Tags: chess online, play chess, chess, chess online, chess online, online chess, backgammon online
Chess Forum legalserv.com << online chess - < chess - chess > - chess online >>
| From | Message | Posted by ccmcacollister legalserv.com
9/28/2008 09:03:03 Play online chess | Subject: Some blitz play
Message: A decent blitz Chess game, from the Ghost of Christmas' Past }8-)
Still around but just slowed down to 3 minute Chess ...
1. e4 d5
2. exd5 Nf6
3. c4 c6
4. dxc6 Nxc6
5. Nc3 e5
6. d3 Qb6
7. Nge2 Bc5
8. f3 Bf2+
9. Kd2 O-O
10. Kc2 Bf5
11. g4 Bxd3+
12. Qxd3 Nb4+
13. Kd2 Rad8
14. Qxd8 Rxd8+
15. Nd5 Nfxd5
16. cxd5 Qe3+
17. Kd1 Rxd5+
I'd been planning just 11...Rd8, then found myself pondering that ultimate Chessplayer
Question (Which Science can Never answer without accusations of metaphysics ... does that
make Chess a "Sport". owww I hear the anguished outcry already. Ok, I'll settle for "Art", or
maybe "Religion" !? :)
"WHY ??!?" Uh, well because it There. um No? Okay how about just Bxd3 since it seems to win
in every line. Strangely after the first 1000 of these Scandi-things I've never SEEN this arise.
Has it not been there? Or have I been blind and this Is the great Epiphany? YES, that's it. I feel
very gestaltic today. Then again, Percodan also does that. Well I'll leave it to the reader to
decide. (By which of course I mean Ionadowman and doctor_knight ! Thx for remembering
Doc !! .... I feel like I've been to my own wake and didnt even have to ....well you know :)
OH, Chess. OK .... If Qxd3 see game or of course Kxd3 then the house still tumbles to Rd8 and
it doesnt matter so much which one, but in tactical situations I generally prefer to use the
Rook who's capture would not Check me ... if it could be capture. So its a matter of principle
on the choice, I think.
So at the end Mate chances abound. To take a Bd2 or even Qe1# if that opens up. And so was
actually pondering "Really which mate WOULD look best there" and probably would have run
out my last minute deciding ... but he was asking the same Question, and it was his move. So
he timed instead. Just another case where Luck pays better than skill ~! }8-)
Please post you blitz games. OR even otb if 30 or 90 minutes is Feeling like Blitz lately. I get
that too. I call it Monday morning ...
| Posted by ionadowman legalserv.com
9/28/2008 15:20:56 Play online chess | It seems that 11.g4...
Message: ... is the losing mistake, but White's position by then was already looking pretty dismal. But 11...Bxd3+ is a crusher.
Hi Craig! How are you doing these days? I thought you had gone off to hibernate or something.
Was this a "book" line up until White's 11th? If so, I don't go a bundle on 7.Nge2. Was there anything against a "normal" move like 7.Nf3.
Would I be churlish in pointing out a quicker mate at move 15? It goes 15...Qe3+ 16.Kd1 Qd3+ 17.Bd2 Qc2#. But the thing with Blitz games, you don't look for the quickest; you look for what works. Nice miniature, Craig!
Cheers,
Ion
| Posted by ionadowman legalserv.com
9/28/2008 15:39:04 Play online chess | Before disappearing over the horizon....
Message: ... I just thought I'd check out the projected 11...Rad8. Of course it's not as decisive as the immediate 11...Bxd3+! but... well, have a look.
b
11...Rad8!? 12.gxf5 Rxd3+! 13.Qxd3 (13.Kxd3?? is mate in 2) 13...Nb4+
14.Kd2 Rd8! 15.Qxd8 (or 15.Nd5) 15...Qxd8+ 16.Nd5 Nfxd5 17.cxd5?! Qxd5+
18.Kc3 Be1+ 19.Bd2 Bxd2#.
Not as forcing as Craig's line, but the thing has a certain ... something ...
