Einstein versus Oppenheimer
Einstein versus Oppenheimer is a game of chess said to have been played between theoretical physicists Albert Einstein and J. Robert Oppenheimer at Princeton University in 1933. In the game, Einstein plays the white pieces, and uses the Ruy Lopez opening; Oppenheimer, as black, responds with the Morphy Defense. Einstein wins the game after 24 moves.
There is no conclusive evidence that Albert Einstein and J. Robert Oppenheimer ever played chess together.
History and factual accuracy
The earliest known source for the game is the 1959 book Freude am Schach by Gerhard Henschel, but provides no date or venue. The 1967 French Dictionaire des echecs, cites Henschel's book but refers to the chess game in conditional tense. Henschel's book contains unverified chess games from other famous figures including Joseph Stalin and Leo Tolstoy.Albert Einstein and chess
In a 1936 interview with a Princeton University freshman, which was reported on by The New York Times, Einstein was asked if it was true that for relaxation, he reportedly played three-dimensional chess. Einstein denied that report, saying "I do not play any games... There is no time for it. When I get through work I don't want anything which requires the working of the mind". He added that he had played conventional chess, "once or twice when a boy".Einstein wrote a foreword to a biography of the chess champion Emanuel Lasker, who was his friend. In that foreword Einstein states,
Chess grandmaster Larry Evans, writing in Chess Life magazine, said:
Alternative players and dates
Some have suggested that the name "Einstein" might refer to another Einstein — someone other than the famous physicist. Dennis Holding, Adam Slemsen and Andy Soltis have independently stated that it was Albert Einstein's son, Hans Albert Einstein; and that the game was played either in 1940 or 1945 at the University of California, Berkeley, where Hans Albert gave lectures. Chess historian Edward Winter has suggested the possibility that it might refer to B. Einstein, a professional chess player unrelated to Albert Einstein.The 1982 Romanian book Şah Cartea de Aur by C. Ştefaniu lists the game as played in 1940 in the United States.