d
with} (11. Qe3 {[%cal Gd1d8]} Be7 12. Bxf6 Bxf6 13. e5 {only releases the
tension after} Be7 14. exd6 Bxd6 15. Ne4 Bxe4 16. Qxe4 O-O 17. Bd3 g6 $11)
11... Be7 ({Logical, but Black can still reach positions of the aforementioned
type with} 11... b4 $5 12. Ne2 Qb6 13. Bxf6 gxf6 $13) 12. e5 $32 {White still
plays for his development advantage in a straightforward fashion, manoeuvring
doesn't promise him too much:} (12. Qe1 Nd7 13. Bxe7 Qxe7 14. Qg3 O-O 15. Rhe1
(15. f5 $6 b4 16. Ne2 Nc5 17. fxe6 fxe6 18. Qe3 Qa7 $1 $36 {[%cal Rc5b3] /\Nb3,
Mecking,H-Polugaevsky,L/Luzern Candidates/1977/}) 15... Nc5 16. a3 Rab8 17. e5
dxe5 18. Rxe5 Nxd3+ 19. Rxd3 b4 20. axb4 Qxb4 21. b3 Rfd8 22. Ree3 h6 23. Qf2
a5 $40 {Browne,W-Tukmakov,V/Hastings/1972/}) ({More interesting is the
alternative} 12. Rhe1 O-O 13. e5 dxe5 14. Qf2 $5 Qc7 (14... Nd5 $2 15. Bxh7+ $1
Kxh7 16. Rxd5 Bxd5 17. Qh4+ $16) (14... h6 15. Bxb5 axb5 16. Rxd8 Rfxd8 17.
Bxf6 Bxf6 18. fxe5 Bg5+ 19. Kb1 {is mentioned by the ECO as unclear, but it
doesn't seem Black has sufficient compensation for the Q after} b4 20. Qc5 $16)
15. fxe5 Nd5 16. Bxe7 Nxe7 $5 $132 (16... Qxe7 17. Ne4 Rfd8 $13 {/+/=} (17...
Nb4 $2 18. Nf6+ $1 $40 {fails tactically.}) (17... f5 18. exf6 $14 {leads to
an inferior version of the J.Polgar-Dreev position-see below.}))) 12... dxe5 {
More or less forced.} (12... b4 $6 13. exf6 gxf6 14. Bh6 bxc3 15. Qxc3 Kd7 16.
f5 $40 {[%csl Rd7] ע[+],Gazik,I-Grinberg,N/EU-chJ Groningen/1978/}) (12... Nd5
13. Nxd5 Bxd5 14. Bxe7 Qxe7 15. exd6 Qxd6 16. Be4 $14 {gives White a small,
but pleasantly durable advantage.}) 13. fxe5 Nd7 $5 {Ambitious, an altogether
different position arises after the more modest} (13... Nd5 14. Bxe7 Qxe7 15.
Ne4 O-O 16. Rhf1 f5 17. exf6 Nxf6 18. Nxf6+ Rxf6 19. Rxf6 Qxf6 20. Rf1 Qe7 21.
Qe3 Rd8 22. g3 Bd5 (22... e5 $5 $11) 23. a3 Qd6 24. Rd1 Qc6 (24... b4 $5 $132)
25. Qf4 Re8 (25... Rc8 $142 {/\Qc7}) 26. Re1 $36 {Polgar,J-Dreev,A/Linares/
1997/ Although finally White managed to convert her advantage into a full
point, Black has more than one chance to improve his play.}) 14. Bxe7 Qxe7 15.
Be4 {[%mdl 512] The pawn sacrifice is consistent and more or less necessary in
the fight for the initiative.} ({After the softer} 15. Qf4 Nc5 16. Ne4 Bxe4 17.
Bxe4 Rc8 18. Rd6 O-O $11 {Mecking,H-Polugaevsky,L/Luzern Candidates/ 1977/
Black has no problems whatsoever.}) 15... Bxe4 (15... Rc8 $6 {practically by
force leads to an unpleasant R_|_ after} 16. Bxc6 Rxc6 17. Ne4 Nxe5 18. Nd6+
Kf8 19. Rhe1 f6 (19... Ng6 $6 20. Nf5 $1) 20. Nxb5 axb5 21. Rxe5 $1 (21. Qd8+
$2 Qxd8 $1 22. Rxd8+ Ke7 23. Rxh8 Nd3+ $19 {is the wrong move order.}) 21...
fxe5 22. Qd8+ Qxd8 23. Rxd8+ Kf7 24. Rxh8 Kg6 25. Rb8 Rc5 26. Kd2 $14 {Sax,
G-Kozul,Z/Radenci op/1998/}) ({It's more difficult to prove White's advantage
after} 15... Qc5 16. Rhe1 Ra7 (16... Rc8 $5 $13 {/\} 17. Bxc6 Qxc6 18. Ne4 O-O
{also deserves attention.}) 17. b4 $5 Qb6 18. Qf4 (18. Qg5 O-O 19. Rd6 Qf2 20.
Re2 Qg1+ $132) 18... Qc7 $13 {[%csl Rb4,Gd1,Ge1] The activity of White's
forces is balanced by the >< of his <<.} ({or maybe even} 18... Bxe4 19. Nxe4
O-O $13)) (15... Nxe5 $5 16. Qd4 (16. Bxc6+ Nxc6 17. Nd5 Qb7 $17) 16... Bxe4 (
16... f6 $2 17. Qxe5 $1 fxe5 18. Bxc6+ $18) 17. Qxe5 (17. Nxe4 f6 {leads to a
position we will mention in the note to move 17, while Black has avoided the
game continuation.}) 17... Bg6 18. Qxg7 Qf8 {is also not so promising for
White, as he can't keep both the Q on the board and Black's K in the [+].} 19.
Qe5 Qh6+ 20. Kb1 O-O 21. Ne4 $5 $11) 16. Nxe4 Nxe5 17. Qc3 $5 $146 {[%mdl 8]
'©!?' Gofshtein,L. Gofshtein,L: 'This novelty doesn't change this well-known
variation evaluation: White has sufficient compensation for P lack, but not
more than sufficient.'} (17. Qd4 f6 18. Nd6+ Kf8 19. Rhf1 (19. Rhe1 {enabled
Black to activate his passive Rh8 after} h5 $1 20. a4 h4 21. h3 Rh5 22. Kb1 Rd8
$15 {Aseev,K-Yermolinsky,A/URS-ch U20 Vilnius/1984/}) 19... Kg8 20. g4 h6 21.
h4 {Sutovsky almost certainly knew not only the following older game, but also
even Kasparov's recommendation} Rf8 $1 (21... Nf7 $143 $6 22. Qe4 Rf8 23. Nf5
Qe8 24. Nd4 $1 e5 25. Nf5 h5 26. Rg1 Rh7 27. Qb7 Kh8 28. gxh5 Qe6 29. Nxg7 $1
$40 {Kasparov,G-Panchenko,A/URS-ch sf Daugavpils/1978/}) 22. g5 hxg5 23. hxg5
Rh5 (23... Ng6 $5 $11) 24. gxf6 Rxf6 25. Qb6 $11 {when White's activity
suffices only for equality. White's novelty is objectively not much stronger,
but it poses Black fresh problems.}) 17... f6 18. Nd6+ Kf8 19. Rd4 {[%cal
Yh1d1,Rd6c8] /\Rhd1,Nc8} (19. Nc8 $6 b4 $1 20. Qxe5 Rxc8 $15 (20... fxe5 $5 $15
)) (19. Rhe1 {Gofshtein,L} Kg8 $44) 19... g6 $6 {[%csl Rf6] An important
moment. Black naturally wants to connect his R as soon as possible, but this
move weakens f6 and the whole >>. Therefore just as in the above examples
deserving attention was} (19... h6 20. Nc8 Qe8 21. Nd6 {Now the most sensible
probably is} Qe7 {and White hardly has more than repetition with} (21... Qc6
$143 22. Qh3 $1 Ke7 23. Rhd1 $36 {[%csl Re7][%cal Rh3a3] /\Qa3,ע}) 22. Nc8 (
22. Rhd1 Kg8 23. Qe3 Kh7 24. Qe4+ Ng6 $5 {/\f5=/+ gives White nothing concrete.
})) (19... h5 $5) (19... b4 20. Qb3 $44 {doesn't give Black anything concrete
and only makes the << more vulnerable.} (20. Qxb4 $2 Nc6 $19)) 20. Nc8 Qf7 {
'+/-?' Gofshtein,L.} ({White will penetrate to the 8-th rank, as} 20... Qe8 $2
{from the above note is now impossible:} 21. Rf4 Kg7 22. Rxf6 $1 Nd3+ (22...
Kxf6 23. Rf1+ Kg7 24. Qxe5+ Kg8 25. Nd6 Qe7 26. Ne4 $18) 23. Qxd3 Kxf6 (23...
Rxc8 24. Rhf1 $40) 24. Qf3+ Kg7 25. Qxa8 Qxc8 26. Qa7+ Kh6 27. h4 $40 {+/-}) ({
I think,} 20... Qb7 $1 {(Gofshtein,L) was stronger!} 21. Rf4 (21. Qc5+ {
Gofshtein,L} Kg7 22. Nd6 Qc6 $17) 21... Kg7 22. Rxf6 Nd3+ $1 23. Qxd3 Qxg2 24.
Rhf1 (24. Rxg6+ {Gofshtein,L} hxg6 25. Qd4+ Kh7 26. Qh4+ Kg8 27. Qd8+ $11)
24... Rhxc8 25. Qd7+ Kh6 26. Qd3 $44) 21. Nd6 {'©?' Gofshtein,L.} ({Now} 21.
Rf4 $2 Kg7 22. Nd6 Qe7 23. Ne4 Rac8 $17 {only allows Black to consolidate with
tempo.}) (21. Rd8+ $1 $16 {(Gofshtein,L) -like in this game.}) 21... Qe7 22.
Nc8 Qf7 {'+/-?' Gofshtein,L.} (22... Qb7 $1 $44 {Gofshtein,L}) 23. Rd8+ $5 {
'!' Gofshtein,L. Gofshtein,L: 'At last Emil found right way!' White wants more
than repetition.} Kg7 24. Rhd1 Rxd8 {Now White gains control over the 8-th
rank, interesting was also} (24... Rf8 25. Qc5 (25. Rxf8 $143 $6 Qxf8 26. Qc7+
Nf7 $17) 25... Kg8 26. g4 g5 $13 {[%csl Ge5] and the defence with the strong
Ne5 seems so hold.}) 25. Rxd8 a5 $2 {Although White has no direct threats,
Black has problems disentangling his major pieces, e.g.,} (25... Rb8 $6 26. Qc5
{/\Nd6 Blehm wants to activate his R via a6, but his <}) 35... Qd1 $6 {
Gofshtein,L: 'Decisive mistake. Now White wins by force:'} (35... e3 $142 36.
Rc4 ({Still premature is} 36. Qg8 $2 Qd4+ 37. c3 Qd2+ 38. Ka3 Qc1+ 39. Ka4 Nb6+
40. Kb5 Qf1+ 41. c4 Qf5+ 42. c5 Qd3+ {Black didn't have this important check
in the line above.} 43. Kxa5 Qc3+ 44. Kb5 (44. Ka6 Nxc8+ 45. cxd6 Qd3+ 46. Ka5
Nxd6 $17 {[%csl Ge3] o^e}) 44... Qd3+ 45. Ka5 Qc3+ $11) 36... Qxg2 37. Qe7 (37.
Ne6 $6 Rxe6 38. Qxe6 Ne5 $13) 37... Ne5 38. Qxd6 Nxc4+ 39. bxc4 {but even here
White's attack is stronger than the o^e3 and he should win after} Qd2 (39... e2
$2 40. Qxf6 h4 41. h3 $1 Qa8 42. Qh8+ Kg5 43. Nf7+ $18) 40. Qf4+ (40. Qe7 $5
$16 {/\} h4 41. a3 e2 42. Qxf6 e1=Q 43. Nf7+ Kh5 44. Qf3#) 40... Kh7 41. Nc6
$16 {/+-}) (35... Kg5 36. Qe7 Rd2 37. g3 $18 {->}) (35... Ne5 36. Qf8+ Kg5 37.
Rc5 $1 Rd2 38. Qe7 $5 $18) ({Right was the only} 35... a4 $5 {Gofshtein,L} 36.
Qg8 a3+ $1 37. Kxa3 ({or} 37. Kc3 {Gofshtein,L} Ne5 {[%csl Rf7][%cal Ge5f7,
Gd8f7]} 38. Qf8+ Kg5 39. Rc5 $16) 37... Ra6+ 38. Kb2 Ne5 39. Rc7 $16) 36. Ne6
$18 {[%cal Rf7g7,Rc8h8] Black can stave off mate only by giving the exchange,
the game is decided.} Rxe6 $8 37. Qxe6 Qd4+ (37... f5 $6 38. Rc6 Qd4+ 39. c3
$18 {costs more material.}) 38. Kb1 (38. c3 $18 Qf2+ 39. Ka3) 38... e3 (38...
Qd1+ 39. Kb2 Qd4+ 40. c3 Qd2+ 41. Ka3 Qc1+ 42. Ka4 $18) 39. h4 $1 {[%cal Rc8h8]
/\Rh8} f5 $8 40. c3 Qd1+ 41. Kb2 Qd2+ 42. Ka3 Qc1+ 43. Ka4 Nb6+ 44. Qxb6 e2 45.
Rh8+ (45. Qd4 $5 {wins even quicker.}) 45... Kg7 46. Qd4+ (46. Qd4+ Kf7 47.
Qd5+ Kf6 (47... Kg7 48. Qe5+ Kf7 49. Rh7+) 48. Rf8+ Kg7 (48... Ke7 49. Rf7+)
49. Qf7+ Kh6 50. Rh8#) 1-0
[Event "St Petersburg-ch"]
[Site "St Petersburg"]
[Date "1995.??.??"]
[Round "11"]
[White "Svidler, Peter"]
[Black "Aseev, Konstantin N"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2585"]
[BlackElo "2530"]
[Annotator "Svidler,P"]
[PlyCount "115"]
[EventDate "1995.04.??"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "12"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[EventCategory "9"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 047"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "1995.08.01"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "1995.08.01"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 {Hecht} c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2
a6 8. O-O-O Bd7 9. f3 Be7 10. h4 Rc8 11. g4 Ne5 12. Kb1 b5 13. Qe1 Qc7 14. Bc1
b4 15. Nce2 Nxf3 16. Nxf3 Qxc2+ 17. Ka1 Qxe4 18. Qg3 (18. Bg2 Rc2 19. Nfd4 (19.
Nf4 Rxc1+ 20. Rxc1 Qxf4 $19) 19... Rxc1+ 20. Rxc1 Qxg2 $19) (18. Qf2 Nxg4 19.
Qg3 e5 20. Bh3 h5 21. Rhe1 $13) (18. Rh3 $5 e5 $1 19. g5 (19. Ng5 Qb7 $17)
19... Bxh3 20. Bxh3 (20. gxf6 Qxf3 $19) 20... Nd7 21. Qf1 $44) 18... e5 $1 (
18... Qxg4 19. Qf2 $36) 19. Bg5 (19. g5 Nh5 20. Qf2 Rc2 $36 (20... Bf5 $5 21.
