Reuben Fine
Reuben Fine | |
---|---|
![]() Fine in 1961 | |
Country | United States |
Born | New York City, U.S. | October 11, 1914
Died | March 26, 1993 New York City, U.S. | (aged 78)
Title | Grandmaster (1950) |
Reuben C. Fine[1] (October 11, 1914 – March 26, 1993) was an American chess player, psychologist, university professor, and author of many books on both chess and psychology. He was one of the strongest chess players in the world from the mid-1930s until his retirement from chess in 1951. He was granted the title of International Grandmaster by FIDE in 1950, when titles were introduced.
Fine's best result was his equal first place in the 1938 AVRO tournament, one of the strongest tournaments of all time. After the death of world champion Alexander Alekhine in 1946, Fine was one of six players invited to compete for the World Championship in 1948. He declined the invitation, however, and virtually retired from serious competition around that time, although he did play a few events until 1951.
Fine won five medals (four gold) in three Chess Olympiads. He won the US Open all seven times he entered (1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1939, 1940, 1941). He was the author of several chess books, covering endgame, opening, and middlegame.
Early life and family
Fine was born in the Bronx, New York City to Russian Jewish parents Jacob and Bertha (Nedner) Fine.[2] He had a sister, Evelyn (born in 1912),[3] and was raised by his mother alone from the age of two. An uncle taught him chess when he was eight.[4]
Chess career
Teenage master
Fine began chess as a young teenager at the famous
Fine's first significant master-level event was the 1930 New York Young Masters tournament, which was won by Arthur Dake. He narrowly lost a 1931 stakes match to fellow young New York master Arnold Denker.[6]
Fine placed second at the 1931 New York State Championship with a score of 8/11, half a point behind Fred Reinfeld. Fine won the 15th Marshall Chess Club Championship of 1931 with 10½/13, half a point ahead of Reinfeld.[7] He defeated Herman Steiner by 5½–4½ at New York 1932; this was the first of three matches between them.[8]
U.S. Open Champion
At 17, Fine won his first of seven US Opens at Minneapolis 1932 with 9½/11, half a point ahead of Samuel Reshevsky; this tournament was known as the Western Open at the time. Fine played in his first top-class international tournament at Pasadena 1932, where he shared 7th–10th with 5/11; the winner was world champion Alexander Alekhine. Fine repeated as champion in the 16th Marshall Club Championship, held from October to December 1932, with 11½/13, 2½ points ahead of the runner-up.[9][10]
College
Fine graduated from City College of New York in 1932, at the age of 18; he was a successful student there. He captained CCNY to the 1931 National Collegiate team title; a teammate was master Sidney Bernstein. This tournament later evolved into the Pan American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship. Fine then decided to try the life of a chess professional for a few years.[6]
Olympiad results
Fine won the U.S. team selection tournament, New York 1933, with 8/10.[11] This earned him the first of three national team berths for the chess Olympiads.[12] Fine won five medals (including three team golds) representing the United States; his detailed record follows; his totals are (+20−6=19), for 65.6%.[13]
- Folkestone 1933: board three, 9/13 (+6−1=6), team gold, board silver
- Warsaw 1935: board one, 9/17 (+5−4=8), team gold
- Stockholm 1937: board two, 11½/15 (+9−1=5), team gold, board gold
North American successes
Fine repeated as champion at the U.S./Western Open,
European debut
Having had outstanding successes in North America, Fine tried his first European individual international tournament at Łódź 1935, where he shared 2nd–3rd with 6/9 behind Savielly Tartakower. Fine won Hastings 1935–36 with 7½/9, a point ahead of Salo Flohr.
