Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Lessons From Bregenz III

I HAVE had the following position three times in my games.
In each case it arose after the moves 1.e4 d5 2.d4!? exd4 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.f3 Bf5!? 5.g4 Bg6 6.g5 Nd5 7.Nxe4 e6
I first had it at Guernsey in 2005, when I continued 8.Nh3!?, which was apparently a novelty, although ChessBase's 2026 Mega database has two subsequent games with the same continuation.
According to my notes, my opponent, Dutchman Peter Vorstermans (1934), suggested 8.c4, which I noted was also recommended by Gary Lane in his 2003 book Blackmar-Diemer Gambit.
I also noted that my main engines at the time, which I am pretty sure were Hiarcs1.5a and Deep Fritz7, "love 8...Bb4+, but Lane gives a ?, continuing 9.Ke2!"
There is little doubt that Lane, and presumably Vorstermans, were ahead of contemporary engines, as modern engines, eg Stockfish18 and Dragon1, flash red when ...Bb4+ is inputted. agreeing that the best reply is Ke2.
I next had the diagram position in round one at Bregenz, where I again continued 8.Nh3!?, having no recollection of the Guernsey game.
That is understandable, since there are almost 21 years and more than 3,000 games between the two encounters, although I do find it surprising, and a little disappointing, that my calculations came to the same apparently sub-optimal solution in both cases.
The third time I had the diagram position was in round three at Bregenz, where I continued 8.Ne2!?, which is again almost certainly sub-optimal, showing how little I had taken from my experience two rounds earlier.
I probably should have chosen one of the two moves liked by Stockfish18 and Dragon1, namely 8.c4 (known since at least a 1947 game of Emil Diemer's - the game is not in Mega26), and 8.h4 (the earliest encounter in Mega26 being a a 1997 game between two unrateds).
LESSON: it is good to look at your games, but it is so much better to study them.

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Chess Tip Of The Day 408

Blogger update on feeder-widget fault: "Unfortunately, this issue hasn't been fixed for everyone yet. The team is still working on it."

The main rationale behind the English is to play either in the centre or on the queenside, but in both cases utilising the control of d5 as a focal point upon which to build one's position.
Nigel Povah, How To Play The English Opening

Lessons From Bregenz II

IN round two of the Bodensee Seniors, in which I was Black against Olaf Hilbig (2026), the following position was reached after White's 18th move.
White has just captured on e5
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After 18...Bxc4 19.Qxc4 Qd5, the game is equal, but I played the active 18...Bc5??, only to realise with horror that White has 19.Ba6!?, after which Black's light-square bishop cannot be saved.
LESSON: when a  piece has left the back rank, but nevertheless has very few squares to which it can safely move, alarm bells should start ringing. Pieces, like people, need breathing room.

Monday, 18 May 2026

Chess Tip Of The Day 407

Blogger were supposed to have sorted the problem with their feeder widget more than a week ago, but perhaps this will be the week it will be fixed.

The queen-and-knight combination is often referred to as the deadliest attacking force in chess. The two pieces work so well together because their differing movements complement each other perfectly.
John Emms, Starting Out: The Scotch Game

