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From The Chessville Forum

What General Opening Book?
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Looking For New White Opening 1821.1

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More Top-10 All-Time Chess Books 1681.12

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Jeremy Silman's Website 1834.1

Corr. Chess
1828.1

 

 

GAMES

First
Saturday Tourney

FS-GM-May (13), 2003

Turov,M (2525) - Predojevic,B (2430) [B22]

1.e4 c5
2.Nf3 e6
3.c3 Nf6
4.e5 Nd5
5.Bc4 Nc6
6.0-0 d6
7.d4 cxd4
8.cxd4 Be7
9.Qe2 0-0
10.Re1 a6
11.Qe4 Qc7
12.Bd3 f5
13.exf6 Nxf6
14.Qe2 d5
15.Nc3 Bd6
16.Bg5 Ng4
17.g3 Qf7
18.Kg2 Qh5
19.h4 Nxd4!
20.Nxd4 Rxf2+
21.Qxf2 Nxf2
22.Kxf2 e5
23.Nb3 Bh3
24.Be2 Rf8+
25.Kg1 Qf7
26.Kh2 Qe6
27.Rad1 Rf2+
28.Kh1 d4
29.Ne4 Bg2+
30.Kg1 Bxe4
31.Kxf2 Qf5+
32.Kg1 Qh3
33.Bc4+ Kh8
34.Re2 Qh1+
35.Kf2 Qg2+
         0-1

 

FS-IM-B
(12), 2003

Farago,S (2340) - Pg Mohd Omar,A (2200) [B59]

1.e4 c5
2.Nf3 Nc6
3.d4 cxd4
4.Nxd4 Nf6
5.Nc3 d6
6.Be2 e5
7.Nb3 Be7
8.Be3 0-0
9.g4 Be6
10.g5 Nd7
11.h4 a5
12.Nd5 a4
13.Nd2 Bxd5
14.exd5 Nb4
15.c4 a3
16.b3 f5
17.gxf6 Bxf6
18.Ne4 Bxh4?
19.Bg4 g6?
20.Qd2 Nc5
21.Nxc5 dxc5
22.Bxc5 e4?
23.Be6+ Kh8
24.Bxb4 Bxf2+
25.Ke2 Bh4
26.Raf1 Rf3
27.Rxh4 1-0

 

FS-FM-May (11), 2003

Kjetza,J (2125) - Harmatosi,J (2210) [D46]

1.Nf3 d5
2.d4 Nf6
3.c4 c6
4.Nc3 e6
5.e3 Nbd7
6.Qc2 Bd6
7.Bd3 0-0
8.0-0 dxc4
9.Bxc4 e5
10.Rd1 Qe7
11.h3 e4
12.Nd2 Re8
13.a4 Nb6
14.Bf1 Nbd5
15.Nc4 Nb4
16.Qb1 Bc7
17.g3 Nfd5
18.Bg2 f5
19.Nd2 h5
20.h4 Nxe3!
21.fxe3 Bxg3
22.Nf1 Qxh4
23.Nxg3 Qxg3
24.Ne2 Qg4
25.Kf2 f4
26.exf4 e3+
27.Bxe3 Rxe3!
28.Kxe3 Bf5
29.Kf2 Bxb1
30.Raxb1 Re8
31.Bf3 Qf5
        0-1

 

Bogoljubow,E - Schmid,L [C47]
GER-ch 13th Bad Pyrmont (8), 1949

1.e4 e5
2.Nf3 Nc6
3.Nc3 Nf6
4.d4 exd4
5.Nxd4 Nxe4
6.Nxc6 Nxc3
7.Nxd8 Nxd1
8.Nxf7 Nxf2
9.Nxh8 Nxh1
10.Bd3 Bc5
11.Bxh7 Nf2
12.Bf4 d6
13.Bg6+ Kf8
14.Bg3 Ng4
15.Nf7 Ne3
16.Kd2 Bf5
17.Ng5 Bxg6
18.Ne6+ Ke7
19.Nxc5 Nxc2
20.Bh4+ Ke8
21.Ne6 Kd7
22.Nf4 Nxa1
23.Nxg6 Re8
24.Bf2 Nc2
25.Nf4 Nb4
         0-1

