Free Demos: Fritz 6 & CBL Linux Chess Programs Kevinfons Reviews: White's Opening Repertoire for 1.e4 1742.1 Notation Problems, How Not To Play Chess 1729.1 Seirawan Series Back In Print! SCID: How To Split Big DB Chess Engines Playing Strength Fritz 8 Troubles Questions To Ask Myself How Much Time Do You Devote To Chess? 1733.1 Annotating Are You A Ladies Man? Mozart & Chess 1726.1 Scholastic Chess Club Structure Macintosh Users 1725.1 Examining GM Games 1740.1 Endgame Problem Measuring Piece Mobility 1723.1 Which General Opening Book? Poll: Chess and Politics 1722.1
GAMES Macieja,B (2634) - Karpov,A (2686) [C45] 1.e4 e5 Karpov,A (2686) - Macieja,B (2634) [E39] 1.d4 Nf6 Macieja,B (2634) - Karpov,A (2686) [C33] 1.e4 e5 Acs,P (2600) - Polgar,J (2715) [B90] 1.e4 c5
Past issues of The Chessville Weekly can be viewed at our archives. |
Volume 2 Issue 15
April 13th, 2003 In This Issue PERSEVERANCE [r1q1brk1/pppn1pb1/6p1/6N1/2B2Q2/8/PPP2PPP/3RR1K1 w - - 0 22] White to move and win - Find the
Solution
The New York Masters Game of the Week, with analysis by IM Greg Shahade. This week's exciting game:
(3) Blatny,Pavel (2564) -
Kreiman,Boris (2581) [A00] Editorial - Chess and Politics, should they mix? Problem of the Week: Tactical training with our weekly puzzle. Glossary of Terms from Pawn Power In Chess by Hans Kmoch
Review: King’s Indian & Grünfeld: Fianchetto Lines by GM Lasha Janjgava. Reviewed by our premier reviewer - Jens Madsen Many Places: Further Adventures of Perry the PawnPusher, by Rick Kennedy: "The queen's
knight had a slight chip. What was most interesting was how it resembled the tornado that took Dorothy and Toto off to the Land of Oz... It's truly amazing where your mind can wander while you're waiting for the other guy at the chess board to make his move. Given enough time, you can go many places."
Go to
Many Places, and read the full story behind that ragged knight! King's Indian & Grünfeld Fianchetto Lines
by Lasha Janjgava Let it be said to begin with: King’s Indian & Grünfeld : Fianchetto Lines is not a fun book, but rather a serious book aimed at serious chess players. With Fianchetto Lines, the third book penned by Georgian GM Lasha Janjgava for Gambit Publications (following The Queen’s Gambit & Catalan for Black and The Petroff ), we are offered a thorough theoretical review of two important opening systems. Fianchetto Lines is rich on concrete analysis presented in an objective manner without any bias towards White or Black, and the well-organized material should serve the advanced player (rated 2000+) with an interest in these opening systems well. Weaker players are likely to find the scant use of verbose explanations cumbersome, so that the book could easily end up a permanent shelf-dweller. As the title indicates,
Fianchetto Lines is an ambitious project that covers fianchetto systems
against two important Black mainstays - the King’s Indian and the Grünfeld...
Read the full review. Reviews, Reviews, and More Reviews In the preceding article you read the beginnings of Jens Madsen's latest review for Chessville. But did you know that Chessville now has reviews of more than four dozen chess books, videos, and DVDs, with more being added nearly every week? Our book review staff is composed of experienced and reflective amateurs who know what it is that you are looking for in a book review. We can better assess a book’s value to the “normal” chess player because we are normal chess players. While we may not be authorities on the latest 30-move variations of opening theory, we can tell you whether you stand to benefit from a book, and provide you with an overview of the contents, organization, and other components of the title under review. From new releases by today's most prolific publishers (e.g. Gambit, Batsford, & Everyman) to classics like The Art of Attack in Chess, by Vladimir Vukovic, or Basic Chess Endings, by GM Reuben Fine, to videos like Accelerated Dragon Assault! by Andrew Martin, and DVDs like Pro Chess, The Video Chess Mentor by Yasser Seirawan, Chessville may have what you're looking for. Maybe your tastes run to historical works, like The Turk: The Life and Times of the Famous Eighteenth-Century Chess-Playing Machine, by Tom Standage, or Impact of Genius: 500 Years of Grandmaster Chess, by R. E. Fauber. Perhaps you prefer fiction, like Sinister Gambits, edited by Richard Peyton. Are you looking for tactical training books? 303 Tricky Chess Tactics & 303 Tricky Checkmates, both by Fred Wilson and Bruce Albertson, or Can You Be A Tactical Chess Genius? ,by GM James Plaskett, might be what you're looking for. Endgames? How about Batsford Chess Endings, by GM Jon Speelmann, et al., Just the Facts: Winning Endgame Knowledge in One Volume, by GM Lev Alburt and GM Nikolay Krogius, or Fundamental Chess Endings, by GM Karsten Muller and IM Frank Lamprecht? Openings? What do you like to play? The Caro-Kann 3.f3!? (e-Book) by IM Jan Pinski & NM Rafal Przedmojski, The Complete Sveshnikov Sicilian, by Yuri Yakovich, Ideas Behind the Modern Chess Openings by Gary Lane, or Starting Out: The King's Indian, by GM Joe Gallagher and others all await you. Let's not leave out some of the all-time great game collections: Tal - Botvinnik 1960, by Mikhail Tal, or I Play Against Pieces by Svetozar Gligoric, might suit your tastes. And some great instructional titles too, like The Art of Attack in Chess, by Vladimir Vukovic, C.J.S. Purdy’s Fine Art of Chess Annotation and Other Thoughts, by C.J.S. Purdy, or Learn from your Chess Mistakes, by IM Chris Baker might be what you need to jump to that next level. Visit
