Yearly Archives: 2009
Game #4821 by Megabyte
16:03, August 20, 2009 by Megabyte
[Event "Jogo Online"]
[Site "www.flyordie.com"]
[Date "2009.08.20"]
[Round "1"]
[White "Mythrill"]
[Black "LionDragon LB"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B01"]
[Annotator "Megabyte"]
[PlyCount "93"]
[EventDate "2009.??.??"]
[TimeControl "1200"]
1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 {(M) This is the center counter game. I'm still
thinking on how hold a complex center here.} Qf5 {(M) For a moment, h4 seemed
tempting.} 4. d4 (4. g4 {[%emt 0:00:00]} Qg6 {(M) This seems interesting and
makes white create many weaknesses.} 5. Be2) 4... Nf6 5. d5 Ng4 6. Nf3 e5 {(M)
What about taking en passant here?} 7. Bb5+ (7. dxe6 Bxe6 {(M) This seems good
for black and allows his/her development. Therefore, Bb5+ is certainly
stronger.}) (7. h3 Nf6 8. g4 {(M) Rybka prefers this, driving the queen and
knight away in two moves.}) 7... Bd7 8. O-O Bc5 9. h3 {(M) I'm obviously not
afraid to trade my rook for two minor pieces.} Nf6 (9... Bxf2+ 10. Rxf2 Nxf2
11. Kxf2 {(M) And white seems to have a very interesting game, despite the
weaknesses.} Bxb5 (11... Qf6 $2 {(M) I originally overlooked Bxb7+.}) 12. Nxb5)
10. Nxe5 Bxb5 11. Nxb5 Na6 12. d6 {(M) Offering this pawn here gave me nothing
but trouble.} O-O $5 {(M) Now I didn't consider the check, I'm into a bit of
trouble. However, according to Rybka, I still have counterplay.} (12... cxd6
13. Nxd6+ Bxd6 {(M) This is what I was hoping for.} 14. Qxd6) (12... Qxe5 {(M)
The pawn cannot be taken, because the bishop is pinned.} 13. Re1 Ne4 14. d7+
Kd8 {[%eval -56,13] [%emt 0:00:04]} 15. Be3 Bb4 {[%eval -66,13] [%emt 0:00:03]}
16. Bd4 Qxb5 {[%eval -46,14] [%emt 0:00:01]} 17. Rxe4 {(M) With a slight
advantage for black.}) 13. Nd3 Bxd6 14. Nxd6 cxd6 {(M) This pawn is, however,
very hard for black to defend still.} 15. g4 $5 {(M) A very bold move. This
wouldn't be possible if the queen was not guarding this square.} (15. Re1 Rfe8
16. Bf4 Rxe1+ 17. Qxe1 Re8 18. Qc3 {[%eval 41,13] [%emt 0:00:04] (M) This
keeps a slight advantage for white.}) 15... Qg6 $2 (15... Qd7 {(M) This looks
much, much safer for black, with ideas of Rfd8, for example.} 16. Bf4 Rfd8 17.
c4 Qc8 18. c5 $2 {(M) And white can't pressure the d-pawn.} dxc5) (15... Qd5 {
[%eval 0,15] [%emt 0:00:01]} 16. Re1 Rfe8 17. Be3 {[%eval 3,15] [%emt 0:00:01]
(M) Rybka prevers this line for black, keeping the game almost perfectly even.}
) 16. Nf4 Qe4 17. g5 {(M) I could simply have taken the pawn here, guarding
the knight twice. But I tought disrupting the knight was much better.} (17.
Qxd6 Rfd8 $1 {(M) And it is true. This gives black some counterplay.} 18. Qa3
Nb4 (18... Qxc2 $2 {(M) And indeed taking the pawn is not as good.} 19. Be3 h6
20. Rac1 $1)) 17... Nd7 18. Re1 Qc6 19. Nd5 Kh8 20. b3 Nac5 21. Bb2 Ne6 {(M)
In this conext, this move is pretty sound.} 22. c4 $1 {(M) And now this makes
it very hard for the white queen to attack.} Nxg5 $4 {(M) Black will regret
getting this pawn. All of a sudden, his/her defense crumbles.} 23. Qg4 $1 {(M)
And the knight is pinned.} f6 24. Re7 $1 {(M) And now black's position is very,
very crowded.} Rf7 $5 {(M) Trading looks natural here, if I accepted.} 25. Rae1
(25. Rxf7 Nxf7 26. Re1 Rf8 (26... Rd8 $4 {Leads to disaster.} 27. Re7 Nde5 28.
