Sunday, 5 July 2026

Getting There (Magdeburg)

CAUGHT Ryanair's 12:00 from Stansted to Berlin.
Getting through German passport control took an hour, following which I took the metro to Berlin's main rail station, followed by a train to Wolfsburg, and another to Magdeburg, arriving at the venue-hotel, Maritim, shortly before 20:00 central European time.
Maritim - a short walk from Magdeburg station
Tournament room

Chess Tip Of The Day 455

Younger players are usually well genned up on current opening theory (though not the theory of 10 years ago), and good at analysing tactical lines, but frequently lack technique in simple positions and endings.
Simon Webb, Chess For Tigers

Tube Puzzle

SAW this serial number on a Northern Line carriage: 51667.
As usual, each number should be used once, and once only, and must be added, subtracted, multiplied or divided to make a balanced equation.
There is a perfect solution, ie one that uses the numbers in the order they appear.
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My solution: 5 + 1 + (6 ÷ 6) = 7

Saturday, 4 July 2026

Chess Tip Of The Day 454

The Blackmar-Diemer is similar to many gambits - not 100% sound, but extremely dangerous in the hands of a well-prepared and imaginative attacking player. In addition, the fact that White can get the key position against 90% of opponents is a significant advantage over many other gambit lines, which depend on Black's cooperation.
Steve Giddins, How To Build Your Chess Opening Repertoire

East Germany

AM making final preparations for flying to Berlin tomorrow for the 34th seniors' championship of Saxony-Anhalt, which starts at Magdeburg on Monday.
There are two sections, 65+ with 107 entries and 50+ with 39 entries.
Both tournaments have seven, mostly-morning, rounds over seven days, with a time control of 40 moves in 90 minutes, a further 30 minutes to finish, and a 30-second increment throughout.
The venue-hotel, Maritim, is also the venue for next spring's world senior team championships.
Image: German Tourist Board

Friday, 3 July 2026

Fascinating Ending

HERE is a a fascinating and instructive endgame position from Carl Portman's Never Mind The Grandmasters column in Chess magazine.
Black to make his 33rd move in Portman (1888 ECF) - Tayeb Kazemi (1791 ECF), Leamington (Warwickshire) League 2026
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Pawn endings with rival majorities are tricky, no matter how equal the engines reckon the position is (completely equal, according to Stockfish18 and Dragon1).
So how does one go about gaining winning chances, or, at least, setting the opponent problems?
The answer, I believe, is to try to create a passed pawn that will divert the enemy king, leaving your own king free to attack weak enemy pawns, and thus create another, this-time-winning, passer.
Here is an example from a 1991 rapid game at London's Barbican.
Black has just captured a knight on e6 in Spanton (151 BCF) - Martin Cutmore (152 BCF)
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I played 26.Kf3, as advancing the king is rarely wrong in such positions, although the engines marginally prefer 26.g4!?
After 26...h5, I took the chance to also advance my backward pawn with 27.e4, and following 27...dxe4+ 28.Kxe4, we have a position with rival pawn-majorities.
The game is completely equal, according to Stockfish18 and Dragon1
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28...f5+?
This natural-looking move not only gains space, but comes with a check, and yet after it Black is lost. The engines reckon several moves maintain the balance, including 28...g6, 28...a5 and 28...b5.
The problem with the text is that after 29.Kf4, Black is obliged to defend the kingside as 29...Kd5 30.Kxf5 Kxd4 is hopeless, eg 31.Kg6 Ke3 32.Kxg7 Kf4 33.Kh6 Kg4 34.g3, when Black's king will eventually have to move, allowing Kxh5.
My opponent played 29...Kf6 (29...g6 runs into the same trouble as in the game after 30.Kg5 Kf7 31.c4), but 30.c4 g6 31.d5 cxd5 32.cxd5 created a diverting passed pawn.
The game finished 32...a5 33.b3 b5 34.a4 b4 35.g3 Ke7 36.Ke5 1-0.
Returning to Portman-Kazemi, what would you play in the diagram position?
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The game saw 33...h5?, which, probably to both players' surprise, loses.
CP states that, after the move, "the engines goes up to '+7' for White." I do not know which engine he is talking about, but for a long time Stockfish18 puts White's advantage at a little over 3.00, while Dragon1 gives White only the upper hand. However, after allowing them more time than I usually would, Stockfish18's evaluation rises to just over +4.00, while Dragon1 agrees White is winning, but puts the advantage at a little under +2.00.
Even so, whatever the precise number, there seems little doubt White is winning, whereas moves such as 33...g4!? (CP's suggestion) and 33...a5 keep the game level.
I might have been inclined to play 33...Kd5, and if, as in the game, 34.c4, a sample continuation runs 34...bxc4+ 35.bxc4+ Kd6, when neither side is able to safely create a diverting passer.
In the game, White met Black's faulty 33rd move by gaining space with 34.c4!, which the engines agree is the strongest continuation by some distance.
There followed 34...a6 35.a4 Kd6 36.a5 Ke6.
How should White proceed?
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37.Ke3
Also winning is 27.h4 - the idea will become apparent as the game progresses.
However, simply creating a passed pawn is NOT the way to go. Indeed, 37.cxb5?? turns a win into a loss after 37...cxb5 as, far from diverting Black's king, the sequence allows the king to advance to the d5 square, eg 38.Ke3 Kd5 39.Kd3 f4 40.gxf4 gxf4, when it is Black who has created a diverting passer, a possible continuation being 41.b4 f3!? 42.Ke3 f2 43.Kxf2 Kxd4 etc, or 41.h4 b4 42.Ke2 Kxd4 etc.
37...Kd6 38.h4!?
This could also have been played in answer to 37...Kf6.
38...bxc4 39.bxc4 gxh4
Or 39...g4 40.Kf4 Ke6 41.Kg5 etc.
40.gxh4 Ke6
Black has created a passed pawn, but rather than diverting White's king from a crucial part of the board, the sequence has created weak squares that invite the king to advance
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41.Kf4 Kf6 42.d5!?
But this does create a passer that diverts.
42...cxd5
Or 42...c5 43.d6!? Ke6 44.d7 Kxd7 45.Kxf5 etc.
43.cxd5 Ke7
As CP points out, 43...Kg6 loses to 44.Ke5.
44.Kxf5 (1-0, 53 moves).
So why was 33...h5? weak? The answer is it eventually let White create kingside weaknesses in Black's position with 38.h4!?
Could Black have prevented this? Well, he could have prevented the h4 thrust, eg with 34...g4, but that does White's job for him by immediately creating black kingside weaknesses, a likely continuation being 35.Ke3 a6 36.Kf4 Kf6 37.cxb5 cxb5 (37...axb5 38.a4) 38.d5, when the diverting passer wins.
As is often the case, a 'simple' pawn ending has proved to be anything but simple.

