Schacksnack har en ny omröstning längst upp i högerspalten. Frågan gäller huvuvida Gideon Ståhlberg, Ulf Andersson eller Nils Grandelius är att betraktas som Sveriges genom tiderna starkaste schackspelare. Det finns ju lite olika måttstockar att beräkna detta genom till exempel ratingprestationer, hårt motstånd över tid eller hur vederbörande har bidraget till schackets utveckling. Beroende på perspektiv och hur insatt man är i denna komplexa fråga kan svaren skifta. Vad säger Schacksnacks läsare?
Sverigemästarklassen och övriga grupper arrangeras i Uppsala 27 juni - 6 juli. Tio spelare kämpar om Sverigemästartiteln och dessa är i ratingordning: GM Platon Galperin, IM Isak Storme, IM Jung Min Seo, GM Erik Blomqvist, IM Martin Lokander, GM Tiger Hillarp Persson., IM Milton Pantzar, IM Hampus Sörensen GM Jonny Hector och IM Axel Falkevall. SM-gruppen är i år stark och öppen så nästan vem helst kan ta hem segern men det skulle inte vara osannolikt om GM Jonny Hector avgår med segern. I SM-sammanhang brukar gedigen erfarenhet väga mycket tyngre än tillfälliga ratingtoppar. Mästar-Elit: IM Michael Wiedenkeller, IM Ludvig Carlsson, IM William Olsson, FM Eric Thörn, IM Tommy Andersson, IM Bengt Lindberg, FM Joar Östlund, FM Alexander Ström-Engdahl, Andreas Landgren och Harald Ljung. Mitt stalltips är att FM Joar Östlund som är en starkt utvecklande spelare kommer att avancera till Sverigemästarklassen.
The 1948 Interzonal Tournament in Saltsjöbaden was a landmark event in chess history. It was the first Interzonal organised by FIDE and served as a major qualification tournament for the 1951 World Chess Championship.
In this video, chess enthusiast Björn Knöppel presents a fascinating book by Swedish Grandmaster Gideon Ståhlberg, devoted to the legendary Saltsjöbaden 1948 Interzonal. The tournament featured 20 players in a round-robin format and was won by David Bronstein, who, together with seven others, qualified for the 1950 Candidates Tournament.
Special attention is given to the celebrated game Lilienthal–Najdorf, which received the tournament’s brilliancy prize and remains a classic example of creative and dynamic chess.
🎥 Filmed by IM Thomas Engqvist
In this 22-minute video, IM Thomas Engqvist presents #27 on his list of the Top 30 Chess Books: John Nunn’s Chess Course – A Complete Chess Education Based on the Games of World Champion Lasker (2014).
The discussion focuses on the book’s treatment of middlegame themes, with particular emphasis on Emanuel Lasker’s games. Lasker was one of the most important figures in chess history and served as the second official World Champion from 1894 to 1921. Through Nunn’s analytical lens, Lasker’s practical approach to the middlegame becomes a central learning tool.
This video is both a summary of the book and a series of reflections on the ideas and examples that made the strongest impression on Engqvist. Special attention is given to the value of studying John Nunn’s instructional style, especially in comparison with classical authors such as Max Euwe. Engqvist also touches on other middlegame books by Nunn, noting how later works incorporate more modern games and perspectives.
John Nunn is widely regarded as one of the most influential British chess authors, known for his clear, rigorous writing across all phases of the game. This video places John Nunn’s Chess Course in that broader context.
The video is intended for all chess players, regardless of playing strength, who are interested in improving their understanding of the middlegame through high-quality chess literature.
In this video, chess enthusiast Björn Knöppel presents what he considers to be Alexander Khalifman’s immortal game. Khalifman, the 14th FIDE World Champion after winning the knockout event in Las Vegas in 1999, produced several brilliant games throughout his career — but the one featured here stands out for its extraordinary tactical clarity.
The game is taken from Gennady Nesis’ book Khalifman: Life & Games (Everyman Chess, 2000). Nesis, who trained Khalifman for 17 years, offers deep insights into his pupil’s style, and Knöppel shares both background about Khalifman and his impressions of the book before guiding you through the game itself.
