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Lubomir Kavalek
Number of games in database: 700
Years covered: 1959 to 1998
Current FIDE rating: 2527
Highest rating achieved in database: 2600
Overall record: +167 -129 =403 (52.7%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      1 exhibition game, blitz game, etc. is excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (67) 
    B42 B96 B83 B80 B47
 Ruy Lopez (62) 
    C95 C93 C72 C67 C81
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (38) 
    C95 C93 C92 C97 C98
 Caro-Kann (24) 
    B17 B14 B19 B15 B18
 King's Indian (22) 
    E90 E69 E60 E76 E68
 Pirc (19) 
    B08 B07 B09
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (76) 
    B93 B83 B90 B43 B98
 King's Indian (62) 
    E92 E62 E90 E97 E98
 Sicilian Najdorf (28) 
    B93 B90 B98 B92 B96
 Ruy Lopez (20) 
    C95 C87 C69 C93 C65
 English (17) 
    A15 A10 A16
 English, 1 c4 e5 (15) 
    A22 A29 A21 A23 A26
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Gufeld vs Kavalek, 1962 0-1
   Kavalek vs E Formanek, 1970 1-0
   Kavalek vs Matulovic, 1966 1-0
   Gheorghiu vs Kavalek, 1969 0-1
   Portisch vs Kavalek, 1975 1/2-1/2
   Kavalek vs W Pietzsch, 1967 1-0
   Sosonko vs Kavalek, 1979 0-1
   Kavalek vs Fischer, 1967 1/2-1/2

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Wijk aan Zee 1977 by EmperorAtahualpa

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LUBOMIR KAVALEK
(born Aug-09-1943) Czech Republic (citizen of United States of America)

[what is this?]
Lubomir Kavalek was born on the 9th of August 1943 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. He was awarded both the IM and GM titles in 1965. He's been Czech Champion in 1962 and 1968, was joint US Champion in 1973 and West German Champion in 1981. More recently he helped Nigel Short in his World title bid in 1993 against Garry Kasparov.

He currently writes a chess column for the Washington Post, which can be read here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...


 page 1 of 28; games 1-25 of 700  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. Kavalek vs J Rejfir  ½-½40 1959 Cerveny KostelecB41 Sicilian, Kan
2. J Marsalek vs Kavalek  1-057 1959 Cerveny KostelecA45 Queen's Pawn Game
3. F Blatny vs Kavalek  1-029 1959 Cerveny KostelecB26 Sicilian, Closed, 6.Be3
4. Kavalek vs J Rejfir  ½-½18 1961 CSR-chB14 Caro-Kann, Panov-Botvinnik Attack
5. J Marsalek vs Kavalek  ½-½16 1961 CSR-chD01 Richter-Veresov Attack
6. Kavalek vs Ujtelky  0-123 1961 CSR-chA42 Modern Defense, Averbakh System
7. M Altschul vs Kavalek  1-034 1961 KosiceB93 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4
8. Kavalek vs Filip  ½-½25 1961 CSR-chC67 Ruy Lopez
9. J Vesely vs Kavalek  1-050 1961 CSR-chA70 Benoni, Classical with 7.Nf3
10. Kavalek vs Jansa  1-037 1962 CZEB71 Sicilian, Dragon, Levenfish Variation
11. Kavalek vs J Kozma  ½-½43 1962 CSR-chB48 Sicilian, Taimanov Variation
12. Plachetka vs Kavalek  ½-½50 1962 CSR-chB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
13. Kavalek vs F Blatny  1-034 1962 CSR-chA00 Uncommon Opening
14. Gufeld vs Kavalek 0-132 1962 Student Olympiad, Marianske LazneC64 Ruy Lopez, Classical
15. J Vesely vs Kavalek  ½-½24 1962 CSR-chB06 Robatsch
16. Kavalek vs J Marsalek  1-047 1962 CSR-chE69 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line
17. M Pavlov vs Kavalek  1-040 1963 HalleB94 Sicilian, Najdorf
18. Doda vs Kavalek  1-062 1963 HalleA09 Reti Opening
19. Kavalek vs F Blatny  1-034 1963 CSR-chC84 Ruy Lopez, Closed
20. Kavalek vs S Johannessen  0-140 1963 HalleC70 Ruy Lopez
21. Kavalek vs H Westerinen  ½-½42 1963 HalleE68 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4
22. Ujtelky vs Kavalek  0-145 1963 CSR-chE67 King's Indian, Fianchetto
23. Uhlmann vs Kavalek 0-132 1963 HalleA68 Benoni, Four Pawns Attack
24. Minev vs Kavalek  1-026 1963 HalleA31 English, Symmetrical, Benoni Formation
25. Kavalek vs Portisch  ½-½21 1963 HalleB41 Sicilian, Kan
 page 1 of 28; games 1-25 of 700  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Kavalek wins | Kavalek loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 2 ·  Later Kibitzing >
Jun-07-04   WMD: When Short changed his mind and decided to make himself available for the English team for the 1994 Olympiad in Moscow (after the PCA, in the guise of Kasparov, stepped in to bail out FIDE), one of his conditions was the removal of Murray Chandler as the team captain:

"My objections to Chandler were simple: over the past several months he, in his capacity as Editor of the British Chess Magazine, has published and continues to publish articles which are not only damaging to me professionally but are untrue and abusive. I refer specifically to the so-called Kavalek Files although these were by no means the only biased and profoundly unfair articles on me to have appeared in his magazine. This point was readily conceded by three of the four selectors (Michael Adams, Bob Wade and Simon Brown. I did not speak to Nunn) in telephone conversations to me. Even Chandler himself, also in a telephone conversation to me, admitted the Kavalek Files were "unethical" although he was unable to acknowledge that the publishing of them was equally so. It is difficult to see how I could trust or have confidence in the integrity of such a person as captain." (Chess, November 1994)

Oct-11-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: Has Kavalek ever published or spoken about how his "training match' with Fischer prior to Bobby's match in '72 went? Also I have read (don't recall now where) that Kavalek actually replaced Lombardy as Bobby's helper or maybe second, for most of the latter games in that first Spassky match in '72? Kavalek would really be entitled to write about Bobby and give his version of happenings if this were all true.
Oct-11-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  iron maiden: Training match with Fischer? I never heard of any such thing, though I did read that there were rumors (from unreliable sources) that Spassky and Karpov played a training match prior to the WC in Iceland.
Oct-12-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: <iron maiden> Yes....it's in one of my many chess books...I just have to find it again...I think I know where I read about it...and when I do will give you the info....in fact this statement about their training match in this book is the only reference I have ever found.
Oct-12-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: In Brad Darrasch's Bobby Fischer v. the Rest of the World it's reported that Fischer wound up working more with Kavelek than Lombardy. No idea if it is true. I read somewhere (maybe Darrasch again?) that Karpov, when he came to the US in 1972 for the San Antonio tournament, confirmed that he had played a training match with Spassky and added "I didn't lose." Given his subsequent record against Spassky, I can well believe it.
Oct-12-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: <iron maiden> <keypusher> Allright the quote is in Gufeld's book "Bobby Fischer from chess genius to Legend" page 82. After Karpov had beaten Korchnoi in the candidates Finals from 1974...."Bobby played a private training match with GM L. Kavalek, which was soon joined by IM Bernard Zuckerman."....I apologize for thinking it was in preparation for Spassky in 1972.
Oct-12-04   WMD: <I read somewhere (maybe Darrasch again?) that Karpov, when he came to the US in 1972 for the San Antonio tournament, confirmed that he had played a training match with Spassky and added "I didn't lose." Given his subsequent record against Spassky, I can well believe it.>

This is contradicted by what Karpov wrote in his autobiography, Karpov on Karpov (and quoted in Russians vs Fischer):

"Then suddenly - imagine - I received an invitation to attend the Spassky training session... This was an honour. True, my star too was rising swiftly, my name already carried considerable weight, and I had received my share of support. But all this was new to me, and the backstage preparations for a world title match seemed to me something like a secret altar. To be there, to peer into this holy of holies was something I could not have imagined a mere year earlier... And so I went to the Spassky session.

"Of course I was not allowed anywhere near the holy of holies. I was considered a chance person and potentially dangerous. Therefore I was only occasionally invited to take part in some trite and non-essential analysis of one of Fischer's games.

"I was amazed to see Spassky doing nothing.

