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The Hague Olympiad 1928

The Hague Olympiad 1928

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The Hague Olympiad 1928

by Gillam, Anthony "Tony" J (editor)

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  • Paperback
  • first
Condition
Very Good to fine
ISBN 10
1901034097
ISBN 13
9781901034097
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About This Item

79 pages with tables, diagrams and index. Octavo (8 1/4" x 5 3/4") bound in original publisher's yellow wrappers. Translated by A J Swift. Rare and Unpublished Tournaments and Matches number 30. First edition. The Hague event was held concurrently with the Games of the 9th Summer Olympiad. As FIDE congress in 1927 bowed under the tension of British delegates and decided to allow only amateurs to take part most world top players ignored the competition, weakening its strength and prestige. Same as in 1924 there was an individual competition, called the Amateur World Championship, and team tourney, this time held as a separate event. Unlike in 1924 both events were split and no results from individual tournament counted for overall team score. Each team was allowed to put one representative in the A.W.Ch. and anyone but Belgium and Denmark did that. Most teams lent their top players in the event but it was not a rule. Steiner, Euwe and Matisons were considered the favourites and Carls, Treybal and Przepiórka had decent chances as well. The tournament brought many sensational results. Euwe was in clear lead in halfway stage scoring incredible 7½/8. Treybal was in runner-up place a full point behind the leader. Matisons, Carls and surprisingly Golmayo had 5½ points each. Steiner lost his first 6 games and played awkward role of the red lantern with a pathetic 1/8. But it was no one else than the Polish master Przepiórka who turned the highest gear on and beat Euwe in round 10. The latter, suffering small crisis failed to win a single game until round 12. After 11 rounds the young Dutchman was still in the lead, but the margin diminished: Euwe 8½, Przepiórka and Carls 8, Matisons 7½, Golmayo 7. Treybal lost two games in a row and dropped out the the leading group forever. In round 12 Euwe beat Matisons in a good style and found himself on a clear way to a win. Przepiórka continued his impressive rally and easily took second place a full point ahead of Matisons who finished third thus failing to defend his title of the "World Amateur Champion" won in Paris, 1924. Famous Norman Whitaker, US player, a master-class chess player and a grandmaster-class embezzler who spent most of his life in prison won four last games and the final spurt let him climb up to the 4th place shared with Golmayo, the Spaniard and Treybal from Czechoslovakia. Carls' poor finish threw him down to 7th place. Steiner recovered a bit but his 12th place was still a joke. W. Henneberger for Switzerland started with decent 2½/4 but then lost virtually all the games and came last way back the rest. Unfortunately the team event was not that much interesting because of bizarre regulations on amateur status. Few well-know players took part. Kasdan, Ståhlberg or Petrovs were long before their prime at that time. Maróczy was absent but still the Hungarians were the favorites. Olympic newbies, USA and Poland seemed strong enough too. The Czechs started well and were in the lead for a couple of days. Denmark, who lacked a reserve player again kept the pace despite a 1-3 loss vs Czechoslovakia. Poland were down the middle of the pack as they lost three matches on a row to Austria, Hungary and surprisingly Switzerland. USA were not very aggressive at the start though they managed to beat Hungary in round 2. The titleholders faced the leaders in round 7 being 3 points behind the Czechs. The Hungarians won the match but with nearest of margins. Poland made up for lost ground and easily beat USA winning on top three boards. Denmark lost many points in favour of Romania and Holland. Round 10 was decisive as the Hungarians demolished the Dutchmen giving away a single draw and the Czechoslovaks sensationally lost 1-3 to the pallid Germans, who deprived of their top players like Tarrasch and Mieses were struggling in penultimate place. The Hungarians had very easy finish and won convincingly. A few firm wins pulled them way ahead the rest. Same might be told about USA and Poland, who indeed easily took the lead of the chasing group. Denmark, Czechoslovakia and Austria, on the contrary, were yet to face couple of strong teams. Czechoslovakia lost 1-3 both to Latvia and Poland and were leveled by the latter yet three round before the end. Switzerland unexpectedly appeared in the leading group but they were yet to get a bye in the last round. The Swiss however beat Hungary in the penultimate round while the Americans bruised brave Danes and secured themselves the runner-up position. Austria and Poland were in shared 3rd place. Since Poland were able to defeat Romania and Austria only drew with the Germans it was Poland who took the bronze medals. Czechoslovakia, Switzerland and Denmark stayed in joint 5th place long way behind the top four.

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Details

Bookseller
The Book Collector ABAA, ILAB, TBA US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
C1415
Title
The Hague Olympiad 1928
Author
Gillam, Anthony "Tony" J (editor)
Book Condition
Used - Very Good to fine
Quantity Available
1
Edition
First
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10
1901034097
ISBN 13
9781901034097
Publisher
The Chess Player
Place of Publication
Nottingham
Date Published
1998
Keywords
Chess, Ajedrez, Schach, Echecs
Size
Octavo

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Wrappers
The paper covering on the outside of a paperback. Also see the entry for pictorial wraps, color illustrated coverings for...
Poor
A book with significant wear and faults. A poor condition book is still a reading copy with the full text still readable. Any...
Octavo
Another of the terms referring to page or book size, octavo refers to a standard printer's sheet folded four times, producing...
First Edition
In book collecting, the first edition is the earliest published form of a book. A book may have more than one first edition in...

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