 

Botvinnik,M - Schmid,L [E62]
EU-chT (Men) Hamburg (6), 1965

1.d4 Nf6
2.c4 d6
3.Nc3 e5
4.Nf3 Nc6
5.d5 Ne7
6.e4 g6
7.g3 Bg7
8.Bg2 0-0
9.0-0 Nd7
10.Ne1 f5
11.Nd3 h6
12.f4 Kh7
13.Bd2 fxe4
14.Nxe4 Nf5
15.Kh1 exf4
16.Nxf4 Ne5
17.Rc1 c5
18.b4 b6
19.bxc5 bxc5
20.Ne6 Bxe6
21.dxe6 Qe7
22.Nc3 Qxe6
23.Nd5 Rab8
24.Nf4 Qd7
25.Qc2 Nd4
26.Qe4 Rb2
27.Bc3 Rxa2
28.Rb1 Qf5
29.Rb7 Rf7
30.Bxd4 cxd4
31.Rxf7 Qxf7
32.Nh5 Rf2
33.Nf4 Rxf1+
34.Bxf1 Qf5
35.Qxf5 gxf5
36.Bh3 Ng4
37.Bg2 Ne3
38.Bc6 Be5
39.Nd3 Nxc4
40.Bb5 Ne3
41.Nb4 a5
42.Nc6 0-1

 

 

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Past issues of The Chessville Weekly can be viewed at our archives.

Volume 2  Issue 20                                                         May 18th, 2003

In This Issue

The Vera Menchik Club

New At Chessville

Crazy Knights

The Mad Aussie's Chess Trivia

Standard Chess Openings

Pablo's Chess News

Position of the Week

New On The Net

Today's quotation is for Gambiteers everywhere, and especially for our friends on the UnorthodoxChessOpenings and chesskamikazes lists:

"To win without risk is to triumph without glory."
– Pierre Corneille

from the editor...  GM Nigel Davies has a special offer for readers of The Chessville Weekly.  All you have to do is solve this issue's Position of the Week, then check out the solution at the bottom.  Good Chess!
 


Chess Express Ratings, Inc.

Position of the Week

Black to move and win - Find the Solution
 

 

 

New At Chessville

The New York Masters Game of the Week, with analysis by IM Greg Shahade.  This week's exciting game:

(4) Charbonneau,P (2444) - Stripunsky,A (2643) [B42]
55th
New York Masters New York (4), 06.05.2003

The Vera Menchik Club: Further adventures of  Perry the PawnPusher.

Chess Fiction: An index page, bringing together in one place links to the modest but (hopefully) growing collection of fiction that involves chess rather more then less.


Review: Standard Chess Openings
by Eric Schiller

Cardoza Publishing, © 2002
Reviewed by David Surratt
 

Steinitz-Lasker:  World Championship Match, Game 14, Queen's Gambit Declined.  Annotations by the combatants themselves!


Review: Crazy Knights

An addictive new CD-ROM game for the Personal Computer based upon the chess knight's L-shape moving pattern.
 

Steinitz-Lasker:  World Championship Match, Game 14, Queen's Gambit Declined.  Annotations by the combatants themselves!

Problem of the Week: Tactical training with our weekly puzzle.

More New Links:  New additions to our links collection!
 

The Vera Menchik Club
Perry The PawnPusher, By Rick Kennedy

The mournful wail echoed through the skittles room. “I don’t want to join the Vera Menchik Club!” I clapped a consoling arm around the shoulders of the tormented man, and turned him to face me.  It was Perry the Pawnpusher. Of all the rotten luck.

Who would have guessed that he, too, would be playing in the same national tournament, this holiday weekend? I had somehow missed him the first few rounds.  “I don’t want to join the Vera Menchik Club,” he started up, again.

“Perry, Perry, listen,” I cut him off, grabbing him by the lapels and then quickly letting my hands drop. Once again, I reached back to the days of the old chess studio for a quote from the great Alekhine “Vera Menchik is an extremely capable chess player; if she continues her work and training, she will graduate from her current status as an average master and become a first-class International Master.”

