Spanish Exchange
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Bxc6 dxc4 5.d4 exd4 6.Qxd4 Qxd4 7.Nxd4 f6!?
A rare move at this point, but playing ...f6 is common in the Exchange Variation of the Spanish, and is a popular response at move five to both 5.0-0 and 5.Nc3.
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8.Be3
Stockfish18 and Dragon1 suggest 8.Bf4!?, the idea being to meet 8...Bd6 with 9.Bxd6 cxd6 and, perhaps, 10.Nc3, when the engines reckon White is slightly better.
8...Bd7 9.Nc3 Bb4 10.Ne2 0-0-0 11.a3 Bd6 12.0-0-0
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It is the usual Spanish Exchange battle of pawn-structure versus bishop-pair. The engines call the game equal.
12...Ne7 13.Na4 b6?
Black is fine after 13...Be6 or 13...Be8!?, according to the engines.
14.Nxb6+! cxb6 15.Rxd6 Kc7 16.Rhd1 Nc8 17.Bxb6+??
The engines reckon White has an advantage worth about 4.50 after 17.R6d3.
17...Nxc6
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18.R6d4 Bg4 19.f3 Rxd4 20.Rxd4 Be6 21.Nf4 Bf7 22.Nd3 Nd7 23.Nb4!?
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23...Ra8
The engines like this, but 23...c5!? is also possible, meeting 24.Nxa6+!? with 24...Kc6, when White is more-or-less obliged to play 25.Rxd7!? Kxd7 26.Nxc5+, emerging with four pawns for a rook, when Black is winning, but the material balance is unusual, and could be tricky to play.
24.Rd2 a5 25.Nd3 Ne5!? 26.Nxe5 fxe5 27.Rd3 Rd8 28.Rc3
Objectively better, according to the engines, is swopping rooks.
28...Kb6 29.b3 c5 30.h4 Rd4 31.g3 h5 32.Re3 c4 33.b4 axb4 34.axb4 Rd6!? 35.f4 Rg6 36.f5
The engines are not keen on this, but their suggested 36.fxe5 hardly offers White much hope.
36...Rg4 37.Kd2 Be8 38.Rf3!? Bc6 39.f6 gxf6 40.Rxf6 Rxe4 41.Rf5 Rg4 42.Rxe5 Rxg3 43.Rxh5 c3+!?
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44.Ke2
Both 44.Kc1? and 44.Kd1? lose trivially, so the only alternative is 44.Ke1, but there are many winning lines for Black, eg 44...Rh3 45.Rh8 Be4, or 45.Rh6 Rh2 46.Kd1 Kb5.
44...Bf3+ 45.Kf2 Bxh5 46.Kxg3 Kb5 47.Kf4 Kxb4 0-1













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