Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Géza Maróczy" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Maróczy and bind
An alternative fifth move for White is to play 5. Bd3 when after 5 ... Bc5 6. Nb3 and now Black can either retreat to Be7 where 7. Qg4 makes Black's kingside problematic or 6 ... Ba7, 5. c4 is also possible, with a Maróczy bind setup.
He did make a brief return to chess after World War I, with some success, and today the Maróczy bind ( see below ) bears his name.

Maróczy and is
The critical test of Black's move order is 5. c4, the Maróczy Bind.
Most common is 3 ... Bd7, when after 4. Bxd7 + Qxd7, White can either play 5. 0-0 followed by c3 and d4, or 5. c4 in the style of the Maróczy Bind.
) Concerning the relative strength of Maróczy and the best young masters of today, my opinion is that, with the exception of Botvinnik and Keres, Maróczy in his time was superior to all the other players of today.
The resulting pawn formation for White is sometimes called the Maróczy Bind, a way of cramping Black's position.
The first known game with the Budapest Gambit is Adler – Maróczy ( played in Budapest in 1896 ).
The Adler variation is named after the game Adler – Maróczy, played at the 1896 Budapest tournament.

Maróczy and formation
?, the Prins Variation, which tries to maintain the option of c4 with a Maróczy Bind formation

Maróczy and White
White can prevent this by 5. Nb5 d6, when 6. c4 leads to a version of the Maróczy Bind favoured by Karpov.
Two drawbacks are that ( a ) the Closed Sicilian lines with an early Nge2 are not very challenging for Black, and ( b ) if Black plays 2 ... Nc6 3. Nge2 g6, 4. d4 reaches an Accelerated Dragon where White has lost the option of playing c4, the Maróczy Bind, often considered White's best line.
If White instead chooses to play an Open Sicilian with 2. e4 and 3. Nf3 or Nge2, followed by d4, the knight's placement on c3 prevents White from playing the Maróczy Bind with c4.

Maróczy and against
Pillsbury also had an even score against Steinitz (+ 5 − 5 = 3 ), but a slight minus against Chigorin (+ 7 − 8 = 6 ), Tarrasch (+ 5 − 6 = 2 ) and against Joseph Henry Blackburne (+ 3 − 5 = 4 ), while he beat David Janowski (+ 6 − 4 = 2 ) and Géza Maróczy (+ 4 − 3 = 7 ) and had a significant edge over Carl Schlechter (+ 8 − 2 = 9 ).
However, he had minus scores against newer players such as Siegbert Tarrasch (+ 5 − 9 = 3 ), Frank Marshall (+ 28 − 34 = 18 ), Akiba Rubinstein (+ 3 − 5 ), Géza Maróczy (+ 5 − 10 = 5 ) and Carl Schlechter (+ 13 − 20 = 13 ).
Maróczy had respectable lifetime scores against most of the top players of his day.
He had plus scores against Richard Teichmann (+ 6-2 = 6 ), David Janowski (+ 3-1 = 0 ), Carl Schlechter (+ 2-1 = 11 ) and Aron Nimzowitsch (+ 3-2 = 3 ), and level scores with Siegbert Tarrasch and Géza Maróczy.
" For example, Lasker scored much better against common opponents, e. g. vs. Chigorin, Tarrasch had + 2 over 34 games while Lasker scored + 7 in 21 ; vs. Akiba Rubinstein Tarrasch was-8 without a single win, while Lasker scored + 2-1 = 2 ; vs. David Janowski Tarrasch scored + 3 compared to Lasker's huge + 22 ; vs. Géza Maróczy, Tarrasch was + 1 over 16 games while Lasker scored + 4-0 = 1, vs. Richard Teichmann Tarrasch scored + 8-5 = 2, while Lasker beat him all four tournament games.
Teichmann's records against Emanuel Lasker and Capablanca were poor (+ 0-4 = 0 and + 0-2 = 1 ); however, he scored wins against all the other leading players of his day, e. g. Carl Schlechter (+ 4-2 = 21 ), Frank Marshall (+ 7-7 = 17 ), Aron Nimzowitsch (+ 1-1 = 5 ), Siegbert Tarrasch (+ 5-7 = 2 ), Akiba Rubinstein (+ 5-6 = 11 ), Géza Maróczy (+ 1-2 = 12 ) and David Janowski (+ 4-5 = 4 ).

Maróczy and some
Hungarian grandmaster Géza Maróczy also played some games with Capablanca ( who got the better of him ).