Perry stared bug-eyed, nodding his head.  “Next round,” he stammered, as his hands twitched in and out of the pockets of his ratty sweater. “If all goes as planned, I will be matched against Vera Menchik!”

Read the rest of Perry's brush with The Vera Menchik Club!
 

Crazy Knights
www.crazyknights.net

John DiGregorio is a mean, evil, cruel, vicious, wicked, sadistic man and I hate him.  I told him so, too.  True to his colors, he just laughed.

John and his partners are behind Crazy Knights, an addictive new CD-ROM game for the PC based upon the chess knight's L-shape moving pattern.  The object of the game is to land on every square without landing on the same square twice.  It can prove to be quite a challenge!  Not to mention quite maddening...

Each game is programmed so the player's next move options are highlighted in yellow, and change with each move, as does their next move options. Once a square has been landed on, it will either change color or reveal more of a picture, depending on which game has been selected.

The game program will not allow a second landing on any square.  At the end of each game the computer will display the number of blocks remaining, amount of time used, and the player's score.  There is also a High Score list to keep a record of the player's statistics.

There are twenty colorful puzzle-pattern games to choose from and a variety of skill levels, making it fun for children and adults.  In the Beginner's category the games include Butterfly, Chain, Flowers, Raceway, and Rocket Ship.  Even preschoolers will enjoy these games!  There are also games listed for Intermediate and Advanced skill levels, as well as the Stallion Challenge - the full size chess board versions of the game, all based of course on the famous knight's tour.

Crazy Knights is as educational as it is fun.  It will help teach players to plan their knight moves more precisely when playing an actual game of chess.  Best yet, if you write to John, he'll send you a free one-puzzle demo of Crazy Knights.

Recommended Minimum System Requirements: Windows Based Operating System (Windows 98 or later - although they have tested it on Windows 95 with 16 MB of RAM, the games took twice as long to load but played OK), 128 MB RAM, 50 MB Hard Drive space, CD-ROM Drive.

For more information, and to receive your demo puzzle, visit Crazy Knights today, or in the USA call 1-732-329-1315.  And if you talk to John, please tell him I was just kidding, and to please send me the solution to the Butterfly puzzle, before those guys in the white coats manage to break through the door...
 

Standard Chess Openings
Reviewed by David Surratt

Second Edition, © 2002
Cardoza Publishing
(Distributed by Simon & Schuster)
Softcover, 784 pages

Standard Chess Openings (SCO) according to the cover, is "The Complete and Definitive Reference to all Standard Chess Openings, More Than 3,000 Opening Gambit Strategies Inside!" containing "The essential concepts, tactics, and thinking behind every major chess opening."  That's a tall order to fill, one that any specialty opening book would be happy to achieve.  It may be too much of a claim for a compendium of this sort, which has to measure itself against such tomes as Nunn's Chess Openings (NCO), Batsford's Chess Openings, and even that ancient classic, I.A. Horowitz's Chess Openings, Theory and Practice (CO,T&P).

SCO contains an Introduction, Overview and an 8-page chapter entitled Choosing the Best Openings.  The openings themselves are organized into chapters covering Open Games, Semi-Open Games, Closed Games, Indian Games, and Flank Games.  Added as a "Supplement to the 2nd Edition" are ten games covering "lines that were not in the first edition" including the Berlin Defense (used successfully by Kramnik in his World Championship Match with Kasparov), a "new" approach to defending the Marshall Attack, and among others, the "Lion Defense, a new opening based on ancient principles..."

Now the Lion isn't exactly "new", depending on your definition of course.  After all, the current post-Ice Age era is new, in geologic terms.  The Lion has had a book out (in Dutch, I believe) for quite a number of years, and, for a time, it's own website...

Read the rest of the review!
 

