Showing posts with label Greek Gift sac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek Gift sac. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 November 2025

Cap Negret Round Six

Spanton (1896) - Josep Fernández Pérez (1801)
French Exchange
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Nf3 Bd6 5.c4!?
Stockfish17.1 and Dragon1 slightly prefer this over the more popular 5.Bd3, and the text scores 14 percentage points higher in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database.
How should Black respond?
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5...c6
This is Dragon1's top choice, but Stockfish17.1 favours 5...Nf6.
6.Nc3 Ne7!?
The idea of this passive-looking placement of the king's knight is to meet Bd3 with ...Bf5, in order to swop light-square bishops, which generally speaking should benefit Black when pawns are fixed on d4 and d5, as in the diagram.
7.Bd3 0-0!?
The main move is 7...dxc4, giving White an IQP with tempo.
How should White proceed?
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8.0-0
Not 8.Bxh7+?? Kxh7 9.Ng5+ Kg8 10.Qh5 as Black has the winning 10...Bf5.
8...Bf5!?
Thematic, and it has been tried by players rated over 2400, but there is a problem with the move on this occasion.
9.Bxf5 Nxf5 10.Qd3
This is the engines' second choice, but it seems to be a novelty, probably because most players have preferred 10.cxd5 cxd5 11.Qb3.
10...g6
The engines suggest 10...Qd7 or 10...Ne7.
11.c5
Swoping on d5 is still the way to go, followed by 12.Qb5.
11...Be7 12.Bf4 Na6 13.h3 Nc7 14.b4 Ne6 15.Be5 Bf6 16.a4?
Better is 16.Rfe1.
16...Bxe5 17.Nxe5
If 17.dxe5, then 17...a5!
How should Black proceed?
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17...f6?
Black wins an important pawn with 17...Nfxd4, as attempting to trap the knight with 18.g4? only leaves matters worse after 18...f6.
18.Nf3 Qd7 19.b5 Rab8
The engines reckon Black, rather than defend the queenside, should go for counterplay on the kingside with 19...Nf4 or 19...Rae8.
20.Rfb1 Qc7 21.Rb4
The engines prefer 21.a5, and if 21...Qf4, then 22.Rd1 or 22.Kf1. The point about 22.Kf1 is that 22...Nfxd4?? fails to 23.Rb4 as ...Nxf3 does not come with check.
21...Qf4?!
This threatens 22...Nxc5, but that is easily countered.
It seems Black can more-or-less equalise by instead playing 21...a5!, coming at a time when White cannot gain advantage from opening the b file, eg 22.bxa6 bxa6 23.Rab1 Rxb4 24.Rxb4, and now 24...Re8!? or 24...Ng5!?, with serious kingside counterplay, one point being 24...Re8!? cannot be met by 25.Qxa6? as Black has 25...Nexd4!, when 26.Nxd4?? runs into 26...Re1+. After 24...Ng5!? 25.Nxg5 fxg5, the engines reckon White can play 26.Qxa6, but 26...Qf4 draws, eg 27.Qd3 Qc1+ 28.Kh2 Qf4+ etc, or 28.Nd1 Re8, with strong play for Black.
22.Rab1 a5
This comes to be Dragon1's top choice, at least for a while, but 22...Qc7 may be better.
23.bxa6 bxa6 24.Ne2!?
The key move, protecting d4 with tempo, leaving the white queen free to capture on a6.
24...Qc7 25.Qxa6 Ra8 26.Qd3 Rfb8 27.Rxb8+ Rxb8 28.Rab8+ Qxb8 29.a5 Nc7 30.Nd2
The engines prefer kingside play, eg 30.g4!? Ng7 31.g5!?, when Black has to worry about the king as well as about the a pawn queening.
30...Qb5 31.Qxb5
How should Black recapture?
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31...Nxb5?!
The engines strongly prefer creating a rival passed pawn with 31...cxb5.
32.Nb3 Nc7 33.Kf1 Ne7 34.Nc3 Nc8
The engines prefer activating the king.
35.Ke2 Kf7 36.Kd3 Ke6 37.Na2 Na6 38.Nd2 Na7 39.Nb1 Kd7 40.Na3 Kc7 41.Kc3 Kb7 42.Nb4 Nc7
The engines agree this is much better than swoping a pair of knights.
43.Nbc2?!
It seems this knight should have been left where it was to keep the black king out of a6.
43...Ka6
Now the black king is blockading the passed pawn, how would you assess the position? 
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Completely equal, according to Stockfish17.1, although Dragon1 gives White a token edge of about 0.1.
44.Kb4 Ncb5?!
Now White is back in business. Instead 44...Ne6 maintains equality, according to the engines.
45.Nb1 Kb7 46.Nd2 Nc8 47.Nf3 Ka6 48.Ne3
The engines reckon 48.g4!? gives at least a slight edge.
48...Ne7 49.g4
A move too late, apparently, as Black can now gain complete equality, according to the engines, although their assessment of other moves fluctuates. However it is possible 49.Ng4 or 49.Nc2!? is better.
49...h6
This may be enough for a draw, but the engines reckon 49...g5 virtually guarantees it.
50.Nc2 Nc7
Temporising with the king may be better.
51.Nfe1
51.Ka4 gives at least a slight edge, according to the engines.
51...Ne6 52.Nd3 g5!?
Dargon1 prefers temporising with the king, or pushing the h pawn, but Stockfish17.1, although at first sceptical, comes to be fine with the text..
53.Ka4 Nc7?
But this is a mistake. Instead 53...Kb7 seems to hold, although Dragon1 is less sure than Stockfish17.1.
54.f4
This seems enough for at least the upper hand, and is probably winning, but 54.Ndb4+ Ka7 55.Ne3 Kb7 56.f3!? Ka7 57.a6! definitely wins, according to the engines, eg 57...Nxa6 58.Nf5! Nxb4 (58...Nxf5 59.Nxc6+) 59.Nxe7 Nc2 60.Nxc6+ etc.
54...Nb5?
This makes it relatively easy. 54...Ng6 is trickier, but Stockfish17.1's 55.f5!? seems to win, although Dragon1 for quite some time disagrees, the main line running 55...Nf4 56.Nxf4 gxf4 57.Ne1 (Dragon1 now agrees White is winning) Nb5 58.Nf3 Nc3+ 59.Kb4 Ne4 60.h4 Ka7 61.Kb3 Ka6 62.Kc2! Kxa5 63.Nd2 Ng3 64.Kd3 Kb4 65.g5! hxg5 66.hxg5 Nxf5 67.gxf6 Nh6 68.Nf3 Nf7 69.Ne5 etc.
55.fxg5 fxg5 56.Ndb4+ Ka7
White to play and win
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57.Nxc6+! Nxc6 58.Kxb5 1-0

