Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


THE WEEK IN CHESS 110                    16/12/96        Mark Crowther-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------E-Mail  mdcrowth@netcomuk.co.ukwww     http://www.tcc.net/gmtchess.htmlTel or fax      01274 882143 [Bradford England]Produced for Thoth Communications Corporation partof Grandmaster Technologies Incorporated.---------------------------------------------------1)  Introduction2)  International Tournament Las Palmas3)  FIDE President Announces new World Championships4)  Russian Cup 1996. Second Tournament.5)  Chess in Disneyland.6)  First Saturday Tournament in Budapest7)  Chess in Edinburgh8)  Turin Chess Festival9)  2nd International Tournament in Loures10) 2nd Gudmundur Arason International Chess Tournament 199611) 63rd National Championships Brazil12) Exhibition Games.    Shirov Simultaneous in Terrassa    Two Polgar sisters visit Indonesia.13) Forthcoming events:    Groningen Chess Festival.    I. RAINBOW CHESS INTERNATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP14) The Czech System - 1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 c6!? - Part IXGAMES SECTIONIt, Las Palmas ESP 1996       18Polgar Matches                 6ch-BRA, Americana 1996        18simul, Terrassa ESP 1996       6II It, Loures POR 1996        30FS IM Dec, Budapest HUN 1996   4op, Turin ITA 1996            60Disney GamesDisney Boys  1996             90Disney Girls  1996            90Russia Cup gamesRussia Cup II, Moscow RUS 1996 2701) IntroductionMy thanks to Marco R. Martini, Daniel Edelman, Laszlo Nagy, Adam Raoof,Gerald Schendal, Andras Adorjan, Luis Santos, Chia Chee Seng, Bobby Angand anyone else who helped out with information on this issue.So many events and not enough time. I have quite a bit of material fornext weeks issue. The Las Palmas hasn't quite lived up to its billingbut it is heading for a tight finish and I pridict some good things fromthe last four rounds. I'm not sure about the absolute accuracy of theround 6 (tonight) games from Las Palmas, especially the end of theIvanchuk-Karpov game, it might be that Karpov capture the bishop andIvanchuk started to give perpetual. The correct version will appear onmy www page tomorrow.As Christmas arrives chess activity takes off and this is reflected inan issue with events Worldwide. Hope you enjoy this issue.Mark2) International Tournament Las PalmasAll to play for after 6 rounds of Las PalmasThe story of the 1996 Las Palmas Chess Tournament has yet to be written.Only Veselin Topalov is out of the running for the first prize after sixof the ten rounds. At such a high level of chess caution is always thewatchword and the weakness of the event is its length, only 10 rounds,this leaves little room for a carefree approach.The players were all well rested before the event and this seems to havelead to some rustiness which is only now being shed and the last fourrounds should be very good indeed. Here are some short impressionsbefore the round up next week.Kasparov started with a win against Veselin Topalov. This was afluctuating game with Topalov playing a quiet opening which thenexploded with apparently equal chances. He however drifted into a poorending and Kasparov took full advantage. If he could have found chanceto break his back rank with h3 at some point he may still have survived.Topalov took his poor form into the second round. His opponent Kramnikmissed a win in the ending (66. Bh6+) and he mananged to draw.Anand beat Ivanchuk in round three with a very creative sacrifice of theexchange. It was either inspired or crazy according to Anand.Kasparov has been very solid in the event but is clearly short of hisbest form. He missed an almost certain win straight out of the openingwith 20. g4 but still had a very good position. He could not win withthe exchange against minor piece and pawn.Topalov appeared to be all over Ivanchuk but no-one has come up with aconvincing winning line for Topalov yet. Ivanchuk defended superbly andaround the first time control obtained a completely winning position. Asuperbly contested game.Ivanchuk again was the star in round 5 when he blew Kramnik away in abeautiful attacking game. It completely overshadowed a turgid meetingbetween Karpov and Kasparov, their first in nearly three years. Karpovis apparently underprepared for the event and has not made an aggressivemove in the entire event.Kramnik was woken up by his loss in round 5 to win a complex tacticalbattle against Anand in round 6.More updates and comments on my www page during the week.Round 1 (1996.12.09)Anand, Viswanathan - Kramnik, Vladimir   1/2   20  B65  SicilianKarpov, Anatoly    - Ivanchuk, Vassily   1/2   61  E62  Kings indianTopalov, Veselin   - Kasparov, Gary      0-1   59  E11  Bogo indianRound 2 (1996.12.10)Ivanchuk, Vassily  - Kasparov, Gary      1/2   23  B52  SicilianKarpov, Anatoly    - Anand, Viswanathan  1/2   44  E15  Nimzo indianKramnik, Vladimir  - Topalov, Veselin    1/2   80  E97  Kings indian; Main lineRound 3 (1996.12.11)Kasparov, Gary     - Kramnik, Vladimir   1/2   19  E71  Kings indianAnand, Viswanathan - Ivanchuk, Vassily   1-0   46  C78  Ruy LopezTopalov, Veselin   - Karpov, Anatoly     1/2   27  D27  QGA;Round 4 (1996.12.12)Kasparov, Gary     - Anand, Viswanathan  1/2   63  B92  Sicilian; NajdorfKramnik, Vladimir  - Karpov, Anatoly     1/2   21  A28  English; 1.c4 e5Topalov, Veselin   - Ivanchuk, Vassily   0-1   41  B17  Caro-KannRound 5 (1996.12.15)Ivanchuk, Vassily  - Kramnik, Vladimir   1-0   34  E81  Kings indian; SaemischAnand, Viswanathan - Topalov, Veselin    1/2   29  C78  Ruy LopezKarpov, Anatoly    - Kasparov, Gary      1/2   45  D43  Semi-SlavRound 6 (1996.12.16)Ivanchuk, Vassily  - Karpov, Anatoly     1/2   14  C10  FrenchKasparov, Gary     - Topalov, Veselin    1/2   28  C45  ScottishKramnik, Vladimir  - Anand, Viswanathan  1-0   39  A30  English; 1.c4 c5Las Palmas ESP (ESP), XII 1996.               