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July 2013 cover Layout 1 15/08/2013 13:04 Page 1€¦ · The Wagenbach Defence to the King’s Gambit Middlesex and Essex on Top ... winning chances in the Pirc than it is in Mark’s

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Chess Chess Magazine is published monthly. Founding Editor: B.H. Wood, OBE. M.Sc † Executive Editor: Malcolm Pein Editors: Richard Palliser, Byron Jacobs Associate Editor: John Saunders Subscriptions Manager: Paul Harrington Twitter: @CHESS_Magazine Twitter: @TelegraphChess - Malcolm Pein Website: www.chess.co.uk Subscription Rates: United Kingdom 1 year (12 issues) £49.95 2 year (24 issues) £89.95 3 year (36 issues) £125 Europe 1 year (12 issues) £60 2 year (24 issues) £112.50 3 year (36 issues) £165 USA & Canada 1 year (12 issues) $90 2 year (24 issues) $170 3 year (36 issues) $250 Rest of World (Airmail) 1 year (12 issues) £72 2 year (24 issues) £130 3 year (36 issues) £180 Distributed by: Post Scriptum (UK only) Unit G, OYO Business Park, Hindmans Way, Dagenham, RM9 6LN - Tel: 020 8526 7779 LMPI (North America) 8155 Larrey Street, Montreal (Quebec), H1J 2L5, Canada - Tel: 514 355-5610 Views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the Editors. Contributions to the magazine will be published at the Editors’ discretion and may be shortened if space is limited. No parts of this publication may be reproduced without the prior express permission of the publishers. All rights reserved. © 2013 Chess Magazine (ISSN 0964-6221) is published by: Chess & Bridge Ltd, 44 Baker St, London, W1U 7RT Tel: 020 7388 2404 Fax: 020 7388 2407 Email: [email protected], Website: www.chess.co.uk FRONT COVER: Cover Design: Matt Read Cover Photo: Ray Morris Hill US & Canadian Readers – You can contact us via our American branch – Chess4Less based in West Palm Beach, FL. Call toll-free on 1-877 89CHESS (24377). You can even order Subscriber Special Offers online via www.chess4less.com

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Contents

Editorial................................................................................................................ 4 Malcolm Pein on the latest developments 60 Seconds with... .......................................................................................... 7 WFM Sarah Hegarty Mickey Adams takes Dortmund by Storm ........................................... 8 A 2923 performance clinches first ahead of Kramnik David Howell dominates in Torquay......................................................12 The 2009 Champion made all in the 2013 British Championship First Equal at the Scottish .........................................................................20 Danny Gormally reports from Helensburgh Mamedyarov on Top in Beijing ................................................................24 Steve Giddins saw Karjakin collapse in the latest Grand Prix Readers’ Letters.........................................................................................................28 The Wagenbach Defence to the King’s Gambit Middlesex and Essex on Top.....................................................................30 Jonathan Rogers reports from the County Finals Swindles: Ten Dirty Moves........................................................................32 Amatzia Avni presents 10 deadly chess weapons Find the Winning Moves .............................................................................35 Can you do as well as the players in the British? Chess in the 1980s.......................................................................................38 John Saunders looks at the magazine in 1987 How Good is Your Chess? ..........................................................................42 Daniel King examines a recent game by Nigel Short Never Mind the Grandmasters ................................................................46 Carl Portman organised a simul by a fellow columnist Home News.......................................................................................................48 The latest congress news and winners at the British The Day Chess Came and Went ...............................................................50 Roger Noble reports from International Chess Day in Hull Studies................................................................................................................51 Brian Stephenson on the importance of Richard Guy Overseas News ...............................................................................................52 It’s been a busy summer from Andorra to Helsingor Solutions............................................................................................................54 New Books and Software...........................................................................55 The latest reviews and arrivals at Chess & Bridge Saunders on Chess ........................................................................................58 John’s 20+, 40+, and 60+ players of the month Photo credits: Andorra Chess Federation (p.6), Steve Connor (15, 16), Calle Erlandsson (pp.26-28), Eteri Kublashvili (p.25), Ray Morris Hill (pp.1, 7, 9), Brendan O’Gorman (pp. 13-14, 17-18, 21-23, 49, 53r), Susan Polgar (p.52), John Saunders (p.53l).

www.chess.co.uk 3

First Equal at the Scottish

Danny Gormally reports from the Scottish Championship in Helensburgh

I want to make an apology to regular read-ers of the magazine. They may have been given the false impression I only want to comment on my own games. After all I did report on the recent Big Slick tournament and mainly looked at my own games, de-spite the fact that Yang-Fan Zhou domi-nated the event. However, there is a simple explanation for this, that hopefully extends beyond a mere need to flatter my own ego: I simply find it so much easier to comment on my own games, where I already have some idea of what was going on, than trying to reconstruct the thought patterns of oth-ers. So laziness is the real explanation...