Chessville's
Review Section, and see what we thought of that title you've been
considering plunking down your hard-earned dollars for. The world of chess contains plenty of politics. Just from the last couple of decades we have the first Karpov-Kasparov match and related shenanigans, the schism between Kasparov & FIDE, the PCA, the GMA, the ABCs (wait, was that kindergarten?), and more recently Yasser Seirawan's efforts to unify the World Chess Championship, the "interview" with young Ruslan Ponomariov, and so on. I accept these things as an integral part of the chess world. Recently though, I have become more aware of politics from the "outside" world creeping into the chess world. At Pakistan Chess Player Lev Khariton's 200 Words for March 31st, 2003, urged chess sponsors and organizers to boycott Garry Kasparov's participation in chess events because of a non-chess article he wrote in the Wall Street Journal supporting a war against Saddam Hussein's regime. Lev takes the position that any moneys paid to Kasparov "will be a token of support for crimes and murders, genocide and another Holocaust in human history." Well, I have an opinion on this war too. But should chess and politics mix? Read my opinion about mixing chess and politics, then participate in our poll: Chess and Politics: Chess websites and magazines should... a)
discuss politics & war, and take stands on issues.
The Mad Aussie's Chess Trivia Correspondence "Checks": In some late 19th century correspondence chess tournaments, players had to pay an "earnest fee" as a guarantee to make sure that they would complete all of their games. If a player completed his games, the "earnest fee" would be refunded. If the player abandoned the tournament before completing their games, their "earnest fee" would be added to the prize pool. Correspondence Ratings: Here is the most recent ICCF ratings list from October 2002: 1. Ulf Andersson (Swe)
2741 Van Oosterom may be better known as the organizer of the Melody Amber tournament in Monte Carlo each year. Rause is the CC equivalent of Judit Polgar! There are a couple of well-known OTB players whose names don't appear on the list, as they haven't played the 30 games required to get a rating. They include Curt Hansen (Den) 2653 and Johnny Hector (Swe) 2616. Correspondence Sadness: Being a CC player, I was saddened to read the following quotes in a Chess Mail interview with Slovakian CC GM Dr Jozef Franzen, who finished second in the 12th ICCF WCCC (1984-91): It is not very optimistic, but I think normal correspondence chess - I have liked it for 30 or 40 years but it is destroyed, and it is finished by computers ... CC was very interesting for me if a player must understand something about the play and must work hard with the chessboard. But at this time, too many people are playing with a computer. Maybe 90% of the opponent's strength is computer". Only calculation and no chess culture. For me it is difficult to play with them. Normally they are not [serious] opponents. But now, for example, he has three computers and I am playing so (Frantzen points to his wallet chess set). For example, draw. It is not very interesting for me. Submit your trivia to the
Mad Aussie!
Chessville -
Recent Chess News
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Asian Team
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other online chess news resources
The Chess Cafe Malcolm Pein: Budapest Bids for Leko-Kramnik Match Chessbase John Nunn: All You Zombies, and other favorite Science-Fiction Works Jean-Michel Péchiné: Chess is a war game without bloodshed! Mig Reports: Kasparov Simuls at NYSE & the Internet French Championship: "National 1" Time to play in Besançon Tim Krabbé's Open Chess Diary 210. 13 April 2003: Tim Krabbé-60 Jubilee Tourney Awards 209. 9 April 2003: A female theme
Pakistan Chess Player John Henderson Is The Scotsman Larry Evans On Chess: Bring On the Gals Times of India: 'Some day, I want to be like Viswanathan Anand' Moscow Times: City Championship Still Packs a Punch Jeremy SilmanCHESS INSTRUCTION FOR BEGINNERS, Lesson Seven gives us our first step into beginning tactics. IM John Watson reviews STARTING OUT: THE KING'S INDIAN. The answer to our third CHESS COMPOSITION by Pal Benko, and a new one that should stump the vast majority of readers.
