Genrikh Kasparyan | |
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![]() Kasparyan on a 2010 Armenian stamp | |
Full name | Genrikh Moiseyevich Kasparyan |
Country | Armenia Soviet Union Russian Empire |
Born | (1910-02-27)27 February 1910 Tbilisi,Georgia, Russian Empire |
Died | 27 December 1995(1995-12-27) (aged 85) Yerevan, Armenia |
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Genrikh Kasparyan[a] (Surname also spelledKasparian) (27 February 1910 – 27 December 1995) was an Armenianchess player. He is considered to have been one of the greatestcomposers of chessendgame studies.
Kasparyan became anational master in 1936 and aninternational master in 1950. He was awarded the titles ofInternational Judge of Chess Compositions in 1956 and International Grandmaster of Chess Composition in 1972, the first composer to receive this title fromFIDE (Harkola 2007).
Kasparyan was also a very strong chess player, winning theArmenian championship ten times[1] (from 1934 to 1956, including two ties with futureworld championTigran Petrosian) and theTiflis championship three times (1931, 1937, 1945). He reached theUSSR Championship finals four times (1931, 1937, 1947, 1952), but never finished higher than tenth place.
Kasparyan is best known for his compositions. He started withchess problems, mainlythree-movers, but soon discovered that his best field was inendgame studies. He wrote several books and collections and composed about 600 studies, many on the theme of domination, winning 57 first prizes.[2] He won the USSR Composing Championship several times (Sunnucks 1970).
Irving Chernev included five of Kasparyan's compositions in his book200 Brilliant Endgames. This study uses a "model mate" in the middle of the board. (Chernev 1989:103)
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Apart from being a prolific composer of chess problems Kasparyan was, as mentioned above, an excellent tournament player. One of his games, Genrikh Kasparyan–Koryun Manvelyan, Armenian Championship, Yerevan 1938, has found its way into countless books on chess tactics:
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1.d4 g6 2.b3 Bg7 3.Bb2 d6 4.e4 f5 5.exf5 Bxf5 6.g3 Nc6 7.Bg2 Qd7 8.f4 0-0-0 9.Nf3 a5 10.Nc3 Nf6 11.Qd2 Ne4 12.Nxe4 Bxe4 13.a4 Rhe8 14.Bc3 b6 15.0-0-0 Kb7 16.Rhe1 Bd5 17.Re2 e5 18.Rde1 exf4 19.Rxe8 Rxe8 20.Qxf4 Ka6 21.Qh4 Rh8 22.Rd1 Qc8 23.Rd3 Be6 24.d5 Bxc3 25.Rxc3 Bxd5 (diagram) 26.Rxc6! Bxc6 27.Qc4+ Kb7 28.Qxc6+!! Kxc6 29.Ne5++ Kc5 30.Nd3+ Kd4 31.Kd2!!1–0
Black cannot prevent 32.c3#.