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Best of Chess Fischer Newspaper Archives
• Robert J. Fischer, 1955 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1956 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1957 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1958 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1959 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1960 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1961 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1962 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1963 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1964 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1965 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1966 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1967 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1968 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1969 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1970 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1971 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1972 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1973 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1974 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1975 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1976 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1977 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1978 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1979 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1980 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1981 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1982 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1983 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1984 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1985 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1986 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1987 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1988 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1989 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1990 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1991 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1992 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1993 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1994 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1995 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1996 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1997 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1998 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1999 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2000 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2001 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2002 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2003 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2004 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2005 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2006 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2007 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2008 bio + additional games
Chess Columns Additional Archives/Social Media

William Lombardy

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Additional Games

  • Chessgames
    1. Game, Harlow B. Daly vs. William Lombardy, Correspondence Game, 1956-1957.
    2. Game, William Lombardy vs. Jones, Eastern States Championship, 1958.
    3. Game, Robert Byrne vs. William Lombardy, Silver Jubilee Invitation Tournament of Log Cabin of West Orange, New Jersey, 1959.
    4. Game, William Lombardy vs. Charles Kalme, Log Cabin Silver Anniversary, 1959.
    5. Game, William Lombardy vs. William Jarnagan, 47-board simultaneous exhibition in Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1960

1957

Chess prodigy Bobby Fischer and William Lombardy playing chess in the home of a mentor, Jack Collins.

August 03 1957

World Junior Chess Championship, Toronto, Canada

World Junior Championship
William Lombardy (U.S.) won the 1957 World Junior Championship, played Aug. 3-Aug. 17 in Toronto, scoring a perfect 11-0. Mathias Gerusel (West Germany) was runner-up with 9-2, and A. K. Jongsma (Holland) came third with 8½-2½. The other scores were V. Selimanov (USSR), 8-3; R. Cardoso (Philippines), 6½-4½; R. Hallerod (Sweden), 5-6; Francois Jobin (Canada-Quebec), 4½-6½; Jorge Aldrete (Mexico), 4-7; T. O. Makelainen (Finland), 3½-7½; B. Rabinowitz (S. Africa), 2½-8½; I. M. Bahgat (Egypt), 2-9; and Peter Bates (Canada-Toronto), 1½-9½.


August 20 1957

U.S. Student Chess Team: Departing for the World Student Team Tournament at Reykjavik, the U.S. team members pause for a moment on the steps to the Icelandic Airlines flight. Front row, left to right, Edmar Mednis and William Lombardy; rear row, Arthur Feuerstein, Anthony Saidy, and Robert Sobel.

October 11 1958

New York Times, New York, New York, Saturday, October 11, 1958

U.S. Paired With Soviet Team In First Round of Title Chess
Lombardy Takes Reshevsky's Place Against Botvinnik in No. 1 Match

The remainder of the twelve teams that will compete in the championship round of the international chess tournament at Munich were decided last night when the adjourned games from the eighth and ninth rounds were played, according to a report from Germany.
Three teams from each of the four sections of preliminary competition qualified to play for the title held by the Soviet Union.
With the preliminaries completed, the draw was made and the United States and the U.S.S.R. were paired for the first round today.
Because Samuel Reshevsky, an Orthodox Jew, does not play on the Sabbath, the defenders were asked to let his game with Mikhail Botvinnik, the world titleholder, begin after sundown.
This was denied. Consequently, the No. 1 place on the United States team will be taken by William Lombardy, a 20-year-old star from City College, and holder of the world junior title.
The Russians again finished at the top in their division, the first, while the United States was half a point below Spain in the second. Argentina set the pace in Section 3 and Czechoslovakia barely outpointed Yugoslavia in Section 4.
Final totals of those that qualified:
Section 1—Soviet Union 27-5; Bulgaria, 21½-10½; Austria, 21-11.
Section 2—Spain, 23½-8½; United States, 23-9; West Germany 22½-9½.
Section 3—Argentina, 23-9; East Germany, 21-11; England, 20-12.
Section 4—Czechoslovakia, 25-7; Yugoslavia, 24-8; Switzerland, 20-12.
The individual records of the five players who represented the United States show that Larry Evans, Nicolas Rossolimo and Lombardy bore the brunt of the fighting. Arranged in the order of the boards they occupied the eight matches, the figures were:
Samuel Reshevsky, 1½-1½; William Lombardy, 5½-2½; Arthur B. Bisguier, 4-3; Larry Evans, 6½-1½; Nicolas Rossolimo, 5½-½.
The Soviet Union's figures:
Mikhail Botvinnik, 3½-1½; Vassily Smyslov, 4-1; Paul Keres, 4½-½; David Bronstein, 4½-½; Mikhail Tal, 5½-½; Tigran Petrosian, 5-1.
Lombardy played the following brilliant game at Board No. 1 against Finland.

