World champion replay guide

Alexander Alekhine Games, Style and Quick Facts

Alexander Alekhine was the fourth World Chess Champion, a Russian-born French master famous for deep calculation, attacking imagination and the 1927 victory over José Raúl Capablanca. Use the six diagrams, replay 10 supplied games and choose an adviser route for your next study session.

  • Fourth World Champion
  • Champion 1927-1935
  • Regained title in 1937
  • Russian-born French master
  • 10 replay games

Choose your Alekhine study route

Six Alexander Alekhine positions to study first

Pause before accepting the arrow as the answer. Each board shows a validated post-move position from a supplied PGN and links to the complete replay.

Title conversion: 82.Re7

Alekhine centralises the rook behind connected kingside pawns, completing the Game 34 conversion that won the 1927 world title.

Alexander Alekhine vs José Raúl Capablanca, Buenos Aires 1927

Final move: Re7

French finish: 43...Rf2

Black's rook reaches the second rank while White's king remains exposed, ending the first game of Alekhine's title match with Capablanca.

José Raúl Capablanca vs Alexander Alekhine, Buenos Aires 1927

Final move: ...Rf2

Lasker attack: 26.Qxg6

The queen capture on g6 finishes a model build-up where Alekhine brings every attacking piece toward the king before opening decisive lines.

Alexander Alekhine vs Emanuel Lasker, Zürich 1934

Final move: Qxg6

Miniature mate: 15.Rf5#

The rook joins the attack with mate after Black's king is pulled into the centre, making this the clearest short tactical pattern here.

Alexander Alekhine vs Oscar Tenner, Cologne 1911

Final move: Rf5#

San Remo bind: 30.h4

A quiet pawn move seals famous positional domination: White owns the c-file, Black's pieces lack useful squares and resistance is exhausted.

Alexander Alekhine vs Aron Nimzowitsch, San Remo 1930

Final move: h4

Black invasion: 40...Nd4

The knight lands centrally with decisive force, completing Alekhine's energetic Black-side win against Réti after sustained activity.

Richard Réti vs Alexander Alekhine, Baden-Baden 1925

Final move: ...Nd4

Alexander Alekhine Replay Lab: 10 games

Choose a featured game and replay it move by move. This is the fastest way to feel Alekhine's style instead of only reading about it.

World championship and rivalry

Start with both 1927 Capablanca games to see the title match from White and Black.

Attacking masterpieces

Use Lasker, Vidmar, Tenner and Isakov for direct attacking calculation.

Strategic pressure

Study Nimzowitsch, Yates and Speijer for pressure that becomes conversion.

Dynamic Black initiative

Replay Réti-Alekhine to see an unusual opening become a forcing invasion.

What to watch: Start with Game 34 against Capablanca for title-match technique, then compare a miniature and a strategic squeeze.


Which Alekhine game should you study?

Choose the skill you want to train and the time available. The adviser points to one supplied replay and gives a contrasting discovery route.

Alekhine's playing style explained

Alekhine's reputation as an attacking genius is deserved, but the attacks were rarely random. His best games usually show three phases: improvement of piece activity, creation of practical pressure, and a concrete tactical sequence that turns pressure into something decisive.

Build before the blow

He often improved the least active piece before starting the final operation, which is why the combinations feel so well timed.

Calculate when it matters

He entered long forcing lines when the pieces were already aimed at the king or a vulnerable file.

Convert pressure

In many wins, the sacrifice is not the start of the idea. It is the release point after pressure has already been built.

Openings connected to Alexander Alekhine

Continue from the replay lab into openings and structures that connect naturally with Alekhine's games and legacy.

Practical Alekhine lessons for club players

Alekhine is valuable study material because his games teach practical attacking habits, not just beautiful endings.

  • Improve piece activity before hunting for a sacrifice.
  • Watch for moments when one defender disappears from the enemy king.
  • Use forcing moves to keep the initiative alive once the attack has started.
  • Study the build-up, not only the final combination.
  • Compare a short miniature with a long squeeze so your attacking chess does not become one-dimensional.
Study path: Replay one Alekhine game slowly, then go back and ask where the attack really began. In many famous wins, the critical turning point comes several moves before the sacrifice everyone remembers.

