Round 1: 4 December 2015
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6Th London Chess Classic (6-14 December 2014)
6TH LONDON CHESS CLASSIC (6-14 DECEMBER 2014) CLASSIC ROUND 4: 14 DECEMBER 2014 YOU’VE JUST BEEN SPACEBARRED With one round to go (starting at 2pm on Sunday), the Classic is nicely poised with five of the six players still able to finish first. Round four featured just the one decisive result, with Hikaru Nakamura beating Mickey Adams, which makes the scores as follows: Kramnik and Giri 6, Nakamura 5, Anand and Adams 4, Caruana 3. One of the great things about an international chess tournament is the exchange of ideas between people from different countries and cultures. From the beginning, the London Chess Classic has placed a great deal of importance on invitees putting in as positive a performance in the commentary room as they do at the board. Top chessplayers are highly intelligent people and have quickly realised that their livelihood depends as much on their ability to communicate as to play good moves. Consequently we now have a young generation of players with the confidence to innovate off the board linguistically as well as on it. Not just those who have English as their first language, either. It’s gratifying for us native Brits to have our language adopted worldwide as the first language of chess, but perhaps a bit scary too. As with our other notable export, football, where we have had to learn to endure other countries playing it a lot better than we do, we now have to live with people from non-English speaking countries being more articulate and creative in English than we are. -
Chess Mag - 21 6 10 18/09/2020 14:01 Page 3
01-01 Cover - October 2020_Layout 1 18/09/2020 14:00 Page 1 03-03 Contents_Chess mag - 21_6_10 18/09/2020 14:01 Page 3 Chess Contents Founding Editor: B.H. Wood, OBE. M.Sc † Executive Editor: Malcolm Pein Editorial....................................................................................................................4 Editors: Richard Palliser, Matt Read Malcolm Pein on the latest developments in the game Associate Editor: John Saunders Subscriptions Manager: Paul Harrington 60 Seconds with...Peter Wells.......................................................................7 Twitter: @CHESS_Magazine The acclaimed author, coach and GM still very much likes to play Twitter: @TelegraphChess - Malcolm Pein Website: www.chess.co.uk Online Drama .........................................................................................................8 Danny Gormally presents some highlights of the vast Online Olympiad Subscription Rates: United Kingdom Carlsen Prevails - Just ....................................................................................14 1 year (12 issues) £49.95 Nakamura pushed Magnus all the way in the final of his own Tour 2 year (24 issues) £89.95 Find the Winning Moves.................................................................................18 3 year (36 issues) £125 Can you do as well as the acclaimed field in the Legends of Chess? Europe 1 year (12 issues) £60 Opening Surprises ............................................................................................22 2 year (24 issues) £112.50 -
The Berlin Wall in NATO Chess Jan Cheung, 1 March 2017
The Berlin Wall in NATO Chess Jan Cheung, 1 March 2017 Last year one of the games had its premiere. For the first time in the history of NATO Chess, a Berlin Defence made its debut. So far I had never seen this middle game at amateur level! The Berlin Defee, ikaed The Beli Wall, is a stategi iddle gae ithout uees, diffiult to pla from both white and black. It is mostly played at 2600+ grandmaster level when black is happy with a draw. Amateurs do not play this defence because in open tournaments, black should create chances to win the game. Even the top 12 of women chess do not play this