Alexander Alekhine Quotes About Chess

We have collected for you the TOP of Alexander Alekhine's best quotes about Chess! Here are collected all the quotes about Chess starting from the birthday of the Chess Player – October 31, 1892! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 32 sayings of Alexander Alekhine about Chess. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
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  • Chess first of all teaches you to be objective.

    "The Soviet School of Chess". Book by Alexander Kotov, p. 42, 2001.
  • I did not believe I was superior to him. Perhaps the chief reason for his defeat was the overestimation of his own powers arising out of his overwhelming victory in New York, 1927, and his underestimation of mine.

  • Deux fous gagnent toujours, mais trois fous, non!

  • Capablanca was snatched too early from the chess world. With his death we have lost a great chess genius, the like of whom we will never see again.

  • The infallible criterion by which to distinguish the true from the would-be strategist is the degree of originality of his conceptions. It makes little difference whether this originality is carried to excess, as was the case with Steinitz and Nimzowitsch.

  • Play on both sides of the board is my favourite strategy.

    Alexander Alekhine (1955). “My best games of chess, 1924-1937”
  • You can become a big master in chess only if you see your mistakes and short-comings. Exactly the same as in life itself.

  • Oh! this opponent, this collaborator against his will, whose notion of Beauty always differs from yours and whose means (strength, imagination, technique) are often too limited to help you effectively! What torment, to have your thinking and your phantasy tied down by another person!

  • Chess will always be the master of us all.

  • Chess for me is not a game, but an art. Yes, and I take upon myself all those responsibilities which an art imposes on its adherents.

    "Poetics". Book by Daniel James Brooks (Book 1, p. 72), 2013.
  • During a Chess competition a Chessmaster should be a combination of a beast of prey and a monk

  • Psychology is the most important factor in chess.

  • I consider chess an art, and accept all those responsibilities which art places upon its devotees.

  • Never before and never since have I seen - and I cannot even imagine, such an amazing rapidity of chess thinking that Capablanca possessed in 1913-14. In blitz games he gave all the St. Petersburg players odds of five minutes to one - and he won.

  • For my victory over Capablanca I am indebted primarily to my superiority in the field of psychology. Capablanca played, relying almost exclusively on his rich intuitive talent. But for the chess struggle nowadays one needs a subtle knowledge of human nature, an understanding of the opponent's psychology.

  • I do not play chess – I fight at chess. Therefore, I willingly combine the tactical with the strategic, the fantastic with the scientific, the combinative with the positional, and I aim to respond to the demands of each given position.

  • The retreat of a minor piece to the back rank, where it cuts the lines of communication between the rooks, is permissable only in exceptional cases.

  • During a chess tournament a master must envisage himself as a cross between an ascetic monk and a beast of prey.

  • Combination is a soul of chess.

  • A lifetime in not enough to learn everything about chess.

  • When asked, -How is that you pick better moves than your opponents?, I responded: I'm very glad you asked me that, because, as it happens, there is a very simple answer. I think up my own moves, and I make my opponent think up his

  • The fact that a player is very short of time is to my mind, as little to be considered as an excuse as, for instance, the statement of the law-breaker that he was drunk at the time he committed the crime.

    Chess Life, Volume 16-18, p. 113, 1961.
  • Chess is not only knowledge and logic

  • I study chess eight hours a day, on principle.

    Attributed to Alexander Alekhine in David Hooper and ‎Kenneth Whyld "The Oxford companion to chess" (p. 8), 1996.
  • That which Steinitz gave to the theoretical aspect of the game when he was at his best is very remote to all out home-bred chess philosophers, but with his views on Morphy, whom he tries to discredit completely, it is of course impossible to agree.

  • I believe that true beauty of chess is more than enough to satisfy all possible demands.

  • Playing for complications is an extreme measure that a player should adopt only when he cannot find a clear and logical plan.

  • For success I consider three factors are necessary: firstly, an awareness of my own strengths and weaknesses; secondly, an accurate understanding of my opponent's strengths and weaknesses; thirdly, a higher aim than momentary satisfaction. I see this aim as being scientific and artistic achievements, which place the game of chess on a par with other arts.

  • Chess is a matter of vanity.

  • As a rule, so-called "positional" sacrifices are considered more difficult, and therefore more praise-worthy, than those which are based exclusively on an exact calculation of tactical possibilities.

    Alexander Alekhine, Garry Kasparov (2011). “Alexander Alekhine's Best Games: Algebraic edition”, Pavilion Books
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    Alexander Alekhine quotes about: Art Chess Strategy