Saturday, 10 May 2025

Lesa Round Two

Maurizio Platino (1805) - Spanton (1907)
QGD Exchange
1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.cxd5 exd5 5.Bg5 c6 6.Qc2 Bd6!?
This is fifth-most popular in ChessBase's 2025 Mega database, scoring 41%, two percentage points more than the normal move 6...Be7.
7.e3 0-0 8.Bd3 h6 9.Bh4 Re8 10.Nge2 Nbd7 11.0-0!?
Can Black play the famous Greek Gift sacrifice here?
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Maybe! After 11...Bxh2+!? 12.Kxh2 Ng4+, Stockfish17 and Dragon1 are unsure where the white king should go.
If 13.Kg3 the line 13...g5? 14.Kxg4 Ne5+ (the engines marginally prefer this over 14...Nf6+) 15.Kg3 Ng4 is well-met by 16.Bf5. However, not so clear is 13...Ndf6!? 14.Bxf6 Qxf6, eg 15.e4!? h5 16.f4!? h4+ 17.Kf3 dxe4+ 18.Bxe4 (18.Nxe4? Qg6) g6!? 19.Rh1 Qf8!?, when Black is knight-for-pawn down, but is slightly better, according to the engines.
If 13.Kh3 there seems no doubt 13...Ndf6 is best, when 14.Bf5 g5 15.Bg3 Re4! is again unclear.
11...Nf8
Now sacrificing on h2 would definitely work.
12.Bg3 Ne6 13.a3 Ng5 14.Bxd6!?
This is the engines' top choice.
14...Qxd6 15.Ng3 h5!?
Apparently a novelty. It is Stockfish17's top choice, but Dragon1 prefers the known move 15...Bd7.
16.h4!?
The engines like this, and also 16.f4.
16...Ne6 17.Rae1 Ng4 18.Bf5 Qe7?!
Probably better is 18...Nf8 19.Bxg4 (the engines strongly dislike 19.Bxc8?! Raxc8) Bxg4 with equal chances, or 18...Qd8.
19.Bxg4 Nxg4 20.Nf5
This is enough for at least equality, but the engines like 20.e4!?, when 20...Qxh4 21.exd5 cxd5 22.Nxd5 is promising (22.Re5!? may also be good). If instead 20...Nxd4, then 21.Qa4 seems strong.
20...Qf6
How should White proceed?
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21.Nd6?!
The engines do not like this, preferring 21.f3 gxf3 22.Rxf3.
21...Rd8
But not 21...Re7? 22.Nxc8 22...Rxc8? (22...Rd7!? is better) 23.Nxd5!
22.Nxc8 Raxc8
Missing the strength of 22...Qxh4!, eg 23.g3 Qh3 24.Ne7+ Kf8 25.Ng6+ (forced, as 25.Nf5? loses to 25...Ng5 etc) fxg6 26.Qxg6 Rd6! 27.e4 (if 27.Re2, then 27...Ke7 with the threat of 28...Rh8 etc) Rad8 (27...Nxd4!? also wins, despite 28.Qxd6+, ie 28...Kg8 29.f3 Nxf3+ 30.Rxf3 gxf3 31.Kf2 Qg2+ 32.Ke3 f2 etc) 28.Qf5+ Kg8 29.Ne2 (there seems nothing better) Rf8 30.Qe5 Rf6! 31.Qxd6 Ng5 etc.
23.g3
MP offered a draw.
How would you assess the position?
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The engines reckon Black may have a slight edge after 23...Rc7!?, one line running 24.Qd1 Qf5 25.e4!? dxe4 26.Rxe4 Rcd7!? 27.Qxg4 Qxg4 28.Rxg4 f5!? 29.Rg6 Kh7 30.h5 Rh8 31.Ne2! Nf8 32.Rg5 Kf6 33.f4 Nh7 34.Rg6+ Kf7, but there are many alternatives along the way, although it does seem Black gets at least enough for a pawn.
23...g5 24.Qe2 Qf3 25.Qxf3?!
This leaves White in danger of falling into a mating net. The engines reckon 25.Kh2!? is equal.
25...gxf3 26.hxg5?
Best may be 26.Kh2!?, but 26...g4 gives Black at least a slight edge, according to the engines.
26...Nxg5
Even stronger is 26...Kg7!, eg 27.e4 Nxg5 28.exd5 Rh8!, transposing to a position reached in the game.
27.e4?!
Probably better is 27.g4 Kg7 28.Kh2 Rh8+ 29.Kg3 Rh3+ 30.Kf4, although after 30...Ne6+ Black has at least the upper hand, according to the engines.
27...Kg7 28.exd5
There seems nothing better.
28...Rh8! 29.Re3?
Better, but still losing, is 29.Re5, eg 29...Nh3+ 30.Kh2 Nxf2+ 31.Kg1 Nh3+ 32.Kh2 cxd5.
29...Rh5 0-1

