Talk:Emanuel Lasker

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[edit] Quotations emoved

I have removed the following from the "quotations" section:

- The game of chess... is not a game. It is a fierce mental struggle between two combatants. During the course of the game I am no longer Emanuel Lasker. I become... something else, entirely, that horrible "other" which, outside of the chess board, only shows himself in strange dreams and flights of fancy. The greatest chess player is that man who, in deliberating upon the best moves, lets himself be guided by the moon of his non-being.

I've not read everything Lasker ever wrote, but I am skeptical in part because the person who added the above also added some questionable "information" to the John Nunn article (see Talk:John Nunn). If somebody has a source, fine, but I'd be uncomfortable seeing it added back without one.

On a similar note, if anybody has a source for the quote about Go, it would certainly be good to include it (I don't really doubt Lasker said it somewhere - it certainly seems more likely than the above and I know he was interested in a range of games - but we should always give sources for these kind of things). While we're on the subject, does anybody have a page number for the Manual of Chess quote? Just for my own gratification... --Camembert 19:51, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)


I very much doubt that the game presented in this article can be considered one of the best ever! It is very interesting, but the combination is not very deep, and arguing that both bishops were sacrificed is excesive, given that the light bishop was rather exchanged for a knight and a pawn!


Regarding the double bishop sacrifice, a similar sacrifice occured in Burn-Owen, 1884 (http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1272117), so Lasker's was not the first.

You are true, but in this case the sacrifice was a fiasco; so Lasker was at least the first known person who used this type of combination with success.--Ioannes Pragensis 17:31, 15 June 2006 (UTC)

[edit] wtf --- life, childhood, etc??

was this article vandalized or did it just not occur to anyone to include any information about the life of Lasker (other than being made to leave Germany for being Jewish)??? early life? family background? when did he start playing, how? etc. kthx.

I agree with the commenter above. The article only briefly mentions Lasker's life outside of chess, even though Lasker was perhaps the world champion who was least interested in chess. The stages of his chess career are also quite interesting, and again barely addressed -- Lasker was like Fischer in that he repeatedly stopped playing for years at a time, then repeatedly came back and amazed the world with how strong he was. (Big differences, of course: Fischer cared only about chess, with Lasker chess took a back seat to everything else; Lasker kept coming out of retirement after financial/personal disaster stemming from (1) hyperinflation in Germany after WWI, later (2) financial ruin after being forced to leave Germany upon Hitler's rise.) Only a brief mention of Lasker's phenomenal win at New York 1924, taking first with 16-4 (80%!) in very strong tournament, 1.5 points ahead of the "great" Capablanca, who had dethroned him three years before, and Alekhine, who would become world champion three years hence. Nothing about Lasker's move to USSR in 1935, then move to US, death in Mt. Sinai Hospital in NYC a year after Capablanca died there. Amazing result at Moscow 1935 after years of inactivity, at age 67!!, also not addressed (1/2 point out of first, behind Botvinnik and Flohr; only undefeated player; ahead of Capablanca, whom he crushed. There is also a fascinating contrariety of views about Lasker, which the article says nothing about, although it cites Soltis, who does. E.g., Botvinnik said that Lasker was "of course" the greatest of the champions; Korchnoi calls Lasker "my chess hero"; Fischer called him a "coffeehouse player" and omitted him from his 1964 Chessworld list of the world's 10 best, but then according to Benko later admitted that he'd greatly misunderestimated Lasker (as Dubya would put it); Reti thought Lasker was a master psychologist who deliberately played bad moves; Tarrasch thought Lasker was just perpetually lucky; Euwe (who was +0 =0 -3 against Lasker) said that Lasker had founded no school -- how could he?; while Soltis himself said that Lasker was far ahead of his time and that "we're all his students." This article needs a lot of work. Krakatoa (talk) 03:41, 21 April 2008 (UTC)

