Inspired Lunacy

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  • Inspired Lunacy

    Buried in that "Team Anand" piece by Devangshu Datta that I posted under the 'World Championship Sochi 2014' thread is this lovely "inspired lunacy" commentary on Baadur Jobava (:

    "Jobava has produced his usual brand of inspired lunacy. The Georgian GM is one of the most creative players around, often producing openings that are completely unheard of. He is also a very sharp tactician who revels in extreme risk. When it works, it is spectacular stuff. When it doesn't work, he shrugs his shoulders, absorbs the loss and tries something even more outrageous. At Tashkent, Jobava has lost one terrible game to Nakamura and he has beaten Karjakin, Rustam Kasimdzhanov and Gelfand in convincing fashion."
    Last edited by Jack Maguire; Friday, 31st October, 2014, 08:05 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Inspired Lunacy

    I posted this link earlier today in a 'Tashkent' post, but Dennis Monokroussos in his Jobava-Andreikin analysis therein identifies 4 inspired chess lunatics, especially in the opening, namely, Baadur Jobava, Alexander Morozevich, Vadim Zvjaginsev, and Richard Rapport.

    http://www.viewchess.com/cbreader/20...128880078.html

    There's been ample written at ChessTalk on 3 of those names but essentially nothing about the 4th man, Vadim Zvjaginsev. Vadim's Wikipedia entry certainly amuses, especially the commentary upon his 'Playing Style' (:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vadim_Zvjaginsev

    Kingcrusher did a YouTube video on Vadim's 'The Pearl of Wijk Ann Zee' which is well worth checking out (:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk0RgcqQSgU

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