Bd2 $13) 21. Qe3 $140 Rxc1+ $1 22. Qxc1 Qxf3 $19) 19... Nxg4 $1 20. Ned4 $5 (
20. Bxe7 Ne3 $19) (20. Bh3 Bxg5 21. hxg5 (21. Nxg5 Qxe2 22. Rhe1 Qf2 $19) 21...
Ne3 $1 22. Bxd7+ Kxd7 $17) 20... Bxg5 (20... exd4 21. Bd3 (21. Bxa6) 21... Qd5
(21... Qb7 22. Bxe7 Kxe7 23. Rhe1+ $16) 22. Rhe1 Ne3 (22... Be6 23. Rxe6 Qxe6
24. Nxd4 $1 $16) 23. Nxd4 (23. Bxe3 dxe3 24. Bxa6 Qa8 25. Bxc8 Bxc8 26. Qxg7
$16) 23... Qxd4 24. Rxe3 $16 Be6 $140 25. Rxe6 (25. Bb5+ $2 axb5 26. Rxd4 Rc1#)
25... fxe6 26. Bg6+ hxg6 27. Rxd4 $18) 21. hxg5 (21. Nxg5 Qe3 22. Qxe3 (22. Ne2
Qxg3 23. Nxg3 Nf2 24. Bxa6 Rc7 $17) 22... Nxe3 23. Bxa6 Rd8 $17) 21... Ne3 (
21... exd4 22. Bxa6 $36) 22. Bd3 (22. Bxa6 exd4 $1 $17) 22... Qg4 (22... Nxd1
$4 23. Bxe4 Rc1+ 24. Bb1 $18) (22... Qd5 $142 23. Nb3 (23. Rde1 exd4 24. Rh4
Be6 $1 $19 25. Rxd4 $140 Qxa2#) 23... Nxd1 24. Rxd1 $17) 23. Qxg4 Bxg4 (23...
Nxg4 24. Nf5 $13) 24. Rde1 (24. Rdg1 $6 Rc5 (24... exd4 25. Nxd4 Rc5 26. Rg3
Re5 27. Nc6 (27. Re1 Nd5 $17) 27... Re6 28. Nd4 $10) 25. Nb3 $8 Bxf3 26. Rh3
Rd5 27. Bb1 e4 $17) 24... Bxf3 (24... exd4 $2 25. Nxd4 $16) 25. Nxf3 Nc2+ 26.
Bxc2 Rxc2 {Hecht: RRN<->RR. 3P<->7P} 27. Rh4 $1 $15 a5 $6 (27... Rf2 $142 $1
28. Rxb4 O-O 29. Rb3 $15) 28. Nd4 $1 Rg2 (28... Rc4 29. b3) 29. Nc6 Kd7 30.
Nxa5 Ra8 (30... Rb8 $5) 31. Nc4 Ke6 32. Ne3 Rxg5 33. Rxb4 {Hecht: 5 verbundene
Freibauern <-> 2 verbundene Freibauern. Es geht um Taktik, es geht um Tempo.}
f5 34. Rb6 f4 35. Nc4 Rd8 36. a4 f3 37. Ka2 f2 38. Rf1 Rf5 39. a5 e4 $138 (
39... g5 $142 40. a6 g4 (40... h5 {Hecht} 41. a7 Ra8 42. Rxd6+ Ke7 43. Ra6 g4
44. Nb6 $18) 41. a7 (41. Ne3 $5 Rf4 42. Nxg4 Rxg4 43. Rxf2 $13) 41... Ra8 (
41... g3 42. Rxd6+ Rxd6 43. a8=Q $18) 42. Rxd6+ Ke7 43. Ra6 g3 44. Ne3 Rf3 $13)
40. a6 g5 41. a7 Ra8 42. Rxd6+ Ke7 43. Ra6 Kf8 $3 (43... Rf6 44. Nb6 Rxb6 (
44... e3 45. Nd5+) 45. Rxb6 Rxa7+ 46. Kb1 e3 47. Rb3 $1 $18) 44. Nb6 Rxa7 $1
45. Rxa7 e3 46. Nd7+ $1 Kf7 (46... Ke8 47. Ra3 $1 Rf3 48. Nf6+ Kd8 49. Rxe3
Rxe3 50. Nxh7 $18) (46... Kg8 47. Ra8+ Kg7 48. Re8 $18) 47. Ne5+ $138 (47. Nc5+
$18) 47... Kf8 (47... Kf6 48. Ng4+ $18) (47... Ke6 48. Nc6 $1 $18) (47... Ke8
48. Nc6 $18) (47... Kg8 $5 48. Ng4 $1 e2 49. Nh6+ Kf8 (49... Kh8 50. Nxf5
exf1=Q 51. Ra8#) 50. Ra8+ Ke7 51. Nxf5+ Kd7 52. Ra7+ Kd8 53. Rxf2 e1=Q 54. Rf3
Qe6+ 55. Ka3 $18) 48. Nd7+ (48. Nd3 $5 g4 $3 $44 (48... e2 $2 49. Rc1 $1 Ra5+ (
49... e1=Q 50. Nxe1 f1=Q 51. Rc8#) 50. Rxa5 f1=Q 51. Rc7 $18)) 48... Kf7 49.
Nc5+ $1 Kg6 (49... Ke8 50. Ra3 $18) (49... Kf8 50. Ne6+ Kg8 (50... Ke8 51. Rc1
$18) 51. Rc1 $18) (49... Kf6 50. Ne4+ Kg6 51. Nc3 $18) 50. Re7 $1 Rxc5 51. Rxe3
Rf5 52. Re2 g4 53. Rexf2 Ra5+ (53... Rxf2 54. Rxf2 h5 55. b4 h4 56. b5 h3 (
56... g3 57. Rg2 Kg5 58. b6 Kg4 59. b7 h3 60. b8=Q hxg2 61. Qb6 $18) 57. b6 g3
58. Rd2 $1 h2 59. b7 h1=Q 60. b8=Q $18) 54. Kb1 h5 55. Rf8 Kg5 56. Rg8+ Kh4 57.
Rh1+ Kg3 58. Rh8 1-0
[Event "NED-ch57"]
[Site "Leeuwarden"]
[Date "2002.06.27"]
[Round "7"]
[White "Tiviakov, Sergei"]
[Black "Van der Wiel, John"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2625"]
[BlackElo "2509"]
[Annotator "Tiviakov,S"]
[PlyCount "136"]
[EventDate "2002.06.20"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "NED"]
[EventCategory "13"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 091"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 h6 10. Bh4 g5 $5 11. fxg5 Ng4 12. Be2 (12. Nxc6 Bxc6 13. g3 $5
hxg5 $146 (13... Qb6 $6 14. g6 fxg6 15. Bh3 $36 Ne5 16. Bf6 Be7 17. Bxe5 dxe5
18. Qe2 Bd7 19. Rxd7 Kxd7 20. Nd5 Bg5+ 21. Kb1 Qc6 22. Rd1 Kc8 23. Nb4 Qb6 24.
Nd5 Qc6 25. Nb4 Qb6 26. Nd5 {1/2-1/2 Gavrikov,V-Gabriel,C/Augsburg 1994/EXT
2001 (26)}) (13... Be7 14. g6 $14 (14. gxh6 Bxh4 15. gxh4 Qxh4 16. Rg1 $14))
14. Bxg5 Qxg5 (14... f6 15. Qf4 $16) 15. Qxg5 Bh6 16. Qxh6 Rxh6 17. Rxd6 (17.
Rd2 Ke7 $44) 17... Nf2 18. Rg1 Rxh2 19. Rd2 Ke7 20. Bg2 Ng4 21. Bf3 Rxd2 22.
Kxd2 Rd8+ 23. Ke2 Ne5 $44 24. Rd1 Rh8 25. Rh1 Rg8 26. Kf2 b5 27. a3 a5 28. Rh5
Kd6 29. Bg2 b4 30. axb4 axb4 31. Ne2 Ng4+ 32. Ke1 Ne3 33. e5+ Kc5 34. Bxc6 Kxc6
35. Rh7 Rf8 36. Nd4+ Kd5 37. Ke2 Nc4 38. Nf3 Nxe5 39. Rh5 f5 40. Nxe5 Kxe5 41.
Rh4 Rb8 42. Kf3 Kf6 43. g4 b3 44. Rh2 fxg4+ 45. Kxg4 Ke5 46. Kf3 bxc2 47. Rxc2
Rb3+ 48. Rc3 Rxb2 49. Ke3 Kf5 50. Rc5+ e5 51. Rc4 Rb3+ 52. Ke2 Ra3 53. Rb4 Rc3
54. Ra4 Rc5 55. Ke3 e4 56. Rxe4 Re5 57. Rxe5+ Kxe5 {1/2-1/2 Van der Wiel,
J-Nijboer,F/Leeuwarden NED 2002/The Week in Chess 398 (57)}) 12... Nge5 13. Nf3
Be7 14. Rhg1 b5 15. Kb1 $5 (15. Rdf1 b4 (15... Rb8) (15... Rc8 16. Kb1 {
- 15.Kb1 Rc8 16.Rdf1}) 16. Nd1 (16. Na4 $5 Qa5 17. b3 $13) 16... Rb8 $1 {(>}) 31. Kc2 (31. Qe2 Bxf5 32. g4 (32. Kc2 Qxg3
$13 (32... e3+ 33. Bd3 Bxd3+ 34. Qxd3 Qxg3 $11)) 32... Bxg4 33. Qxg4 c2+ 34.
Kxc2 Qb2+ $11) 31... Bxf5 32. g4 Bxg4 33. Qxc3 Bb4 $1 34. Qxe5+ fxe5 35. Rh1 f5
$44 {([+], o^e4)} 36. Rh4 (36. Rh6 Kd7 37. Re6 Bd6 $11) (36. Rh8+ Kd7 37. Rb8
Bd6 38. Rg8 e3 $11) 36... Ke7 37. Rxg4 {^-} 1/2-1/2
[Event "Presov"]
[Site "Presov"]
[Date "1999.08.19"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Manik, Mikulas"]
[Black "Kulaots, Kaido"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2447"]
[BlackElo "2478"]
[Annotator "Tsesarsky,I"]
[PlyCount "71"]
[EventDate "1999.08.14"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "SVK"]
[EventCategory "10"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 073"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "1999.12.01"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "1999.12.01"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Kb1 (11. f5 $5) 11... Qb6 12. Nb3 (12. Nf3
b4 13. Ne2 (13. Nd5 $2 exd5 14. exd5 Ne7 15. Re1 Kd8 16. Bc4 Qc5 17. Bb3 a5 $19
{0-1 Urbanc,S-Grosar,K/SLO-chT Bled ,EXP 1996 (21)}) 13... a5 (13... Rc8 14.
Ng3 h5 15. e5 f5 16. exd6 $16 {1-0 Spassky,B-Cappello,R/Lugano (ol) 1968/Inf
06 (38)}) (13... Qf2 14. Ng3 (14. Ne1 a5 15. Nd3 Qb6 16. g3 $132 {0-1
Blackstock,L-Ostojic,P/Budapest Tungsram 1977 (41)}) 14... Qxd2 15. Rxd2 Bh6
16. Nh5 Ke7 17. g4 $14) (13... Qc5 14. f5 h5 15. fxe6 fxe6 16. g3 Ne5 17. Nfd4
Nc4 18. Qd3 $14 {1/2-1/2 Weinstein,N-Browne,W/Lone Pine 1977/Inf 23 (36)}) (
13... Ra7 14. Nc1 Rc7 15. Bd3 e5 16. f5 $14 {1-0 Grinfeld,A-Grosar,K/Nova
Gorica-W 1992 (46)}) (13... h5 14. f5 $5 $14 (14. g3 a5 15. Bg2 Ra7 16. h3 Qc5
17. Nc1 a4 18. Rhf1 Rg8 19. Qe1 Bh6 20. Nd3 Qb6 $132 {1-0 Fritz4-Grosar,A/
SLO-Fritz4 (Bled 1996 (32)})) 14. Ned4 $1 $14 (14. f5 Qc5 15. fxe6 (15. Nf4 a4
16. Nh5 Be7 17. Qh6 (17. Ng7+ Kd8 (17... Kf8 18. Qh6 $18) 18. Nh5 (18. fxe6
fxe6 19. g3 b3 $17) 18... b3 $17) 17... b3 18. c3 (18. cxb3 axb3 19. axb3 Nb4
20. Bc4 Qa7 $19) 18... bxa2+ 19. Kxa2 a3 $17) 15... fxe6 16. Nf4 a4 17. Nd3 Qa5
18. Be2 b3 19. axb3 axb3 20. Qxa5 bxc2+ (20... Nxa5 21. Nd4 bxc2+ 22. Nxc2 Nb3
$17 {1/2-1/2 De Wit-Linders/cr NED 1e kl 0 (36)}) 21. Kxc2 Nxa5 $17)) (12. g3
b4 (12... Qxd4 13. Qxd4 Nxd4 14. Rxd4 Bc6 15. Bh3 {[%cal Gf4f5]} (15. Bg2 f5
16. Re1 O-O-O 17. Rd2 b4 18. Nd1 fxe4 19. Bxe4 Kc7 20. Bxc6 Kxc6 $132 {1/2-1/2
Drollinger,D-Pernutz,H/Saarbrucken-Ingbert 1987 (26)}) 15... h5 16. Rhd1 h4 17.
g4 O-O-O 18. Bg2 $132) 13. Nce2 Na5 14. Nb3 Nxb3 15. cxb3 Bc6 16. Bg2 f5 $15 (
16... e5 $6 $14 {0-1 Tarjan,J-Larsen,B/USA 1968/Inf 06 (34)})) (12. Nxc6 Qxc6
13. Qe3 Qc5 14. Qxc5 dxc5 15. Re1 c4 16. Be2 h5 17. Bf3 Rd8 18. Nd5 Be7 19.
Nxe7 Kxe7 20. e5 $11 {1/2-1/2 Rorvall,G-Schneider,L/Sweden 1983 (21)}) 12... b4
(12... O-O-O 13. g3 Kb8 14. Bg2 Bc8 15. Bf3 Bg7 (15... Bb7 16. Rhe1 h5 17. h4
$14) 16. Rhe1 Bb7 17. Qe3 $14 {1-0 Shamkovich,L-Zaltsman,V/New York 1980 (73)})
13. Ne2 (13. Na4 Qc7 14. Qf2 Rb8 $15 {[%csl Ra4][%cal Gd7a4]}) 13... h5 $6 $14
(13... a5 14. Nbd4 a4 $132) 14. Ng3 {[%csl Rh5]} (14. g3 a5 $132) 14... a5 15.
