Mikhail Chigorin was the father of the Russian Chess School and a leading player of the late 19th century. A romantic player who favored knights over bishops, he challenged the dogmatic principles of his time. Explore the creative and aggressive games that laid the foundation for Soviet chess dominance.
Mikhail Chigorin (1850–1908) was the first Russian player to compete for the World Championship. He is widely considered the founder of the Russian chess tradition that later dominated the world.
He was a Romantic player living in a scientific era. While his rival Steinitz preached positional rules, Chigorin preached creativity, exceptions, and the power of piece activity.
Contrary to modern theory which values the "Bishop Pair," Chigorin famously preferred Knights. He believed their ability to control specific outpost squares made them superior in complex fights.
His name is attached to the "Chigorin Defense" in the Queen's Gambit (1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nc6) and the main closed line of the Ruy Lopez (9...Na5), both of which are still played today.
He was the worthy challenger to Wilhelm Steinitz, playing him in 1889 (Havana) and 1892 (Havana). Though he lost both, he proved he was the second-best player in the world.
In the 23rd game of the 1892 match, with the score tied, Chigorin had a winning position but famously overlooked a "Mate in 2," tragically losing the match.
He founded the St. Petersburg Chess Club and wrote columns that inspired the generation of Alekhine and Botvinnik.
In 1890, he played a famous 2-game telegraph match against Steinitz to test their opening theories. Chigorin won both games!
He kept the Evans Gambit alive long after others abandoned it, using it to score spectacular victories.
His games are the best historical examples of how to use Knights to dominate Bishops in closed positions.
He finished equal first with Max Weiss in one of the strongest tournaments of the 19th century.
His innovation 1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nc6 violated classical principles (blocking the c-pawn) but created immediate tactical pressure on White.
In the greatest tournament of the era, he finished 2nd ahead of the World Champion Lasker, defeating Pillsbury in a brilliant game.
Like other romantics, he despised "grandmaster draws" and fought every game to the bitter end.
He had a respectable score against Emanuel Lasker, winning several games against the man who ruled chess for 27 years.
Alexander Alekhine, the 4th World Champion, cited Chigorin as his greatest influence, calling him a "searcher of truth."
He developed an unusual system against the French Defense (1.e4 e6 2.Qe2), aiming to disrupt Black's standard plans.
Despite being an attacker, his endgame play was highly creative, often finding exceptions to established rules.
He did not take chess seriously until his late 20s, proving that you don't have to be a child prodigy to become a legend.
He was one of the last top-level players to regularly employ the King's Gambit in serious tournament play.
He organized and played in this elite 4-player tournament (Lasker, Steinitz, Pillsbury, Chigorin), one of the strongest events ever held.
In Russia, clubs and tournaments are named after him to this day.
His variation in the Ruy Lopez (9...Na5) remains the absolute main line of the Closed Spanish today.
He proved that chess principles are guidelines, not laws. If a move works tactically, it is correct, even if it looks "ugly."