Wednesday, 5 June 2024

Lessons From Kenilworth V

MY round-six game featured the Exchange Variation of the French Defence, quickly reaching the following position.
White has just played 9.Rf1-e1
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My opponent, without much thought, played 9...0-0?
As he admitted later, as soon as he had played the move he realised White had the chance to play a Greek Gift Sacrifice.
In some ways he was unlucky - of the four games to reach the position in ChessBase's 2024 Mega database, only one continued with the move I played, 10.Bxh7+!
LESSON: it is easy to let one's guard down during a game, for example when up a lot of material, or, as here, when the opponent plays a 'boring' opening such as the Exchange Variation of the French. But failing to concentrate throughout is a recipe for mistakes.

Sunday, 16 April 2023

Lessons From Fagernes V

MY round-five game reached the following position.
What should White play?
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The position arises from the Exchange Variation of the Queen's Gambit Declined. The only slightly unusual feature is that the black dark-square bishop is on d6 rather than performing its more-normal role of breaking the pin on e7.
This apparently minor difference becomes huge if, as 20 times in ChessBase's 2023 Mega database, White continues 11.0-0?
This has been played by two players rated in the 2600s, two rated in the 2400s, three rated in the 2300s, two rated in the 2200s and two rated in the 2100s.
One of the remaining nine games was played at the 1966 Olympiad in Havana, ie before the world chess federation Fide adopted Arpad Elo's rating system, so it seems the mistake is particularly attractive to relatively strong players.
The reason it is a mistake is Black can play the Greek Gift sacrifice, ie 11...Bxh2+!. although five players, including one rated 2491, appear to have failed to spot this opportunity, or at least rejected it for a spurious reason.
After 12.Kxh2 Ng4+ 13.Kg3 Black has 13...g5, which gives a large advantage.
LESSON: apparently minor differences can make major changes. If, in the first diagram, whites, when considering castling, had asked themselves what captures would black then have, only two would have been possible: the clearly bad ...Rxe3 and the alarm-bell ringing ...Bxh2+. It is hard to believe anyone, especially a titled player, would play 11.0-0? if such a basic check had been made.