The Mad Aussie's Chess Trivia
From Graham Clayton

More "Who Am I?" problems for you to consider:

1.  I left my country of birth due to being orphaned during World War 1.  I commenced my international career in the 1920's. In a 10 year period I played in 50 national and international tournaments, and shared or won first prize in 24 of others, as finished lower than third on only 4 occasions. I also played in 5 Olympiads. I was a journalist by profession, and often reported on the tournaments that I played in. I became a national hero; cigarettes, pastries, slippers and other products featuring my name were made in my honour. I was selected by FIDE to challenge Alexander Alekhine for the world title, but the political situation in Europe at this time made this match an impossibility. I fled Europe at the beginning of World War 2, and ended up taking Soviet citizenship. I continued playing after World War 2, but was only a shadow of the player I was prior to World War 2. Who am I?

2.  I had a very successful junior career, including leading my country's team to victory in the Student Teams Olympiad.  I also played in 7 "senior" Olympiads. I twice won my country's "Open" championship, and finished second in the "closed" championship. The demands of my profession limited my ability to compete in international tournaments from the mid 1960's on. I was also a "second" for a World Championship match. Who am !?

Find the answers here.     Submit your trivia to the Mad Aussie!
 

Pablo's Chess News

ChessvilleRecent Chess News  Chessville Coverage of:
    
33rd Bosnia Chess Tournament (May 17-27 / Sarajevo, BOSNIA)
         
Round 1 today   * Chessville coverage
     3rd Leiden Computer Chess Tournament (May 16-18 / Leiden)
         
The King leads  (6.5/7)   * Chessville coverage

     Spanish Team Championships (Canary Islands, SPAIN)
         
C.A Marcote won the title   * Final standings
     1st Saturday Tournaments (Budapest, HUNGARY)
         
May tournaments have finished
        
 * May tournaments (results, standings & pictures)
          * Download the games

     GM Patrick Wolff - the Rest of the World (from August 31st, 2002)
         
* Official site

other online chess news resources
The Week In Chess (TWIC) The most complete Tournament News
Mig's Daily Dirt - Commentary on Current Chess Events
Jeremy Silman - John Watson: Latest Chess News
The Chess Oracle Monthly International Chess News
The Chess Report Another great chess news site
The Campbell Report Correspondence Chess News
Net Chess News - News and More
 

New On The Net

The Chess Cafe
     Review: The Chess World, 1932-33, Edited by George Koltanowski
     Endgame Study: J.Sule, Ceskoslovensky Sach, 1956
     Karsten Müller: Queen and Rook's Pawn vs Queen (Part 2)
     Tim Harding: A Little Tutorial on PGN
     Mark Dvoretsky: Standard and Non-Standard Combinations

The Telegraph Chess Club
     Malcolm Pein: Athenaeum takes trophy

Tigerchess - Updated Grandmaster Growl

Baltimore Sun: Chess teams checkered by recruiting practice

Correspondence Chess News - LATEST ISSUE (90):  VIEW  PDF

Steve Lopez's T-Notes
     MAY 11, 2003: INSTALLING CB PLAYER ENCYCLOPEDIA 2003

The Salt Lake Tribune - Checkmate

About.com Chess - 10 New Puzzle Sets

The New York Daily News: Some missing pieces in learning

Chessbase
     Milan Vukcevich, 1937 – 2003
     Test your wits in the latest puzzle edition
     Lothar Schmid Turns 75  (See a pair of his games in the Games section)

Jeremy Silman
     INSTRUCTION FOR TOURNAMENT PLAYERS: THE ANSWER FOR CRAZED OR CALM
     IM John Watson reviews Alexander Kalinen's two books: THE FRENCH DEFENCE and THE SICILIAN DEFENSE

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Chess champion finds everyone targets No. 1

Chess Siberia - Secrets of the April 2003 FIDE Rating List

The Washington Times: Unsound but irresistible fun

Go Memphis: Undisputed Champs - The Oakhaven Lennox Lewis Chess Team placed first in the U.S.C.F.'s National Elementary Championships

Chess Sector - Ukrainian Chess Online
     Bundesliga 2002/03: Games and Fragments
     Some Comments to the Letter from Turkish C.F.
     Pobeda-2003 Chess Tournament
     Some Answers to Open Letter of GM Igor Glek

India's Press Information Bureau: A BIG BOOM IN THE BRAIN GAME

Chessnews Weekly
     Endings, Annotated Games, Blunder of the Week, check it out!