Lessons From Bregenz

IN round one of the Bodensee Seniors I was White against Kurt Vogel (1643).
The game began as a Scandinavian, 1.e4 d5, but I mixed things up by switching into the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit with 2.d4!?
There are 2,034 examples of this transpositional trick in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database, although, on the face of it, the trick rebounds on White as 2.d4!? scores 48%, seven percentage points lower than the mainline 2.exd5.
Then again, of all the moves after 1.e4 d5 that appear at least 100 times in Mega26, 2.d4!? records the second-highest score, so it has something going for it.
Not only that, but it has been played by grandmasters, although German GM Matthias Wahls, in a 1997 article for ChessBase, wrote: "The vast majority of Scandinavian Defence supporters are aware of the possibility of becoming involved in the BDG."
He furthered this by giving d4 a question mark, explaining that he had been taught a pawn is worth "roughly two to three tempi," whereas in the BDG White "only receives a single tempo for the sacrifice."
With all due respect, I am not sure Wahls is right about this.
After 2...dxe4 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.f3 exf3 5.Nxf3, the following position is reached 3,407 times in Mega26.
It is Black to move, but I am showing the board from White's viewpoint
Black has accepted the sacrifice by taking on f3 - until then it was still possible to decline the gambit, for example by 4...e3 (585 examples in Mega26).
After Nxf3, White has developed two pieces, against Black's one, and has opened diagonals for both white bishops, whereas Black has yet to open a diagonal for the f8 bishop.
I make that an advantage of two development tempi, and it will be three once White castles kingside, as the king's rook will land on the half-open f file.
True, it is Black to move, but even so, by my reckoning, White has the "roughly two to three tempi" that Wahls was taught is necessary for a positional pawn sacrifice.
Then again, show the diagram position to Stockfish18 and Dragon1, and they reckon Black has the upper hand, which rather supports Wahls' opinion.
Black should continue, according to the engines, with 5...c6, 5...Bf5 or 5...g6!? The last move is interesting as it was Diemer's choice when Bogoljubow played the gambit against him in 1952 at Baden-Baden. ChessBase gives the game as a White win, but Black made the last move, the final position is dead drawn, and no explanation is given as to what happened, so it is anyone's guess as to how the game ended.
Be that as it may, the main line in Mega26 runs 5...Bg4 6.h3 Bh5 (6...Bxf3 is also popular) 7.g4!? Bg6 8.Ne5 e6 9.Bg2 c6, reaching the following position.
White has developed three pieces, including a knight to the fifth rank, which, according to Tarrasch, counts as two development tempi
Black has developed two pieces, but it is White to move, and White can still castle kingside, developing the king's rook to a half-open file. Alternatively, White might castle long, in which case the queen's rook
will be developed to a half-closed file - one on which the black queen currently resides.
Again White seems to be getting "roughly two to three tempi" for a pawn.
Naturally, counting tempi is far from being the only way to evaluate opening play, and, in the diagram, after 6...c6, White has more space in the centre and on the kingside, but also a lot of holes.
This time the engines have a higher regard for White's play, rating the position as giving equal chances (Stockfish18) or at best giving Black a slight edge (Dragon1).
LESSON: as is often the case in chess, there is plenty of room for divergence of opinion, and the objective merits of a move, especially if it involves a gambit, may be very different from the practical results.

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Chess Tip Of The Day 406

After a couple of days of working, Blogger's feeder widget is again malfunctioning.

A square is only weak if the opponent can make good use of it.
Edmar Mednis, Practical Middlegame Tips

Summing Up Bregenz

MY score of +3=1-3 in the Bodensee Seniors, for men 60+ and women 55+, lost 23.6 Fide elo.
Lake Constance - cygnets hitching a ride on Mum's back

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Bregenz Seniors Round Seven

Overnight hail and snow
FACED a Belgian.

Bernard Logie (1822) - Spanton (1911)
Sicilian Hyper-Accelerated Dragon
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 g6 3.c3 d5 4.e5!?
Stockfish18 and Dragon1 prefer this over the more popular 4.exd5, and it scores five percentage points better in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database.
4...Nc6 5.d4 Bg7
This natural-looking move may be a little slow; the engines prefer 5...Bg4 or 5...cxd4.
6.Bb5!? Ob6!?
How should White proceed?
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7.Bxc6+!?
Giving up White's good bishop is the top choice of the engines.
7...bxc6
The engines reckon the less popular 7...Qxc6!? is better.
8.0-0 e6?!
The engines suggest an apparent-novelty in 8...f6!?
9.Na3 Ne7 10.Nc2 0-0
Now both sides have castled, how would you assess the position?
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White's central space advantage is much more important than Black's bishop-pair, according to the engines, and they reckon White has a positionally won game.
11.b4
The engines suggest 11.b3.
11...c4?!
Reducing the light-square bishop to a sorry looking piece,
12.a4
BL pressed the clock and immediately offered a draw.
12...Nf5 13.a5 Qc7 14.g4!?
This is the top choice of Stockfish18, and is also liked by Dragon1, although the latter marginally prefers 14.Bf4.
14...Ne7 15.g5!?
Again Stockfish18 approves; Dragon1 suggests 15.h4 or 15.Qe2.
15...Nf5 16.Ne3!? Nxe3
Otherwise White has 17.Ng4.
17.Bxe3 Ba6 18.Re1 Rfd8 19.Kg2 Rab8 20.Qc2 Bb5 21.h4
White I was thinking about my next move, BL offered a draw, commenting that he was tired
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White's advantage is worth about two pawns, according to the engines, but in human terms the advantage is surely worth much more as White can build up at leisure on the kingside, safe in the knowledge that any possible counterplay by Black will involve giving up a pawn for nebulous compensation.
½–½
This game ended a sequence for me of 11 without a draw, and I have had just two draws in my last 21 games.

