Revenge That Came Too Easy | Capablanca vs Riumin | Moscow 1936.

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Following the successes in international tournaments of Moscow (1925) and Moscow (1935), Nikolai Vasilyevich Krylenko again sought to stun the chess world and the Soviet Union with a third international event between Soviet masters and their foreign counterparts. This time, however, he conceived of a more rigorous format, with the ten players (five Soviets and five foreigners) in a double round robin competition. The lineup was impressive, with Capablanca and Lasker being invited back a third time to compete in Moscow, in addition to the previous year’s winners, Botvinnik and Flohr. The tournament was held in Moscow’s famous Hall of Columns from May 14 to June 8. Capablanca’s near flawless accuracy and superiority in the endgame proved to be instrumental in winning first prize by a full point over the future world champion Botvinnik. Lasker, who had always finished ahead of his successor to the crown in prior tournaments, started out strongly, but at 67 years of age he became fatigued more easily and his performance suffered during the second cycle. The tournament brought immense excitement and interest, both to the citizens of the Soviet Union and to the greater world at large. Capablanca’s first place was to be one of the last successes against the Soviet Chess School before the triumph of Robert James Fischer 36 years later. It was also the last hurrah for Krylenko, the founder and organizer of the tournament. He was arrested in January 1938, tried and executed later that year.

Jose Raul Capablanca vs Nikolai Nikolaevich Riumin
Moscow (1936), Moscow URS, rd 3, May-16
Old Indian Defense: General (A53)

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 d6 3. Nc3 Nbd7 4. e4 e5 5. d5 Nc5 6. f3 Be7 7. Be3 O-O 8. b4 Ncd7 9. Bd3 Ne8 10. Nge2 g6 11. O-O a5 12. a3 Ng7 13. Bh6 f6 14. Qb3 Kh8 15. Rac1 ab4 16. ab4 c5 17. Na4 cb4 18. Qb4 f5 19. ef5 gf5 20. Ng3 Bg5 21. Bg5 Qg5 22. Rce1 Qh4 23. Rf2 Qd4 24. Bf1 Rf6 25. Nc3 Rh6 26. Nge2 Nc5 27. Nd4

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