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| a site David Sein Translated from the Second Russian Edition by Jim Marfia ZURICH INTERNATIONAL CHESS TOURNAMENT, 1953 David Bronstein The book of a strong tournament ts more than just a games collection. When its participants are the world’s strongest players . . . the tournament as a whole represents a step forward in the development of chess creativity. We may take as examples of such tournaments the events at Hastings 1895, St. Petersburg 1914, New York 1924, Moscow 1935, and Groningen 1946. Beyond doubt, Zurich-Neuhausen 1953 deserves a place among them. David Bronstein ventured this evaluation of Zurich 1953 just three years after the event, in the preface to the first Russian edition of this book. Since that time the 210 games of the legendary tournament have only grown in stature. Most knowledgeable chess players now rate it the greatest tournament since World War II, and possibly the greatest tournament of all time. For over 25 years the Russian edition was the only record of the tournament. Ten years ago Jim Marfia, a talented amateur player, became determined to provide an authoritative English translation, and after four revisions, he has finally finished the task. The complete record of the famous Zurich Intérna- tional Chess Tournament, 1953, is available in English for the first time. Held to determine a challenger for then World Champion Botvinnik, Zurich 1953 attracted fifteen of the strongest players in the world: Smyslov Geller Boleslavsky Bronstein Najdorf Szabo Keres Kotov Gligoric Reshevsky Taimanov Euwe Petrosian Averbakh Stahlberg Almost all the games were hotly contested, and many are masterpieces of the first rank. To mention Euwe-Smyslov (round 3), Taimanov-Najdorf (round 4, winner of a brilliancy prize), and Keres-Reshevsky (round 11, one of the most reproduced and analyzed games in chess), is just to touch the tip of the iceberg; there are literally dozens of memorable, innovative games in this volume, including a substantial portion by the author, one of the game's greatest players, who finished tied for second with Keres and Reshevsky. behind the winner Smyslov. This book fills a significant gap in the English-language library of influential chess tournament books. Advanced players, many of whom have known about the tournament for years, will want this book for the games alone. Beginning and intermediate players, concerned more immediately with instruction, will find David Bronstein’s annotations not only perceptive and thorough, but also a veritable textbook on how to play the middle game. Original Dover (1979) publication, consisting of an English translation of the corrected, second Russian (1960) edition. 210 games in algebraic notation. 352 diagrams. Index of players. xviii + 349pp. 6% x 9%. Paperbound. ISBN 0-486-23800-8 $6.00 in U.S.A. Apauuay “gq {neg Aq uSisap 1aa09 ‘Ted TIM Aq ydesBo10yg -qn[D ssayD URNeYyUR|! Jo AsojIN0d UaUIssoyD ZURICH INTERNATIONAL CHESS TOURNAMENT, 1953 by DAVID BRONSTEIN Translated from the Second Russian Edition by JIM MARFIA Dover Publications, Inc. New York Copyright © 1979 by Jim Marfia. All rights reserved under Pan American and International Copyright Conventions. Published in Canada by General Publishing Company, Ltd., 30 Lesmill Road, Don Mills, Toronto, Ontario. Published in the United Kingdom by Constable and Com- pany, Ltd., 10 Orange Street, London WC2H 7EG. Zurich International Chess Tournament, 1953 is a new English translation by Jim Marfia of the second, corrected Rus- sian edition as published by Gosudarstvennoe Izdatel’stvo “Fizkul'tura i Sport’? [State Publishing House “Physical Culture and Sports’’], Moscow, in 1960 under the title Mez- dunarodnyi turnir grossmeisterov; kommentarii k partiyam tur- nira pretendentov na maté s Gempionom mira. international Standard Book Number: 0-486-23800-8 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 78-74881 Manufactured in the United States of America Dover Publications, Inc. 180 Varick Street New York, N.Y. 10014 A WORD FROM THE TRANSLATOR Surely, this is no ordinary chess book that you hold, dear Reader. self, I have read chess books that were entertaining, and those ee were instructive; some that were historic, and a few that were downright bad. But never have I encountered a book written with such powerful style and such obvious passion for the game. assion is infectious. The translation you hold is the final pro- dust of ten years’ work and four revisions — and still, I feel that it wanted more effort...so you can see the fascination Bronstein's book ‘had for its translator! If my translation can infect you, the Reader, with half of that fascination, then it will be a job well done. I must thank Jack O'Keefe for his meticulous proofreading and price-~ less editorial work. Jim Marfia TH INSTEAD OF A PREFACE As 1 began work on my first chess book, I put myself mentally in the reader's place, recalling the excitement with which I used to open each new chess book, hoping to find vital thinking there, clear words, and a wondrous tale of the art of chess. I absorbed a great deal from books, and to this day I cherish the memory of the best of them. Books about chess tournaments belong to a special class of litera- ture, which would seem at first blush to be rather restrictive of the author's creative possibilities, since he must write, not on themes of his own choosing, but about chess material already created. But this is not quite true. The author is free to treat the games any way he wishes, to make generalizations, and to uncover the ideas and plans actually ex- ecuted, as well as those that could have occurred in the actual or some other game. The book of a strong tournament is more than just a games collection. When its participants are the world's strongest players, then the games are mutually interdependent, and brimming with ideas, which crystallize and develop as the event progresses. Thus, the tournament as a whole represents a step forward in the development of chess creativity. We may take as examples of such tournaments the events at Hastings 1895, St Petersburg 1914, New York 1924, Moscow 1935, and Groningen 1946. Be- yond doubt, Zurich-Neuhausen 1953 deserves a place among them. In working on this book, I started from the premise that every full- bodied game of chess is an artistic endeavor, arising out of a struggle between two masters of equal rank. The kernel of a game of chess is the creative clash of plans, the battle of chess ideas, which takes on its highest form in the middlegame. This book examines a number of standard positions which occur as a result of the collision of plans; also examined are such strategic con- cepts as darksquare weaknesses, the advantage of the two bishops, play and counterplay on opposite wings, the relative strengths of the pieces, overprotection, and so forth. Such elements of the struggle as intui- tion, resourcefulness, and determination are discussed too. The games of a tournament of grandmasters bring the reader into the creative circle of the contemporary leaders of chess, showing him the rise and fall of battle as well as the manner in which a game of chess is created. It is the author's intention to discourse upon the least ex- plored and most interesting stage of the game: the middlegame, and the way it is handled by today’s grandmasters. That is the basic aim of this book. The author has tried to avoid weighing down his book with variations. Variations can be interesting, if they show the beauty of chess; they become useless when they exceed the limits of what a man can calculate; and they are a real evil when they are substituted for the study and clarification of positions in which the outcome is decided by intuition, fantasy and talent. Along with this, it was my hope that the player who read this book would raise himself thereby to a rather higher level of playing strength. The reader will see errors, too, in the games of this tournamerit; but he will not be too severe in his judgment of the masters if he pictures to himself the peculiar nature of the chess struggle. At the board there sits a living person, with all his everyday thoughts and worries, some- times far removed from chess. While selecting his plan, or even his next tlove, he cannot help thinking about his standing in the tournament, re~ Membering yesterday's result, looking at other games. A game is not an analysis: everything must be worked out in one's head, without moving the pieces, without consulting a book or asking advice from anyone... Tey} The grandmaster thinks and thinks — one last look at the clock — "Time to decide; I'll risk it!" — and the knight goes to e5. Of course it's easy, a whole year later, after studying all of the analyses and spending days on the position, to tell the reader, with absolute cer- tainty: A mistake; the careful Nel was to be preferred..." It may be that mistakes will turn up in my analyses and evaluations as well, although I have tried to keep them to a minimum. It is my hope that the reader will be indulgent, and help me to correct them. It is with trepidation, then, that I submit my work to the judgment of the readers. I will consider my ends achieved if the contents of this book expand the reader's chess horizon, increase his mastery of the game, give him some idea of the state of the art, and help him more fully to value — and still more to love — the depths of chess. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION Now that my book is ready for its second edition, I would like to explain today what I had to pass over in the preface to the first edi- tion four years ago. The work I submitted to the readers' judgment at that time was a work which had little in common with the commentaries usu- ally seen in the chess press. "Rotework" is athing abhorrent to art and lit- erature alike; thus, it should be still less acceptable in chess, which ac- tually falls somewhere in an intermediate zone between art and litera- ture, I do not wish to say anything against the numerous tournament and reference books that are being published, but for some years now a con- siderable decline has been noticed in the appetite of chessplayers for this type of literature, and yesterday's insatiable demand has slack- ened. Under these circumstances, how would the public accept a large and unfortunately rather expensive tournament book, such as this one? I had no wish to become a variations-monger; nor did I want the role of annotator-cum-guide. I felt that the author's ideas and conclusions should form the basis of this book, with the moves played in each game serving to amotate them, as it were. I tried to let the book's contents display the richness and Limitless expanse of chess ideas, and to let the format resemble that of a literary work. To judge from all the accepted indicators, the author appears to have accomplished his purpose, at least in part: the book sold out very quickly, and the reviews were favorable. Most valuable to me, however, were the many letters and opinions I received from readers (and I re- gret not having answered nearly enough of them). There I found, along with justified criticism of my book's shortcomings, approval of the basic principles by which it was written. Those letters have been the finest possible reward for my labors, and I should like to take this opportunity to offer my heartfelt thanks to all who wrote me. IT should like especially to thank Peter Romanovsky for his detailed review (helpful to readers and the author aliked which appeared in "Shakhmaty v SSSR". I was happy to agree to the publishers’ suggestion of a second edi- tion; I intended to excise all obsolete and unimportant materials, to develop other material a bit more fully, and to expand the preface to reflect the most recent developments in the world of chess. Thus, this second edition devotes a great deal less space to text, in games which did not serve my purpose of uncovering and describing the ideas of the art of chess. This applies especially to games from the later rounds, when the final standings of the tournament had already been largely determined, and the tension had slackened somewhat. Addi- tionally, two or three errors in analysis, discovered by the readers and the author, have been corrected; the proofreading has been up- graded, and some diagrams revised. I would like to close this segment with the hope that in the future my chessplaying audience will continue to aid the author in his work with their alert criticism, as well as their words of praise. soieteade Since this is a book devoted mainly to the middle phase of the game of chess, it might be appropriate to begin with a few words about the evolution of opening ideas and the modern openings repertoire. In former times — shall we say, the latter half of the preceding century — a game generally opened with the king's pawn, to which Black would, in the majority of cases, reply 1..e7-e5. Such defenses as the Sicilian and the French were also employed, of course, but less frequently. With some exceptions, over half of the games played in any tournament would be open games, and sometimes a much greater percentage than that. At the close of the last century and the beginning of the Twiil present one, the closed games for White and the semi-open games for Black became very popular. Thus, in the Cambridge Springs tournament of 1904, the Queen's Gambit was the most