Cheers,
Ion ——— Michael Adams and Nigel Short ready for rare battle — The British chess championship, which starts in Sheffield on Monday, is the strongest in the chess event's 107-year history, with almost all of England's top grandmasters taking part. There will also probably be a rare head-to-head between the former world finalists Michael Adams and Nigel Short, who are both in good form. Adams tied first at the World Open in Philadelphia, Short at the Commonwealth Open in South Africa. The other interesting prospect is a clash of generations as the long supremacy of Adams, 39, and Short, 46, is challenged by the ambitious and fast-rising David Howell, 20, and Gawain Jones, 23, who aim to take over the top boards in the national team. It is hard to see beyond ...
Posted by ccmcacollister legalserv.com
10/02/2008 15:19:18 Play online chess | another mate sac motif
Message: Pretty straight forward. What it the point in studying blitz play. Well becasue they are often ugly but the show stock attacks, standard mate sacs and motifs, etc like nothing else. Things that are jjust in the notes in the GM games and avoided as only being factors of move choice, unless there is a time scrammble.
ps Hi Ion, good to see you here. I will be back later and more talkative. Far from being a spoiler, I consider it great you found more since I am a truth seeker. Or was when i had the ambition :)
1262 vs me in 7 minute play1. e4 c6
2. Bc4 e6
3. Nc3 d5
4. Bd3 Nf6
5. Nf3 Qc7
6. e5 Nfd7
7. Qe2 b5
8. b3 b4
9. Nd1 Nb6
10. Bb2 N8d7
11. Ne3 Be7
12. h4 h6
13. g4 Bb7
14. O-O-O a5
15. a4 bxa3
16. Ba1 a4
17. Kb1 c5
18. Ka2 g6
19. Rb1 Bc6
20. c4 d4
21. Nd1 axb3+
22. Rxb3 Na4
23. Rxa3 Qb6
24. Nb2 O-O
25. Rb1 Nc3+
26. dxc3 Rxa3+
27. Kxa3 Ra8+
28. Na4 Rxa4#
Weird game huh. But I LIKED his play as it made me think as nothing was where I thoguth it would be. I hated my play. But I might of been a little out of it :) Ah but standard mates are bicycles my friends!
——— Chess on the China road — Greetings from China! I am writing this column from my hotel room in Ningbo as I attend the 2011 World Team Chess Championship, which runs from July 16 to 26. Although I lived in Europe for four years (1988-92), this is my first trip to Asia. I feel privileged to witness the U.S. team as it battles hard against a tough field in an attempt to earn a medal and represent our nation on the world chess stage. I was invited to be a coach for the U.S. team, which is made up of three-time and reigning U.S. Chess Champion Gata Kamsky, 2006 U.S. Chess Champion Alex Onischuk, 2008 U.S. Chess Champion Yury Shulman, four-time U.S. Chess Champion Yasser Seirawan and 19-year-old chess phenom Grandmaster Robert Hess. A formidable ...
Posted by ionadowman legalserv.com
10/03/2008 13:54:57 Play online chess | Once learned, never forgotten...
Message: ... and often recognised at a distance, too. Sometimes you see the motif well ahead, then steer for it. Where in a normal game an alert player will have time to avoid the danger, in Blitz you often don't see it until the grille pattern has been imprinted on your ar- ... behind.
That was a pretty strange game, but I think Black was "in the lead" from quite early on. White's projected K-side pawn storm never got going...
It often happens that one side establishes an early initiative and then it's all one way traffic from then on. However hard the enemy struggles, and tries to keep the balance, one feels that the thing can end in only one way. The following wasn't a Blitz game, but it was a very fast time control: 15 minutes apiece.
White: IAD Black: LCT Caro-Kann Wellington, December 1982.
1.e4 c6
2.d4 d5
3.exd5 cxd5
4.c4 ... - Panov-Botvinnik Attack...
4...Nf6
5.c5!? ... - Gunderam Line. The game shows what this strategic decision is all about.
5...e6?!
6.b4 Be7
7.Nf3 0-0
8.b5 Qc7
9.Be3 Bd7
10.Nc3 b6?
11.c6 Bc8 - Who needs development when you can shut doen the enemy Q-side so comprehensively?
12.a4 Bb4
13.Qb3 Qd6
14.Bd3!? Ne4
15.Bxe4 dxe4
16.Ne5 a6
17.0-0 Bxc3
18.Qxc3 axb5
19.axb5 Rxa1
20.Rxa1 f6 - all these exchanges haven't relieved Black's position much. Material is still level, but Black has almost no play.