Maróczy and Sicilian
Topalov-Kasimdzhanov looked for a while like it would be more interesting: Kasimdzhanov played the Kan Sicilian ( 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 ), and Topalov opted for a Maróczy Bind-type structure with 5. c4.

Maróczy and .
* Players still living who, though past their best in 1950, were recognised as having been world class when at their peak: Ossip Bernstein, Oldřich Duras, Ernst Grünfeld, Borislav Kostić, Grigory Levenfish, Géza Maróczy, Jacques Mieses, Viacheslav Ragozin, Akiba Rubinstein, Friedrich Sämisch, Savielly Tartakower, and Milan Vidmar.
Perhaps its most famous use came in the game Tartakower versus Maróczy, New York City 1924.
He shared third place with Botvinnik at Budapest ( The Maróczy Memorial ) in 1952, after Keres and Geller.
These included the minor tournament at the great Hastings 1895 tournament, where he finished equal second, behind Géza Maróczy, and was awarded the Newnes Cup for the best result by a British amateur.
Géza Maróczy (; 3 March 1870 – 29 May 1951 ) was a leading Hungarian chess Grandmaster, one of the best players in the world in his time.
Géza Maróczy was born in Szeged, Hungary on March 3, 1870.
After 1908, Maróczy retired from international chess to devote more time to his profession as a clerk.

bind and is
Of course, the AEC is in a bind now.
The connection with Latin ligare, " to bind ," is erroneous.
Wheat's adaptation to allow aluminium tolerance is such that the aluminium induces a release of organic compounds that bind to the harmful aluminium cations.
If an antibody is developed to stabilize a molecule that's similar to an unstable intermediate of another ( potentially unrelated ) reaction, the developed antibody will enzymatically bind to and stabilize the intermediate state, thus catalyzing the reaction.
There is a sophisticated security system with highly sensitive motion detectors, remote cameras, and the latest in card readers and key pad security locks bind the campus.
Each tip of the " Y " of an antibody contains a paratope ( a structure analogous to a lock ) that is specific for one particular epitope ( similarly analogous to a key ) on an antigen, allowing these two structures to bind together with precision.
Once cytochrome c is released it binds with Apoptotic protease activating factor-1 ( Apaf-1 ) and ATP, which then bind to pro-caspase-9 to create a protein complex known as an apoptosome.
Alexander advances the idea that it is would not be God ’ s fault to create a being that would bind the ‘ corrupt ’ with the ‘ clean ’.
The Bluetooth logo is a bind rune merging the Younger Futhark runes 8px ( Hagall ) ( ᚼ ) and 8px ( Bjarkan ) ( ᛒ ), Harald's initials.
One property many proteins have is that they specifically bind to a certain molecule or class of molecules — they may be extremely selective in what they bind.
Calcitonin is produced by parafollicular cells in the thyroid gland, and can bind to receptors on osteoclasts to directly inhibit osteoclast activity.
Osteoprotegerin is secreted by osteoblasts and is able to bind RANK-L, inhibiting osteoclast stimulation.
Ossetic bættən " bind ", bast " bound ") and Iranian * arna-" offspring ", equating it with the δουλόσποροι " slave Sporoi " mentioned by Nonnus and Cosmas, where Sporoi is the people Procopius mentions as the ancestors of the Slavs.
If the mutated sequence is present in the patient's genome, the probe will bind to it and flag the mutation.
In the most general sense of the word, a cement is a binder, a substance that sets and hardens independently, and can bind other materials together.
It is this deprotonation that allows the serine side chain to act as a nucleophile and bind to the electron-deficient carbonyl carbon of the protein main chain.
Once inside the cell, the disulfide bond is reduced, and the A1 subunit is freed to bind with a human partner protein called ADP-ribosylation factor 6 ( Arf6 ).
For example, if a vacancy encounters an impurity, the two may bind together if the impurity is too large for the lattice.
Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with underlying bedrock.
The roots of the plants bind the soil together, and interweave with other roots, forming a more solid mass that is less susceptible to both water and wind erosion.
* Phagocytosis is the process by which cells bind and internalize particulate matter larger than around 0. 75 µm in diameter, such as small-sized dust particles, cell debris, micro-organisms and even apoptotic cells, which only occurs in specialized cells.
Ligands may also bind elsewhere, however, as is the case for bulkier ligands ( e. g., proteins or large peptides ), which instead interact with the extracellular loops, or, as illustrated by the class C metabotropic glutamate receptors ( mGluRs ), the N-terminal tail.

0.479 seconds.