cat. XXI (2757)-------------------------------------------------------------                                  1  2  3  4  5  6-------------------------------------------------------------1 Ivanchuk, Vassily   g UKR 2730 ** =. 0. == 1. 1.  3.5  28212 Kasparov, Gary      g RUS 2785 =. ** =. =. =. 1=  3.5  28073 Anand, Viswanathan  g IND 2735 1. =. ** =. =0 =.  3.0  27614 Karpov, Anatoly     g RUS 2775 == =. =. ** =. =.  3.0  27495 Kramnik, Vladimir   g RUS 2765 0. =. =1 =. ** =.  3.0  27516 Topalov, Veselin    g BUL 2750 0. 0= =. =. =. **  2.0  2637-------------------------------------------------------------3) FIDE President Announces new World ChampionshipsOn Sunday at a Press Conference in Las Palmas FIDE President KirsanIljumzhinov announced details of his World Championship Tournanament.The event will be a knockout event with 100 players starting. Karpov andKasparov are invited to take up places in the semi-finals. Dates aresaid to be 16 December - 10th January. The venue will be Elista Kalmykiaand the sponsor will be the Kalmykian Government (President KIljumzhinov.)The Prizefund will be $5m. The winner takes $1.37 and the losingfinalist $768,0004) Russian Cup 1996. Second Tournament.The second event of the Russian Cup a Grand Prix event composed of aseries of opens (the last being in St. Petersburg) took place in Moscowbetween November 28th and December 6th 1996. There were 168 players andthe games appeared on the net on the ChessAssistant site.http://pc701-20.cs.msu.su/  The lower prizemoney reduced the level ofthe event from the first one but still it attracted a strong field.Alezei Federov won the first prize alone on 7.5 points from the ninerounds.Moscow RUS (RUS), XI-XII 1996.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  1 Fedorov, Alexei             g BLR 2555    7.5     +1.92  2 Malaniuk, Vladimir P        g UKR 2610    7.0     +0.88  3 Chekhov, Valery A           g RUS 2535    7.0     +1.24  4 Hachian, Melik              m ARM 2480    7.0     +1.78  5 Sokolov, Andrei             g RUS 2585    6.5     -0.10  6 Aleksandrov, Aleksej        m BLR 2550    6.5     +0.74  7 Kiselev, Sergey             m RUS 2545    6.5     +0.56  8 Kharitonov, Andrei Y        g RUS 2540    6.5     +0.30  9 Balashov, Yuri S            g RUS 2530    6.5     +0.56 10 Belikov, Vladimir           m RUS 2510    6.5     +0.56 11 Vasiukov, Evgeni            g RUS 2505    6.5     +1.34 12 Volzhin, Alexander          m RUS 2485    6.5     +1.01 13 Volkov, Sergey                RUS 2485    6.5     +0.78 14 Nikolenko, Oleg             m RUS 2480    6.5     +0.74 15 Zaitsev, Igor A             g RUS 2435    6.5     +1.46 16 Kasimdzhanov, Rustam        m UZB 2435    6.5     +2.00 17 Sveshnikov, Evgeny          g RUS 2535    6.0     -0.12 18 Notkin, Maksim              m RUS 2520    6.0     +0.06 19 Burmakin, Vladimir          g RUS 2505    6.0     +0.51 20 Gorelov, Sergey G           m RUS 2485    6.0     -0.03 21 Mukhametov, Eldar           m RUS 2485    6.0     -0.21 22 Najer, Evgeniy              m RUS 2480    6.0     +0.96 23 Asrian, Karen                 ARM 2380    6.0     +2.28 24 Rychagov, A                   RUS 2375    6.0     +2.28 25 Dzhumaev, M                   UZB 2365    6.0     +1.00 26 Kosyrev, Vladimir             RUS 2315    6.0     +1.14168 players.5) Chess in Disneyland.Anatoly Karpov travelled to Disneyland in France to take part in theDisney Rapid Chess Championships. He has been involved in this rapidplayevent since its inception in 1993. In the past he has playedsimultaneous games against the winners of each section in thecompetition. This year his involvement was more as the patron of theevent, the winners played four of France's Olympic Champions fromAtlanta who also have an interest in chess. They were Jean-Pierre Amat(Bronze Medal in Sharpshooting), Florian Rousseau (Gold Medal inCycling), Guy Tisserant (Gold Medal in Table Tennis (wheelchair)) andAlexandre Spicq (Sculling). Karpov tried to help the Olympians with someadvice but the juniors proved too strong.The event has an entertaining site at: http://rapidchess.disney.com/The event had four sections Under 12 and under 14 boys (actually an opensection with at least one strong female player) and Under 12 and Under14 boys. Etienne Bacrot was the favourite in the under-14s sectionhaving been a previous winner on two occasions and having beaten Karpovin a simultaneous game last year. This year the top section was markedby heavy scoring and his loss to Dain Grigutavicius in round 3 and drawwith Marcin Dziuba in round two put him under pressure. He stillcompeted right to the end but gambled on trying to win with the blackpieces in the last round against the eventual winner Chinese player NiHua but lost.The winners of the sections were: Alexandra Kosteniuk, Russia (Girls under 12) Eli Vovsha, Israel (Boys under 12) Regina Pokorna, Slovakia (Girls under 14) Hua Ni, China (Boys under 14)Final standingsUnder-14 boys1. Hua Ni (China) Unrated 7.52. Joan Fluvia         (Spain) 2205 7.03. Alexander Grischuk (Russia) 2375 6.54. Etienne Bacrot (France) 2470 6.55. Arnaud Rainfray (France) 2135 66. Marcin Dziuba (Poland) 2085 67. Albert Bokros (Hungary) 2220 6... 