Tuesday, 11 April 2023

Fagernes Game Nine

Spanton (1806) - Jiabao Eivind Ji (1704)
French Winawer
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e5 c5 5.Bd2 Nc6
The mainline in ChessBase's 2023 Mega database runs 5...Ne7 6.Nb5 Bxd2+ 7.Qxd2+ 0-0 with an equal game, according to Stockfish15.1 and Komodo14.1.
6.Nb5 Bxd2+ 7.Qxd2 Nxd4
How should White proceed?
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8.Nxd4
This is easily the most-popular choice in Mega23, and is recommended by the engines, but 8.Nd6+!? gives White decent compensation for a pawn. It arguably comes down to a matter of taste.
8...cxd4 9.Qxd4
This 'obvious' recapture is less-popular in Mega23 than 9.Nf3 and 9.f4. Meanwhile Stockfish15.1 suggests 9.h4!?, and both engines come to plump for 9.0-0-0.
9...Ne7 10.Nf3 Bd7
The immediate 10...Nc6 is possible, not least because 11.Bb5??, hoping to swop bishop for knight to produce a minor-piece clash of good knight versus bad bishop, loses to 11...Qa5+.
11.Bd3 Nc6 12.Qg4 g6
Not 12...0-0 13.Bxh7+ Kxh7 14.Qh5+ Kg8 15.Ng5+ - a superior version of the Greek Gift sacrifice.
13.0-0 Qe7 14.Rfe1 0-0-0
Now both sides have castled, how would you assess the position?
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Positions with opposite-side castling are among the hardest to judge in chess. Two things are, I believe, clear: White has the better bishop, and the black king looks less secure than its white counterpart. The engines give White the upper hand.
15.a4 Rdg8 16.h4!?
Hoping, believe it or not, to keep lines on the kingside as closed as possible. The engines prefer 16.Nd4.
16...h6 17.c3 g5 18.h5 f5 19.exf6 Qxf6 20.Qg3 Re8?!
Probably better is 20...g4, followed by pressure against h5.
How should White continue?
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21.Ne5?!
Occupying the hole at e5 seemed so natural to me, but is strongly disliked by the engines, which give 21.Rad1 or 21.b4!?
21...Rhf8?
After 21...Nxe5 22.Rxe5 Qf4 White is only slightly better, according to the engines.
22.a5?
The engines reckon White is winning after 22.Ng6 Rf7 23,b4 e5 24.b5.
22...Nxe5 23.Rxe5 Qf4 24.Qxf4 Rxf4 25.g3 Rf6 26.Rae1 Rf3
Black's pressure against f2 compensates for White's pressure against e6.
27.Be2 Rf5 28.Bg4 Rxe5 29.Rxe5 Kc7 30.Kf1 Kd6 31.Re3 Rf8 32.Ke1 b6!? 33.axb6 axb6 34.Rf3 Rxf3 35.Bxf3 e5 36.Kd2 Kc5 37.Be2 Be8 38.b4+ Kd6
JJ offered a draw. I played on, but the position is completely equal.
39.Ke3 Ke6 40.Bg4+ Kf6 41.Be2 Kf5 42.f3 Ke6 43.f4 exf4+ 44.gxf4 Kf5 45.Bd3+ Kg4 46.Be2+ Kh4 47.fxg5 Kxg5 48.Bf3 Bxh5 49.Bxd5 Be8 50.c4 h5 51.Kf3 Kf5 52.Ke3 Ke5 53.Bf3 Bf7 54.c5 bxc5 55.b5?!
A last, somewhat-foolish, attempt to win.
55...Bd5
Komodo14.1 claims 55...Kd6 and 55...h4 win, but the Syzygy endgame tablebase shows the position is drawn.
56.Bxh5 Kd6 ½–½

Friday, 10 April 2020

New Spice (part six)