"Usually the morning would begin with him enthusiastically recounting, over breakfast, another episeode from the Greek myths, which he loved dearly and read before going to bed. Then there would be tennis. Then something else. Anything except chess. At the time he was expounding the 'theory' of a clear head. With a clear head and refreshed, he would, with his talent, outplay anyone. This theory had been invented by his coach Bondarevsky so as somehow to justify the World Champion's pathological laziness. Although I too consider myself lazy, Spassky's laziness astonished me. I was certainly not impressed by the fact that he had been able to win his match with Petrosian after such 'preparation.' With all due credit to Petrosian, I felt even then that the experience of the match with him could not be simply extrapolated to the coming match with Fischer. These were not just different people; Fischer symbolized the coming of an entirely new type of chess. Was this not obvious?...

"Toward the end of the training session, Spassky - wishing to test his form - decided to play a few games with me. In the first he asked me to open with the Ruy Lopez. I had the white pieces and soon obtained a won position, but - overplayed my hand and lost. Spassky liked the game. He decided that he was in excellent form and that there was no point in continuing the test. My participation in that last training session before the match was practically confined to that one game."

Oct-12-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: Thanks, <WMD>, for the correction. I had never heard that story. Very interesting about Spassky!
Oct-13-04
Premium Chessgames Member
  cu8sfan: I recently read "Bobby Fischer Goes to War" and that's what they say, too, that Spassky was lazy and didn't work very hard on his preparation. Maybe if he would have Fischer might never have become World Champion.
Feb-18-05   Albertan: GM Kavalek writes a column for the Washington Post which you can read at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...

Feb-18-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Appaz: Why not put such links to chess columns in the biography <cg.com> ?
Apr-09-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Caissanist: Nice story about how Kavalek made it to the west, from TWIC. Looks like he calculated all the variations correctly and made the right move. http://www.chesscenter.com/twic/eve...
Apr-30-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Here is one of my favourite games of his: Portisch vs Kavalek, 1975
Apr-30-05   ChessHistorian: What does he do now?
Apr-30-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Caissanist: I was actually reminded of that exact game when I read the story of how he made it to the west. In both cases he faced what seemed to be a hopeless position against a very strong but rather unimaginative adversary, and so decided to do something "crazy" that his opponent could not possibly have planned for.

To me, it takes the same kind of mind to sacrifice a queen for a bishop out of the opening as it does to spend all your tournament winnings on vodka (to use for bribes). Or, more to the point, to do it successfully.

Jun-18-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Where is my mind: Does Lubomir Kavalek still write his chess column @ washingtonpost.com? The last one was posted april 18.
Jun-19-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: Kavaek always seems to me to be fully American; I keep forgetting that he was born in Prague. Does he now have an American accent?
Jul-25-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Caissanist: His column's still there, and the archive at www.washingtonpost.com shows columns throughout the year. If you have it bookmarked you might want to update your bookmarks; the link that I have is http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy....
Sep-25-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Where is my mind: Thanks for the link <Caissanist>.I needed to update the bookmark.
Dec-10-05   WTHarvey: Here is a little collection of puzzles from Lubomir's games not shown here: http://www.wtharvey.com/kava.html
May-04-06   BIDMONFA: Lubomir Kavalek

KAVALEK, Lubomir
http://www.bidmonfa.com/kavalek_lub...
_

Aug-20-06   Kenkaku: "Players Bobby's age, like myself, are a lost generation. We always lived in the shadow of Bobby. We had him as an idol. He was someone to follow. When he stopped playing, I somehow got lost. We lost our inspiration. The last decade belonged to me in the United States. I was always ahead in ratings; but I can't say I was first because, in the back of my mind, there was always Bobby. He was still alive. He is still alive." – Lubomir Kavalek
Oct-10-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  RookFile: Kind of echoes what Steinitz must have felt as long as Morphy lived.
Oct-10-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Honza Cervenka: <Does he now have an American accent?> No, he has no accent. He speaks Czech perfectly and the only accent he has is the Prague one.:-)

Btw, only tennis players like Lendl or Navratilova and top-models are getting it (quite quickly, I would say.)

Oct-10-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <Kind of echoes what Steinitz must have felt as long as Morphy lived.>

Ha!

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