Be2 {[%cal Ge2h5]} h4 16. Nh5 Be7 (16... Rh6 17. g4 hxg3 18. hxg3 a4 19. Nc1 a3
20. b3 Rc8 21. g4 $14) 17. g4 $1 a4 $2 $16 (17... hxg3 $1 {It was necessary to
exchange PP Getting rid from unnecessary weakness.} 18. hxg3 {[%cal Gh5g7]} Rg8
19. g4 a4 20. Nd4 Nxd4 21. Qxd4 Qxd4 22. Rxd4 $14) 18. Nd4 (18. Nc1 a3 19. b3
Rg8 20. h3 $14 {[%csl Re8,Rh4]}) 18... Nxd4 19. Qxd4 Qxd4 20. Rxd4 Rb8 21. f5
$1 (21. Rhd1 Bc6 22. Rxd6 Bxe4 (22... Bxd6 23. Rxd6 Rxh5 (23... Bxe4 24. Nxf6+
Ke7 25. Nxe4 f5 26. Bc4 fxe4 27. Rxe6+ Kd7 28. Rxe4 $18) 24. gxh5 Bxe4 25. Rd4
Bf5 26. Kc1 $16) 23. R6d4 Bc6 24. f5 $14 {[%csl Re6,Rf7][%cal Ge2c4]} (24. Rc4
Bb5 25. Nxf6+ $1 Bxf6 26. Rxb4 Bxe2 27. Rxb8+ Ke7 28. Rb7+ Ke8 29. Rdd7 Bxg4
30. Rxf7 Bf3 31. Ra7 Rg8 32. c3 Rg6 $44)) 21... Bc6 22. Rhd1 (22. Bc4 $1 e5 (
22... Kd7 23. Rhd1 Rhd8 24. fxe6+ fxe6 25. Ng7 e5 26. Be6+ Kc7 27. Rc4 Bf8 28.
Nf5 $18) 23. Bd5 exd4 24. Bxc6+ Kd8 25. Bxa4 h3 (25... Ra8 26. Bb3 $16) 26. Bb3
Ke8 27. Nf4 Rg8 28. Rg1 Rc8 29. Nxh3 Rh8 30. Rg3 Bf8 31. Kc1 Bh6+ 32. Kd1 $16)
22... Kd7 23. b3 $2 $132 (23. Bc4 $16) 23... Rhc8 24. Rc4 (24. Bc4 e5 25. R4d2
Bxe4 26. Bxf7 axb3 27. axb3 Bf3 28. Be6+ Kc7 29. Rf1 Bxg4 30. Bxc8 Rxc8 31. Ng7
Kd7 $44) 24... Rg8 25. Nf4 Rb6 26. h3 (26. Rcd4 axb3 $1 (26... Rgb8 27. fxe6+ (
27. bxa4 e5 $17) 27... fxe6 28. Ng6 e5 29. Rc4 Bb5 30. bxa4 Bxc4 31. Bxc4 $14)
27. axb3 Rgb8 $1 $132 {[%csl Rb6][%cal Ge6e5]} (27... Re8 $2 28. Bc4 e5 29. Nd5
Bxd5 30. Rxd5 Rg8 (30... Ra8 31. R5d3 Ra3 32. Rh3 $18) 31. h3 Kc7 32. Ra5 Rf8
33. Bd5 $18)) 26... Rgb8 27. Bf1 (27. Rcd4 e5 $19) 27... axb3 (27... a3 $5 $132
) 28. axb3 Bf8 $2 $16 (28... Ra8 29. Rcd4 Ra5 $132) 29. fxe6+ fxe6 30. Ng6 Bh6
(30... Be7 31. Rcd4 Rd8 32. e5 d5 33. Rf4 fxe5 34. Nxe5+ Kc7 35. Rf7 Re8 36. g5
$16) 31. Rdd4 $2 (31. Rcd4 {Maybe this move was done?} Bf8 (31... Ba8 32. e5 $1
$16) 32. Nxf8+ Rxf8 33. Rxd6+ $18) 31... Bf8 32. Rxd6+ $4 Ke8 $4 33. e5 $4 (33.
Rdxc6 $18) 33... Be4 34. Nh8 Rxd6 35. exd6 Kd7 36. Nf7 {Seems mistake on the
scoresheet...} 1-0
[Event "Rishon Le Ziyyon 9798"]
[Site "Rishon Le Ziyyon"]
[Date "1997.12.26"]
[Round "2"]
[White "Bitensky, Igor"]
[Black "Khasin, Alexander"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2320"]
[BlackElo "2505"]
[Annotator "Tsesarsky,I"]
[PlyCount "68"]
[EventDate "1997.12.25"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "ISR"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 063"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "1998.03.26"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "1998.03.26"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. Kb1 (9. f3 Be7 10. h4 (10. g4 b5 11. h4 Ne5 12. Bxf6 Bxf6 13. g5
Be7 14. f4 Nc4 15. Qe1 Rc8 16. f5 $40 {1-0 Cullip,S-Martinidesz,D/Oakham (07) ;
CBM 30 1992 (27)}) 10... Rc8 11. g4 Ne5 12. Kb1 b5 13. Qe1 Qc7 14. Bc1 b4 15.
Nce2 Nxf3 16. Nxf3 Qxc2+ 17. Ka1 $14 {1-0 Svidler,P-Aseev,K/St.Petersburg-ch
(11) ;CBM 47 1995 (58)}) 9... Be7 10. f3 Rc8 (10... O-O 11. h4 Rc8 12. Nxc6 (
12. h5 Ne5 13. Be3 b5 14. Bd3 Nc4 15. Bxc4 Rxc4 16. g4 b4 17. Nce2 d5 18. g5
Ne8 19. exd5 e5 20. Nb3 $16 {0-1 Daurer-Scheipl/Aibling op, SW 1991 (36)})
12... Bxc6 13. Qe1 Qc7 14. Bd3 b5 15. Ne2 b4 16. Nd4 a5 17. Nxc6 Qxc6 18. Qe2
$14 {1-0 Hracek,Z-Kotronias,V/Moscow olm CZE-GRE 1994 (56)}) (10... Qc7 11. g4
(11. h4 Rc8 (11... O-O 12. h5 Rfd8 13. g4 d5 14. e5 Nxe5 15. h6 Nc4 16. Bxc4
dxc4 17. hxg7 Bc6 18. Qe1 Kxg7 19. Qh4 Ng8 20. Nxe6+ fxe6 21. Qxh7+ {1-0
Ehlvest,J-Tischbierek,R/New York op 1994}) 12. g4 Nxd4 13. Qxd4 b5 14. Qd2 h5
$1 $132 {1/2-1/2 Luther,T-Groszpeter,A/Kecskemet 1993 (19)}) 11... O-O-O (11...
Nxd4 12. Qxd4 b5 13. Be3 h6 (13... h5 14. g5 $16) 14. h4 Rb8 15. Rg1 b4 16. Ne2
e5 17. Qd2 g6 18. Nc1 $16 {Nikolaidis,K-Kotronias,V/GRE-ch94 Glyfada 1995/1/
2-1/2 (93)}) 12. Be3 h6 13. h4 Nxd4 14. Bxd4 Bc6 15. Qf2 Rd7 16. Bb6 Qb8 $14 {
1-0 Pelle,G-Van Herck,M/Interteam ch, Antwerp BEL 1998 (29)}) (10... b5 11. h4
(11. Nxc6 Bxc6 12. h4 (12. Ne2 $2 Rc8 $4 (12... Nxe4 13. fxe4 (13. Bxe7 Nxd2+
$19) 13... Bxg5 $17) 13. Bxf6 $4 (13. Nd4 $17 {0-1 Walther,E-Aleksejev/cr WT/M
1979 (30)} Nxe4 14. fxe4 Bxg5 15. Nxc6 Rxc6 16. Qf2 {0-1 Santiago,R-Strauss,D/
USA-op Dearborn 1992})) 12... Qb6 (12... O-O 13. Ne2 (13. g4 Qc7 14. Bh3 (14.
Bf4 Rfd8 15. Bd3 b4 16. Ne2 e5 17. Bg5 d5 18. Bxf6 Bxf6 19. Ng3 Be7 20. Rde1 a5
21. g5 a4 22. h5 b3 23. g6 a3 24. cxb3 dxe4 25. Nxe4 Bb5 26. gxh7+ Kh8 27. Nf2
axb2 28. Qc2 Qa5 29. Qxb2 Bxd3+ 30. Nxd3 Rxd3 31. Rxe5 Qd8 32. Qe2 Bf6 33. h6
Bxe5 34. Qxe5 Rd1+ 35. Rxd1 Qxd1+ 36. Kb2 Qd2+ $2) 14... Rac8 15. Ne2 $17 {
0-1 Markovic,M-Jurka,M/Ceske Budejovice op 1994 (25)} Nxe4 16. fxe4 Bxe4 17.
Bxe7 Qxe7 $14 {1-0 Caposciutti,M-Mednis,E/Forli op 1992 (29)}) 13... Rc8 14.
Nd4 Bb7 15. g4 Nd7 16. Be3 d5 17. exd5 Bxd5 18. Be2 Nb6 19. g5 Nc4 20. Bxc4
bxc4 21. Qc3 Qd7 22. h5 $1 $16 {1-0 Hracek,Z-Hausner,I/Pardubice op 1993 (51)
[#]}) 13. g4 O-O-O 14. Be3 Qb7 15. g5 Nd7 16. Nd5 $16 {1-0 Starostits,I-Madl,I/
FSIM Feb, Budapest HUN 1997 (43)}) 11... Qa5 12. g4 Ne5 13. h5 b4 14. Nce2 Nc4
15. Qc1 h6 16. Bh4 Rc8 17. Ng3 Bb5 18. g5 hxg5 19. Bxg5 Qb6 20. f4 $16 {
1/2-1/2 Landenbergue,C-Grosar,A/Ptuj zt 1995 (57)}) (10... Qa5 11. h4 b5 12.
Nxc6 Bxc6 13. Bd3 Rc8 14. g4 Bb7 15. Rhg1 h6 16. Be3 Nd7 17. g5 b4 18. Ne2 Ne5
19. Nd4 $14 {1/2-1/2 Galego,L-Damaso,R/14th Masters, Caldas de Felgueira POR
1998 (45)}) (10... h6 11. Be3 Nxd4 12. Qxd4 b5 13. g4 Rb8 14. e5 dxe5 15. Qxe5
Rc8 16. Be2 Qc7 17. Qxc7 Rxc7 18. Bf4 {1/2-1/2 Formanek,E-Yermolinsky,A/Reno
op 1994}) 11. g4 (11. Nxc6 Bxc6 12. h4 h6 13. Be3 Qc7 14. Bd3 d5 15. exd5 Nxd5
16. Nxd5 Bxd5 17. c4 Bc6 18. Qf2 O-O 19. Bb6 $5 $146) 11... h5 $14 {1-0
Stephan,A-Wilde,D/GER-chJ U17 (08) ;EXT 92ch 1992 (38)} (11... Ne5 12. h4 Nc4
13. Bxc4 Rxc4 14. Be3 Qc7 15. g5 Nh5 16. Nde2 b5 17. Nf4 Nxf4 18. Bxf4 b4 19.
Ne2 e5 20. Bh2 Be6 21. b3 Rc6 22. f4 $6) 12. gxh5 Nxh5 (12... Rxh5 $14 13. h4
$1) 13. Bxe7 Qxe7 14. Rg1 $5 Nxd4 15. Qxd4 Rc6 16. e5 $6 (16. f4 $1 e5 $14 (
16... Nxf4 17. Rxg7 Qf8 18. Rg1 Rxh2 19. e5 Nd5 20. Nxd5 exd5 21. Rg2 $2) 17.
fxe5 Qxe5 (17... dxe5 $16 18. Qd2 $15) 18. h4 Be6 19. Rg5 Qxd4 20. Rxd4 g6 21.
Nd5 Bxd5 22. exd5 Rc7 $4) (16. Bc4 $17 e5 17. Qd3 Nf4 18. Qf1 (18. Nd5 Nxd3 19.
Nxe7 Nxb2 20. Nxc6 Nxd1 21. Na5 (21. Rxd1 Bxc6 22. Rxd6 Rxh2 $17) 21... Nc3+
22. Kb2 Na4+ 23. Ka3 b5 24. Bb3 Nc5 25. Rxg7 Rxh2 $19) 18... Bh3 $6) 16... d5
$15 (16... dxe5 17. Qxe5 Qc5 18. Qxc5 Rxc5 19. Ne4 Rc7 $2) 17. f4 Qc5 (17... g6
$1 18. Nxd5 $16 exd5 19. e6 Nf6 20. exd7+ Qxd7 21. h3 $1) 18. f5 exf5 $2 19.
Qxd5 Qxd5 (19... Qe7 $1 $16 20. Qd4 Be6 21. Bg2 Rc4 22. Qa7 Bc8 23. Nd5 Qc5 24.
Qb6 $132) 20. Nxd5 Be6 21. Bg2 (21. c4 g6 22. b3 Ng7 23. Bg2 Rc5 24. h3 b5 $1
$132) 21... Rc5 $6 22. b3 (22. Rd4 $1 Bxd5 (22... f4 23. Rgd1 a5 24. Bf3) 23.
Bxd5 Nf4 $17 24. Bc4 Ne6 25. Bxe6 fxe6 26. Rxg7 Rxh2 $6) 22... g6 23. Rd4 Bxd5
24. Bxd5 (24. Rxd5 $1 Rc7 $15 25. Rgd1 Ke7 $1) 24... Nf4 $1 25. Bc4 $2 (25.
Bxf7+ $1 Kxf7 26. Rxf4 Rxh2 27. e6+ Kf6 $19 28. Re1 Rc7 $4) (25. Bxb7 $19 Ne2
$15) (25. Bf3 Ne6 26. Rd2 b5 $15 (26... Rxe5 27. Bxb7 Nc5 28. Bc6+ Ke7 $1))
25... b5 $1 26. Rgd1 $1 O-O (26... Kf8 27. e6 $14 Nxe6 (27... bxc4 28. Rd8+ Ke7
(28... Kg7 29. e7 Re5 30. Rxh8 Rxe7 31. Ra8 $14) 29. Rxh8 fxe6 $1) 28. Bxe6
Rxh2 $4 (28... fxe6 $18 29. Rd8+ Kg7 30. R1d7+ $2)) 27. Rxf4 $15 (27. Bxf7+
Kxf7 28. Rxf4 Rxe5 $15) (27. Bf1 Ne6 28. Rd5 Rfc8 29. c4 Nf4 30. Rxc5 Rxc5 31.
