Monday, January 2, 2012
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Spencer Pumpelly by Charles Bevis
Source: The Baseball Biography Project
Join SABR
Appearing in just one inning of one major league game in 1925 fresh from the semipro ranks, pitcher Spencer Pumpelly has gained a measure of mystique on the SABR Biographical Research Committee's Top 20 List as the most recent player for whom knowledge of which side of the plate he batted from is lacking.
Spencer Armstrong Pumpelly was born on April 11, 1893, in Owego, New York, an upstate town twenty miles west of Binghamton and ten miles north of the Pennsylvania border. He was the younger of two sons of Gurdon and Kia Pumpelly, both members of notable families in nineteenth century Owego.
The Pumpelly family, which settled in Owego in the early 1800s, was prosperous, its wealth stemming from Owego's position as a transportation hub; where goods from the Lake Cayuga region were shipped down the Susquehanna River and then later by railroad. By the late 1880s, Gurdon Pumpelly was a wholesale leaf tobacco dealer and the family lived on a farm on the south side of the Susquehanna River. His wife, Kia, was the daughter of the local doctor. By 1910, Gurdon was retired and the family lived in town at 44 Front Street with two live-in servants.
Gurdon Pumpelly was the nephew of two prominent Owego citizens, George Pumpelly and Frederick Hewitt. In 1908 after Hewitt died, Gurdon Pumpelly was executor of his will, which called for the disbursal of $5 million to various charities with $500,000 to Yale University, his alma mater, and bequeathed $40,000 to Gurdon.
Although there is nobody named Pumpelly living in present-day Owego, or in New York State for that matter, the Pumpelly name lives on in Owego. The residence at 44 Front Street is now the Pumpelly House Bed & Breakfast, which the Tioga County Tourism Board touts as having "the elegant antique Victorian atmosphere of yesterday." Half a mile west down the Susquehanna River is a tributary called Pumpelly Creek.
Yale was a popular educational destination for wealthy Owego citizens, and several members of the Pumpelly family attended Yale, including Thomas Platt, who became a U.S. senator and an influential politician in New York. The Hewitt inheritance and gift to Yale paved the way for both Pumpelly brothers to attend Yale. Spencer attended the Hotchkiss School, a prep school in northwestern Connecticut, before journeying to New Haven for his freshman year at Yale in the fall of 1913. His older brother, Harold, was already an athletic star at Yale when Spencer arrived, based on his exploits on the football gridiron (Third Team Walter Camp All-American in 1912).
Spencer made his varsity baseball debut for Yale as a sophomore in the spring of 1915 (freshman couldn't play varsity in those days). Pumpelly pitched in at least half a dozen games in 1915, defeating Georgetown, Lafayette, Cornell, and Pennsylvania while losing close games to Dartmouth (5-4) and Cornell (1-0). Despite his commendable won-loss record, Pumpelly had control problems as a pitcher, usually walking as many batters as he struck out. In the Lafayette game on May 6, Pumpelly walked eight, struck out six, yielded eight hits, and escaped with a 5-2 victory as Lafayette stranded fourteen baserunners.
Pumpelly was also subject to lapses in concentration after pitching well. After the Pennsylvania game, in which Pumpelly also walked eight batters, the New York Times reported, "Pumpelly's lapse in the fourth allowed Murdock to walk, Irwin to single, and Matchett to smash the longest home run ever seen at Yale." After a game against Cornell, the Times headline said it all: "Bases on Balls Beat Yale Nine; Pitcher Pumpelly's Wildness in Tenth Forces in Cornell's Only Run." After yielding just one walk in the first nine innings, Pumpelly loaded the bases in the tenth with two walks and his own throwing error on an attempted sacrifice bunt; he then walked in the winning run. Making matters worse for Pumpelly were no doubt the many friends and family in attendance that day for the game in Ithaca, New York, just twenty-five miles from his Owego hometown.
He apparently suffered arm troubles, as he didn't pitch for Yale after a June 5 game, missing a Princeton game at the Polo Grounds and a three-game series with Harvard, one game played before 15,000 at Yale and another at Ebbets Field.
The June 5, 1915, game was Pumpelly's last on-field appearance in a Yale uniform, as four months later he was declared ineligible to play athletics at the institution because of a rules violation. During the summer, Pumpelly, along with four other Yale varsity baseball players, played on a Long Island summer league team but made the mistake of accepting free room and board from a team benefactor. In an October 18 letter, Pumpelly and the four other athletes acknowledged their ineligibility:
"We, the undersigned members of the Yale University baseball team of 1915 during the past Summer played with the Quogue Field Club nine, the club furnishing the board and room to the players. From the time we discovered the provision in the Yale rules that no man who has received board for playing Summer baseball shall represent Yale on its teams, each of us paid in full for board and lodging subsequently furnished him by the club. In view, however, of the fact that we did, although unintentionally and ill-advisedly, violate the rule, we hereby withdraw from competition in intercollegiate athletics."
An appeal of their case to the Executive Committee of the Yale Athletic Association upheld the ineligibility ruling, although the committee seemed to offer a slight concession that the ineligibility was just for one academic year. Nevertheless, Pumpelly did not return to the baseball team during his senior year, 1917. He did play some semipro baseball in 1916, as his name pops up in line scores of the New Haven Colonials in the team's exhibition games with the New York Giants and Brooklyn.
Pumpelly then virtually disappeared from the baseball landscape until he suddenly reappeared nearly ten years later in 1925 to pitch for the Washington Senators. A diligent search by SABR member Marc Okkonen couldn't locate Pumpelly's name on a reserve list of any minor league team before 1925. Between his 1917 Yale graduation (and his naval service in World War I) and his brief stint with the Senators in 1925, Pumpelly must have played some semipro baseball. The 1920 U.S. Census indicates that Pumpelly and his brother were both back in Owego, making their living as cigar manufacturers.
Perhaps due to some influential contacts with Washington owner Clark Griffith, Pumpelly was given a tryout with the Senators during the summer of 1925. For an unheralded semipro player, Pumpelly received quite a bit of ink in the Washington Post.
In a June 24 article headlined "Yale Hurler Impresses Harris," the Post proclaimed, "Pumpelly is a right-hander of considerable experience. He made quite a reputation for himself for the Elis several years ago and had gotten a trial with Ty Cobb's Bengals. Since then he has met with success in semipro ranks with some of the strong teams around New York and as a member of the Colonials of New Haven." The next day, the paper gushed, "Pumpelly has plenty of speed, good curves, fairly good control and, above all, apparently knows how to mix them up to the best advantage. ... Manager Harris was enthusiastic over his chances of making good."
With several Washington pitchers injured in early July, Washington signed Pumpelly on July 5. Manager Bucky Harris gave Pumpelly his first shot on the mound in a July 6 exhibition game in Pittsburgh between the Nats and the Pittsburgh Pirates. In an article subheadlined "Spencer Pumpelly Gets First Chance on Hurling Hill," the Post reported that "the former Yale pitcher turned in a fine effort, allowing but four hits in as many frames" while yielding one earned run. In that game, Pumpelly would have batted at least once in a Washington uniform, since he pitched four innings, but no record remains of which side of the plate he took his swings from in that game.
A week later, on July 12, Pumpelly made his sole major league appearance, in the sixth inning of Washington's game with the St. Louis Browns at Sportsman's Park in St. Louis. "Pumpelly was given a chance to see what he could do in the sixth and McManus greeted him with a home run clout to the scoreboard in left field. He walked the next man and then pulled out of the inning with no further damage being done to his slants," the Post reported. Pumpelly left the game when Harris sent up a pinch-hitter for him in the top of the seventh inning. Washington gave Pumpelly his ten-day notice of release the next day.
Washington went on to win the American League pennant in 1925, meeting Pittsburgh in the World Series, a matchup previewed in that July exhibition game that Pumpelly pitched in. When Washington divided up its loser's shares after the World Series, Pumpelly did not receive consideration for a cut of the proceeds.