AFTER 1.d4 d5, the most-popular move at club level is probably 2.Nf3, rather than immediately playing the Queen's Gambit with 2.c4.
White might be planning to play c4 later, but often 2.Nf3 is a prelude to the Colle or, more commonly these days, the London System.
Black usually replies with something standard such as 2...Nf6 or 2...e6.
But Black can take advantage of the lack of immediate pressure on his centre by putting immediate pressure on White's centre with 2...c5.
This has been played by many grandmasters, and scores a very healthy 50% in ChessBase's 2020 Mega database - only 2...c6, with 48%, comes close to matching this.
Despite its success, the move is not something White sees often - it is only sixth-most popular in Mega20.
The first question to consider is whether White can get an advantage by accepting what is effectively a Reversed Queen's Gambit.
A) 3.dxc5!?
Vladimir Kramnik is among those who have played this move, and many of the old masters, including Pillsbury, Lasker, Alekhine, Capablanca and Flohr, tried it from time-to-time, so it should be taken seriously. Black's most-popular response is 3...e6, after which White can try to hold on to the extra pawn.
Yury Piskov (2550) - Magaram Mogomedov (2450)
Capelle-la-Grande 1994
4.b4!?
It is well-known that for Black to try to play this way in the Queen's Gambit proper, ie 1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.e3 b5?!, is doubtful, but the question is whether the addition of 2.Nf3 makes a significant difference.
4...a5 5.c3 axb4 6.cxb4 b6
Black continues to pressurise White's queenside. It is not even a sacrifice as 6.cxb6?! Bxb4+ 7.Bd2 Qxb6 was good for Black in Ignatz von Popiel - Georg Marco, Trebitsch Memorial (Vienna) 1915, although the game was eventually drawn.
7.e4!?
This move, which is the choice of the analysis engines Stockfish10 and Komodo10, seems to have been grandmaster Piskov's new idea in keeping, at least for a while, the extra pawn.
The main alternative is probably 7.Bb2, the point being that Black cannot follow-up 7...bxc5 8.bxc5 with 8...Bxc5?? as that loses to 9.Bxg7. Instead Svetlana Petrenko (2207) - Khanim Balajayeva (2130), EU women's championship (Chakvi, Georgia), 2015, continued 8...Nf6 9.e3 (9.Qc2 Qa5+) Bxc5 10.Bd3 0-0 11.0-0 Nbd7, when Black had a slight edge thanks to her extra central pawn and pressure against a2.
7...bxc5 8.Bb2
How should Black proceed?
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8...cxb4!?
This looks greedy, and Piskov must presumably have had this position on the board in his preparation, but it works out well.
9.Bb5+ Bd7 10.Bxd7+ Qxd7
White now played a move, after which the game was agreed drawn, but what was the move?
Mega20 has 11.Be5??, but that does not just look weird, it is an outright blunder as 11..dxe4 is winning for Black, eg 12.Nfd2 (12.Qxd7+?? loses a piece to 12...Nxd7) Nc6 13.Bb2 f5, when Black is two pawns up.
11.Ne5 makes more sense, although the engines reckon Black has an edge after 11...Qb5 or 11...Qb7.
At any rate, White's 4.b4!? was not a great success.
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A less-popular, but less-weakening, way to try to hold on to the pawn is 4.Be3.
Admittedly this blocks the e2 pawn, but White can develop his light-square bishop via g2, from where it may exert pressure on Black's centre in conjunction with the pawn-thrust c4.
Most popular now is 4...Na6, but the engines like a move played by Spanish international master Juan Mellado Trivino: 4...Nf6!?
The idea is to calmly get on with development, and fight for the central squares.
Igors Rausis (2520) - Mellado Trivino (2465)
Mondariz (Spain) 1998
5.c3!?
Threatening to tighten his hold on the pawn with b4.
A serious alternative is 5.c4, which can be met by 5...Na6 (other moves are clearly possible), whereupon 6.Nc3 Bxc5 7.Bxc5 Nxc5 led to draws in Predrag Nikolić (2605) - Yasser Seirawan (2610), World Cup (Barcelona) 1989, and Chao B Li (2703) - Jinshi Bai (2568), Chinese Team Championship 2018.
5...a5
The engines prefer 5...Be7 or 5...Qc7, not worrying about b4. For example, after 5...Be7 6.b4, they give 6...0-0 7.Nbd2 Qc7 8.g3, when both Stockfish10's 8...e5 and Komodo10's 8...Ng4 look promising.
6.c4!
The engines like this sudden switch to a more-aggressive use of the c pawn.
6...Na6 7.Nc3 Nxc5 8.cxd5 Nxd5 9.Nxd5 Qxd5 10.cxd5 exd5
White has given Black an isolated queen's pawn, and must have a slight edge, but the weakness seems well-defendable.
11.0-0-0?!
Trying to generate quick pressure on the isolani, but White's king proves vulnerable, despite the absence of queens.
11...Bf5! 12.Bxc5
'Normal' development starting with 12.g3? runs into 12...Nb3+! 13.axb3 Rc8+ 14.Bc5 Bxc5 15.Kd2 Bxf2, with a winning advantage for Black.
12...Bxc5 13.e3 Rc8 14.Bd3
Not 14.Kd2? Bb4+ 15.Ke2 Rc2+ 16.Nd2 Rxb2 etc.
14...Bxe3+ 15.Kb1 Rc1+ 16.Rxc1 Bxd3 17.Ka1 Bxc1 18.Rxc1 Ke7 19.Rc7+ Kd6 20.Rxb7
White has restored material equality, but after …
20...Rc8
… Black had activated his rook, to go along with his more-active king and minor piece, and he went on to win in 51 moves.
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B) 3.c3
Grabbing the pawn on c5 and trying to hold on to it tends to not work out very well.
At club level, especially if White wants to play the London System, 3.c3 is common. Black usually replies 3...e6 or 3...Nc6. The former is slightly more popular, and has been played by Magnus Carlsen, so it seems a good place to start.
Wesley So (2815) - Magnus Carlsen (2832)
Chess.com Speed blitz (2017)
4.Bf4
Entering the London is overwhelmingly the first choice, and is especially likely at club level.
