Yuri Gusev

Soviet chess player (born 1921) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yuri Semyonovich Gusev (born September 25, 1921) is a Soviet chess player who was a Merited Master of Sport of the USSR (1951). He is also a former radio engineer. Gusev peaked with a classical Elo rating of 2380,[1] making him the equivalent of a FIDE Master in terms of strength, although it is not clear what, if any, title he ultimately achieved. It is unknown if he is still alive, having been last heard from in 1999.

Yuri Gusev vs. E Auerbach, 1946
abcdefgh
8
e8 black queen
g8 black king
h8 black rook
a7 black pawn
h7 black pawn
b6 black pawn
c6 black rook
d6 white queen
e6 white pawn
f6 black pawn
g6 black pawn
h6 white bishop
e5 black knight
e4 white pawn
c3 white pawn
a2 white pawn
b2 white pawn
e2 white bishop
h2 white pawn
a1 white rook
g1 white king
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
As White, Gusev plays the brilliant sacrifice 24. Qxe5!!, a long-term positional sacrifice that eventually choked Black into submission. It is the only move that secures an advantage for White in what is otherwise a level position.

Gusev was a participant in many championships in Moscow, including the semi-finals of the USSR Chess Championship, in which his best results were 4–6 in the XIX edition and 6–7 in the XXII edition. In 1948, he drew a match with Ilya Kan.

Gusev played a game in 1946, known as Gusev's Immortal, against E Auerbach at Molniya Sporting Society.[2] The game itself was not part of a major competition, but Gusev's Immortal has been brought from obscurity in the 21st century and has been widely recognized for its long-term strategic brilliance—Gusev played the shocking positional queen sacrifice 24. Qxe5, strangling Gusev.

While Gusev's queen sacrifice was indeed proved to be the best move by comprehensive human and computer analysis, there was for decades speculation that a defensive resource existed following another later one of Gusev's moves in which his opponent could have formed a fortress to draw the game, but such a defence was only found in 2011, 65 years later after the original game.[3] Had Gusev and Auerbach both played the objectively best moves at every point after his brilliancy, however, the game would still have been a victory for White.

Grandmaster Simon Williams called Gusev's Immortal one of the most beautiful ideas that he had ever seen.[4]

Gusev played his last recorded game in 1999 at 77 years old at the Efim Geller Memorial.[5]

References

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