• Mikhail Botvinnik vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship semi-final, Moscow 1931, Dutch Defence (A90), 0-1 Konstantinopolsky defeats that year's Soviet champion. • Ilia Kan vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Young Masters tournament, Leningrad 1936, Dutch Defence, Stonewall Variation (A95), 0-1 Another Dutch game shows a definite flair for this sharp defence. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Viacheslav Ragozin, USSR Young Masters tournament, Leningrad 1936, King's Indian Attack / Reversed Grunfeld (A07), 1-0 Black goes for complications and gets outcombined. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Alexander Tolush, Moscow 1936, Queen's Pawn Game (A47), 1-0 Tolush gets too greedy, grabs material with his King in the centre, and gets demolished. • Vladimir Alatortsev vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship, Tbilisi 1937, Dutch Defence, Stonewall Variation (A91), 0-1 Konstantinopolsky again shows his virtuosity with the Dutch. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Ilia Kan, USSR Championship, Tbilisi 1937, Sicilian Defence, Dragon Variation, Yugoslav Attack (B76), 1-0 One of the first games with this dangerous plan of long
castling by White. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Samuel Reshevsky, Leningrad / Moscow 1939, Neo-Grunfeld Defence (D78), 1-0 Reshevsky was one of the very top players outside the USSR; this was one of the few games where Konstantinopolsky got the chance to meet a non-Soviet player. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Salo Flohr, USSR Championship, Moscow 1945, Caro-Kann Defence, Two Knights' Variation (B10), 1-0 Flohr was a guru with the Caro-Kann, but meets his match here. • Boris Verlinsky vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Moscow Championship 1945, King's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation (E67), 0-1 One of the influential games using the King's Indian Defence from this period, as the line was rising in popularity. • Grigory Levenfish vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Leningrad 1947, Caro-Kann Defence, Bronstein-Larsen Variation (B16), 0-1 An exchange
sacrifice sets up a very deep trap winning White's Queen; this line was eventually jointly named for Konstantinopolsky's pupil Bronstein. • Paul Keres vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship, Moscow 1948, Caro-Kann Defence, Panov-Botvinnik Attack (B14), 0-1 Black's strong Kingside attack outwits the formidable tactician Keres, the #3 player in the world at the time. • Alexander Kotov vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship, Moscow 1948, King's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation (E67), 0-1 Another dandy with the King's Indian to defeat that year's Soviet co-champion. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Andor Lilienthal, USSR Championship, Moscow 1948, Grunfeld Defence, Exchange Variation (D85), 1-0 Lilienthal was one of the world's strongest players during the 1940s. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Vasily Smyslov, USSR Championship, Moscow 1948, Semi-Slav / Grunfeld-Schlechter Defence (D30), 1-0 Smyslov had finished second in the World Championship tournament earlier that year. • Ratmir Kholmov vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship, Moscow 1948, Queen's Pawn Game / London System / King's Indian Defence (A46), 0-1 White avoids main-line King's Indian theory to no avail. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Isaac Boleslavsky, USSR Championship, Moscow 1950, King's Indian Defence, Fianchetto Variation (E68), 1-0 This game has Konstantinopolsky on the White side of the King's Indian scoring a win over the world's #3 player that year! • Yuri Averbakh vs Alexander Konstantinopolsky, USSR Championship, Moscow 1950, Ruy Lopez, Closed (C92), 0-1 Future Soviet Champion Averbakh gets deposed here. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Viktor Korchnoi, USSR Championship, Moscow 1952, Queen's Pawn Game (D03), 1-0 By some accounts, Korchnoi is the #6-ranked player of all time, so any win over him is noteworthy. • Alexander Konstantinopolsky vs Alexei Suetin, USSR Championship, Moscow 1952, Grunfeld Defence, Russian Variation (D95), 1-0 This method of play in the opening was just being developed then, so this was one of the important early games. ==References==