Stephan Buchal (2202) - Spanton (1911)
King's Indian Attack/English Symmetrical/Réti
1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c5 4.0-0 g6 5.c4
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5...Bg7 6.cxd5 Nxd5 7.Nc3 0-0
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The position occurs 2,330 times in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database, with White scoring a below-par 51%. Stockfish18 calls the game completely equal, but Dragon1 gives White at least the better part of equality.
8.Nxd5!? Qxd5 8.d3 Nc6
This is the point at which, according to ChessBase, the opening switches from A34 to A38.
9.d3 Nc6 10.Be3!?
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10...Qd6
This is the commonest continuation in Mega26, followed by 10...Bd7, but the engines reckon Black should grab the proffered pawn with 10...Bxb2!? After 11.Rb1 Bf6!?, White has various moves, including offering a second pawn, temporarily, with 12.Nd4!?, when 12...Qxa2!? 13.Ra1!? Qb2 14.Nxc6 bxc6 15.Rb1!? Qa2 16.Bxc6 Bh3!? 17.Bxa8 Bxf1 18.Bf3 Bh3 19.Bxc5 is completely equal, according to the engines. But there are lots of alternatives along the way, including 14.Rb1 Qxb1!? 15.Qxb1 Nxd4, when Black has rook, knight and two pawns for a queen - imbalanced, but equal, according to the engines. Give the engines enough time, and Stockfish18, at least, rates 10...Bd7 on a par with 10...Bxb2!?, and it is not as though they reckon the text, which has been played by many grandmasters, is a mistake.
11.Rc1 Nd4
Grischuk and others have tried 11...b6?!, but 12.d4 is a strong answer.
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12.Bxd4!?
The engines prefer the main move, 12.Nxd4, when 12...cxd4 13.Bd2 is slightly better for White, according to the engines, which value White's pressure against Black's queenside more highly than Black's central space.
12...cxd4 13.Nd2
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13...Be6!?
This is the main move in Mega26, albeit from a small sample, but the engines come to more-or-less plump for another known move, 13...Qb4!? (the choice of an 1831, the lowest-rated player to reach the position in Mega26), but they also suggest apparent-novelties in 13...a5!? and 13...Bh6!?
*****
| Now White has the chance to capture the opponent's QNP, but should he? |
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14.Qa4!?
After 14.Bxb7 (there are no examples of this move in Mega26) Rab8 15.Bf3!? Rxb2 16.Nc4 Bxc4 17.Rxc4 Rxa2, White has enough for a pawn, but no more, according to the engines. They reckon the text is best.
14...Bd7
The engines prefer two apparent-novelties in 14...Bh6!? and 14...Rfb8!?
15.Qb3 Be6?!
The engines suggest another apparent-novelty in 15...Rab8.
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Yes, according to the engines, which give best-play as 16.Qxb7 Rab8 17.Qxa7 Rxb2 18.Ne4! Qb8 19.Qxe7, all of which occurred in Vlastimil Sejkora (2221) - Daniel Koval (2093), Tatranské Zruby (Slovakia) 2011, after which the engines reckon White had the upper hand (1-0, 36 moves).
My game went ...
16.Qa4 Bd7 17.Qb3 Be6?!
... at which point SB wrote down the move 18.Qa4 and announced he was claiming a draw by repetition.
½–½My third draw in my last 30 games.
