Re1 b4 $17) 27... bxc4 $17 28. Rxc4 (28. bxc4 Rxe5 29. Kb2 $1) 28... Rxc4 $2 (
28... Rxe5 $6 29. Rc6 Re2 30. Rxa6 Rxh2 (30... Rc8 $18 31. c4 Rxh2 32. Ra7 Re8
33. c5 Ree2 34. c6 Rb2+ 35. Ka1 Rbc2 36. c7 Kg7 37. b4 f4 38. b5 f3 39. b6 $2)
31. c4 (31. a4 $19 Rc8 32. c4 Re8 33. Ra7 Ree2 34. Rdd7 Rh1+ $3 $18) 31... f4
32. c5 g5 33. c6 Rc8 (33... f3 34. c7 Kg7 35. Ra5 Kg6 36. Rd8 f2 37. Rf5 $18)
34. b4 Rh6 (34... g4 35. b5 Rh6 (35... g3 36. b6 $1 $18) 36. c7 $1) 35. b5 Kg7
$1 36. Ra4 (36. Rg1 Rg6 37. Ka1 f3 38. b6) (36. Ka1 f3 37. b6 Rcxc6 38. b7 Rb6
$19 39. Rb1 Rxb1+ 40. Kxb1 f2 $19) 36... Rf6 37. Rc4 Kg6 38. a4 g4 39. a5 g3
40. a6 Rf5 41. Rb4 g2 42. b6 (42. a7 f3 43. b6 f2 44. Rg4+ Rg5 45. Rxg2 (45. b7
f1=Q $19) 45... Rxg2 46. b7 Rd8 47. Rf1 Rg1 $11) 42... f3 43. b7 Rd8 44. Rg1 f2
45. Rxg2+ Kf6 46. Rxf2 Rxf2 47. Kc1 (47. Ka1 Rd1+ 48. Rb1 Rdd2 49. Rb6 $1)
47... Rh8 48. Rd4 Ke5 49. Rd1 Rf6 50. Re1+ $3 Kd4 51. a7 Rxc6+ 52. Kd1 Rcc8 $2)
29. bxc4 Rc8 30. Rd6 $17 (30. Rd4 Rc5 31. Kb2 Rxe5 32. Rd6 a5 $19) 30... Rxc4
$4 31. Rxa6 Kg7 $1 (31... Re4 $17 32. a4 (32. Kc1 Rxe5 33. Kd2 Kg7 $19) (32.
Ra5 f4 33. Kb2 f3 34. Ra3 Rf4 $1) 32... Kg7 33. Kb2 (33. a5 Rxe5 34. Ra8 f4 35.
a6 f3 36. a7 f2 $1 37. Rg8+ Kxg8 $19 38. a8=Q+ Kg7 $19) 33... Rxe5 34. Kb3 (34.
Rd6 f4 35. Rd3 Kf6 36. Kb3 Kf5 37. c3 (37. Kb4 Re2 $19) 37... Ke4 38. Rd7 f5
39. Kb4 f3 40. a5 f2 41. Rd1 Ke3 $19) 34... f4 35. Rd6 f3 36. Rd1 Kf6 37. c4
Kf5 38. Kb4 Kg4 39. a5 f2 40. Rf1 Kf3 41. a6 Ke2 42. a7 Re8 43. Ra1 f1=Q 44.
Rxf1 Kxf1 45. Kb5 f5 46. Kb6 f4 47. Kb7 f3 $4) (31... Rh4 $1 32. e6 $4 fxe6 (
32... Rxh2 $18 33. e7 $11) 33. Rxe6 Kf7 (33... Rxh2 34. Rxg6+ $11) 34. Re2 $1
$11) 32. e6 $1 fxe6 33. Rxe6 f4 34. Kc1 Kh6 (34... f3 35. Kd1 (35. Kd2 Rxc2+
$11 (35... f2 36. Ke2 Rxc2+ 37. Kf1 Rxa2 38. Re2 $19) 36. Ke1 (36. Ke3 Re2+ $19
) (36. Kxc2 f2 $11) 36... Rxh2 37. Re3 $4) 35... Rxc2 36. Ke1 (36. Re3 $19 f2))
1/2-1/2
[Event "BCF-ch 89th"]
[Site "Torquay"]
[Date "2002.08.01"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Lane, Gary William"]
[Black "Wells, Peter K"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2446"]
[BlackElo "2479"]
[Annotator "Tyomkin,D"]
[PlyCount "54"]
[EventDate "2002.07.29"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "11"]
[EventCountry "ENG"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 091"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f3 Be7 10. g4 ({The main move is:} 10. h4 {and black usually
faces it by:} h6 {-see games in this opening key;}) 10... h5 {This move
prevents white from attack on the queenside and black gets the rook- h8 in to
the game via h-file; The only lack of h5 move is that black can't caslte to
the kside anymore;} (10... b5 11. Nxc6 Bxc6 12. Bd3 Rc8 13. Ne2 Nd7 14. Bxe7
Qxe7 15. Nd4 $11 {1-0 Baramidze,D-Langheinrich,F/Augsburg 2002/CBM 87 ext (64).
(63)}) 11. gxh5 Nxh5 12. Bxe7 Qxe7 13. Nde2 (13. Nxc6 Bxc6 14. Qxd6 $6 Qxd6 15.
Rxd6 Ng3 16. Rg1 Nxf1 17. Rxf1 Rxh2 $15) 13... g5 14. Rg1 (14. Qxd6 Qxd6 15.
Rxd6 Ne5 16. Bg2 Ng6 $44 {[%csl Rh2][%cal Gh5f4,Ge8c8,Yh8h7,Ya8h8] Black gets
outposted N on f4,and backward pawn h2 is weak forever- black's compensation
is obvious here;}) 14... Ne5 15. Qe3 Rc8 $6 {P.Wells sacrificed pawn by this
move, but black didn't get enough compensation for it;} (15... f6 $142 16. h4
$1 gxh4 17. f4 Nc4 {with very sharp game ahead;}) 16. Rxg5 Nc4 17. Qg1 {
[%cal Gg5g8]} Qf6 18. e5 (18. Kb1 $5 Qxf3 $140 19. Rd3 Qf6 20. e5 $1 $18 {
[%cal Gc3e4]}) (18. Rg8+ Rxg8 19. Qxg8+ Ke7 20. Qg4 Rc5 {and black got some
initiative;}) 18... Qh6 (18... dxe5 19. b3 Na3 20. Kb2 Nb5 21. Ne4 Qxf3 22.
Rxe5 $18 {[%cal Rd1d3]}) 19. f4 (19. Ne4 d5 20. Nd2 $16) 19... dxe5 20. Ne4 Nf6
21. N2c3 Ke7 22. Kb1 $4 {That's amazing but white king is placed on b1 worse
than on c1! In addition, white loses important tempo! By simple 22.fxe5 white
achieves large advantage almost on force;} (22. Bxc4 Rxc4 23. Qb6 Nxe4 24. Nxe4
Rxe4 25. Rxd7+ Kxd7 26. Qxb7+ $16 {[%cal Gb7e4]}) (22. fxe5 $142 Nxe4 23. Nxe4
Qxh2 (23... Nxe5 24. Qg3 $1 {[%cal Gg3e5,Gg3a3]} Qxh2 25. Qa3+ Kd8 26. Rd2 $18
{[%cal Ga3a5,Ga5e5]}) 24. Qd4 Ba4 $8 25. b3 Qf4+ 26. Kb1 Rhd8 27. Nd6 $18)
22... Nxe4 23. Nxe4 Qxh2 {[%cal Rc4a3,Ge5f4] Roles was changed in 2moves- now
black is up a pawn and has created couple of strong threats;} 24. Nc5 {
Desperation!} (24. fxe5 Qxg1 (24... Na3+ 25. Ka1 Nxc2+ 26. Kb1 Ne3 $1 $17) 25.
Rxg1 Nxe5 $17) 24... Nd2+ 25. Kc1 (25. Rxd2 Qxd2 26. Bd3 Bc6 $19 {[%cal Gh8h1]}
) 25... Qxg1 26. Rxg1 Rxc5 27. Rxd2 exf4 $19 {Black is just 2 pawns up
here-the advantage which guarantees simple win on Grandmaster level;} 0-1
[Event "North Sea Cup 17th"]
[Site "Esbjerg"]
[Date "2002.07.11"]
[Round "7"]
[White "Stefansson, Hannes"]
[Black "Galliamova, Alisa"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2588"]
[BlackElo "2505"]
[Annotator "Tyomkin,D"]
[PlyCount "113"]
[EventDate "2002.07.05"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "DEN"]
[EventCategory "14"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 091"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.11.12"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Kb1 h5 12. Nxc6 Bxc6 13. Qe1 b4 $6 $146 {
White has shown the refutation of this move in this game; Saying in general,
this move doesn't help black to achieve an attack over the queenside, but it
weakens pawns and spots over there; But of course, following move of white is
very important!} (13... Bh6 {Gofshtein,L} 14. g3 $1 {[%csl Gf4,Gg3,Gh2,Rh6]
Restricting Bh6 for a long time.} (14. f5 $6 {Gofshtein,L} Bf4 $1 {[%cal Gf4e5]
} 15. Bd3 Be5 {[%csl Ye5]} 16. Ne2 Ke7 17. Rf1 Qg8 $132 {1-0 Schuster,B-Wagner
Michel,A/Germany 1999/EXT 2000 (35)}) 14... b4 15. Nd5 $1 a5 (15... exd5 $4 {
Gofshtein,L} 16. exd5+ $18 {[%csl Rc6,Rh6]}) 16. Bg2 O-O $2 $16 {[%csl Rg8,Rh5]
0-1 Acs,P-Kozul,Z/Ohrid 2001/CBM 84/[Gofshtein,L] (51)} (16... Rc8 $142 {
Gofshtein,L} 17. Ne3 $14)) ({White left with serious advantage in the next
games:} 13... Qa5 {Gofshtein,L} 14. Bd3 O-O-O $6 {[%csl Rc8]} 15. f5 b4 16. Ne2
e5 17. Nc1 d5 18. Qe2 Bb7 19. exd5 Qb6 20. Bc4 $16 {1-0 Ginzburg,M-Aparicio,A/
Salta 1995/EXT 97 (67)}) ({and} 13... Rb8 {Gofshtein,L} 14. f5 e5 15. Qh4 Ke7
16. Be2 Rc8 17. Rd3 Qc7 18. Rhd1 Bh6 19. Rxd6 Bg5 20. Qf2 $18 {1-0 Cela,
A-Kozul,Z/Elista 1998/CBM 66 ext (43)}) 14. Nd5 $1 a5 15. f5 Bxd5 {Black can
not avoid this trade, but probably could delay it for a while;} (15... Bh6 $5)
16. Rxd5 (16. exd5 $5 e5 {but white looks much better here too;}) 16... Qc7 17.
Rb5 e5 (17... h4 $5 18. Bd3 $16) 18. Qd1 $16 {[%csl Gd5][%cal Yc4f7][%mdl 32]
White has obvious advantage in this middlegame with opposite B's- light
squares in the centre are weak and can be used for white pieces to transfer
them in; In addition white king is much safer than black; Rh8 is restricted in
movement because of weakness of h-pawn; Those are concequences of 13..b4 move!}
Qc6 19. Rd5 Ke7 20. Bb5 Qc7 21. Qe2 {[%csl Yd6][%cal Gh1d1]} Bh6 22. Rhd1 Rad8
23. Ba4 {[%csl Ra5,Rd6][%cal Ye2a6] this move cleares path for white queen to
the queenside- a5 and d6 are targets;} h4 24. Qa6 $18 {[%csl Ra5]} Be3 25. Rxa5
Rb8 (25... Rhg8 $142 26. Bb3 {[%csl Yf7][%cal Ga5b5,Gb5b7]} Rxg2 27. Rb5 Rd7 (
27... Rb8 28. Rxb8 Qxb8 29. Qc4 $16 {[%csl Rf7]}) 28. Qa8 $16 {[%cal Gb5b8,
Ya8d5]}) 26. Rb5 Rxb5 27. Qxb5 Rb8 28. Qe2 Bf4 29. g3 $1 (29. h3 {would be
worse because white has less open files for his heavy pieces here while extra
pawn on the kingside doesn't make any sense;}) 29... hxg3 30. hxg3 Bxg3 31. Bb3
$18 {[%csl Rf7]} Qc5 $2 {[%mdl 8192] Just a blunder while it doesn't change
much an evaluation of this position;} (31... Bf4 32. Qh5 Rf8 33. Rg1 {[%cal
Gg1g7]} Bg5 {and black is alive for a while;}) 32. Bxf7 $1 Kxf7 33. Qh5+ Ke7
34. Qh7+ Kd8 35. Qg8+ Kc7 36. Qxg3 Rc8 37. Qb3 Rh8 (37... Kb7 38. a3 $18) 38.
Qf7+ Kc6 39. Qxf6 Qd4 40. Rc1 Ra8 41. Qe7 Qxe4 42. Rd1 (42. f6 $2 Qd5 {[%csl
Ra2] some accuracy is always needed even in totaly winning positions :-)})
42... d5 43. f6 Rh8 44. b3 $6 {44.f7 was much faster way to the win;} (44. f7
Qf3 (44... Rh1 45. Qf6+ Kb7 46. Qf1) 45. Rc1 $18 {[%cal Re7e8]}) 44... Rh1 45.
Rxh1 Qxh1+ 46. Kb2 Qe4 {[%cal Ge4d4]} 47. Qa7 Qe1 48. Qa8+ Kd6 49. a4 $1 {
to avoid perpetual check, but this also creates another passer;} Qc3+ (49...
bxa3+ 50. Qxa3+ {[%cal Gf6f7]}) 50. Kb1 Ke6 51. f7 Kxf7 52. Qxd5+ Kf6 53. a5
Qe1+ 54. Ka2 Qc1 55. Qc6+ Kf5 56. a6 Kf4 {this just makes the game shorter;} (
56... Kg5 $142 57. Qc5 Qa3+ 58. Kb1 Qxa6 59. Qxe5+ {and white wins b4 as well;}
) 57. Qh6+ 1-0
[Event "RUS-chT 09th Group1"]
[Site "Ekaterinburg"]
[Date "2002.05.20"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Tseshkovsky, Vitaly"]
[Black "Malakhov, Vladimir"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2554"]
[BlackElo "2663"]
[Annotator "Tyomkin,D"]
[PlyCount "99"]
[EventDate "2002.05.17"]
[EventType "team-tourn"]
[EventRounds "7"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 090"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.09.20"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.09.20"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
[WhiteTeam "Vladivostok Debiut-DVGU"]
[BlackTeam "Norilsk Norilsky Nikel"]
[WhiteTeamCountry "RUS"]
[BlackTeamCountry "RUS"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Nxc6 Bxc6 12. Qe1 Ra7 13. Bd3 Qb6 14. Kb1
h5 15. Qh4 Be7 {Among 3 choices of black here, 15...Bg7 looks the most
resistant way, while 15...Rh6 should be checked more properly; Regarding 15...
Be7 line, I got impression that black suffers alot in this line;} (15... Rh6 {
black hasn't tried to protect h6 pawn this way before} 16. f5 Qc5 17. Rhe1 {
[%cal Ge4e5,Yc3d5]} e5 18. Be2 Rc7 19. Rd2 b4 20. Nd5 Bxd5 21. exd5 a5 22. Bf1
Rh7 23. Qe4 Bh6 24. Rd4 Rg7 $132 {0-1 Almasi,Z-Topalov,V/Monaco 2002/CBM 87
ext (48)}) (15... Bg7 {Tyomkin,D: 'Comparing with 15...Be7 line, here Black
king can be placed on e7 and Bg7 can be entered to the game thru h6;'} 16. Rhf1
{Tyomkin,D: 'Immediate 16.f5 is much more dangerous for black;'} (16. f5 e5 17.
Be2 Ke7 18. Bxh5 Rc7 19. Qg4 Bb7 (19... Bh6 {Tyomkin,D} 20. Bxf7 $1 Kxf7 21.