Friday, 15 May 2026

Bregenz Seniors Round Six

FACED a Swiss.

Spanton (1911) - Reinhard Döserich (1734)
Caro-Kann Tartakower
1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 dxe4 4.Nxe4 Nf6 5.Nxf6+ exf6 6.Be3!? Bd6 7.Bd3 Be6
The main move in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database is 7...0-0.
8.Ne2!? Nd7!?
Stockfish18 and Dragon1 marginally prefer this over the more popular 8...0-0.
9.Nf4!?
How should Black proceed?
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9...Qc7?
Spanton (1982) - Brian Hewson (2062), British 65+ Championship (Liverpool) 2025, went 9...Bxf4!? 10.Bxf4 Qb6 11.0-0!? Qxd4 12.Qd2 Ne5!, with advantage to Black, according to the engines (0-1, 72 moves). However, they reckon 11.Be3!? Qxb2 12.0-0 improves, awarding White full compensation for a pawn.
Also better than the text is 9...Bf5!?, the idea being 10.Bxf5 can be met by 10...Qa5+ and 11...Qxd5.
10.Nxe6 fxe6 11.Qh5+ Ke7 12.0-0-0
With both sides having connected rooks, how would you assess the position?
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White's safer king and bishop-pair add up to a positionally won game, according to the engines.
12...Rae8 13.Rhe1 Kd8!?
The queenside is the safest place for the black king.
14.Kb1 g6 15.Qh3 Nb6 16.Bd2!? Qf7 17.c4 Bc7 18.Bc3
The engines like 18.a4!?, one point being 18...Nxa4? loses to 19.c5!?
18...Kc8!?
This is the engines' top choice.
19.b3 Kb8!?
And again moving the king is engine-approved.
20.Qf3 Rhf8 21.a4!? Nd7 22.a5
The engines suggest 22.c5!?, or 22.Bb4 and then c5.
22...a6
The engines reckon Black can ignore White's advancing a pawn in favour of counterplay in the centre, eg 22...e5!? 23.d5 cxd5 24.Qxd5!? Qxd5 25.cxd5 Bd6, assessing Black's position as only slightly worse. If, instead of pushing the d pawn, White tries 23.a6, the engines give 23...exd4 24.Bxd4 Ne5, after which White loses the bishop-pair, and the white king's position is looking airy.
23.Bb4
How should Black respond?
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23...Rg8
The engines suggest sacrificing the exchange with 23...e5!? 24.Bxf8 Qxf8, eg 25.Bc2 Qa3 26.Re2 f5!? 27.Qc3 e4, after which Black will probably pick up the a5 pawn at some stage, and have what is probably the safer king in a position with opposite-colour bishops. The engines give White a slight edge, but the position is double-edged and difficult to play for both sides.
24.Be4 Ka7
The engines like 24...Kc8!? or 24...g5!?, but give White at least the upper hand.
How should White proceed?
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25.Bxc6! bxc6
The engines reckon it is better not to take the bishop, but then Black is a pawn down and with a bad position.
26.Qxc6 Rc8?!
Best, according to the engines, is something like 26...Bf4 27.d5 exd5 28.Rxe8 Qxe8 29.Qxd5, but Black is losing either the knight or the bishop, after which White will be two pawns up and with a continuing attack.
27.Rxe6 1-0

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Bregenz Seniors Round Five

FACED a Swiss.

Erich Kampenhuber (1675) - Spanton (1911)
English
1.c4 e6 2.Nc3 d5 3.g3?!
There are 188 examples of this move in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database, including by a player rated over 2600, albeit at blitz, but letting Black gain space with tempo is at least questionable.
3...d4
This is better than 3..Nf6, although the latter is almost three times more common.
4.Nb5
Not 4.Ne4?? f5.
4...a6 5.Na3 Bc5!?
Stockfish18 and Dragon1 like 5...c5 and 5...e5, but the text, which is apparently a novelty, was played with the following sequence in mind.
6.b3!? d3!?
White to play and lose
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7.exd3??
Black is better, but not winning, after 7.Bb2 or 7.Nf3.
7...Qf6 0-1