Narrow misses at U.S. Championship
Although Fine was active and very successful in U.S. open tournaments, he was never able to win the
Fine tallied 50/64 in his four U.S. title attempts, for 78.1%, but was never champion. Not being national champion seriously hurt Fine's prospects for making a career from chess.[6]
International success
However, Fine's international tournament record in the 1930s was superior to Reshevsky's.[6] The former did play many more top-class international events than the latter during that period, and was usually near the top of the table. By the end of 1937, Fine had won a string of strong European international tournaments, and was one of the most successful players in the world. Fine won at Oslo 1936 with 6½/7, half a point ahead of Flohr. Fine captured Zandvoort 1936 with 8½/11, ahead of World Champion Max Euwe, Savielly Tartakower, and Paul Keres. Fine shared 3rd–5th at the elite Nottingham 1936 event with 9½/14, half a point behind winners José Raúl Capablanca and Mikhail Botvinnik. Fine shared 1st–2nd at Amsterdam 1936 on 5/7 with Euwe, half a point ahead of Alekhine. Fine placed 2nd at Hastings 1936–37 with 7½/9, as Alekhine won.[8]
The year 1937 was Fine's most successful. He won at
AVRO 1938
In 1938, Fine tied for first place with
Wartime years
As World War II interrupted any prospects for a world championship match, Fine turned to chess writing. In 1939, Fine became the first world-class player to edit the classic opening guide Modern Chess Openings. His work on the sixth edition of the book led to a significant increase in sales. In 1941 he wrote Basic Chess Endings, a compendium of endgame analysis which, some 80 years later, is still considered one of the best works on this subject. His book was the most comprehensive on the subject written to that time, included significant original work by Fine, and received worldwide acclaim. His The Ideas Behind the Chess Openings, though now out of date, is still useful for grasping the underlying ideas of many standard chess openings; it was revised in 1989.
Fine played a few serious American events during World War II, with international chess at a virtual standstill, and continued his successes with dominant scores. He won the U.S. Open at New York 1939 with 10½/11, half a point ahead of Reshevsky. In the 23rd Marshall Club Championship of 1939, Fine won with 14/16. He won the 1940 U.S. Open at
Declines to enter 1948 World Championship
As the World War ended in early September 1945, Fine was 30 years of age, and working on his doctorate in psychology. After World Champion Alekhine died in March 1946, FIDE (the World Chess Federation) organized a World Chess Championship tournament to determine the new champion. Alekhine was the first champion to die as title-holder, creating an unprecedented problem. As co-winner in the AVRO tournament, Fine was invited to participate, but he declined, for reasons that are the subject of speculation even today. Fine had played a third match against Herman Steiner at Los Angeles 1947, winning 5–1; this match was training for his potential world championship appearance.
Publicly, Fine stated that he could not interrupt work on his doctoral dissertation in psychology. Negotiations over the tournament had been protracted, and for a long time it was unclear whether this World Championship event would in fact take place. Fine wrote that he didn't want to spend many months preparing and then see the tournament cancelled. However, it has also been suggested that Fine declined to play because he suspected there would be collaboration among the three Soviet participants to ensure that one of them won the championship. In the August 2004 issue of Chess Life, for example, Larry Evans gave his recollection that "Fine told me he didn't want to waste three months of his life watching Russians throw games to each other." Fine's 1951 written statement on the matter in his book The World's Greatest Chess Games was:
Unfortunately for the Western masters the Soviet political organization was stronger than that of the West. The U.S. Chess Federation was a meaningless paper organization, generally antagonistic to the needs of its masters. The Dutch Chess Federation did not choose to act. The FIDE was impotent. The result was a rescheduling of the tournament for the following year, with the vital difference that now half was to be played in Holland, half in the U.S.S.R. Dissatisfied with this arrangement and the general tenor of the event, I withdrew.
Final competitive appearances
Once Fine completed his doctorate, he did play some more competitive chess. He won at New York 1948 with 8/9, ahead of Miguel Najdorf, Max Euwe, and Hermann Pilnik. Fine drew a match against Najdorf at 4–4 at New York 1949. He participated for the U.S. in the 1950 radio match against Yugoslavia, drawing his only game. Fine received the title of International Grandmaster in 1950 from FIDE, on its first official list of titled players. Fine's final top-class event was the Maurice Wertheim Memorial, New York 1951, where he scored 7/11 for 4th, as Reshevsky won.[8]
Given his pre-war results, Fine was invited to participate 1950 Candidates Tournament at Budapest, but declined his invitation; this tournament was the first to select an official challenger to the World Champion under the auspices of FIDE, the World Chess Federation.[15]
Lifetime scores against top players
Fine had a relatively short career in top-level chess, but scored well against top players. He faced five World Champions: Emanuel Lasker (+1−0=0);[16] José Raúl Capablanca (+0−0=5, excluding simultaneous games);[17] Alexander Alekhine (+3−2=4);[18] Max Euwe (+2−2=3);[19] and Mikhail Botvinnik (+1−0=2).[20]
His main American rivals were
(+7−7=5, with three losses as a 16-year-old against Dake in his 20s).Internationally, Fine faced the best of his time, and usually more than held his own, with three exceptions. He struggled against
Finally, against the new generation of American masters which emerged in the late 1940s, Fine proved he could still perform well: Arthur Bisguier (+1−0=1); Larry Evans (+0−0=2); George Kramer (+1−0=1); and Robert Byrne (+0−0=1).