39 playersUnder-12 boys1. Eli Vovsha (Israel) Unrated 72. P Harikrishna (India) Unrated 6.53. Kamil Milton (Poland) 2220 6.54. Vinay Bhat (USA) 2225 6.5....44 playersUnder-14 girls1. Regina Pokorna (Slovakia) 2195 7.52. Irina Krush (USA) Unrated 7.03. Cristina Calotescu (Romania) 2095 6.54. Lena Dembo (Israel) Unrated. 6.5..... 34 playersUnder-12 girls1. Alexandra Kosteniuk (Russia) 2295 82. Ilze Berzina (Latvia) Unrated 73. Sridhar Chitra (India) Unrated 74. Gu Xiaobing (China) Unrated 6.55. Elisabeth Pahtz (Germany) Unrated 6.5.....37 playersThe juniors played 25 minutes per side per game and were required toscore the game until they were down to less than five minutes on theclock.6) First Saturday Tournament in BudapestInternational Master Attila Czebe leads the December First Saturday IMTournament after nine of the eleven rounds. Rafael Rodriguez's chancesof getting an IM norm were severely dented after his loss in round 9(see the games section). The event is organised by Laszlo Nagy who canbe contacted via E-Mail<100263.1700@CompuServe.COM> and who now has awww pagehttp://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/chess_first_saturday_hu/ Finalresults should be available on my www page later in the week.American player Daniel Edelman had a fascinating first round struggle,he annotates it below, my thanks to him:Edelman,D (2400) - Peredy,F (2305) [B01]Budapest HUN (1), 02.10.19961.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 Bg4 6.h3 Bh5 7.Bd2!? Withthe idea of delaying g4 7...c6 8.Bc4 e6 9.Qe2 Bb4 10.g4 Bg6 11.0-0-0Nbd7 12.Ne5 Qc7 13.h4! Bxc3 14.Bxc3 Be4 15.g5 [15.Nxd7!? Kxd7!(15...Qxd7 16.d5!+-) ]  15...Bxh1 16.Nxf7!?  [16.gxf6 Bd5 17.fxg7 Rg8With the idea of 18. ... Nxe5, 19. ... O-O-O] 16...0-0! 17.Rxh1?[17.gxf6! Rxf7 (17...Bd5? 18.Nh6+!) 18.Rxh1 Transposes to the game;(18.Qxe6? Bd5 19.Bxd5 cxd5!+-) ] 17...Rxf7?  [17...Nd5!]  18.gxf6 Rxf619.Bxe6+ Kh8 20.d5 Rff8 21.h5 h6 22.Rg1 Nf6 23.Be5 Qe7 24.Qd3! cxd525.Qg6 With the idea of 26. Bd6! or 26. Bf5! +-  25...Rg8 only move26.Bxf6 [26.Bxg8 Rxg8 27.f4!?]  26...Qxf6 27.Qxf6 gxf6 28.Rxg8+ Rxg829.Bxg8 Kxg8 30.Kd2 Kf7 31.Ke3 Ke6 32.Kf4  [32.Kd4!? b6 (32...Kf5??33.Kxd5 Kg4 34.Ke6 Kxh5 35.Kf5!+-) ]  32...f5 33.Ke3 Ke5 34.f4+ Kd635.Kd4 b6!  This is a most interesting and instructive king and pawnending. Can white win or is it a draw?  36.c3?  [36.b3 Ke6 (36...b537.b4) 37.Kc3 (37.c4 dxc4 38.Kxc4 Kd6 see game) 37...Kd6 38.Kb4 Kc639.c4 (39.c3 b5) 39...Kd6 (39...dxc4 40.bxc4 Kd6 41.Kb5 Kc7 42.c5;39...d4 40.Ka3 Kc5 41.Kb2 Kb4 42.Kc2 d3+ 43.Kxd3) 40.Kb5 (40.Kc3 dxc441.Kxc4 Kc6) 40...Ke6 (40...dxc4 41.bxc4 Kc7 42.c5; 40...d4 41.Kb4 Kc642.Ka3) 41.c5; 36.a4 Ke6! (36...a5?? 37.c3 Ke6 38.b3 Kd6 39.b4 Ke640.bxa5 bxa5 41.Kc5+-; 36...a6?? 37.b4 Ke6 38.a5 bxa5 39.bxa5 Kd640.c3+-) 37.a5 Kd6 (37...bxa5?? 38.Kc5 d4 39.b3 a6 40.Kc6+-) A) 38.b4Ke6 (38...b5?? 39.a6) 39.axb6 axb6 40.c4 dxc4 41.Kxc4 Kd6 42.Kb5 Kc7(42...Kd5?+- White is a tempo up on the game.) ; B) 38.axb6 axb6 39.b3Ke6 (39...b5 40.b4+-) 40.Kc3 (40.c4 dxc4 41.Kxc4 Kd6 See gsme) 40...Kd641.Kb4 Kc6 42.c4 (42.c3 b5) 42...Kd6! (42...dxc4? 43.bxc4 Kd6 44.Kb5 Kc745.c5+-; 42...d4? 43.Ka3 Kc5 44.Kb2 Kb4 45.Kc2 d3+ 46.Kxd3 Kxb347.Kd4+-) 43.Kb5 (43.Kc3 dxc4 44.Kxc4 Kc6) 43...Ke6 (43...dxc4? 44.bxc4Kc7 45.c5+-; 43...d4 44.Kb4 Kc6 45.Ka3+-) 44.Kxb6 d4 45.c5 d3 46.c6 d247.c7 d1Q 48.c8Q+; C) 38.b3?? 38...bxa5]  36...Ke6 37.Kd3 Kd6 38.Kd4 Ke639.a3 Kd6 40.a4 Ke6 41.a5 Kd6 42.axb6 axb6 43.b3 Ke6 44.c4 dxc4 45.Kxc4Kd6 46.Kb5 Kd5! [46...Kc7?? 47.Ka6 Kc6 48.b4+-]  47.Kxb6 Ke4 48.b4 Kxf449.b5 Kg4  [49...Kg3? 50.Kc5 f4 51.b6 f3 52.b7 f2 53.b8Q+; 49...Ke5?50.Kc6+-; 49...Kg5? 50.Kc5 f4 51.Kd4 Kg4 52.b6 f3 53.Ke3+-; 49...Ke4?50.Kc5 f4 51.b6 f3 52.b7 f2 53.b8Q f1Q 54.Qe8+ Kf3 55.Qf7+ Ke2 56.Qxf1+Kxf1 57.Kd4!! Ke2 58.Ke4!!+-; 49...Ke3!? 50.Kc5 f4 51.b6 f3 52.b7 f253.b8Q f1Q 54.Qe5+ Kd3 (54...Kd2? 55.Qb2+ Ke3 56.Qd4+ Kf3 57.Qf6++-)55.Qd4+ Kc2]  50.Kc5 f4 51.Kd4 1/2Budapest (HUN), X 1996.                                     cat. III (2316)--------------------------------------------------------------------------                                        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Czebe, Attila            m HUN 2345  * . 1 = . = = 1 1 1 1 1  7.5  2577 2 Rodriguez Lopez, Rafael  f ESP 2410  . * 1 . 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1  6.0  2422 3 Vukovic, Ivo             f CRO 2310  0 0 * 1 = . . 1 1 1 1 0  5.5  2398 4 Novgorodskij, Vladimir     RUS 2365  = . 0 * 1 0 1 . 0 1 = 1  5.0  2344 5 Sziebert, Adam           f HUN 2300  . 0 = 0 * 1 . 1 = = = 1  5.0  2360 6 Fancsy, Imre             m HUN 2325  = 0 . 1 0 * = = 1 0 . 1  4.5  2321 7 Jamrich, Gyorgy            HUN 2295  = 1 . 0 . = * 0 = 1 0 1  4.5  2321 8 Peredy, Ferenc             HUN 2305  0 1 0 . 0 = 1 * . = 1 =  4.5  2319 9 Horvath, Adam              HUN 2250  0 1 0 1 = 0 = . * 0 = .  3.5  225510 Edelman, Daniel          m USA 2400  0 0 0 0 = 1 0 = 1 * . .  3.0  219711 Kuklin, Alexander        f HUN 2270  0 0 0 = = . 