Pumpelly seems to have been a free spirit, from what little can be reconstructed of his life. An article in the May 20, 1916, issue of the New York Times, "A Yale Tradition Shattered," noted that Pumpelly thumbed his nose at one of Yale's most treasured traditions, admission to one of its senior clubs. "In refusing to appear on the Yale campus during the annual 'tap day' exercises yesterday, thereby forfeiting his opportunity of being chosen to one of the senior societies, Spencer Pumpelly of Owego, N.Y., broke all Yale traditions. Heretofore, every member of the junior class who considered himself a possibility for election to Skull and Bones, Scroll and Key, or Wolf's Head has been careful to be on the campus until the last man was tapped. Pumpelly jumped into his automobile and spent the afternoon riding."
By the time of the 10th anniversary report of the Class of 1917, Yale had already lost contact with Pumpelly. "The only information that we have received about him since then [the war] is to the effect that he has been playing semiprofessional baseball. So far as our records show, he is unmarried," the 1928 class report told classmates, many of whom were already compiling impressive re?sume?s.
An online 1997 article describing a log cabin available for rental in Owego notes that Spencer Pumpelly, while hunting in the 1930s, discovered a log cabin built in 1815. "Pumpelly paid $25 for it and removed it piece by piece. He rebuilt the cabin at its present location on the south side of the Susquehanna River. ... It took Pumpelly four years to take the cabin apart and rebuild it. Each of the pieces were carefully numbered so they could be replaced in the correct places." ("182 Year Old Cabin Open to the Public," )
Such a free-spirit attitude may also have been passed down to a present-day race car driver named Spencer Pumpelly ().
Pumpelly died at the age of 80, on December 5, 1973, in Sayre, Pennsylvania, just across the New York border and about fifteen miles from Owego.
Sources
New York Times, "Five Yale Athletes Barred From Sports," October 19, 1915.
Washington Post "Yale Hurler Impresses Harris," June 24, 1925.
Yale University archives, History of the Class of 1917.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Facebook | Your Photos - Photos from my blog, 2006-2009
Facebook | Your Photos - Photos from my blog, 2006-2009: "twchesssafari.blogspot.com"
Friday, October 31, 2008
Memories of my hospital stay
note: some of the original content of this blog entry was moved to my main blog of 6/4/09.
Listed below are some additional scenes I will cover...
1. May 1968 - I'm addicted to demerol
2. Memorial Day weekend 1968 - Nurse injects 1,200,000 units of penicillin into my femoral artery; I go into shock
3. Same weekend - No doctors available on the holiday other than the interns and residents, so they take me of all medications cold turkey
4. Another miracle happens!
5. June 1968 - x-ray incident; I decide to become a hospital administrator
6. July 1968 - Tilt table; right femur breaks in physical therapy
7. August 1968 - Rick home on leave due to his mother's cancer; he takes me to Newburyport on a weekend pass
8. August 1968 - Rick meets Danalee
9. Danalee, Diana and others begin giving me guitar lessons
10. September 1968 - Start correspondence courses in Locksmithing, Insurance Adjusting and Accounting; Initiate the H & R Block tax training course by mail
11. October 31, 1968 - Student Nurses make my room one of their trick or treat stops
12. November 1968 - I get braces; the heels are 6 inches high and make me look and walk like Lerch
13. December 1969 - Debbie K takes me home with her to Monson MA for Christmas; I overhear her father telling her "not to get involved with a cripple"
14. December 1968 - I meet Christine Merski
15. January 1969 - Frank Borrelli is my new roommate; we play cards every evening
16. January 1969 - NY Jets win the Super Bowl; Vin F. takes me on a day pass and I "officiate" Hartford road race in my wheelchair.
17. March & April 1969 - I do MD tax returns; learn the relationship between physicians and their money (that's a good thing)
18. July 1969 - Linda B invites me to Woodstock; I decline
19. September 1969 - Student nurses lock the door to my room and get me drunk for my 21st birthday
20. January 1970 - I'm finally discharged (after 18 operations)
Listed below are some additional scenes I will cover...
1. May 1968 - I'm addicted to demerol
2. Memorial Day weekend 1968 - Nurse injects 1,200,000 units of penicillin into my femoral artery; I go into shock
3. Same weekend - No doctors available on the holiday other than the interns and residents, so they take me of all medications cold turkey
4. Another miracle happens!
5. June 1968 - x-ray incident; I decide to become a hospital administrator
6. July 1968 - Tilt table; right femur breaks in physical therapy
7. August 1968 - Rick home on leave due to his mother's cancer; he takes me to Newburyport on a weekend pass
8. August 1968 - Rick meets Danalee
9. Danalee, Diana and others begin giving me guitar lessons
10. September 1968 - Start correspondence courses in Locksmithing, Insurance Adjusting and Accounting; Initiate the H & R Block tax training course by mail
11. October 31, 1968 - Student Nurses make my room one of their trick or treat stops
12. November 1968 - I get braces; the heels are 6 inches high and make me look and walk like Lerch
13. December 1969 - Debbie K takes me home with her to Monson MA for Christmas; I overhear her father telling her "not to get involved with a cripple"
14. December 1968 - I meet Christine Merski
15. January 1969 - Frank Borrelli is my new roommate; we play cards every evening
16. January 1969 - NY Jets win the Super Bowl; Vin F. takes me on a day pass and I "officiate" Hartford road race in my wheelchair.
17. March & April 1969 - I do MD tax returns; learn the relationship between physicians and their money (that's a good thing)
18. July 1969 - Linda B invites me to Woodstock; I decline
19. September 1969 - Student nurses lock the door to my room and get me drunk for my 21st birthday
20. January 1970 - I'm finally discharged (after 18 operations)
Monday, October 13, 2008
Bobby Fischer
Here's a link to the text of Bobby Fischer Goes to War.
I will use this blog entry to develop my comments on Bobby Fischer for my book.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
What a Player!
The chess and poker worlds simultaneously lost a shining star on February 4, 1999. I am working on an article to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Ken Smith's passing.
Here's an old Poker Player article and a copy of the USCF press release at the time of his death.
And here are my expanded notes...
A Alvarez on Ken Smith (1981 WSOP Main Event)
Page 150 – Ken Smith, who is also a chess master and was Bobby Fischer’s second in charge of the preparation for the Reykjavik marathon with Boris Spassky, wore what he always wears at competitions – a frock coat and a decrepit top hat, which he claims was found in Ford Theatre the night that Lincoln was assassinated. Smith has a ragged beard, a squeaky voice, and a girth like that of Swineburne’s giant slumbering boar: “the blind bulk of the immeasurable beast.” Each time he wins a pot, he lumbers to his feet, doffs his topper to the audience, and pipes, “What a player!”
Page 160 – The gigantic Ken Smith, the chess master, was also playing to the crowd, not only doffing his top hat and bleating “What a Player!” but also using the crowd as a sounding board whenever he decided to coffeehouse – or bluff verbally – an opponent. Early in the afternoon he found himself head to head with a marose-looking man named Don Furrh. As soon as Smith bet, Furrh’s hands moved ominously to the back of his chips. They hovered while he considered whether or not to move all in.
“I’ve gotta real hand here,” Smith squeaked. “You gotta be strong, Don.”
A large bleached blonde in cut-off Levi’s and a halter shouted from the rail, “You tell him, Smitty!”
Ken Smith’s voice rose another decibel. “It’s a real good hand I’m holding here.”
“Amen!” called the blonde.
Furrh stared contemptuously at Smith, shrugged, and threw in his cards.
Page 161 – Minutes later, Ken Smith was at it again, his “What a Player!” almost drowning out the din of the slot machines. Doyle Brunson, who has known Smith for 30 years, grinned at him benevolently. “You’re all heart, Ken,” he said. “Heart and belly.” The railbirds applauded. “You know what I’m gonna do?” Brunson continued. “I’m gonna raise you on two rags and bluff you right out.”
“Try me,” piped Smith, and he cam out betting when the next flop was dealt: king, queen, jack.
