DTFC Lothar Schmid B-Day Tournament

Start Date: May 20, 2023

Finish Date: Dec 23, 2023

Time Control
Players
Games Rated
Avg Rating
Rating Range
Points Available
Max Group Size
Complete
# Advance
Round
Simultaneous Games
Completed Games
Tie Breaks
Remaining Games
Max Avg. Time/Move
# of Timeouts
Biggest Upset
This is a "No Vacation" tournament!

1 DAY. Will be 3 rounds and the final between the best six players. NON-Vacations allowed. 10 CONCURRENT PER ROUND.

Lothar Schmid 1928-2013 GM, Chess Book Collector, World Championship Arbiter most famously Fischer-Spassky 1972 born May 10, 1928, 95 years ago.

Lothar Schmid – the Complete Chess Authority

By Elmer Dumlao Sangalang

I love books. I love to read them. I love to have them. As a result, I have a growing library. Moreover, because chess ranks top among my few absorbing hobbies, most of my books are on chess. It is a genuine source of delight for an aficionado like me, that chess possesses an extensive literature, which in content probably exceeds that of all other games combined. Each year I have some interesting new book to look forward to.

Whenever I sit back to relax and appreciate my modest chess book collection, I never fail to think fondly, especially on the occasion of his 80th birthday, of a friend elsewhere in the world who must be two-hundred times as joyous about his – for he is in possession and has direct access to any one of a vast collection of more than 50,000 chess books!

He is International Grandmaster Lothar Schmid, the celebrated bibliophile owner of the largest private chess library in the world. Born Lothar Maximilian Lorenz Schmid in Dresden, West Germany, on May 10, 1928, his love for books must have been enkindled by the fact that his family owned the large publishing firm, the Karl May Verlag, whose management passed on to him when his father died. It is not just the sheer number, but also the quality of his collection that is remarkable. For example, he owns one of only ten extant copies of the first printed chess book by Luis Lucena, entitled Discourse on Love and the Art of Chess with 150 Endings (in English translation), which appeared in 1497.

He also has all eight editions of Pedro Damiano’s book, Questo libro e da imparare giocare a scachi et de la partite (1512-64). About six feet of shelf-space in his library is taken up by all editions published in more than a century of Jean Dufresne’s famous little primer, Kleines Lehrbuch des Schachspiels (1881). These and many other fascinating features of GM Schmid’s legendary collection have been written about frequently. However, does anybody know that it even has a Philippine section?

GM Schmid spent two and a half months of 1978 in Baguio City, the Philippines, as chief arbiter of the Karpov-Korchnoi match. He has to love the City of Pines and the famed Filipino hospitality. His stay, however, was abbreviated by pressing business concerns that required his physical presence in West Germany, so he was not in attendance at the match’s conclusion.

Schmid returned to our country fourteen years later to participate in the 1992 FIDE Congress held in Manila as member of the Commission on Chess Art and the Rules Commission. In the meantime, we became friends through correspondence that I had initiated with my request for an autographed picture in 1982. Along with it, GM Schmid sent me a souvenir booklet/program of the 100th Anniversary Celebration of the Bamberg Chess Club.

In genuine appreciation of his extraordinary thoughtfulness that I felt I had not deserved, I reciprocated by sending him several of our locally published chess booklets. I was gratified to learn from his response that he valued them even if, in my personal assessment, they were obviously inferior to most of the countless publications he was accustomed to. I was so impressed by such humility from a chess personality of his stature that I earnestly sought out all extant Philippine chess publications and sent them to him to augment his collection. Every time a new book of Philippine origin appeared, I made sure that GM Schmid promptly got his copy in mint condition. In due time his compilation grew in size to develop, according to him, into a noteworthy part of his library that he now refers to as the beloved “Philippine Section”.

Not to be outdone in generosity, GM Schmid has gifted me with some rare and precious titles such as Das Konigliche Spiel by Petzold and Schachspiel und Trictrac by Kluge Pinsker (Hg.). When he came to our country in 1992, he brought me a couple of limited-reprint vintage tournament booklets as souvenirs of his visit. I treasure and take great pride in them, together with all the letters and chess-inspired cards I have received from him through the years of our friendship.  In mutual admiration, I call them my “Schmid Collection”.

GM Schmid was consistently among the best three players of West Germany in the three decades following the Second World War. As an over-the-board (OTB) player, he represented West Germany in the Olympiads eleven times from 1950 to 1974, winning the silver medal on second board in Lugano 1968. He should have also won two more silver medals for his excellent debut performances on board two, in Dubrovnik 1950 and in Helsinki 1952, but medal honors, besides the gold, were not being awarded in the early years of the post-war Olympiads.

His most notable OTB achievement was shared second place with former World Champion Tigran Petrosian, half a point behind GM Paul Keres, but ahead of prominent contemporary GMs Wolfgang Unzicker, Borislav Ivkov, Jan Donner and Laszlo Szabo in the tournament held in his hometown Bamberg in 1968, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Bamberg Chess Club

A man of great chess talent, Lothar Schmid also excelled in postal chess, where he holds the title of International Correspondence Chess Grandmaster.  He won the great Dyckhoff Memorial Correspondence Chess tourney in 1956 and subsequently took second place equal with ICCGM Lucius Endzelins, half a point after ICCGM Viacheslav Ragozin, in the 2nd World Correspondence Chess Championship, 1956-58.

But his most famous chess-related activity involved chess organization. GM Schmid was the chief arbiter of several world championship matches.  With great tack and patience, IA Schmid refereed the 1972 Fischer-Spassky in Reykjavik, 1978 Karpov-Korchnoi in Baguio, 1986 Kasparov-Karpov in London-Leningrad and 1992 Fischer-Spassky in Sveti Stefan-Belgrade.  His study of and training in law found relevant application in the officiation at the highest levels of chess competitions.

As my way of congratulating GM Schmid for having lived life to the full for eight decades of a century, I am presenting his favorite game.  It is not one of his big wins against the world-class players GMs Paul Keres and Efim Bogolyubov and former World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik.  What he relishes most is this game against his old friend and fellow Olympic Team member GM Klaus Darga in Frankfurt 1966, given with his light annotations.

Announcements

Club

ColdTime14 | Dec 24, 2023, 12:47 PM

If you are not a member, please, do you want to join us? The benefit to be a member, besides the chicks, alcohol, and the music at our central facilities, you will be receiving first the invitations to the tourneys and ten years of amazing luck.

Please follow the link:

https://www.chess.com/club/daily-tournaments-fans-club

Tournament

ColdTime14 | Dec 24, 2023, 12:45 PM

Well, gentlemen, the DTFC Lothar Schmid B-Day Tournament has ended, congratulations to all and especially to @finnkeddin CHAMPION, @PuuUkko 2nd Place and @Adam2015adam 3rd Place.

Congratulations mates, great tournament!

Thanks for participating

TD ColdTime14


Club

ColdTime14 | May 20, 2023, 1:46 PM

If you are not a member, please, do you want to join us? The benefit to be a member, besides the chicks, alcohol, and the music at our central facilities, you will be receiving first the invitations to the tourneys and ten years of amazing luck.
Please follow the link:
https://www.chess.com/club/daily-tournaments-fans-club

Tournament

ColdTime14 | May 20, 2023, 1:45 PM

Dear friends!

We started good luck and good games for everybody.

Let the strongest win. Thank you for your participation.

Questions or any problems please send me a direct message.

TD ColdTime14