1 0 = . * =  3.0  218612 Francsics, Endre           HUN 2220  0 0 1 0 0 0 0 = . . = *  2.0  2105--------------------------------------------------------------------------7) Chess in EdinburghAdam Raoof is the organiser of two events in Edinburgh. The 14th-19th ofDecember will see the Rowson-Arkell 5000 pound challenge match. Thefirst game (a Rowson win) is in the games section and there willprobably be updates on my page during the week. The second event is the1st Caledonian Masters a five day 10 player all play all. Again morenext week.Commonwealth ChampionshipsMithrakanth of India won the Commonwealth Championships in Calcutta with7.5/10 above Gokhale, Sriram, Praven Thipsay and McNab on 7.0. There wasan IM norm for 17 year old Vijaylaxmi who won the women's title. Morenews if I get it.8) Turin Chess FestivalEx-World Champions Boris Spassky and Vassily Smyslov were the starsappearing at the Turin Chess Festival. Spassky was there to give asimultaneous exhibition and Smyslov played in the main open event. Theevent ran from the 8th-15th December 1996.There were numerous cultural events surrounding the tournamentsincluding Chess and the Cinema which showed : Black and White like Nightand Day; Entracte, by Ren� Clair (France 1924); Chess fever, by V.Pudovkin e N. Spikovsky (Urss 1925) [Capablanca and Lasker appear assome scenes were filmed during the 1925 Moscow tournament]; A chessgame, by Luigi Maggi (Italy 1912); Innocent Moves, by Steven Zaillian(Usa 1992); The King of Chess, by Teng Wenji (China 1988); DangerousMoves, by Richard Denbo (France/Switzerland 1985);The Seventh Seal, byIngmar Bergman (Sweden 1956); The chess players, by Satyajit Ray (India1977); Chess and Music (about Philidor); Chess and Literature; Chess andArt; Chess and Artificial Intelligence; Chess on Display (Chess Boardsand games in the City Centre);Chess in Turin's Historic Cafes; Chess andFood etcThe main open section was won by Thomas Luther. It was a nine round openevent. 1   LUTHER Thomas            GERGM  7.0   45.5 2   GODENA Michele            TVGM  6.5   46.0 3   NURKIC Sahbaz            BIHIM  6.0   46.0 4   ARLANDI Ennio             MIIM  6.0   45.5 5   MARCHAND Francois        FRA    6.0    5.0 6   SMYSLOV Vassily          RUSGM  6.0   44.0 7   LANZANI Mario             MIFM  6.0   39.0 8   MIKHALEVSKI Victor       ISRGM  5.5   44.0  3.0 9   SKEMBRIS Spyridon        GREGM  5.5   44.0  2.5 10  FINKEL Alexander         ISRGM  5.5   42.0 11  BERG Klaus               DENIM  5.5   41.5 12  VUJOVIC Milorad          YUGIM  5.5   41.0 13  WOHL Aleksandar H.       AUSIM  5.0   44.5 14  MRDJA Milan              CROIM  5.0   43.5 15  RACIOPPO Paolo            TO M  5.0   40.0 16  RANIERI Fabrizio          TOCM  5.0   38.5 17  CASTALDO Folco            TOCM  5.0   38.0  4.0 18  BOLICO Exfelicos         PHI M  5.0   38.0  3.5 19  CANTORE Alberto           ATCM  5.0   37.5 20  SACCONA Silvano           TOCM  5.0   35.5 21  SEDINA Elena             UKRWG  5.0   33.0 22  CREA Vincenzo             MECM  4.5   40.0 23  MOLA Pietro               FICM  4.5   39.0 24  BIANCO Valerio            TO M  4.5   37.5 25  SCOTTI Umberto            TOCM  4.5   36.0 26  MOLLERO Michele           GECM  4.5   35.5  3.5 27  FARAONI Enrico            TOCM  4.5   35.5  2.0 28  RICCA Roberto             TOCM  4.5   32.5 29  LAMPIC Teo                TOCM  4.5   32.0 30  SARNO Spartaco            TOIM  4.0   42.5 31  MORDIGLIA Riccardo        TOCM  4.0   39.5 32  CLERICO Antonio          DEN    4.0   35.0 33  CAVALLINI Gianfranco      MICM  4.0   28.0 34  COSTANTINO Giampaolo      TOCM  3.5   39.0 35  VISMARA Daniele           LC M  3.5   37.5  3.5     3 36  ROSSI Giampiero           COCM  3.5   37.5  3.5     2 37  DI-DONNA Massimo          TO M  3.5   34.0 38  QUAGLIANA Giuseppe        TOCM  3.5   31.0 39  MINERVA Enzo              NO1N  3.5   30.0 40  STUART E. Leslie         ENG    3.0   32.5  2.0 41  DUARTE Riccardo           PVCM  3.0   32.5  1.5 42  FUGGETTA Leonardo         TOCM  3.0   30.5 43  CANELLI Daniele           TOCM  2.5   31.0 44  SACCHINI Michele          PECM  2.0   29.0 45  LUPPI Sergio              MICM  2.0   27.5 46  MALANO Francesco          TOCM  1.5   31.59) 2nd International Tournament in LouresLuis Santos reports:The Tournaments in Loures are the result of a ten year plan of chessdevelopment in Loures (PDX plan). Loures is close to Lisbon and has400,000 inhabitants. Since 1986 there has been a chess trainingprogramme in schools, each year 3000 children have chess lessons and2000 play in tournaments concluding in a finals section. Every yeararound 400 become members of one of the 15 chess clubs in Loures (therewere no chess clubs in 1986) and two are in the first division of thenational league and one in the second. Most of the clubs have chesstrainers (there were 17 trainers in 1996). In 1993 a training academywas started, most of the trainers were not from Loures, this is nowdifferent with many of the trainers being between 20 and 24 from Louresand the first products of the chess scheme. Some of the players aretrying to get international master norms and the events are calledMESTRE-JOVEM (young masters)Wednesday 11 December saw the start of the 2nd Loures International acategory 2 event. There are some differences with the 1st Loures event.This time, there are two under 18 players (Paulo Dias and Josi Andrade)and altogether six good young Loures players (the others are Carlos P.Santos, Alexandre Quadrio, Artur Gaspar and Paulo Pinho). Again the mainatraction is GM Kevin Spraggett who has lived in Portugal (he is marriedto the Portuguese player Aida Ferreira) since 1987.There is daily news on Luis Santos's site, he is the arbiter of theevent. http://www.ip.pt/~ip001018/Chess in Portugal is covering the event in English:http://www.costa-do-estoril.com/chessportugal/Loures POR (POR), XII 1996.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------                                           1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Spraggett, Kevin            g CAN 2530  * . . . . 1 1 . = . 1 1  4.5  2576 2 Frois, Antonio              m POR 2380  . * 1 = = . . 