Bxe5 Rf8 29. Nxf6 gxf6 (29... dxe5 $1 {[%eval 184,12] [%emt 0:00:02] (M) Nice
Rybka move.} 30. Nd5 a5 {[%eval 207,13] [%emt 0:00:04]} 31. Rxf7 $4 {The queen
guards the critical square c8.} (31. Rc7 {[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01]} Qd6 {
[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01]} 32. Rxb7 {[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01] (M) And
black still hangs on, but he/she is down two pawns.}) 31... Rxf7 {[%eval -212,
12] [%emt 0:00:01]}) 30. Bxf6#) 27. Re7 Nde5 28. Bxe5 dxe5 {(M) And black
barely hangs on.}) 25... Rxe7 26. Rxe7 Ne5 $4 {(M) This loses material.} 27.
Bxe5 $1 {(M) Giving up a good dark-squared bishop to exploit my opponent's
weak position.} dxe5 $2 {(M) This recapture is not good for black.} (27... Re8
28. Rxe8+ Qxe8 29. Bxd6 {(M) This loses material, but it is safer for black.})
28. h4 b5 29. hxg5 bxc4 {(M) Is gxh4 faster?} 30. bxc4 (30. gxf6 g6 (30... Qxd5
$4 {(M) The knight cannot be taken, after all.} 31. Qxg7#) 31. bxc4 {(M) And
black is still in the game.}) 30... Qa4 31. gxf6 g6 32. Qe6 Qd1+ 33. Kg2 Qa4
34. f7 Qxc4 $4 {(M) Very greedy, but the threats are numerous.} 35. Re8+ $1 {
(M) Deflection.} Rxe8 36. fxe8=Q+ Kg7 37. Qxe5+ Kh6 38. Qh2+ {(M) Restricting
black's play area.} Kg7 (38... Kg5 39. Qee5+ Kg4 40. Qhg3#) 39. Qee5+ Kg8 40.
Ne7+ Kf8 41. Qhf4+ Ke8 (41... Qxf4 42. Qxf4+ Kxe7 {(M) Not great, but it
delays checkmate for a while more.}) 42. Qxc4 h5 43. Qg8+ Kd7 44. Qed5+ Kxe7
45. Qge6+ Kf8 46. Qdd7 a5 47. Qef7# 1-0
Game #4822 by Mega
16:03, August 20, 2009 by Mega
[Event "Jogo Online"]
[Site "www.flyordie.com"]
[Date "2009.08.20"]
[Round "1"]
[White "Mythrill"]
[Black "LionDragon LB"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B01"]
[Annotator "Megabyte"]
[PlyCount "93"]
[EventDate "2009.??.??"]
[TimeControl "1200"]
1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 {(M) This is the center counter game. I'm still
thinking on how hold a complex center here.} Qf5 {(M) For a moment, h4 seemed
tempting.} 4. d4 (4. g4 {[%emt 0:00:00]} Qg6 {(M) This seems interesting and
makes white create many weaknesses.} 5. Be2) 4... Nf6 5. d5 Ng4 6. Nf3 e5 {(M)
What about taking en passant here?} 7. Bb5+ (7. dxe6 Bxe6 {(M) This seems good
for black and allows his/her development. Therefore, Bb5+ is certainly
stronger.}) (7. h3 Nf6 8. g4 {(M) Rybka prefers this, driving the queen and
knight away in two moves.}) 7... Bd7 8. O-O Bc5 9. h3 {(M) I'm obviously not
afraid to trade my rook for two minor pieces.} Nf6 (9... Bxf2+ 10. Rxf2 Nxf2
11. Kxf2 {(M) And white seems to have a very interesting game, despite the
weaknesses.} Bxb5 (11... Qf6 $2 {(M) I originally overlooked Bxb7+.}) 12. Nxb5)
10. Nxe5 Bxb5 11. Nxb5 Na6 12. d6 {(M) Offering this pawn here gave me nothing
but trouble.} O-O $5 {(M) Now I didn't consider the check, I'm into a bit of
trouble. However, according to Rybka, I still have counterplay.} (12... cxd6
13. Nxd6+ Bxd6 {(M) This is what I was hoping for.} 14. Qxd6) (12... Qxe5 {(M)
The pawn cannot be taken, because the bishop is pinned.} 13. Re1 Ne4 14. d7+
Kd8 {[%eval -56,13] [%emt 0:00:04]} 15. Be3 Bb4 {[%eval -66,13] [%emt 0:00:03]}
16. Bd4 Qxb5 {[%eval -46,14] [%emt 0:00:01]} 17. Rxe4 {(M) With a slight
advantage for black.}) 13. Nd3 Bxd6 14. Nxd6 cxd6 {(M) This pawn is, however,
very hard for black to defend still.} 15. g4 $5 {(M) A very bold move. This
wouldn't be possible if the queen was not guarding this square.} (15. Re1 Rfe8
16. Bf4 Rxe1+ 17. Qxe1 Re8 18. Qc3 {[%eval 41,13] [%emt 0:00:04] (M) This
keeps a slight advantage for white.}) 15... Qg6 $2 (15... Qd7 {(M) This looks
much, much safer for black, with ideas of Rfd8, for example.} 16. Bf4 Rfd8 17.