I agree with most of Krakatoa's comments. Perhaps the Lasker articles needs a structure something like that that of Alexander Alekhine, i.e. chronological "periods" that contain both career and bio information. Then follow up with an "Assessment" section that can accommodate contemporary and recent comments as well as statistical assessments ('Warriors of the Mind', Chessmetrics).
Re playing strength in old age, a comparison with Korchnoi would be interesting - I think Chessmetrics actually has a page on the subject. And Steinitz was pretty good at age 60, see his Steintiz-von Bardleben (Hastings 1895).
The financial aspects particularly deserve more emphasis (cf. Alexander Alekhine), especially in the light of Lasker's determination to avoid Steinitz' fate.
A selection of representative games would be good - preferably games that feature in both player applets (e.g. chessgames.com) for instant play through and in books for annotations.
The idea that Lasker was perhaps the world champion who was least interested in chess would need refs. And Botvinnik would be very strong competition in that respect - arguably Botvinnik achieved more in electrical engineering than Lasker actually achieved in maths or philosophy.
I'd pitch in myself but I already have 4 projects on the go :-( Philcha (talk) 08:59, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Capablanca was also pretty uninterested in chess - but passionate about baseball (One Man’s Mind) Philcha (talk) 18:04, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Quote

  • "Chess is a game restricted to this world, Go has something extraterrestrial. If ever we find an extraterrestrial civilisation that plays a game that we also play, it will be Go, without any doubt."

was removed from this page by User:Sibahi, who said that "I believe the omitted quotation is by Edward Lasker, not Emanuel". A Google search turns up a handful of pages and nothing definitive, but also attributes it to Albert Einstein, which indicates it predates Edward Lasker, and there's at least one page (apparently independent of Wikipedia) that attributes it to Emanuel.--Prosfilaes 13:14, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Players owning their games

I've got refs for Em. Lasker's arguments that players should own their games. I remember seeing a Web page that said it was a condition of entry for Hastings 1895 that the players collectively owned the copyright in the games, and would like to quote this as a precedent for Lasker's arguments - but of course I can't find it now!! Can anyone help? Philcha (talk) 11:24, 31 May 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Math lecturer

I have math-oriented sources for 1901 and 1903. Reshevsky wrote, "He was a respected professor of mathematics at Heidelberg University in Germany for many years. Lasker was determined not to devote all of his time to chess."[1] Can we find corroboration and dates? - this is the kind of subject on which GMs often retail urban myths. Philcha (talk) 13:23, 31 May 2008 (UTC)

There is no doubt that he did mathematical research of encyclopaedic interest. (Primary decomposition, both of ideals and of modules, is a well-known part of the 20'th century approach to commutative algebra; it is what mathematicians loosely often calls "central to the field". I'm not able to judge the importance of his contribution to game theory, since, I have not accessed it.) I have not been able to find further information about his academic career, however. He is not listed on de:Liste berühmter Persönlichkeiten der Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg; which of course does not prove that he wasn't a "professor" (in the American sense) there. If he had been a "Professor" in the German sense, then there should be some mention of his Habilitation, somewhere, I think. A disadvantage is that the authors of the various encyclopaediae articles were much more interested in his chess career, and thus may have omitted or been ignorant of much else. However, at least "der grosse Brockhaus" (1955) ought to have mentioned a formal professorship for Lasker, if he got one.
Therefore, my guess would be that he only taught in subordinate academic positions, in the German fairly hierarchical academical world. I really don't know; and none of my sources indicates what he was doing after he "retired" in 1925 - nota bene from his chess career - and until he "became active" again in the '30's.-JoergenB (talk) 18:43, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
Thanks, JoergenB! I think what I've written from other sources covers Lasker's mathematical significance well enough, and I notice you haven't suggested any changes. And thanks also for putting my mind at ease about not using the Reshevsky quote at the top of this thread. Philcha (talk) 12:50, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
I don't suggest any textual changes (unless and until we find more information, of course). I did add some category and project information, since I think Lasker also is of some interest as a mathematician; thanks for bringing this fact to my attention, by the way. JoergenB (talk) 16:59, 3 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] First wife???

UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography: Emanuel Lasker says "His first wife died in the early 1900s, and he remarried in 1911" but gives no other details of the alleged earlier marriage. I can find nothing else on the Web about a wife before Martha Cohn. Can anyone help? Philcha (talk) 18:36, 1 June 2008 (UTC)

Simply untrue. Greetings, Stefan64 (talk) 21:44, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
That's what I suspected. Thanks! Philcha (talk) 08:49, 2 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Snippets

Use if found useful:

Philcha (talk) 16:00, 2 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Martha Cohn

I've found various accounts of her on the web (more sources, but these basic stories):

  • Dr. Emanuel Lasker (1868 - 1941) Schachweltmeister 1894 - 1921 says she was the widow of piano manufacturer Emil Cohn. Lasker had been friendly with the Cohns since about 1902. At a critical point in the Laser-Tarrasch match 1908 Emil, although bed-ridden with the illness that killed him in 1910, sent Martha to support Lasker. The web page is in German (try Google's translation for a laugh). I've also seen an English version of this, but of course I can't find it now I'm actually looking for it.
  • Emanuel Lasker's match and tournament record says she was the widow of an industrialist. (I've found this site useful for 19th century chess, and am inclined to regard it as reliable.)
  • Bill Wall says Martha was already a grandmother when she married Lasker.
  • Most other sources on Google say Martha was the daughter of Emil Cohn.
  • Lasker: New Approaches says Martha Cohn wrote popular stories under the pseudonym "L. Marco".

Can anyone clear up Martha's background? Philcha (talk) 16:24, 2 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Negotiations for title match with Rubinstein?

Before my recent edits, Emanuel Lasker contained this:

Just before World War I, Lasker was supposed to play Rubinstein for the World Championship. Capablanca planned to play the winner. World War I interrupted these matches.

Can anyone provide sources? Fine in World's Great Games of Chess wrote that Rubinstein had no chance of a match because he had no wealthy friends to back him. Philcha (talk) 23:33, 2 June 2008 (UTC)

