 30.Nf4 Rxf4 31.Bg6 28...Rg8 29.Bxf5 Rg6 30.Bxg6 fxg6 31.Ne4 b5 32.g5! Bb7 33.Nxf6 33.gxf6 Rg8 34.Ng5 Nxf6 35.Nf7# 33...Nf8 34.Qh2! Bc8 34...Rd8 35.Qe5 35.Qe5 Ne6 36.Nd7+ 36.Nd7+ Ng7 37.Nb6 Ra7 38.Qd6! 1–0
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Byrne,R | - | Evans,L | - | 1–0 | 1965 | | USA-ch | 11 |
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