common opening, with the Ruy Lopez second and the Sicilian third. The Indian defenses also began to appear in the tournaments of the 1890's and 1900's: these were the har- bingers of new ideas. The 1920's witnessed the almost total disappearance of the open games, with the exception of the Ruy Lopez, from important tournaments, and the rise of the Queen's Gambit and other Queen's Pawn games. White's success with the Queen's Gambit and the Ruy led gradually to the pop- ularization of the asymmetrical defensive systems: the Indian against 1 d2-d4, and the Sicilian against 1 e2-e4. This was a very fruitful period for the development of opening ideas. The victories of the young grandmasters were closely bound up with their discovery of new openings: the Nimzo-Indian, Reti's Opening, Grunfeld's Defense, Alekhine's De- fense. At the strong double-round tournament at Bled 1931, which included Alekhine, Bogolyubov, Nimzovich, Vidmar, Flohr, Tartakover, Spielmann and Maroczy, among others, 77 Queen's Gambits and other Queen's Pawn games were played; of these, White won 29, and Black only 13. In the same event, 21 games used Indian Defenses, of which White could win only 2, while losing 14. Is in any wonder that, in the era that followed, en- compassing the 1930's and 1940's, fewer and fewer Queen's Gambits would be seen? The careers of many Soviet and non-Soviet players owed a great deal to the creation and development of new systems in the King's Indian and Sicilian, as well as in the Nimzo-Indian and Grunfeld Defenses. To- day, one may separate all openings, Black and White, into three major groupings. In the first grouping, both sides follow classical principles, devel- oping pieces, occupying space, creating a pawn center, avoiding weak- nesses, etc. This is the shape of the struggle in the great majority of variations of the Queen's Gambit, Ruy Lopez, French, and some systems of the Sicilian and Nimzo-Indian Defenses. Black knows that in these variations, especially in symmetrical positions, the advantage of the first move counts heavily, and he faces a long and patient struggle for equality. He has few winning chances, but if he works hard and plays cautiously, he may get a draw. The results of the World Championship match between Capablanca and Alekhine may be taken as typical for such openings. Of the thirty-four games of that match, thirty-three opened with the queen's pawn; twenty-five games were drawn, White won six, and Black two. Masters nowadays tend to avoid such openings, shunning sym- metrical setups in favor of defenses which offer counterchances. Thus we come to the second group of openings, in which one side fol- lows classical principles, while the other side consciously flouts a few, in order to obtain active play for his pieces, or an attack on the enemy pawn center, or sometimes simply for the sake of complicating. Such are the main lines of the King's Indian, Sicilian, Grunfeld and Nimzo-Indian, and some forcing lines of the Queen's Gambit. To the third group we may assign those openings in which White uses the opening phase not to occupy, but to control, the center squares, avoiding early definition of the pawn structure, and retaining maxi- mum flexibility, while preparing for a war of maneuver. While this is going on, White is ready to stir up complications at an appropriate moment, or — should he secure some positional plus — to boil the game down to a technical stage. This group comprises the Closed Variation of the Sicilian, a number of lines in the Reti, the English, the King's Indian Reversed, and a few others. It should be noted here that giving an opening a name does not auto- matically set the course of the opening struggle. For example: in the Queen's Gambit, one may play the Orthodox Defense, which is a typical form of the struggle on a classical footing. But one may also play Bot- Tvilil vinnik's line, or the risky "Peruvian" variation, with forcing play and counterchances for Black. The Queen's Indian is not one of the symmet- rical openings, but it does not give Black any real counterchances at all. And the Nimzo-Indian, one of the most outstanding and hardiest of defenses the "Hypermodern" school of the 1920's ever produced, allows a flexible transition either to positional schemes or to sharp varia- tions. tok These changes in our conception of the opening closely paralleled the development of chess ideas in general. The Queen's Gambit's greatest popularity coincided with the period when chess was completely dominated by the principles of the positional school. With all the good these principles have done, their one major shortcoming must be pointed out: the evaluation of positions by externals alone. In the eyes of Tarrasch' disciples — and he was the propagandist of Steinitz' ideas — such fac- tors as a backward pawn, or a powerful pawn center, or an advantage in development, were decisive, bothin the evaluation of one's own position and in setting up a plan of action. "If one piece stands poorly, the whole game stands poorly," said Tarrasch. The principles of the posi- tional school, expressed in simple instructional form by Tarrasch, be- came inviolable axioms of chess to many of his contemporaries. And thus arose the misconception, which persists to this day, of the so-called “consistent" game, in which one player carries out, from beginning to end, his logical plan, almost as if he were demonstrating a theorem of geometry, In the annotations to such an "ideal" game, one player always appears as the keeper of principle, the other as its transgressor. The "good" player then accumulates positional advantages and places them in avault, much as if he were saving to buy a motorcycle. Having accumulated the proper amount, he then launches a combinative attack, winding it up with an instructive mate, or with a still more instructive win of the ex- change. And just what, you may ask, was his opponent doing all this time? Why, gazing phlegmatically at his backward pawns and poorly-placed pieces, shrugging his shoulders, and then finally: "Black resigns.” I doubt if it needs to be demonstrated that such games never occur be- tween two grandmasters of equal ability, and that the annotators— a role generally assumed by the winner — turned what they wished to be into what actually happened. The views of the positional school held sway in chess for a long time, but their weak side came to light in the 1920's. As the Queen's Gambit began to fade from the openings lists, so the names of Nimzovich, Reti, Tartakover and other masters began to appear more and more frequently at the top of tournament crosstables, while these players came out strongly against one-sided understanding and exaggeration of the role of positional principles. Around 1935, the young masters of our country made their internation: al debut, with Botvinnik at their head; later, they were to advance to the forefront of the world's players. Their continuing successes gave some observers the impression of a Soviet school of chess, some sort of aggregate of identical chess ideas and views. I don't find this to be entirely true. As a matter of fact, the Soviet family of chess masters includes players of the most diverse styles. For example, Spassky and Petrosian, to judge from their styles of play and differing conceptions of the game, are as unlike one another as were Spielmann and Schlechter; and Tal as is far removed from Botvinnik as Lasker was from Capablanca. Now, what sort of ideas characterize the 1950's? What contribution did this tournament in Switzerland make to the development of ‘these ideas? And what is to be the direction of further progress in chess? First, let us note the great erudition of chessplayers who have ab- sorbed the experience of previous generations, allowing them now to ney fight with still more courage, forethought, fantasy and risk — all based on sober assessment of the pros and cons of the intended oper- ation. Qur understanding of positional play has matured immeasurably. Where Tarrasch taught us to avoid weaknesses in our own position while striv- ing to create them in our opponent's position, to accumulate small ad- vantages, to occupy open lines, and never to begin an attack without sufficient grounds, today things are sometimes done altogether differ- ently. We might give ourselves weak spots and weak pawns, in order to distract our opponent; give up open lines, in order to save the rooks for other, more promising plans; or mount an attacking demonstration, in order to hide our real intentions. The number of standard defensible positions, which every chessplay- er knows he can fall back on in case of need, has also grown by leaps and bounds. We now find that many positions which were formerly consid- ered lost can be defended successfully, even actively; but this requires, firstly: a tense game of calculation, and secondly: the ability to per- ceive the proper moment to abandon the weakness to its fate and carry the fight to a new sector. Only now has it become clear that this was precisely Emanuel Lasker's standard approach to the game, and that one of his major advantages over his rivals lay in the fact that none of them understood it. On the other hand, this approach was hardly Lasker's only distin- guishing characteristic. He was the game's great psychologist, who knew better than anyone how to make the pendulum of battle swing left, then right, never overstepping the bounds of safety himself, while impercep- tibly goading his opponent over the edge. He would deliberately play second-rate moves, practically inviting his orthodox opponent to punish him. Nowadays, even this style has been analyzed and superseded. Today's players are ready at times to give their opponents what would appear to be a positional advantage from the very first moves. Clear examples of this are the positions that arise in the King's In- dian after ..e5:d4, as well as the group of positions after 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 c5 3 d5 e6 4 Nc3 ed 5 cd. The Boleslavsky Variation of the Sici- lian, with its gaping hole at d5 and the hopelessly backward pawn on dé, might seem unbelievably daring, but nonetheless it withstands ev- ery assault. In this book, we will find a number of such examples. The reader will also find here descriptions of the technical ways and means employed by the contemporary master in the middlegame. The concept of technique is much broader now than it was a few decades ago, and what was omce a rare occurrence, a lucky find, is now the tool of the masses. Without technique, one cannot attain mastery of any form; it is no less impossible in chess. However, the importance of technique in chess should not be exagger- ated, either. The end phase of the game, frequently described as "a matter of technique", is certainly not always that clear and simple. Thirty years ago, Capablanca was considered the greatest technical player in the world; today it is Smyslov. After analysis of the so- called technical games of Capablanca and Smyslov, I concluded that they are based on the combinative element and on far-seeing and accurate an- alysis, and that as a consequence their technique is of an unusually high order, The same could be said, to a greater or lesser degree, of the endgames played by many grandmasters. I will mention only two here From this tournament: Euwe'’s against Stahlberg, and Gligoric's against uwe. Another characteristic quality of the contemporary creative output, which the reader will note more than once in the games of this tour- nament, is a readiness to react instantly to any change in the oppo- nent's plans, and to make radical alterations in one's own plan, if v7 given sufficient justification. One of the most prominent — and promising — tendencies which came forward in the course of this tournament was a penchant for wide-open piece play almost from the first moves. Apparently Morphy's style re- tains an irresistible fascination for chessplayers in every age, and a return to this style, refined perhaps to a higher level, is the dream of all players, grandmasters included. To me, it appears that we are closer to this ideal now than we have been at any time in the past cen- tury. This new tendency, whose representatives have blazed a trail through the USSR Championships, the 1955 and 1958 Interzonal tournaments, and the 1959 Candidates’ tournament, is characterized by an effort to take the game out of its logical channels at any cost, redirecting it into the combinative — or, more accurately, the calculative. The material side of the question — a pawn more or an exchange less — has no spe- cial significance. There is absolutely no need to demonstrate the com- bination's correctness in every variation. More likely the reverse may be true: in the majority of cases, it turns out that the defending side could have held out by finding a series of saving moves. But here the New Wave grandmaster trusts in himself and in his phenomenal ability to calculate a vast number of long and complicated variations. Sometimes this can give the game a very strange turn indeed. As one positional master said, "I fought him (a master of the calculative style) for thirty-two moves, and never guessed his reply, except once, when he had to take my queen." The foremost advocates of this dynamic style today are undoubtedly Mikhail Tal and Boris Spassky. Of course, complicating and turning the game into a war of calculation are not the only weapons in the arsenal of these unusually talented and well-rounded players. They are past masters of the techniques of positional play, conduct brilliant endgames, know the openings well, and surpass other masters precisely in their skill at giving the game a dynamic twist, making it the sort of game which is absolutely impossible to evaluate by landmarks; willy-nilly, one must then play "move by move", or perhaps even “variation by var- iaCion . _The time came for one of them to try his mettle, and the viability of his personal style, in single combat against the most powerful player of the past two decades: Mikhail Moiseevich Botvinnik. The results of that encounter and of the tournaments that led to it show, first of all, that in Mikhail Nekhemevich Tal we have the representative of a definite new direction; and second, that the existence of this direction does not by any stretch of the imagination signify an end to the kind of chess strug- gle that is based not only on the computation of variations, but on logic and principle as well. The author of this book, in the course of his twenty-year life in chess, has played quite a few sharp, tense games, where he had to bal- ance for a while on a sword edge; but I would certainly be the last to conclude that chess consists solely of calculating variations. And I would hope that, rather than see the further course of chess history bear out such a conclusion, the new style of play will instead become but one of many elements in the arsenal of creative techniques that are comprised in the art of chess. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. is. 16. 17. 18. ROUND ONE Szabo--Geller 0-1 Najdorf--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 Petrosian--Keres 1/2-1/2 Averbakh—Smyslov 1/2-1/2 Taimanov—-Bronstein 0-1 Euwe--Kotov 1-0 Stahlberg—-Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 ROUND TWO Kotov--Stahlberg 0-1 Geller—Euwe 0-1 Smyslov--Szabo 1/2~1/2 Keres—-Averbakh 0-1 Reshevsky--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 Bronstein--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 Gligoric--Taimanov 1/2~-1/2 ROUND THREE Najdorf--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 Petrosian--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 Averbakh--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 Szabo--Keres 0-1 CONTENTS 11 15 16 18 19 19 21 23 25 26 27 [xiii] 19. Euwe--Smyslov 0-1 20. Stahlberg—Geller 1/2-1/2 21. Boleslavsky--Kotov 1-0 ROUND FOUR 22. Geller--Boleslavsky 0-1 23. Smnyslov--Stahlberg 1-0 24. Keres—Euwe 1/2-1/2 25. Reshevsky~-Szabo 1-0 26. Bronstein-~Averbakh 1/2-1/2 27. Gligoric-~Petrosian 1/2-1/2 28. Taimanov--Najdorf 0-1 ROUND FIVE 29. Petrosian--Taimanov 0-1 30. Averbakh--Gligoric 0-1 31. Szabo--Bronstein 1-0 32. Euwe--Reshevsky 0-1 33. Stahlberg--Keres 0-1 34. Boleslavsky—-Smyslov 1/2-1/2 35. Kotov--Geller 1/2-1/2 28 31 33 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 45 46 48 51 52 54 55 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44, 45. 46. 47. 48. 49, 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. ROUND SIX 56. Petrosian—Averbakh 1/2-1/2 Smyslov—Kotov 1/2-1/2 56 ROUND NINE Keres--Boleslavsky 1-0 57 57. Szabo--Petrosian 0-1 Reshevsky--Stahlberg 1-0 59 58. Euwe--Najdorf 1-0 Bronstein--Euwe 1/2-1/2 60 59. Stahiberg--Taimanov 0-1 Gligoric--Szabo 0-1 64 60. Boleslavsky—Gligoric 1/2-1/2 Taimanov--Averbakh 1-0 66 61. Kotov--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 Najdorf--Petrosian 1-0 69 62. Geller--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 ROUND SEVEN 63. Gmyslov--Keres 1-0 Averbakh--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 71 ROUND TEN Szabo--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 72 64. Reshevsky--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 Euwe--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 72 65. Bronstein--Geller 1/2-1/2 Stahlberg-~Bronstein 1/2-1/2 74 66. Gligoric--Kotov 0-1 Boleslavsky--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 75 67. Taimanov--Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 Kotov--Keres 1/2-1/2 75 68. Najdorf--Stahlberg 1-0 Geller--Smysiov 0-1 77 69. Petrosian--Euwe 1-0 ROUND EIGHT 70. Averbakh--Szabo 1/2-1/2 Keres-~Geller 1/2-1/2 80 ROUND ELEVEN Reshevsky~-Kotov 1-0 80 71. Euwe--Averbakh 0-1 Bronstein—Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 81 72. Stahlberg—Petrosian 0-1 Gligoric--Stahlberg 1-0 82 73. Bolelsavsky--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 Taimanov~-Euwe 0-1 82 74. Kotov--Taimanov 1-0 Najdorf--Szabo 1/2-1/2 34 75. Geller--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 xiv 86 88 90 93 95 97 100 101 104 104 105 107 109 112 114 117 119 120 120 122 76. Smyslov--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 77. Keres--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 ROUND TWELVE 78. Bronstein—Keres 1-0 79. Gligoric--Smyslov 0-1 80. Taimanov--Geller 1-0 81. Najdorf--Kotov 1-0 82. Petrosian—Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 83. Averbakh--Stahlberg 0-1 84. Szabo--Fuwe 1/2-1/2 ROUND THIRTEEN 85. Stahlberg--Szabo 0-1 86. Boleslavsky--Averbakh 1/2-1/2 87. Kotov--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 88. Geller—-Najdorf 1-0 89. Smyslov--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 90. Keres--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 91. Reshevsky--Bronstein 0-1 ROUND FOURTEEN 92. Gligoric--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 93. Taimanov—-Keres 1/2~1/2 94. Najdorf—Snyslov 1/2-1/2 125 128 133 135 136 138 140 140 141 142 144 146 149 151 151 151 159 Teeasd 95, 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 110. 111. 112. 113. Petrosiane-Geller 1/2-1/2 Averbakh--Kotov 0-1 Szabo—Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 Euwe--Stahlberg 1-0 ROUND FIFTEEN Boleslavsky~-Euwe 1/2-1/2 Kotov--Szabo 1-0 Geller--Averbakh 1/2-1/2 Smyslov--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 Keres--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 Reshevsky--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 Bronstein--Gligoric 1-0 ROUND SIXTEEN Bronstein~-Taimanov 1/2-1/2 Reshevsky-~Naidorf 1/2-1/2 Keres--Petrosian 1-0 Smyslov--Averbakh 1/2-1/2 Geller--Szabo 1/2-1/2 Kotov--Euwe 1/2-1/2 Boleslavsky~Gtahlberg 1/2-1/2 ROUND SEVENTEEN Stahlberg--Kotov 0-1 159 159 162 162 167 168 171 173 175 177 180 183 184 185 187 189 189 192 114. Euwe-—-Geller 0-1 194 135. Gligoric-~Averbakh 1/2-1/2 115. Szabo--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 195 136. Bronstein--Szabo 1-0 116. Averbakh—Keres 1/2-1/2 196 137. Reshevsky--Euwe 1-0 117. Petrosian--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 196 138. Keres--Stahlberg 1-0 118. Najdorf--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 197 139. Snyslov--Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 119. Taimanov--Gligoric 0-1 198 140. Geller--Kotov 0-1 ROUND EIGHTEEN ROUND ‘TWENTY-ONE 120. Gligoric--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 201 141. Kotov--Smyslov 1-0 121. Bronstein--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 202 142. Boleslavsky—Keres 0-1 122. Reshevsky-~Averbakh 1-0 202 143. Stahlberg--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 123. Keres--Szabo 1/2-1/2 204 144. Euwe--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 124. Snyslov~-Euwe 1-0 207 145. Szabo--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 125. Geller--Stahlberg 1/2-1/2 210 146. Averbakh--Taimanov 1-0 126. Kotov--Boleslavsky 0-1 211 147. Petrosian--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 ROUND NINETEEN ROUND TWENTY-TWO 127, Boleslavsky--Geller 0-1 213 148. Najdorf—Averbakh 0-1 128. Stahlberg--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 215 149. Taimanov--Szabo 1/2-1/2 129. Euwe--Keres 1/2-1/2 216 150. Gligoric--Euwe 1-0 130. Szabo--Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 218 151. Bronstein--Stahlberg 1/2-1/2 131. Aver) --Bronstein 1/2-1/2 219 152. Reshevsky--Boleslavsky 1-0 132. Petrosian--Gligoric 1-0 219 153. Keres--Kotov 1/2-1/2 133. Najdorf--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 221 154. Smyslov--Geller 1-0 ROUND TWENTY ROUND TWENTY-THREE 134. Taimanov--Petrosian 1-0 223 155. Geller—-Keres 0-1 ue 225 226 227 229 231 231 234 234 236 236 238 241 242 243 244 247 253 255 259 261 264 156. Kotov--Reshevsky 1-0 157. Boleslavsky--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 158. Stahlberg--Gligoric 0-1 159. Euwe--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 160. Szabo--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 161. Averbakh--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 ROUND TWENTY-FOUR 162. Petrosian--Szabo 1-0 163. Najdorf—Euwe 1/2-1/2 164. Taimanov--Stahlberg 1-0 165. Gligoric--Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 166. Bronstein--Kotov 1/2-1/2 167. Reshevsky--Geller 1/2-1/2 168. Keres—-Smyslov 0-1 ROUND TWENTY-FIVE 169. Smyslov--Reshevsky 1-0 170. Geller--Bronstein 1-0 171. Kotov—Gligoric 1/2-1/2 172. Boleslavsky--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 173. Stahlberg--Najdorf 0-1 174. Buwe--Petrosian 1/2-1/2 175. Szabo--Averbakh 1/2~1/2 ROUND ‘TWENTY-SIX 176. Averbakh--Euwe 1-0 265 267 268 270 272 274 275 276 277 279 280 280 283 285 287 288 291 295 297 298 299 177. 178. 179. 180. 18. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191. 192. 193. 194. 195. 196. 197. txvill Petrosian~-Stahlberg 1-0 Najdorf--Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 Taimanov--Kotov 1-0 Gligoric--Geller 0-1 Bronstein--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 Reshevsky—-Keres 1/2-1/2 ROUND TWENTY-SEVEN Keres--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 Smyslov--Gligoric 1/2-1/2 Geller--Taimanov 1-0 Kotov--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 Bolesiavsky—-Petrosian 1/2-1/2 Stahlberg--Averbakh 1-0 Euwe--Szabo 1/2-1/2 ROUND TWENTY-EIGHT Szabo--Stahlberg 1/2-1/2 Averbakh--Boleslavsky 1/2-1/2 Petrosian--Kotov 1/2-1/2 Najdorf--Geller 0-1 Taimanov--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 Gligoric—Keres 0-1 Bronstein—Reshevsky 1-0 ROUND TWENTY-NINE Reshevsky—-Gligoric 1-0 301 302 305 307 309 310 311 312 312 314 314 317 319 321 32] 324 324 324 324 321 334 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. Keres--Taimanov 1/2-1/2 Smyslov--Najdorf 1/2-1/2 Gellier--Petrosian 1/2-1/z Kotov--Averbakn 1/2-1/2 Boleslavsky--Szabo 0-1 Stahiberg--Euwe 1/2-1/2 ROUND THIRTY Averbakh--Geller 1/2-1/2 Petrosian--Smyslov 1/2-1/2 331 333 334 334 335 335 337 337 Hii 206. Taimanov-~Reshevsky 1/2-1/2 207. Euwe--Boleslavsky 0-1 208. Gligoric--Bronstein 1/2-1/2 209. Szabo--Kotov 1-0 210. Najdorf--Keres 1/2-1/2 Crosstable Index of Players Round-by~-Round Progressive Scores 337 338 339 340 342 344 346 348 ROUND ONE 1. Szabo—Geller (Catalan Opening) I have long suspected, when- ever the books I have read began discussing darksquare weaknesses or an attack on the dark squares, that the subject under discussion was not only beyond my understan- ding, but beyond the author's as well. "Certainly,", I would say to myself, "it must be true that the enemy dark squares will be weak if his pawns stand on light squares and he loses his dark- square bishop. But if he then removes all of his pieces from the dark squares, what will be left for me to attack?" Such was my line of reasoning, until the day I realized that a weakness of the dark squares is also a weakness of the pieces and pawns on the light squares. Light- square weaknesses are also possi- ble, resulting in a weakening of the enemy pieces and pawns onthe dark squares — as occurred, for example, in the Geller - Najdorf game in Round 13. The point of an attack on the dark squares is that, by placing my pawns and pieces on the dark, I attack mv opponent's pteces and pawns on the light. The Szabo ~- Geller game pro- vides a clear example of the me- thod of exploiting a darksquare weakness; and the combination which was possible after Black's 24th fairly begs to be included in a textbook, taking place as it does entirely on light squares. 1. c2-c4 Ng8-£6 2. g2-g3 e7-e6 3. BE1-g2 a7-d5 4, d2-d4 d5:c4 5. Qdl-a4+ Nb8-d7 6. Ngi-f3 a/-a6 7. Qaa:c4 b7-b5 8. Qc4-c6 wae Having hatched a plan to weak- en the enemy dark squares, Szabo undertakes a delicate maneuver aimed at bringing about the ex- change of the darksquare bishops, which will further strengthen his grip on the dark squares. 8. vee Ra8-b8 9. Bci-f4 Nf6-d5 tai 10. Bf4-g5 BE8-e7 11. Bg5:e7 Qd8:e7 12. 0-0 Bc8=b7 13. Qc6-c2 c7-c5 14, d4ic5 Nd7:c5 15, Rfi-cl Rb8-c8 16. Nbi-c3 Nd5-f£6 _ an & ert, 4 Z gy Woy Re SI 4 i 32 A small but serious inaccuracy: Black removes this piece fromthe main theater of operations. Addi- tionally, the combination 17N:b5 ab 18 b4 now becomes possible, dua to the insufficiently protected rook at c8. Szabo, however, con- tinues with his plan, fixing the pawns at a6 and b5 on their light squares. 16.. Nb6 would have been much better for Black: increasing his control of c4 would have made it more difficult for White to decide, on b2-b4. 17. b2-b4 Nec5-a4 18. Qc2-b3 Na4:c3 19.) Rel:c3 Rc8:c3 20. Qb3:c3 0-0 21. Rale-cl R£8-d8 Geller cannot take the c-file away from his opponent, for if 21.. Rc8, White would simply take the rook: 22 Q:c8+ B:c8 23 R:c8+ Ne8 24 Ne5!, and there is no stopping 25 Bcé. 22. a2-a3 Nf6-d5 Seeing that White's position- al squeeze could become very dan- gerous, should he succeed in oc- cupying the seventh rank or in establishing his knight on c5, Geller decides to complicate (hig move also stops both threats). 