Anyway no such guilt need be applied to my report on the Scottish Championships, where by some freak of nature, I managed to come equal first with a 2650 perform-ance; my best result for about seven years. The Scottish was held in Helensburgh, a beautiful town set on the banks of the River Clyde, and surrounded by many breathtak-ing lochs and hills. I’ve always found it much easier to play good chess when you are in decent surroundings – it inspires the imagi-nation.

Early on in the event the use of acceler-ated pairings created some controversy, which is perhaps why they weren’t used in the British Championship which followed soon after, but the tournament really only exploded into life in round four.

M.Hebden-D.Gormally

Round 4 Pirc Defence

1 d4 Ìf6 2 Ìf3 g6 3 Ìc3 Íg7

I was eager to avoid the Barry Attack, as it’s much easier to generate active play and winning chances in the Pirc than it is in Mark’s favourite opening. Indeed everyone seemed to follow this pattern in the tour-nament, as both Lawrence Trent and Ga-wain Jones went into the Pirc against Mark as well. 4 e4 d6 5 Íe3 0-0 6 Ëd2 Ìc6 7 Íb5

Mark sticks to his principles. I was rea-sonably confident he’d do this, as he’d

played it before in a game and won with it. However I had found an improvement on Black’s play. As Mark opined after the game, White should probably play 7 d5!. He was concerned about the reply 7...Ìe5 (7...Ìb8 is an alternative; although it looks passive Black can always break out with ...c6 or ...e6 later), but after 8 Ìxe5 dxe5 9 0-0-0 White’s attacking chances with h4-h5 are very good, while it is not easy for Black to create counterplay on the other wing. 7...e5!

A rare ‘human’ novelty, as this is not the

engine’s first choice. 8 Íxc6?!

8 dxe5 Ìxe5 9 Ìxe5 dxe5 10 Ëxd8 Îxd8 11 f3 would be the cop-out variation. This is similar to another line where White has his bishop on c4, which is a definite im-provement for him; with the bishop on b5 I don’t think Black has any problems.

8 d5 Ìe7 9 0-0-0 is probably critical, but I discovered in my preparation that after 9...a6! 10 Íe2 Íd7 11 h4 b5 12 a3 Îb8 Black will have good counterplay with ...a5, so his chances are at least equal. 8...exd4! 9 Íxd4 bxc6 10 0-0-0 Íe6 11 h3

Now Black takes over the initiative, but it is already becoming hard to suggest any-thing for White. During the game I was con-cerned about central action with 11 e5, but this is comfortably refuted by 11...Ìg4! 12 exd6 Íh6 13 Íe3 Ìxe3 14 fxe3 cxd6 with advantage to Black. 11 Ëf4 also looks

like a possible improvement, until you see the line 11...c5! 12 Íxc5 Ìg4! 13 Ëg3 Íxc3 14 bxc3 Ëc8! with the idea of ...Ëa6, when Black is the one making all the running. 11...c5 12 Íe3 Îe8

Essential, as White intended to play Íh6 and exchange the dark-squared bish-ops, taking all the sting out of the black position. 13 Íh6 Íh8 14 Ìg5

Once you’ve played Mark as many times

as I have, you start to get an insight into how he thinks. As soon as he played this I realised what he intended to play: he wants to play f2-f4. 14...Ìd7!

The computer prefers 14...Íd7, but I think my choice is at least the more human. Besides although I did consider retreating the bishop, if I had done so I would not have got the chance to attack like I did in the game. 15 f4 Ëb8 16 Îhe1?

Underestimating the strength of the coming attack. Black’s idea would have been revealed after the rash 16 f5? Íxa2! when the bishop is immune due to checkmate, and 17 b3 Íxb3 18 cxb3 Ëxb3 is a real slaugh-ter. However, 16 e5! Ìb6 17 b3 dxe5 18 Îhe1 would have kept the game very un-clear. 16...Ìb6 17 b3

When I recently wrote my magnum opus, Mating the Castled King for Quality

20 September 2013

Chess, I was asked by Jacob Aagaard to do a section on Black attacking with the ma-noeuvre ...Ìb6-c4. I’m glad he did, because it made my next move very easy to find.

