King's Indian Attack/Sicilian Closed
1.e4 c5 2.d3!? Nc6 3.Nf3 g6 4.g3 Bg7 5.c3!? d5 6.Nbd2 e5 7.Bg2 Nge7
| Perhaps it is a matter of taste whether the opening is classified as a King's Indian Attack or the Closed Variation of the Sicilian |
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If pressed to choose, I would pick the former, but would not be surprised to be called wrong. ChessBase muddies the water further by opting for "B30: Sicilian: 2...Nc6 3 Bb5, lines without ...g6," which is certainly not correct.
8.0-0 0-0
8.0-0 0-0
| Getting the name right would be nice, but evaluating the position correctly is more important, so how would you assess matters now both sides have castled? |
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Black has more space, which may be why Stockfish17.1 gives Black the better part of equality. Dragon1 has the position as almost completely equal.
9.h3!?
This prevents the pinning ...Bg4, but that does not look dangerous, and also prepares an advance of the g pawn, but the engines prefer 9.exd5 or 9.a3!?
9...h6!?
But this h-pawn push, which prepares ...Be6 without allowing the reply Ng5, is the top choice of the engines.
10.Ne1!?
Probably a novelty. The engines prefer the known 10.Re1, which is more normal in the KIA.
10...Be6 11.f4 Qd7 12.Kh2 Rad8
| The engines reckon Black has a positionally won game, but I was not expecting my opponent to resign and time soon |
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13.Qe2 Rfe8
Black has a large lead in development, but the position, while not closed, is not open either.
14.Nb3 b6 15.Be3 a5 16.Nc2 a4 17.Nd2
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17...d4
Gaining space, but closing the centre. The engines prefer 17...exf4 and especially 17...f5!?, both of which are likely to lead to more lines opening.
18.cxd4 cxd4 19.Bg1 b5 20.Nf3 f6
The engines still like ...exf4 and especially ...f5.
21.a3
White would surely have had to play this sooner or later as otherwise the white queen's rook could not move.
21...Rc8 22.g4 g5!?
This is Stockfish17.1's top choice (Drgaon1 prefers 22...exf4). The idea is to oblige White to push on with the f pawn, and so make it more difficult to open lines on the kingside.
23.f5 Bf7 24.Qd2 Qa7 25.h4 Na5 26.Rae1 Nb3 27.Qe2 Bf8 28.Na1 Rc6 29.Nxb3 Bxb3
Stockfish17.1 marginally prefers 29...axb3. Dragon1 fluctuates between the two moves, before coming down in favour of the text.
30.Rc1 Rec8 31.Rxc6 Rxc6 32.hxg5 Rc2 33.Qe1 hxg5 34.Rf2 Qc7 35.Rxc2 Qxc2 36.Qd2 Qc7?!
The engines much prefer 36...Nc6 or 36...Qxd2, although, even after the text, they still reckon Black has a positionally won game.
37.Nxg5!?
The engines suggest 37.Kh3!?, 37.Ne1, 37.Bf1 or 37.Bh3, but they do not out-and-out condemn the text either.
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37...Bh6!
This is best, although it leaves Black a pawn down. Also good is Stockfish17.1's second choice, 37...Nxf5, provided Black sees the same ...Bh6 idea. Dragon1's second choice, 37...Qc2, is also probably winning.
38.Ne6 Bxd2 39.Nxc7
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Black's bishops are more active than White's, and Black will be able to create an advanced passed pawn, against which White's pieces are not well-placed to contend, whereas Black's king is ideally situated to deal with White's extra kingside pawn.
39...Bc1?
But this is the wrong way to go about matters. After 39...b4 40.axb4 Bc1!, White is helpless, eg 41.Nb5 Bxb2 42.Bf2 a3 43.Nxa3 Bxa3, when Black's extra piece should prevail easily.
40.Nxb5 Bxb2 41.Bf2 Bd1!?
Possibly better is 41...Bc1 or 41...Kg7, in each case with full compensation for a pawn, according to the engines. They do not like the text when it is inputted, and for quite a few moves afterwards, but later judge that it is OK.
42.Bh4 Be2 43.Bxf6 Nc6
Not 43...Bxd3?? 44.Bxe7 Bxb5 45.g5, and if 45...d3, then simply 46.Bf3.
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44.Na7?
Also losing is 44.g5? Bxd3 45.Nc7 Bxa3, and 44.Bg5? Bxd3 45.Nc7 Bxa3, and 44.Kg3? Bxd3 45.Nc7 Bxa3.
But the engines' 44.Kg1! is another story, eg 44...Bxd3? 45.Bf1! Bxe4 46.Bc4+ Kf8 47.Bg5! Na5 48.Be6 Nb7 49.f6 Bg6 50.Bh6+ Ke8 51.Bd5 Nd8 52.Nd6+ Kd7 53.Nc4 Bc3 54.Nxe5+ Kd6 55.f7, when White wins a piece.
So 44.Kg1! should be met with 44...Bc1!, eg 45.Bf1 Be3+ 46.Kg2 Bxg4, when the engines reckon Black has enough activity to make up for a being a pawn down.
44...Nxa7 45.Bxe5 Bxd3 46.Bd6 Be2 47.e5
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47...d3??
This turns an advantage worth +3.00, or possibly more, into a disadvantage worth more than -7.00. Instead, Black wins by attacking the white dark-square bishop with 47...Nb5 or 47..Nc8, or by taking control of the g8-a2 diagonal with 47...Bc4.
48.Bd5+ Kh7
Even worse is 48...Kg7? as that allows 49.f6+ with tempo.
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49.Bc4??
Both 49.f6 and 49.Be4 win without any trouble.
49...Nc8 50.Kg3?
This does not help, but White should lose anyway after the engines' top choice, 50.Bc7, eg 50...Bxa3 51.g5 Bc1 52.g6+ Kh6 53.Kg2 Bf4 54.Kf2 Bg4! 55.Bxd3 a3 56.Bb1 Bxf5! 57.Ba2 Kxg6, after which Black will win White's last pawn, and so be up knight and pawn. White will eventually have to give up a piece for the a pawn, although Black may have to show how to win with king, bishop and knight versus king.
50...Nxd6 51.exd6 Be5+ 52.Kf2 Bxd6 53.g5 Bxa3 54.Ke3!?
This is Stockfish17.1's top choice, which means White's position is completely hopeless.
54...Bc1+ 55.Kd4 Bxg5 0-1