“Raise!” said Brunson so loudly that his jowls quivered. He put both hands behind his now depleted stacks of chips and pushed them belligerently into the center. Smith paused, shrugged, and docilely folded. Brunson pulled in the pot, then turned over his hole cards and tossed them, face up, on the table: a six and a five of different suits. He rose majestically to his feet, doffed his Stetson, and cried, basso profundo, “What a Player!” The crowd roared.
Page 168 – “Keep it up, Texas!” called a tall cowboy…
Ken Smith raised his topper in acknowledgment. And for a period the contest seemed to become a question more of places than of personalities, hold ‘em being, by tradition, a Texas game. Brunson, in fact, had made a large patriotic bet with Gabe Kaplan that the Texans would beat the Jews. Now the forces were equally matched: Ken Smith, Gene Fisher, and Bill Smith against Stu Unger, Perry Green, and Jay Heimowitz.
Page 170 -- When the game broke for early dinner, at five, only four players were left. Stu Unger, who two hours before had been trailing the field with $50,000, was the clear leader, with $340,000; Pery Green was econd, with $220,000; the two Texans, Gene Fisher and Ken Smith, had $95,000 each. Brunson shook his jowls. “That bet of mine with Gabe don’t look too healthy,” he said.
It looked even less healthy a couple hours later when Perry Green eliminated Ken Smith with four aces against a top-straight draw. Smith lumbered to his feet and raised his topper when Jack Binion handed him his prize money. Someone in the crowd shouted, “What a Player!” Smith doffed his hat again.
The next segment is by Lou Hayes (link above)
FIDE Master Ken Smith, 68, owner of Chess Digest and a Texas chess legend died February 4, 1999 in Dallas. Smith was the dominant chess master of the southwest United States during the 1950s and 60s, earning him the nickname “Capablanca of the cattle country.”
His chess career began by accident in the late 1940’s. Ken was on a full football scholarship at Southern Methodist University in Dallas when a leg injury landed him in the hospital. He was bored in his hospital bed and decided to take up chess. He acquired some chess books and immediately became fascinated with the game. As soon as he was out of the hospital, Smith quickly made friendships with several strong players and began playing chess constantly. He joined the Dallas Chess Club and became a regular weekend Swiss player.
He was indefatigable in his passion for the game, and the stories have it that within six months, he was already a master strength player. This was an amazing feat for a player learning chess at the age of nineteen. Over the next few years, he played in numerous Texas weekend tournaments, almost always winning or sharing first prize.
He won more than 200 chess tournaments in his life, including eight times Texas Champion, seven times Southwest Open champion, four times Southern Open champion, and one time each winner of the British Major Open and the Mexican championship. Ken played in the great 1972 Church’s International tournament in San Antonio against some of the world's strongest players. Although he fared poorly overall against these elites, he did score a win (vs. Kaplan) and draws against Campos-Lopez and the legendary super grandmaster, Paul Keres. Smith was a titled FIDE Master with a FIDE rating of 2360. He was a USCF Senior Master for many years.
In 1960 Ken and his father founded S&S construction company in Dallas and in 1962 Ken started Chess Digest. Both companies prospered, and soon Ken was flying to New York to play in Manhattan Chess club weekend blitz tournaments.
Smith was a benevolent teacher and player. As the years went by and he began publishing chess books, he provided employment as writers, proofreaders and editors to many strong Dallas-Fort Worth players. As late as the early 1980’s he still willingly played in many Saturday Swiss tournaments at the Dallas Chess Club, even though it occasionally meant drawing or losing to lower rated players. Everybody had a chance at the big guy, and those game scores were very meaningful to the average players.
In those days Ken kept the Dallas Chess Club supplied with books and study materials even though he probably lost money on this consignment arrangement. Ken was a great believer in gambit play, and the Smith-Morra Gambit, (1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3) bears his name. Over thirty years Ken wrote nine books and forty-nine articles on this gambit. He advocated the Danish and Goring gambits as White, the Sicilian Scheveningen against 1.e4 and the Tarrasch Henning-Schara gambit as Black. Smith claimed he had never lost a tournament game on the Black side of the Scheveningen until his game with Karpov at San Antonio, 1972.
Ken was also a very strong endgame player. His “Improving your Chess” course always stressed the importance of endgame study, even though most players found it boring. He wrote basic endgame books with a diagram every move, so players could study without a board.
Ken always said that chess players well versed in gambit play make good poker players. “Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand.”
Ken was a world-class poker player and during the 1980’s finished third one year and fourth another year in the World Championship of Poker. His poker skills earned him an interview with Ted Koppel and mention in Newsweek magazine. In addition to the World Championship of Poker tournaments, Ken has won the “Stairway to Stars” poker tournament in Las Vegas, Amarillo Slim’s “Omaha” tournament, “Eight or Better High-Low Split” tournament, and came in second in the “Low-Ball Draw” tournament, also sponsored by Amarillo Slim. He always played poker in a black silk top hat which came from Ford’s theater in Washington, D.C.
In 1972 Ken was employed by Bobby Fischer as an assistant in the World Championship match with Boris Spassky. Ken went to Iceland and Chess Digest provided Fischer all the materials Bobby requested for his match preparation.
The last eleven years of Ken’s life were marred by health problems. In 1988 his kidneys failed and he was forced to undergo dialysis three times a week. Despite this, he continued to work four and five day weeks at Chess Digest until late in January this year.
Ken was a brilliant man who could do virtually anything he set his mind to, whether it be chess, poker or simply living as normal a life as possible despite severe health problems. Ken Smith was certainly one of the most unforgettable and interesting persons one could know. He will be greatly missed by the chess community.
Smith is survived by his parents, his wife Elaine, four children, four stepchildren and three grandchildren.
Robert Canright: I remember when I was a teenager living in New Orleans, 26 years ago, that I had a Chess Digest catalog (small then) that I used to buy chess trophies for our big high school tournament. For a long time, his Chess Digest provided resources for chess players when no one else was interested. Just a couple of years ago I had a very minor quibble with an order at Chess Digest and he personally took care of it. I think he contributed to U.S. chess, and I’m very sorry to hear of his departure. I wanted to share my thoughts on Ken with everyone. I don’t think I have ever replied-to-all before on this email list.
Don Maddox: I bought my first chess book from Ken Smith in 1972. Today, my shelves hold literally hundreds of books I purchased from Ken. Mark Twain once wrote, “Show me a good billiards player and I'll show you a misspent youth.” From Ken’s resume, I suspect he misspent several youths, and I’d like to thank him for helping me misspend mine. My condolences to his family and to the chess community. We will miss him.
Michael Simpson: I remember getting a BHB clock from Chess Digest at the 1990 Southwest Open, and one of the clocks quit working about four months later. I didn’t have my receipt, and the 90 day guarantee was over, so I figured I was stuck. I sent it back to Chess Digest with a note saying I bought it at the Southwest Open and to”please fix and let me know how much it cost.” Three days later I received a new BHB, no questions asked, not even a bill for shipping. It’s rare to have that kind of service in any kind of business, and we were blessed for having a chess bookseller who took care of his customers that way.
“I was playing with the great players in these days . . . guys like Bob Hooks, Kenny Smith, Dicky Carson, Bill Bond and Bill Smith.
Kenny (Ken Smith) was a big chess player in Texas and he just loved to play poker . . . played poker for years. He always wore a silk top hat that was supposed to have been from the theater where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; he had certification on it, too. Kenny would wear that hat in all the big tournaments, and everytime he won a pot he would stand up on the table and yell, “What a player!” And that's how he got his nickname.
We were playing in a hand at the Am Vet one time when Bob Hooks limped in and Ken Smith raised the pot up a pretty good amount of money. It came back to Hooks and he moved in his whole stack with two kings. Ken put the stall on Hooks for about three minutes . . . he didn’t look like was ever going to act on his hand. So Hooks looks over and grabs Ken’s cards out of his hand and sees two aces in his hand . . . and he moved Ken’s chips into the pot himself! So Ken never had to put his own money in – Hooks put it in for him. I’ll bet that was the only time that Hooks ever lost a hand when he put the money in for both players.”