Qg6+ Ke7 22. Rxd6 $1 $18) 20. Qxg7 Rxh5 21. Qg3 b4 22. Nd5+ Bxd5 23. Rxd5 Qc6
24. Qd3 $16 {1-0 Efimenko,Z-Kozul,Z/Panormo 2001/CBM 84 ext (45)}) 16... Qc5 {
'!' Tyomkin,D.} (16... f5 $5 17. e5 $13 (17. exf5 {Tyomkin,D} Bxc3 18. fxe6 $1
Bg7 19. exf7+ Kxf7 20. Qg5 $40)) 17. f5 e5 (17... Qe5 {Tyomkin,D} 18. Ne2 {
[%csl Rh5][%cal Ge2f4,Yf4h5,Ge2g3]}) 18. Rf3 (18. Be2 {Tyomkin,D} Rc7 {[%cal
Gb5b4]}) 18... Rc7 19. Rg3 Kf8 20. a3 {0-1 Kotronias,V-Kozul,Z/Leon ESP 2001/
The Week in Chess 366 (33) '?!' Tyomkin,D: 'It just helps black to get
counterattack over the queenside;'} (20. Ne2 $140 $5 {[%cal Gg3h3,Yh4e1]
Tyomkin,D})) 16. f5 Qc5 $146 {since 16...b4 doesn't solve black opening
problems, Malakhov tried it other way;} (16... b4 17. Ne2 e5 18. Ng3 (18. Rhe1
a5 19. Bc4 a4 20. b3 axb3 21. cxb3 Rg8 22. Ng3 $16 {0-1 Sedlak,N-Jakab,A/
Subotica YUG 2001/The Week in Chess 367 (46)}) (18. g4 {Tyomkin,D} a5 19. gxh5
a4 20. h6 Rh7 21. Rhg1 Qe3 22. Rg8+ Kd7 23. Qe1 Rb7 $15 {0-1 Svoboda,S-Manik,M/
Presov SVK 2001/The Week in Chess 357 (50)}) 18... Qc5 19. Nxh5 Kd8 20. g4 a5
21. Rhf1 Rd7 22. Qe1 Kc7 23. Qe2 $16 {1-0 Kotronias,V-Damljanovic,B/Leon ESP
2001/The Week in Chess 367 (54)}) (16... Qe3 17. Rhe1 Qg5 18. Qf2 Rb7 19. h4
$16 {1-0 De la Paz,F-Delgado,N/Santa Clara CUB 1999 (41)}) 17. Rhe1 a5 (17...
e5 18. Ne2 $5 {[%cal Ge2g3,Yg3h5] and like in games mentioned above;}) 18. fxe6
fxe6 19. Qg3 ({the following blow would be in spirit of this sicilian position:
} 19. e5 fxe5 20. Qg3 {[%cal Gg3g6,Gc3e4] and white gets very dangerous attack;
}) 19... b4 20. Ne2 (20. Qg7 bxc3 $1 21. Qxh8+ Kd7 {and black got real
counterplay;}) 20... Qe5 21. Nf4 $16 {[%cal Gg3g7] Black has left with
weaknesses all around and unsafe king in the centre with no clear conterplay;}
Bf8 22. Qf2 {[%csl Ya7][%cal Gf4g6]} Rg7 $8 23. Bc4 Bd7 {Black holds the
defence by only moves;} 24. Bxe6 $1 {[%mdl 64] here comes the tactics to
justify the correct strategy;} Bxe6 25. Rd5 Bxd5 26. exd5 Be7 27. Rxe5 fxe5 $6
{No matter how strange and dubious it looks, 27...fxe5 probably would give
black more practical chances!} (27... dxe5 28. Ne6 Rg4 {[%csl Rb1][%cal Ye7a3]
I have to point out that white king is much more vulnerable here than in the
game continuation- Be7 is powered over e7-a3 diagonal and a3 bxa3 b3 isn't
that strong as it has happened in the game!} 29. g3 (29. a3 bxa3 30. b3 a4 $132
) 29... h4 30. Qb6 $1 Kf7 31. Nf4 $1 {[%cal Gb6e6] but the position is still
messy;}) 28. Ne6 $18 {[%mdl 1024] The material balance is about equal: queen
and pawn for pair of rooks, while in this specific position queen supported
with knight are dominating;} Rf7 29. Qe2 Rf6 30. a3 $1 {White gets rid of
backrank troubles as well as intends to attack black pawns over the queenside;}
bxa3 31. b3 Kf7 32. Ng5+ Kg7 33. Ne4 {just switching outposts;} Rf4 34. g3 Rf7
{Black pieces remain passive;} 35. Ka2 h4 36. Qg4+ Kf8 37. Qc8+ Kg7 38. Qg4+
Kf8 39. Kxa3 {[%csl Ya3,Rf8] White kings becomes important piece in this
ending while black king is still very vulnerable;} hxg3 40. hxg3 Rh2 41. c4 Rf1
42. Ka4 {White king may easily join the attack on black king!} Rb2 43. Qc8+ Kg7
44. Qd7 Rf7 45. Nxd6 Bxd6 46. Qxd6 Re2 47. Qb8 e4 48. Qe5+ Kg8 49. d6 e3 50. d7
(50. d7 Rd2 51. Qg5+ {[%cal Gd7d8]}) 1-0
[Event "EU-chT (Men) 13th"]
[Site "Leon"]
[Date "2001.11.06"]
[Round "1.1"]
[White "Kotronias, Vasilios"]
[Black "Kozul, Zdenko"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2548"]
[BlackElo "2569"]
[Annotator "Tyomkin,D"]
[PlyCount "66"]
[EventDate "2001.11.06"]
[EventType "team-swiss"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "ESP"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 086"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.02.05"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.02.05"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
[WhiteTeam "Cyprus"]
[BlackTeam "Croatia"]
[WhiteTeamCountry "CYP"]
[BlackTeamCountry "CRO"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Kb1 Qb6 12. Nxc6 Bxc6 13. Qe1 Ra7 {
This line has got popularity nowdays thanks to GM Z.Kozul;} (13... Be7 $5) 14.
Bd3 {14.f5 saves time in some variations, because white bishop can be moved
directly to e2;} (14. f5 $5 h5 (14... Qc5 $146 15. Qh4 h5 16. e5 fxe5 17. fxe6
fxe6 18. Bd3 Re7 {[%cal Ge8d7]} 19. Rhf1 Kd7 20. Qh3 Bg7 21. Be4 Kc7 22. Qh4
Rd7 23. Bxc6 Qxc6 24. Ne4 d5 25. Nf6 Rdd8 26. Nxh5 {1/2-1/2 Wells,P-Nevednichy,
V/Ohrid 2001/CBM 84 (26)}) (14... b4 15. Ne2 e5 (15... Bxe4 16. fxe6 fxe6 17.
Nf4 $16) 16. Ng3 {[%csl Rh5][%cal Rg3h5]} h5 {To stop Nh5} (16... Qc5 17. Nh5
Be7 18. Qh4 Qe3 19. Bd3 $16) 17. Be2 $1 $36 {[%csl Rh5][%cal Ye2h5,Yg3h5] 1-0
Gurevich,I-Kozul,Z/Biel 1993/CBM 37/[Wolff] (53)}) (14... Rg8 15. Qh4 {[%cal
Yh4f6,Yh4h7]} Ke7 16. Ne2 $1 {[%cal Ye2d4,Ye2g3,Ye2f4,Yg3h5]} e5 17. Ng3 Qe3 (
17... h6 18. Rxd6 Kxd6 19. Qxf6+) 18. Qxh7 Rg7 19. Qh8 Bxe4 20. Bd3 $1 Bxg2 21.
Rhe1 Qc5 22. Be4 $36 {1-0 Dimitrov,V-Kozul,Z/Linares 1996 (52)}) 15. Qh4 (15.
fxe6 {Gofshtein,L} fxe6 16. Bd3 Rg7 17. Rf1 Be7 18. g3 Qc5 19. Ne2 Bd8 20. Nf4
Kd7 21. Rf3 Qe5 22. Bf1 $36 {[%csl Re6][%cal Yf1h3,Yh3e6] 1-0 Zontakh,
A-Simonovic,A/Ulcinj 1998/EXT 99 (52)}) (15. Bd3 Qc5 16. Rf1 (16. fxe6 $142
fxe6 17. Rf1) 16... e5 17. Qh4 Ke7 18. Ne2 a5 19. Rf3 Bh6 20. Qxh5 a4 21. Qh4
b4 22. Qe1 Bg5 23. h3 Rc7 $13 {Palac-Kozul,Croatia 1997}) 15... Be7 16. Ne2 Rc7
17. Nd4 Bd7 18. Be2 e5 19. Nb3 a5 20. Bxh5 Kf8 21. Rd3 Be8 22. Nd2 b4 23. Rc1
Bb5 24. c4 bxc3 25. Rdxc3 Rxc3 26. Rxc3 Bd8 27. g4 $4 (27. Nf3 $1 {[%csl Gg1]})
27... Qg1+ 28. Kc2 Be2 {0-1 Breder,D-Kozul,Z/Bled SLO 2001/The Week in Chess
334 (28)}) 14... h5 {14...a5 is an alternative, but it doesn't solve all black
problems too;} (14... a5 15. Qh4 (15. f5 b4 16. Ne2 e5 17. Ng3 (17. Nc1 $6 {
Gofshtein,L} Bh6 18. Qe2 Ke7 19. Bc4 Rf8 20. Rd3 Qc5 21. Rh3 Bg5 22. Rxh7 a4
$44 {0-1 Gyorkos,L-Kozul,Z/Osijek 1992/EXT 99 (35)}) 17... Bh6 18. Bc4 Ke7 19.
Qe2 Qc5 20. Rhe1 Bg5 21. Nf1 Rc8 22. b3 a4 23. Ne3 {1/2-1/2 Moldovan,
D-Lupulescu,C/Baile Tusnad 2001/CBM 80 ext (23)}) 15... Be7 16. f5 Qc5 (16...
e5 17. Qh6 $16 (17. Be2 $5 {[%cal Gc3d5]})) 17. Rhf1 (17. e5 fxe5 18. Qh5 a4 (
18... exf5 $142) 19. fxe6 a3 20. Bxb5 $1 $18 {1/2-1/2 Efimenko,Z-Lupulescu,C/
Balatonlelle HUN 2001 (34)}) 17... e5 18. Be2 Rc7 19. Qf2 Qxf2 20. Rxf2 Rb7 21.
Nd5 Bd8 22. Nxf6+ Bxf6 23. Rxd6 Bh4 24. g3 Bxe4 $11 {1-0 Jedryczka,K-Kozul,Z/
Panormo 2001/CBM 84 ext (56)}) (14... Rc7 $5 $146 {(Gofshtein,L) The new
attempt of Z.Kozul to rehabilitate this variation.} 15. f5 e5 {[%csl Rd5] It
is a new plan in this variation. Usually black played b4 first, and only after
knight's retreat playes e5.In this game black doesn't afraid to weaken square
d5 immediately.} 16. Qh4 $1 {[%cal Yh4f6]} (16. Bf1 {Gofshtein,L} Bb7 17. Nd5
Bxd5 18. Rxd5 Rc5 19. Qd2 Qc6 20. g3 $14) 16... Be7 (16... Bg7 {Gofshtein,L}
17. Rhe1 $14) 17. Qh6 $5 {Ater this strong move black loses pawn without any
real copmpensation.} b4 18. Nd5 Bxd5 19. exd5 a5 20. Qg7 Rf8 21. Qxh7 $16 {
0-1 Nataf,I-Kozul,Z/Istanbul 2000/EXT 2001/[Gofshtein,L] (50)}) (14... Qc5 {
Gofshtein,L} 15. f5 a5 (15... Bh6 $6 16. fxe6 fxe6 17. Nd5 $5 {1-0 Zelcic,
R-Kozul,Z/Bled 2000/CBM 75 ext (40)}) 16. Ne2 Bh6 17. Rf1 $14 {[%cal Yf1f6]
0-1 Benjamin,J-Kozul,Z/Luzern 1997/CBM 62/[Ftacnik] (38)} (17. Qh4 Bg5 18. Qh5
e5 $132 (18... exf5 19. Ng3 $1 $16) (18... e5 19. h4 Be3 20. g4 d5 $132)) (17.
fxe6 fxe6 18. Rf1 $14)) 15. Qh4 Bg7 {Comparing with 15...Be7 line, here Black
king can be placed on e7 and Bg7 can be entered to the game thru h6;} (15...
Be7 16. f5 b4 (16... Qe3 {Gofshtein,L} 17. Rhe1 Qg5 18. Qf2 Rb7 19. h4 $36 {
1-0 De la Paz,F-Delgado,N/Santa Clara 1999/CBM 70 ext (41)}) 17. Ne2 e5 18. Ng3
$1 (18. g4 a5 19. gxh5 a4 20. h6 Rh7 21. Rhg1 Qe3 22. Rg8+ Kd7 23. Qe1 Rb7 $15
{0-1 Svoboda,S-Manik,M/Presov SVK 2001/The Week in Chess 357 (50)}) 18... Qc5
19. Nxh5 Kd8 20. g4 a5 21. Rhf1 Rd7 22. Qe1 $16 {1-0 Kotronias,V-Damljanovic,B/
Leon ESP 2001/The Week in Chess 367 (54)}) 16. Rhf1 $146 {Immediate 16.f5 is
much more dangerous for black;} (16. f5 e5 17. Be2 Ke7 18. Bxh5 Rc7 19. Qg4 Bb7
(19... Bh6 20. Bxf7 $1 Kxf7 21. Qg6+ Ke7 22. Rxd6 $1 $18) 20. Qxg7 Rxh5 21. Qg3
$16 {1-0 Efimenko,Z-Kozul,Z/Panormo 2001/CBM 84 ext (45)}) 16... Qc5 $1 (16...
f5 17. exf5 Bxc3 18. fxe6 $1 Bg7 19. exf7+ Kxf7 20. Qg5 $40) 17. f5 e5 (17...
Qe5 18. Ne2 {[%csl Rh5][%cal Ge2f4,Yf4h5,Ge2g3]}) 18. Rf3 (18. Be2 Rc7 {
[%cal Gb5b4]}) 18... Rc7 19. Rg3 Kf8 20. a3 $6 {It just helps black to get
counterattack over the queenside;} (20. Ne2 $140 $5 {[%cal Gg3h3,Yh4e1]}) 20...
a5 21. Ne2 (21. Nd5 Bxd5 22. exd5 b4 (22... Qxd5 23. Be2 $16 {[%csl Rd6]}) 23.
Be4 Qf2 $132) 21... b4 22. axb4 axb4 23. Nc1 Ba4 24. Nb3 (24. b3 Bb5 25. Rd2
Bc6 $132 {[%cal Gc7a7,Gc5a5]}) 24... Qf2 25. Rf1 (25. Rh3 Qa7 {[%cal Gc7c8,
Yc8a8] with the same plan like in the game;}) 25... Qa7 26. Be2 Rc8 {[%cal
Gc8a8]} 27. Rd3 $4 {White had to keep balance accurately by:} (27. Rd1 Qf2 28.
