Joe Gallagher, Beating The Anti-Sicilians
BEAU CHESS - the post-work workings-out of a chess amateur
I begin this blog after getting back into league chess following many years' absence due to work. My post-job status also means I am able to play more tournament chess. My new club in London is Battersea and my first game for them is on Thursday September 14, 2017. I start with a Fide rating of 1858, an ECF grade of 169 (=1968 elo) and an ICCF correspondence rating of 2267. My current Fide is 1951, my ECF is 1954 and my ICCF is 2369.
Tuesday, 30 June 2026
Chess Tip Of The Day 450
Anyone who is not a full-time chess player will have great difficulty in mastering the Open Sicilian.
Lessons From Bischofsgrün VIII
I HAVE been asked why, if I dislike draws so much, did I acquiesce to an exchange of queens in the following position in round eight, where I was White against Udo Waltenberger (2033).
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The main, purely chess arguments, for White playing on are that White has the bishop-pair and more space in the centre.
The main, purely chess arguments, for White playing on are that White has the bishop-pair and more space in the centre.
But, apart from the fact that Black's knight has a strong outpost, and the bishops do not have great diagonals to work on, there is another major consideration.
This is that to avoid a draw by by keeping queens on would mean play remains very much in the middlegame, and in the middlegame a kingside majority (assuming both sides have castled short) is a potent force.
So. in the diagram, 22.Qf2, for example, could be answered by 22...f5, when Black is already better, both in engine terms and in practical human play.
LESSON: to paraphrase Cecil Purdy, taking risks to avoid a sterile draw against a higher-rated opponent is not a paying proposition.
Monday, 29 June 2026
Chess Tip Of The Day 449
4.Bd2 (in the Nimzo-Indian) has been heavily slagged off in the popular press. The criticism runs along the lines of "this move is just too passive." My opinion is that any move which serves a useful purpose (in this case unpinning) must be treated with some respect.
John Emms, Easy Guide To The Nimzo-Indian
John Emms, Easy Guide To The Nimzo-Indian
Lessons From Bischofsgrün VI & VII
IN round six I was White against Dieter Bauer (1787), and in round seven I was Black against Manfred Herbold (2075).
In the English game, Black has one developed piece, a knight, against White's three - a bishop and two knights.
The openings were very different - an English and a Sicilian Grand Prix Attack - but there was something similar about Black's position in both games after 10 moves.
| Black has just captured on c4 in the English game |
| Black has just pushed the e pawn in the Sicilian game |
In the Sicilian game, Black has one developed piece, a bishop, against White's, arguably, four - both rooks and both knights, and White has castled.
In both games it is White to move, so Black's lack of development is even starker.
But there is a huge difference in how Stockfish18 and Dragon1 evaluate the positions.
In the first diagram, White is winning, according to the engines, after the game's 11.0-0, and after 11.Nxc6!
In the second diagram, again according to the engines, White has the normal slight edge one associates with moving first.
Why the difference, especially in view of the discrepancy in development being greater in the second diagram, and White having a doubled and vulnerable pawn in the first diagram?
The answer is that in the first diagram, lines have been opened in the centre, which makes it easier for pieces to attack the opponent's position in general, and the opponent's king in particular.
In the second diagram, while the centre is not closed, it is definitely not open either, with both sides having eight connected pawns, and none in contact with enemy pawns.
LESSON: the importance of development increases dramatically as lines are opened.
Sunday, 28 June 2026
Lessons From Bischofsgrün V
MY round-five game, in which I was Black against Rolf Zens (1884), featured an instructive moment as the pressure built on my opponent's position.
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The move stops Ng5, and makes ...e4 a major threat.
Indeed, if it were Black to move in the diagram, Stockfish18 and Dragon1 reckon 21...e4 would give Black an advantage worth almost a minor piece, one of the points being that not only does the move attack the white knight, it threatens ...exd3 with ...Bxc4 to come.
Probably best is 21.Rac1, reinforcing c4, although the 3ngines agree Black is positionally winning.
The game saw 21.Ng1, which is not the most ridiculous move on the board as, although the knight is out of play on the back rank, White now has a pawn and three pieces covering the e4 square.
But the move did not achieve what was presumably its primary purpose (we did not have a postmortem), as I played 21...e4! anyway.
LESSON: when making a retrograde move that you feel is the only way to stop an opponent's dangerous continuation, you must be certain the move actually achieves its purpose.