(T.J. Cloutier with Tom McElvoy, Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold’em, Cardsmith Publishing, 4535 W. Sahara #105, Las Vegas, NV 89102)
Notes by FM John Jacobs:
Ken was especially proud of this game, as it featured a TN in his beloved Smith-Morra Gambit. Like so many of Ken’s games, it featured a flurry of piece activity and tactics – and it ended quickly.
Smith-Morra Gambit B21
Ken Smith
Gil Ramirez
San Francisco 1972
1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3 Ken was a risk-taker, and this gambit suited his style like no other. I still recall his invaluable advice to me as an aspiring teenage chessplayer, “John, learn the open games first because all closed games finally become open.” 3...dxc3 4.Nxc3 Nc6 5.Nf3 d6 6. Bc4 e6 7.0-0 Be7 8.Qe2 Nf6 9.Rd1 e5 At the time, this was considered one of the most formidable defenses to the Smith-Morra Gambit. Black prevents e5, but use of the d5 square and his superior mobility give White good compensation for the pawn. 10.Be3!? It was thought by some that 10. h3 was a necessary preventative to the annoying ...Bg4 pin. However, for his 1972 book Smith-Morra Gambit Accepted, Ken had commissioned some original analysis by GM Matulovic to help demonstrate that White need not waste a tempo on 10.h3. 10...0-0 10...Bg4 at once transposes after 11h3 Bh5 12Rac1 0-0. 11.Rac1 Bg4 12.h3 Bh5 Matulovic had analysed 12... Bxf3 13.Qxf3 Rac8 14.a3 Na5 15. Ba2 Nc4 16.Bxc4 Rxc4 17.Bg5! h6 18.Bxf6 Bxf6 19.Nd5 as giving White more than sufficent compensation, but this retreat went unmentioned in the 1972 publication. Ken now unleashes his TN. . 13.g4! Bg6 14.Bc5! Sustaining the initiative by threatening 15.Bxd6 followed by 16.Nb5. 14...Nxg4?! Interesting but unsound. 14...a6 was better as in a 1978 Conroy-Arkell game: 15.a4 Rc8 16.Ba3 h6 17.b4 Qb6 18.b5 axb5 19.axb5 Na5 20.Ba2 and White stood better. 15.hxg4 Qc8 The point - White's bishop and g-pawn are threatened. 16.Nxe5!? An excellent counter-sacrifice. If 16.Bxd6? Qxg4+ 17.Kf1 (or 17. Kh1 Bxd6 18.Rxd6 Nd4! 19.Nxd4 Qh4+ 20.Kg1) 17...Qh3+! 18.Ke1 Bxd6 19.Rxd6 Bh5 and the pin wins. However, subsequent analysis indicated that after 16.Be3! White has nothing to fear: 16...Qxg4+ 17. Kh1! Bh5 18.Nh2 Qh3 19.f3. 16...dxc5 White owns a nearly decisive mobility advantage after both 16... Nxe5 17.Nd5 and 16...dxe5 17.Bxe7 Nxe7 18.Nd5 Nxd5 19.Bxd5. 17.Nd5 Bg5 18.Nxg6 hxg6 19.f4 Bd8 With every White piece more active than its counterpart, White has a sizeable advantage in mobility. If White can double heavy pieces on the h-file, his attack will be unstoppable. 20.Qg2 Re8 21.Rd2 21Rc3 with Rh3 to follow was more efficient. 21...Nd4 22.Rc3 b5 23.Bf1 Qb7 24. e5! Threatening 25Nf6+. 24...Rb8 25.Bd3! Maneuvering the bishop to an aggressive post at e4. 25...Ba5 26.Be4 Qd7 27.Qh3 With the game-ending threat of 28Rh2. 27...f5 28.gxf5 gxf5 29.Nf6+ gxf6 30.Rg3+ Kf7 30...Kf8 31.Qh6+ yields a similar result. 31.Qh7+ After 31...Ke6 32.Bxf5+ Black loses his queen and is soon mated.
1-0
French Rubinstein C10
Jason Doss 2341
Alexey Root 2077
TexOhma Open 1999 (4)
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nd2 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Bd7 5.Bd3 Bc6 6.Nf3 Nd7 7.Qe2 Ngf6 8.Ng3 Be7 (8...Bd5 9. 0-0 c5 10.Be3 Qb6 11.c3 ± Parma-Forintos, Maribor 1977) 9.Bd2 0-0 10.0-0-0 b6 11.Rhe1 a5 12.Ne5 Bb7 13.f4 g6 14.f5! gxf5 15.Nxd7 Qxd7 16.Nxf5 exf5 17.Qxe7 Qxe7 18.Rxe7 Nd5 19.Re5 Nb4 20.Bxf5 Nxa2+ 21.Kb1 Nb4 22.c3 Nc6 23. Re4 Bc8 24.Rf1 Bxf5 25.Rxf5 f6 26.Re6 Nd8 27.Rexf6 Ne6 28. Rxf8+ Rxf8 29.Rxf8+ Kxf8 30.d5 Nc5 31.Bf4 Na6 32.Kc2 b5 33. Kd3 Ke7 34.Kd4 Kd7 35.g4 c5+ 36.dxc6+ Kxc6 37.h4 Nc5 38.g5 Ne6+ 39.Ke5 Ng7 40.Be3 b4 41. cxb4 axb4 42.Bd4 b3 43.Bc3 Kc5 44.Ke4 Ne6 45.Kf5 Nc7 46.h5 Nd5 47.Be5 Kc4 48.g6 hxg6+ 49. hxg6 Kd3 50.g7 Kc2 51.Ke6
1-0
From Dallas Morning News obits,
http://classifieds.dallasnews.com/6_friday/A01.html
SMITH KENNETH RAY, was born September 13th, 1930 in Olney, Texas. Raised in Ft. Worth Ken resided in Dallas most of his life. Ken briefly attended SMU as quarterback, due to injury he took up the game of chess. His hobby soon became his profession and he founded Chess Digest, the world's largest chess book publisher and retailer. He went on to become an International Chess Master and won numerous domestic and international championships, including the U.S., British, and Mexico Opens.
In 1972 he prepared Bobby Fischer for the World championship with IGM Spassky. He utilized his prodigious memory to play more than 25 simultaneous games while blindfolded, and to become the winner of multiple poker championships. In the early 80's he was ranked by Newsweek magazine as the World's 4th Best Amateur Poker Player. Ken will always be loved and survived by his parents, Mr. & Mrs. Ray F. Smith, brother Jerry Smith, his loving wife, Elaine, his previous wife Linda Griffin and their four children, Dr. Jane Witten, Robert Ray Smith, Lori Kay Weldon, Kenneth Bradley Smith, his three grandchildren, Will, Neal, and Amanda, furthermore, by his Stepchildren, Steve Salsbury, Theresa Walker, Lisa Foss, Melissa Marshall and their nine children.
In life Ken was always a winner, famous for donning his top hat and tuxedo. Now is the time for us to tip our hats and say, 'What a Player' Visitation will take place at Sparkman/Hillcrest, Friday the 5th, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Memorial services will be held Saturday 12:00 Noon at Sparkman /Hillcrest, Northwest Hwy Chapel, Interment, Hillcrest Memorial Park. Rev. John Delgado, Officiating, Pallbearers, Will Witten, Jim Griffin, Gary Walker, Edward Escobedo, Steve Foss. Sparkman/Hillcrest Funeral Home, Cemetery Mausoleum, 7405 W. Northwest Highway, Dallas 214-363-5401.
About Chess Digest, Inc.
Chess Digest began as a hobby business in 1962 in Dallas, Texas. Ken's primary business was S & S Utility Contracting Company, Inc., but chess was an avid vocation. Since chess books were not readily available in the United States unless imported from Europe, Ken saw a need and filled it by starting Chess Digest Magazine in his spare bedroom. Working nights and weekends using an old typewriter and a lot of paste, he produced his original magazine once a month.