Bd3 {and white keeps the balance;}) 27... Bb5 28. Rd2 Ra8 $19 {Now rook d2
disturbs white king to escape;} 29. c4 bxc3 30. bxc3 Qa3 $2 {Time-trouble
miss- black could just win a piece by primitive:} (30... Qb7 $1 31. Bxb5 (31.
Kb2 Bxe2 32. Rxe2 Rb8 $19) 31... Qxb5 {[%csl Rb3,Rf1]}) ({and this line could
lead to the same end as in the game;} 30... Qa4 $1 31. c4 (31. Bxb5 Qxb5 {
[%csl Rb3,Rf1]}) 31... Qxb3+ 32. Rb2 Qa4 33. cxb5 Ke7 $19) 31. c4 $2 {Missing
a chance:} (31. Bxb5 Qxb3+ 32. Rb2 Qxc3 33. Qe1 $15 {and white repulses an
attack of black;}) 31... Qxb3+ ({Another good way was:} 31... Ba4 $19 32. Nc1
Rb8+) 32. Rb2 Qa3 33. cxb5 Ke7 {[%cal Gh8c8] Black decively enters Rh8 to the
attack;} 0-1
[Event "Sochi"]
[Site "Sochi"]
[Date "1993.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Berelowitsch, Alexander"]
[Black "Shmuter, Leonid"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2510"]
[BlackElo "2455"]
[Annotator "Vaisman,V"]
[PlyCount "136"]
[EventDate "1993.09.??"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "13"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[EventCategory "10"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 038"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "1994.02.01"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "1994.02.01"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Nxc6 Bxc6 12. Bd3 b4 13. Ne2 Qb6 14. Kb1
h5 15. Rhf1 O-O-O $5 (15... a5) 16. c3 d5 17. cxb4 $6 (17. Qc2 $1 Kb8 18. exd5
Bxd5 (18... Rxd5 19. Be4 Rxd1+ (19... Rc5 20. Bxc6 Rxc6 21. Rd7) 20. Rxd1 Bxe4
21. Qxe4 bxc3 22. Nxc3 Ba3 23. Na4 $1 Qb4 24. Rd4 Qb5 25. Rd3 $16) 19. Be4 Bxe4
20. Rxd8+ Qxd8 21. Qxe4 bxc3 (21... Qb6 22. Rc1) (21... f5 22. Qc4 Qb6 (22...
bxc3 23. Qxa6 cxb2 24. Qb5+ Kc8 25. Qxb2 Qd3+ 26. Ka1 Rg8 27. Rc1+ Kd8 28. Nd4
Bg7 29. Nc6+ Ke8 30. Ne5 $40) 23. Rc1) 22. Nxc3 {/\ Rd1, f5} f5 23. Qe2) 17...
Bxb4 18. Qc2 Kb8 19. e5 $5 d4 $5 20. exf6 (20. Be4 Bb5 (20... d3 $5 21. Bxd3 f5
$1 $44) 21. Bd3 Bc6 22. Be4 Bb5 $10) 20... Rc8 21. Nc1 $1 Bf3 22. Qa4 (22. Rxf3
$1 Rxc2 23. Bxc2 Ka7 24. Rb3 Qd6 25. Nd3 Bc5 26. Ne5 Rb8 27. Rxb8 Kxb8 28. Be4
$1 $44 {/\ g3, Rd3, Rc1}) 22... Bxd1 (22... Bxg2 23. Rf2 Bb7 24. Nb3 $36) 23.
Rxd1 a5 $2 (23... Qa5 $142 24. Qxa5 (24. Qb3 Ka7 25. Be4 Rc7) 24... Bxa5 25.
Bxa6 $13) 24. a3 Bd6 25. Nb3 Bxf4 26. Nxa5 $2 (26. Be4 $1 d3 (26... Rhd8 27.
Rd3 Bc7 28. Nxa5 $18) 27. Rxd3 Rhd8 28. Rxd8 Rxd8 29. Nxa5 Rc8 $8 30. Nc6+ Kc7
31. h4 $36) 26... Rc5 $2 (26... Rhd8 27. Be4 d3 $1) 27. Nb3 Rd5 28. Be4 Qb5 29.
Rxd4 Qxa4 30. Rxa4 Rdd8 $8 31. Nd4 $138 (31. Na5 $5 Kc7 $5 32. Nc4 Kd7 {/\ Rh6}
) 31... Kc7 32. Ra7+ Kd6 33. Nf3 Rd7 34. Ra6+ Kc7 35. g3 Be3 36. Ne5 Rd1+ 37.
Ka2 (37. Kc2 $5) 37... Rh6 38. Rc6+ Kb8 39. Nxf7 (39. Rc3 Bb6 40. Rf3 $1 (40.
Rb3 Kc7) (40. Nc6+ Kc7) 40... Bd4 (40... Bd8 41. Nxf7 Rxf6 42. Nxd8 Rxf3 43.
Nc6+ Kc7 44. Bxf3 Rf1 (44... Rd3 45. Be4 Re3 46. Bh1 Re1 47. Bf3 Re3 48. Nd4 e5
49. Ne6+ Kd6 50. Ng5 $18) 45. Ne5 Kd6 46. Nc4+ Kc5 47. Nd2) 41. Rb3+ Kc8 42.
Bb7+ Kc7 43. Bf3 Rc1 $8 (43... Rf1 $2 44. Rb7+ Kc8 45. Nxf7 Rxf6 46. Nd6+ Kd8
47. Bc6 $18) 44. Rb7+ Kc8 45. Nxf7 Rxf6 46. Nd6+ Kd8 47. Bxh5 Rf2 $13 48. Nf7+
Ke8 49. Nd6+ Kd8 $10) 39... Rxf6 40. Nd6 Rc1 (40... Rf8 41. Nb5 Ba7 42. Rxe6)
41. Ra6 Ba7 42. Ra4 (42. Nb5 Re1 {/\ Rf7}) 42... Rf2 43. Rb4+ Kc7 44. Nb5+ Kb8
45. Nd4+ $5 (45. Nd6+ Kc7 46. Nb5+ Kb8 $10) 45... Kc8 46. Nxe6 Rxh2 47. Bf5 $5
Bf2 48. Rb3 Kd7 49. Rd3+ Ke7 50. Nf4 Rg1 51. Ne2 Re1 52. Nc3 Re5 53. g4 h4 (
53... Rh4 54. Rf3 Bd4 55. gxh5 Bxc3 56. bxc3 $10) (53... Rg2 54. Nd5+ $1) 54.
Ne4 h3 $5 $138 (54... Kf8 $5) 55. Nxf2 (55. Ng5 Re2 56. Rd7+ Ke8) 55... Rxf2
56. Rxh3 Rb5 57. Rb3 Rxb3 58. Kxb3 Kd6 $10 59. Kc3 Kd5 60. a4 Rf4 61. a5 Kc5
62. a6 Kb6 63. Bc8 Rf8 64. Be6 Re8 $1 (64... Kxa6 $2 65. Kd4 Rf2 66. b3 Re2 $2
67. Bc4+) 65. Bd5 Kxa6 66. Kd4 Kb5 67. g5 Re1 68. g6 Rg1 (68... Rg1 69. Bf7 Kb4
70. Ke5 Rxg6) 1/2-1/2
[Event "Tata Steel Qualifier 82nd"]
[Site "Wijk aan Zee"]
[Date "2020.01.22"]
[Round "6"]
[White "De Boer, Eelke"]
[Black "Vogel, Roven"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2324"]
[BlackElo "2465"]
[Annotator "Vogel,R"]
[PlyCount "60"]
[EventDate "2020.01.17"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "NED"]
[EventCategory "7"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 194"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2020.01.27"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2020.01.27"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
{Zu diesem Zeitpunkt war ich mit 3,5/5 einen halben Punkt hinter dem
Führenden und hatte meine letzten beiden Partien nicht gewonnen. Es war also
an der Zeit, wieder Fahrt aufzunehmen und wichtige Punkte im Kampf um den
Turniersieg einzufahren!} 1. e4 c5 {In mindestens drei von fünf Partien
standen diese beiden Anfangszüge in jeder Runde dieses Turniers auf dem Brett!
} 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 $5 {Vor dem Turnier war bereits
klar, dass ich in diesem Turnier auf viele 1.e4-Spieler treffen würde.
Gleichzeitig wusste ich, dass ich auch mit Schwarz unbedingt auf Gewinn
spielen sollte, da normalerweise eine sehr hohe Punkteausbeute für den
Turniersieg im "Qualifiers" benötigt wird. Daher investierte ich vor dem
Turnier viel Zeit in die Analyse dieser Eröffnung, die ich noch nie zuvor
gespielt hatte. In der Tat ging diese Investition voll auf: ich bekam fünf
Schwarzpartien, in denen meine Gegner alle mit 1.e4 eröffneten und
tatsächlich erreichte ich bis auf Runde 1 in jeder dieser Partien eine sehr
komfortable Stellung aus der Eröffnung heraus.} 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8. O-O-O
Bd7 9. f3 Nxd4 $5 {Ein noch recht selten gespielter Zug, der allerdings schon
im Trend liegt und daher wohl in Zukunft öfters zu sehen sein wird.} ({
Die Hauptvariante beginnt nach} 9... Be7 10. h4 h6 11. Be3 h5 $132) 10. Qxd4
Be7 11. h4 ({Sehr harmlos ist} 11. Bxf6 $6 gxf6 $132 {[%cal Gd8a5,Ga5c5,Ga8c8]}
(11... Bxf6 12. Qxd6 Bc6 13. Qxd8+ Rxd8 14. Rxd8+ Kxd8 15. Bd3 g5 $44 {-
selbst das Endspiel ist mit den starken Läufern annehmbar.})) 11... b5 (11...
Qc7 {mit Zugumstellung.}) 12. Kb1 Qc7 13. Qd2 $6 {Etwas harmlos und langsam,
der kritische Versuch startet nach 13.g4. Wahrscheinlich wollte mein Gegner
0-0 verhindern.} (13. g4 O-O $1 14. Qd2 b4 15. Ne2 {Nun erlaubte Grandelius
einen altbekannten Trick, auf den man besser nicht reinfallen sollte.} a5 $4 ({
Stattdessen sollte man lieber} 15... Rfc8 $5 $132 {spielen, mit beiderseitigen
Chancen und einer womöglich sehr inhaltsreichen Partie.}) 16. Be3 $4 (16. e5
$1 dxe5 17. Bxf6 Bxf6 18. Qxd7 Rad8 19. Qxc7 Rxd1+ 20. Nc1 $18) 16... Rfc8 17.
h5 a4 18. Nc1 d5 19. g5 Ne8 20. g6 Bf6 21. exd5 exd5 22. Bf4 Qb6 23. Bd3 b3 24.
cxb3 axb3 25. a3 Rxa3 26. gxf7+ Kxf7 27. Bg6+ Kf8 {0-1 (27) McShane,L (2688)
-Grandelius,N (2691) Eskilstuna 2019}) 13... b4 $1 {Schwarz tut fast immer gut
daran, so schnell wie möglich seinen Angriff am Damenflügel voranzutreiben,
da früher oder später heterogene Rochden entstehen werden. Dieser schnelle
Bauernvorstoß wäre nicht möglich gewesen, wenn die Dame noch auf d4 stünde.
} ({Eine Variante, in der die Dame auf d2 auch durchaus Sinn ergibt, ist
folgende:} 13... h6 $5 14. Be3 $1 (14. Bxf6 $6 {gibt unnötig das Läuferpaar.}
Bxf6 ({wesentlich schärfer und objektiv leicht schlechter ist} 14... gxf6 $6
15. f4 (15. Ne2 Bc6 16. Nf4 h5 $132 {[%cal Ga8d8,Gd6d5]}) 15... Bc6 16. f5 $1 (
16. Bd3 b4 17. Ne2 d5 18. exd5 Bxd5 19. f5 e5 20. Ng3 (20. Bb5+ Bc6 $132 {
Schwarz übernimmt langsam die Initiative.}) 20... Rg8 21. Be4 Bc6 $132 {
mit typischem, strategisch kompliziertem Richter-Rauser-Kampf.}) 16... b4 17.
Ne2 Bxe4 18. fxe6 fxe6 19. Nf4 e5 (19... Qd7 20. Bd3 $18 {[%csl Ye8][%cal
Gh1e1]}) 20. Nd5 Qc5 21. Ne3 $36 {Weiß behält eine gewisse Initiative auf
den weißen Feldern.}) 15. Qxd6 Qxd6 16. Rxd6 Ke7 17. Rd1 b4 18. Ne2 Rhd8 $44 {
in dieser Art von Endspielen hat Schwarz immer Kompensation in Form seines
starken schwarzfeldrigen Läufers.}) (14. Bf4 b4 15. Ne2 e5 16. Be3 Be6 17.
Qxb4 d5 18. Qb6 Qd7 $44) 14... h5 15. Bf4 b4 16. Ne2 Rc8 (16... e5 17. Bg5 {
Das ist gewissermaßen der Punkt, warum Weiß mittels Le3 erst auf ...h5
wartet und dann Lf4 macht.} Be6 18. Ng3 (18. Qxb4 $5 O-O 19. Qd2 Rab8 20. Nc3
Rfc8 21. Ka1 Bd8 $132 {[%cal Gc7b7,Gd8a5]}) 18... g6 19. Be2 $14 {[%cal Gg3f1,
Gf1e3,Gg2g4,Ge3d5]}) 17. Ng3 $14 {[%cal Gf4g5] und nun steht die Frage im Raum,
ob h5 wirklich so nützlich war, da der Bauer nun nach 0-0 sehr anfällig und
dadurch auch die Königssicherheit stark geschwächt wird.}) ({Das natürliche
} 13... O-O $4 {verliert wieder wegen des bereits erwähnten Tricks} 14. e5 $1
dxe5 (14... b4 {ändert nicht viel:} 15. Ne2 dxe5 (15... Nd5 16. Bxe7 Nxe7 17.
exd6 $18) 16. Bxf6 gxf6 17. Qxd7 $18) 15. Bxf6 Bxf6 16. Qxd7 $18) 14. Ne2 a5
15. Nd4 $6 {Unklar, ob der Springer dort wirklich so gut steht. Weiß hätte
besser versuchen sollen, den Druck auf d6 weiter aufrechtzuerhalten, um so
später einmal das "Provokationsmanöver" Lf4/Lg5 zu haben, was die Felder d5
und f5 schwächt.} ({Weiß kommt sowieso nicht ohne} 15. g4 $142 $5 {aus, also
wäre hier wieder ein guter Zeitpunkt dafür gewesen} h5 $5 {Auch sehr typisch.