Common questions about Alexander Alekhine

These answers keep the broader Alekhine authority set while using one-row accordions, exact FAQPage schema parity and page-specific replay hooks.

Biography and fast facts

Who was Alexander Alekhine?

Alexander Alekhine was the fourth World Chess Champion and one of the greatest attacking players in chess history. He combined fierce calculation with dynamic piece play and left a huge body of famous tournament, match, and exhibition games. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch how his championship strength mixed technique with attack.

When was Alexander Alekhine born?

Alexander Alekhine was born on October 31, 1892. That date places him in the great transition period between classical chess and the sharper, calculation-heavy style that he helped to define. Select Alekhine (White) vs Isakov (Black) — Moscow Club Spring 1907 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see how early his tactical imagination was already showing.

Where was Alexander Alekhine born?

Alexander Alekhine was born in Moscow. Moscow was then part of the Russian Empire, which is why many references describe him as Russian-born even though he later represented France. Select Alekhine (White) vs Isakov (Black) — Moscow Club Spring 1907 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to connect that early Moscow background with his first striking attacking games.

When did Alexander Alekhine die?

Alexander Alekhine died on March 24, 1946. His death ended one of the most dramatic careers in chess and left the world title in the hands of a champion who never lost it over the board. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to revisit the peak that defined his place in history.

Where did Alexander Alekhine die?

Alexander Alekhine died in Estoril, Portugal. Estoril became part of chess history because his death there froze the championship story at an unfinished point. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to trace the title-winning path that made his final status so unusual.

Was Alekhine Russian or French?

Alekhine was born in Russia and later became a French citizen. That is why the most accurate short description is that he was a Russian-born French world champion. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Réti (White) — Baden-Baden 1925 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to study one of the major wins from his mature European career.

How long was Alekhine World Chess Champion?

Alekhine was World Chess Champion from 1927 to 1935 and again from 1937 to 1946. He beat Capablanca, lost the title to Euwe, and then won it back, which gave him one of the most dramatic title histories of any champion. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 and Alekhine (Black) vs Capablanca (White) — World Championship 1927, Game 1 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see both ends of his defining match story.

Was Alekhine the only world champion to die while still champion?

Yes, Alekhine was the only undisputed World Chess Champion to die while still holding the title. That fact is one reason the end of his career still feels historically unfinished even though his achievements are clear. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to return to the title-winning performance that shaped that legacy.

Style and chess strength

What was Alekhine's playing style?

Alekhine’s style was dynamic, concrete, and highly imaginative. His best attacks were usually built on active piece placement and forcing calculation rather than random sacrifice. Select Alekhine (White) vs Vidmar (Black) — Karlsbad 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch how he drags the game into a full attacking storm.

Was Alekhine mainly an attacking player?

Alekhine was mainly famous as an attacking player, but that description is incomplete on its own. His greatest games often show a build-up phase first, where pressure, space, and activity make the final attack possible. Select Alekhine (White) vs Yates (Black) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see how his wins could begin with slow improvement before the decisive phase.

How good was Alexander Alekhine?

Alexander Alekhine was one of the strongest players of his era and one of the most influential champions in chess history. He proved his strength not only in combinations but also in world championship match play, elite tournaments, and difficult technical positions. Select Alekhine (White) vs Lasker (Black) — Zürich 1934 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see him overpower another all-time great in direct combat.

Why are Alekhine's games still studied today?

Alekhine’s games are still studied because they teach how activity turns into concrete attacking chances. They are especially valuable for showing the moment when a position stops being merely promising and becomes tactically winning. Select Alekhine (White) vs Tenner (Black) — Cologne 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see that transformation happen in miniature form.

Did Alekhine only win with tactics?

Alekhine did not only win with tactics. Many of his best games show strategic pressure, better piece coordination, and endgame conversion before any flashy finish appears. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Speijer (White) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to follow a long strategic squeeze rather than a quick sacrificial burst.