Now in 1997, Chess Digest, Inc. no longer publishes a magazine - Ken started writing books instead - and has since grown into a major chess book publisher and supplier with over 2,000 different chess titles from both the U.S. and Europe. Chess Digest, Inc. is still a family owned and operated business.
Ken "Top Hat" Smith (1930--1999 From Texas) is both a Chess Master (FIDE 2360) and a World Class Poker Player (3rd one year and 4th another year in the World Championship Of Poker). He believes, practices, and teaches that chess players versed in gambits can become outstanding poker players "Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand." -Smith.
In chess, a gambit player for 33 years, Ken Smith has written nine books and 49 articles on the Smith-Morra Gambit 1 e4, c5 2 d4, cxd 3 c3. The gambit now bares half its name from Ken Smith, Texas and Pierre Morra, France (deceased). Smith is one of the few that Bobby Fischer signed a contract with:
February 24, 1970
I appoint Ken Smith, Editor of Chess Digest Magazine, to help with tournament and match preparation - Bobby Fischer International Grandmaster
Ken has won over 200 chess tournaments including 8 times Texas Champion, 7 times Southwest Champion, 1 time British Major Open, 1 time Championship of Mexico and 4 times Southern Open Champion.
In poker Ken Smith has won in Las Vegas the "Stairway to the Stars" tournament, Amarillo Slim's "Omaha" tournament, Amarillo Slim's "Eight or Better High-Low Split" tournament, and came in second in the "Low-Ball Draw" tournament sponsored by Amarillo Slim. These are in addition to his 2nd and 3rd place finishes in the Poker World Championship.
Excerpts from Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold'em by T.J. Cloutier with Tom McElvoy :
"I was playing with the great players in these days... ...guys like Bob Hooks, Kenny (Ken) Smith, Dicky Carson, Bill Bond and Bill Smith".
"Kenny (Ken Smith of Chess Digest, Inc., Dallas, TX) was a big chess player in Texas and he just loved to play poker... ...played poker for years. He always wore a silk top hat that was supposed to have been from the theater where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; he had certification on it, too. Kenny would wear that hat in all the big tournaments, and everytime he won a pot he would stand up on the table and yell, `What a player!, And that's how he got his nickname.
“We were playing in a hand at the Am Vet one time when Bob Hooks limped in and Ken Smith raised the pot up a pretty good amount of money. It came back to Hooks and he moved in his whole stack with two kings. Ken put the stall on Hooks for about three minutes . . . he didn't look like was ever going to act on his hand. So Hooks looks over and grabs Ken's cards out of his hand and sees two aces in his hand . . . and he moved Ken’s chips into the pot himself! So Ken never had to put his own money in – Hooks put it in for him. I’ll bet that was the only time that Hooks ever lost a hand when he put the money in for both players.”
Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold’em available from Cardsmith Publishing, 4535 W. Sahara #105, Las Vegas, NV 89102.
Ken's Improving Your Chess course. Return to Index Last Updated: 02/14/99. You can email general questions to: chessquest@aol.com. Please send any comments regarding this site to RCKlenk. Copyright © by Chess Digest, Inc. 1997-1999. All Rights Reserved.
Ken Smith (1930-1999) Texas chess legend Kenneth Ray Smith, 68, died Feb. 4 after a protracted kidney ailment. In 1962 he founded a highly successful mail order business, Chess Digest, which became a model for other chess businesses. With an inside track on the world's opening theory, he was tapped as Bobby Fischer's theoretical supplier during the 1972 world championship match. Later that year he was the sole Texas competitor in Church's International Tournament in San Antonio. From 1951 to 1983 he won the Texas state championship and the Southwest Open each ten times. An inveterate gamesman, he was often seen at the poker table wearing a stovepipe hat and tux. As an expert on high-stakes poker competition he was once interviewed by Ted Koppel on Nightline. Ken may be best remembered in the chess world for popularizing the Morra Gambit in the Sicilian (1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3), which is now known as the Smith-Morra Gambit.
Obituary: http://classifieds.dallasnews.com/6_friday/A01.html
Chess Digest began as a hobby business in 1962 in Dallas, Texas. Ken's primary business was S & S Utility Contracting Company, Inc., but chess was an avid vocation. Since chess books were not readily available in the United States unless imported from Europe, Ken saw a need and filled it by starting Chess Digest Magazine in his spare bedroom. Working nights and weekends using an old typewriter and a lot of paste, he produced his original magazine once a month. Now in 1997, Chess Digest, Inc. no longer publishes a magazine - Ken started writing books instead - and has since grown into a major chess book publisher and supplier with over 2,000 different chess titles from both the U.S. and Europe. Chess Digest, Inc. is still a family owned and operated business.
Ken "Top Hat" Smith (1930--1999 From Texas) is both a Chess Master (FIDE 2360) and a World Class Poker Player (3rd one year and 4th another year in the World Championship Of Poker). He believes, practices, and teaches that chess players versed in gambits can become outstanding poker players "Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand." -Smith.
In chess, a gambit player for 33 years, Ken Smith has written nine books and 49 articles on the Smith-Morra Gambit 1 e4, c5 2 d4, cxd 3 c3. The gambit now bares half its name from Ken Smith, Texas and Pierre Morra, France (deceased).
Smith is one of the few that Bobby Fischer signed a contract with:
In 1954 he won the British Blitz Championship while stationed in England. He was not given a prize because he was not British. In 1983 while playing in the National Open in Las Vegas, Ken Smith won $140,000 at a poker tournament. He has won the Texas Championship 9 times and the Southwest Championship 7 times.
Ken finished 6th (of 42) in the main event of the 1978 World Series of Poker won by Bobby Baldwin (top 5 were paid, so he was out of the money). He was 4th (of 75) in 1981, winning $37,500. Stuart Unger won that year, his second consecutive WSOP victory.
Dan Harrington was 6th in 1987 ($43,750), won by Johnny Chan. Howard Lederer was 5th ($56,250).
Link to TJ Cloutier's blog about "Top Hat"
Here's an old Poker Player article and a copy of the USCF press release at the time of his death.
And here are my expanded notes...
A Alvarez on Ken Smith (1981 WSOP Main Event)
Page 150 – Ken Smith, who is also a chess master and was Bobby Fischer’s second in charge of the preparation for the Reykjavik marathon with Boris Spassky, wore what he always wears at competitions – a frock coat and a decrepit top hat, which he claims was found in Ford Theatre the night that Lincoln was assassinated. Smith has a ragged beard, a squeaky voice, and a girth like that of Swineburne’s giant slumbering boar: “the blind bulk of the immeasurable beast.” Each time he wins a pot, he lumbers to his feet, doffs his topper to the audience, and pipes, “What a player!”
Page 160 – The gigantic Ken Smith, the chess master, was also playing to the crowd, not only doffing his top hat and bleating “What a Player!” but also using the crowd as a sounding board whenever he decided to coffeehouse – or bluff verbally – an opponent. Early in the afternoon he found himself head to head with a marose-looking man named Don Furrh. As soon as Smith bet, Furrh’s hands moved ominously to the back of his chips. They hovered while he considered whether or not to move all in.
“I’ve gotta real hand here,” Smith squeaked. “You gotta be strong, Don.”
A large bleached blonde in cut-off Levi’s and a halter shouted from the rail, “You tell him, Smitty!”
Ken Smith’s voice rose another decibel. “It’s a real good hand I’m holding here.”
“Amen!” called the blonde.
Furrh stared contemptuously at Smith, shrugged, and threw in his cards.
Page 161 – Minutes later, Ken Smith was at it again, his “What a Player!” almost drowning out the din of the slot machines. Doyle Brunson, who has known Smith for 30 years, grinned at him benevolently. “You’re all heart, Ken,” he said. “Heart and belly.” The railbirds applauded. “You know what I’m gonna do?” Brunson continued. “I’m gonna raise you on two rags and bluff you right out.”