} (15... a4 $5 16. Bf4 $1 e5 (16... Ra6 $4 17. Ng3 Rb6 18. g5 $18) (16... Rc8
$6 17. Ng3 O-O 18. g5 (18. Ba6 Ra8 19. Bxd6 Bxd6 20. Qxd6 Qa5 21. Be2 a3 22. b3
Rfd8 $44 {[%csl Ga3,Gb4,Ye5,Yf4,Yg3][%cal Gd7e8,Ga5e5,Ge5b2,Ga3b2,Gb4c3,Ga5c5,
Ga8c8,Gd7b5]}) 18... Ne8 19. h5 $40) 17. Bg5 O-O (17... Be6 18. Bxf6 gxf6 (
18... Bxf6 19. Qxb4 $14 {[%cal Ge2c3,Gc3b5]}) 19. Ng3 O-O 20. Nf5 (20. Qh6 $2
Rfc8 21. Bd3 $2 Bxa2+ $1 22. Kxa2 (22. Kc1 Bf8 23. Qxf6 Bg7 24. Qg5 h6 25. Qe3
a3 $19) 22... b3+ 23. Ka1 a3 $19) 20... Rfb8 21. Nxe7+ Qxe7 22. g5 f5 23. exf5
Bxf5 24. Bd3 Qe6 25. Bxf5 Qxf5 26. Qd3 Qxd3 27. Rxd3 Rb6 28. Rhd1 $14) 18. Bxf6
Bxf6 (18... gxf6 19. g5 $14 {[%cal Gf1h3]} (19. Ng3 $14 {[%cal Gg3f5]})) 19.
Qxd6 Qxd6 20. Rxd6 Rfd8 21. Nc1 $14 {Hier ist die Kompensation für den Bauern
in Form des schwarzfeldrigen Läufers nicht vollwertig, da er auf f6 sehr
passiv steht und der e5-Bauer große Felderschwächen auf d5 und f5
zurückgelassen hat. Mit dem Läufer auf e3 und bereits entknoteten Figuren
sähe die Welt anders aus.}) 16. gxh5 (16. Bxf6 $5 gxf6 (16... Bxf6 17. g5 Be7
18. f4 {So eine Stellung kann schnell sehr riskant für Schwarz werden, da die
weißen Bauern schon weit fortgeschritten sind. Schwarz sollte nicht versuchen,
direkt weiter anzugreifen, sondern lieber die Stellung öffnen und seinen
Läufern Diagonalen zum "Arbeiten" verschaffen. Eine Beispielvariante könnte
folgendermaßen aussehen:} O-O 19. Nd4 d5 $1 20. exd5 (20. e5 $2 g6 $17) 20...
exd5 21. Bg2 Bg4 $132) 17. g5 {[%csl Yh5][%cal Gf3f4,Ge2d4]} a4 18. Nd4 Qc5 19.
f4 a3 $132) 16... Nxh5 17. Nf4 Nxf4 18. Bxf4 Rh5 19. Be2 (19. Bxd6 $2 {wäre
ein großer strategischer Fehler-} Qxd6 20. Qxd6 Bxd6 21. Rxd6 g5 $15 {[%csl
Ga5,Gb4,Gd7,Ye4,Yf1,Yf3,Gg5][%cal Ge8e7,Gh5h4] da Schwarz nun einfach ein
besseres Endspiel erhält.}) 19... Rc8 $132) 15... Qb7 $6 {Ebenfalls unnötig.
In der Partie hatte ich Sorge, dass nach Sb5 ...Lxb5 Lxb5 mein Angriff ins
Stocken gerät, da nun der Läufer auf a4 ein Zuhause findet. Allerdings darf
ich einerseits auch, mittels d5, im Zentrum spielen und andererseits ist ...a4
stark, wonach der Läufer nicht nach a4 gelangt und ich zudem zu a3 oder b3
komme. Außerdem verliert er mit dem Springer eine wesentliche Angriffsfigur.}
(15... O-O $142 16. Nb5 $6 (16. g4 $142 a4 17. Bd3 Rfb8 $13 (17... Rfc8 $13))
16... Bxb5 17. Bxb5 a4 $1 (17... Rfd8 18. Ba4 h6 (18... d5 $2 19. e5 Ne8 (19...
Qxe5 20. Bf4 Qf5 21. g4 $18) 20. g4 $40) 19. Bf4 (19. Bxf6 $5 Bxf6 20. f4 (20.
g4 $2 d5 21. g5 dxe4 22. Qe3 Rxd1+ 23. Rxd1 Rd8 24. Rh1 hxg5 25. hxg5 Bd4 26.
Qxe4 g6 $19 {[%csl Ya4,Yf3,Yg5]}) 20... h5 21. Qe2 Qc5 22. g4 g6 $1 $11 (22...
hxg4 $6 23. Qxg4 Kh7 24. h5 Rac8 $36 {[%cal Gh5h6,Gf4f5,Ga4b3,Gh1g1]})) (19.
Bxh6 $2 gxh6 20. Qxh6 Nh7 $19 {[%cal Ge7f8,Gc7c5,Gc5e5]}) 19... Qb7 $132 {
[%cal Gd6d5]}) 18. Qxb4 {Das Bauernopfer anzunehmen, ist sehr riskant, aber
gewissermaßen auch alternativlos.} (18. Bxf6 Bxf6 19. Qxd6 (19. Qxb4 a3 20. b3
(20. bxa3 Rfc8 $17) 20... Rfc8 21. Qd2 Qc5 $19 {[%cal Rc5e5,Re5a1]}) 19... Qa5
20. e5 (20. Be2 $2 Rfc8 $19 {[%cal Rb4b3,Ra4a3]}) 20... Rfd8 21. Qc6 Bxe5 22.
Rxd8+ Qxd8 23. Bxa4 Rb8 $17 {[%csl Rb2,Re5][%cal Rd8d4,Rd8f6]}) (18. g4 a3 19.
b3 d5 $17 {[%cal Rc7e5,Re5b2]}) 18... d5 (18... Rfb8 $5 19. Bxf6 (19. c4 d5 $1
20. Qc3 a3 21. e5 Nh5 22. Bxe7 Qxe7 23. b3 Ng3 24. Rh3 (24. Rhe1 dxc4 25. Qxc4
Rd8 $15) 24... Qc7 25. Rxg3 Rxb5 $15) 19... gxf6 20. c4 d5 21. Qc3 dxc4 22. Rd7
Qc5 23. Bxc4 Rb6 24. Rc1 Rab8 25. b3 axb3 26. Bxb3 Qa3 27. Rd3 Kg7 $13) 19. Qd4
(19. Qd2 dxe4 $17) 19... Rfc8 $17 {Weiß hat überhaupt keinen Angriff,
während Schwarz über die geöffnete b-Linie und das Zentrum einen gewaltigen
Angriff bekommt.}) 16. h5 $5 ({Wieder} 16. g4 $142 $5 $132) 16... a4 $2 {
Unfassbar unvorsichtig gegenüber der gegnerischen Idee. Was will der Gegner
wohl machen, wenn er h5 spielt?} (16... h6 $142 17. Bh4 $1 (17. Be3 $6 e5 18.
Nf5 Bxf5 19. exf5 d5 $132 {ähnlich zur Partie}) 17... a4 18. g4 a3 19. b3 Rc8
20. Bc4 Rc5 $132) 17. Be3 $2 {Zum Glück nicht h6 spielen.} (17. h6 g6 {
In der Partie hatte ich nur sehr oberflächlich abgeschätzt, dass nun der
Königsflügel geschlossen bleibt. Die konkrete Idee mit Df4/Dh4 war mir
entgangen.} 18. Qf4 e5 19. Qh4 Ng8 20. Bxe7 Nxe7 21. Ne2 Nc8 22. Nc1 Be6 23.
Bd3 $14 {Vielleicht falle ich hier nicht gleich um, aber besonders schön ist
es auch nicht.}) 17... e5 ({Nach} 17... h6 18. g4 e5 $2 (18... Nh7 $142 $132)
19. Nf5 Bxf5 20. gxf5 $16 {hat Weiß die Möglichkeit, so wiederzuschlagen,
weshalb ich sofort ...e5 spielte.}) 18. Nf5 Bxf5 19. exf5 h6 {Endlich!} 20. g4
{Endlich!} a3 $5 {Idealerweise wollte ich mit diesem Zug, dem weißen König
dauerhaft die Luft zum Atmen nehmen und auf c3 einen mächtigen Vorposten,
für z.B. meinen Springer, erlangen. Mein Gegner reagierte etwas
schablonenhaft, aber hätte mit konkretem Spiel durchaus auf Vorteil hoffen
können. Die Stellung ist unheimlich kompliziert, aber ich vermute (nach
einiger Analyse), dass ein Verstärkungszug, wie Tb8, der den b-Bauern von
hinten zuverlässig deckt und sich keine weitere Schwäche in Form eines
angreifbaren Königs (im Falle von 20...a3) oder wackeligen Zentrums (im Falle
von d5) macht, der stärkste Zug in der Stellung ist. Aus praktischer Sicht
bin ich mit meinem 20.Zug...a3 nicht ganz unzufrieden, obwohl die Partie nach
21.g5 auch hätte ganz anders laufen können.} (20... Qxf3 $4 21. Bg2 $18) (
20... b3 $5 21. cxb3 (21. g5 $2 bxa2+ 22. Kxa2 hxg5 23. Bxg5 Rb8 $40) 21...
axb3 22. a3 d5 $1 (22... Rc8 23. g5 hxg5 24. Bxg5 Rxh5 25. Rxh5 Nxh5 26. Bxe7
Qxe7 27. Ba6 Rc2 (27... Rd8 28. Rh1 $18) 28. Qa5 $16) (22... Nh7 $4 23. Bc4 $18
) (22... O-O 23. g5 hxg5 24. h6 $1 $40 (24. Bxg5 Qxf3 25. Be2 Qxf5+ $17 {
Hier macht es sich bemerkbar, warum b3 von Vorteil sein kann.}) {und der
konkrete Versuch scheitert auch} 24... Qxf3 25. Be2 Qxf5+ (25... Qc6 {[%cal
Gc6c2]} 26. Rc1 $1 Qb7 27. hxg7 Rfc8 28. Bxg5 $18) 26. Bd3 e4 27. hxg7 Rfc8 28.
Bxg5 Nh7 (28... exd3 29. Bxf6 Qxf6 30. Rdg1 $18) 29. Bxe7 exd3 30. Qxd3 $18)
23. Qd3 $3 {[%cal Gd3b5]} (23. g5 hxg5 24. Bxg5 Rxh5 25. Bd3 Rxh1 26. Rxh1 Nd7
27. Rh8+ Bf8 28. Qe1 f6 29. Bd2 Kf7 30. Qh1 Bc5 $132 {und Schwarz könnte
zumindest kämpfen}) (23. Qe2 $1 O-O 24. Qb5 $14 {[%cal Gd1c1,Gc1c6] Genau vor
solchen Szenarien hatte ich Angst: Weiß fängt plötzlich an, den b3-Bauern
(und das Zentrum) anzugreifen.} (24. g5 Bxa3 $3 $13 {Das sind diese Art von
Opfern, die man zwar während der Partie durchaus sieht, aber absolut keine
Ahnung hat, ob sie funktionieren und sie daher verwirft. Zumindest ich, Tal
hätte dazu wahrscheinlich eine andere Meinung gehabt.})) 23... O-O 24. g5 (24.
Qb5 $14 {natürlich auch wieder möglich}) 24... hxg5 ({Hier geht nicht mal
mehr das "Tal-Opfer", weil Schwarz später nach Lc5 nicht mehr die Ressource ..
.Ta2! mit Angriff auf die Dame hat.} 24... Bxa3 25. bxa3 Rxa3 26. Bc5 $18) 25.
h6 {Ab hier wird es sehr computerisch, aber feststeht, dass Weiß (bei
unheimlich präzisen und genauen Spiel) eine starke Initiative hat.} Rfc8 26.
hxg7 Bxa3 27. Qb5 Qe7 (27... Rc2 28. Bc1 $18 (28. Qxb7 $4 Rxb2+ 29. Ka1 Ra2+
$11)) 28. Qxb3 Bc5 (28... Rcb8 29. Rh8+ Kxg7 30. Rxb8 $18) (28... Rab8 29. Bb5
Bxb2 30. Kxb2 d4 31. Rh8+ Kxg7 32. Rxc8 Rxc8 33. Rc1 $16) (28... Bxb2 29. Rh8+
Kxg7 30. Rxc8 Rxc8 31. Kxb2 $16) 29. Rc1 Bxe3 30. Rh8+ Kxg7 31. Rcxc8 Rxc8 32.
Rxc8 $16) (20... d5 $6 21. Qe2 $1 {[%cal Ge2b5]} (21. Qh2 $2 d4 22. Bc1 Ra5 $15
) 21... Ra5 22. g5 hxg5 23. Bxg5 $14 {[%cal Gh5h6,Ge2e5]}) (20... Rb8 $3 {
Multifunktional: verhindert De2/Db5, deckt den b-Bauern zuverlässig und hält
die Option offen, nach g5 mit dem Turm auf h5 zu schlagen.} 21. g5 (21. Bg2 $5
b3 22. cxb3 (22. axb3 axb3 23. f4 Ne4 24. Qd3 Nc3+ 25. Qxc3 Qxg2 26. cxb3 O-O
$15 {[%cal Gf8c8,Ge7f6,Ge5f4,Gg2a8,Gb8b1,Ga8a1,Gc8c1,Gf6b2]}) 22... axb3 23. a3
(23. f4 $5 Ne4 24. Qe2 bxa2+ 25. Ka1 O-O 26. fxe5 dxe5 27. Bc1 Ng3 28. Bxb7
Nxe2 29. Rd7 Nxc1 30. Rxc1 Bg5 31. Rcc7 Bf6 $11 {[%cal Ge5e4]}) 23... O-O 24.
f4 (24. g5 hxg5 25. h6 (25. Bxg5 Rfc8 26. f4 Qb6 $13) 25... Rfc8 $13 {[%cal
Gc8c2]}) 24... e4 25. g5 Rfc8 26. Rc1 Ng4 27. Bd4 Qd5 28. Rhe1 Rc2 29. Rxc2
bxc2+ 30. Kxc2 Qb3+ 31. Kb1 d5 $13) 21... hxg5 22. Bxg5 b3 (22... Rxh5 23. Bc4
Rd8 24. Rxh5 Nxh5 25. Bd5 Qb5 26. Bxf7+ Kxf7 27. Bxe7 Kxe7 28. Qg5+ Kd7 29.
Qxh5 $14 {[%csl Gb1,Rd7]}) 23. cxb3 axb3 24. a3 Qxf3 (24... Rxh5 25. Rxh5 Nxh5
26. Bxe7 (26. Bc4 Bxg5 27. Qxg5 Qxf3 $19) 26... Qxe7 27. a4 $14 {Weiß behält
einen kleinen Vorteil, aber es ist noch lange nicht vorbei.}) 25. Bxf6 $1 Qxf5+
26. Ka1 Qxf6 27. Bc4 O-O 28. Rdf1 Qh6 29. Qd5 Kh8 30. Rxf7 Rxf7 31. Qxf7 Bf6
32. Bxb3 e4 $132 {Schwarz sollte in der Lage sein, die Partie remis zu halten.}
) 21. b3 $2 (21. g5 $1 hxg5 22. Bxg5 Nd5 (22... axb2 $2 23. h6 Qd5 (23... Qc6
24. hxg7 Rxh1 25. Bxf6 Kd7 26. Bxe7 Kxe7 27. Qg5+ f6 28. g8=N+ $1 $18) (23...
gxh6 24. Bxf6 Bxf6 25. Qxd6 $18) 24. Qxd5 Nxd5 25. Rxd5 Bxg5 26. hxg7 Rg8 27.
