Luis Roux Cabral
Luis Lisandro Roux Cabral (17 November 1913, in Montevideo[1] – 1973?) was an Uruguayan chess master.
Chess career
He won the Uruguayan Chess Championship twice, in 1948 and 1971,[2] and played for Uruguay in the Chess Olympiads of 1939, 1964 and 1966.[3]
"The Uruguayan Immortal"
In the Uruguay Championship of 1943, Roux Cabral defeated Molinari with a brilliant sacrificial attack; the combination is known as "The Uruguayan Immortal".[4] Fred Reinfeld annotated the game on pages 11–12 of the Chess Correspondent, May–June 1944. His final remark was: "A game destined for immortality."[5]
gollark: Bots are not generally capable of applying mystical curses of some sort. Yet.
gollark: And overestimate the importance of trendy stuff when the predictions are made.
gollark: Longer-term predictions of scientific developments always tend to miss some weird thing which came out of seemingly nowhere.
gollark: I think they would argue that seed AI isn't that far-future and very important to get right. But it's very hard to tell if it *actually* is.
gollark: You could probably make an excuse along the lines of "if it's not accurate enough, it is liable to go horribly wrong and explode *your* ship".
References
- Visa with photo
- "Campeonato de Uruguay de ajedrez". Ajedrezdeataque.com. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
- Bartelski, Wojciech. "Men's Chess Olympiads: Luis Roux Cabral". OlimpBase. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
- "B Molinari vs Luis Roux Cabral (1943) The Uruguayan Immortal". ChessGames.com. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
- Winter, Edward. "Chess Notes by Edward Winter: 5529. Uruguayan brilliancy". ChessHistory.com. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
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