17...Ìc4! Crushing.

18 Ëd3 18 bxc4 (18 Ëe2 Íxc3 19 Ìxe6

Ëb4! is also mating) 18...Ëb4 19 e5 Ëa3+ 20 Êb1 Îab8+ 21 Ìb5 Îxb5+ 22 cxb5 Ëxa2+ 23 Êc1 Ëa1# is one nice line that illustrates how strong Black’s attack is. Basi-cally once he’s castled queenside, any open-

ing of the b-file normally spells trouble for White, and as Mark pointed out, his major pieces (queen on d2, rooks on d1 and e1) are about as badly placed as they can be, as they merely help to suf-focate his king. 18...Ëb4 19 Ìb5

As usual, Mark is as tricky as possible. One of the reasons he’s been one of the top players in the UK for so many years is that he’s just so hard to put away. Fortunately my position is so good that only some accuracy was required to finish off. 19...Ìb2 20 Ëe2 Íc4!

20...Ìxd1 21 Êxd1!, while surely very good for Black, would at least keep the game alive. 21 bxc4 Ìxc4 22 c3 Ëxb5 23 e5 Îab8 24 Ëc2 Ëa5 25 a4 Îb2 26 Ëxb2 Ìxb2 27 Êxb2 Ëxa4 28 exd6

28 Îa1 Îb8+ wins a rook. 28...Ëb4+ 0-1

The tournament was

blown wide open in the same round, when heavy pre-tournament favour-ite, the reigning British

Champion Gawain Jones, surprisingly lost with the white pieces to the Serbian Grandmaster Aleksa Strikovic.

G.Jones-A.Strikovic

Round 4 Philidor Defence

1 e4 d6 2 d4 Ìf6 3 Ìc3 e5 4 Ìf3 Ìbd7 5 g4

This highly aggressive wing-attack has been popularised by Shirov, amongst others. 5...Ìxg4 6 Îg1 Ìgf6 7 Íe3 c6 8 Ëd2 b5 9 0-0-0 Íb7?

In light of what occurs, 9...b4 10 dxe5 dxe5 11 Íc4 Ëa5 looks an obvious im-provement for Black. 10 dxe5 dxe5 11 Ìxb5!

Gawain goes straight for the throat. I was most impressed by his ultra-aggressive, uncompromising style in this tournament – he really goes after people. White opens lines when Black is far from prepared for it as his development is lagging. 11...Ìxe4

11...cxb5 12 Íxb5 Îc8 13 Ìxe5 Îc7 14 Íg5 is an illustration of why it was so

dangerous to play the bishop to b7 earlier, taking it away from the defence of the d7-square.

12 Ëe1? This looks the most natural from a hu-

man point of view, not blocking the bishop’s path to b5, but the silicon beast only deals in absolutes, not in generalisations, and frowns upon this choice. As Gawain explained later, he could have won on the spot with the computer suggestion 12 Ëe2!:

a) 12...cxb5 13 Ìxe5 Íd6 14 Îxd6! Ìxd6 15 Íg5! is crushing.

b) Lines like 12...Ëa5 13 Ìxe5! Ìxe5 14 Ëh5!! offer little salvation either. 12...cxb5 13 Íxb5

Nevertheless, White still has a very ob-vious, and possibly just winning attack. 13...Íd6 14 Ìxe5

14 Îxg7! Ëf6 15 Íxd7+ Êe7 (15...Êf8 16 Îg4 Ëxf3 17 Îxe4 Íxe4 18 Îxd6 is also very good for White) 16 Îxd6 Ëxd6 17 Íf5 was a very good alternative, when White has an enduring attack in return for a very small material investment. 14...Íxe5 15 Îxd7 Ëxd7 16 Íxd7+ Êxd7 17 Ëa5

White has won the queen and Black’s

king is roaming around in the centre of the board, not to mention that Strikovic was facing a rampant Gawain, a tactical genius, who is fully motivated to win the game. Black’s task may on the face of it look hope-less, but in fact it’s not terribly clear, and from this point on Strikovic defends ex-tremely well.