Rxd6 Ke7 28. Rb6 $18) (22... d5 23. Re1 $1 ({als Mensch braucht man nur} 23.
Bxf6 Bxf6 24. Qxd5 Qxd5 25. Rxd5 $14 {zu sehen und weiß, alles andere im 23.
Zug ist Bonus}) 23... Nd7 24. h6 gxh6 25. Bxe7 Kxe7 26. f6+ $36 {[%csl Re7]})
23. Qxd5 Qxd5 24. Rxd5 Bxg5 25. Rb5 Ke7 26. Rxb4 d5 27. c4 $14 {Vielleicht
hält Schwarz, vielleicht aber auch nicht.}) 21... d5 $5 22. Bg2 ({Ein großer
Unterschied ist nun, dass nach} 22. g5 hxg5 23. Bxg5 Rxh5 24. Rxh5 Nxh5 25.
Bxe7 Kxe7 $17 {d6 nicht mehr mit Schach hängt.}) ({weiterhin habe ich auf
einmal nach zum Beispiel} 22. Qe2 Qc7 23. g5 Qc3 $1 {einzügige Mattdrohungen}
24. Bc1 hxg5 $17) 22... Rd8 $5 $15 {Mittlerweile habe ich alles bekommen, was
ich brauche um besser zu stehen: ein gut kontrolliertes Zentrum, einen
geschwächten gegnerischen König, während mein eigener recht sicher ist.Von
hier an geht es sehr schnell bergab für Weiß.} 23. f4 $6 ({Auch sonst ist
Weiß um seine Stellung schon nicht mehr zu beneiden:} 23. Qe2 Qc7 24. Bd2 O-O
25. g5 (25. Rc1 d4 $19 {[%cal Gf6d5,Ge7g5]}) 25... hxg5 26. h6 g6 27. fxg6 fxg6
$17 {[%cal Gg8h7,Ge7d6]}) 23... Ne4 $1 24. Bxe4 (24. Qd3 $4 Nc3+ 25. Ka1 e4 26.
Qd4 Bf6 $19) 24... dxe4 25. Qf2 $6 {Die Dame sollte zumindest den e4 angreifen
und g5 unterstützen, weshalb sie auf g2 am besten steht.} (25. Qg2 $142 exf4
26. Bxf4 O-O 27. g5 Bxg5 28. Bxg5 hxg5 29. Qxg5 Qb6 $1 $19 {Im höheren Sinne
ein technischer Sieg für Schwarz, da der weiße König zu schwach und der
e-Freibauer zu stark ist.}) 25... exf4 $1 26. Qxf4 O-O $19 {[%csl Ra3,Rb1,Rb4,
Gf7,Gg7,Gg8,Gh6][%cal Ra3b2,Rb4c3,Re7g5,Re7f6] Die Ungleichheit der
Königssicherheit macht den entscheidenden Unterschied!} 27. Bd4 Bg5 28. Qf2 (
28. Qe5 Bf6 29. Qc5 Rd5 30. Qa7 Qc6 31. c4 (31. Bxf6 Qxf6 $19) 31... bxc3 32.
Kc2 e3 33. Bxe3 Rxd1 34. Rxd1 Qg2+ $19) 28... Qd5 $1 {[%cal Gd8d1] Winning by
pinning!} 29. Qe2 Qxd4 30. Rxd4 Rxd4 {Schwarz dominiert in Kombination von
Mattdrohungen und dem starken e-Freibauern komplett. Weiß hat überhaupt kein
Gegenspiel und warf deshalb das Handtuch. Eine sehr interessante Partie, die
nach dem kritischen Moment um Zug 20 ein überraschend schnelles Ende fand.}
0-1
[Event "Match/Nation U26 DDR-POL 19,5-20,5"]
[Site "Zinnowitz"]
[Date "1977.10.02"]
[Round "4.1"]
[White "Vogt, Lothar"]
[Black "Bielczyk, Jacek"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2495"]
[BlackElo "2385"]
[Annotator "Vogt,L"]
[PlyCount "83"]
[EventDate "1977.09.28"]
[EventType "team-schev"]
[EventRounds "4"]
[EventCountry "DDR"]
[SourceTitle "EXT 2013"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2012.11.22"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2012.11.22"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
{SCHACH 11/1977 Seite 491} 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6
6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8. O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 {Dies ist derzeit modern.} ({Der
Normalzug ist hier} 9... Be7) 10. Bxf6 (10. Nxc6 Bxc6 11. Bd3 {ist eine andere
Methode.}) 10... gxf6 (10... Qxf6 11. e5 dxe5 12. Ndxb5 {fьhrt zu klarem
weiЯen Vorteil.}) 11. Kb1 ({Ein interessanter Zug ist auch} 11. f5 {,wonach es
zu folgender Variante kommen kann:} Nxd4 12. Qxd4 Bh6+ 13. Kb1 Bf4 {nebst Le5
mit kompliziertem Spiel.}) 11... Qb6 12. Nxc6 Bxc6 13. Bd3 Qc5 (13... O-O-O {
ist vorzuziehen.}) 14. Rhf1 O-O-O 15. f5 d5 $2 (15... Be7 {war geboten, obwohl
WeiЯ nach} 16. fxe6 fxe6 17. Ne2 {nebst Nf4 einen kleinen Erцffnungsvorteil
behдlt.}) 16. exd5 exd5 {[#]} 17. Be4 $1 Bd6 ({Auch nach} 17... d4 18. Bxc6
Qxc6 19. Qd3 Qxg2 20. Rf4 {hat Schwarz erhebliche Schwierigkeiten.}) 18. Nxd5
Bxd5 {So gut wie erzwungen, da sonst 19.b4 eine recht gefдhrliche Drohung
darstellt.} 19. Bxd5 {wie schon in meiner ersten Partie mit Bielczyk haben wir
auch hier wieder ungleiche Lдufer erreicht; diesmal aber mit Damen!} Bxh2 20.
Rf3 Be5 21. Rd3 Rd6 {Was sonst?} 22. Bxf7 Rhd8 23. Bd5 {WeiЯ mцchte seine
Schwerfiguren fьr den Angriff behalten.} Kb8 24. g4 h6 25. Bh1 ({Mit} 25. b4 {
nebst Dxh6 konnte ich auch einen zweiten Bauern gewinnen, aber die
Partiefortsetzung gefiel mir noch besser.}) 25... Ka7 (25... Rxd3 $2 26. cxd3 {
цffnet auch noch die c-Linie fьr Weiss.}) 26. Qg2 Qc7 27. Rc1 Rd4 28. Rxd4 Rxd4
29. c3 Rd8 30. Qe4 {Schwarz kann nichts unternehmen, da er auf Matt steht.} Qb6
31. Bf3 a5 32. Rh1 b4 33. c4 b3 34. a3 a4 35. g5 Bxb2 {Verzweiflung!} ({
Natьrlich scheiterte} 35... hxg5 {an} 36. Rh7+ Bc7 ({bzw.} 36... Ka6 37. c5 Qb5
38. Be2) 37. c5) 36. c5 Qb5 37. Kxb2 Re8 38. Qd4 Re2+ 39. Kb1 Re5 40. c6+ Ka6
41. c7 Re8 42. Qxf6+ 1-0
[Event "Belgrade RAD 30"]
[Site "Belgrade"]
[Date "1977.01.15"]
[Round "1.4"]
[White "Suetin, Alexey S"]
[Black "Weinstein, Norman"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2525"]
[BlackElo "2475"]
[Annotator "Weinstein,N"]
[PlyCount "86"]
[EventDate "1977.01.15"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "13"]
[EventCountry "SRB"]
[EventCategory "9"]
[SourceTitle "EXT 2018"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2017.10.13"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2017.10.13"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
[TimeControl "40/9000:16/5400:0"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Nf3 Qb6 12. Kb1 O-O-O 13. f5 $146 (13. g3
Be7 14. Ne2 Kb8 15. Ned4 Nxd4 16. Nxd4 Bc8 17. Bg2 Bb7 18. Qe2 h5 19. c3 h4 20.
f5 e5 21. Nc2 hxg3 22. hxg3 Rxh1 23. Bxh1 Rg8 24. g4 Rh8 25. Bf3 Qc5 26. Ne3
Rh3 27. Nd5 {1/2-1/2 (27) Hlousek,Z (2380)-Mititelu,G (2400) Luhacovice 1971})
13... Kb7 $6 (13... Kb8 {inf 23/(412)}) 14. fxe6 fxe6 15. g3 h5 16. Bh3 Bh6 17.
Qg2 Ne5 18. Nd4 Rhe8 19. Nce2 Ng4 20. Qf3 e5 21. Nf5 Bxf5 22. Qxf5 Ne3 23. Qxh5
Nxd1 24. Rxd1 Bg5 25. Bf5 Rh8 26. Qf7+ Kb8 27. h4 Qf2 28. Nc3 Rhf8 29. Qd5 Be3
30. Qc6 Bd4 31. Nd5 Qe2 32. Rc1 Qc4 33. Qxa6 Rf7 34. b3 Qc5 35. c4 b4 36. Qb5+
Rb7 37. Qxc5 dxc5 38. h5 Rg8 39. g4 Rbg7 40. Nxf6 Rf8 41. Nd7+ Rxd7 42. Bxd7
Rf2 43. Rh1 Rb2+ 1-0
[Event "Moscow Aeroflot op"]
[Site "Moscow"]
[Date "2002.??.??"]
[Round "3"]
[White "Asrian, Karen"]
[Black "Galliamova, Alisa"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2599"]
[BlackElo "2514"]
[Annotator "Wells,P"]
[PlyCount "54"]
[EventDate "2002.02.04"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 088"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2002.03.21"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2002.03.21"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 h6 10. Bh4 g5 $5 {Nothing wrong with this system as such ( its
another fairly respectable way of contesting the e5 square ) but the weakness
of f7 should be constantly borne in mind.} 11. fxg5 {[%csl Ge5]} Ng4 12. Nxc6
Bxc6 13. Be2 Ne5 14. Kb1 Be7 15. Rhf1 $5 hxg5 16. Bg3 b5 $2 (16... Qa5 $5) 17.
Bxe5 $1 dxe5 {[%csl Rf7][%cal Ye2h5,Yf1f7]} 18. Bh5 $1 {[%csl Rf7] A nice
tactic to emphasise thematic plusses.} Bf6 (18... Rxh5 19. Qe2 $16 {[%cal
Ge2h5,Gd1d8]}) 19. Qf2 Qe7 20. g4 $1 {[%csl Yh5] A great bishop. Can't move -
doesn't need to.} Rh6 21. h4 b4 22. hxg5 bxc3 23. Qb6 Bb5 24. gxh6 Kf8 25. Rf2
Kg8 26. Qd6 Rf8 27. h7+ Kxh7 1-0
[Event "Interzonal-16"]
[Site "Biel"]
[Date "1993.??.??"]
[Round "11"]
[White "Gurevich, Ilya"]
[Black "Kozul, Zdenko"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B67"]
[WhiteElo "2575"]
[BlackElo "2595"]
[Annotator "Wolff,P"]
[PlyCount "105"]
[EventDate "1993.07.16"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "13"]
[EventCountry "SUI"]
[SourceTitle "CBM 037"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "1993.12.01"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "1993.12.01"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 d6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Qd2 a6 8.
O-O-O Bd7 9. f4 b5 10. Bxf6 gxf6 11. Kb1 (11. f5 $5 Nxd4 12. Qxd4 Bh6+ 13. Kb1
Bf4 14. fxe6 fxe6 15. Ne2 Be5 16. Qd2 Qb6 17. Nf4 a5 18. g3 O-O 19. Bh3 $16
Rae8 20. Nd3 Bd4 21. Rhe1 b4 22. Nxb4 Bf2 23. Rf1 Bc5 24. Nd5 $18 {Hjartarson,
J-Kozul,Z Biel izt (6)}) 11... Qb6 12. Nxc6 $5 Bxc6 13. Qe1 {Usually the move
11.Kb1 introduces the Nf3,Pg3 setup versus this Rauzer. Young Ilya Gurevich's
idea is to draw the queen to the b6 square before trasposing back to the 11.
Nxc6 setup, so that it is placed more awkwardly.} Ra7 {White threatened 14.Nd5,
which is now met by 14...exd5 15.exd5+ Re7} 14. f5 $14 b4 15. Ne2 e5 (15...
Bxe4 16. fxe6 fxe6 17. Nf4 $16) 16. Ng3 h5 {To stop Nh5} 17. Be2 $1 Rh6 (17...
h4 18. Nh5 Be7 19. Qxh4) 18. Bc4 (18. Bxh5 $5 {This looks like a good pawn to
me!}) 18... a5 19. Nf1 Qc5 20. Ne3 $5 a4 $6 (20... Bxe4 21. Bd5 {White has
fantastic compensation, of course, but at least Black has a pawn for his
suffering. As the game goes, Black is simply positionally lost.}) 21. Bd5 Bb5
22. b3 Rh8 23. Bc4 axb3 24. cxb3 Bc6 25. Nd5 Qa5 26. Qf2 Be7 27. Rhe1 Rb7 28.
Nxf6+ $5 Bxf6 29. Rxd6 Qb6 $8 (29... Rb6 30. Rxf6 (30. Bd5 Bxd5 (30... Qb5 31.
Rxf6 $18) 31. Qxb6 Qxb6 32. Rxb6 {See the game}) 30... Bxe4+ 31. Rxe4 Rxf6 32.
Qf4 Kf8 33. Rxe5 Qd8 $16) 30. Qxb6 Rxb6 31. Bd5 (31. Rxf6 Bxe4+ 32. Rxe4 Rxf6
33. Rxe5+ Kd7 $132) 31... Bxd5 32. Rxb6 Bd8 $8 33. Rb8 Bc6 34. Rd1 Bd7 35. Rb7
Bc8 (35... Bc6 36. Rxd8+ Kxd8 37. Rb8+) 36. Rb8 Bd7 37. f6 $1 Rh6 $4 (37... Rg8
38. g3 (38. Rd5 Rxg2 (38... Rg5 39. Ra5 Bc6 40. Ra7 $18 {/\ Re7+}) 39. Rxe5+
Be6 40. Rxh5 Kd7 41. Rxb4 Bxf6 $132) 38... Rg4 (38... h4 39. Rd5 hxg3 40. hxg3
Rxg3 41. Rxe5+ Be6 42. Rxe6+ fxe6 43. f7+ Kxf7 44. Rxd8 $16) (38... Rg6 39. Rd6
$18 {/\ Ra6-a8}) 39. Rxb4 $16) 38. Rd6 Rh8 39. Ra6 Rh6 40. g3 Be6 41. Rd6 Bd7
42. Kc2 Rg6 43. Ra6 Be6 44. Raa8 Rxf6 45. Rxd8+ Ke7 46. Rd2 Rf1 47. Ra7+ Ke8
48. Rb7 f5 49. Rxb4 fxe4 50. Rb5 Kf7 51. Rxe5 Kf8 52. Rxe4 Bf5 53. Rde2 1-0