23. Qc3-d4 £7-£6 24. N£3-e1 e6-e5 25. Qd4-c5 wee A consistent, though rather un- inspired, continuation. 25 Qa7! would certainly have been much prettier, retaining his hold on the dark squares while attacking the enemy pieces and pawns on the light squares. Black would be un- able to smoke the queen out, since 25..Ra8 would obviously fail ag- ainst 26 B:d5+; while after 25..K£8 26 Nd3 Ra8 27 Qc5, the ex- change of queens would bring the white knight to cS. And finally, 25..Rd7 brings on an elegant lit- tle combination: 26 Q:b7! If Black takes the queen, then 27 B:d5+, followed by 28 Rc8+ leads to the complete extermination of Black's pieces ~ curiously enough, all of them perish on light squares. Black may have intended to ans- wer 25 Qa7 with 25..e4, and if 26 Bre4, not 26..N£4? (which would be nicely refuted by 27 BF3), but simply 26..Q:e4 27 Q:b7 Q:e2, with an unclear game. On 25..e4, how- ever, White's bishop would leave the blocked diagonal for an equ- ally successful career on its neighbor (with 26 Bh3). 25. see Qe7:c5 26. b4:c5 White would have maintained a clear advantage with 26 R:c5, but Szabo probably thought that his pin on the knight, combined with his threat to advance the c-pawn would assure him victory. However, Black finds the defensive maneu- ver ..Rd8-d7-e7. 26. Bb7-c6 27, Rel-di Rd8-d7 28, Bg2-h3 Rd7-e7 29. Nel-c2 ab-ad 30. Bh3-g2 Re7-d7 31. Bg2-h3 Rd?-e7 32. Kgl-f1 tee Szabo declines the re etition although he no longer has the bet- ter position. This is a psycho- ogical error common to chess- Players of all ranks from begin- her to grandmaster: to lose one's objectivity is almost invariably to lose the game as well. 32. eee 33. Kf1l-e1 Kg8-£7 This was White's last chance to force the draw with Bh3-g2-h3. 33. eee Re7-c7 34. Rd1-d3 Bc6-b7 And now White will lose his co pawn. 35. Ne2~e3 Re7ic5 36. Ne3-£5 Bb7~c6 37. N£5-d6+ Kf£7-£8 38. Bh3-g2 27-26 39. Kel-d2 Kf8-e7 40. Nd6-e4 Rce5=c4 41. £2-£3 £6-£5 42. NeG-£2 Re4-a4 43, Nf2-d1 e5-e4 44. £3:e4 f£5:e4 45. Rd3-b3 Ra4-d4+ 46. Kd2-ci b5-b4 Black's plan is simple: to cre- ate a passed pawn and queen it. White can offer no real resistance to this, 47, Nd1-e3 Nd5-c3 48, a3:b4 Nc3:e2+4 49. Kel-b1 Be6-a4 50. Rb3-b2 Ne2-c3+ 51. Kbi-ci ab: b4 52. Rb2-d2 Rd4:d2 53. Kel:d2 Ke7-d6 34. Ne3-g4 Kd6-c5 55. h2-h4 Ke5-d4 36. h4-h5 g6:h5 57. Ng4-e3 Nc 3-b1i+ 58. Kd2-e2 Ba4-b5+ 59. Ke2-f2 b4-b3 WHITE RESIGNED deiedetededs 2. Najdort—Reshevsky (Nimzoindian Defense) 1 d2-d4 Ng8-£6 2. c2-c4 e7-e6 3. Nbi-c3 Bf 8-b4 4. e2-e3 eee Aron Nimzovich, who invented this defense, could hardly have thought that thirty years later the masters of chess still would not have solved the basic prob- lem: whether putting the ques- tion to Black's bishop with an immediate 4 a3 is good or bad. Naturally, if we knew it to be good, that would render all oth- er tries pointless, to say the least. 4. see c7ec5 5. Bft-d3 0-0 6. Ngi-f£3 d7-d5 Nimzovich never used to ad- vance his c-pawn to c5 without need; he hoped that, after he gave White doubled pawns by means of the exchange at c3, sooner or later he could induce White to play d4-d5, after which he could establish his knight at c5. A lot of water has gone un- der the bridge since, and the modern master puts no great stock in that far-off prospect of capi- talizing on the doubled c-pawns. Instead, the immediate counter- attack on the center with every means available has become one of the standard ideas for Black in the Nimzo-Indian. 7. 0-0 Nb8-c6 8. a2-a3 Bb4:¢3 9. b2:c3 d5:c4 10. Bd3:c4 Qd8-c7 Today, this position has been studied as thoroughly as were the Muzio and Evans Gambits acentury ago. What are the basic features of this position, and how does the evaluation of those features give rise to the further plans for both sides? The placement of White's pieces radiates a great deal of poten- tial energy, which ought to be converted into kinetic — White must set his center pawns in motion, activating both his rooks and his deeply-buried darksquare bishop. The most logical plan would seem to be the advance of the e-pawn, first to e4, and then to e5, todrive Black's knight from £6 and lay the groundwork for a kingside attack. Black in turn must either pre-~ vent the e-pawn's advance or counterattack the white pawn center, which will lose some of its solidity the moment the pawn advances from e3 to e4. In this game, Reshevsky com- bines both of Black's ideas to achieve a favorable disposition of his forces, while Najdorf does not put nearly enough vig- or into the execution of his plan. 11. a3-a4 ae Of all the possible continu- ations that have been used here, this one may well be the least logical: it resolves only one minor problem, the development of the queen's bishop— and to a poor square, at that. The pawn at c5 will find defenders eas- ily enough, and the bishop will find itself out of the action. That outflung pawn at a4 will not be a jewel in White's posi- tion either. 11. see b7-b6 12. Bcl-a3 Bc8=b7 13, Bc4-e2 R£8-d8 14, Qdi-c2 Nc6-a5 15. d4:c5 b6:¢c5 16. c3-c4 Bb7-e4 17. Qc2-c3 Ra8-b8 ( See diagram next page ) Another weak point in White's position: Black now controls b3. White cannot play 18 Rb1, and 18 Nd2 is not attractive either 18. Rfi-d1 Rd8:di+ ( osteson ater 17..Rab# ) SQ guetentoners 20. eean<2 Bi Sach Nasob3 ack pon, he ae bein then 22%ab2 Nob 25 Qe3, Fork g? and 95. 7 > 22, alt Ntgoa? BL 92-2 16 ag oe gana the sepawn i fallingy hile Waite har yet eo Find useful enploynent’ fof his Bishops, tn ehis difficult sie= HELGE nalaert esplays the reg 26, ntaend thet tess strategy and the more 2, a7=¥6 Hoy tp acct che threat of af Sta question White yas Sauled! yon, to"doovesy Bee hnutes Toft to-mike his tase 16. fovea, ‘offered’ a draw. bvidently etons table. vo egicutaes. folly Binatone 29 Wpe Nena Se ts f6e ge Benguet 2 8 2s Tathis published comientaries es SE Shor howe hat he faa 2°98 Baty and chore’ is" 4p escaping the etpecat! "setor 38 Bee! ana‘ 30 BEBE cee e Boeke ead 30 Bese RAST Rabe Rab Se ghee Get Bees azingve’ 35," ploying ered tae Steady ches 36°Ge2> and” 2? Qos tse leads inevitably to a per petual check suite would have had a harder ce, Sacked aera, Te Black Side, Now 28 Nga would not have ‘early’ the sane effect, in view DEES 05 260) NFB. Anorher fey‘acter Benin a8 hee ae; for examples fou wnieets'witsr gly rie, Since Surn variations are inpossibie to celculate accurately in tine~ pressure, Reshovsky preferred the conn SESE payee te sting, en these EEE nance OWES Sa feeeriul’ center poe just EOP SPTERE Since {Shaan a MO: wees 5: mtna2 Beeps 1) M28 ras Te as time to start thinking ‘about casting and. develop’ the’ rocks. to suppoet. the Furthe ‘dvanee of the Pawns. One Sractive Lins Envoiving Long Whee Ea the pawn, which he’ then advances Eontly Breaking up the enemy. Senter paws. After the text Setey alec ho Tengen hag te, 11. Beles nese eset up he, sheen, of oppartiniy fo stop this. pam Serge Aitey 1 cbePs ahige Uiles opportunity. Im order to meetrehe" threatened aduanee of been’ practically: forced to sake the ekehange on €6 Hi agbife 6 we Rez Ges ih tose, taportant point in 4)" Parks ‘the Intersection ghasis Tees ot sorce fon the fp fron the Black rook fo. ehe Fedaheteosts Bette den ae would white queen and’ serengehen the’ Plo.on the engghe ae for thice's Rent and quite obvious “nove SEL Tedce the value af Ents Eonoutese fone nenus' ay aints the bishoyon een the feat om Would have given Bleck © very Dromistng sane: te “hacks pace Mack could net carute te be Er3" Ns motid hae. deprived Eege or his depawny and Eelrest~ Tnctleths"youlahiee foenittes Heckel 17. gusts gebses a BES RES 19. Qtaee5 A prevey final, sere, tased on ‘sive aystom White has devised ETI Sattasse aueene and ont inage with So 2)"ESy he ehIL reece z Dee, or ORES! ave strona 19.286 20, guest f6,21, 93 127 2B aE dost S0h as 22. Ret 43 35! Raed ad Zor ascd nicb BS! bed Be The position Jp pow ace, Sparen Headly Sit SESS AESPERZIS: te a az 2 8 16 29.65 Wack 30, Hee wee di fas See ned to. 98, net ini See REL fa ahs ge 3 Set Het Boe 38: AOE Re Go Sted abe Ue Rai RS ‘The game was agreed a sithout further play. 4. Avobakn—Smysiov uy Lopes % x i aihiserin's System in the, Roy appeared in durleh only" six. tines: bite narshals his forces for'a’Kingelge aetack which gene eraily‘oesnts five: mach bite to Set up a defetsible position, fet, Gtrpetsingly, ehereforey most or the fares. plaed with thie fariaeson have Intely been wind- 12. mene ao naan nied ae Bacar 1 find st hacd to, the White's tase’ tuo moves In-with his steae Eggle, plant the Bsshop on @2\ and Deter pisced than Chey were st holt. oFiginat positions. Arter Eile igea of evo cenoty hice’ Betas on the Eingete can Secides to gengrate Pisce play onthis wing vithoue taking oh Sale tonat"tesponsibslicies with the Sivance' of the eeeaws Bees Bee ettis boing the ficst, sound Tess Gaetie: nefther hes yee Pythed’s nan past the boubdary SEINE Own tebritorys Bosh elder sibsepTabel ares, fe SBCA EREy ioe 22. Wage NES iB 23, edie In the event of 23 hey Bock had prepared the ropipeh3r ah. ab TR Beet She Tnfolving teSece, shichveould be 29, ated? (See aiagran, top of next page) Jor ngitnee NE Snystoy wasn't vortied about ia an t mt fea A Ga Am @ A tea ‘at the last soment he noticed the Eextbook ‘stroke 31 fd the fucen ts ipses Now hamiit give ap his darkequare bishop. instend, MEAG ahi Eine proved” aeciobve 20. i 32 gries nesea Black's centralized knight ful ayconpensates for Ghite'® pov ebrut Bishop ac ho. Tamar eosin {Boron Ooers) ets 9 ftticule thing tonsioe san opectivtty nen cfnent ing Flag” seh caiepatae fae Getolls Tow quick’ and pleneifut From the gems Uarlat onl shiek Eeettees" opts, Tower goctctorn STeeateos one oesie (Spe ecsrat ty Fite eh Perbepignatfopehtever."2o"then Serie Sigtatint'ts Conners Sy ene fia cet eel fot"heve a decisive advantage eee sesh goesass STi UR, Soh, Let eeseca turning potme of the game, at SR Bemis ti, Estas Faster ee eee orn te ut 3 SNES ras Sat doe Bick stave Oy piermnen the speachead. "the BESTT feet Se Seosdlede SafSue"and eStae be Bis Ed Set alge fer fete tates 21a ene HRS Meet sbegs So een palace white’ s"ar and bepamsy SHEET Beat ES Fatoe'OF SHEP HELI Dah eto Pega inchs ETShageDe 3. "Sunce en EER syetery'de oibayts © sete’ of acthit) 18 aebasesc~ silyigthepseds Ae final thee Tee tntrdet ii ate eats (Caunteres 9g Falls Se" evel pheg the genta Hoe Utefout worlhe Be bese ies Sela Sgfe! OF course, the sacrifice hs ics deficiefeies arvwelly chiet song: these being che pat del elehchouid whtte sredually. eu Seed In overtoning"alt he afPEL- SILL have excelent winning. chan in any more. games From this Cour~ = GeeI"TE eve, ‘porely this tournament with the sortof froteacted defense Black i gon Eally forced co pug up with ie tne BE the *normnl® Hines. fb. easbs Bg a ypites BOBRIEZ —aZas colis'gatggune, bash RBS SV RES 9. :a6 Beta once I had precisely the sane potision to. play, putas White, Seelbuntan af Stéckhota, 1548s" {Paedbimope, whereupon Black Eecaptured at ge'vith bis Enighe, Thich he then brought via oF an’ Weiee BE, thle Seanad ecly pro game Trecaptired at abswith my Sock, sendity the Gueen"s Kou The white queen’s khtshe and shicthlne She“Gefensetct the iaerad and be ete ey ce notes Black position; but this proves Henn ates Bee RB peP i ees Elshopre ate diagonals asda? fer that, ih seep heey TLE oh Te 1B. lonsee agogaly tobi In View of HiNSGe SBrRsed wed Te Geed Goes Fes Res. ra" ws. ar-v6 5 Messe a omce again, 16 65 de 27 Ries fFerdoes not Work, but this dues te ean estou have rouse Nis’ pawn st the core of his dark a9 Te’ hacte ‘nhac wound sind ith’ sone’dangerdus’darksgusre Solagstee OBESE Hle ing? 13. nciine — Raorae 18) Based Rgsiea 1 ald not want to capture, the nce White woul 12. aie? gepeas 20. qed} Ste founded on the fact that Ais base pawn se 7 is close co hone and Eherefore easy to. defends while the'thite pawns ae“ed and Sea Ford-excet ent targets to Bleck Eookey Ifthe ecpabm advances, ‘The following Lines, give an 3 beahe"tn'practicar" terest 2)" gia6 RB:a6 22 Re2 NEOs or 22 €5 Ne7s br 22 Ral Renz 29° RO8 Ra GE Repl Rats Taimanow was coro of queens © but he should also 21. gata Rabin? Salle Sabina BO Either White overestinsted his erage cRenceey oe cise be sis piy‘tatled to give groper cor Biderasion to Bisew'e Strong 2B. ase 2382 2h wii SE i Unive coutdy for cxame ple, exchange knights and give SAR Seis Es tence tinea! Cee et tine ene REP 26, Ra2-b3 ttaving weathered Nis troubles” Sania Sole cineca uit Bldek paws 26 KFT woud have ae Benes, Mune left White far fewer, if any, Tosing chances. aeicatt cect B a vesting the threatened 29 ol heedcentg" in foc econ clear at ack canals Bee eaDPESRE Gea Sees le ete es BEEP EES 29, WeSeee NEGA So: Bede Ralcal Bi omgsee NT Sinise was on the point of Lose nals tg GPE oe ie Bcgi ned $2 igs gele 33'xh2 £5, ‘alelng the expam would, cost wulte Rte pawns after that, the SS UaR gy 30 NaS ght rhea ests ana lhe tlghe ehdgane Be Take the kntehes from the ‘boasdy and, this. game must ind Up driamy bot Bisek's iaighe has le’ to Fork 40 ae Neseas My waites nite protects his f-pawm, toe 4 nadia Gh akin, RERSED 6. Evwo—kotor (Benon! Befonse) essa ae 5: och The eysten Black hav selected seins eta es Seatac Sa pontes SlveratSEne’ tne GEER Eis EELS SATS fone Rgninst two onthe queensides For Me it init Shinty eta on the paws" the Rey Sone ecBunck S Oat