Top ten for eight years
Although FIDE, the World Chess Federation, did not formally introduce chess ratings for international play until 1970, it is nevertheless possible to retrospectively rate players' performances from before that time. The site Chessmetrics.com, which specializes in historical ratings throughout chess history, ranks Fine in the world's top ten players for more than eight years, from March 1936 until October 1942, and then again from January 1949 until December 1950. Fine was inducted into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame in 1986, the charter class. He continued his successful chess writing career for many years after he retired from competition.
Notable games
- Reuben Fine vs. Mikhail Botvinnik, Amsterdam AVRO 1938, French Defence, Winawer/Advance Variation (C17), 1–0 In the final position, "Black does not have a single move, and Rf3 is threatened. A combination of a splendid strategic idea with tactical subtleties." (Botvinnik)
- Reuben Fine vs. Salomon Flohr, Amsterdam AVRO 1938, French Defence, Winawer/Advance Variation (C17), 1–0 Deep tactics in an unusual variant of French Defense.
- Reuben Fine vs. Herman Steiner, Pan-American Championship, Hollywood 1945. Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical (D29), 1–0 Fine sees further than his opponent in a sharp tactical position.
Professional life
Fine earned a bachelor's degree from the City College of New York in 1932.
During World War II, Fine worked for the U.S. Navy, analyzing the probability of German U-boats surfacing at certain points in the Atlantic Ocean. Fine also worked as a translator.[6]
After World War II, he earned his doctorate in psychology from the University of Southern California. After receiving his doctorate he abandoned professional chess to concentrate on a new profession as a professor. Fine continued playing chess casually throughout his life (including several friendly games played in 1963 against Bobby Fischer, one of which is included in Fischer's My 60 Memorable Games). In 1956 he wrote an article, "Psychoanalytic Observations on Chess and Chess Masters", for a psychological journal. Later, Fine turned the article into a book, The Psychology of the Chess Player, in which he provided insights steeped in Freudian theory. Fine is not the first person to have examined the mind as it relates to chess: Alfred Binet, the inventor of the IQ test, had studied the mental functionality of good chess players, and found that they often had enhanced mental traits, such as a good memory. He went on to publish A History of Psychoanalysis (1979) and a number of other books on psychology.
Journalist Gilbert Cant observed:
A great chess player, Manhattan's Reuben Fine, has popularized a psychology of chess studded with phallic symbols, spattered with anal-sadistic impulses and imbued with latent homosexuality. In successive rounds, Fine once defeated Botvinnik, Reshevsky, Euwe, Flohr and Alekhine, and drew with Capablanca. When Fine switched his major interest from chess to psychoanalysis, the result was a loss for chess—and a draw, at best, for psychoanalysis. Many psychologists, some Freudians included, now believe that the sexual symbolism in chess is vastly overdrawn.[21]
Fine served as a visiting professor at CCNY, the
Personal life
Fine married five times, all but the last ending in divorce. He had two biological children and one stepson.[22][23]
Per the Los Angeles Times, he married Charlotte Margoshes in 1937.[24] The New York County registrar lists a marriage certificate for Charlotte Margoshes on October 8, 1936,[25] but the marriage was very short. The New York Times first mentions a marriage to Emma Thea Keesing (1916–1960), whom he met in the Netherlands, married in September 1937,[26] and divorced in 1944.
Fine remarried in 1946, to Sonya Lebeaux. They had two children together, a son, Benjamin, and a daughter. He wrote The Teenage Chess Book with Benjamin.
His last marriage, to Marcia Fine, lasted to his death in 1993.[23]
Books
On chess
- Dr. Lasker's Chess Career, by Reuben Fine and Fred Reinfeld, 1935, ISBN 4-87187-531-8.
- Modern Chess Openings, sixth edition, 1939.
- ISBN 0-8129-3493-8.
- Chess the Easy Way, 1942. 1986 Paperback re-issue. ISBN 0-923891-50-1.
