In 1924, at the Alamac Hotel of
New York, Alekhine played 26 simultaneous blindfold games against very strong opponents (
Isaac Kashdan and
Hermann Steiner among them), with the score of 16 wins, 5 losses, and 5 draws. This was probably the strongest of any blindfold exhibitions ever held. The next year in February in
Paris he faced 28 teams of four players each, with the impressive result of 22 wins, 3 losses, and 3 draws. In the same year, Réti bettered this record by playing 29 players simultaneously in
São Paulo, and commented on his poor memory after leaving his briefcase behind after the event. On July 16, 1934, in
Chicago, Alekhine set the new world record by playing 32 blindfold games, with 19 wins, 4 losses, and 9 draws.
Edward Lasker was the referee for this event. Then the world record was set by
George Koltanowski on 20 September 1937, in
Edinburgh, who played 34 chess games simultaneously while blindfolded. He won 24 games and lost 10 over a period of 13 hours. Later
Miguel Najdorf broke that record twice. Najdorf's first record in
Rosario,
Argentina, in 1943, was against 40 opponents, scoring 36 wins, 1 draw, and 3 losses. and was organised in an effort to gain sufficient publicity to communicate to his family that he was still alive, as he had remained in Argentina after travelling from his native
Poland to compete in the 1939
Chess Olympiad, during which German
Invasion of Poland occurred. He increased this record to 45 opponents in São Paulo in 1947, with the result of 39 wins, 4 draws, and 2 losses. Although Koltanowski initially did not acknowledge Najdorf's record, because he thought that he allegedly had access to the scoresheets, and there were multiple opponents per board, claiming that he could have managed 100 games under those conditions, Najdorf's records are considered legitimate by modern historians. Hungarian
Janos Flesch claimed to have bettered this record in
Budapest in 1960, playing 52 opponents with 31 wins, 3 draws, and 18 losses. However, this record attempt was somewhat sullied by the fact that Flesch was permitted to verbally recount the scores of the games in progress. It also took place over a remarkably short period of time, around five hours, and included many short games. His specialty was conducting a blindfold
Knight's Tour on boards of up to 192 squares. ==21st century 24-hour blindfold chess records==