defence. A reason may be that the Berlin Defence requires sophisticated play from both sides. A minor reason for black not to play the Berlin Defence is that in one side variation, white can force a draw by repetition of moves. Hundreds of games between grandmasters have been played in this manner, to get around the Sofia rule. To avoid spoiling my chess creativity, I will not show you this variation. In this article I want to show you some ideas of the Berlin Defence, with the game played in the 3rd round of the 2016 NATO Chess Championship. You do not have to know much theory about the Berlin Defence to understand the middle game concepts. Pietruszewski, Marcin (2163) – Nielsen, Morten Majlund (2004) C67 NATO-ch 27th Shrivenham (3.8) 23.08.2016 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 We start with the Ruy Lopez. -
YEARBOOK the Information in This Yearbook Is Substantially Correct and Current As of December 31, 2020
OUR HERITAGE 2020 US CHESS YEARBOOK The information in this yearbook is substantially correct and current as of December 31, 2020. For further information check the US Chess website www.uschess.org. To notify US Chess of corrections or updates, please e-mail [email protected]. U.S. CHAMPIONS 2002 Larry Christiansen • 2003 Alexander Shabalov • 2005 Hakaru WESTERN OPEN BECAME THE U.S. OPEN Nakamura • 2006 Alexander Onischuk • 2007 Alexander Shabalov • 1845-57 Charles Stanley • 1857-71 Paul Morphy • 1871-90 George H. 1939 Reuben Fine • 1940 Reuben Fine • 1941 Reuben Fine • 1942 2008 Yury Shulman • 2009 Hikaru Nakamura • 2010 Gata Kamsky • Mackenzie • 1890-91 Jackson Showalter • 1891-94 Samuel Lipchutz • Herman Steiner, Dan Yanofsky • 1943 I.A. Horowitz • 1944 Samuel 2011 Gata Kamsky • 2012 Hikaru Nakamura • 2013 Gata Kamsky • 2014 1894 Jackson Showalter • 1894-95 Albert Hodges • 1895-97 Jackson Reshevsky • 1945 Anthony Santasiere • 1946 Herman Steiner • 1947 Gata Kamsky • 2015 Hikaru Nakamura • 2016 Fabiano Caruana • 2017 Showalter • 1897-06 Harry Nelson Pillsbury • 1906-09 Jackson Isaac Kashdan • 1948 Weaver W. Adams • 1949 Albert Sandrin Jr. • 1950 Wesley So • 2018 Samuel Shankland • 2019 Hikaru Nakamura Showalter • 1909-36 Frank J. Marshall • 1936 Samuel Reshevsky • Arthur Bisguier • 1951 Larry Evans • 1952 Larry Evans • 1953 Donald 1938 Samuel Reshevsky • 1940 Samuel Reshevsky • 1942 Samuel 2020 Wesley So Byrne • 1954 Larry Evans, Arturo Pomar • 1955 Nicolas Rossolimo • Reshevsky • 1944 Arnold Denker • 1946 Samuel Reshevsky • 1948 ONLINE: COVID-19 • OCTOBER 2020 1956 Arthur Bisguier, James Sherwin • 1957 • Robert Fischer, Arthur Herman Steiner • 1951 Larry Evans • 1952 Larry Evans • 1954 Arthur Bisguier • 1958 E. -
Torneo Ciudad De Dos Hermanas – Kasparov Not Winning!
Torneo Ciudad de Dos Hermanas – Kasparov not winning! Year Champion Country Points 1989 cat. 3 Julian Hodgson (already GM) England 7'5/9 (first edition) Leonid Bass (on tie-break, IM, then and today) USA 1990 cat. 5 7/9 Mark Hebden (IM then, later GM) England Alexander Goldin (already GM) 1991 cat. 7 Russia 7'5/9 (2. Granda Zuniga, 3.= Bass) Leonid Yudasin 1992 cat. 11 Israel 7/9 (2. Akopian, 5. Pia Cramling; 8. Hodgson) Anatoly Karpov 1993 cat. 13 Russia 7'5/9 (2. Judit Polgar, 3.= Epishin, Khalifman) Boris Gelfand 1994 cat. 16 Belarus 6'5/9 (2. Karpov, 3. Epishin, 4. Topalov) Gata Kamsky (on tie-break) Anatoly Karpov, second win USA 1995 cat. 18 Michael Adams Russia 5'5/9 supertorneo (4.-5. Gelfand, Judit Polgar, 6.-7. Lautier, England Illescas, 8. Piket, 9. Salov, 10. Shirov.) Vladimir Kramnik (on tie-break) 1996 cat. 19 Veselin Topalov supertorneo Russia (3.-4. Anand, ➔ Kasparov half a point behind, 6/9 (nine of the top ten Bulgaria 5. Illescas, 6.-7. Kamsky, Gelfand, 8. Ivanchuk, Elo ranked player!) 9.-10. Shirov, Judit Polgar) Viswanathan Anand (on tie-break) 1997 cat. 19 Vladimir Kramnik, second win India 6/9 supertorneo (3.-5. Salov, Karpov, Topalov, 6.-8. Judit Polgar, Gelfand, Shirov, 9. Short, 10. Illescas) 1998 (no tournament) 1999 cat. 18 / 19 Michael Adams, second win supertorneo (2. Kramnik; 3./4. Illescas, Topalov, 5./6. (10th and Gelfand, Karpov, 7. Korchnoi; 8.-10. Svidler, jubilee edition, Judit Polgar, and the title defender, top-seeded England 6/9 Adams surpass Anand as joint last, remaining the only player three former & without a single game win! Korchnoi was 68. -
