Siegmund Kolthoff (2074) - Spanton (1911)Maróczy Bind
1.Nf3 c5 2.e4 g6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nc6 5.c4 Bg7 6.Be3 Bf6 7.Nc3 d6 8.Be2 0-0 9.0-0
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| This position occurs 20,723 times in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database |
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White's space advantage gives at least a slight edge, according to Stockfish18 and Dragon1.
9...Bd7 10.h3!?
Dragon1 prefers the commonest continuation, 10.Qd2, when the main line in Mega26 runs 10...Nxd4 11.Bxd4 Bc6 12.f3 a5!? 13.b3 Nd7 14.Be3!? Nc5 15.Rab1!? Qb6!? 16.Rfc1, with a slight edge for White, according to both engines.
Stockfish18 likes keeping pieces on the board with 10.Nc2!?, when the main line in Mega26 goes 10...Rc8 11.f3 a6 12.Qd2 Ne5!? 13.b3 (13.Na3!? is a popular alternative) b5!? (the almost equally popular 13...Qc7?! is a mistake, according to the engines, which reckon several moves, including 14.a4!?, give White the upper hand) 14.cxb5 Qc7 15.Bd4, leaving White with at least a slight edge after 15...axb5, according to the engines. But they reckon 15...Bxb5!?, which does not appear in Mega26, more-or-less equalises.
10...Nxd4 11.Bxd4 Bc6 12.Qc2!?
In 1904, in what is generally regarded as the first example of what came to be called the Maróczy Bind, the move 12.Qd3 was played against Geza Maróczy. Two years later, when Maróczy had the same position as White, he preferred 12.Bf3!? Today the text is most popular, perhaps not surprisingly - it scores 70% in Mega26.
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| How should Black respond? |
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12...Nd7!?
The engines prefer the mainline 12...a5!?
13.Bxg7
Tiviakov reckons an exchange of dark-square bishops in the Maróczy Bind nearly always favours Black, but this position may be an exception - at least, the engines reckon it is. Note that 13.Be3 does not lose a pawn, as 13...Bxc3?! 14.Qxc3 Bxe4? runs into 15.Bh6, when 15...Nf6 16.Bxf8 gives White a large advantage.
13...Kxg7
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| How should White proceed? |
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14.Rad1
SK was upset with himself in the postmortem for not having played 14.b4!?, which is indeed the engines' top choice. Black's best reply is perhaps 14...b6 (a 2331 lost a blitz game with 14...a6?? 15.b5), which is not the sort of move Black normally plays in the Maróczy Bind. However, the text is also popular, and gives White at least a slight edge, according to the engines.
14...a5 15.f4 Qb6+ 16.Kh1!? a4!? 17.Bg4 Nc5 18.Bf3
Possibly a novelty. Olga Badelka (2427) - Kamil Szadkowski (2278) Chess.com Blitz 2020, went 18.e5!? dxe5 19.fxe5 Rfd8?! 20.Nd5 Bxd5 21.cxd5, with a positionally won game for White, according to the engines (1-0, 30 moves). However, they reckon Black had several equalising moves in reply to19.fxe5, including 19...e6 and 19...Qb4.
18...Qb4 19.Ne2
SK was highly critical of this in the postmortem, but the engines are fine with it. although their top choice is probably 19.Be2 or 19.Nd5.
19...Ra6!? 20.Nd4 Rb6 21.Rf2 e5!?
Seeking to win the d4 square for Black's knight.
22.Nxc6
Also possible is 22.a3!? Qa5 23.Ne2, but the engines prefer the text.
22...Rxc6 23.f5 Nd7 24.a3!?
The engines suggest 24.b3 or 24.Be2.
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| What should Black play? |
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24...Qb6
The engines reckon 24...Qxc4 25.Qxc4 Rxc4 26.Rxd6 Nc5 gives Black at least a slight edge.
25.Rfd2
Not 25.Qxa4?? Qxf2.
25...Nc5 26.Rd5
SK offered a draw.
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| Objectively, should Black play on? |
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Black has the better minor piece and pressure against b2 and c4. White has pressure against d6 and, arguably, the less-threatened king, but that still leaves Black with at least a slight edge, according to the engines.
26...f6!?
If 26...Rfc8, White has 27.Qd2, and if 27...Nb3. then 28.f6+!, when 28...Kxf6?! leaves Black in big trouble after 29.Qh6. So Black should almost certainly play 28...Kh8, when 29.Qh6 Rg8 is completely equal, according to the engines.
However, instead of the text, Black can try 26...Nb3, when best-play may run 27.Qc3 f6 28.fxg6 hxg6 29.Bg4 Qc7 30.Qg3!? Nd4 31.Bh5!? g5 32.Qd3, with an imbalanced position, although the engines reckon Black is slightly better.
27.Qf2 Qa6 28.h4
Dragon1 reckons the position after 27...Qa6 is completely equal, while Stockfish18 awards Black the better part of equality, but both engines find it difficult to settle on White's best continuation, candidates including Kh2, Qg3, fxg6 and Qe2. The text is also probably all right, if followed up correctly.
28...Qxc4 29.Rxd6?!
Probably better is 29.fxg6 hxg6, and now 30.Rxd6 Rxd6 31.Rxd6 Nxe4 32.Rd7+ Rf7 33.Rxf7+ Kxf7 34.Qb6!, when the engines agree Black has nothing more than a draw.
29...Rxd6 30.Rxd6 Nxe4 31.Bxe4?!
Possibly better - for a long time Dragon1 prefers the text - is 31.Rd7+ Rf7 32.Rxf7+ Kxf7 33.fxg6+, when 33...hxg6 34.Qb6! transposes to the drawn line given at move 29. But the engines point out Black can improve with 33...Kxg6!, when 34.h5+ Kg7 35.Qh4 Qc1+ 36.Kh2 Nc5 gives Black the upper hand (Dragon1) or at least a slight edge (Stockfish18).
31...Qxe4 32.fxg6 hxg6
Here 33...Kxg6? is a mistake that allows a draw after, for example, 34.Qg3+ Kf7 35.Rd7+ Ke6 36.Qg7 etc.
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| After 32...hxg6, what is White's best hope for a draw? |
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33.Rd7+?!
Heading for a queen-and-pawn ending, but it is completely lost, so better chances lay in, for example, 33.Rb6, although the engines agree that after 33...Qd5!?, Black is winning, eg 34.Rb4 Re8 35.Qe3 (35.Rxa4?? Qd1+) e4 36.Rd4 Qc6, when Black's extra pawn should tell, albeit after a slow and somewhat painstaking process.
33...Rf7 34.Rxf7+?
White should definitely keep rooks on.
34...Kxf7
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| At first glance it might seem White has hopes of a perpetual, but it turns out every White continuation either drops material or allows transposition into a trivially won pawn ending |
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35.Kg1 Qd4 0-1