Up to this point White has been following well-known analysis, but now he makes a fatal error - he begins to use his own head.


Concerning a World Chess Championship match, as quoted by William Ewart Napier in "The Bright Side of Chess" (1952) by Irving Chernev, p. 114


Up to this point White has been following well-known analysis, but now he makes a fatal error - he begins to use his own head.

Up to this point White has been following well-known analysis, but now he makes a fatal error - he begins to use his own head.

Up to this point White has been following well-known analysis, but now he makes a fatal error - he begins to use his own head.

Up to this point White has been following well-known analysis, but now he makes a fatal error - he begins to use his own head.