Available in paperback, hardback, Amazon Kindle and Forward Chess
Petr Izmailov was considered to be one of the top four players of the Soviet Union in 1929 according to Yuri Averbakh, and he was ranked around number 50 in the world at the time based on Chessmetrics methodology. Izmailov won the 1928 Championship of Soviet Russia, reached the last four of the 1929 Soviet Championship, and had a 2/2 lifetime score against Botvinnik. He was a regular winner of Siberian regional and city championships as well as a pioneer in some openings, playing a line similar to the Makogonov Attack against the King’s Indian more than ten years before Makogonov himself.
Izmailov, like many players of his generation, fell victim to Stalin’s purges. He was arrested on spurious charges in 1936 and executed in 1937. His name was then mostly expunged from the Soviet chess press for over 50 years.
At the time of Petr’s arrest, his son Nikolai was less than two years’ old. Once the Soviet-era archives opened up, Nikolai set out to reconstruct the life and chess career of the father he never knew. This book is the result of his research over many years. It contains as complete a tournament record of Izmailov as could be found, as well as all 25 games and fragments that were reported in the contemporary press. At the time of this book’s publication in English Nikolai is a sprightly 86-year old great-grandfather.
All games and fragments have been thoroughly analyzed in this book in move-by-move style by Romanian Grandmaster and leading chess author Mihail Marin. While his analysis is in itself highly instructional Marin has provided a comprehensive historical background to the chess openings deployed in these games, often showing their origin, contemporary treatment by such masters as Alexander Alekhine and Jose Capablanca, and how they have evolved to modern interpretation by today’s leading grandmasters, such as Magnus Carlsen and Anish Giri. This book will hence be of interest both to practical players wishing to improve their play and fans of chess history.
"This book gathers together all of Izmailov's surviving games with annotations by the always excellent Mihail Marin as well as contemporary notes from players such as Yuri Averbakh... There's also a mass of biographical detail including many photos giving a wonderful insight into Russian chess life in the 1920s and 1930s seen through the eyes and career of a strong master... A really lovely book, warmly recommended!" - Grandmaster Matthew Sadler, New In Chess magazine, January 2022
Nikolai Izmailov (born 1934 in Tomsk) was the son of 1928 Champion of Soviet Russia Petr Izmailov. Prior to publishing his biographical book on his father, Nikolai wrote several articles in the Russian chess press about him. A retired engineer,...
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Mihail Marin is a Romanian grandmaster. He has won the Romanian championship on three occasions and participated in 12 Chess Olympiads, winning a bronze individual medal in 1988. In 1987 and 1990 he qualified for the Interzonal tournament. For many...
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