21.Nc4 Qd8
22.Ra7 e5
23.Bh6! ... - What I liked about finding this move was the complete shift of attention from the Q-side bind to a direct attack on the K-side. Black can not play 23...gxh6 owing to 24.Qg3+ Kh8 25.Qg7#. One of Craig's "standard mates", in a rather unusual setting. :)
23... Qxd4! - the best counter to a flank action is to strike in the centre!
24.Rxg7+ Kh8
25.Qxd4 exd4
26.Nd6 Be6
27.Re7 d3
28.Nxe4 Rd8
29.Nxf6 Bg8
30.Bg7#
Possibly Black could have sacrificed his way out of the bind early on, but even that poor option was eventually denied him. The poor old b8-knight never got to move for the entire game.
Cheers,
Ion
——— Chess: Ulf Andersson, positional master — Andersson rarely makes a direct attack: he wins by subtle improvements in position. DK: I've been wanting to tackle positional play in this column for some time, but couldn't think of a good way into a topic that is just too vast – until inspiration came with the arrival of Grandmaster Chess Strategy, by Jurgen Kaufeld and Guido Kern (New In Chess, £19.95). The title is bland, but the strapline reveals the content: "What amateurs can learn from Ulf Andersson's positional masterpieces". Andersson is, for me, an enigmatic chess player: he rarely makes a direct attack on his opponent's king, preferring to exchange pieces and gently improve his position – and against strong chess players this frequently leads to ...
Posted by ionadowman legalserv.com
10/05/2008 13:41:13 Play online chess | Endgames in Blitz play ...
Message: One might imagine that endgame technique is at a premium in endgames, time running short and probably a lot of moves to play to realise the result. In the following Blitz (10-minute) game, played several years ago, Black (myself) had already flubbed several straightforward winning chances. For the bishop, White has 3 extra pawns - a nominal material parity:
w
Now White thought he had a chance of his own with the queens off:
47.Qxf6+!? gxf6!
Of course the King can't take, as the b-pawn just runs through to queen. Now White has two widely separated passers. How can Black stop them?
48.b6 Kd6
49.g7 Bh7
Now Black appears to have contained White's passers and threatens to round up at least one of them. How ought White to continue?
50.e4!? - by creating more passed pawns?
50...dxe4
Now White has 4 passed pawns, but he has called into existence two for Black!....
51.d5! ...
Rather neatly preserving the life of the b-pawn. Nor may Black take the d-pawn.
51...e3
52.Kc3! f5!
For the moment, White's pawns are stymied. Black can't win them, but neither can they advance. Black takes advantage of this to bring up support for his own passer.
53.Kd3 f4+
54.Ke2 Bg8
55.c4 ...
Now what? Black can make no progress with his pawns; the bishop bites on granite. Sometimes, to go forwards, you have to take a step back:
55...Kd7!
56.Kf3 Kc8!
57.Ke2 ...
Marking time. But White can not preserve his advance b-pawn. 57.d6 was no good owing to 57...Bxc4. Zugzwang!
57... Kb7
58.c5 Bxd5
59.Kd3 Bg8?!
Probably more accurate was ...Bf7. Black has now the better of it, insofar as having contained the White pawns, but still has to find a win with only a semi-mobile bishop.
60.Ke2 Kc6
61.Kd3 Bf7
62.Ke2 - What else/
62...Bxh5+!
63.Kf1 Bf7
Black's third passed pawn seals the deal. The White King can't stop them all, and he can use his own only as a distraction.
64,Ke2 h5
65.Kf3 h4
66.Ke2 h3
0-1 after a few more moves.
You don't need a whole lot of material on the board to live on the edge...
Cheers,
Ion ——— Bobby Fischer Against the World (movie review) — A riveting documentary about the troubled US chess champion and his battle with Boris Spassky. Liz Garbus's gripping documentary about the life and times of the troubled American chess genius Bobby Fischer asks a number of questions. Did Bobby's missing dad create an emotional void which was neurotically filled with chess? Is there something in the game that encourages immersive obsession and ultimate madness? Would Fischer have gone the same way if he had been a plumber or a welder? And why is it that antisemitism is the bigotry of choice for mentally ill people? Non-chessers like me are already basically aware of the second and third acts of this American life. The middle act was ...
| | | |
|