Israel Horowitz in "From Morphy to Fischer" (Batsford 1973, p.69) says the same thing. He writes how Lasker/Capablanca negotiations broke down in 1912, and then he writes: "Late in 1912 Lasker opened negotations with Rubinstein. Despite Rubinstein's prodigious string of victories, however, money to finance a meeting was not to be found; his self-effacing personality had won him few rich friends. Nevertheless it was agreed that they would contest a match sometime in 1914, should various clubs in Germany, Poland and Russia contrive somehow to raise sufficient funds"... Horowitz then writes a bit about the 1914 St. Petersburg tournament (Lasker 1st, Capa 2nd, Rubinstein =6th), a bit more about rules for future matches, then on p.70 "Since funds for the match with Rubinstein had not yet been collected, and since the two men (Lasker and Capa) were again on speaking terms, it would have been logical had negotiations begun in earnest for a meeting with Lasker and Capablanca. Logic, however, was to have precious little say in the affairs of the world for the next four years..."
So the claim is unsourced and we've got two sources which say something different. So we should delete what's there, and put in what Fine + Horowitz say, i.e. neither a Rubinstein nor Capablanca match was organised before WWI broke out. Peter Ballard (talk) 13:41, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
Thanks, Peter Ballard! A few follow-ups:
  • Would you consider Horowitz reliable on this? I'm asking because I vaguely remember a page (possibly by Winter) that said the "prolific" writers (e.g. Fine, Horowitz) were often too busy to check the facts.
  • If not, can you suggest other sources?
  • Horowitz says, "... since the two men (Lasker and Capa) were again on speaking terms ..." When and why did they fall out? Philcha (talk) 14:54, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
Last one first: Horowitz is referring to the fact that Lasker/Capa match negotiations broke down, somewhat acrimoniously, in 1912. As for reliability: I've found that Fine at times gets his facts wrong (I own the Fine book you mention above), but Horowitz is pretty good. Having said that, I don't doubt that Winter is better still. If we can have a good reference that there was a 1914/15 match actually organised (either with Rubinstein or Capa), then it can go in. But we can't have it as an unreferenced claim when two writers say otherwise. Peter Ballard (talk) 00:00, 4 June 2008 (UTC)
Looks good! Thanks for the clarification re the relative accuracies of Fine & Horowitz, I'll stop worrying about Horowitz.
I'll edit in what you've said about Lasker and Rubinstein, unless you get there first. Feel free to check that I don't over-interpret :-)
Re Lasker and Capa, any idea why negotiations broke down? Philcha (talk) 01:01, 4 June 2008 (UTC)
Largely over Lasker's insistence of Capa needing to win by a 2 point margin. See http://members.aol.com/graemecree/chesschamps/world/world1921.htm which seems to largely, but not exclusively, use Horowitz' book. Peter Ballard (talk) 09:30, 4 June 2008 (UTC)
BTW I just checked Fine's book and it didn't have an error I thought it had. So I think Fine is pretty good too, though Horowitz has more detail. Peter Ballard (talk) 11:04, 4 June 2008 (UTC)
Thanks for http://members.aol.com/graemecree/chesschamps/world/world1921.htm, which I'll need to analyse carefully. I note it says Lasker-Capa negotiations started in 1911, so Emanuel Lasker needs to be changed.
BTW re Fines's reliability, I first had doubts when I noticed his varying accounts of why he did'nt play the 1948 World Champ Tournament. Then while working on Howard Staunton I found Fine was extremely prejudiced against Staunton; now I notice that Fine says nothing about Lasker's propensity for tortuous title match negotiations after his scare with Schlechter in 1910. I've concluded that there are some subjects on which Fine is not reliable, and the only way to find out which is which is to lokk at other sources; where he's consistent with these, I'll still use him. Philcha (talk) 10:25, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
Reviving this discussion... I was browsing Akiba Rubinstein (duh, why didn't we of this?) and the reference is Jeremy Silman (2007), Silman's Complete Endgame Course: From Beginner to Master, Siles Press, ISBN 1-890085-10-3, p.477. Though personally I find Silman a slightly dubious source here, because this is an endings book not a history book.

[edit] 3 different Laskers

I am deleting this introductory section:

Between about 1890 and 1940 there were 3 notable chess players whose family name was "Lasker": Emanuel, the subject of this article; his older brother Berthold (born 1860), who himself became one of the world's 10 strongest players in the early 1890s;[1] and the chess player and engineer Edward Lasker, who was apparently a distant relative.[2] Hence this article will use their full names wherever necessary to avoid ambiguity.

This is the "Emanuel Lasker" article, and therefore it is clear that "Lasker" means "Emanuel Lasker". Plus, the other two are several orders of magnitude less notable. Peter Ballard (talk) 09:01, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

