Botvinnik vs. Bronstein | World Chess Championship 1951
With an amazing 10 decisive games out of 24, and several late lead changes, it is no surprise that Mikhail Botvinnik vs. David Bronstein made the top 10 list of most exciting world championships of all time.
The public was hungry to see Botvinnik over the chessboard again after this three-year hiatus. That the challenger, Bronstein, was a highly-creative player, didn't hurt either.
This match, which represented the first of nine consecutive held exclusively in Moscow, scored 29 points from our judging panel. It is also the first match in our countdown where one judge rated it number one (NM Dane Mattson). Still, two judges left it off their list completely.
Botvinnik via Wikipedia.
As for the match itself, it took place in the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall and had the key provision that the champion, Botvinnik, retained the title in case of a 12-12 tie. That's a rule he would end up needing.
Bronstein took the lead with the first win in game five, then Botvinnik won two straight. After a few more wins by each player, the champ still led by one with only four games to go.
That's when Bronstein won two straight to get to 11.5 points. He only needed one point from the final two games to become the new world champion.
The finish to game 22, the one that gave Bronstein the lead, was especially sweet:
But with his back against the wall and having only one turn with White remaining, Botvinnik kept his crown by winning in game 23 to pull level at 11.5 points each. It took a while, but eventually his two bishops broke through against two knights.
Bronstein couldn't make anything happen in the final game, so after only 22 moves a draw was agreed and the 12-12 tie allowed Botvinnik to retain the title.
Reflecting back many years later in The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Bronstein said that while there may have been some overt pressure from authorities, he was never told to throw the match, and it was his obligation to not to bend to this pressure regardless.
In fact, four decades later, he even seemed to prefer that history played out like it did and he never became world champion:
In those times such a title meant that you were entering an official world of chess bureaucracy with many formal obligations. Such a position is not compatible with my character. Since my childhood I have enjoyed freedom and despite the country that I grew up in, I have tried to live all my years in this spirit and I am very happy that today I feel the same and can enjoy my freedom.
Coming up next: Number 7 on our list!
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