PE, inthe ne'Setacs be fce‘Secupatton by'nis plecegs tax er, the"egne gee tacrese tgs thanks! to¥bold'play = bold tor Eegpssst fl SabelEcee™oyooen 10. tna sea? a) wei} - Atypical maneuver in this po sition Wnlve brings the’ kaight toeay and then plays ateas Eo Jority by blockade; should Black then play s.b7=b5, whive's knight seine‘ acteas toa ana cos = ae Rese e783 Algck activates his pieces, ine eto bring che Height on 7 18, gai-b3 Hating Black's plan, White 1s Spain since he would sbeatn sn or 22'ba fiese, with ‘the enreat of 23 fe en Nar-e6 atsposaty nomely 18s Babs, under Scotland! gen’ tae $5" R:bs"ab 20 nee Bb’ had Waive gaonot play’ 21'aie} La view" of at Neab. eter ib, -Aavs, the heen of TBtSea would cheny more ects sie en on he! raecoda fo obtain conplicationss) = 2, Gorar RE? ite prepares the deeteive Drank’ b2Sbty thick Black prevents iving'up his rook for'the Bie 2h, Re 25. REL BeB 26, QDS BAT ah wie ter re dzpayn, could tat, have been Soyer if 27. Nbrd5, White’ takes EIS and’ checks wieh the ktshe seed. 28. Rob Net, 22. ghE Qibe 30, Kibo iS! ate ace ned af. vet Ba7 93.05, Bes 4. Ned? wa? 35. ares Ros SP gee Ned 37. Read had 38, Rat ied 590 Bee 7. Sung tamonty a Se Me SORES 0-0 Fifteen years ago, the King's spatieticteer se tre ts. Settee ea Been woh OSE ee SPORT Tact rltetae hte ks ete ar Be Ene Sinhce get in Zopieh, ope out of hres games "king's Indian, and foreign’ players used it’ jase as alten as ure ta , ‘Te diagranned position is a sontisSe" Ser ehcoeyy the! coat fries. wishing to develop his Bishdp to ess unite, alse over protects hie’ evpawn! alee cera PANES SAS EP, fe with ta 'Be3 Qd7 15 Meer Bee ‘espawn anyaore. no gEN soGhtssgtertec ically, the King's baci waged on all Fronts. sine Uleaneousty. The" syste Used here Secures Uhiée considerable. terei= Eonyy not onfy in the center, but fon the’ kingside: as well to ae te lene te shot BS ERR ae see stimtleans etio sen le ite tae alta taste 2 gt eee aa Seiya oti gene, iar ek eer el tome eit BE ADaitay eitbtecs taht fs Maui eras Sete ee aires Selb Patches Seen ane en, pth to cegarding the defense of c3 and Se Te 18 Qed was White's: Latest Ekdotet teal aiecovery, then the i eesall recreate fuscisiay Stacks 14 ona, Shehald paver adver" iP act, Fetter posttion, whereas now the Blon’con be covered with 137 NeS. Be HS Eas 1 7 Stahiberg decides to rid bis petition. ofce and for all of the Ehteat ae a biack pawn advance Pouads Sits nove deprives, the Square ©) of" pawn protection, BQOTTE aio efrenethens, the po= ition of the pam at b2' and! fersestly gf ebe tha conctet~ fation ab-bo-c3 ‘The next stage of the game — oughly to ove 30 consists of Seviifur maneuvers from both inite's preparation for eateS pd Black's" for" scd7ad5 ore. f7= £5) Sod mutual prevent ion of thise beeaks: 18: Barres 2. meg? a Sarre 2 havea? 33 Race? what"umisualy both for White Seo? Rak Fist concn Eketpawmeae ey an fosaute' ich ihiee"tugs fo! aigert by, ceeat™ Uieely enaraccertatie thae, tn Shabe cr enesy cat thus SHITE So PEad at pattae es Theat Square’ fot nfs eaneta ped alah at ge he: ride of Sriginal aque ety since all giige"secgdat Sqiafes would tne Eetferey in oge "way cr"anoener, withthe coordination between HS ‘This seems an appropriate tine scolinpare to the Posder the, sep though fsckwaed on an'open, ile, PROS SOREL STS eOoen HE: ele nut to exack, because tt ts So'nard to feach’ Teaighe seer hat ‘nothing. could be aimpler han dpoppite. the knight back, White néods his knighe precisely SAE, "chore" St obstves" thes” Sguszse"bS, 6) 6 and 65, and a@itraiieas the power’ of tne bs- iNonprecaut lake ageinst all of Binck's possible attacks (sade Be gatetesee Sete) gan te Senter; but meanwhile Black has inetd regroup. sTiow or acny Such Fee ye weak Rjemmanent” weakness at do /vhich eb'Tong. condemned the King’s Io Glan’t6 the Tist of dubtode open ‘ngs. ‘Te knight WiLL return, Five roves Tater, to help the’ pawn on e'efogs the RubleoR. The’ pawn ould have" Been pushed ne oe, Erol of the 9 square; Black's EiShop could go"there, ani after 20S" ue3y mite would have had fe Sacrifice his queen by taking he Unighe ae fe ein hie pawn = but that would win for Whcter The Simple 24""dey gn the other han sould’ give’ Bide excetient plays ue coud nae tan the o> Prise! We’ neede his arketuore etenievaty's 26th nove to an sohitgghasty'gdtsh to t6 0 eee cece capatine oP Ree Ta eas alta oo Sree cteeie, fee robe SESS HS: BY BE The, posttjon appgars basically has taken places the digeppear~ agetgh Ea askagee Seka, ‘Hita’ the’ bishops!" disappescance, Both Sider ate?" nor eakl"n5cn oleenes‘in hel SES sees Sr cot priority to seciring” Saran Eo” tong 3 9g0- ag eahie the tlrston tn the heat of battle, Bole sinely"dleteetege hls eres” Renal say fae Se ‘ferregt’ 35:c0e7y. defending a Tost Goch thregtey 36-027 Se ge aks area of egal "consider ng Bla. ex en if Black host nose of his throaty Solesiaveky"s the bishop fs ready onthe elg8\ diagonal, and. Frpamn, by going to fb, covers Elect the ain Toad the fashon for Ris pare, mart punch © hole fn'chis few defensive Tine at an SRETSEL SH SPORES, ttt porpavunn tho or elae the initiative wil Secinesses in'thite's position, SRIER' Vere OE only passing tot? Ffenstve (Ole the” lac of” pawn ontrel"of 3, 3 and £3, and ERE psofve bishop's 2}, miehe lihite's task 4 now partsally, complete! the gugen nar attained the" Long diagosat Judging {rom hs. next oxo coves ME Stone guste Itkely that ‘Bisek’ simply over looted. thts mod- tat Litele sovey which shakes his Syahtborg 18 connmmate tac fetatton'to"ies" ounaaclonss Anaater of the Fina Hae Reaok, "and thle saceietege ieee anater af 95, so, the ba ses Bevan Sot theSTepenz. ee ‘the pin,on che knight aust be oe Bot go UE, 390365 a2 39 gt TL TP Sip ad atta take bey Black. avolds ‘the parses Ae ‘Sere Bae might have Bad erage gonsesicnrety since besides "29 e4, GhieeCoo1d dade have expioiced the new pin motif to drive the SiscEEafe sates set tng net at REE at gtr kee 42 nds such” Tieton late gersninly got for the saterial balance, and Black's ih Te"Eoas much dinger aa be- 39. go5:t5 Bt yaas for drste8 neseds Black uses his last move before she, pel cenetol £0 feind tite asp 00, Black's queen T= Eo'take' ine Bena oF, efvcin Seances permitting! co" oneer ae F'With Ehe”ehreat of Net At, geSeeb a KaS-a7? FR se the sove Black wrote om ‘oowledge of chat seded nove, hd tovansivee’both of Black*s pogst Dieteepl ices at. o kg? and "AFT, 42. Ge6-o7+ mora get tri Emveletely. “Bist Shot retreat 32 fhe Bithop ‘has to tnterpose staal ap Bt Ss Spam with 42 Quit, hut" nis beta'drav. Well, the game was on she aE, te Ree aS. Nabcebe Coptainty the obvioves "Mast else over are not slways tes a8. nabteoe ae Neecnse sel Me eas uot Stahberg's offer. The at- enpt! to ena the game. wish’ QueeneSacrlisee git ng” cording Hons” &8"he‘ne? So-gresit gece SI hea, 15 retuted by 4. ek, 36, would pot have won either: ausck’ replies tse, hey ang. Sttee Go"geuk i 30 Hid, wiah ene pe Darently unstoppable threat of fate by’ St gt back Tiguidates thechteae Gin the surf ising conteeseroke 50. ufase However, 48 hy instead of goes, Gould hive ied to vic= fore na hiss yeeally enters the as change Variation of the Orthodox apeces @onbie With the Unease ion whith he seacions his. rooks on the Bilsee Softee "and inch adeno tocreste's backinard black: pave ‘oumber of faster panes have den= Gneroteg'tnat "thie fe ton'dicert plan fo poce any’ great danger to Bukcky who’ may ie Ris tummy ex apd pon hic control of the = Pile t2"tarey an'sceive. piece game fo the bingeldey establishing proximate equal iey part'of one plan, Seanibers. ts verhaps the only grandnaster of fr day whe Teeaine: the Orthodox ekoiad BSE aP hie weperctre, Bibs Svaten wleh 7298 ahd the astlingy is his lovention. Nei ther kofav, im the present gsc, hor the author, tn Phe. tourtae pent second half, nor even the Moria’ champion potvinnik la of 1352, could tind any weak sp. Sn the. Svodiah grandaate ortte'detenses 12. aeas Kotoy has kept Mis battle pla feocoded Tong enough: now at Gast” o"teue Untenttone are evested, a spot 1S weidgs re Tats move ts gore than a Little spsgpsegucnes 1 sould be goods TERE Sere Cartying eae the leceigesigciey aac bo Rerey after the, pun has been Pesneg ta gh the tore peovscae EeeTa Bed ie baetort 1 gy OtBRD Ha weitn ECB Pearlesely castling inte tt. 15. 6-0-0 White ansvers in kind. The bat~ cies" jotneds Be Beraba 18. ei Bouse} Br Gare) Gub:e3 and ends straightway. AS a rediicor this exthabeer 4 pawn ge\noved fron 80:co et Both Sidea’ preter the new sicuaeion, Gech'rSe'his ou ressones White, Seesute"he her's tew-onen files {andthe patie closer’ to the Seneery Snd"alack, Decanse. he Seed’nd Longer fedr’ the pes Stormy. and fe now controls the ey" Square et. ang’ walER'clvoce Uhite es bles land cequives accurate play from Bincks ‘unite would have, dove. Seteer to play 21yRbiyaneuer= Sng 21. cad) with 22-627 then, afer the f-Lile opened, he Could obtaln: comterpretsore on tor Black's. 2 Wihive's ina play has. result Eecloration of his pos Bt mie i the exchange of inde plecet’ Cs feet) folds the'night ects fo fS'tun bee ata the white vfahop'y siuuseten'be thet precarious (even the: Toray SFou'too shore): Eoace Et we RY IF 33 BE4 43, followed by Nel Unito's game is lost; he bas ‘nothing tol'mtch Black's passed Peacitesl chatees ofa deay ft Ene following warsations 36 ab aba kal ASSP HR AY aah mea eBook is, unapproneh: Could tse to" attaek the b= sod ‘Sopaume! 39°, KES 40 Rs Kgs SECS ad if OTe beh ite gets this atau’ but on das 65) he Eos fens short 42" as 24 S3ccbs fon bey thie would bee draws Bue‘hg showig’ stil have tried st, especially since the whole. var Tetlon octurs Guat before the Boxee BER % 2 Rane Ft face io b Neunede ah kenga S3tae vaurTe REstexED 9, Gotle—Euwe nmssindtan Betonse) ted a postrful actack on the king See eitichne Bie CE piano le Gurcerr! provided Pisele held to Gver, carried out tuo remariable feats“) utiiieing his queen S160 ange of conmintcacTon for 35 decaying” che eneny"s Forete deep into Bis awa Seer aren, with the’ aia‘ of cutting thee oft” from the defense of their bing. he fot te Dieses , intron farther and further,” 1 dante tebote 8 ees subtlety: Black substituted + dete Se cae Sree, “Goch details should never EME ataes Se ate Cicely speaking, however, the ad= vantage of playing White boils eases Eble ee el te noacb gi ae ) Hr ebieu Nieces cobgcEanTTERS PE CERES? and eretaghets tance Pt Mies tings whice thererofe: secured #5 SiescotOdesclne'cls' cpsene ne Sue etelEet olabeEm fhe Seamed yj WRUEG STEER DN 12. eda ‘sade ese i RS Sommeseerd 7 tnice's sttack hae become ra shez, threatening, "Black's pre= Stall Ghitets inteneion vo push Pieces. "Bien te, Whee” needs feck ad queen ey theres ‘ond could save'the Black kings = flustered, Romenber that’ in A= Liftine he! piaves ‘ore cham seventy games with slekbiney the 16. i Slot of eran Sithrah Tnconceguential radios of Reclvity Ce Rey, ee a7, eter) else apr peared SPE ie coat Sty 60 1ietleand Coo" tate 17. Reich gdseb6 keoh AS BEES ete? ehh The & BS 2 das ALL of White's goves required sctaniga nfs Fae only B0"ed woutd foil to 20. eee 2k. aasenre us, hive has broken theooeh oclee lh 'SE teeta ithe Clon’ appenrs critical” BE niche MEE neki RIMS 36th oove was he offcounteratcack, then this Took Sacrifices’ fee’ gunganenean eace Grawing the shite queen still forthet afield and decoying te Sucy from the e2 squares mean= hile! attacking the King. tobe | ak Es a! maces lame eae orgatguing mtg Jn fevaoes: irgesaing mtg te fr StL fea asinine Be Hint, Ree nee ee Tah Mec PAT gal A piles vert mere at Be call mek, sheen 25, hekae 2) ras! once agsin, the osly ove fs 27 Froud EeLis have Sishap and eo, pawns {for hit’ 'eook enen, nich would eave him good wining chsees, Seunite shine. Te goes without. Saying the efler hd, no prac Hest’ was better’ However those ho love chess will tind felts Fleule'to agree wlth this. woves ieetSa!? ARS"Set nde Porgotsons 24. falsct—Reaigae BORER REE ie Mid RSE 10. Smysion—seabo et Opening 1s oh EG 2, 3 6 3. NED a gs'eS aBtS. Cao aby 8: Bad gh 4; Ger*b-0' 8: 0-084ed? Seed ed 40. Hbae age in." ga3 New is BSe7 Regr 23. Grae ea the open'e-file apd chiefly on the dventage gt his good" bishop rer Backs, "which itl be heoned 17. Ned Need iss de NS. 19. NEOs Bris 30, Rea Agcavsis Racl Mie? Bb Rie? hab 25: Et fet De, Bock ce5. 