- The Ideas Behind the Chess Openings, 1943. Revised in 1948 and 1989. McKay, ISBN 4-87187-460-5.
- The Middlegame in Chess. ISBN 0-8129-3484-9.
- Chess Marches On, 1946. ISBN 4-87187-511-3.
- The World's A Chessboard, 1948. ISBN 4-87187-512-1.
- Practical Chess Openings, 1948. ISBN 4-87187-534-2.
- The World's Great Chess Games, Crown Publishers, Inc. 1951, LOC # 51-12014; ISBN 4-87187-532-6.
- Lessons From My Games, 1958, ISBN 4-87187-533-4.
- The Teenage Chess Book, 1965 (assisted by son Benjamin Fine), ISBN 978-4871875790[27]
- The Psychology of the Chess Player, 1967. ISBN 4-87187-815-5.
- Bobby Fischer's Conquest of the World's Chess Championship: The Psychology and Tactics of the Title Match, 1973. ISBN 0-923891-47-1.
On psychology
- Freud: a Critical Re-evaluation of his Theories (1962).
- The Healing of the Mind: The Technique of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (1971).
- The Development of Freud's Thought (1973).
- Psychoanalytic Psychology (1975).
- The History of Psychoanalysis (1979).
- The Intimate Hour (1979).
- The Psychoanalytic Vision (1981).
- The Logic of Psychology (1983).
- The Meaning of Love in Human Experience (1985).
- Narcissism, the Self, and Society (1986).
- The Forgotten Man: Understanding the Male Psyche (1987).
- Troubled Men: The Psychology, Emotional Conflicts, and Therapy of Men (1988).
- Love and Work: The Value System of Psychoanalysis (1990).
- Troubled Women: Roles and Realities in Psychoanalytic Perspective (1992).
See also
References
- ^ "Entry record". FamilySearch.org. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
- ^ "Fine, Reuben". Encyclopaedia Judaica.
- ^ Aidan Woodger (October 25, 2019). "CN 11518. Reuben Fine". Chess Notes by Edward Winter. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ Tassinari, Edward J. "Fine, Reuben". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
- ^ Petersen, Glenn (June 1993). "Reuben Fine 1914-1993". Chess Life. pp. 34–36, 47.
- ^ a b c d e f g Denker and Parr 1995, chapter Fine Distinctions
- ^ rogerpaige.me.uk/tables2.htm
- ^ a b c d e Reuben Fine at Chessmetrics
- ^ rogerpaige.me.uk/tables3.htm
- ^ The Chess Review, January 1933, p. 24
- ^ rogerpaige.me.uk/tables4.htm
- ^ The Chess Review, June 1933, p. 5
- ^ Bartelski, Wojciech. "Reuben Fine". OlimpBase. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
- ^ "Edward Winter presents: Unsolved Chess Mysteries (9)". ChessBase. July 3, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
- ^ Horowitz, I.A. (1973). The World Chess Championship: A History. New York: Macmillan.
- ^ Fine–Lasker record, chessgames.com
- ^ Fine–Capablanca record, chessgames.com
- ^ Fine–Alekhine record, chessgames.com
- ^ Fine–Euwe record, chessgames.com
- ^ Fine–Botvinnik record, chessgames.com
- ^ Cant, Gilbert (September 4, 1972). "Why They Play: The Psychology of Chess". Time. pp. 44–45.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
- ^ ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
- ^ Folkart, Burt A. (March 29, 1993). "Reuben Fine; International Chess Star and Psychologist". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
- ^ "Charlotte Margoshes and - New York". marriage-divorce-records.mooseroots.com. Retrieved January 15, 2018.[dead link ]
- ^ "Reuben tries a new gambit". Chess. September 14, 1937. p. 3 – via Chess Notes by Edward Winter.
- ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1965: January-June. Copyright Office, Library of Congress. December 18, 1968. p. 310.
FINE REUBEN The teenage chess book With the assistance of Benjamin Fine New York D McKay 114 p © Reuben Fine 15 Feb65 A756582
Bibliography
- Aidan Woodger, Reuben Fine: A Comprehensive Record of an American Chess Career, 1929–1951, Jefferson: McFarland & Company, Inc. Publishers, 2004, ISBN 978-0-7864-1621-9.
- ISBN 1886040184.
External links
- Reuben Fine player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- "Reuben Fine, Chess and Psychology" by Edward Winter, Chess Notes