Slate: Confessions of a Chess Dad

Seagaard Chess Reviews
     The French Defence (Kalinin)

World Chess Network
     John Henderson is The Scotsman
     Larry Evans On Chess - ABSTRACT PROBLEMS

RusBase Part Three - New Additions for 1985

Annotated Games

New York Masters Game of the Week, analysis by IM Greg Shahade

The Telegraph Chess Club
     David Norwood: Ivanchuk-Hector, 11th Sigeman International 2003 Rd 5
     Nigel Short: Short-Dublan, Lanzarote 2003

Robert Byrne (NY Times): Short-Lutz, Budapest 2003

Lubomir Kavalek (Washington Post): Hansen - McShane, Sigeman 2003

Jack Peters (LA Times): GM Nielsen-GM McShane (England), Malmo 2003

Puzzles & Problems

Chessville - Problem of the Week
William Harvey's Chess Puzzles - Solutions
     White Mates in 3 (2 solutions), Nadel vs S Margulies, Berlin, 1922
     White Mates in 5, Imbaud vs Strumilo, Corr., 1922
     Joseph Krejcik vs Richard Reti, Vienna, 1922
     Luigi Miliani vs Walter Henneberger, Milan, 1922
     Geza Maroczy vs Milan Vidmar, Ljubljana, 1922
Sack the King! - A new tactical puzzle every day!
MagnateGames - A problem each day
Bruno's Chess Problem of the Day
Mastermove - Endgame Compositions
National Scholastic Chess Foundation - Problem of the Week
Chesshaven - Tactical Exercise of the Day
The London Times - Winning Move & Column, Both Daily

Tell us about your favorite site that you would like us to keep an eye on for you.  Write: Newsletter@Chessville.com

 

Here are the solutions to The Mad Aussie's Chess Trivia questions:

1) Salo Flohr (Czechoslovakia/USSR 1908-83)
2) William Lombardy (USA 1937--)

Position of the Week: Solution


Kurkletis - Vasyukov
Kazakhstan, 1957

1...Rb8 White Resigns.  If 2.Qxb8 Qxc3+ 3.Kd1 (3.Bd2 Qxd2 mate) 3...Nf2 mate.  Or 2.Qc2 Rxb1 when White's best is 3.fxe4 (not 3.Qxb1?? Qxc3+ mate next.)

This position was taken from GM Nigel Davies (of Ask the Tiger! fame) great book, The Power Chess Program Book 1.  Power Chess is a structured year-long study program for the serious chess student.


For a limited time GM Davies is offering autographed copies of Power Chess for just £10 plus postage (the normal retail price is £16.99). Just email him to place your order and he'll invoice you via PayPal's secure online payment facilities.  Don't have a PayPal account?  Get one free by clicking on the link below.

  I accept payment through PayPal!, the #1 online payment service!
 

 

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TigerChess
with
GM Nigel Davies

Here's another example from a recent post to the TigerChess discussion list by GM Davies:

"Just as a boy becomes a man when he walks around his first puddle,
chessplayers reach maturity when they are willing to play normal
positions that arise from normal openings rather than the oddball
stuff designed to trick your opponent early on or force the pace
from the outset. And in this regard I have a confession to make; I
was still jumping into the puddles age at the age of 30 with my
slimy tricks in the Modern etc, but I became a GM when I started to
play more 'normally'."