I think it's helpful to warn against possible confusion, especially in the early years and especially for the benefit of readers who have less prior knowledge. But thanks for raising the issue. Let's see what others think. To that end I'm reinstating the para for now. Philcha (talk) 09:12, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
I agree with Peter, I don't think it's necessary. Pawnkingthree (talk) 09:15, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
I think it's OK to have something to warn of confusion, but maybe the top banner could be slightly extended to say "For other persons named Lasker, including other chess players, see ..." Having two introductory comments like this does seem a bit over the top. Brittle heaven (talk) 09:40, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
That sounds good, whatever the outcome of this specific discussion. What about repeating the "chess players" banner just under the heading "Life and career"? Philcha (talk) 10:26, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
I'm not enthusiastic about expanding the "other Laskers" top banner. IMHO, such banners are there in order to facilitate navigation; the shorter, the easier to assess (or ignore) in a semi-automatic reading process, when you open an article.
On the other hand, shortening the section about other Lasker chess players, and there repeating the banner, somewhat expanded, seems good. Perhaps, also we could formulate it more from the perspective "Emanuel belonged to a family which produced more chess players"? JoergenB (talk) 14:19, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
I'm not sure about emphasising the family aspect. At present I've seen only 1 source about the relationship of Edward Lasker to the brothers, and that puts it in rather tentative terms. Of course if someone finds a reliable source that is more confident, then the family aspect is worth emphasising.
Is there an article on "famous intellectual families"? I can think immediately of 3 other examples, Darwin, Penrose and Polgar - 2 with strong chess connections, but that just might be sampling bias :-) Philcha (talk) 14:39, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
The most famous "intellectual family" probably would be the Bernoulli's; to a high degree since they were so many and active for such a long time. (There is one obvious disadvantage with associating patrilinear surnames and historical achievments, anyhow. I guess you associated to Erasmus and Charles Darwin, a while ago, but did you automatically also consider Francis Galton as a member of that family, Philcha?)
By a strange coincidence, while I was having the wiki-rest in which you typed your question, I was reading Matt Ridley's book "Nature via Nurture", which reminded me of Galton's relationship to the Darwins. I think we call that a draw. :-) Philcha (talk) 18:07, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
As for "famous parent-and-child" cases, I have had a recent (afterwards amusing) experience. I glanced through Emanuel Lasker's long 1905 article in Mathematische Annalen, and found that he in several places were referring to the important work in the field by Noether. On the other hand, I also looked at Noether's article from 1921 in the same journal, where she referred to Lasker's work. Confused, it took me a while to realise that Emanuel was referring to the famous algebraist Max Noether, whose even more famous algebraist daughter Emmy Noether in her turn referred to Emanuel...
Damn, I missed that while researching for Emanuel Lasker on maths. You're 1-0 ahead :-( Philcha (talk) 18:07, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
The trouble with establishing relations (or not...) between Emanuel and Edward is that Edward seldom is mentioned. Most encyclopaedias I've looked in just mention two male Lasker's: Emanuel, and the German liberal politician Eduard Lasker. Actually, the Swedish Nordisk familjebok, the "owl edition", 'uggleupplagan', treats Eduard and Emanuel in the same article, and explicitly claims that they were related. If this is confirmed elsewhere, it ought to be added.
"Edward seldom is mentioned" is plain wrong - the 1st chess book I ever read, Fine's World’s Great Chess Games, presents Ed. Lasker's Q sacrifice against George Thomas; and the 2nd chess book I read was Ed. Lasker's "Chess for Fun & Chess for Blood". More scientifically, Google returns over 10 pages of hits for Edward, and hardly any are wiki-clones. 1-1 :-) Philcha (talk) 18:07, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
The de:WP article de:Edward Lasker has this to say:
Er war nach eigener Aussage weitläufig mit dem Schachweltmeister Emanuel Lasker verwandt. Wegen der Namensähnlichkeit wurden Partien der beiden gelegentlich in Schachpublikationen verwechselt.
As usual, other WP articles in themselves are not good "reliable sources"; this might actually be translated from English. However, it would be nice to know if there really was any confirmable confusion between Emanuel and Edward in the chess literature; if so, we do have a good raison d'etre for an "avoid confusing Laskers" section. JoergenB (talk) 16:53, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
Chaos in a Miniature re George Thomas vs Edward Lasker, London, 1912 (Danish Gambit). So much for chess publications as WP:RS :-)

http://www.correspondencechess.com/campbell/articles/a030716.htm A Tribute to Ken Whyld : Three New Lasker Games] mentions some other potential confusions that were cleared up. These 2 pages are the only relevant pages I could find in 5 pages of Google results.Philcha (talk) 18:07, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

The 3 Laskers section at the beginning is distracting and unnecessary, in my opinion. As Peter Ballard said, the other two Laskers are far less important, and I don't think there is a significant problem with confusion of the three -- unlike, say, the three Polgar sisters and GMs Mikhail, Dmitry, and Ilya Gurevich. Krakatoa (talk) 05:29, 10 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Lasker's approach to the openings