4...Bd6!?
Black has a wide choice at move four, but I have chosen to concentrate on the text as it was Carlsen's choice, and has the added advantage of being less well-known than the more-popular 4...Nc6 and 4...Nf6.
5.Bg3
White helps Black's development if he plays 5.Bxd6 Qxd6, and anyway London System players are usually reluctant to give up their dark-square bishop without very good cause.
However, 5.e3 is a known idea in these sorts of positions, as 5...Bxf4 6.exf4 gives White good central control. Nimzowitsch, who had a strong positional feel, met 5.e3 with 5...Nc6, when he had this position in 1920. That game ended in a draw, but 5...Nc6 is Stockfish10's choice, and it puts the onus back on White to decide what to do about the face-off between the dark-square bishops. Delaying a decision further with 6.Nbd2!? is problematic as White ends up with doubled pawns and an isolani after 6...Bxf4 7.exf4 cxd4.
5...Nf6 6.e3 0-0 7.Nbd2
How should Black proceed?
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7...Qc7!?
An interesting moment. Both players have been making normal moves, and it would not have been a surprise to see 7...Nc6. But then the engines like the reply 8.Bb5!?, and so does Carlsen - he has played it six times as White. Carlsen must rate the move highly because he stuck with it despite losing the first two of those six games.
After 8.Bb5!?, the main line runs 8...Ne7!? 9.Bd3!?, which the engines reckon is nothing special, but White scores very well in Mega20. Black's second-most popular move is the provocative 8...a6!?, whereupon 9.Bxc6 bxc6 10.Qa4 is a little tricky to meet.
8.Bd3 Nbd7
Note that 8...Nc6?!, which at first glance might seem more palatable now White has spent a tempo on Bd3, runs into 9.dxc5.
9.e4?!
Opening lines in the centre when you have not castled, but your opponent has, is something most club players would shy away from. So knows not to do that, as a general rule, but must have thought he had found an exception.
Later in the same tournament, on the same day, the players reached the same position, and this time So played the normal 9.0-0. The game continued 9...b6 10.e4 Bxg3 11.hxg3 dxe4 12.Nxe4 Bb7 with a fairly equal position, which was eventually drawn.
It therefore seems the point of playing e4 early may be to deny Black the equalising option ...Bb7. But Black has other ways to at least equalise.
9...cxd4!
The immediate ...dxe4 is also reasonable as, after 10.Nxe4, Black has 10...Nxe4 11.Bxe4 Nf6 with what looks like equality.
10.cxd4 dxe4 11.Nxe4?!
It seems that gaining a tempo by flicking in the zwischenzug 11.Rc1 is better, but the position is still good for Black.
11...Nxe4 12.Bxe4 Nf6 13.Bd3 Qa5 14.Ke2
Not 14.Qd2?? Bb4, and if 14.Nd2, then Black has several pleasant options including 14...Rd8 15.0-0 Bxg3.
14...Rd8 15.Bh4!?
The engines suggest immediately getting queens off with 15.Qd2 Qxd2+ 16.Kxd2, but prefer Black after 16...b6.
15...Bd7 16.Bxf6 gxf6 17.Qd2 Qxd2+ 18.Nxd2 f5
White has succeeded in ensuring he is not the only one with a structural weakness, and he has got queens off, but Black's bishop-pair is strong (0-1, 38 moves).
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C) 3.e3
After 1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 c5, the move 3.e3 is very popular at all levels.
It is particularly suitable for Colle players, but is the end of the line for London System players as white's dark-square bishop gets shut in.
Black's most-popular replies are 3...Nc6 and 3...Nf6. There are more games with the former in Mega20, but the latter scores a better percentage, was Anand's choice when he reached this position, and is frequently played by former Russian champion Sergey Volkov.
It also fair to say that while one can be fairly certain the king's knight belongs on f6, it is possible the queen's knight might want to go to d7 or a6, rather than to c6, if, for example, White plays dxc5.
Sergey Kayumov (2450) - Djurabek Khamrakulov (2524)
Uzbekistan Championship (Tashkent) 2009
4.b3
White is setting up a Colle-Zukertort, a sub-system of the Colle that has largely supplanted the regular Colle, which would normally see c3 being played here.
After 4.c3, the well-established main line runs 4...e6 5.Bd3 Nc6 6.Nbd2 Bd6!? (a more-aggressive posting of this bishop than is normally advisable if White had played Bg5) 7.0-0 0-0 8.dxc5!? (White plans e4, but he does not want to be saddled with an isolated d pawn after ...cxd4, so first he captures on c5) Bxc5 9.e4.
Black's moves have been easy to find so far, but here it is useful to know that the main move is 9...Qc7, fighting for the e5 square and supporting the possible manoeuvre ...Nh5-f4, after which White usually plays 10.Qe2, reinstating the threat to play e5.
Now the main move is 10...h6, but I like the engines' choice of 10...b6!?, which is also popular with grandmasters. White now usually follows through with his threat by playing 11.e5, when 11...Ng4! allows White to play a Greek Gift sac, but it works out to Black's advantage: 12.Bxh7+ Kxh7 13.Ng5+ Kg8 14.Qxg4 Qxe5 - material is level and the black king's position has been slightly weakened, but Black dominates the centre and has the bishop-pair.
Accordingly, in several games White has resisted sacrificing on h7 and instead played 12.b4 Be7 13.Re1 f6 14.exf6 Bxf6, when Black's central pawn-duo is probably a strength rather than a weakness - Black has won all four games to reach this position in Mega20.
Position after 4.b3 - how should Black proceed?
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4...cxd4!