Was Alekhine stronger in open tactical positions or closed strategic positions?

Alekhine was most feared in open tactical positions, but he could also handle strategic structures at the highest level. What made him special was his ability to turn quiet advantages into positions full of concrete threats. Select Alekhine (White) vs Nimzowitsch (Black) — San Remo 1930 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch him squeeze a strategic edge until Black runs out of room.

What should club players study in Alekhine's games?

Club players should study how Alekhine improved piece activity before the final blow appeared. The real lesson is that attacks usually become sound only after the pieces have already taken away key squares and defensive resources. Select Alekhine (White) vs Yates (Black) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to pinpoint where his positional edge becomes a winning plan.

What is the biggest practical lesson from Alekhine's best wins?

The biggest practical lesson from Alekhine’s best wins is that initiative must be fed with forcing moves at the right moment. He was exceptional at sensing when a threat should be continued, simplified, or converted. Select Alekhine (White) vs Lasker (Black) — Zürich 1934 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to witness a forcing finish that arrives exactly when Black’s position can no longer hold.

Openings, patterns, and named ideas

What is Alekhine's Gun?

Alekhine’s Gun is a heavy-piece battery on one file, usually with two rooks in front and the queen behind them. The name matters because it captures Alekhine’s taste for maximum pressure on a single target until the defender collapses. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Speijer (White) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to study how file pressure and queenside expansion can make that kind of domination possible.

Did Alekhine invent Alekhine's Gun?

Alekhine did not invent the general idea of doubling and tripling major pieces, but the formation became strongly associated with him. The label survived because his games made the pattern memorable, purposeful, and dangerous in a way that players could instantly recognize. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Speijer (White) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to follow one of the clearest lessons in pressure-building from his career.

Is Alekhine's Defence named after Alexander Alekhine?

Alekhine’s Defence is named after Alexander Alekhine. The opening begins with 1.e4 Nf6 and reflects his willingness to invite an advanced white centre and then challenge it dynamically. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see that same taste for dynamic imbalance in championship play even when the opening is different.

Is Alekhine mainly famous for the opening named after him?

No, Alekhine is famous first as a world champion and attacking genius rather than only as the name behind one opening. His enduring reputation comes from the quality and imagination of his games across many openings and many types of positions. Select Alekhine (White) vs Vidmar (Black) — Karlsbad 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see why his over-the-board creativity matters more than the opening label alone.

Did Alekhine play the French Defense well?

Alekhine handled the French Defense very well from both sides of the board. Several of his best-known games in this opening show how he could turn blocked-looking positions into active operations with precise timing. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Capablanca (White) — World Championship 1927, Game 1 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch him outplay Capablanca from a French structure.

Did Alekhine play the Ruy Lopez well?

Alekhine played the Ruy Lopez extremely well. His Ruy Lopez games often show a mixture of classical development and sudden tactical acceleration once the pieces are fully mobilised. Select Alekhine (White) vs Vidmar (Black) — Karlsbad 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see a Lopez-type battle explode into direct king pressure.

Capablanca, rivalries, and comparisons

Why did Alekhine refuse to play Capablanca again?

Alekhine did not grant Capablanca an immediate rematch because negotiations became tangled in money, conditions, and distrust. The failure of the rematch mattered historically because it froze one of chess history’s greatest rivalries without a clean second title match. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 and Alekhine (Black) vs Capablanca (White) — World Championship 1927, Game 1 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to compare the match tension from both colours.

How did Alekhine beat Capablanca in 1927?

Alekhine beat Capablanca in 1927 through deep preparation, stubborn defence, and superior endurance across a long match. The result was not one lucky blow but a sustained championship performance in which he repeatedly handled complex positions better. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch one of the clearest demonstrations of that match-winning control.

Who was better, Alekhine or Capablanca?

There is no final answer to whether Alekhine or Capablanca was better because the comparison depends on what qualities you value most. Capablanca is usually praised for clarity and technical ease, while Alekhine is remembered for calculation, complexity, and fighting energy. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Capablanca (White) — World Championship 1927, Game 1 and Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to compare their strengths through the same match.

Was Alekhine better than Lasker?

Alekhine was not simply better than Lasker in every chess sense, but he did prove he could beat him in brilliant style. Lasker brought resistance, psychology, and resourcefulness, which makes Alekhine’s attacking win over him even more impressive. Select Alekhine (White) vs Lasker (Black) — Zürich 1934 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to follow how Alekhine breaks through against one of the hardest defenders in chess history.

Was Alekhine better than Nimzowitsch?

Alekhine and Nimzowitsch represented different kinds of chess greatness, but Alekhine often got the better of the direct practical fight. Nimzowitsch was one of the great theorists of restraint and control, which makes Alekhine’s pressure wins against him especially instructive. Select Alekhine (White) vs Nimzowitsch (Black) — San Remo 1930 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see strategic restraint slowly crushed by active pressure.

Did Alekhine have a real rivalry with Réti?

Alekhine and Réti stood for sharply contrasting chess approaches, so their games naturally carried real rivalry value. Réti is often linked with hypermodern flexibility, while Alekhine was ready to seize space and then punish hesitation with energy. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Réti (White) — Baden-Baden 1925 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see how Alekhine dismantles Réti’s setup with direct counterplay.

Death, myths, and verification questions

How did Alexander Alekhine die?

Alexander Alekhine was found dead in Estoril on March 24, 1946, and the exact circumstances remain disputed. Contemporary and later accounts have discussed heart failure and choking, but the surviving evidence does not justify presenting one explanation as completely settled. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to return from the unresolved history to the chess that made his reputation last.

Is it true that Alekhine died unbeaten as champion?

Yes, it is true that Alekhine died while still world champion, which means no one beat him for the title after he regained it from Euwe. That does not mean he was unbeatable, but it does mean his reign ended through circumstance rather than match defeat. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to study the championship standard that framed that final status.

Is Alekhine remembered more for brilliance than for consistency?

Alekhine is remembered for brilliance first, but his career also required major consistency against elite opposition. A player does not win and regain the world title on combinations alone; sustained preparation, stamina, and practical judgment are also required. Select Alekhine (White) vs Yates (Black) — Hamburg 1910 and Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to compare his technical side with his brilliant side.

Did Alekhine win many short brilliancies?

Alekhine won many short brilliancies, especially in exhibitions, miniatures, and sharp tournament games. Those quick wins are memorable because they show how fast he could exploit loose king safety or a single tactical mistake. Select Alekhine (White) vs Tenner (Black) — Cologne 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to watch one of the cleanest short Alekhine finishes on the page.

Did Alekhine also win long strategic games?

Alekhine also won long strategic games, not just miniatures and sacrificial attacks. His deeper wins often feature superior pawn breaks, stronger files, and patient technical conversion after the initiative has already done its work. Select Alekhine (Black) vs Speijer (White) — Hamburg 1910 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to follow a longer game where pressure and structure matter as much as tactics.

Which Alekhine game should a beginner start with?

The best Alekhine game for a beginner to start with is usually a short one with a clear finish. A compact miniature makes it easier to see how development, threats, and king exposure fit together without getting lost in too many branches. Select Alekhine (White) vs Tenner (Black) — Cologne 1911 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to start with a direct mating attack you can replay in just a few minutes.

Which Alekhine game best shows his full strength?

No single Alekhine game captures everything, but his best title games and balanced attack-plus-technique wins come closest. The strongest choices are games where activity, calculation, and conversion all appear in the same struggle rather than only a single brilliant flash. Select Alekhine (White) vs Capablanca (Black) — World Championship 1927, Game 34 in the Replay Alekhine’s Best Games selector to see the widest possible sample of his full championship skill.

Continue with attacking chess

Alekhine's games reward active pieces, forcing moves and the confidence to carry an initiative through to its conclusion.

The Complete Guide to Brilliant Forward-Only Attacking Chess

Continue from the replay lab into a structured course on building attacks, finding forcing continuations and keeping practical pressure on the opponent.

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