I've just found a 2-part article (Steve Wrinn. Lasker and the Exchange Variation of the Ruy Lopez - Part 1. Retrieved on 2008-06-09. and Steve Wrinn. Lasker and the Exchange Variation of the Ruy Lopez - Part 2. Retrieved on 2008-06-09.) that says Lasker only used the Exchange Variation of the Ruy Lopez against top-class players, twice in "must-win" situations, and very successfully (+10 =3 -1). The whole thing sounds to me very like Botvinnik's approach to the openings: rather than looking for "one-shot" tactical tricks, look for sets of positions that he understood better than his opponents. It makes me doubt the conventional story that Lasker paid little attention to the openings (as does something I read about him deliberately choosing lines an opponent was known to consider inferior, if Lasker thought it was sound - if only I can find that ref again - *#$!). Can anyone add anything on this? Philcha (talk) 10:35, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Using Chessmetrics for rankings

I am uncomfortable with placing too much weight in Chessmetrics (or any other ratings system) when there were no ratings lists during Lasker's career. I'll try to rewrite some to de-emphasise the use of Chessmetrics. I realise this may lose some information - e.g. that Blackburne was ranked 9th in the world according to chessmetrics when he played a match against Lasker - but I think to present Chessmetrics as an absolute is misleading. (And in some cases downright wrong, because Chessmetrics has its weaknesses). Peter Ballard (talk) 12:18, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