1 . 1 . .  4.0  2533 3 Paramos Dominguez, Roberto  f ESP 2410  . 0 * . . = 1 . 1 . 1 .  3.5  2417 4 Rocha, Sergio               f POR 2400  . = . * = 1 . . . = . 1  3.5  2407 5 Santos, Carlos P            f POR 2340  . = . = * . 1 1 . = . .  3.5  2404 6 Caselas, Jacobo               ESP 2350  0 . = 0 . * . . = . . 1  2.0  2192 7 Dias, Paulo                   POR 2180  0 . 0 . 0 . * 1 . 1 . .  2.0  2247 8 Pinho, Paulo                  POR 2135  . 0 . . 0 . 0 * 1 . 1 .  2.0  2194 9 Ferreira, Nelson            m ANG 2200  = . 0 . . = . 0 * . . =  1.5  216310 Gaspar, Artur                 POR 2180  . 0 . = = . 0 . . * = .  1.5  215711 Quadrio, Alexandre            POR 2230  0 . 0 . . . . 0 . = * 1  1.5  199112 Andrade,J                         ----  0 . . 0 . 0 . . = . 0 *  0.5  1976-----------------------------------------------------------------------------10) 2nd Gudmundur Arason International Chess Tournament 1996Hafnarfjordur Iceland is the venue of the 2nd Gudmundur ArasonInternational Chess Tournament 1996. The event will be held betweenDecember 13th and the 21st 1996.The event will be covered on Dadi Jonsson's excellent Chess in Icelandpage.  http://www.vks.is/skak/indexe.html the event is sponsored byGudmundur Arason and Smitfort Staal B/V.After three rounds the standings are:Hafnarfjordur ICE (ICE), XII 1996.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------                                           1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Gislason, Gudmundur          ISL 2285  +28 +11 + 7  .   .   .   .   .   .   3.0 2 Edvardsson, Kristjan         ISL 2200  +13 + 8 = 3  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.5  2666 3 Engqvist, Thomas           m SWE 2375  +26 +12 = 2  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.5  2370 4 Kristensen, Bjarke         m DEN 2420  + 9 =19 +15  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.5 5 Vidarsson, Jon G           f ISL 2360  +20 =15 +19  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.5  2335 6 Bjarnason, Saevar          m ISL 2285  =17 +25 =10  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  2518 7 Blees, Albert              m NED 2415  +18 +16 - 1  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  2358 8 Carlier, Bruno             m NED 2380  +27 - 2 +20  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  2192 9 Einarsson, Bergsteinn        ISL 2175  - 4 +26 +23  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  234510 Martin, Andrew D           m ENG 2425  =22 +17 = 6  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  226711 Raetsky, Alexander         m RUS 2455  +21 - 1 +22  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  237812 Thorfinnsson, Bragi          ISL 2155  +23 - 3 +25  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  241513 Turner, Matthew            m ENG 2425  - 2 +30 +21  .   .   .   .   .   .   2.0  230814 Dunnington, Angus J        m ENG 2450  =25 =22 =16  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  224015 Einarsson, Einar Kristinn    ISL 2100  +30 = 5 - 4  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  230116 Karason, Askell O            ISL 2245  +24 - 7 =14  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  232117 Kjartansson,David                ----  = 6 -10 +27  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  216218 Leosson, Torfi               ISL 2170  - 7 =27 +30  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  227019 Viglundsson,Bjorgvin             ----  +29 = 4 - 5  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.5  228120 Asgeirsson, Heimir           ISL 2185  - 5 +29 - 8  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.0  214321 Gunnarsson, Arnar            ISL 2225  -11 +28 -13  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.0  220122 Gunnarsson, Jon Viktor       ISL 2250  =10 =14 -11  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.0  231823 Halldorsson, Bragi           ISL 2270  -12 +24 - 9  .   .   .   .   .   .   1.0  201824 Berg, Susanne             wf SWE 2100  -16 -23 =29  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.5  192025 Jensson, Einar Hjalti        ISL 2225  =14 - 6 -12  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.5  202326 Kristjansson,Stefan              ----  - 3 - 9 =28  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.5  194327 Olafsson,Thorvardur F            ----  - 8 =18 -17  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.5  208228 Ragnarsson, Johann           ISL 2100  - 1 -21 =26  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.529 Thorfinnsson, Bjorn          ISL 2065  -19 -20 =24  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.5  194930 Burden, James                USA 2125  -15 -13 -18  .   .   .   .   .   .   0.0----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------11) 63rd National Championships BrazilThe 63rd National Championships in Americana ended in a three way tie,there will be a playoff in February. These players were a point and ahalf clear of the rest of the field and were all undefeated and verytough on the bottom players in the field.Average Rating 2.376,26 for a Category V event. IM norm 7.0 points.First Prized: R$ 8.000,00 (US$ 7.200,00)Covered on the internet at http://200.246.231.65/fpx/pagina01.htmAmericana BRA (BRA), XI-XII 1996.                              