- Nigel Davies

 

 

GAMES

Deep Sjeng 1.5 - Fritz [E42]
3rd Leiden Computer Chess Tournament Leiden, NED (1), 16.05.2003

1.d4 Nf6
2.c4 e6
3.Nc3 Bb4
4.e3 c5
5.Nge2 cxd4
6.exd4 0-0
7.a3 Be7
8.d5 exd5
9.cxd5 Re8
10.d6 Bf8
11.g3 b6
12.Bg2 Nc6
13.b4 Bb7
14.0-0 a6
15.Na4 Re6
16.Be3 Bxd6
17.Bxb6 Qb8
18.Rc1 Na7
19.Bxa7 Rxa7
20.Nd4 Re8
21.Bxb7 Qxb7
22.Qd3 Bf8
23.Nc5 Qb6
24.Rfd1 h6
25.Na4 Qb8
26.Nb2 a5
27.b5 Rc7
28.Rxc7 Qxc7
29.Na4 Qb7
30.b6 Qa8
31.Qb3 h5
32.Rc1 Qe4
33.Nf3 Rb8
34.Re1 Qb7
35.Ra1 Rc8
36.Ne5 d6
37.Nc4 Qd5
38.Nab2 h4
39.gxh4 Qf5
40.Ne3 Qh3
41.Nd3 Ng4
42.Nxg4
          Qxg4+
43.Kf1 Qf5
44.Ne1 Qe5
45.b7 Rb8
46.Rb1 Qxh2
47.Nf3 Qh3+
48.Ke2 Qf5
49.Qd3 Re8+
50.Kd2 Qf4+
51.Kd1 Rb8
52.Qd5 Qf6
53.Ke1 Qe7+
54.Kf1 Qd7
55.Ng5 g6
56.a4 Bh6
57.Rb5 Bg7
58.Rb3 Qc7
59.Ne4 Be5
60.Kg1 Kg7
61.Ng5 Kg8
62.Kg2 Qd7
63.Rb5 Qg4+
64.Kf1 Qd7
65.Rb6 Kg7
66.Rb3 Bf4
67.Qe4 Be5
68.h5 Bf6
69.h6+ Kg8
70.Qd5 Bxg5
71.Qxg5 Qe6
72.Re3 Qf5
73.Qxf5 gxf5
74.Re7 Kh7
75.Rxf7+ Kxh6
76.Ke2 Kg6
77.Rc7 f4
78.Kd3 Kf5
79.Kc4 Ke4
80.Kb5 1-0

 

Rus Women's Ch Elista (1), 18.05.2003

Fatalibekova E (2276) - Shadrina T (2386)

1.d4 Nf6
2.Nf3 e6
3.e3 b6
4.Bd3 Bb7
5.0-0 c5
6.c4 Be7
7.Nc3 0-0
8.d5 exd5
9.cxd5 d6
10.e4 a6
11.a4 Nbd7
12.Nd2 Ne5
13.Be2 Re8
14.f4 Ng6
15.Bd3 Bf8
16.Qf3 Bc8
17.h3 Ra7
18.g4 h6
19.Nc4 Nh7
20.Be3 Rb7
21.e5 Nh4
22.Qg3 b5
23.axb5 axb5
24.Na5 b4
25.Ne4 dxe5
26.fxe5 Ng6
27.Nd6 Bxd6
28.exd6 Nf6
29.Nc6 Rxe3
30.Qxe3 Qxd6
31.Ra8 Rc7
32.Bxg6 fxg6
33.Rxc8+ Rxc8
34.Ne7+ 1-0
 

Kuzmina O (2256) - Slavina I (2381)

1.e4 e5
2.Nf3 Nc6
3.Bc4 Bc5
4.b4 Bb6
5.a4 a6
6.Nc3 Nf6
7.Nd5 Nxd5
8.exd5 Nd4
9.Nxd4 Bxd4
10.Ra3 Bxf2+
11.Kf1 d6
12.Qe2 Ba7
13.Rg3 Bd7
14.Ke1 Qh4
15.b5 f5
16.Kf1 f4
17.Rb3 f3
18.Rxf3 Bg4
19.Qe4 g5
20.bxa6 bxa6
21.Bxa6 Bxf3
22.Qxh4 Bxg2+
23.Kxg2 gxh4
24.d3 Rg8+
25.Kf3 Ke7
26.c3 Raf8+
27.Ke2 Rg2+
28.Kd1 Bg1
29.d4 e4
30.Ke1 e3
31.Bf1 Rc2
32.Rxg1 Rxc1+
33.Ke2 Rf2+
         0-1
 

 

 

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