c4 Qc8 18. c5 $2 {(M) And white can't pressure the d-pawn.} dxc5) (15... Qd5 {
[%eval 0,15] [%emt 0:00:01]} 16. Re1 Rfe8 17. Be3 {[%eval 3,15] [%emt 0:00:01]
(M) Rybka prevers this line for black, keeping the game almost perfectly even.}
) 16. Nf4 Qe4 17. g5 {(M) I could simply have taken the pawn here, guarding
the knight twice. But I tought disrupting the knight was much better.} (17.
Qxd6 Rfd8 $1 {(M) And it is true. This gives black some counterplay.} 18. Qa3
Nb4 (18... Qxc2 $2 {(M) And indeed taking the pawn is not as good.} 19. Be3 h6
20. Rac1 $1)) 17... Nd7 18. Re1 Qc6 19. Nd5 Kh8 20. b3 Nac5 21. Bb2 Ne6 {(M)
In this conext, this move is pretty sound.} 22. c4 $1 {(M) And now this makes
it very hard for the white queen to attack.} Nxg5 $4 {(M) Black will regret
getting this pawn. All of a sudden, his/her defense crumbles.} 23. Qg4 $1 {(M)
And the knight is pinned.} f6 24. Re7 $1 {(M) And now black's position is very,
very crowded.} Rf7 $5 {(M) Trading looks natural here, if I accepted.} 25. Rae1
(25. Rxf7 Nxf7 26. Re1 Rf8 (26... Rd8 $4 {Leads to disaster.} 27. Re7 Nde5 28.
Bxe5 Rf8 29. Nxf6 gxf6 (29... dxe5 $1 {[%eval 184,12] [%emt 0:00:02] (M) Nice
Rybka move.} 30. Nd5 a5 {[%eval 207,13] [%emt 0:00:04]} 31. Rxf7 $4 {The queen
guards the critical square c8.} (31. Rc7 {[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01]} Qd6 {
[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01]} 32. Rxb7 {[%eval 199,12] [%emt 0:00:01] (M) And
black still hangs on, but he/she is down two pawns.}) 31... Rxf7 {[%eval -212,
12] [%emt 0:00:01]}) 30. Bxf6#) 27. Re7 Nde5 28. Bxe5 dxe5 {(M) And black
barely hangs on.}) 25... Rxe7 26. Rxe7 Ne5 $4 {(M) This loses material.} 27.
Bxe5 $1 {(M) Giving up a good dark-squared bishop to exploit my opponent's
weak position.} dxe5 $2 {(M) This recapture is not good for black.} (27... Re8
28. Rxe8+ Qxe8 29. Bxd6 {(M) This loses material, but it is safer for black.})
28. h4 b5 29. hxg5 bxc4 {(M) Is gxh4 faster?} 30. bxc4 (30. gxf6 g6 (30... Qxd5
$4 {(M) The knight cannot be taken, after all.} 31. Qxg7#) 31. bxc4 {(M) And
black is still in the game.}) 30... Qa4 31. gxf6 g6 32. Qe6 Qd1+ 33. Kg2 Qa4
34. f7 Qxc4 $4 {(M) Very greedy, but the threats are numerous.} 35. Re8+ $1 {
(M) Deflection.} Rxe8 36. fxe8=Q+ Kg7 37. Qxe5+ Kh6 38. Qh2+ {(M) Restricting
black's play area.} Kg7 (38... Kg5 39. Qee5+ Kg4 40. Qhg3#) 39. Qee5+ Kg8 40.