Playing the Trompowsky
Playing the Trompowsky By Richard Pert Quality Chess www.qualitychess.co.uk Contents Key to Symbols used & Bibliography 4 Preface 5 Introduction 7 1 2...e6 3.e4 11 2 2...e6 3.¤d2!? 47 3 2...c5 3.¤c3!? 61 4 2...c5 3.d5 79 5 2...¤e4 3.¥f4 c5 4.d5 93 6 2...¤e4 3.¥f4 c5 4.f3 107 7 2...d5 3.¥xf6 141 8 2...d5 3.e3 157 9 2...¤e4 3.¥f4 d5 4.e3 171 10 Rare 3rd Moves 193 11 Rare 2nd Moves 201 12 2.¥g5 against the Dutch 211 13 1.d4 d5 2.¥g5 233 Variation Index 263 Introduction If like most players you have a limited amount of time that you can spend studying chess openings, but still want to push for an advantage with White, then the Trompowsky is a great choice. Despite the opening not being as well investigated as a lot of the main lines, it is still a very attacking opening that is tricky for Black to face. I have no doubt that when I made this opening my main choice some fifteen years ago, it significantly improved my performance with White. In this opening White stamps his mark on the position from the second move with 2.¥g5. I have focused on providing an in-depth White repertoire in the Trompowsky, 1.d4 ¤f6 2.¥g5, with a couple of choices for White against several of Black’s key options. On top of that I have also taken the time to give a repertoire versus the Dutch Defence, 1.d4 f5 2.¥g5, which seems to me to be very strong, and had a look at the Pseudo-Tromp, 1.d4 d5 2.¥g5, which leads to interesting positions. -
Monarch Assurance International Open Chess
Isle of Man (IoM) Open The event of 2016 definitely got the Isle of Man back on the international chess map! Isle of Man (IoM) Open has been played under three different labels: Monarch Assurance International Open Chess Tournament at the Cherry Orchard Hotel (1st-10th), later Ocean Castle Hotel (11th-16th), always in Port Erin (1993 – 2007, in total 16 annual editions) PokerStars Isle of Man International (2014 & 15) in the Royal Hall at the Villa Marina in Douglas Chess.com Isle of Man International (since 2016) in the Royal Hall at the Villa Marina in Douglas The Isle of Man is a self-governing Crown dependency in the Irish Sea between England and Northern Ireland. The island has been inhabited since before 6500 BC. In the 9th century, Norsemen established the Kingdom of the Isles. Magnus III, King of Norway, was also known as King of Mann and the Isles between 1099 and 1103. In 1266, the island became part of Scotland and came under the feudal lordship of the English Crown in 1399. It never became part of the Kingdom of Great Britain or its successor the United Kingdom, retaining its status as an internally self-governing Crown dependency. http://iominternationalchess.com/ For a small country, sport in the Isle of Man plays an important part in making the island known to the wider world. The principal international sporting event held on the island is the annual Isle of Man TT motorcycling event: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_in_the_Isle_of_Man#Other_sports Isle of Man also organized the 1st World Senior Team Chess Championship, In Port Erin, Isle Of Man, 5-12 October 2004 http://www.saund.co.uk/britbase/worldseniorteam2004/ Korchnoi who had to hurry up to the forthcoming 2004 Chess Olympiad at Calvià, agreed to play the first four days for the team of Switzerland which took finally the bronze medal, performing at 3.5/4, drawing vs. -
6Th London Chess Classic (6-14 December 2014)