More popular is 4...Nc6, but the text is recommended by Larry Kaufman in The Chess Advantage In Black And White, and scores a better percentage in Mega20.
The point is that 4.b3 freed the b2 square for White's dark-square bishop. But if White replies to 4...cxd4! with 4.exd4, which he nearly always does, the bishop will be blocked by its own pawn fixed on d4.
If White avoids this by playing 4.Nxd4?!, then 4...e5 5.Nf3 Nc6 gives Black a classical centre that is not easily undermined.
5.exd4 Nc6 6.Bb2
Nearly always played - the point is that although the bishop is blocked by the fixed d pawn, it can support a knight going  to e5.
6...Bg4 7.Be2 e6
Kaufman recommended 7...Bxf3!?, the idea being to "thwart White's strategy of [playing Nbd2 and] bringing a knight to e5." However, White can get around this by playing Nbd2 at move six, after which a transposition to this game is likely.
8.0-0 Bd6 9.Nbd2
The game reached this position by a different move-order (it began 1.Nf3 c5), but for clarity's sake I have used the most-frequent sequence.
9...0-0 10.Ne5
White has succeeded in planting a knight on e5, but it is far from clear this does him any good.
10...Bxe2 11.Qxe2 Qb6!?
More popular is 11...Rc8, but it may be the rook is better left for the moment on a8, where it supports pressure down the a file. Indeed, the engines like 11...a5 12.a4 Qb6, marginally favouring Black.
12.Ndf3 Rad8
The engines reckon Black is better after 12...a5.
13.Rad1 Nd7 14.Rd3 h6 15.Nxd7!?
This may seem strange at first glance, but the move is quite liked by the engines, although they prefer 15.Nxc6.
White could have tried 15.a3, preventing a knight fork on b4 and so freeing the white queen's rook. The engines then give 15...Ndxe5 16.Nxe5 Qa6, with ...Rc8 and play against White's slightly rickety queenside pawns to come.
15...Rxd7 16.c4 Bb8 17.c5!?
The engines agree this is a good time for White to push past (with tempo).
17...Qc7 18.a3 b6 19.b4 bxc5 20.bxc5
The engines prefer the double-edged 20.dxc5, continuing 20...e5 21.Nh4 d4 22.Qg4 g6 23.Re1 with an edge for White.
20...Re8 21.g3 f6 22.Rad1 Na5 23.Nh4 Nc4 24.Qh5 Rdd8 25.Bc1 Qf7
This offer to exchange queens relieves the pressure on Black's position, and the game was drawn after 46 moves.
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D) 3.c4
This is White's most-popular continuation. It is also the sharpest, which means it will not appeal to all 1.d4 players - certainly not at club level, at any rate.
Black's usual response is 3...e6, but after 4.cxd5 exd5 5.g3, the game is transposing to the heavily theoretical Schlechter-Rubinstein System against the Tarrasch.
I am recommending the engines' choice, 3...dxc4, which has a better percentage score in Mega20.
Péter Lukács (2465) - Zoltán Németh (2355)
Hungarian Championship 1989
4.e3
The main move, but 4.d5!?, not worrying about quickly getting the pawn back, is also popular. I then like the engines' choice, 4...Nf6, which has been played by Alexei Shirov and other strong GMs. The next few moves are well mapped out for both sides, viz: 5.Nc3 e6 6.e4 exd5 (Capablanca once, in a very unlike-Capablanca move, gave up a knight by 6...Nxe4?! 7.Nxe4 exd5, giving him three pawns and the centre for a piece, but he lost) 7.e5!? (this has been played by Kasparov and Karpov, but Capablanca, now on the white side, preferred 7.exd5).
After 7.e5!?, Black usually plays 7...Nfd7, but also popular, and much preferred by the engines, is 7...Ne4!? Then the main line goes 8.Qxd5 Nxc3 9.Qxd8+ Kxd8 10.bxc3, and now I am recommending a speciality of the Spanish grandmaster Jordi Magem Badals: 10...Nc6 11.Bxc4 Be6 12.Bxe6 fxe6 13.Ng5 Ke7. Magem Badals has had this position four times (in Mega20), beating players rated 2653 and 2545, and drawing with players rated 2490 and 2468.
Alexandr Fier (2653) - Magem Badals (2564), Barcelona Casino 2009, continued: 14.f4 h6 15.Ne4 Kd7 16.Be3 b6 17.Ke2 Be7 18.Rhf1 Rhd8 19.Rf3 Ke8 20.Raf1 Rd5, which the engines reckon is level, although Magem Badals went on to win.
4...cxd4 5.Bxc4!
The most-precise move. Often seen is 5.exd4, but then 5...Be6!? proves annoying. The main line runs 6.Nc3 Nf6 7.Ne5 Nc6 8.Nxc6 bxc6 9.Qa4 Qd7 10.Bxc4 Bxc4 11.Qxc4 e6 12.0-0, when the engines reckon Black is at least equal.
How should Black proceed?
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5...Qc7!
Gaining a tempo on the bishop. Try to avoid what happened in a 1997 Finnish game between two unrateds: 5...dxe3?? 6.Bxf7+ 1-0.
6.Qb3 e6 7.exd4 Nc6!?
More popular is 7...Nf6, but the text, which introduces the threat of ...Na5, may be better, although often the two lines transpose.
8.Nc3 Nf6 9.0-0 Bd7
Now ...Na5 is a serious threat as White cannot avoid an exchange of minor pieces by interpolating a check to the black king.
10.Bd3 Be7 11.Be3 0-0 12.Rac1 Rfd8
A later game, Mikhail M Ivanov (2457) - Mihajlo Stojanovic (2522), Verona 2006, saw 12...Rad8?!, which may be a case of the wrong rook, although Black did go on to win.
13.a3 Be8 14.Rfd1 Ng4
The more-conventional 14...Rac8 also seems fine.
15.Qc2 g6!?
Better may be 15...h6.
16.Qe2 Nxe3 17.fxe3
Black, with his bishop-pair, is slightly better, according to Stockfish10, but Komodo10 prefers White. The game was decided when a surprising tactical error gave Black a pawn to go with the bishops.
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CONCLUSIONS
When White plays the non-forcing 2.Nf3, after 1.d4 d5, Black can immediately fight for the initiative with 2...c5. This will put many whites on the back foot, leading them to play passively.
If White knows some theory, a sharp tussle can ensue, with play that should suit the tactically orientated player.

