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Master Class Vol. 19: Wilhelm Steinitz

Williams Steinitz, 1st World Chess Champion (1886-1894) The match between William Steinitz and Johannes Zukertort in 1886 was the first chess match for the ‘World Chess Championship’. Steinitz won, and has since been considered the first official world champion in chess history.

Free video sample: The Steinitzian method of restriction

Free video sample: Strategy Introduction

In 1894, he lost the title in a match against Emanuel Lasker. William Steinitz, born in 1836 in the ghetto of Prague, then Austria, came to Vienna in 1858, and soon became one of the best chess players in the city. In 1862, he moved to the chess stronghold of London and made a name for himself by defeating the other top players of the world in competitions. Steinitz is considered the founder of modern chess theory. He analysed master games, formulated rules and laid the foundations for the modern strategic-positional school of chess, which replaced the ‘romantic’ style, characterised by stormy attacks on the king. William Steinitz was not only a prolific player, but also a prolific writer. He wrote a chess column in ‘The Field’ in London. After moving to the USA, he published the chess magazines ‘The International Chess Magazine’ and ‘The Modern Chess Instructor’. In opening theory, variations in the Spanish Game, the Scotch Game and the French Defence are named after Steinitz. In this video course, experts including Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Karsten Müller and Oliver Reeh, examine the games of William Steinitz. Let them show you which openings Steinitz chose to play, where his strength in middlegames were, or how he outplayed his opponents in the endgame. Finally, you’ll get a glimpse of his tactical abilities in the Tactics section.

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This is what is delivered:
  • Fritztrainer App for Windows and Mac
  • Available as download or on DVD
  • Video course with a running time of approx. 4-8 hrs.
  • Repertoire database: save and integrate Fritztrainer games into your own repertoire (in WebApp Opening or in ChessBase)
  • Interactive exercises with video feedback: the authors present exercises and key positions, the user has to enter the solution. With video feedback (also on mistakes) and further explanations.
  • Sample games as a ChessBase database.
  • New: many Fritztrainer now also available as stream in the ChessBase video portal!
That's what the FritzTrainer App can do for you:
  • Videos can run in the Fritztrainer app or in the ChessBase program with board graphics, notation and a large function bar
  • Analysis engine can be switched on at any time
  • Video pause for manual navigation and analysis in game notation
  • Input of your own variations, engine analysis, with storage in the game
  • Learn variations: view specific lines in the ChessBase WebApp Opening with autoplay, memorize variations and practise transformation (initial position - final position).
  • Active opening training: selected opening positions are transferred to the ChessBase WebApp Fritz-online. In a match against Fritz you test your new knowledge and actively play the new opening.
Even more possibilities: Start FritzTrainer in the ChessBase program!
  • The database with all games and analyses can be opened directly.
  • Games can be easily added to the opening reference.
  • Direct evaluation with game reference, games can be replayed on the analysis board
  • Your own variations are saved and can be added to the own repertoire
  • Replay training
  • LiveBook active
  • All engines installed in ChessBase can be started for the analysis
  • Assisted Analysis
  • Print notation and diagrams (for worksheets)

Sample video

Contents

  • Introduction
  • Short biography
  • Opening
  • Introduction
  • French Defence
  • Spanish
  • Scotch Game
  • Vienna Game
  • Strategy
  • Introduction
  • A Bridge between Steinitz and Modern Chess
  • Game 1: De Vere - Steinitz
  • Game 2: Bricard - Marin
  • Game 3: Zuckertort - Steinitz
  • Game 4: Steinitz - Chigorin
  • Game 5: Chigorin - Steinitz
  • Game 6: Steinitz - Zuckertort
  • Game 7: Steinitz - Lasker
  • Tactics 1
  • Pihal - Steinitz 1959
  • Hamppe - Steinitz 1860
  • Steinitz - Meitner 1860
  • Reiner - Steinitz 1860
  • Steinitz - Robey 1862
  • Steinitz - NN 1862
  • Novotny - Steinitz 1862
  • Steinitz - Andersen 1862
  • Steinitz - Thorold 1864
  • Green - Steinitz 1864
  • Steinitz - Duffy 1865
  • Steinitz - Burden 1865
  • Steinitz - MacDonnell 1866
  • Tactics 2
  • Steinitz - Stern 1870
  • Fisher - Steinitz 1872
  • Steinitz - Zuckertort 1872
  • Steinitz - Anderssen 1873
  • Steinitz - Gelbfuhs 1873
  • Winawer - Steinitz 1883
  • Steinitz - Gunsberg 1890
  • Steinitz - Chigorin 1892
  • Steinitz - Pillsbury 1892
  • Waldtbrodt - Steinitz 1895
  • Steinitz - Von Bardeleben 1895
  • Tactics database
  • Further Exercises
  • Endgames
  • The Steinitzian method of restriction
  • Two bishops vs two knights
  • Opposite coloured bishops favour the attacker
  • Good knight bad bishop
  • Opening attacking inroads
  • The transformation of advantages
  • Interactive Exercise: A knightmare
  • Extra Endgames
  • Bonus
  • All Games from Steinitz
  • Steinitz Book with White
  • Steinitz Book with Black
  • More Tactics
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