22 Rab 26, Red ho Bi aes insufficient for winning pura Fossey Black mega onl Eee and hia King at e7! cost issort= Sriayy ne Mictpot vance any of oniy"help his opponent to create opdeted pave. 28. e+ Kif6 29, Kab. 65.20, fa fg ghe"ek'ag 32: Kzeatbes a a SE gh 98 35! eae ad Go. be Allowing Black's pas to get to a3‘cost kite hie winning ctnees? ie fade9/ pus his om pan to a3 HE BARRA ee i liao, ease BE per es is 17, Qbe Gab 28. c5 ef 19, Bre5 GE 1 surprising and correct deci in, Blacie Leaves his knighton [b°Uiehoue pawn protect on and ‘pose ys King to win pan ‘Maced hia that che pawy cannot be"secoveredy and Blocks weak esses will fot be tuch of Pesblen eo him with che, queens EEE white also" has weak pawns SE figs ow on the queensige 2 RENE Be Gta uITE RESIGNED 12, Reshorsky—Patrosi {iimzcinaan Defense) 1. aed Nagoe6 oe Scot 3. wbices ae Panera 0-0) 5) seicas arias em eroe3 a oc bscee Baia Bese 8: he Bre ot Sale eat! alr, ce are Spe, ain nti en pilthe theoeetieians, have! fap Sa ee supposed. + 7 Boke ee tion aa Bundlag the correc bo accomplish that endy ts tone of the tases of chess strat xy in Gvery phase of ‘he games SEL peopet hove order cleo elt Gn ilportant’ pare, but thicltatis ter he heading’ of tactical in Plesentationy witch ofcourse is Sisto deobatnae of She" een eat) ne Stentegic| Hore, White's baste idea ix ooniouty "he, poedsa goad devel Soment, for beth Ais shops, he Eon aecgmplish this Sn tuo ways: i oraus followed by fadsvor by'taking de So, apd then Pighune ch Apparentay: Sgateae RID rosie, ‘hotevery whee places Rl Bishop On's diagonal which te Secupied by" pane, ee ine BERT PE phag rel he goed! PT ny? as ip urns out, 11 af voll) have ecm net by" 11, "cd TCG Bee) SevHs" ad Mat ladescke IP cl foal allow the rep 12.5 "Rb8; preventing 13 30S. Having played 11 Bb2, however, ite cin! go head with hisesec4,| Tingaaey13"de Reo othiack re ply. is dot merely usetaty but al- ole, obligatory.” The pext phase Se the, setae Ls Saf ined by the taster and preferences of the tho layers" than it-has todo Gen? ehets choles of opening. nte'Win Se Ale°s-a oF Bazzed d-pawn and combining the Sdvance of these central pavn= Siithvan attack on the #flicr Blacks with thees prams to tio onipid, Signe wing, "earnot. o-oo uch with them fat the moment, Since he eust etree baceie the hits Bishop ptt and cenerat HE palit aces 15) Qdivel —Nfced lack could have altered the contac of the, seruagle hereby EStERS Ghe"naghes HDs BSE Egbatdekng sos the Standard exe, pom canter, and the open g- ie Stig Ry Sed Ae. Soule Biothedoyieavamn™ Rot dangerous for the moment. B.D aa eB 18'5;43.04 19 Geb de 20°F Rfet Bi BS'isdolesthacts ana the et af 43 18 ent ns bite’ could syaiematically eenpthen ia pebieian with Fe ee Gia Raby ely Ral and 6 atone etter or Ses, Seperate, oh Row wise iiss! tRs alba ales prove fo 3p, the kang ‘would be Black's Soula"hive had’ very shall chances of success, considering Ris Teo SteltGeS*aanstvering Mace! She awn barelers hamper the sobility Seas knights etsovian continues folLoving Tong's he Ads tide no unsound iovesy. nor upset the posle tonal Eelaacerhe SG5T noe Bch finding ag. Nea-a2 fon 20,24 there could follow aot fest '21"Ba5 a 22° Bed ca 20, a2-r6 boobs ayat an 22 Ba! the aneuver sand reminds his Spponent that he’ has a qucenesae 21. Redd be have grow accustaned to, undertakes @ roundabout maneuver Sich Borenge"serangehens Waite! EP*Ais"pamme, hitherto Impossibie. 24, Rel-ed Rated BS aFiel — Revee Resheraty‘s clever play com bined with’ petrosian's {ton log Yee thas pane oherof the tourmperts SevelsrBigck ute for the tranater of his knight to Sr OM coutbey aise gece bed infePkntghe ie puch stronger on Sb, as is hie bishop ach to vous avd, bite might have Taunehed a’divect attack with fod winmine ghancers bee he ex 26. ateas iS Pol ye 95" ab Redd So Bset FeiD8 gree (28 giee fd: ed would ‘ive btn weatet\y but Betortan fetbetares With ale plans Neb-e? cAnSSRd Beano lng to roche the SESE we Ts Ulloa 28. ae ards 2. peitis — Byoras Seon senseless Bat now Gets White whe mat’ solve Peycholosscal. probes ‘alieieue Showtd he ExZhange‘on bar shien practically foatanfees ‘the’ draw, or advance SieTrewny devine ee With no tine Left tn which to calculate, Variations, It 1s une Noula'Secoms extremly’ dangerous. espe ec liTREANG BUSEE te gp into the eSS2 Feo ksa gets QF get Eta he BB Rage wh? 40-bit ab at" Bare ile ad a ea er gebre? eke 2. neta? babs Bee TNE je; Nath} ace 20 Reich Rasch Black has a snall advantage, ‘but aot enough'to converts After Bonlyels at home, both players sngreed tothe 18. Bronstein Naldor (ig's Inca) bh OMee Marcls Si atigs —e7ne5 62 "S083 eos A lot has already happened to thop's developyent. tovs5y instead ihe elt Sigek quickly. couneeraceacked the jeg te Eiht Ean prepare. .bi-b5 with «paTca. Siecmeginrd ge pared with the. anwunt of effort ena peas eget the gare. 2. need ‘me positions of Black's pieces give the’ es! end Feraung on § Sythe’ elm pow at bots hardly Sxopensotion For Bhack's"cranped Eke rooks ae t8 abe: a7 REM, could nok be a Loved a. gaia er} Te G2585 ‘s sued Forever the pawn = en Stepr shutting fa his"ove bishop. Sab x Bowe BL NEE Small advantages, patiently ie ie acter fey sous site, BeLSE, felereSti re ties ork here by Induct sigh Rate Zauned lek’ congld= ceable grief after 25 Bel, 23 Rat Sas Vales poseltte, bux aiihough Nays have had’ fo consider an sy au, oite mite the ‘searmhie, Nite needs ony’ two Sian km 2 Reha re Placenont at, a8 helps uhice pad but they. outa have een BE'RES Reb 26 qa Hg) 29 his Now Mayeeeha conplicat Lone, andy. more {mportantiy,, to exchange qucens, Gave aMEeY nis deeences 29. aEa-bt esas 3 ESE shat ub witegs an Ke of course White docs aot take ghepumny chich woald aliow the EbightToic"of Te2"Siseane"Cornee 2. anes Biowkis Hess ractically alt of White" vantage Gibafpdare’arter the or ERinge of rooke, Better wos36 Rie? § Beeb or ius sBdo 35 Bob Bes ‘hes iy Bic} Rb} 38 bast Maite overestimted the strength cof the pawn at Jin rejecting this Sontimuseton, alehough Ais pam om S"vould have been mich nore dan= feet ‘The best Line of atl would have een atitgas Instead g633 RE vor, Mite had overlooked Black's opty, 33. 38 z a 1 ta hoa ns bg ws Tn the overshelning majority of gis haseenehSeltzoc age ieiche tall" of Cashion = aGdehs Tong after this tournament. G1L- feoric's choice, 4 81, ts, alnp ols gusybics Anthobe ace Resto Seigtthe ifeinibe ts to'blne tor that. Taigapo,blundered ¢ piece” To gam neg ties? Sigce the white knight is iam refelelenely defended —'t 30. R=? Bbc an Taied Tests Cligorte ts not ageatd,of the foetal of Alas ou copreely Sing hes Selgntad SoMopiees 128s, ah anere is She Slayer ths cond ror gph eet elt URN ED thse sho pe fhe atiacky a"any. rae. S0,he aa of he’ quiet mapeuves bee Savantage for Blacks However, wise aight have cast ae opene tf fehad' pinged Givver clatling idear that being GUT Sitelag*commtentions be snes pind pass 3 Rad" cehion Sther replies), wich & very por cerehn setae ne theeet "ame Shevother thingey siaplyd'e3” ‘Though 1 know I'm anticipating, 1 Hilf ante tesise moat ton that ess than to years afters ahs ase, Une afod Gh Shane Plonchipy"Talsanow rerched pee EiStiy hss" position ageinat ke beds Tor ahh the Estonian had 7 The luprovenent 12'a5t Keres! dea ahd the author's thos coine ciged'™ snd immediately diverged: ieite answered 12, edy got with aniy then itd tarts 29 tas Toke gfe 17 pees'o-000 18 Gal, anon excetlene positions Blick Rea"eo" iy: down his arne ba 2 & we 1s Neores, fa ae me ® Tie al Tainanev hae, kept his mm oc cote tate het lee Ete WhiGh noce or ieee defines the Sreene of plsckts portent d= shaving been traded off in the Doceng are of the games nay them will disappear in che next thelve sovesi This staeistse ts isp's Eeficce fon of the essere tp'demide the black king and’? Siga to ives Black atoe"gucene Eseherity 1 2: 2 ora ah EB RES ‘The pay skiraishes ave gone aniwhite¥s Eavars Biacle now has aiveakness ae a6, and nis Fine Ee"Start ing to! #éel'tne Grates 25. ede RESHE? _ihize had plonned the further fhe-diagonal Zor Ehe"aueen tos Evade at g6. Ae the somone, this ould’ not Sore, since’ on 26" 65 Black giver chick and takes SEf theve-paym with: his: queens More pe ekchenges oliow shortly andthe game begins to Took Like 2 dem 26. RgIdd Sea 2: Menge fest 28: gezi8 Reulge b: Rarer REED Black throws all of his pte= cozsover to the"gs#%ey bub fo 30. nessa ke 3h ieee i oRece By BEE eG fon rouno ree a heat tt cos gras iach | gg 5. chad eos he, colge, of ening Ldicten pile git 2 geese cate’ Fae tan nc Sah pty Pee Stta Moen SEh Pen Gites pete lteome Tae Hore or a nove earlier, white igight have evied fo seit’ yp at else {he°senblance Sf a Fight ParSoe! The! Ziak’ would have been fealty ut on the" other handy ie Ee'hot Tikely he could have bro ken'ineo Black's position either. So'both cepesine decide to seest wich the'tind Ineo’ quiet harbor: Mee Bist in badete sees mda a 18 eaten oan Pugh gS St gi-B3 us a Tis, caalan only appears. co be ie"Conceais S monber of subtle Hes) hick de way eds en played by ouch as Keres, Shystoy’and Fetrortan. White's vig d? to c6. Now, however, Bie’ the Ceetc ey Septhaing hy his pawn by NCS-eb:en or HOE GEE Se Boling Back eo" gat~ ince pov 5 ike a eget ine by nana of the Skane aera anneuver scTseSy the Tiss hettoed bishop’ unleadhes tres Oro eb gua By eae Ras § Gee Bie 10 Nes Reb TH Ned BS intBesy Soa'welte fos an out~ standig games eestor 1A new Lie, Black wants. to darny the bishop oot to 2 to prevent the inigne fron Sein Phat square. Op 6 Nog Whee wae aftanid af Cased 7 be Bed, thon'Black ecains Ale" pawns but Teevuld be ineevesting’ co See hat would’ happen after £03 &. Bet~d2 bbe? a Qgtcee oS HL SRS ES, eagles Bah Bop theceo eke » Bebea? Aoyusy!_ On 8 eS, Black re piles 8’ kee, allouing his pawns Paige shattered: after 9 Wise Bree 10 Beeee be TT Gch, howe fyety Black hab 11.05," Fore the sane completely, Tf 9 grcé in EhfeFines “Gestces io! de Hi bsg ed 2° 9:08 gee 470-0 neo] ees BES wD Bage3 Babe Egat ee ORES BES EME Bee The transsston phage. £500 op the fight with an eneny pice on Su) oot dete Bitck cary Bossa he: placing. of. these two plecé both’ stdes repest moves = 17 averbath—Reshovs “wimeomnan Doren 3 2 4 ° 20. with Black inthe 18st ebund age ‘akhe"tere Najdort’ played 11 acy ‘Averbath plays the hore, Logica Eine MARIGh prepares 12"t2. tne will have'to eetupy cewith'a’ vey In order to prevent Black's Baim from doing 50. He gatce a RES Rs ma | Pate eel tea ey oe ee Prevent mie’ dards, Bit: mis Ce i cae ght alefegene, and sharper, han tensfon ate snd eS, forse a setletfog of Black's king's tine, pleceerefor example, 1. 5h6 BENGE ated TORS cd i7"ea 0a eitia cat hive threatens to play f2-f4, youl open the gine in White's sifi-i6 would also be poor in ‘iew"of Bbiy whan ‘the ghite queen will Iowade at hi Se TISEE Repl he conet rice fon of Cesaty "fo meet ‘the threat of Is"Eay Eoe"now Black. could reply Ip, tek 19\ef"nacts che move (> aisctusefull for control of the 18. cach bbe i « gagcet 20. tera An audit of, the last ten soves gotten in 20 ea, snd closed the” Enter, So Enat”nge he” fo ready tovstore he king's positions dnd" in the event*of Sn endgame, iets" ready wich, his provecced Eisssat po Sedat aa! eps that Bishop ac‘ ad, bic" thae can always be Fedeploved vis bt te SDI’ Ee BIAEK"Ee tet the, fox Steady Rime weather the dark squares, his rooks on the Ssfiter and his knight at db, Shere: ie"Blockader the paw and Clvers the Tighe squire! 3: RACH RSSCBD 23. fa-te Bae Bas made 86 Black shores eS up with wight sad mtn, peeseing gtzultanecusly ce in the hope of inducing fo" 8. 25, face correctly evaluating the posi- fon; Averbalh does not capture ned, “even though be would hold Seleke nevantage after 25 fe fe Je Rfl, followed vy the doubling af the'rookg. on the fofiley sine the’ evpaun. ‘The reason he dignte Ente’ he" pawn ie" that Black would hrawe answered 25 fe'vith 95. 8:65, she Diack knighe which sould ‘a6 would be not 9 bie ‘3 thite Fook Now, n buscks bishop limacely vite is ge and hepa 25. ae ebabe 36. neitée 7 antafoes, boetnping his attack, Will nove inorder to meet che Thestened 27 fche ee eben ens for hive to begin bis Be Rom Sean. foe Chore rare eater Boe ee ee Cece ee Resntvaiy’ to! Ship in a’ieete cee coat ere SESS Be 2 pind oa esi En Waiters attack would gow fre woliesfofe"Fisks Gee ack” ERA I AU, se see en) ak: ‘res though ie did continue uneil°the Pecan por a teases ores, category players in the handicap Badr rea at Se eye het pont, ffteen ol Utes considering his reply ett areata a Hs ee WEEN Fuser ree ea Seer "Ececbalty: "even in’thaee” highly, problematical event, how Gver, he would still have only” ‘Sho fawne For his piece: 4 poe, downy Seabo pantces vty not E"Ress"ugen his te cence Plane} of Soporte tes” o"cone PUteaE FERS gags elves op Eieceba pam, in hoper*ehse 1F LCT CENR Pee Meera Eeapi tatcompioge ut develope fale the stadxy Fesalning” eo Reschoe Ze faces ah aise Raat 18, Euwo-—Smyelov ‘Grunts Detense) boa 85 5: whose ee OM Sees Ses EE Nits Bete bee 23)" bey"the shite: depownrensin Se hae Ets hes Bogie deer ‘entghes from 66 or bE 2 36: The fn whether Roce at an aopeee EAs acts feats ‘tages 1f not, Black will obtain Seen Peete gts good for wie, te Shofes this opintony clucey de spite the suctetsful Cuteate of fea eres lov is dealing vith ogreat expett on tte Grunfeld. At the eteerdam 1950 cournanés BURGE, cont ining fece’witn 00d, "and recommended the cons Efmuicion 10st nag. 11 ai ed EINSSHARE 13 Rest Saystoe gees ctr gre tom 2 Hye ESS ea Both roves soem adequate to ne. 43 5 would have been « erifle ‘pecking the koighe Eovgo'to a) Bere oume wiehe 1S NES ke $B bed $a" a3 gas 13. ageD’ 12) neiZes Bascee senett unthe’ threatens to occu pie via lie tet Heec nti A arta, BI Sse ceca Sat it vould have had wore effect 1s. 45-96 aesea3 Be : but ies tactics formation is" wong: Now 1695 was gecessury tn Glee’ eo meee Te." arti 17 Red RG)" Te'8.07"hpe with 19 a6. After the text, "an ineerese ing hate le ot the’ pietes encuesy here Black! "chances id 1a" in any’ event aaviee torcaltulate, gue weer 20; neared, bared 21, Bedies ——gaseas Brora oe ofthe passed Teese Compensation for’ tex Changes thevaanewer Saysov fe giosteleh'Sals"aove, etover, jerscores_ the weakngss of thé Pay at a6. 22°NS 2 now inpose EWley im view of 22.."Rtb3. oo the Siehop has & reiteat 22. Reseed Ree 2a Need Beside ‘Te, scales tip fest, one way, then the other!” just. when Black Ees"obthaned the upped had, Bowe e'Bretey awischensug, 26 'N87~ 2h. MedetGr — Kgdehs As vill later become clear, cfs Rerlea Beeteeeh Ss. Eke" Ring defend’ che’ pawn on £7. 