I thought I'd been fairly careful with the phrasing, e.g. "X's playing record was at that time the nth best ..." Please try to avoid losing information about the strength of of L's opponents, as the striking point about L's early career is that he rose from coffe-house player to top 10 in a year and then cut such a swathe through the top ranks that the NY Times (1894, cited) had no doubts about the validity of his challenge to Steinitz. This was another of the surprises that I seem to get when I research chess bios - what I'd read previously did not make it clear how astonishingly fast Lasker's rise was - as seen by the rest of the world; I'm sure he and brother Berthold thought it quite amusing, but that's WP:OR - unless someone finds a ref :-)
Re your "Chessmetrics has its weaknesses":
  • Can you be more specific? That would be interesting for the article on ranking top players throughout history.
  • Is it likely to be far wrong, for the purposes of this article?
  • Are there alternative statistical systems that reach that far back and have such depth of coverage?
  • The only other alternative I can see would be to quote some text ref for each of L's opponents, which would: be vague; open the article to accusations of "ref spamming" / "cite bombing" / your charge of choice. Philcha (talk) 13:35, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
Chessmetrics gives some results that intuitively look wrong, e.g. Petrosian being ranked #6 in the world just before his successful title defence against Spassky. I think its weaknesses are (1) too much penalty for inactivity, and (2) no distinction between "important" and "unimportant" games (the latter a weakness of all ratings systems). In any case, the onus isn't on me, the onus is on chessmetrics to demonstrate its validity. My problem is not so much with the ratings as a guide, but the importance the article text attaches to them. e.g. "Lasker shot up through the chess rankings in 1889" and "opponents with high world rankings" - there were no chess rankings in 1889. The article gives the impressions that the rankings existed. Far better to just leave it vague that the opponents were strong. Or let readers follow links to gauge how strong his opponents were. Or, just say that after these strong results he'd established himself, in the eyes of the chess world, as one of the "big 4". Peter Ballard (talk) 00:44, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
I'll add that I'm not picking on Philcha here - it's a trend I've seen across a number of Wikipedia chess articles. We've got to bear in mind that chessmetrics is the work of a single person, and he could fix a bug in his algorithm tomorrow, immediately rendering scores (perhaps hundreds) of WP references out-of-date. So I believe any Chessmetrics ranking should always be clarified as being a chessmetrics ranking and never implied to be an absolute. If that makes it so clunky that Chessmetrics rankings are used a little less, then that's probably a good thing. Peter Ballard (talk) 03:06, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
Don't worry, Peter Ballard, I won't take it personnally.
I think "Lasker shot up through the chess rankings in 1889" is OK - coffee-house champion to 3rd in a decent international tournament in under a year, which even a statistical ignoramus like me would find remarkable. I think it's preferable to e.g "Lasker's playing strength rose very rapidly in 1889" because it's quite possible that his coffee-house opponents were facing a top-10 player but it took a while for everyone to realise it. It struck me while writing that para that the Lasker brothers were the Williams sisters of chess.
But I see your concerns about "opponents with high world rankings". Maybe change it to "top-class opponents" with a footnote that says, e.g. "for example their Chessmetrics ranking were ....", possibly in bands for 1-10, 11-20, 21-30.
I don't actually see an alternative way to make the point, because you hardly ever hear about anyone out side the top 5 in most competitive activities, even to-day. But if you can think of one that's adequetely sourced, go ahead. Philcha (talk) 05:46, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
The best example Peter Ballard can give of Chessmetrics "results that intuitively look wrong" is "Petrosian being ranked #6 in the world just before his successful title defence against Spassky"?! That ranking does not strike me as being at all implausible. Recall, btw, that Petrosian just won the 1962 Candidates Tournament by a half point over both Keres and Geller (both of whom Chessmetrics ranks below Petrosian in 1966), and had finished 2.5 points behind Fischer at the 1962 Interzonal. He beat Spassky by just 12.5-11.5 in 1966. His tournament results were not very impressive for a world champion. Shortly after the world championship, both he and Spassky played in Santa Monica 1966, where Petrosian finished =6th with Reshevsky, behind Spassky, Fischer, Larsen, Portisch, and Unzicker. I wouldn't go as far as Fine, who wrote that Petrosian was probably the weakest world champion ever, but he never dominated the chess world the way that Lasker, Capablanca, Alekhine, Fischer, Karpov, and Kasparov did at their peaks. Krakatoa (talk) 06:10, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
That doesn't invalidate his main point though, that talking about rankings in this era is historically inaccurate. It can ultimately only ever be a matter of opinion as to who was a "top 10" player in Lasker's time and who wasn't. Pawnkingthree (talk) 08:16, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
Actually it was worse than I said: Petrosian was ranked #8 before the 1966 match and #6 after beating Spassky.[1] But my main points (that there were no official rankings, and Chessmetrics is in any case the unofficial work of one person) still stand in any case. Peter Ballard (talk) 09:31, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
That's the trouble with giving intelligent examples. :-)
Back, belatedly, to Peter Ballard's point. How about my suggestion to change "opponents with high world rankings" to "top-class opponents" with a footnote that says, e.g. "for example their Chessmetrics ranking were ....", possibly in bands for 1-10, 11-20, 21-30? Philcha (talk) 10:06, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
That's a good suggestion I think. We should consign Chessmetrics to footnotes and not give their figures in the main text.Pawnkingthree (talk) 10:15, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
Chessmetrics isn't the only game in town. It's not as accessible (not on the Web AFAIK, not that I've looked), but Arpad Elo (yes, that Elo) wrote the book The Ratings of Chessplayers: Past and Present, which has tons of this sort of thing. I have a copy, so if anyone wants to know Elo's estimated rating for the best five years of so-and-so's career or some such thing, let me know. (e-mail fsrhine[AT]gmail.com) Krakatoa (talk) 03:23, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
As to how to designate a pre-Elo-ratings-player whom Elo and/or Chessmetrics rates highly, I would be inclined to refer to the player as "a world-class player" or "a leading player of the day" or some such, and drop a reference as to how Elo and/or Chessmetrics ranks the player. Certainly if both Elo and Chessmetrics say someone was hot stuff, he probably was. Given Elo's stature, I would consider his view alone pretty authoritative. Krakatoa (talk) 03:34, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
That sounds very useful. How many types of comparison does Elo provide? For example Elo's peak 5-year rating would be useful for "Who was the greatest ever?" but less useful for tracing an individual's playing strength, e.g. Fischer's amazing surge 1970-72 or the fact that Blackburne stayed in the top class for an amazingly long time. Does Elo give that kind of detail?
Does anyone know of any critical comparison of the various rating methods? Philcha (talk) 11:32, 11 June 2008 (UTC)