Danny Gormally tied for first in Helensburgh.

www.chess.co.uk 21

17...Îhe8 18 Îd1+ Êc8 19 Ëb5 Ìf6 20 Íg5?!

After 20 Ëc4+! Êb8 21 Íf4 Íxf4+ 22 Ëxf4+ Êc8 23 Ëc4+ Êb8 24 Ëxf7 a5 25 Ëxg7 Îa6 26 Ëg3+ Êa7 27 f4 the extra pawns should ultimately prove deci-sive. 20...Îe6 21 Ëc5+ Íc6 22 f4 Ìd7! 23 Îxd7 Íxb2+ 24 Êxb2 Êxd7 25 Ëd4+ Îd6 26 Ëxg7 Íd5

Perhaps worn out by his opponent’s tough resistance, Gawain wanders into a devious trap. 27 Ëd4?

27 a4! Îc8 28 Ëe5 would still have of-fered White very good winning chances. 27...Îb8+

28 Êc1?? Even 2650-rated

players are human! 28 Êc3 Îc8+ 29 Êb2 was just a draw. 28...Îb1+!

Ouch. The game has turned on its head. 29 Êxb1 Íxa2+ 30 Êxa2 Îxd4 31 Êb3 Êe6 32 c3 Îe4 33 c4 f6 34 Íh4 Îxf4 35 Íg3 Îg4 36 Êb4 f5 37 Íf2 a6 0-1

As I suggested to Gawain after the game, perhaps his blunder was a direct consequence of the fact that he had been winning earlier; you be-come frustrated that you didn’t finish your oppo-nent off, take your eye off the ball completely, and end up with the worst possible result.

In the fifth round I won an important game against the very promis-ing young Icelandic player, Hjorvar Gretars-son. So at that point I was clear in the lead, but at the same time I expected Gawain to come back in the second half of the

tournament, which of course he did. By round seven it was clear I needed to win against the tough Scottish Grandmaster Colin McNab, who himself was fighting for the Scottish title. I have had many hard bat-tles with Colin; even when his position looks desperate, he will keep fighting and find hidden resources. This time there were many adventures, but ultimately I somehow emerged with the full point. That left me on 6/7 with two rounds to go, but Jones was like an angry fly, always buzzing around, refusing to go away, and he closed the gap to half a point with a smooth win against the Hungarian Grandmaster Ivan Farago.

G.Jones-I.Farago

Round 7 French Tarrasch

1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 Ìd2 c5 4 Ìgf3 a6 5 exd5 exd5 6 Íd3 c4

This line is a very ambitious choice by Black. He needs to be very accurate with his follow-up as those pawns on the queenside can easily be dismantled, as we’ll see in this game. 7 Íe2 Ìc6 8 b3 b5

8...c3 9 Ìf1! really plays into White’s hands: later his knight will go to g3, the

bishop back to d3, etc. Black’s main strate-gic weapon is the smothering of White’s minor pieces, particularly the bishop on e2. 9 a4 Íf5 10 0-0 Íd6

I don’t know if Gawain prepared the fol-lowing line at home, but this turns into a very poor practical choice, as for a small material investment, White gains a huge attack.

10...Ìf6 11 Íb2 Íd6 12 Ìe5 Îc8 was a solid alternative. 11 axb5 axb5 12 Îxa8 Ëxa8 13 bxc4 bxc4

14 Íxc4! An inspired sacrifice. For the piece White

gets two pawns plus a slow-burner of an attack, which is extremely difficult to de-fend against. 14...dxc4 15 Ìxc4 Ëd8 16 d5 Ìce7 17 Ëd4 Ìf6 18 Íg5 0-0 19 Íxf6 gxf6 20 Ëxf6 Íc5? 21 d6

21...Íxc2? A tactical error under extreme pressure.

The only way to defend was to try and play with the two bishops against the two knights, albeit two pawns down, with 21...Íg6 22 Ëe5 Íb4 23 c3 Ìc6 24 Ëb5 Íxd6 25 Ëxc6 Íf4. However, after the accurate 26 Ìce5 White really should be winning. 22 Ëg5+!

Farago must have missed this. Now it’s all over. 22...Ìg6 23 Ëxc5 Ëc8 24 Ëxc8 Îxc8 25 d7 Îd8 26 Ìb6 Ìf8 27 Ìe5 Íe4 28 f3 Íb7 29 Îc1 Ìe6 30 Êf2 Êf8 31

An uncharacteristic blunder from Gawain Jones.