“Try me,” piped Smith, and he cam out betting when the next flop was dealt: king, queen, jack.
“Raise!” said Brunson so loudly that his jowls quivered. He put both hands behind his now depleted stacks of chips and pushed them belligerently into the center. Smith paused, shrugged, and docilely folded. Brunson pulled in the pot, then turned over his hole cards and tossed them, face up, on the table: a six and a five of different suits. He rose majestically to his feet, doffed his Stetson, and cried, basso profundo, “What a Player!” The crowd roared.
Page 168 – “Keep it up, Texas!” called a tall cowboy…
Ken Smith raised his topper in acknowledgment. And for a period the contest seemed to become a question more of places than of personalities, hold ‘em being, by tradition, a Texas game. Brunson, in fact, had made a large patriotic bet with Gabe Kaplan that the Texans would beat the Jews. Now the forces were equally matched: Ken Smith, Gene Fisher, and Bill Smith against Stu Unger, Perry Green, and Jay Heimowitz.
Page 170 -- When the game broke for early dinner, at five, only four players were left. Stu Unger, who two hours before had been trailing the field with $50,000, was the clear leader, with $340,000; Pery Green was econd, with $220,000; the two Texans, Gene Fisher and Ken Smith, had $95,000 each. Brunson shook his jowls. “That bet of mine with Gabe don’t look too healthy,” he said.
It looked even less healthy a couple hours later when Perry Green eliminated Ken Smith with four aces against a top-straight draw. Smith lumbered to his feet and raised his topper when Jack Binion handed him his prize money. Someone in the crowd shouted, “What a Player!” Smith doffed his hat again.
The next segment is by Lou Hayes (link above)
FIDE Master Ken Smith, 68, owner of Chess Digest and a Texas chess legend died February 4, 1999 in Dallas. Smith was the dominant chess master of the southwest United States during the 1950s and 60s, earning him the nickname “Capablanca of the cattle country.”
His chess career began by accident in the late 1940’s. Ken was on a full football scholarship at Southern Methodist University in Dallas when a leg injury landed him in the hospital. He was bored in his hospital bed and decided to take up chess. He acquired some chess books and immediately became fascinated with the game. As soon as he was out of the hospital, Smith quickly made friendships with several strong players and began playing chess constantly. He joined the Dallas Chess Club and became a regular weekend Swiss player.
He was indefatigable in his passion for the game, and the stories have it that within six months, he was already a master strength player. This was an amazing feat for a player learning chess at the age of nineteen. Over the next few years, he played in numerous Texas weekend tournaments, almost always winning or sharing first prize.
He won more than 200 chess tournaments in his life, including eight times Texas Champion, seven times Southwest Open champion, four times Southern Open champion, and one time each winner of the British Major Open and the Mexican championship. Ken played in the great 1972 Church’s International tournament in San Antonio against some of the world's strongest players. Although he fared poorly overall against these elites, he did score a win (vs. Kaplan) and draws against Campos-Lopez and the legendary super grandmaster, Paul Keres. Smith was a titled FIDE Master with a FIDE rating of 2360. He was a USCF Senior Master for many years.
In 1960 Ken and his father founded S&S construction company in Dallas and in 1962 Ken started Chess Digest. Both companies prospered, and soon Ken was flying to New York to play in Manhattan Chess club weekend blitz tournaments.
Smith was a benevolent teacher and player. As the years went by and he began publishing chess books, he provided employment as writers, proofreaders and editors to many strong Dallas-Fort Worth players. As late as the early 1980’s he still willingly played in many Saturday Swiss tournaments at the Dallas Chess Club, even though it occasionally meant drawing or losing to lower rated players. Everybody had a chance at the big guy, and those game scores were very meaningful to the average players.
In those days Ken kept the Dallas Chess Club supplied with books and study materials even though he probably lost money on this consignment arrangement. Ken was a great believer in gambit play, and the Smith-Morra Gambit, (1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3) bears his name. Over thirty years Ken wrote nine books and forty-nine articles on this gambit. He advocated the Danish and Goring gambits as White, the Sicilian Scheveningen against 1.e4 and the Tarrasch Henning-Schara gambit as Black. Smith claimed he had never lost a tournament game on the Black side of the Scheveningen until his game with Karpov at San Antonio, 1972.
Ken was also a very strong endgame player. His “Improving your Chess” course always stressed the importance of endgame study, even though most players found it boring. He wrote basic endgame books with a diagram every move, so players could study without a board.
Ken always said that chess players well versed in gambit play make good poker players. “Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand.”
Ken was a world-class poker player and during the 1980’s finished third one year and fourth another year in the World Championship of Poker. His poker skills earned him an interview with Ted Koppel and mention in Newsweek magazine. In addition to the World Championship of Poker tournaments, Ken has won the “Stairway to Stars” poker tournament in Las Vegas, Amarillo Slim’s “Omaha” tournament, “Eight or Better High-Low Split” tournament, and came in second in the “Low-Ball Draw” tournament, also sponsored by Amarillo Slim. He always played poker in a black silk top hat which came from Ford’s theater in Washington, D.C.
In 1972 Ken was employed by Bobby Fischer as an assistant in the World Championship match with Boris Spassky. Ken went to Iceland and Chess Digest provided Fischer all the materials Bobby requested for his match preparation.
The last eleven years of Ken’s life were marred by health problems. In 1988 his kidneys failed and he was forced to undergo dialysis three times a week. Despite this, he continued to work four and five day weeks at Chess Digest until late in January this year.
Ken was a brilliant man who could do virtually anything he set his mind to, whether it be chess, poker or simply living as normal a life as possible despite severe health problems. Ken Smith was certainly one of the most unforgettable and interesting persons one could know. He will be greatly missed by the chess community.
Smith is survived by his parents, his wife Elaine, four children, four stepchildren and three grandchildren.
Robert Canright: I remember when I was a teenager living in New Orleans, 26 years ago, that I had a Chess Digest catalog (small then) that I used to buy chess trophies for our big high school tournament. For a long time, his Chess Digest provided resources for chess players when no one else was interested. Just a couple of years ago I had a very minor quibble with an order at Chess Digest and he personally took care of it. I think he contributed to U.S. chess, and I’m very sorry to hear of his departure. I wanted to share my thoughts on Ken with everyone. I don’t think I have ever replied-to-all before on this email list.
Don Maddox: I bought my first chess book from Ken Smith in 1972. Today, my shelves hold literally hundreds of books I purchased from Ken. Mark Twain once wrote, “Show me a good billiards player and I'll show you a misspent youth.” From Ken’s resume, I suspect he misspent several youths, and I’d like to thank him for helping me misspend mine. My condolences to his family and to the chess community. We will miss him.
Michael Simpson: I remember getting a BHB clock from Chess Digest at the 1990 Southwest Open, and one of the clocks quit working about four months later. I didn’t have my receipt, and the 90 day guarantee was over, so I figured I was stuck. I sent it back to Chess Digest with a note saying I bought it at the Southwest Open and to”please fix and let me know how much it cost.” Three days later I received a new BHB, no questions asked, not even a bill for shipping. It’s rare to have that kind of service in any kind of business, and we were blessed for having a chess bookseller who took care of his customers that way.
“I was playing with the great players in these days . . . guys like Bob Hooks, Kenny Smith, Dicky Carson, Bill Bond and Bill Smith.
Kenny (Ken Smith) was a big chess player in Texas and he just loved to play poker . . . played poker for years. He always wore a silk top hat that was supposed to have been from the theater where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; he had certification on it, too. Kenny would wear that hat in all the big tournaments, and everytime he won a pot he would stand up on the table and yell, “What a player!” And that's how he got his nickname.
We were playing in a hand at the Am Vet one time when Bob Hooks limped in and Ken Smith raised the pot up a pretty good amount of money. It came back to Hooks and he moved in his whole stack with two kings. Ken put the stall on Hooks for about three minutes . . . he didn’t look like was ever going to act on his hand. So Hooks looks over and grabs Ken’s cards out of his hand and sees two aces in his hand . . . and he moved Ken’s chips into the pot himself! So Ken never had to put his own money in – Hooks put it in for him. I’ll bet that was the only time that Hooks ever lost a hand when he put the money in for both players.”