(Unindent) I hadn't realized it until I saw it in the bibliography of Elo's above-mentioned book, but he had an article in Chess Life magazine, April 1964, pp. 81-82, that gave the best 5-year and 25-year averages for notable players up until that time (roughly Elo 2400 and up). For example: Alekhine 2680, 2660; Blackburne 2550, 2535; Botvinnik 2720, 2690 (identical to Lasker's numbers!); Capablanca 2720, 2685; Charousek 2540 (5-year only; he died at age 27); Euwe 2640, 2610; Fine 2660, 2625; Keres 2670, 2645; Lasker 2720, 2690 (a 25-year-average ten points higher than Alekhine's 5-year best!); Morphy 2690 (5-year only); Najdorf 2650, 2620; Steinitz 2650, 2625 (just a smidge better than Najdorf!). (The USCF sells a tremendous DVD that has Chess Life, Chess Review and Chess Life and Review from 1933-1975.) Table 5.52 of Elo's book graphs lifetime ratings of 36 notable players from Adolf Anderssen to Portisch; unfortunately it's just a line graph, so you have to stare at it to try to approximate a player's rating at any given point in time. Table 6.56 is a similar (very steep) graph of Fisher's development. Tables 9.4 and 9.5 of Elo's book give the best 5-year averages for titled players (i.e. from 1950 on) and untitled greats of the past, respectively. Krakatoa (talk) 06:19, 12 June 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Grandmaster?

The opening sentence of the article describes Lasker as "a German chess grandmaster, mathematician, and philosopher, and was World Chess Champion for a record 27 years." The infobox also lists his title as "Grandmaster," then adds that he was World Champion from 1894-1921. My inclination would be to omit this "grandmaster" stuff altogether, for four reasons. First, Lasker was not designated a grandmaster by FIDE, having died before 1950. His "grandmaster" status derives from having supposedly been awarded that title by the czar (along with the other four finalists) at St. Petersburg 1914. However, as Edward Winter has documented, the tale of Lasker and the other four being anointed grandmasters by the czar is highly dubious, to say the least; no known source before 1940 supports that story. See Grandmaster_(chess)#Early_tournament_use. Second, even if the story were true, as Peter Ballard once observed, how is the czar's opinion any more meaningful than, say, that of George W. Bush? Third, as the British Chess Magazine once wrote (of Botvinnik, actually, but the same applies even more strongly to Lasker), to call him a grandmaster is to damn him with faint praise. The man was World Champion for a record 27 years. Fourth, as I document in various entries at Talk:Grandmaster_(chess)#Grandmasters_before_1950_FIDE_period and Talk:Grandmaster_(chess)#Dubious_first_use.3F, it appears that no one besides Wikipedia defines the term "grandmaster" by counting anyone to whom FIDE has awarded the title plus the five supposedly anointed by the czar at St. Petersburg 1914. For all of these reasons, I think we should just refer to Lasker as having been "World Champion" and we should scrap the "grandmaster." Krakatoa (talk) 04:21, 11 June 2008 (UTC)

I think this was settled (largely due to your good work) when we discussed this at Talk:Grandmaster (chess) a while back: that we won't designate anyone as a GM except those awarded the title post-1950 by FIDE, because the pre-1950 usage was inconsistent. So yes, remove it from Lasker, and anyone else pre-1950. Peter Ballard (talk) 05:01, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
Re Krakatoa's comments, I don't see that a title awarded by Nicholas II of Russia is any less valid than one awarded by Kirsan Ilyumzhinov. :-)
That's probably a good idea. We never followed up on this, so if we are going to consistently use the simple standard of using GM to indicate only the FIDE title, we should remove Lasker, Marshall, Capablanca, Alekhine, and Tarrasch from Category:Chess grandmasters and also remove them from List of chess grandmasters. The explanatory text at Category:Chess grandmasters should also be updated to indicate that only the FIDE title qualifies. Quale (talk) 07:29, 12 June 2008 (UTC)