Thursday, 2 July 2026

Blogger Blow

TWO months ago I reported that the feeder widget on Blogger, which I use to update my Chess Tip Of The Day on Beau Chess, was malfunctioning.
It is supposed to take my daily tip from https://chessnuggets.blogspot.com/ and insert it in a space reserved in the top-right corner of https://beauchess.blogspot.com/.
From the start, the feed only worked on the web version of Beau Chess, not the mobile version, but at least it did work.
Then two months ago it started stalling, with long delays between updates, and it still only works intermittently, despite the problem being repeatedly reported by myself and others.
I know Blogger is free, and is indeed a remarkable product, but don't Blogger's owners Google feel any duty to maintain standards and correct bugs?

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Lessons From Bischofsgrün IX

MY round-nine game, in which I was Black against Thomas Bildt (2029), featured a rare but sharp line from the King's Gambit, the following position being reached after White's eighth move.
White has just played 8.Bc1-d2
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White is a pawn up, and is slightly ahead in development in that White has four pieces developed (queen, bishop and two knights), while Black has two (bishop and knight), but has also castled.
If left undisturbed, White will, next move, castle long, after which he will have no worries.
Black's obvious move to delay castling is ...Re8+, but there is also ...Ng4 to be considered, which indirectly delays castling by threatening the triple fork ...Nf2 (if White has castled, the knight would hit the queen and both rooks).
I chose 8...Ng4?, and was rewarded by the sequence 9.Ne4?? Bf5, after which, as I showed in my annotations to the game, Black has a large advantage.
However, while Ne4 was a blunder, turning a winning position into a losing one. according to Stockfish18 and Dragon1, the idea is correct.
But the right way to implement it is with 9.Ng5, threatening checkmate. Black can defend against the threat by 9...g6, or 9...Re8+ 10.Be2 g6, but in each case there follows ...Nce4, when White simultaneously defends f2 and attacks c5.
LESSON: when you have two moves that seem to answer an important need in the opening, but one of the moves involves moving an already developed piece, while the other move develops an extra piece, you must be absolutely certain the former move is significantly better as you are not helping your development.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

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).
Black has just played 21...e7-e5!, and, after 22.Qxd8 Rbxd8, offered a draw, which I accepted
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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.
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

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).
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 English game, Black has one developed piece, a knight, against White's three - a bishop and two knights.
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.