(T.J. Cloutier with Tom McElvoy, Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold’em, Cardsmith Publishing, 4535 W. Sahara #105, Las Vegas, NV 89102)
Notes by FM John Jacobs:
Ken was especially proud of this game, as it featured a TN in his beloved Smith-Morra Gambit. Like so many of Ken’s games, it featured a flurry of piece activity and tactics – and it ended quickly.
Smith-Morra Gambit B21
Ken Smith
Gil Ramirez
San Francisco 1972
1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3 Ken was a risk-taker, and this gambit suited his style like no other. I still recall his invaluable advice to me as an aspiring teenage chessplayer, “John, learn the open games first because all closed games finally become open.” 3...dxc3 4.Nxc3 Nc6 5.Nf3 d6 6. Bc4 e6 7.0-0 Be7 8.Qe2 Nf6 9.Rd1 e5 At the time, this was considered one of the most formidable defenses to the Smith-Morra Gambit. Black prevents e5, but use of the d5 square and his superior mobility give White good compensation for the pawn. 10.Be3!? It was thought by some that 10. h3 was a necessary preventative to the annoying ...Bg4 pin. However, for his 1972 book Smith-Morra Gambit Accepted, Ken had commissioned some original analysis by GM Matulovic to help demonstrate that White need not waste a tempo on 10.h3. 10...0-0 10...Bg4 at once transposes after 11h3 Bh5 12Rac1 0-0. 11.Rac1 Bg4 12.h3 Bh5 Matulovic had analysed 12... Bxf3 13.Qxf3 Rac8 14.a3 Na5 15. Ba2 Nc4 16.Bxc4 Rxc4 17.Bg5! h6 18.Bxf6 Bxf6 19.Nd5 as giving White more than sufficent compensation, but this retreat went unmentioned in the 1972 publication. Ken now unleashes his TN. . 13.g4! Bg6 14.Bc5! Sustaining the initiative by threatening 15.Bxd6 followed by 16.Nb5. 14...Nxg4?! Interesting but unsound. 14...a6 was better as in a 1978 Conroy-Arkell game: 15.a4 Rc8 16.Ba3 h6 17.b4 Qb6 18.b5 axb5 19.axb5 Na5 20.Ba2 and White stood better. 15.hxg4 Qc8 The point - White's bishop and g-pawn are threatened. 16.Nxe5!? An excellent counter-sacrifice. If 16.Bxd6? Qxg4+ 17.Kf1 (or 17. Kh1 Bxd6 18.Rxd6 Nd4! 19.Nxd4 Qh4+ 20.Kg1) 17...Qh3+! 18.Ke1 Bxd6 19.Rxd6 Bh5 and the pin wins. However, subsequent analysis indicated that after 16.Be3! White has nothing to fear: 16...Qxg4+ 17. Kh1! Bh5 18.Nh2 Qh3 19.f3. 16...dxc5 White owns a nearly decisive mobility advantage after both 16... Nxe5 17.Nd5 and 16...dxe5 17.Bxe7 Nxe7 18.Nd5 Nxd5 19.Bxd5. 17.Nd5 Bg5 18.Nxg6 hxg6 19.f4 Bd8 With every White piece more active than its counterpart, White has a sizeable advantage in mobility. If White can double heavy pieces on the h-file, his attack will be unstoppable. 20.Qg2 Re8 21.Rd2 21Rc3 with Rh3 to follow was more efficient. 21...Nd4 22.Rc3 b5 23.Bf1 Qb7 24. e5! Threatening 25Nf6+. 24...Rb8 25.Bd3! Maneuvering the bishop to an aggressive post at e4. 25...Ba5 26.Be4 Qd7 27.Qh3 With the game-ending threat of 28Rh2. 27...f5 28.gxf5 gxf5 29.Nf6+ gxf6 30.Rg3+ Kf7 30...Kf8 31.Qh6+ yields a similar result. 31.Qh7+ After 31...Ke6 32.Bxf5+ Black loses his queen and is soon mated.
1-0
French Rubinstein C10
Jason Doss 2341
Alexey Root 2077
TexOhma Open 1999 (4)
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nd2 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Bd7 5.Bd3 Bc6 6.Nf3 Nd7 7.Qe2 Ngf6 8.Ng3 Be7 (8...Bd5 9. 0-0 c5 10.Be3 Qb6 11.c3 ± Parma-Forintos, Maribor 1977) 9.Bd2 0-0 10.0-0-0 b6 11.Rhe1 a5 12.Ne5 Bb7 13.f4 g6 14.f5! gxf5 15.Nxd7 Qxd7 16.Nxf5 exf5 17.Qxe7 Qxe7 18.Rxe7 Nd5 19.Re5 Nb4 20.Bxf5 Nxa2+ 21.Kb1 Nb4 22.c3 Nc6 23. Re4 Bc8 24.Rf1 Bxf5 25.Rxf5 f6 26.Re6 Nd8 27.Rexf6 Ne6 28. Rxf8+ Rxf8 29.Rxf8+ Kxf8 30.d5 Nc5 31.Bf4 Na6 32.Kc2 b5 33. Kd3 Ke7 34.Kd4 Kd7 35.g4 c5+ 36.dxc6+ Kxc6 37.h4 Nc5 38.g5 Ne6+ 39.Ke5 Ng7 40.Be3 b4 41. cxb4 axb4 42.Bd4 b3 43.Bc3 Kc5 44.Ke4 Ne6 45.Kf5 Nc7 46.h5 Nd5 47.Be5 Kc4 48.g6 hxg6+ 49. hxg6 Kd3 50.g7 Kc2 51.Ke6
1-0
From Dallas Morning News obits,
http://classifieds.dallasnews.com/6_friday/A01.html
SMITH KENNETH RAY, was born September 13th, 1930 in Olney, Texas. Raised in Ft. Worth Ken resided in Dallas most of his life. Ken briefly attended SMU as quarterback, due to injury he took up the game of chess. His hobby soon became his profession and he founded Chess Digest, the world's largest chess book publisher and retailer. He went on to become an International Chess Master and won numerous domestic and international championships, including the U.S., British, and Mexico Opens.
In 1972 he prepared Bobby Fischer for the World championship with IGM Spassky. He utilized his prodigious memory to play more than 25 simultaneous games while blindfolded, and to become the winner of multiple poker championships. In the early 80's he was ranked by Newsweek magazine as the World's 4th Best Amateur Poker Player. Ken will always be loved and survived by his parents, Mr. & Mrs. Ray F. Smith, brother Jerry Smith, his loving wife, Elaine, his previous wife Linda Griffin and their four children, Dr. Jane Witten, Robert Ray Smith, Lori Kay Weldon, Kenneth Bradley Smith, his three grandchildren, Will, Neal, and Amanda, furthermore, by his Stepchildren, Steve Salsbury, Theresa Walker, Lisa Foss, Melissa Marshall and their nine children.
In life Ken was always a winner, famous for donning his top hat and tuxedo. Now is the time for us to tip our hats and say, 'What a Player' Visitation will take place at Sparkman/Hillcrest, Friday the 5th, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Memorial services will be held Saturday 12:00 Noon at Sparkman /Hillcrest, Northwest Hwy Chapel, Interment, Hillcrest Memorial Park. Rev. John Delgado, Officiating, Pallbearers, Will Witten, Jim Griffin, Gary Walker, Edward Escobedo, Steve Foss. Sparkman/Hillcrest Funeral Home, Cemetery Mausoleum, 7405 W. Northwest Highway, Dallas 214-363-5401.
About Chess Digest, Inc.