25. Relede —Bdsne wmite, "bat Bis neat move Le guite pretty. onto an unprotected. square, Sie ag RH SA SPs ete ahs eka SNGRARDSD n we ete apO;dle fe of Fe. eps Gilt, 29-Nzb8 Ride 30 anal BBL garnad oe sayslov's determination to_pla for Vompl ications has borne ¢rult Bowe falls eo find the better ete 28 Ges hone, pig contin 45 Geet ee 31 aly nich enrese neste Filing 32" 954 black Soatd be forced to trate, queens ed tej to save hinself’ tna dif FeuLe’pammedown epdsane? 28.2 Gabe 28°Gia6 Nene 30 Nebs RIE HT he With che queen on dé, white oll have continued 25 Ofer and Soba hese’ Forcing 30, aed 29. Ketel gases A beitliant, resource ytch Unive overlooked. Bisckts queen eeneers the, fray, elegantly. and the! pinned’ knishes 30, Bezens GeSee7 Bi, ga2ne2 7 32 got Neb 33 ba 9204 aegKel Reel Need BS Bee Now Black is a plece up, and eneTuan dey 5 Eaty Says" te TnteSncey however, che eechnique EIT" SeSfnything bat 'simpiey For the piece White’ heey besides to Seite nisvkine i better shel Ered, an Enighe’ hae be ZoFSheld dathang ine” guoeseide dingy to’ bring his knight to the Ednaisde, and tinailys ce stcack Eng SHES pe a8 2" and 82 Cor requires except ional restraint, deep calculation, and eapig as Scsspent of the positions that Beggs ate Be gece Reece BREE Mee ie Gite. IER Ree gee Ses ee a EE. REG 0 last moves were played sclprievous cimgepeeseurey and ‘lagi has hus" far achieved no- thing Seyond pinning. the white sieet the Frotection ofthe A tquares Now he gust ‘secure c6 for the tiansfer of his tnights aay ee eS. mga toca? Se anf ae le te rack a"Zeapo"to agro. Eda RS spe 51,2 Ne5 52 KE R05 55 Kez Kel’ st'hi RG, and White*s pawns aS ah ee niet? 57. giz-ex men 3 BER : 58 RdS vould not have helped futher, inview of Sey: RES Sothsad Qhre 80 £5 Red The eoxt Teade to\am immediate lore: so ere? Acer, 58. Ned 59 Qse7 Rie? oof nite afgne nave nada ieithegatened, and 16 39" 3 then Shes Gest decides, Snyslow shoved a high level of sgetaiy and on Increahbte wilt to Bene. 2. Stahiberg— Galler ings naan) Bonga a Neote3 a ip sprain ssn puso Pati anieeharina iee Rt ae te Paredes ne te el Eaht Foe Sar SERS Bee eichangess ands Saat ee Tor” cory, Cieet on the Kingside, and then over the entice beard ied Be sista is that. alte ‘cannot Gove BES gueen’to ed In view of it a." 13. Bei-es — Neseea we macs “SHE stahlberg's, manewverings are noe azeatde op any steateele bg Gat edz hy Fane fence’ and chess-senae: ‘advance 7 ‘estes, show not thet slightcat SEseesioe inten" bu mange, Feady to sets tactical Share at Shoje’Serige of plantess {but al- Sevhacabeas)outey Uhicelg po Tourcefuiness and determingtion igtbreaidg doom seahlbergts slithed sadn entirely ie) Rival “Arche Nowy white che knight. eempo= rarity blocks. the dlagonsiy Bin’ breaks ‘ehe: pin, pues his king om hy and then’ plays = #5. BES Ae 20. Bice) Bed-eb Tinea ae Eesupeéterwia tithe Black undes= Sea ae Mhowing: ful! weil that he seit? aup advances, and wrongly so Yow the break vould cone too fetid neaee? BES'aY Getre Sou hve the Clack Berinitets Elser could anee wot REC . {Buen af tnroad™ACbetcer plan Gores Giamees Baoan” Beek ey el Sout ug Been ot 8 3ned 7 the oe ci Lin amos al 3 ongitis Sa MS Sicatte one in Chases" sng TAGS mst mk gee le es ie BoMEg othe Mets ee ad ay azaaecrantie ie a Bie @ To give the bathe © wey outs th ere RETO NERY Mt Heed Fe ieee we EPS EG PLB & eke igs AR See, White WiLL soon’ get the op= fe. keieet Ske Kotov therefore tries to 15 no AE serkumlty‘co aval hissed see a aka a olde Shteeeh F308 7 Bas-26 After adjourtment and analysis, dr elsa driving the bishop ausy = Boe. gis Ueins waite bravely sucricices = pan, feos. Ee ita BSS then he trades off a1 white’ plays Stahaerg eishes tovhurty ge 2 oe BEReee caPteeh BUGLE 2 a Fa Seu tae tytn ge RAS te OF & Spent | aaa E 25 7-06 fs nied For trading's sake, Stahtbere 21, Bolesavehy—Kotor deseo obi Shage ao patent foe wie hieeTogninst he king's indian. b Beatie sein have est 5 2. RAMs ——_ge7sas & BE aces 3 z a s: a 14,05, erualy played here, A11_the comentators agreed x bet gt Role es ont ae SIS Efe se B tending C0 play'if Say SP SHsGyiaibe fo"cnety tue See wRicetsTRGSy EeTats EoLeO aimee Sletthvttartnebugh that fot lows. Leora elec Sept bbattateecguss™ GERPIIRgh Se fit sh eStrcereneTomateas’ oP achiahelogtasametem Stet ME Ts SHatlbtee tata 7 Sosa Fol'ni2 plecese"fonlocee” el sugest' shat 15), We'aas 2 he ertabtiebecne"sr'aipiete The toglSSS othe’ eres He a tertkesb sage lawl ooesel eae oesbe Ruiseltores Ghite’ofiie —S0ter°Rluncy Shee soe tae ig hlerts lage poe before she Peinfhcadacne"in'Wee Guach Ode. Gerrans ae ee Giller ple tory wp PRGA eee Hhactepteds aametys“Cherscwcts {Tein on" aah oe cn Sitee ope glam goctoreop SEAT RE ose erat ee Shen of Riz Bicone fishy BSR Bes iene las RE RRANPaiiie: lioa iee an 0 pene up fhe eefe Gee 8 GBs vert aie, tak, Misi iguled ie Sfetaays'Re‘coghe’ — flthong athe abe" oeane Roleplavsky ananses a gr Heat asi see ee ay Haile gio EU abel ce feeder, giieinmemas caret, ELSES pat lssls aera red Shen, fect off sabe neo ih Be Meg SPIT Sat eS Abie sepalcatsone, "ety te" Sctact Me should Like sp so a Little Sirste sethng ts SFier o's dtapld HES thePConcoot at ol pul chess “To begin with,” the ais ote SEH. S'RIS ats Suly SSbrious coneinustion, fie advan ime Elnaily Potted down vo his chigane: certainly fot all that Singles ‘nor ail that euch! Secondly, it's not clear how the'bare e/aleht have’ gone after BLN Eee antes Bao he cee thapon Saha Ef Black” playe Ts. nes, instead of taking’ the keighty ne Loses fhe exchange after 1b Nig and BP saisand om 15. ha? We ais fog ticong,"Eeoke takes the bbe in-g°vea! predicancnt after NG Ried: ie, he Leaes ‘tothe te Sign detepse tothe heat tc Against 1) qia'Nis 1i'Nieh fo 1S Reby ete, Ot OF 1B lod the game tp fa, taken auc ‘been iabéled’ the eistakey and BSS; ab retomenied inséeady since Ledoor not appest to be tow’ dane Black's dtticutetey appear co naashettclcet ee ere ao SAS TUEMD SE SE alt. BEG Foele ati fs, She iter, ae santas ae ES Saag oat de BERENS ataneage pe HeGHESEg ath tite ste Such selding of logic, snd cone binge ive powets fs he hal inate cf Boleslavaky rr) aitglsyensy, te aes that cake 15, 5:06 1B. ae asst et A age eases 16. a2) 7208 a) sata Mite does not need the pay solmch asthe square eb: Gcedie is due thite also for sshestins ett Sl Spt aie feng: intghetes GETGRT Meese Sad at eblegis Ss olstape fosaften folly comentaee hie Duty the Evo bishops wilt dia= ‘Spear ane tl Sie Bie ET EA EE eot 20, ee mb 20., RfeS 21 Brae Rich 22 Rebs ibe 32°Be? ome nd tome ow Boleslavsky aust, devonstrate ini ondgase aki. White bepine HESS Evpieal secnelaue se soey Bishop three. squares distant from" he ehesy ge on op oppostt Golored square, thereby totally fopriving'the Katght of moves. Getting, out via £6 would be abs fotety"hopetees, since the kata bishop ending with an extes an is'a' dead win For wniee™ Boleslavsky continues by fixe ing’ the a= apd trpaun on 1gRe sptioves and bringing up his Ling fen, aceer 4° Fle Sore’ prepara tory novos, he ean pick! off th ‘Scpem with Mis kaighes On 25,.86,26, 4 n5,27, £3 ah sGE 88 Ebbets ue seule iat ae B66 JE, Nes Bir? hoa Ba Bes ted KET 37. Naas Reo'SEene3 ag 35, neds né7 ads nes ka GF Bed Bas «2, a2" KE) BLACK RESTGXED Wolze would continver 43 Kae obs Wate ROUND FOUR, 22. Galer—Boestoraky (Guoon's dln Defense) oe ake 2-04 ‘orb ‘cher things being equal, it's anna alvantageous, 2 gecipy, he Geller decides to see whether the fi Bishops ceally do counterbal= heed stfong pawn centers ease Sb o peitas ‘ehoes 9. 0-0, std 19) neSZbs, ofeeas eget Bi erat i eid Faves nice With the ce bishops. fhe two Bishops, but white bes He eather ac Ua) andthe weak square. dos See eear ee nae Sheep,a long diagonel after Beguigl gonniths- the eh ite throws hiaself inte his Agu Later, 17 teh taqude geeand seriall ‘foutd have eee ago? oh EEE Ted B29 8 etfs ot only of his weak pawn, ft oe"bnace'l fnsghe Se wit 20. fes-ae a maiiae 2, RL Geller's decision to trade ook nore is contrary £0. Logic. GRIRG Te" pression on the: epten, Iy'pgtter than spe, After the 23'Red1, one of Black™s pieces fovttiggs‘eliher ns acvy ss Bes, 2. Rogeas Hi: naitie BOSSES fa MASSE i Ms gucensde diversion (2: eas seg Sse, HASTE Sea Bal SeSetere eshte Aes pie ANGST us ge Se hast atthe Suze Pane” inertia than for‘afy"other rea~ ssigaet aly Stee elec staveky Taye his trumps on the inbier ae QeTohd Ficet cones this attack on the back-rank sate threats if 25 05, Par example, then Black takes 25. Rabat 20-35 ere rk a Se A, 26. Katat 7 ‘the sudden turn of evente hac affected Cellee's nerve and Self fessesgton Tere Wag’ teineed 0 SETI SPlajabler Been shove hice Pack’ 26 Qe3- gf 2) Rite O35. Be Gez whe “sack mae no Lorced BF ockttz ice ae SES Rag ‘A pretty maneuver. 23. eaeste 2:08 Se: MEGS RENE Bh eae i Aeiee."both sides were soma seer te a. e506 The puns start co rolls this 1s"the?Geginning of che end: Bascer e586 Ratcae e5 eases afecat Pushing the e-paim Eo 62 woul have: decidet at Ente. fn‘ tines Pressure, Black wanes £0 trade fsens Firets ERE Ue vel "hed Oe probably Failed to novice that his bishop on £1 wis hanging, ». Ree Big Nesced Reseed e333 23. Smystor—staniberg (Pronch Defense) 1. geet alae Biche 3. xbiced a z 18: Ee ; For this game, the chessboard betones a béetléground of brine Ciple’ between Sayelou and Seahi- elas ho age eepestine thelr aman. There, Stahiberg contin Ser wiin iiss nag, onigtte. die” Cover, after’ 12 Nirbh, that he Eeula’ pot secapcure wich hig Gucen because bf 13 Beas and uy wining. pawn Seyherey te delays! the"Eschtnge | slihoue achiteing any subseanesal nite has a palpable sdvantage sn'space and" complete freedom SF snetver, unite Black's iho Eight and requires che queeh'> Protecclon, "te Black tndehe’s Soveents are quive rescricted foo. Unier these cizeunstances, lightest sisstep could be ibis Hoesen 38 ee Sihce"Sn tee gire ised would HP ogiradi SEE yo Beapiberg For nae playing the fore acclcate 17. ,"Ad),"Sinee in TRIS csce ais uhice would have, hneny ways to strengthen his pos ‘elon,’ such as 1e'aey ot 1e°NeS Spd 18°Nd3, co say nothing of the Simple Is 4:fG4, fol lowed by Nes and Reledvha for an attack, 18. Nesitee —_g7e86 a) bees” gaar Suystov's Logical play hae Been Sore Gitticuie. “he Catnot take The‘ cspaun, af coucse" "Because of Bo ofa which issues baste else ples 190s Woe 20 ghe ges aT ake Ehedatening 22 Res ‘andi? Rag” Nor. doe re save by 5 lew of 20. ho Nar FY ob nd Ire" ezenanad! oe paver, fring’ wiiegter soak fo GPa hehe EenbSs or° 85, ge) ST'atee Acer She" text, White ‘aust bring his iinighe eo SUES Syd te Bont ine sets seule. 2 hoor 20. Nees, snes simplicheys' alate the TE Foute to gh Lies’ theough eos fhe” fnishe runs full elie ones the Suyonees ™ nt coula Be sine Ehse taking the knighe youll” open the door for Whltete” queen Sher roek Covset up’ mating. St Ene4s 20, ds Gyo Falck by 22 QF6+ and 23 ed! it ths Bnew lod pretty in'theScomer which yogay tie gefutsa1 gst aoe SE het Kae 25¢he5 nfee Se ght, = a“quiee ove 2t.. Khe 25 Ray ‘thvea sine Og? ae and oh 235." Sbvteusiy, there Follows 36 gles.) 20. I-07 2 & 2 sacks 1 sna} conetuding conbinat ions the Fook conpot ercapey due to he, Eiceg of 23 NESE" an al EiSe'te the" eext, whereby thie Wins the exchange, and thus ren devs che Scchinder of the gane's iso 22°Qher; 2 Seadonable sove Ghich’nafntaias the steak. a ae 8 Be eee x forte 30. aieses z Bee 33. = tame oe Ptr ii #& oy MCG bed? A Letle cesmaping of fach= ionable variationt instead. ftby the'enighe 1s beought 0 @7. for thie"Gamgs Bawe makes his appeae= shes Ss Boowot Clan, he"ylther toi deponsteate that by kesping. Bosh hie bishops ana Forcing: the trade’ of pieces, Black has Sn cas dean! 5. ateads St padves ey BEMotte takes, the bishops SUSsrdus fen tuo of white’s locos are o9 vElge. After 10 Bich bec peithersTi'qp spor the timed i Bice ho amusing situation! Black nethoGlehlly, trades of every Bhete unite’ veinge out — Fits he’ two knighteey and sow cones Bud tReP exchanges he can only ‘Shoose the square on which it SIT test 1g, Beane Soh 1) Beles ay ea Wiite is 2 rook enting fase words. 2. nab-be eo White has sone advantage in, 25, Reshavaky Szabo oveLopoent, but no'pisce te fo~ 5 haan oe us his energies, since Black ‘so wenknase’ anywhere) snd f Nosramile, “Bisck LateSe Sing 5 Tis bishop gut to. good postion bn'cb via'd7y oF by -b)-bo and 5 oT Beesb}. 2. donde Mig 7 SSR 8 BN S etehe With sony. pieces on, the boards hls posh tabays"Evomises,scthoty Ene bllspse of that mish have bene a Wletory for’ Biwe the Theoret etn "Bat we won't call 1 the 2 Pe toving begn, the exe game 3B Bie sfsipe iia Sh as, Bate haleSatasdses, and snericfeen 2 [eesvoc Teli meicte and fe enary pi center and create fhe Sse” ne tape In he price paid for ain chia — 9. ass noaece Woogie’ ede GE Niasaa ise Sh beates Ms Fritunovic, Gruber and Borie {(Sectlen Ofey Systen Twos” Variant #8, Continsat lon A), witha nove Seating that Black, foe nis, tuo SeceiBfced pames hag tap threat Sides ere. playing a prepared tines ‘now we shall See how Reshevsky Sesvone bishop co'weet bev a4, Bete? 13) beaoes Szabo's Fest intependent, move of this gare, angTe’Toses.lmed= Bocelys Easing bishore in onaer Eeupo “would have: Seen Sore in Shel apirit of shies variation gases $8 elke sand TE Ty Que’ Ghse when inci |e Ehreae OF 1 Med prevents White from care Tlang and allovy. the recovery oF abe oF Slacks pawns: site would probably hove played SHoles'with reasonabie Counter iay. 1s. nach bras ows an’ elegant cat 26" heb) gre 37 Ba 23. REl-d)—Base-b? BAL neties * A small combination: 4 24,.Rae 2s"qhdy forking #) and BP. u Retres BLACK RESIGNED 28, Bronstoin—Averbath ‘humrondion betonse) 1. de E62, 4 6 3. Ne Bhs a.taa deb 7, Golds &: ded 9¢ Bad Bae To."Res"ae in Nes 05 12. Nee mba? A Nifer wees 42. Se be scature exchange en! 43y" am the Unfortunately. posted Queen's bi Shops render ghy effective play Sgelbet Biack™s hanging paws Se Practieabie. 