Richard Réti

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Richard Réti
Full name Richard Réti
Country Austria-Hungary, Czechoslovakia
Born 28 May 1889(1889-05-28)
Bösing, Austria-Hungary (now Pezinok, Slovakia)
Died 6 June 1929(1929-06-06) (aged 40)
Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czechia)

Richard Réti (28 May 1889, Bösing (now Pezinok) – 6 June 1929, Prague) was an ethnic Jewish, Austrian-Hungarian, later Czechoslovakian chess player, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was born in Pezinok which at the time was in the Hungarian part of Austria-Hungary, where his father worked as a physician in the service of the Austrian military.

His older brother Rudolph Reti [sic: he did not use the acute accent] was a noted pianist, musical theorist, and composer.[1] He is the great-grandfather of the German painter Elias Maria Reti.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Réti came to Vienna to study mathematics at Vienna University.[2] One of the top players in the world during the 1910s and 1920s, he began his career as a fiercely combinative classical player, favoring openings such as the King's Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.f4). However, after the end of the First World War, his playing style underwent a radical change, and he became one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism, along with Aron Nimzowitsch and others. Indeed, with the notable exception of Nimzowitsch's acclaimed book My System, he is considered to be the movement's foremost literary contributor. He had his greatest early tournament successes in the period 1918 through 1921, in tournaments in Kaschau (Košice) (1918), Rotterdam (1919), Amsterdam (1920), Vienna (1920), and Gothenburg (1921).[2] The Réti Opening (1.Nf3) is named after him. Réti famously defeated the world champion José Raúl Capablanca in the New York 1924 chess tournament using this opening – Capablanca's first defeat in eight years, the only one to Réti, and the first since becoming World Champion. Réti was also a notable composer of endgame studies.

In 1925 Réti set, and for a time held, the world record for blindfold chess with twenty-nine games played simultaneously. He won twenty-one of these, drew six, and only lost two.

His writings have also become "classics" in the chess world. Modern Ideas in Chess (1923) and Masters of the Chess Board (1933) are still studied today.

Réti died on 6 June 1929 in Prague of scarlet fever. His ashes are buried in the grave of Réti's father Dr. Samuel Réti in the Jewish section of Zentralfriedhof cemetery in Vienna, in Section T1, Group 51, Row 5, Grave 34.[3]

[edit] Famous endgame study

Richard Réti, 1921
Solid white.svg a b c d e f g h Solid white.svg
8  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  white king 8
7  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 7
6  black king  black king  white pawn  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 6
5  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black pawn 5
4  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 4
3  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 3
2  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 2
1  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 1
Solid white.svg a b c d e f g h Solid white.svg
White to move and draw

Réti composed one of the most famous chess studies, shown in this diagram. It was published in Ostrauer Morgenzeitung 4 December 1921. It seems impossible for the white king to catch the advanced black pawn, while the white pawn can be easily stopped by the black king. The idea of the solution is to move the king to advance on both pawns at the same time using specific properties of the chess geometry.

1. Kg7! h4 2. Kf6 Kb6

or 2...h3 3.Ke7 and the white king can support its own pawn

3. Ke5!!

and now the white king comes just in time to the white pawn, or catches the black one

3... h3 4. Kd6

and draws

[edit] Notable chess games

A collection of his games was published as Reti's Games of Chess, annotated by H. Golombek, republished by Dover (1974).

[edit] Publications

[edit] References

  1. ^ Winter, Edward (2003). A Chess Omnibus. Russell Enterprises. ISBN 1-888690-17-8. 
  2. ^ a b "Memoir of Reti," in Reti's Best Games of Chess, annotated by H. Golombek (Dover 1974).
  3. ^ JewishGen Online Worldwide Burial Registry - Austria http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/.

[edit] External links


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