Saturday, 11 January 2020

Morphing The French XII

WHILE playing at Bournemouth in October, I was invited by Keith Gregory to play for Wessex in Britain's top team competition, the 4NCL.
Today was the first chance to take him up on the offer, and I played on top board in division four for Wessex C against Oxford 4 at the Holiday Inn in Maidenhead, Berkshire.
Spanton (1854/168) - A Philip Neatherway (1822/158)
French Exchange
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5
My 12th attempt at playing against the French Defence in the style of Paul Morphy.
3...exd5 4.Nf3 Bg4
An aggressive choice that has been tried by Fabiano Caruana and Alexei Shirov. It was also the move Nigel Short played when Mikhail Gurevich, needing a draw to become a world championship Candidate, switched from his habitual closed openings to 1.e4 so he could essay the French Exchange against Short (Short won).
5.h3 
Massively more popular is 5.Be2, but the text has been played by Garry Kasparov and Vladimir Kramnik.
5...Bh5 6.Bd3
Kasparov and Kramnik preferred 6.Qe2+.
6...Bd6 7.0-0 Ne7 8.Re1 0-0?
This allows a Greek Gift sacrifice.
9.Bxh7+ Kxh7!?
Objectively better is 9...Kh8, but after 10.Bd3 Black was a clean pawn down and had a weakened king's position in Herbert Kiefer - Siegfried Schön, Regensburg 1997 (1-0, 41 moves).
10.Ng5+ Kg6
Hopeless is 10...Kh6 11.Ne6+ Kg6 (or 11...g5 12.Bxg5+ Kg6 13.Qd3+) 12.Qd3+.
11.Qd3+ f5 12.Ne6 Qe8 13.Nxf8+ Qxf8 14.g4 Bxg4 15.hxg4 Qh8 16.gxf5+
I rejected returning the exchange with 16.Re6+ Kf7 17.Rxe7+ because, after 17...Kxe7 18.Bg5+ Ke8 (forced) 19.f4, I felt White's advantage is not as big as in the game, although Black undoubtedly has less counterplay.
The engines point out an improved version of returning the exchange, namely 16.Rxe7!, the point being that 16...Bxe7 allows 17.Qxf5#.
16...Kf7 17.Qf3 Qh2+ 18.Kf1 Nbc6 19.Be3 Rh8
I have made quite a few sub-optimal moves, according to Stockfish10 and Komodo10, but have maintained a winning advantage. However, the problem with playing sub-optimally like this, apart from it being bad on principle, is that just one slip can turn a win into a draw or even a loss.
20.Nc3 Rh5 21.Qg2
Not 21.Nxd5?? Rxf5.
21...Qh4 22.Rad1 Rxf5 23.Ke2 Bf4 24.Rh1 Qf6 25.Rh3 Ng6 26.Nxd5!
This may look foolhardy, but was correctly calculated.
26...Qe6 27.c4
Not 27.Nc3?? Bxe3 28.Rxe3 (28.fxe3 Nf4+) Nf4+ 29.Kd2 Qxe3+ 30.fxe3 Nxg2.
27...Na5 28.Kd3?
I guess I was fixated on getting my king to queenside 'safety', whereas 28.Kf1 maintains White's winning advantage.
Black to play and equalise
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28...c6?
The engines reckon Black has equalised after 28...Nxc4 29.Kxc4 Ne7 or 29...Rxd5.
29.Nxf4 Qxc4+ 30.Kd2 Nxf4 31.Bxf4 Rxf4 32.Rf3 Qxd4+ 33.Kc1 Qc4+ 34.Rc3 Qe6
34...Qxa2 runs into 35.Rd7+, eg 35...Ke8 36.Rdd3 Kf7 37.Qh2 Qa1+ 38.Kc2 Qa4+ 39.Kb1. If in this line Black plays 35...Ke6, then 36.Qh3+ Kf6 37.Rd6+ Ke5 38.Qe3+ Kxd6 39.Qxf4+ Kd7 40.Rd3+ Ke7 41.Qd6+ and mates.
35.b3 Qf5
If 35...Qf6, then 36.Qg3 as 36...Rxf2 fails to 37.Qc7+.
36.Rcd3?
Again 36.Qg3 is good.
36...Rxf2 37.Rd7+
Black to play and draw
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37...Ke6?
Black draws with 37...Ke8 38.Rd8+ Kf7 39.R1d7+ Ke6 40.Rd6+ Kf7 41.R8d7+ Ke8 etc.
38.R1d6+ Ke5 39.Qxg7+ Ke4 40.Re7+ Kf4 41.Rf6 1-0
Wessex C won the match 4-2.