William Lombardy vs Eero Einar Book
Munich Olympiad qual-2 (1958), Munich FRG, rd 4, Oct-04
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation (B90) 1-0

U.S. Paired With Soviet Team In First Round of Title Chess; Lombardy Takes Reshevsky's Place Against Botvinnik in No. 1 Match

January 20 1969

January 20, 1969. Ex-World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik of the Soviet Union and William Lombardy, U.S.A., in the 6th round of the Hoogovens tournament.

October 16 2017

William LombardyWilliam Lombardy 16 Oct 2017, Mon The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) Newspapers.com

Mr. Lombardy, pointing, observed chess matches near his home in New York in 2016.

William Lombardy, 79, chess grandmaster turned priestWilliam Lombardy, 79, chess grandmaster turned priest 16 Oct 2017, Mon The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) Newspapers.com

William Lombardy, 79, chess grandmaster turned priest
By Dylan Loeb McClain
NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK - William J. Lombardy, who was one of the most talented and promising chess players of his generation, winning titles and accolades while he was still a teenager, but who all but gave up the game at the height of his career to become a priest, died Friday in Martinez, Calif. He was 79.
His son, Raymond, confirmed the death. Mr. Lombardy, who was born in the Bronx and had long lived in New York City, collapsed and died suddenly while staying with a friend in Martinez, his son said. The cause had not been determined.
Mr. Lombardy was the first American to win the World Junior Chess Championship doing so with a perfect score, a feat that has never been duplicated and he led the United States to victory over the Soviet Union in the 1960 World Student Team Championship, beating Boris Spassky, the future world champion. He was later named a grandmaster, the World Chess Federation's highest title.
“His abilities were native, with a natural talent,” Anthony Saidy an international master who played with Lombardy on the top American teams in the 1950s and '60s, told The New York Times in 2016. “He always seemed to drag his matches out so long, getting out of jams until his opponent couldn't.”
But he came of age in the shadow of Bobby Fischer, the phenomenon out of Brooklyn six years his junior. Virtually all the sponsorship money and support available for American players went to Fischer.
Raymond Lombardy said his father had felt that if Fischer had not come along, he might have become world champion himself. But Mr. Lombardy was not resentful of Fischer, with whom Lombardy had an almost brotherly relationship, the son said. “He was not jealous,” he said.
Fischer was not the only impediment to an even more successful chess career for Mr. Lombardy, however. Brought up in the Roman Catholic faith, he had a competing interest — his church.
William James Joseph Lombardy was born on Dec. 4, 1937. Though he would be known as Bill in both his personal and professional life, he disliked the name, his son said. His father, Raymond, of Italian heritage, was a supervisor for the Savarin restaurant chain, and his mother, Stella, with Polish roots, was a beautician.
Though both his parents worked, the family struggled to pay the rent living in a less-than-adequate apartment in the Hunts Point section of the Bronx. Bill Lombardy, while attending St. Athanasius School in the Bronx, slept in a room that had little insulation.
&dquo;I think we could have stored meat in there like a refrigerator,” he was quoted as saying in the 1974 book “My Seven Chess Prodigies,” by the renowned American chess coach John W. Collins, who taught Mr. Lombardy informally for many years. (Fischer was another of his students.)
No one in the Lombardy family played chess, but when Bill was 9, a 10-year-old neighbor, who played the game but who always lost, decided to teach him. The neighbor wanted a sparring partner whom he could beat. In a couple of years, Bill was already showing unusual talent and playing regularly, often in city parks.
He went on to graduate from La Salle Academy, a Catholic school in Lower Manhattan; attended City College for three years; and later enrolled at St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers with the intention of becoming a Roman Catholic priest. He was ordained in 1967 and remained in the priesthood until the late 1970s.
Most great players start out as tacticians, always looking to attack, before they evolve into strategists, plotting a long-range path to victory from the very first move. Mr. Lombardy was a strategic player, and a good one, from the beginning.
At the 1960-61 US championship, he finished second to Fischer, qualifying him for the 1962 Interzonal in Stockholm, the next step on the road to the world championship. But instead of entering the tournament, Mr. Lombardy, by then enrolled at St. Joseph's Seminary, decided to pursue ordination.
He continued to compete, though intermittently, for the next 20 years. He won or tied for first in the 1963, 1965, and 1975 US Open Championships, and he played on US national teams in the 1968, 1970, 1974, and 1976 Chess Olympiads, winning an individual gold medal and three individual silver medals, all as a reserve. But for all intents and purposes, the serious part of his chess career was over.
In 1972, when Fischer qualified to play a match for the world championship in Reykjavik, Iceland, against Spassky, the reigning champion, he asked Mr. Lombardy to assist him by analyzing adjourned games. In the Fischer-Spassky event, which became known as the Match of the Century, 14 of the 21 games were adjourned. Fischer won and was crowned world champion.
Mr. Lombardy eventually left the priesthood, his son said, because he had lost faith in the Catholic Church, which he believed was too concerned with amassing wealth. Soon after, while competing in a tournament in the Netherlands, he met and married a Dutch woman, Louise van Valen, who moved to Manhattan to live with Mr. Lombardy in his two-bedroom apartment at the Stuyvesant Town complex. Mr. Lombardy had moved there in 1977 to help care for his friend and coach Mr. Collins, who died in 2001.
The couple's son, Raymond, was born in 1984. The marriage ended in divorce in 1992 after Mr. Lombardy's wife had returned to the Netherlands with their son.
Besides the son, Mr. Lombardy leaves an older sister, Natalie Pekala.
He had been staying with friends since he had fallen on hard times and been evicted from his apartment at Stuyvesant Town for being behind in his rent an episode that was the subject of an article in The Times in 2016.
Though he was a good student in school, Mr. Lombardy did not like to study chess from books; he preferred to hone his skills through practice. “There is nothing like plenty of experience,” he told Collins, “doing it on the board, getting your head knocked about a bit, and learning from every win, draw, and loss.”