Saturday, 27 June 2026
Lessons From Bischofsgrün IV
IN round four, where I was White against Stef van Kesteren (1861), I reached the following lost rook-and-minor-piece ending.
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Black is a pawn up, and has the better minor piece for play on an open board with pawns on both wings, especially when rooks are present.
Stockfish18 and Dragon1 reckon a reasonable consolidating move, such as 26...f6 or 26...Rfd8, leaves Black with a winning advantage worth about two pawns.
Naturally, there would still be a long way to go before the advantage could be turned into victory, but one way to virtually rule out winning chances was to play the game's 26...Bxd6?
After 27.Rxd6, the activity of the rook on the sixth rank means Black has at best a slight edge (Dragon1), or effectively no edge at all (Stockfish18 fluctuates, but eventually more-or-less settles on Black's advantage being worth a tenth of a pawn).
I was able to draw the game without any trouble.
LESSON: almost the last thing you want to do when playing for a win in an endgame is to swop off into a rook-and-pawn ending.
Friday, 26 June 2026
Lessons From Bischofsgrün III
IN my round-three game, where I was Black against Fide master Jochen Bruch (2115), my opponent offered a draw in the following position.
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I am a pawn up and have two passed pawns, so it did not take me long to play 33...Kxf7, confident that, barring a catastrophic mistake, I would either win or have to settle for a draw.
I should have remembered that in rook-and-bishop endings with opposite-colour bishops, what counts more than the odd pawn is the activity of the bishops.
In the diagram, White has a dark-square bishop, anchored on d4 and bearing down on g7, while the black light-square bishop is 'loose', albeit not immediately endangered, and impeded by the black pawn on e4.
If I had seriously considered such matters, I would not have been so surprised after my defeat to discover the position in the diagram is completely equal, according to Stockfish18 and Dragon1.
LESSON: Cecil Purdy put it rather more succinctly, if with a dash of hyperbole: "In endings with bishops of opposite colour, material means NOTHING, position EVERYTHING."
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Lessons From Bischofsgrün II
THE following position was reached after six moves of my round-two game, in which I was White against Peter Babrikowski (2155).
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The position is reached 1,429 times in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database, with most games (1,240) continuing with 7.Be2 or 7.Be3, both of which score an excellent 65%
I preferred 7.Bg5, which occurs just 40 times, and scores a miserable 35%.
One of the problems with my move in such positions is that after the reply 7...Be7, White has to be constantly on the alert for tricks based on the move ...Nxe4.
Indeed, if White were to meet 7...Be7 with 8.b3, Black can already play 8...Nxe4!?, eg 9.Nxe4 Bxg5 10.Nxc6! (an only-move, according to the engines) bxc6 11.Nxg5 Qa5+! 12.b4! (12.Qd2? Qe5+) Qxg5 13.Qxd6 Bb7, with what the engines reckon is an equal position.
| I was aware of the danger, and I am sure my opponent was too, but that did not stop me reaching the following position, having just played 13.f3?! |
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This is a case where ...Nxe4 does not just equalise, but gives Black at least a slight edge, eg 13...Nxe4! 14.Bxe7 Nxc3!? 15.bxc3 Qxe7 16.Qxd6 Qg5 leaves Black with much the better pawn-structure, as well as the better bishop, and Black has the upper hand (Stockfish18) or is even winning (Dragon1).
White can improve with 14.Nxe4 Bxg5 15.Nxg5 Qxg5 16.Qxd6, but 16...Rfd8 leaves Black with the better bishop, and what the engines reckon is a slight plus.
LESSON: when White has a pawn on e4, and Black has a knight on f6, the move Bg5 can open White to surprise tactical shots if Black has a bishop-queen battery on e7 and d8.
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
League Chess
GOT home yesterday afternoon in time to play last night on board five (of eight) for Battersea against Kings Head in London League Division Two.
Spanton (1954) - Andrew Gilfillan (2080)
Sicilian Bb5(+)
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.Qe2!?
The commonest moves in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database are 4.e5, 4.Bxc6 and especially 4.Nc3.
4...g6 5.c3 Bg7 6.d4 cxd4 7.cxd4 0-0 8.Nc3 d6 9.0-0
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White has more space in the centre, and that is enough for a slight edge, according to Dragon1, although Stockfish18 is less sure.
9...Bg4 10.Be3 Nd7!?
The engines like this.
11.Rfd1
11.Rad1!? is marginally preferred by the engines.
11...e5!?
Grandmasters have played 11...a6 or 11...Rc8, but the text is the engines' choice.
12.Bxc6!? bxc6 13.h3 Bxf3 14.Qxf3 f5!
This looks bad at first glance, but after ...
15.exf5
... Black has a zwischenzug that grabs space in the centre.
15...d5 16.dxe5 Rxf5 17.Qe2 Nxe5
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18.f4?
The position is equal after 18.Qa6!? or 18.Rac1, according to the engines.
18...Nc4 19.Bd4
Perhaps the engines' 19.Bc5!? is best, but 19...Qe8!? seems a strong reply, eg 20.Qf2 can be met by 20...g5 or 20...Qb8.
19...Bxd4+ 20.Rxd4 Qb6 21.Qf2 Qxb2 22.Qxb2 Nxb2
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Black has more pawn islands, but Black's extra pawn and connected passers add up to a winning advantage, according to the engines.
23.Re1 Nc4 24.Re6 Rc8 25.g4!? Rf7
The engines reckon 25...Rff8 is better.
26.Kg2 Rb7?!
The engines like 26...Kf8, intending ...Re7.
27.f5 Rb2+ 28.Kg3 Rc2 29.Ne2!?
Perhaps 29.Rd3 is better.
29...Kf7?!
The engines reckon Black has at least a slight edge after 29...Nd2!?
30.Rf4?
30.Rd3!? equalises, according to the engines, eg 30...Rxa2 31.Nd4 gxf5 32.gxf5 Re8!? 39.Rxe8 Kxe8 40.Nxc6 Ra6 41.Nb4 Ra3 42.Rxa3 Nxa3 43.Nxd5.
30...g5!? 31.Rf3 Nd2
Even stronger may be 31...c5!?
32.Ra3 Ne4+ 33.Kf3 Rc7 34.Ra6??
Black is only slightly better after 34.Nd4 or 34.Ke3, according to the engines.
34...Nc5
White is lost. The game finished:
35.Raxc6 Nxe6 36.fxe6+ Ke7 0-1
Kings Head won the match 6.5-1.5.
My Battersea Season 2025-6
Date Event Colour Rating Opp's Rating Score Season's Perf
16/9/25 CLL W 1936 1952 0 1552
18/9/25 CLL W 1936 1797 = 1675
16/10/25 CLL W 1889 2047 0 1665
23/10/25 CLL B 1889 1823 1 1805
18/11/25 LL W 1891 1980 = 1840
20/11/25 CLL W 1891 1866 1 1911
25/11/25 BCC B 1891 1817 1 1955
9/12/25 LL W 1904 1982 1 2008
16/12/25 LL B 1904 2046 0 1968
18/12/25 CLL B 1904 2066 1 2018
6/1/26 CLL W 1929 2150 = 2066
7/1/26 LL W 1929 1971 = 2058
8/1/26 CLL B 1929 1800? = 2038
13/1/26 LL B 1929 2035 1 2067
27/1/26 LL B 1929 2089 0 2041
29/1/26 CLL B 1929 1882 = 2031
3/2/26 BCC W 1928 1836 1 2043
12/2/26 CDL B 1928 1890 1 2057
25/2/26 LL B 1928 1863 = 2047
26/2/26 CLL B 1928 2015 0 2025
3/3/26 CDL B 1914 1976 1 2043
24/3/26 BCC W 1921 1780 1 2049
26/3/26 CLL B 1921 1942 = 2045
31/3/26 CDL B 1921 2091 0 2030
7/4/26 BCC B 1938 1505* 1 2030
9/4/26 CLL W 1938 2012 = 2029
30/4/26 CLL W 1938 2285 0 2023
7/5/26 CLL W 1939 2007 1 2037
9/6/26 LL B 1954 2059 0 2024
23/6/26 LL W 1954 2080 0 2012
CLL: Central London League
LL: London League
BCC: Battersea club championship
CDL: Croydon & District League
I also have a win-by-default in the Central London League
*A win against a 1505 counts as a 1905 performance, so I have excluded this game from calculating my season's performance as it would lower my average despite me winning.
Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Chess Tip Of The Day 443
If I repeat an opening variation that my opponent has lost badly against, I'll gain an immediate psychological advantage. He will have to confront not only my moves, but also his painful memories.
Ján Markoš, The Secret Ingredient To Winning Chess
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