Andrianov & Silman's Scholastic Magazine -
NEW!! Salt Lake Tribune: Checkmate Steve Lopez's T-NotesT-NOTES FOR APRIL 6, 2003: INDEX TO YEAR SIX OF ETN T-NOTES FOR MARCH 30, 2003: IMPROVEMENT FOR THE AVERAGE PLAYER T-NOTES FOR MARCH 23, 2003: SHORT TAKES Rediff.com: Grandmaster in the Making Chess City - New Look & Feel, Under Construction Still, But Looking Good! ChessopolisRandy Bauer Reviews: Play the Classical Dutch - IM Simon Williams
Mechanics' Institute Chess Room De Firmian - Van Beek, Ruy Lopez C72, Bundesliga 2002-3, 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 d6 5.0-0 Bd7 6.d4 b5 7.Bb3 Nxd4 8.Nxd4 exd4 9.c3 d3 10.Qxd3 Be7 11.Qg3 Bf6 12.f4 Ne7 13.Nd2 0-0 14.Nf3 Ng6 15.Bd2 c5 16.f5 Ne5 17.Bd5 Bc6 18.Bxc6 Nxc6 19.Bf4 Re8 20.Rad1 Ne5 21.Rd5 Qc7 22.Rfd1 Rad8 23.Nxe5 dxe5 24.Bg5 Rxd5 25.Rxd5 Bxg5 26.Qxg5 Qb6 27.Qe3 Qa5 28.a3 Qa4 29.Qd3 b4 30.cxb4 cxb4 31.Qc4 a5 32.h3 h5 33.Kh2 h4 34.Rd6 Ra8 35.f6 g6 36.Rc6 Re8 37.b3 Qxa3 38.Rc8 1-0 King's Indian & Grünfeld: Fianchetto Lines (Lasha Janjgava)The Manual of Chess Combinations 2 (Sergey Ivashchenko)
RusBase Part Two - New Additions for
1983 Chess Links Sam Collins' Reviews: How To Build Your Chess Opening Repertoire Book Reviews. GMSquare's reviewers look at the printed page Sam Collins' Reviews. The Best of Chess Cafe.com Chess Kamikazes - ATTENTION: We now have some content back! Annotated Games
New York
Masters Game of the Week, analysis by IM Greg Shahade Puzzles & Problems
Chessville -
Problem of the Week Tell us about your favorite site that you would like us to
keep an eye on for you. Write:
Newsletter@Chessville.com Position of the Week: Solution
Tal,M - Petrosian,T 1.e4 g6 2.d4 Bg7 3.Nc3 d6 4.Nf3 Nf6 5.Be2 0-0 6.0-0 Nc6
7.d5 Nb8 8.Re1 e5 9.dxe6 Bxe6 10.Bf4 h6 11.Nd4 Bd7 12.Qd2 Kh7 13.e5 dxe5
14.Bxe5 Ne4 15.Nxe4 Bxe5 16.Nf3 Bg7 17.Rad1 Qc8 18.Bc4 Be8 19.Neg5+ hxg5
20.Nxg5+ Kg8 21.Qf4 Nd7 The diagrammed
position. 22.Rxd7!! Bxd7 22...Qxd7 loses to 23.Qh4
Qh3 24.Qxh3 Bh6 25.Qxh6 and mate next. 23.Bxf7+ Rxf7 24.Qxf7+ Kh8
25.Qxg6 Bf5 25...Qg8 26.Qh5+ Bh6 27.Qxh6+ Qh7 28.Qxh7mate.
26.Nf7+ Kg8 27.Nh6+ Kh8 28.Nxf5 Everything Black can do now
leads to mate. 28...Qg8 29.Re7 Fastest was 29.Re4.
29...Bf8 29...Rd8 allows Black to survive a bit longer, but I
suspect Petrosian was committing chessic suicide... 30.Qh5+ Black
resigns. |
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A wood-pusher overlooks the ranks. – Russian Proverb Let the opponent have the pawn center, and I will attack him. – Siegbert
Tarrasch
GAMES Hansen,C (2610) - Anand,V (2764) [A29] 1.c4 e5 Hunguest Tournament Budapest, Hungary (1), 11.04.2003 Korchnoi(GM) (2632) - Polgar(GM) (2715) [E12] 1.Nf3 Nf6 Hunguest Tournament Budapest, Hungary (1), 11.04.2003 Short(GM) (2686) - Lutz(GM) (2640) [B48] 1.e4 c5
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