'til the world understands why Robert J. Fischer criticised the U.S./British and Russian military industry imperial alliance and their own Israeli Apartheid. Sarah Wilkinson explains:

Bobby Fischer, First Amendment, Freedom of Speech
What a sad story Fischer was,” typed a racist, pro-imperialist colonial troll who supports mega-corporation entities over human rights, police state policies & white supremacy.
To which I replied: “Really? I think he [Bob Fischer] stood up to the broken system of corruption and raised awareness! Whether on the Palestinian/Israel-British-U.S. Imperial Apartheid scam, the Bush wars of ‘7 countries in 5 years,’ illegally, unconstitutionally which constituted mass xenocide or his run in with police brutality in Pasadena, California-- right here in the U.S., police run rampant over the Constitution of the U.S., on oath they swore to uphold, but when Americans don't know the law, and the cops either don't know or worse, “don't care” -- then I think that's pretty darn “sad”. I think Mr. Fischer held out and fought the good fight, steadfast til the day he died, and may he Rest In Peace.
Educate yourself about U.S./State Laws --
https://www.youtube.com/@AuditTheAudit/videos
After which the troll posted a string of profanities, confirming there was never any genuine sentiment of “compassion” for Mr. Fischer, rather an intent to inflict further defamatory remarks.

This ongoing work is a tribute to the life and accomplishments of Robert “Bobby” Fischer who passionately loved and studied chess history. May his life continue to inspire many other future generations of chess enthusiasts and kibitzers, alike.

Robert J. Fischer, Kid Chess Wizard 1956March 9, 1943 - January 17, 2008

The photograph of Bobby Fischer (above) from the March 02, 1956 The Tampa Times was discovered by Sharon Mooney (Bobby Fischer Newspaper Archive editor) on February 01, 2018 while gathering research materials for this ongoing newspaper archive project. Along with lost games now being translated into Algebraic notation and extractions from over two centuries of newspapers, it is but one of the many lost treasures to be found in the pages of old newspapers since our social media presence was first established November 11, 2017.

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