Winner Takes it All

Submitted by kenytiger on Sat, 08/16/2008 at 7:53pm.

Albéric O'Kelly de Galway ( 1911-1980), was a Belgian Grandmaster in 1956 and an International Correspondence Grandmaster in 1962, most famous for being the third ICCF World Champion in correspondence chess between 1959 and 1962. He was also a chess writer.

He won the Belgian Championships thirteen times between 1937 and 1959. In 1947 he became one of Europe's leading players, finishing first at the 1947 European Zonal Tournament at Hilversum. He earned the title of International Master in 1950, the first year the title was awarded.

O'Kelly was made an International Arbiter in 1962 and was the chief arbiter of the Petrosian-Spassky World Championship matches in 1966 and 1969. In 1974 he was the arbiter for the Karpov-Korchnoi match in Moscow. He was also a good linguist, fluent in six languages (French, Dutch, German, English, Spanish, Russian, and also some Italian).

The following game, played in 1970, is a triple-award winner, the point, the brilliancy prize and the best-played game.

» posted in Amazing Games
 

Comments:

by Jayded - 3 months ago
Cape Town South Africa
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 36

That is the most retarded opening game I have ever seen. I get the guy is a GM but that was more like club chess.

by davidetal - 3 months ago
Tarragindi Australia
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 1178

kenytiger, thank you: most informative and enjoyable.I think Al's 27. Nf6 also deserves !!

by Artemi - 3 months ago
Imus, Cavite Philippines
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 90

A rare game specimen!

by depthshaman - 3 months ago
United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 280

wow, what a great game. You should mention he is also the founder of O'kelly sicilian, a rather dangerous opening for anyone playing less than GM level chess.

 

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