6TH LONDON CHESS CLASSIC (6-14 DECEMBER 2014) CLASSIC ROUND 2: 11 DECEMBER 2014 So to round two, with Britain’s Mickey Adams at the top of the table as the only winner in the first round. No distractions today, just straight down to business, with the only blonde mop-tops in sight being the children deputed to make the elite players first moves. Today the number of decisive results doubled, as Vladimir Kramnik played what at least one of the spectating GMs described as ‘the perfect game’ to defeat Hikaru Nakamura, and Anish Giri opened his Olympia account at the expense of the overnight leader. Birthday celebrant Vishy Anand had another fairly uneventful draw, this time with Fabiano Caruana. Round 2 Scores: Giri, Kramnik 4, Adams 3, Anand 2, Caruana, Nakamura 1. Let’s get the draw out of the way first. It lasted around 2 hours and 17 moves before a repetition brought it to the gentlest of conclusions. Having nothing to say about it, I’ll leave you with a nice picture of the players and move on. VLAD DOESN’T FALL FOR KID-OLOGY Kramnik-Nakamura was a much more red-blooded affair. The US number one never shirks a challenge and was prepared to punt a King’s Indian Defence. He won a zinger of a game with the KID at the Classic against another world champion, Vishy Anand, a year or two ago so it’s been good to him. It is an opening much beloved of amateurs and lower-echelon professionals but, apart from the adventurous Hikaru and a couple of others, the 2700+ boys tend to give it a wide berth. -
Interview with GM Peter Wells Questions by Mark Rivlin a Prolific
Interview with GM Peter Wells Questions by Mark Rivlin A prolific chess author, GM Peter Wells has written nine books, including the recently published Chess Improvement – It’s All In The Mindset (co-authored with Barry Hymer, an expert in psychology and education) which has received excellent reviews. Peter has an impressive portfolio of training success with the England Open and Women’s squads and with England’s top young players through the Chess Trust’s Accelerator Programme. We are delighted that he is providing a monthly column for Chess Moves. Tell us about your playing career, the highs and lows. I was lucky to be part of a very strong generation of players in the UK: Nigel Short is just a couple of months younger than me and Julian Hodgson, Danny King, Jo Gallagher, Stuart Conquest, John Emms, Willy Watson, and James Howell (amongst others – apologies to anyone I have missed out!) were all just a couple of years either side. I think this provided a very healthily competitive environment growing up. My career overall has had more than its share of frustrations – as happens to players who never quite solve the time management issue. I guess the two lowest points that spring to mind are the failure to even minimally control my nerves in the first round of the 1997 World Championship knockout (my only appearance at this level) and the very simple win I missed (35…Nf2!) – again with the help of that deadly combination of nerves and time-trouble – against Julian Hodgson in the final round of the British Championship in Scarborough 2001. -
Round 5: 8 December 2015
7TH LONDON CHESS CLASSIC (4-13 DECEMBER 2015) CLASSIC ROUND 5: 8 DECEMBER 2015 John Saunders reports: As usual we started with some children making moves for the grandmasters. This time the children in question had travelled all the way from Gloucestershire. That’s around 200 kilometres due west of London for those readers unfamiliar with our green and pleasant land, and our adherence to Imperial units of measurement. They brought with them some innovative opening ideas. The little boy from Slimbridge Primary School deputed to make Levon Aronian’s move against Magnus Carlsen unfurled 1.Nh3!? which was extremely welcome with us photographers as it made the players smile for the camera. The clash of two of the leaders, Vachier-Lagrave and Giri, was bloodless