Ne7+ Kf8 41. Qhf4+ Ke8 (41... Qxf4 42. Qxf4+ Kxe7 {(M) Not great, but it
delays checkmate for a while more.}) 42. Qxc4 h5 43. Qg8+ Kd7 44. Qed5+ Kxe7
45. Qge6+ Kf8 46. Qdd7 a5 47. Qef7# 1-0
Game #4823 by Noname
03:42, August 24, 2009 by Noname
[Event "Club Buho21"]
[Site "Buho21.com"]
[Date "2009.08.02"]
[Round "?"]
[White "quecur1"]
[Black "Kaspavor"]
[Result "0-1"]
[PlyCount "40"]
[WhiteElo "1662"]
[BlackElo "1674"]
[TimeControl "600+5"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3 O-O 6. Nge2 c5 7. d5 Bd7 8. Be3
b5 9. cxb5 a6 10. bxa6 Nxa6 11. a3 Qb6 12. Rb1 Nc7 13. Qd2 Rfb8 14. g4 Nxe4
15. Nxe4 Bxb2 16. N2g3 Rxa3 17. Rxb2 Qxb2 18. Qxb2 Rxb2 19. Bc1 Ra1 20. Kd1
Ba4+ 0-1
Game #4824 by Noname
07:56, August 24, 2009 by Noname
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 g6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Qxd4 Nf6 5. e5 Nc6 6. Qa4 Nd5 7. Qe4 Ndb4 8. Na3
{This can be called one of the two main variations in this opening complex, that doesn’t
have a very good reputation at all for Black. However, this is one of those judgments that
build on no critical study and only copycat work from earlier more or less competent
games played.}
d5 9. Qf4{
9. exd6 e.p. Bf5 10. dxe7 Bxe7 is fine for Black.}
Bf5!
{Clearly stronger than the normally played 9. -, Bg7, but generally theory is way off the
track in these lines. In might very well be that the 4. Qxd4 complex is good for White,
something theory likes to state, but not because of the moves theory recommends! In
other words these lines are very complicated and unless one has a total grab on what is
going one it is going to be difficult.}
10. c3
{The alternative is 10. Bb5, which is more testing for Black, but I can lift the lid a bit. Not
here either it is easy for White to get something. A few examples I can mention can be 10.
Bb5 e6! (Again theory’s 10. -, a6 is poorer) 11. d4 Bxc2! or 11. Bd2 a6 12. Bxb4 axb5 13.
Bxf8 Ra4!}
Nd3+ 11. Bxd3 Bxd3 12. Ng5 f6 13. exf6 exf6 14. Qe3+ Qe7 15. Ne6 Ne5 16.
Nxf8 Rxf8 17. f4
{Here I took my first serious think. A long one. I used no less than 45 minutes but I had
the time. After strategically having used 15 minutes for the first six moves I consequently
moved à tempo up till now. I had the position up till 16. -, Rxf8 on my analysis board the
evening before in my hotel room. Which I am sure my opponent didn’t have. After 9. -,
Bf5 he started looking confused, spending a lot of time, and at this stage in the game he
has less than 20 minutes left.}
Nc4 18. Qxe7+ Kxe7 19. b3?
{I hadn’t exactly ‘analyzed’ this ending the evening before, I only ’assumed’ it to be okay
for Black. The position is in fact without problems for Black. His strong black-squared
Bishop more than compensates for the ’weakness’ of the d-pawn. That Black has no
advantage either is, however, evident. The position after 19. Nxc4 or 19. Nb5 Nd6 20.
Nxd6 (but not 20. Nc7 Rad8 21. Nxd5 Kf7 with advantage to Black) is pretty dead drawn.
The text move, however, is a misunderstanding of what’s going on. Hatanbaatar is at this
stage probably still under the impression that he can play for a win, but with my long
think at move 17 I had seen a bit further, actually as long as to move 25.}
Nd6 20. Be3 Rac8 21. 0-0-0
{This was the move he counted on.}
Be4 22. Kb2 Bxg2 23. Rhe1
{Probably 23. Rhg1 Bf3 24. Ref1 Be4 25. Bxa7 Rc6 is better for White than the game
continuation but firstly Black is still a bit better and secondly this was not White’s idea.}
a6! 24. c4 Kf7! 25. cxd5
{A look at the position reveals a total positional disaster for White. Black’s isolated dpawn
has been swapped till now being white and White has ended up with three pawnislands,
h2, f4, d5, and in the process Black has gotten himself a beautiful square on f5.
After Black’s next move which put White’s position under pressure it becomes apparent
that the White d-pawn is very weak.}
Rfe8 26. Nc4?
{Panicking, but he was getting very short on the clock. Technically I doubt the White
position is savable unless Black messes up. Now it is of course totally over.}
Rxc4 27. bxc4 Nxc4+ 28. Kc3 Nxe3 29. Rb1 Nxd5+ 30. {resigns. 0-1.}
Game #4825 by shchess
08:07, August 24, 2009 by shchess
[Event "Global Mobicom Tournament, Ulaanbaatar"]
[Date "2009"]
[Round "10"]
[White "GM Bazar Hatanbaatar"]
[Black "Torben Sorensen"]
[Result "0-1"]
[WhiteElo "2409"]
[BlackElo "2401"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 g6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Qxd4 Nf6 5. e5 Nc6 6. Qa4 Nd5 7. Qe4 Ndb4 8. Na3
{This can be called one of the two main variations in this opening complex, that doesn’t
have a very good reputation at all for Black. However, this is one of those judgments that
build on no critical study and only copycat work from earlier more or less competent
games played.}
d5 9. Qf4{
9. exd6 e.p. Bf5 10. dxe7 Bxe7 is fine for Black.}
Bf5!
{Clearly stronger than the normally played 9. -, Bg7, but generally theory is way off the
track in these lines. In might very well be that the 4. Qxd4 complex is good for White,
something theory likes to state, but not because of the moves theory recommends! In
other words these lines are very complicated and unless one has a total grab on what is
going one it is going to be difficult.}
10. c3
{The alternative is 10. Bb5, which is more testing for Black, but I can lift the lid a bit. Not
here either it is easy for White to get something. A few examples I can mention can be 10.
Bb5 e6! (Again theory’s 10. -, a6 is poorer) 11. d4 Bxc2! or 11. Bd2 a6 12. Bxb4 axb5 13.
Bxf8 Ra4!}
Nd3+ 11. Bxd3 Bxd3 12. Ng5 f6 13. exf6 exf6 14. Qe3+ Qe7 15. Ne6 Ne5 16.
Nxf8 Rxf8 17. f4
{Here I took my first serious think. A long one. I used no less than 45 minutes but I had
the time. After strategically having used 15 minutes for the first six moves I consequently
moved à tempo up till now. I had the position up till 16. -, Rxf8 on my analysis board the
evening before in my hotel room. Which I am sure my opponent didn’t have. After 9. -,
Bf5 he started looking confused, spending a lot of time, and at this stage in the game he
has less than 20 minutes left.}
Nc4 18. Qxe7+ Kxe7 19. b3?
{I hadn’t exactly ‘analyzed’ this ending the evening before, I only ’assumed’ it to be okay
for Black. The position is in fact without problems for Black. His strong black-squared
Bishop more than compensates for the ’weakness’ of the d-pawn. That Black has no
advantage either is, however, evident. The position after 19. Nxc4 or 19. Nb5 Nd6 20.
Nxd6 (but not 20. Nc7 Rad8 21. Nxd5 Kf7 with advantage to Black) is pretty dead drawn.
The text move, however, is a misunderstanding of what’s going on. Hatanbaatar is at this
stage probably still under the impression that he can play for a win, but with my long
think at move 17 I had seen a bit further, actually as long as to move 25.}
Nd6 20. Be3 Rac8 21. 0-0-0
{This was the move he counted on.}
Be4 22. Kb2 Bxg2 23. Rhe1
{Probably 23. Rhg1 Bf3 24. Ref1 Be4 25. Bxa7 Rc6 is better for White than the game
continuation but firstly Black is still a bit better and secondly this was not White’s idea.}
a6! 24. c4 Kf7! 25. cxd5
{A look at the position reveals a total positional disaster for White. Black’s isolated dpawn
has been swapped till now being white and White has ended up with three pawnislands,
h2, f4, d5, and in the process Black has gotten himself a beautiful square on f5.
After Black’s next move which put White’s position under pressure it becomes apparent
that the White d-pawn is very weak.}
Rfe8 26. Nc4?
{Panicking, but he was getting very short on the clock. Technically I doubt the White
position is savable unless Black messes up. Now it is of course totally over.}
Rxc4 27. bxc4 Nxc4+ 28. Kc3 Nxe3 29. Rb1 Nxd5+ 30. {resigns. 0-1.}
Game #4826 by Noname
23:44, September 02, 2009 by Noname
[Event "ICS unrated blitz match"]
[Site "freechess.org"]
[Date "2009.09.02"]
[Round "-"]
[White "GuestHBKD"]
[Black "GuestQDNP"]
[Result "1-0"]
[WhiteElo "0"]
[BlackElo "0"]
[TimeControl "600"]
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 d6 4. d4 Bg4 5. d5 Bxf3 6. Qxf3 a6 7. dxc6 axb5
8. Qc3 bxc6 9. Qxc6+ Ke7 10. Nc3 f6 11. Nxb5 Qd7 12. Qxc7 Qxc7 13. Nxc7 Rc8
14. Nd5+ Ke6 15. c3 Ne7 16. Nxe7 Bxe7 17. O-O Rc5 18. Bd2 Rc4 19. f3 g5 20.
a4 h5 21. b4 Ra8 22. a5 h4 23. h3 d5 24. exd5+ Kxd5 25. Rfc1 Ke6 26. b5 Bd8
27. b6 Rc5 28. b7 Rb8 29. a6 Bb6 30. Be3 Rc6 31. Bxb6 Rxb6 32. a7 R6xb7 33.
a8=Q Rxa8 34. Rxa8 Kf5 35. c4 Kf4 36. c5 Rc7 37. c6 e4 38. fxe4 Kxe4 39.
Rd8 f5 40. Rd7 Rxc6 41. Rxc6 f4 42. Re6+ Kf5 43. Re8 g4 44. Rf7+ Kg5 45.
Rg8+
{GuestQDNP resigns} 1-0
Game #4827 by Noname
06:06, September 04, 2009 by Noname
[Event "Yahoo! Chess Game"]
[Site "Yahoo! Chess"]
[Date "undefined.59"]
[Round ""]
[White "cherry_k2009"]
[Black "marukonofan"]
[Result "0-1"]
1. e4 e5
2. d3 Nc6
3. Nf3 Nf6
4. d4 exd4
5. Nxd4 Nxd4
6. Qxd4 d5
7. exd5 b5
8. Nc3 b4
9. Ne4 Be7
10. Bb5+ Bd7
11. Bxd7+ Qxd7
12. O-O O-O
13. Bf4 Rfd8
14. d6 Nxe4
15. Qxe4 Bxd6
16. Rad1 Qa4
17. Bxd6 cxd6
18. Rxd6 h6
19. Rfd1 Qe8
20. Qxb4 Rab8
21. Qd4 Kh7
22. h3 Rxd6
23. Qxd6 Rxb2
24. Qd4 Rxa2
25. Rd3 Rxc2
26. Rg3 g6
27. h4 h5
28. Kh2 Qb8
29. Qd7 Rxf2
30. Kh3 Rf1
31. Rf3 Rh1# 0-1
Game #4828 by Noname
09:09, September 04, 2009 by Noname
[Event "London m6"]
[Site "London"]
[Date "1851.??.??"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Howard Staunton"]
[Black "Elijah Williams"]
[Result "0-1"]
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Nf3 Nf6 5.Bd3 Bd6 6.O-O O-O 7.Bg5 Bg4 8.c3 c5 9.dxc5 Bxc5 10.Nbd2 Nbd7 11.Qc2 Qc7 12.Bh4 Bd6 13.Bg3 Nc5 14.Nd4 Bxg3 15.fxg3 Nxd3 16.Qxd3 Rfe8 17.Rae1 Bh5 18.Qb5 a6 19.Qa4 b5 20.Rxe8+ Nxe8 21.Nxb5 Qc6 22.Qh4 axb5 23.Qxh5 Nf6 24.Qe5 Qb6+ 25.Kh1 Rxa2 26.Qf5 Qe6 27.Qb1 Ra8 28.Qd3 Qc6 29.Qf5 Qe6 30.Qd3 Qc6 31.Nf3 Qc4 32.Qd1 Re8 33.Nd4 b4 34.Nf5 Re6 35.Qf3 bxc3 36.bxc3 Qe4 37.h3 Qxf3 38.gxf3 Re2 39.Nd4 Rd2 40.g4 g6 41.Ra1 Nd7 42.Ra8+ Kg7 43.Rd8 Ne5 44.Rxd5? Nxf3 45.Nxf3 Rxd5 46.Kg2 Rc5 47.Kg3 Rxc3 48.h4 h5 49.g5 f6 50.Kf4 Rxf3+ 51.Kxf3 fxg5 52.hxg5 Kf7 53.Ke3 Ke6 54.Ke4 Kd6 55.Kd4 Kc6 56.Ke5 Kc5 57.Kf6 h4 58.Kxg6 h3 59.Kf7 h2 60.g6 h1=Q 61.g7 Qd5+ 62.Kf8 Qf5+ 63.Ke8 Qg6+ 64.Kf8 Qf6+ 65.Kg8 Kd6 66.Kh7 Qf7 67.Kh8 Qh5+ 68.Kg8 Ke6 0-1
Game #4829 by Noname
18:49, September 05, 2009 by Noname
1. c4 e5 2. Nc3 Nc6 3. g3 f5 4. Bg2 Nf6 5. d3 Bc5 6. e3 f4 7. ef4 0-0 8. Nge2 Qe8 9. 0-0 d6 10. Na4 Bd4 11. Nd4 ed4 12. h3 h5 13. a3 a5 14. b3 Qg6 15. Nb2 Bf5 16. Qc2 Nd7 17. Re1 Nc5 18. Bf1 Ra6 19. Bd2 Rb6 20. Ba5 Rb3 21. Bd2 Ra8 22. a4 Ra6 23. a5 Kh7 24. Red1 b6 25. Be1 ba5 26. Na4 Rd3 27. Bd3 Bd3 28. Qa2 Nb4 29. Qa3 Nc2 30. Qb2 Na1 31. Ra1 Na4 32. Ra4 Qe4 33. Ba5
Game #4830 by Noname
15:47, September 06, 2009 by Noname
[Event "Yahoo! Chess Game"]
[Site "Yahoo! Chess"]
[Date "undefined.44"]
[Round ""]
[White "honkido3"]
[Black "marukonofan"]
[Result "0-1"]
1. e4 e5
2. g3 Nf6
3. f3 Nc6
4. c3 d5
5. d3 dxe4
6. fxe4 Na5
7. Bh3 Bxh3
8. Nxh3 c5
9. Nf2 c4
10. Bg5 h6
11. Bxf6 Qxf6
12. Ng4 Qe7
13. Qe2 Rc8
14. Na3 Nb3
15. axb3 cxb3
16. Nc4 Rc5
17. Rxa7 Qc7
18. Ra8+ Kd7
19. Ra3 b5
20. Ngxe5+ Ke7
21. Ra1 bxc4
22. Nxc4 Qc6
23. Kd2 g6
24. Ra7+ Ke8
25. Rha1 Bg7
26. Na5 Bxc3+
27. bxc3 b2
28. Rb1 Rxa5
29. Rxa5 Qb6
30. Ra2 Kd7
31. Raxb2 Qa5
32. Ke1 Qxc3+
33. Qd2 Qd4
34. Rb7+ Ke6
35. R1b5 Qg1+
36. Ke2 Qg2+
37. Ke3 Qg1+
38. Qf2 Qc1+
39. Kd4 Qa1+
40. Qb2 Qg1+
41. Kc4 Rc8+
42. Kb4 Qe1+
43. Ka3 Ra8+
44. Kb3 Qd1+
45. Kc3 Rc8+
46. Kd4 Qg1+ 0-1