The highlight is a stunning Rubinstein-style combination, where a quiet move concludes a sequence of sacrifices and checks — the kind of silent finishing touch that elevates a tactical idea to true artistry.
ilmed by IM Thomas Engqvist.
Björn Knöppel har bestämt sig för att sälja av ca tre fjärdedelar av sin stora boksamling med flera tusen böcker. Många böcker har hans egen autograf men även andra kända spelare som till exempel Ulf Andersson och Viktor Korchnoi finns med i hans samling. Om du är intresserad av att komma i kontakt med Björn Knöppel går det att nå honom på två sätt:
bjorn.knoppel@gmail.com
mobil 070 64 29 572

Björn Knöppel (Foto: Lars OA Hedlund)
In this episode, IM Thomas Engqvist presents and analyses no. 26 in the Top 30 Chess Books series: Igor Zaitsev – Attacking the Strongpoint (2020). While Steinitz spoke of attacking the opponent’s weakest point, Lasker emphasised psychology, and Nimzowitsch championed prophylaxis, Zaitsev offers a strikingly different perspective: the deliberate attack on a strongly defended point. Over-protecting a key square or pawn, he argues, can invite a powerful assault precisely because it is so heavily guarded — a principle that also mirrors the battlefield strategies of Alexander the Great, which is discussed in detail.
Engqvist refer to this as the Alekhine–Zaitsev concept, since both players consciously and systematically demonstrated that a well-prepared attack on a fortified point can increase activity, dynamism, and ultimately undermine the opponent’s structure — but only once one’s own position has been strengthened through the accumulation principle. Elements of the idea can be found in the games of Paulsen and Steinitz, although they did not fully formulate it as a structured concept. Classic examples include Steinitz–von Bardeleben, Hastings 1895, along with many instructive games by Alekhine and Zaitsev himself.
He also examine Zaitsev’s combinational style. A deeply original player, he introduced many ideas later adopted by Karpov in World Championship matches against Korchnoi and Kasparov. Born on 27 May 1938, Zaitsev served as a leading trainer and coach from 1971 to 1991, working with Polugaevsky, Petrosian, and Karpov. Remarkably, Attacking the Strongpoint is his only book, published in 2020 by Russell Enterprises.
Join chess enthusiast Björn Knöppel for a clear, engaging and insightful 45-minute exploration of one of the most dramatic moments in chess history: Garry Kasparov’s sensational 19-move loss with Black in the Caro–Kann Defence to IBM’s supercomputer Deep Blue in 1997.
Filmed by IM Thomas Engqvist, this presentation draws inspiration from Bruce Pandolfini’s Kasparov and Deep Blue: The Historic Chess Match Between Man and Machine (1997). Knöppel offers an accessible walk-through of the 1997 match while also revisiting the closely related 1996 encounter. He discusses each game verbally before carefully analysing, in detail, the decisive game that Kasparov lost — highlighting strategic ideas, psychological turning points and the broader significance of the event.
Presented in a friendly, welcoming and informative style, this video is suitable for viewers of all levels — from newcomers to long-time chess enthusiasts — and provides historical context as well as fresh insights into a match that reshaped the relationship between humans and machines forever.
A five-time world champion Vishy Anand explains how he manages to compete at the top level although being semi-retired, the generational differences, and much more.
Top 30 Chess Books – #25 | Alexander Shashin; Best Play – A New Method For Discovering The Best Move
In this video, IM Thomas Engqvist explores Best Play – A New Method For Discovering The Best Move by Alexander Shashin, a revolutionary book aimed at intermediate and advanced players. Shashin introduces a completely new approach to evaluating positions and selecting moves, reducing the typical 5–7 candidate moves to just 2–3, making decision-making far more precise. The method is built around five key elements: material, time, king safety, compactness (density), and spatial expansion (elevation). These are analysed using algorithms inspired by Tal’s attacking style, Capablanca’s strategic manoeuvring, and Petrosian’s defensive mastery. Join Thomas as he breaks down this innovative system and demonstrates how it can transform your understanding of chess.




Senaste kommentarer