cat. VI (2376)-----------------------------------------------------------------------------                                           1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Leitao, Rafael              m BRA 2475  * = = = = 1 1 = 1 1 = 1  8.0  2541 2 Vescovi, Giovanni           m BRA 2490  = * = = = 1 1 = = 1 1 1  8.0  2540 3 Lima, Darcy                 m BRA 2430  = = * = = = = 1 1 1 1 1  8.0  2545 4 Souza, Ivan                   BRA 2285  = = = * = = 0 = 1 = 1 1  6.5  2449 5 Van Riemsdijk, Herman C     m BRA 2425  = = = = * = 0 = = 1 1 1  6.5  2436 6 Disconzi da Silva, Rodrigo  f BRA 2345  0 0 = = = * 1 1 = = = 1  6.0  2414 7 De Toledo, James Mann       m BRA 2400  0 0 = 1 1 0 * = = = = =  5.0  2337 8 Matsuura, Everaldo          m BRA 2385  = = 0 = = 0 = * = 1 = 0  4.5  2310 9 Toth, Christian Endre       m BRA 2380  0 = 0 0 = = = = * 0 = 1  4.0  227310 Caldeira, Adriano             BRA 2220  0 0 0 = 0 = = 0 1 * = 1  4.0  228811 Loureiro, Luiz                BRA 2365  = 0 0 0 0 = = = = = * =  3.5  224312 Gomes, Luiz A                 BRA 2310  0 0 0 0 0 0 = 1 0 0 = *  2.0  2119-----------------------------------------------------------------------------12) Exhibition Games.Shirov Simultaneous event in Terrassa..Shirov played a simultaneous exhibition organised by the Xec-Epic Casinodel Comerc against a selection of the best players in Terrassa. Thegames were shown on the internet and he conceded just one draw toJoaquim Armengol. His opponents were:Shirov, Alexei         - Pomes, Juan             1-0   36  D02  Queen's pawnShirov, Alexei         - Pablo Marin, Alejandro  1-0   35  B90  Sicilian; NajdorfUbach, Marcelo         - Shirov, Alexei          0-1   56  A21  English; 1.c4 e5Shirov, Alexei         - Bordell Rosell, Roman   1-0   42  E44  Nimzo indianShirov, Alexei         - Gonzalez,Anton          1-0   44  D13  Slav defenceShirov, Alexei         - Armengol,J              1/2   49  B30  SicilianBordell Rosell, Roman ESP (2275), Pablo Marin, Alejandro f ESP (2370) Pomes, Juan m ESP (2420), Ubach, Marcelo  ESP (2300)The event was covered on the internet at http://www.dracnet.es/escacs/Two Polgar sisters visit Indonesia.Judit and Sofia Polgar are visiting Indonesia and playing a series ofexhibition matches between December 12th and 18th 1996.Judit Polgar and Utut Adianto are playing a series of 25 minute games,the last two will be conducted blindfold. Sofia Polgar plays a number ofwomen players from Indonesia at a time-rate of one hour for all theirmoves.Venue:Tugu Pratama Building, Jl. Rasuna Said, Jakarta Games: Live on ICCMy thanks to Chia Chee Seng and Bobby Ang for all the details.After three days play:Polgar, Judit - Adianto, Utut  1/2   56  B18  Caro-KannAdianto, Utut - Polgar, Judit  0-1   37  A57  Benko gambitPolgar, Judit - Adianto, Utut  0-1   54  B12  Caro-KannJakarta INA (INA), XII 1996.-------------------------------------------------------------                            1   2   3   4   5   6-------------------------------------------------------------Adianto, Utut  g INA 2605   =   0   1   .   .   .   1.5  2665Polgar, Judit  g HUN 2665   =   1   0   .   .   .   1.5  2605-------------------------------------------------------------Polgar, Sofia - Ratna,M        0-1   41  C82  Ruy LopezRatna,M       - Polgar, Sofia  0-1   50  B40  SicilianJakarta INA (INA), XII 1996.-------------------------------------------------------------                            1   2   3   4   5   6-------------------------------------------------------------Polgar, Sofia  m HUN 2480   0   1   .   .   .   .   1.0Ratna,M              ----   1   0   .   .   .   .   1.0  2480-------------------------------------------------------------Polgar, Sofia        - Tamin, Upi Darmayana  1-0   39  B93  Sicilian; NajdorfJakarta INA (INA), XII 1996.--------------------------------------------------------------------                                   1   2   3   4   5   6--------------------------------------------------------------------Polgar, Sofia         m HUN 2480   .   .   1   .   .   .   1.0Tamin, Upi Darmayana wm INA 2175   .   .   0   .   .   .   0.0--------------------------------------------------------------------Some details about the Indonesian Women players and the event:1. Name         : Maria Lucia Ratna S.(WIM)   Born         : Surabaya,14 January 1975 ( 21 years old)   Rating Fide  : 2195   Achievements :-Champion National Women C'ship Indonesia 1993 & 1995                 -Champion Invitation Antarmaster piala Enerpac 1997                 -Champion I - II World Championship Under-14 Aguadilla,Puerto Rico 1989                 -Champion III World Championship Under-20 Buenos Aires 1993                 -Champion I Asia Under-20 Brastagi,Sumatera Utara 1991                 -Champion II Asia Under-20 Shah Alam, Malaysia 1992                 -Indonesian Women team Olympiad Yerevan 19962. Name         : UPI DARMAYANA TAMIN (WIM)   BORN         : Jakarta, 4 Februari 1970 ( 26 years old )   Rating fide  : 2175   Achievements :- Champion Asia Pasific Under-16 Australia 1970 (WFM)                 - Champion I National Women C'ship Indonesia 1986                 - Champion III Zone Jakarta 1987 (WIM)                 - Champion I Asia Women Senior Championship 1996 India                 - Indonesian Women Team Olympiad Yerevan 1996.3. NAME         : LISA KARLINA AL LUMONGDONG (WIM)   BORN         : Jakarta 23 Juli 1968 ( 28 years old)   Ratinf fide  : 2125   Achievements : - Champion II Nasional Indonesia 1990,1992,1993.                  - Champion III Zone XII Malaysia (WIM) 1991                  - Champion I National Women C'ship Indonesia 1994                  - Indonesian Women Team Olympiad Yerevan 1996Prizes Winners the Battle of SexesAdianto Utut vs judit PolgarWinners    : US$ 10.0002nd place  : US$  6.000Sofia Polgar VS Maria Lucia,Upi D Tamin, Lisa LumongdongWinners     : US$ 2.5002nd place    : US$ 1.50013) Forthcoming events:Groningen Chess Festival.Next week sees the start of the Groningen Chess Festival. The games willbe available on-line and the event will bring together an exciting fieldof players.Nigel D. Short, Alexei Shirov, Ivan Sokolov, Boris Gelfand, PeterSvidler, Viktor Korchnoi, Vladimir Akopian, Peter Leko, AlexanderOnischuk, Loek van Wely, Jan Timman and Julian Hodgson are invited.The Open event will contain a number of excellent players including:Miles, Epishin, Yermolinsky, Milos, Psakhis and Adorjan. The event willno doubt be covered live on Dutch Teletext but the games will beavailable quickly on the internet.http://www.noord.bart.nl/~ssg/ is the source of the above informationand is the homepage of the Groningen Chess Club that organises theevent.I. RAINBOW CHESS INTERNATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP OF HUNGARY FIDE RATED OPENTOURNAMENTAndras AdorjanHEVES, HUNGARY, 24 February - 2 March 1997 is the venue of the 1stRainbow Chess International Championships.  Sponsored by ALTENA CLEANINGKFT, TOWN of HEVESPrizefund:: 700 000 HUF (approx. DM 7 000) I. 100 000 II. 60 000 III. 40000 Special prizes in 5 rating categories: I. 50 000 II. 25 000 III.15000 each Plus 10 000 HUF each for: the best junior; the best lady; thebest senior; the most wins with black (dark...); the highest % withblack (dark...)The event is a 7 round Swiss system Time rate: 2 hours/40 moves, plus 1hour each to finishContact: TAMAS BODl, H-3360 HEVES, Fout 22.,Fax: (36-36) 346-900or ANDRAS ADORJAN, new address:H-1053 Budapest, Kalvin ter 2.Tel/fax: (36-1) 118-62-59All FIDE rules will be in use but the difference will be in the chesssets used!!Something about Rainbow Chess by GM Andras AdorjanThe officers behind the ranks of 'traditional' Black and White pawns havetheir own colours:KINGS ARE RED, QUEENS ARE PURPLE, BISHOPS ARE BLUE,KNIGHTS ARE YELLOW,and ROOKS ARE GREEN.And, as the 'Black' pieces are the DARKER SHADES of the 'White' ones,there can be no problem with telling them apart! You can easily getaccustomed to the 'orgy' of colours, which is really strange at firstsight.According to inventor Pal Suvada (1912-1995), his idea, which waspatented in the USA more than 30 years ago, can have numerous advantages(his hypotheses are based on the result of earlier research):- the human eye perceives and stores colours much quicker than any form orsign;- therefore, quite a bit of precious thinking time can be saved for realprofessional problems;- as the 'private' colours of pieces are a useful addition to the ways ofidentilication we have known so far, we can presume that the number ofblunders and grave errors would go down, too;- it is especially beginners (mostly children) who learn much more easilyand eagerly with the help of colours;- it would make our game far more popular, first of all by facilitating thebroadcasting of chess on TV;- the appearance of the colours of the rainbow on the chessboard can alsoincrease the aesthetic pleasure of the spectators.Unlike other reform attempts, Rainbow Chess does not change anythingapart from adding new colours: the startposition, the way the piecesmove, the size of the board and all the other archaic conventions of thegame remain the same!The idea - like the Sleeping Beauty - awoke from its 30 years of sleepon 22 July, 1994, when the world premier took place in Budapest,Hungary, as a part of Bela Papp Memorial. lt was a rapid subjecttoumament. It was a lot of fun, too...  So the ball started to roll...Since that we've organized a large number of 'speedy' tournaments from30' down to 5' each.Only this year 5 events took place (so far), among them the FirstHungarian Speedy Rainbow Chess Ch. (20' each, 112 participants) and theI.Rainbow Blitz Championship of Budapest (10' each, 34 participants,including 8(!) GM-s led by Peter Leko, the youngest ever GM in chesshistory and 9 IM-s, probably the strongest of all time competition ofthis kind in Hungary).I took part in all of these tournaments both as organizer and player. Inaddition I've played 9 out of 11 games by using my Rainbow Chess set asa demonstration board in the (traditional) Hungarian Championship in '95January and many more in Team Ch. Matches in 95/96. My two years'personal experience by analysing and playing with Rainbow Chesscompletely confirms of Mr.Suvada's hypothesis.14) The Czech System - 1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 c6!? - Part IX------------------------------------------------------------------By Marco R. Martini (ITA) - Email: avvmartini@mailbox.icom.it                          - WWW  : htpp://www.icom.it./user/scacThere are some additional theoretical lines in the THEO110.CBF section also.1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 c6 4.g3 e5   [4...Nbd7 5.Bg2 e5 6.Nge2 (6.f4!?)     