22 September 2013

Ìc6 Íxc6 32 Îxc6 Êe7 33 Îc8 Îf8 34 Îxf8 Ìxf8 35 Êe3 Êd8 36 Êe4 Êc7 37 Êe5 Ìe6 38 Ìd5+ Êxd7 39 Ìf6+ Êe7 40 Ìxh7 Ìc5 41 h4 Ìd3+ 42 Êe4 1-0

After a rather wet and quick draw in

round eight, I decided to go for a long walk, and ended up trekking five miles up the road in the blazing summer heat. Eventually I even made it as far as the naval base at Faslane, where the UK nuclear deterrent, Trident, is based. I wasn’t fooled by the se-rene surroundings; this is a serious military installation. The submarine port looked rather ominous as it loomed up, the high fence straddled with barbed wire and the signs saying “armed guards patrol these grounds – keep out!”; a scary reminder that within those walls were housed weapons of great destructive power. Rather like Houdini novelties.

Eventually I tied for first with Gawain on 7/9, but we were joined on that score by the Hungarian Grandmaster Imre Hera, who won his last two games, although not with-out incident.

A.Tate-I.Hera

Round 8

17 d6 Tempting as the d6-pawn looks very

powerful, but there was something even stronger. Black has got into a horrible mess in the opening with his king wandering around in the middle of the board. When your opponent’s king is exposed, you should open lines. To that end, 17 dxe6+! was clearly indicated: 17...Êe8 18 Ìg3! Îd8 19 Ëc3 Íh3 20 0-0 Ëc6 21 Íe3 Íxe6 22 Íxe6 Ëxe6 23 Îcd1 just looks very good for White. 17...Ëc6 18 0-0 Îc8 19 Ía5?

This is a very serious mistake, after which the game turns around completely. The simple sequence 19 Ìg3! Íg6 20 Íb3 would have left Black in serious diffi-culties. 19...Ìxc4! 20 d7

20 Îxc4 e5 21 Ëe3 Íxd6 just drops

the pride and joy of White’s position, the d6-pawn. 20...Ìxa5 21 d8Ë Îxd8 22 Ëxd8

Perhaps this was Tate’s idea when he

played 19 Ía5?, but if so he had badly overestimated his chances. Although for the moment Black cannot develop his kingside, his remaining pieces are doing more than a good enough job to ensure White cannot develop any initiative. 22...Ëa4! 23 Îfd1 e5?!

23...Êg6 24 Ìc3 Ëb4 25 a3 Ëxc5 26 b4 Ëe5 27 Ëxa5 Ëxa5 28 bxa5 Íxa3 just looks winning for Black, who has the two bishops and an armada of pawns. 24 Ìc3 Ëb4 25 Ìd5 Ëa4 26 b3?

A very overambitious winning attempt when short of time and material. Why not just come back with 26 Ìc3 when Black would have to show he had something bet-ter than the repetition? 26...Ëa3 27 Îc3 Ìc6 28 Ëc7+ Íe7 29 Ëxb7 Îc8 30 Îcc1 Íg4 31 Îe1 Íe6

32 Ìxe7 Ìxe7 33 b4 Íd5 34 Ëb6 e3! The decisive blow. White cannot handle

the opening of the position.

35 fxe3 Ëb2 36 e4 Íxe4 37 Îxe4 Ëxc1+ 38 Êf2 Ëd2+ 39 Îe2 Ëd4+ 40 Êf1 Îd8 41 a3 Ëf4+ 0-1

All in all, I would recommend playing the Scottish Championships to anyone, espe-cially if it’s held in such a beautiful place as Helensburgh.

Leading Scores: 1-3 Danny Gormally, Gawain Jones

(both ENG), Imre Hera (HUN) 7/9 4 Hjorvar Gretarsson (ISL) 6½ 5-11 Matthew Turner (SCO), Aleksa

Strikovic (SRB), Vlad-Victor Barnaure (ROM), Alejandro Hoffman (ARG), Ivan Farago (HUN), Lawrence Trent (ENG), Roddy McKay (SCO) 6

Scottish Champion: Roddy McKay (see last month’s Executive Editorial – ed.)

Experienced FIDE arbiter Alex McFarlane helped organised the Scottish Championship and was responsible for the pairings at both it and the British Championship which followed it.

www.chess.co.uk 23

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