Nick's Best Selected games of Bryon Nickoloff by Angela Day
Our Price: £ 16.99
Publisher: Chess'n Math Association, 2007
Edition: Paperback medium Pages: 295 Language: English
Canada's eccentric International Master Bryon Nickoloff was a genius at opening preparation and endgame strategy. The main reason he never became a Grandmaster was habitual time trouble with the clock. He was simply addicted to the adrenaline of time scrambles. So this book will be very educational for students of openings and endgames, but a dramatic 'cautionary tale' regarding the time-consuming search for perfection in the middlegame.
Contents - Biography - 73 annotated Nickoloff' games - 21 tactical exercises from Nickoloff'games - indices on opponents, openings, themes
"Nickoloff, with an IQ of 180, whizzed through school with no mark below 95. He was one of a select group of students picked for the city's short-lived experiment in advanced independent learning. At 15, he joined a chess club at a local YMCA. 'There were 500 people there and everyone was beating me, ' says Nickoloff. 'But six months later, 1 could beat them all. ' He became 'obsessed' with the game and would play six hours a day, study chess books and famous games for another 10 hours. ..." Dave Stonehouse, Toronto Star, November 13, 1988
"...there is such a thing as chess talent. It manifests as a sort of premature intuition. The player just naturally sees the right moves in complex or bizarre positions, or feels when the turning point in the game is at hand. ...Two Canadians have impressed this columnist as being more talented than the rest. One is Kevin Spraggett of Montreal, who has gone on to become a Grandmaster ...The other is Bryon Nickoloff of Toronto ..." Jonathan Berry, Globe and Mail, June 3, 1989
IM Lawrance Day of Toronto is a former Canadian Champion and 13 time member of the national Olympic team, as well as a former rival and friend of Bryon Nickoloff.