A) 6...Be7 7.0-0        A1) 7...0-0 8.a4 (8.b3 Ne8 9.Bb2 Nc7 10.f4 f6 11.Qe1 exd4         12.Nxd4 Nb6 13.a4 a5 14.Qf2 Na6 15.Rfe1 Qc7 16.Bf3 Bd7 17.Rad1         Rae8 18.f5 +/-Jerez,J-Napolitano,M corr. 1956) Qc7 (8...a5         9.h3 Re8 10.b3 Bf8 1/2-1/2 Trepp,M Vokac,M Praga 1987) 9.b3         b6 10.Ba3 Re8 11.Re1 Bb7 12.Qd2 a6 13.Rad1 Bf8 14.dxe5 dxe5         15.Bd6 Bxd6 16.Qxd6 Qxd6 17.Rxd6 Nc5 18.Red1 a5 +=         Kennaugh-Mah, Hastings 1995;        A2) 7...Qc7 8.a4 b6 9.h3 h5 10.Be3 Ba6 11.f4 Bb7 12.Nc1 c5         13.dxe5 dxe5 14.Nd3 Rd8 15.Qe1 Bd6 16.Nd5 +/- Galdunts,S-Orlov,         1989;        A3) 7...b5;     B) 6...b5        B1) 7.d5 Bb7 8.0-0 Be7 9.h3 0-0 10.Kh2 Rc8 11.Be3 Qc7 12.Rc1         Nb6 13.b3 b4 14.Bxb6 Qxb6 15.Na4 Qa5 16.c4 bxc3 17.Nexc3 cxd5         18.exd5 unclear Tomczak,R-Bush,K Germany 1990;        B2) 7.a3 Bb7 8.0-0 a5 9.b3 (9.h3 b4 10.Na4 c5 11.dxc5 dxc5         12.f3 c4 13.b3 cxb3 14.cxb3 Nc5 15.Be3 Nxa4 16.bxa4 Bd6 17.axb4         axb4 18.Nc1 0-0 19.Nb3 Qe7 20.Rf2 Rfc8 21.Rd2 Ne8 22.a5 Rc3 1/         2-1/2 Manca,F-Mokry,K Reggio Emilia 1991) b4 10.axb4 axb4         11.Rxa8 Qxa8 12.Na4 c5 13.d5 Be7 14.h3 h5 15.f4 h4 16.g4 Nh7         17.Bb2 c4 18.c3 cxb3 19.Qxb3 Ba6 20.c4 0-0 21.Rc1 Rb8 =+         Lagumina,G-Belotti,B Forl� (op) 1991;        B3) 7.0-0 Be7 8.a3 (8.h3 0-0 9.g4?! b4 10.Na4 d5 unclear)           B31) 8...Bb7 9.h3 a5 (9...h5 10.Be3 a6 11.f4 0-0 12.Qd2 Re8            13.Rad1 Qc7 14.fxe5 dxe5 15.d5 cxd5 16.exd5 Bc5 17.Kh2 Bxe3            18.Qxe3 Qb6 19.Qg5 Rac8 20.g4 hxg4 21.Ng3 1/2-1/2            Kalinichev,S-Oratowsky,M Germany 1994) 10.b3 0-0 11.Bb2 Re8            12.Re1 Bf8 13.Qd2 exd4 14.Nxd4 b4 15.axb4 axb4 16.Na4 c5            17.Nf5 Nxe4 18.Qf4 Ndf6 19.f3 Nc3 20.Nxc3 Rxa1 21.Rxa1 bxc3            22.Bxc3� Gogichaishvili,G-Belikov,V Odessa 1991;           B32) 8...0-0 9.h3 (9.b3 a5 10.Bb2 Ba6 11.Re1 Re8 12.Qd2 Bf8            13.Na2 Bb7 14.Rad1 a4 15.Nac3 Qa5 16.b4 Qc7 17.Bc1 Nb6 18.h3            Rad8 19.Qd3 Ba6 20.g4 c5 21.bxc5 dxc5 22.d5 Qc8 23.Qf3 b4            24.Nb1 Nfd7 25.Ng3 Nc4 26.g5 Qb7 27.h4 b3 28.Qc3 Rb8 29.Be3            Nxe3 30.Rxe3 c4 31.d6 g6 32.Bh3 Qc6 33.Qd2 Nb6 34.Nc3 bxc2            35.Qxc2 Bxd6 36.Nge2 Bc5 37.Rf3 Bc8 38.Rf6 Qc7 39.Bxc8 Qxc8            40.Ng3 Qh3 41.Rf3 Qxh4 42.Nxa4 Nxa4 43.Qxa4 Qxg5 44.Qxc4 Qe7            45.Rd5 Rec8 46.Qd3 Bd4 47.Ne2 Qh4 48.Kg2 Rb2 49.Nxd4 Rc1            50.Ne2 Rxe2 51.Rd8+ Kg7 52.Rxf7+ Kxf7 53.Qf3+ Qf4 54.Rd7+ Ke8            0-1 Vilela,JL-Galego,L/Capablanca B Cienfuegos City CUB (5)            1996)              B321) 9...Bb7                 B3211) 10.Be3 a5 (10...a6 11.Qd3 Qc7 12.Rfd1 Rfe8                  13.dxe5 dxe5 14.Kh2 1/2-1/2 Podlesnik,B-Genov,P                  Porabka, 1987) 11.g4 (11.Nb1 Re8 12.g4 exd4 13.Nxd4                  Bf8 14.Nd2 Nc5 15.f3 d5 unclear Weideman,J-Huemmer,B                  Germany 1988) Nb6 12.Ng3 Nc4 13.Bc1 Re8 14.b3 Nb6                  15.Nf5 Bf8 += Link,U-Huemmer,B Germany 1988;                 B3212) 10.g4 Re8 11.g5 Nh5 12.Bf3 g6 13.Bxh5 gxh5                  14.dxe5 Nxe5 15.Ng3 Bxg5 16.f4 Bh4 17.Nxh5 +/                  -Muhutdinov,M-Rustemov,A Alushta (op) 1993;              B322) 9...a5 10.g4 Ba6?! (10...Bb7 11.Ng3 b4 12.axb4               axb4 13.Rxa8 Bxa8 14.Nce2 d5 15.dxe5 Nxe5 16.f4 Bc5+               17.Kh1 Nc4 18.g5 Nxe4 unclear) 11.b4! (11.Ng3 b4               12.Nce2 d5 13.exd5 Nxd5 14.Re1 bxa3 15.bxa3 Bf6 16.Ne4               Bxe2 17.Rxe2 exd4 18.Nxf6+ Qxf6 19.g5 Qf5 20.Qxd4 Rae8               21.Rxe8 Rxe8 =+Stisis,Y-Okhotnik,V Ajka 1992) Bb7               12.Rb1� axb4 13.axb4 Ne8 (13...Nb6!? 14.Ng3 g6) 14.Ng3               g6 15.Bh6 Ng7 16.Nce2 Nb6 17.f4 exf4 18.Nxf4 Bg5? (18...               Nc4 19.Qc1 Bg5 20.Bxg5 Qxg5 21.Nd5!? Qxc1 22.Nf6+ Kh8               23.Rbxc1 Ra3 24.c3 Rfa8� 25.Nd7!? Kg8 26.Nf6+=) 19.Bxg5               Qxg5 20.e5! dxe5 (20...d5 21.Rb3 +/-) 21.Ne4 Qe7               22.dxe5 Qxe5 (22...Rad8? 23.Nf6+ Kh8 24.Qe1 25.  Qh4+-)               (22...Nc4? 23.Nf6+ Kh8 24.Qe1 Qxe5 25.Qh4 h5 26.Rbe1+-)               23.Qd6!� (23.Nc5? Rad8) Qxd6 (23...Nc4 24.Qxe5 Nxe5               25.Nf6+ Kh8 26.Rfe1 Nc4 27.Re7) 24.Nxd6 Ra7 25.Ra1 Rxa1 (               25...Rfa8? 26.Rae1 Rd8 27.Nxf7! Kxf7 28.Ne6++-) 26.Rxa1               Ba8 27.Ra6 Nc8! (27...Nd5? 28.Bxd5 cxd5 29.Nxb5+-)               28.Nxb5 (28.Ne4!? Bb7 29.Ra1) Bb7 29.Ra5 cxb5 30.Bxb7               Nd6 31.Bc6 Rb8 32.Ra7 Ne6 33.Nxe6 fxe6 34.Rd7? Nc4 35.Re7               Ne3 36.c3 Nd1 37.Rxe6 Nxc3 38.Re3 Na4 39.Re5 Nc3 40.Rc5               Ne2+ 41.Kf2 Nf4 42.Bxb5 Beliavsky,A-Mokry,K/Haifa 48/175               1989 1/2-1/2]   [4...Bg4 5.f3     A) 5...Bh5 6.Bg2 Nbd7 7.Nge2 e5 8.Be3 Be7 9.Qd2 Qa5 10.0-0 h6      11.Kh1 0-0 12.Rad1 Qd8 13.g4 Bg6 14.Ng3 Nh7 15.Nf5 Bxf5 16.gxf5      Ndf6 17.Rg1 Kh8 18.Bf1 Ng8? 19.dxe5 Ng5 (19...dxe5 20.Qg2+-)      20.Bxg5 Bxg5 21.f4 Bh4 22.Qg2+- Berg,J-Hoffman,S Germany 1989;     B) 5...Bc8 6.Be3 Nbd7 7.g4 e5 8.Nge2 b5 - Line with 4.f3]   [4...Qa5 5.Bg2 e5 6.Nge2 Be7 7.0-0 0-0 8.h3 Nbd7 9.Be3 Re8 10.Qd2 Bf8   11.Rad1 b5 12.a3 1/2-1/2 Weigel,R-Weiner,O Germany 1989]   [4...Qb6 5.Bg2 e5 6.Nge2 Be7 7.0-0 0-0 8.h3 Nbd7 9.Kh2 Re8 10.b3 Bf8   11.Be3 Qa5 12.f4 exd4 13.Bxd4 Nc5 +=Prandstatter,E-Pekarek,A Varsavia   1987]   [4...Qc7 5.Bg2 e5 6.Nge2 Be7 7.a4 a5 8.h3 Na6 9.Be3 0-0 10.0-0 Nb4   11.g4 Re8 12.Ng3 b6 13.Qd2 Ba6 14.Rfe1 Nd7 15.Rad1 Rad8 16.Nf5 Bf8   +=Mohr,S-Bishoff,K Dortmund 1989]5.Bg2 Be7 6.Nge2 0-0   [6...b5   (bKe1,Qd1,Nc3,e2,Bc1,g2,Ra1,h1,Pa2,b2,c2,d4,e4,f2,g3,h2;nKe8,Qd8,Nb8,f6,Bc8,e7,Ra8,h8,Pa7,b5,c6,d6,e5,f7,g7,h7)   7.a3 a5 8.d5 Bb7 9.dxc6 Bxc6 10.Bg5 Nbd7 11.0-0 0-0 12.h3 b4 13.Nd5   Nxd5 14.exd5 Bb5 +=Farkas,Gy-Alperovich,A Ajka (op) 1992]7.0-0 Na6   [7...b5 8.h3 b4 9.Nb1 Nbd7 10.c4 bxc3 11.Nbxc3 Ba6�   Totsky,L-Hlavnicka,J Pardubice (op) 1993]   [7...Re8 8.h3 Nbd7 9.a4 Bf8 10.Be3 exd4 11.Qxd4 a5 12.Rad1 Ne5 13.Bf4   Qc7 14.g4 Be6 15.Bg3 Nc4 16.b3 Na3 17.Qd2 +=Mathe,A-Okhotnik,V   Cappelle (op) 1993]8.h3 Re8 9.Be3 +=   [9.b3 exd4 10.Nxd4 Nc5 11.Bb2 Bf8 12.Re1 a5 13.a3 a4 14.Qd2 Qb6 15.b4   Ncd7 16.Rad1 Ne5 =+Medeira,W-Correa,A San Paulo, 1991]Line

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp