| Bo. | 46 | England - 5 | Rtg | - | 32 | Germany (W) | Rtg | 0 : 0 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16.1 |
| 1897 | - | WFM |
| 1953 | ||||||
| 16.2 | CM |
| 1861 | - | WIM |
| 1982 | |||||
| 16.3 |
| 1908 | - | WFM |
| 1930 | ||||||
| 16.4 |
| 1859 | - | WFM |
| 1958 |
English Botvinnik v Dutch Leningrad
1.c4 f5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.g3 g6
Setting up the Leningrad Variation of the Dutch Defence.
4.Bg2 Bg7 5.d3 d6 6.e4
This, combined with the king's knight going to e2, constitutes the Botvinnik Setup in the English.
6...c6!?
This is second in popularity in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database to 6...Nc6. Both moves prepare ...e5, while leaving open the opportunity of recapturing on f5 with the light-square bishop if White plays exf5. However, very interesting is 6...e5 7.exf5 Bxf5!? 8.Bxb7 Nbd7 9.Bxa8 Qxa8, when, for the exchange and a pawn, Black has the bishop-pair, a lead in development, and light-square targets. Indeed, Stockfish17.1 and Dragon1 reckon White should play 9.Nf3!?, 9.Qc2 or 9.Be4.
7.Nge2 e5 8.0-0 0-0
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White has a little more space on the queenside, Black on the kingside, while the white king has arguably more pawn cover than its black counterpart, although perhaps this is not important, bearing in mind Black's kingside space edge. The engines give White a slight advantage, but dependent on a specific continuation.
9.h3
Best, according to the engines, is 9.exf5!?, meeting both 9...Bxf5 and 9...gxf5 with 10.d4. The text is marginally more common in Mega26, but the engines have a sharp response in mind.
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9...h6
The engines suggest 9...f4!? 10.gxf4 Nh5, when they reckon 11.fxe5 dxe5 gives Black at least a slight edge, eg 11.f3!? (apparently a novelty, but best, according to the engines) Be6 12.Be3 Rf7, with a steady build-up, relying on the weakness of White's kingside as long-term compensation for a pawn. So they suggest offering the pawn back immediately with 11.f5!?, claiming equal chances.
10.Be3
This allows 10...f4!?, with similar ideas to 9...f4!?, so the engines suggest an apparent-novelty in 10.exf5!?, meeting 10...Bxf5 with 11.d4, and 10...gxf5 with 11.f4 or 11.Be3, in each case claiming White is better.
10...Be6 11.exf5!?
This may also be a novelty. The engines fluctuate in their preference between it and the known-move 11.Qd2.
11...Bxf5
This loses a tempo over those lines in which White plays exf5 before the bishop moves. However, Dragon1 rates the text and 11...gxf5 as of roughly equal strength; Stockfish17.1 prefers the pawn recapture.
12.d4 Qe7
The engines suggest 12...h5!?, 12...Na6 or 12...Nbd7.
13.Qd2
Even stronger, according to the engines, are 13.Qb3 and 13.g4!?
13...Kh7 14.Rad1 Na6 15.Kh2
The engines still like g4.
15...Rad8
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16.d5
This comes to be the engines' top choice, at least for a while, but they also like 16.g4!? and 16.Kg1!?
16...cxd5 17.cxd5
The engines prefer 17.Nxd5, only playing cxd5 in the event of ...Nxd5.
17...b6
The engines give 17...Nc5!?, the idea being 18.b4 can be met by 18...Nce4 19.Nxe4 Nxe4, when 20.Bxe4!? Bxe4 21.Bxa7 is possibly too much of a price to pay for a pawn.
18.f4 e4?
Perhaps played to try to keep lines closed, but it allows the white king's knight to occupy the plum d4 square. The engines prefer 18...h5!? or 18...Nc5.
19.Nd4
The engines suggest 19...Rde8, but both 20.g4 and 20.Nc6 are very good for White.
19...Bd7 20.f5 gxf5 21.Rxf5!?
The engines agree sacrificing the exchange is marginally stronger than 21.Nxf5.
21...Bxf5 22.Nxf5 Qf7
The engines are unsure whether f7 or e5 is the best square for the queen.
23.Bxh6 Bxh6
The engines give 23...e3!?, but agree that, after 24.Bxe3, White's advantage is the equivalent of being more than a piece up.
24.Qxh6+ Kg8 25.Nxe4 Nxe4 26.Bxe4 Qf6 27.Qh5 Nc5!?
This may be Black's best try. The main alternative seems to be 27...Rd7, but 28.Nh6+ Kg7 29.Ng4! Qxb2+ 30.Kg1 is crushing, eg 30...Rff7 (30...Rdf7? 31.Qh7#) 31.Qh6+ Kg8 32.Bh7+! Rxh7 33.Nf6+ Qxf6 (forced) 34.Qxf6 leaves White with queen, pawn and a continuing attack for rook and knight.
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28.Nh6+
Not the winning move, but this spoils nothing as, after ....
28...Kg7 29.Nf5+ Kg8
... the same position is reached, without Black having a chance to vary.
30.Bc2!
Preserving the bishop, and ensuring Black cannot capture on b2 with check.
30...Rde8
All moves lose.
31.Rd4
Not the only winning continuation.
31...Rf7 32.Nh6+ Kf8
Worth a try is 32...Qxh6!? as 33.Qxh6? concedes a draw to 33...Re2+ 34.Kg1 Re1+ 35.Kg2 Re2+ etc. However, 33.Rg4+ Qg7 (33...Rg7? 34.Qxe8#) 34.Rxg7+ Kxg7 35.h4! leaves White with queen, bishop and two pawns against two rooks and a knight, and with much the safer king, adding up to an advantage worth more than a rook (much more than a rook, according to Dragon1).
33.Rf4 1-0
Team Result
Freeman = Malachowski
Stokes 1-0 Wagner-Michel
Spanton 1-0 Skibbe
Marshall 0-1 Kierzek
England 5 2.5-1.5 Germany Women