Chess Digest began as a hobby business in 1962 in Dallas, Texas. Ken's primary business was S & S Utility Contracting Company, Inc., but chess was an avid vocation. Since chess books were not readily available in the United States unless imported from Europe, Ken saw a need and filled it by starting Chess Digest Magazine in his spare bedroom. Working nights and weekends using an old typewriter and a lot of paste, he produced his original magazine once a month.
Now in 1997, Chess Digest, Inc. no longer publishes a magazine - Ken started writing books instead - and has since grown into a major chess book publisher and supplier with over 2,000 different chess titles from both the U.S. and Europe. Chess Digest, Inc. is still a family owned and operated business.
Ken "Top Hat" Smith (1930--1999 From Texas) is both a Chess Master (FIDE 2360) and a World Class Poker Player (3rd one year and 4th another year in the World Championship Of Poker). He believes, practices, and teaches that chess players versed in gambits can become outstanding poker players "Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand." -Smith.
In chess, a gambit player for 33 years, Ken Smith has written nine books and 49 articles on the Smith-Morra Gambit 1 e4, c5 2 d4, cxd 3 c3. The gambit now bares half its name from Ken Smith, Texas and Pierre Morra, France (deceased). Smith is one of the few that Bobby Fischer signed a contract with:
February 24, 1970
I appoint Ken Smith, Editor of Chess Digest Magazine, to help with tournament and match preparation - Bobby Fischer International Grandmaster
Ken has won over 200 chess tournaments including 8 times Texas Champion, 7 times Southwest Champion, 1 time British Major Open, 1 time Championship of Mexico and 4 times Southern Open Champion.
In poker Ken Smith has won in Las Vegas the "Stairway to the Stars" tournament, Amarillo Slim's "Omaha" tournament, Amarillo Slim's "Eight or Better High-Low Split" tournament, and came in second in the "Low-Ball Draw" tournament sponsored by Amarillo Slim. These are in addition to his 2nd and 3rd place finishes in the Poker World Championship.
Excerpts from Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold'em by T.J. Cloutier with Tom McElvoy :
"I was playing with the great players in these days... ...guys like Bob Hooks, Kenny (Ken) Smith, Dicky Carson, Bill Bond and Bill Smith".
"Kenny (Ken Smith of Chess Digest, Inc., Dallas, TX) was a big chess player in Texas and he just loved to play poker... ...played poker for years. He always wore a silk top hat that was supposed to have been from the theater where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; he had certification on it, too. Kenny would wear that hat in all the big tournaments, and everytime he won a pot he would stand up on the table and yell, `What a player!, And that's how he got his nickname.
“We were playing in a hand at the Am Vet one time when Bob Hooks limped in and Ken Smith raised the pot up a pretty good amount of money. It came back to Hooks and he moved in his whole stack with two kings. Ken put the stall on Hooks for about three minutes . . . he didn't look like was ever going to act on his hand. So Hooks looks over and grabs Ken's cards out of his hand and sees two aces in his hand . . . and he moved Ken’s chips into the pot himself! So Ken never had to put his own money in – Hooks put it in for him. I’ll bet that was the only time that Hooks ever lost a hand when he put the money in for both players.”
Championship No-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold’em available from Cardsmith Publishing, 4535 W. Sahara #105, Las Vegas, NV 89102.
Ken's Improving Your Chess course. Return to Index Last Updated: 02/14/99. You can email general questions to: chessquest@aol.com. Please send any comments regarding this site to RCKlenk. Copyright © by Chess Digest, Inc. 1997-1999. All Rights Reserved.
Ken Smith (1930-1999) Texas chess legend Kenneth Ray Smith, 68, died Feb. 4 after a protracted kidney ailment. In 1962 he founded a highly successful mail order business, Chess Digest, which became a model for other chess businesses. With an inside track on the world's opening theory, he was tapped as Bobby Fischer's theoretical supplier during the 1972 world championship match. Later that year he was the sole Texas competitor in Church's International Tournament in San Antonio. From 1951 to 1983 he won the Texas state championship and the Southwest Open each ten times. An inveterate gamesman, he was often seen at the poker table wearing a stovepipe hat and tux. As an expert on high-stakes poker competition he was once interviewed by Ted Koppel on Nightline. Ken may be best remembered in the chess world for popularizing the Morra Gambit in the Sicilian (1.e4 c5 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3), which is now known as the Smith-Morra Gambit.
Obituary: http://classifieds.dallasnews.com/6_friday/A01.html
Chess Digest began as a hobby business in 1962 in Dallas, Texas. Ken's primary business was S & S Utility Contracting Company, Inc., but chess was an avid vocation. Since chess books were not readily available in the United States unless imported from Europe, Ken saw a need and filled it by starting Chess Digest Magazine in his spare bedroom. Working nights and weekends using an old typewriter and a lot of paste, he produced his original magazine once a month. Now in 1997, Chess Digest, Inc. no longer publishes a magazine - Ken started writing books instead - and has since grown into a major chess book publisher and supplier with over 2,000 different chess titles from both the U.S. and Europe. Chess Digest, Inc. is still a family owned and operated business.
Ken "Top Hat" Smith (1930--1999 From Texas) is both a Chess Master (FIDE 2360) and a World Class Poker Player (3rd one year and 4th another year in the World Championship Of Poker). He believes, practices, and teaches that chess players versed in gambits can become outstanding poker players "Both are a calculated risk. As you play your gambit, you are projecting all the confidence in the world. You move all your poker chips to the middle of the table when you think you have the best hand." -Smith.
In chess, a gambit player for 33 years, Ken Smith has written nine books and 49 articles on the Smith-Morra Gambit 1 e4, c5 2 d4, cxd 3 c3. The gambit now bares half its name from Ken Smith, Texas and Pierre Morra, France (deceased).
Smith is one of the few that Bobby Fischer signed a contract with:
In 1954 he won the British Blitz Championship while stationed in England. He was not given a prize because he was not British. In 1983 while playing in the National Open in Las Vegas, Ken Smith won $140,000 at a poker tournament. He has won the Texas Championship 9 times and the Southwest Championship 7 times.
Ken finished 6th (of 42) in the main event of the 1978 World Series of Poker won by Bobby Baldwin (top 5 were paid, so he was out of the money). He was 4th (of 75) in 1981, winning $37,500. Stuart Unger won that year, his second consecutive WSOP victory.
Dan Harrington was 6th in 1987 ($43,750), won by Johnny Chan. Howard Lederer was 5th ($56,250).
Link to TJ Cloutier's blog about "Top Hat"
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
My Feedback Team
These are the wonderful friends who have offered to provide feedback for my book:
1. Staci Logan, Boonville, MO
hey frank I would like to be added to your feedback team to see what your up to.
sincerely,
staci logan
stacilogan@hotmail.com
Hello Carolyn-
My name is Staci and I just moved to Boonville about three months ago. I teach special Education during the day and Bartend at Jim's Place at night. A man named Frank walked into my life last night and I found him to be the most plesent and interesting person I have talked to in awhile...(which trust me doesn't take much from working with special ed kids and drunks all day ;)
He told me why he was in town and of your wedding to your boyfriend.
I found your story fascinating and as I was signing the guest book at Frank's site today saw your name and thought that I would say congratulations and good luck to you this weekend. You have perfect weather for a wedding.
Best Wishes,
Staci Logan
2 & 3. Carolyn & Dave Carrigan
Hello Staci - Very kind of you. Thanks so much. Frank is a wonderful man. I think he is one of the nicest and giving men I have ever met. I was tickled to death when I found out he was going to be able to come to the wedding. It has been lots of fun and a real pleasure having him here. Did Frank tell you he was helping my sweetie build a chicken coop? He enjoyed taking pictures of David playing in the pen with the chicks and coach him along as he was building. Thanks again, Carolyn
more to come...
Monday, October 6, 2008
New Blog
This is a place where I will put the writing that is percolating and marinating in my mind. These pieces are in various stages of completion. Some require further research and fact checking. Some require just the time to sit and write. Once each is complete, I will move it to one of my main blogs. Your input is welcome.
Best wishes,
Frank Niro
ChessSafari@yahoo.com
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