and the first game to finish, around two hours into the round. It was a Berlin Defence and drawn in 33 moves. The main point of interest was the move 19...Nd4, which must have been computer analysis. It was a prepared improvement on the game Adams-Kramnik, played – no prizes for guessing where – yes, at the Classic last year. Thereafter the only piquant point was the presence of passed pawns on the same file (as if they had somehow overtaken one other). However, the resultant position was lifeless and a repetition duly followed. The Athenian oracle was typically withering: "I have gone on strike: I refuse to commentate on [MVL v Giri] as a point of principle." A colleague in the press room thought that the players' priority might have been watching the evenings' Champions League matches. -
London Chess Classic Day 3 Round-Up
6th December 2015 LONDON CHESS CLASSIC DAY 3 ROUND-UP After yesterday’s five draws, it looked like there could be up to four decisive results in today’s 3rd round, but many missed opportunities meant Maxime Vachier-Lagrave was the only player to bring home the full point, thus joining Anish Giri in the lead with 2/3. World Champion Magnus Carlsen facing his predecessor Vishy Anand In the most highly anticipated clash of the day, Carlsen chose to meet Anand’s Ruy Lopez with the Berlin Defence, an opening that famously played a huge part in both their World Championship matches. Anand came out of the opening with a favourable position, but a few inaccuracies before the time control left Carlsen in the driving seat. However, the World Champion failed to convert his clear advantage and the players eventually agreed a draw on move 57. Carlsen was clearly displeased after the game, stating: ‘It was a bit embarrassing for both of us’. Another player who came very close to tasting victory was Alexander Grischuk. The Russian virtuoso spent 1 hour and 3 minutes(!) on 20.f4, but subsequently reached an almost winning position. Having run very short of time though, he missed the necessary precision to convert his advantage and a draw was agreed – meaning Anish Giri remains unbeaten in the Grand Chess Tour. Caruana will also be disappointed tonight, as he failed to convert a position that seemed to be technically winning in the US derby against Nakamura. Adams meanwhile scored his third draw - against Aronian - despite having been a tiny bit worse out of the opening. -
Mating the Castled King
Mating the Castled King By Danny Gormally Quality Chess www.qualitychess.co.uk First edition 2014 by Quality Chess UK Ltd Copyright 2014 Danny Gormally © Mating the Castled King All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any fo rm or by any means, electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of the publisher. Paperback ISBN 978-1 -907982-71-2 Hardcover ISBN 978-1 -907982-72-9 All sales or enquiries should be directed to Quality Chess UK Ltd, 20 Balvie Road, Milngavie, Glasgow G62 7TA, United Kingdom Phone +44 141 204 2073 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.qualitychess.co.uk Distributed in North America by Globe Pequot Press, P.O. Box 480, 246 Goose Lane, Guilford, CT 06437-0480, US www.globepequot.com Distributed in Rest of the Wo rld by Quality Chess UK Ltd through Sunrise Handicrafts, ul. Skromna 3, 20-704 Lublin, Poland Ty peset by Jacob Aagaard Proofreading by Andrew Greet Edited by Colin McNab Cover design by Carole Dunlop and www.adamsondesign.com Cover Photo by capture365.com Photo page 174 by Harald Fietz Printed in Estonia by Tallinna Raamatutriikikoja LLC Contents Key to Symbols used 4 Preface 5 Chapter 1 - A Few Helpful Ideas 7 Chapter 2 - 160 Mating Finishes 16 Bishop Clearance 17 Back-rank Mate 22 Bishop and Knight 30 Breakthrough on the g-file 40 Breakthrough on the b-file 49 Destroying a Defensive Knight 54 Breakthrough on the h-file 63 Dragging out the King 79 Exposing the King 97