15, BE3 net 16, mat Rew 17, Qb3 gat’: efat fea He Bet aaa BO. Qi Ghe 2h gd Head Rather than wait until his op ponent collects binself aut 1" Ciently’to be able” es, organize an Black simplifies the position aNSertes" ot exchangess E 2B WEEE? 2. Gligoe—Petroson ‘Semon Detense) ade Nase ee a5 a s nome 5 5 rog8 2 Nae ae aie principles of the opening by SESLPEEDEAE the’ sane pee aie aoig mites of faety heels prem Ehird’eliney in order to bring it tnce, de thir Sheena of the principle, then? Of enuree ott Black," you secy has sirens" vio- ated classical, principles ewice eye" ekengleg' after’ fm, fo a) wing pawn and By giv Tog himcelt"a backward pawn St i with his Lact nave,” further ‘he ha, Saddtedhimselt ich GEooe"side vere te'rigy other side’ contented himself with Foltgving the rules, the wince would'not be ai#ficart to predict. ESSE Ge oi iSeiSSo! fowl the qucen Been fhe ewe te get Be Safip Fecomenaeoae to fit ines"totaidetartonn Ss, SNe abe fae" Leokbaas} "7 ots Sams gseser fae 2 M2 Hast chee eis fect clas ecco te Sapte RE atcete ee, everett tht ahs ee han nine ite eae Seti Sages asthe? SRS sate We ube Scan seis eh BE ugh aa etc, ea a1 Seite endl meres a crtiene ten ee Beatie ae Sle sont, » rosea? 1m order to answr # Ned with Unite has the better position, syck fat h!imedite Fespents $e Bat Ste ae poe SES Nearwhile, White can begin the permtellee with oat Plana eS ie clearing the way. for" the fora’ plece Saveuiers to alieout Rover even gets as far ae the eecrla Eat te ise, AES te Ged FY Jes ed to win me the ss Ttaarant bets are BIS PRG ats Sehghs ate fe SES TAP esata Naices suas Skene ist Ene at eres Pllcate'his position, but donne ‘he weakness, of Black’ dhe aan 815g ER En cone forces hin to exchange queens and fake on a somevnat Entieior ent anes Dut one in which he does ve" passed paumy The next part oF tee fate, takes place n'a ¢ine= inaccurately. i Rag te Tae me hoy ac ho Sefeodtae the atpayn. ‘The pawn would have been better gptacked” oom the side with) SEMHOS GRE ther alact cout Bis fe mero bring his king Co fhe. apeensige’ and ty"t0 pul sone a7, aSead—KERET Here too, 37.. RI, sncendss "Wd, ens better’ Back woul sicthate’ Beate Siaplay so"mech 2B. R22 Rese? a3, "Richa Retna for pices Ratna The rook stands poorly here pack Wil now nave’ to find jist tho raghe move fo dest, a1 heh ites the game was edjournes, Gre conclude that the draw eas Sithin Black's capabilities, so Eligerse only asued to. see that Stove Bleck had" sealed. Peerosisn, Br course, yas not about ts"allov af oun on’ hoe a e5eh5 28, Taimanon—Najdort (king's nai nis was one of che tourney™s ost Tneerescing genes, and the Tifahey"petze. fd miaalggate "were conducted Byinajgors"wien sucha high Bee" of erudition and mastery Ene the" need of s third’ phate ape alee et a 3 BEE? avd 2 a + « cots Talnanoy exployed his ice in the 260h USSR Enicoonship: Im both eases Re _ serch ont soe BE, folened ce aerate se oats let oe Sie Reingce ateuenee ae ee Baus ee ea eee ot Ree reve it eet, aes However, 2 fev players stil yentongd dots SESfoclde" serdar herbs del Plata cournancne of 38s foe example, “Seldoet felt Hietia'to Fashlont playing white, Eteleertacton be fot 2b fiesiey against teifunovicr At fhe start of the touensnent in Zurichy however, these games were ‘or known to. Talmanov. Thus, both sides ployed che Rojgaey “hevite aborted the Yur feat co'nore 31, "sod "aimanov, stilt flusmed with hie previous ate NeoGeo? 9° wider Nesca? Bele} . 2c) # pe inanow's ingrid defensive ‘ppeare aoa’ toposing! the Bowne oft Tighe squanel fore GF Toothed foresees watly wish the darksgoare blohop coverife” ee eps Between the teeth, Rit Tf fhe’ position be examinad without Brejodgaeney then if would be Gee Riu eth SE EB ee re ide atetiy, Sarettiee Mane mec pia, Sint Rep sig ce a sii8e Berge 16, Reine? greta The wag che syste enpto py ehigcric and Feifimovie ae efendedy he rook Stn Gove eke rele hod aise Embhet Eceyes the Hing waner est sblaiey"of fis position, and con Elnues site’ abe caval ibe Sates on'the Guseoe ides Wy. jheag ersae HE: gids i RA A pawn agertfice with an enor surg feck Reece? Boer aes wartietieag 885 Selaleet facet ‘By de" afuceth, other ose Poe cheb atop ae eS even fneeget ofthe exchaaer OY Playing 2 woe. = 38: Bere} ROUND FIVE aoe: ee ea RS ee a sie mst fry bp he the eae hat ie would Sot be tn after seating pore, pieces he nuces 701 °6y oo toe pat eee Bg tie kes Eerie soe yet cmmnay te Sra ay fee Peale ele Sushil eek a ae: ee savage BAe Sibert g eee ee eee ee Le Pppgent eine Ponte rainiiaies EL sisi Rsirawwcanme | SSE SRG ate HESS Reegonlel oe 15. Bases 5:08 SQuabity fs maineainedy and the ee 7 - ve . ReBiee The inviting 16 45 cd 17 Wid ae ° ange of lshop. Fort ketenes Intending to transfer the roo! iievbeas 18 gees Nes. However way of £3 to attack the King Parkers ae 20. aes Ner-e6 Bl its Petrosian wants to throw his ec ONt Eitan Tne he ace ‘Sove than the Ins of chess will Silow hin, Ae Nejdort suegests, ‘hae wos" cequived was S193 <5 Wig ca 97 eal woe’ 26 ope, oF Hsfqege 32 pal bes 23 G63) wien afpoweetur attack aTis texheblonls thtgete busbar For thE opeSation of the hares ‘lous duet of Bb? and G50 a. Forcing Mite back on the de= sentiventolack’ already hav the White gust accede to thts exe catgs of ok “eich abe! concer ge pnone, in'view ofthe cere te" eRrene’ of 28. Re. a 38, TET ‘The ending, vould be dn Alack favor, “but the queens shoulda Rave beem exchanged Tease weuid have feee thite of the direct threats on bi ‘ing, which See proving more and more dangers vodyguard’ cee hist nov established gh ese hg ia SER ese ee ah te seiates"e Ses Se AMIE AAPL STE a 49. gpbch?—Nedeeze a RE : caf" SD Eee cone Blick’ has és. Qa do MUITE RESIONED 30. Avorbakh—aiigore (King’s Indian) neces eee wip aed 906: eines 8: Nesead 1 5 SL ee eae Sry, but above the Peas unten Saas tepy Black hae opened AS bin SFE Slaguntleoattack ne ae SeaTiought. "fhe Knaghe™s porieten 1 oll on 63, vill be secured with «5 03, areas pawn may also" piched! Beecher! fo"Se Pod even co ade alee steal, chick each ogighce nr amtanaite's Ie et aS tae Walters Lor ang Blatkts: threes ty Stata tet aeeee heute Se acts caer Sevcoy te bere a cory esis tae se ll seein laggy the a fe, rte or tera Fg, ellos oe he the is farang Ey. Chie would Leave the knight on, Besa did ut clr fat seca lan tinh cae Bethe eat ar Hitec ceats 9. 7-05 10, itis : Before leaving for this tourns~ ESpecisliy in the: popular epentags Seth ar the Ring's Thdian, the St Elian and’ the Sitmeos indian, tne St the Gest of these muse.b9 the Spates Heerbatin Prepares ah attack on the ‘Ppawnt bur practice has shown GREE, titel Tittie,Stnee"ta take abieNe"netacky anf suse quickly Feteeat. "The chen canp mise theron Fore'be" umeaded witha weaker phe Feet She wove” tO Fh to Fisnchertoed” bishop's diagonal is" Only closed tenporarils i aeitia eae hite's position 1s solid as a sets oe Back Se! oly desead Slice fury Ras abviously Loses ta SB°Sted Gaigerie peaves equal to the chollenger his Lo not a mech ‘ical but a cxeative mgctery of every nuance of the Kingts Indian. HED ants Siiieve Gike dem foves hence Black se{11 mill nat Rive nad'co give up Ris Sepawnt wea Neca? TS! aiden ‘me pawp capture here would Sofe"Hses "adr and e988 Eraiges this threat, and what site Sees Black have now? 15. ee BRT ‘This looks sensetesss, surely tne’ Bishap.canmet, stay Neve Yer 16, Be2t2 16 36 4 Boed 17 Yo Need TERM eek 19 Rab Lacks Rinagise iy ve weakeed, ioe Whice’ sf teveetcte off dnd pawn are 16. 7 Ree08 In order vo drive out the bi- ae7-o? gis 22) Nez=e3 NEB-h? ‘the position certainly ts ripe for detisive setiony but, £e Sight fhnve. Seen worth the’ tecuble £0. Filg,gpe more Prenaratory nove: 23. baste Seas del tee Bosca? Bs) eS 7 ‘The sort of move thet ts either very good oF very beds Tes, draws Backsfare so Sovfous that che ad Vance, of this pawn te (3 is only Playable when forcing Line has Seen calculated, sesulting tn a clear advantage’, In the present {nstance, hvetoaih probably. se, essed the position after Black's SSre'move'sheorrecty- 25. ae Bebo? 26. qedba ms The ceapo of the attack slacks anechave been 26 fg #92) eS Res. 25 dept, getting close fo the black figs and paralyzing Bltcurty theese Like 20 Ride, 2%. B sis meets Bor ope this exchange to a= play'2? Radi, continuing, inthe Beene oe 27.2 Sts, with 28 c3. 2 = 30. A mmber of weaknesses have cropped up Sn White's posttion. aE beets Bice 3a Reb gol om the” seventh would give ably, be considered as favoring 3h. Rd2H<2 ‘The threat was 36. Na. Bae Reda loadin Raoces Get Ree? Averbalt's resourcefulness doet ‘ot abandon ing even in the most rican tituatssnes im efor pressures hevaete 0 trapy Car Eiigorie’ ends the" prope rebue~ Be Bl peicor GE ness Hoping for 38.. gf 39 Bied4. 3B. NeS:e4 38. neSigy KBs? for Redies © Rebies ah Beisee Reseas ao BARS etch a3 xtziceNtced a Reese Rashes a Bites RBLCLE 8, Szavo—Bronsein (1d inaien Defense) Sl ngices —neca go tee Tees So oaftg2 toe aite's seemingly Lereproach- aole development. turns out ta fave hole" in ie afterall: he hae ased eo" eake contra! of ely find, finck exploits this tamed! Steay fy epeegring jredeel and hae pam ae 68, but, th fe" begins’ acfonce fot fay' plone Ege QB cperactheitete SP'contebporaey. ge gti ie Bee SFIS A Htc descr soe wih ide ty chien Seer ede cethacthy, See is i me late Besietdnartsets Segue’ ac EES as Setriy Sve Oo Sieg, umbasee a aise fries to disorganize the enemy eles pe leer rec eats Be annie ae elke ee SSE® Gia the Sepelse Os SEs stele his Se ee tee Hr io dubtn’ "Bishop ae well. siecle deste biter ets iiek tras tect eae SPP AES, ese Le wi aires 13. Beach 7 ih the unsubele ehrest of "BED, bie now Black succeeds BS Spiditing his bishop awyy socvonly. giving his gunen th Ehenisplaced:seate of the kataht eran. After 1} hres Nic) 16 Ned the’ gine would have been roughly every while now Black hes! the ipitiative’ciemy inched, Seabo'goes Sécer an neice crane Gown for fia” Bey EES aS Re — Forced: after Black carries out ls’ theeat to gove his queen's nights an unpleasant: pf would Be I-88 162 neScaa eres a MEE Rescas MERGE AFM Mow wae 1. ot 18. zen 7 In view of Black's positon a8, psec of DMN ta iL its Ses ae Sn eran 19. Rate e283 Bo: Reaet — dascae nn [gree Guese? 59, White hes made just one peealovest35 Rath and’ at for igh better be’ called Soubie= fdged than favorable to White, ‘to which we sight add that pincx could hove made Stilt bet Serge of his pieces, With 131, “Nes"Zo' nese and fou 20, 983, In daat event lack Engh auld: stand actively en’ c6y the (ucents bishop would hve been Sreotered, ge lca bishop would base been tenporarsiy’ de Prived of the c3 squares at conclusion may we, dey team allvof this? The"ahen, one, {eI developed, one can ators to Spends few anves to capture alge that Spe"moe thee eval Shee the posit lon cassactly, and 22, a2-e3 . aid down in the previous note, in hin duetracted’ determination ce gertei, the pustt ign ofthe SE pS eSola’ have’ forced white the e Elston op ea."aue 23 5 2avco gas didn't sees clear Gnoiuh'eo ney. s0, 7 dechded to fuke sone soit of waiting move. 23, ates babs Age Bleck ase oe sb Sr RE Big Fates yal gi ae Bagh JS og SST Suonstat Go the'outtoner were 7 2 sont matey saat Sib age ane Ege ou 27. tats nae ge id is pr re Tearing. Beene he B 40! ‘ere? In order to distract that awful big team the fon diagonaiy TP an, Bebe 21 4 wasn't bad, efeher. BE mites a Sab ts dead set on checks (Position after 36 Rhé) A Bir of tactics: Unico draws tained sufficient advantage to ‘hough, however this move, etves Vicfenclve' chancery siace thecdiagonal gichs is beietly. logeds 32 Qg5 faed! 36 Rid? and S5°Gee' was Stronger. After checking the scoresheot goltske Sure thic'ho one Rad for= Black $2 now so terrorized by spe bishop tore} chat S11 be hn deehtthout Eninwine, (Nimeoinan Detense) See e SMe tG Sondnow on elites edge: Sees fee te era Sou can aie ee eet 23,"T breathed a sigh of relict — Saly co notice 17 Qhbts and mate Speech. a toed deal of rouble ftvan expert_on the Black Up to this potne, Black was fhe Shwisch ine, ahold ghosts Sey KET was‘cortect, al Ehoush Unite Gould STI hse ee fase se 2, threatened and Lf Black's ( Sought Fettente'Eo 6 "ten BS! begins wi vefore enstling. ‘The reader will find just such 4g developgent” of events in Cane ins then Reshevsky ventured a ree pede of this varitelon agsinet’ Meg ae eat ight, strum Reshevay bad hove tho squares! lovevery the Peadual advance. of thir paw has El ogte toa, with Whlee’ play dng siSviy' (10 Naat was best, eSnevsly” anends hie" eyror on {Shaghst ates esa nove een Correct reply would have been HBr Aces Bl Py als oege Seigeer'aebatnee'thien "Say FoSHTBTE SHER'ERE qheen at © tn asd gasses Black threatens mate at 62, seingre, nd ne Tease Th oie eaves white only 13 NEs, whes the’Entehe will Sot. be very well placed thats thevsate 1 a2. erate ease Ho Skee c3rde 12.- gS gould be tad, of course efter 18 a3°alack!s position cram test 1. ogee? i af Wee i fe i ok i) Bet ‘The changing of the guard. we e636 BBL nedlis i The only possible explanation for this) Exchange must be thee Bowe wanted to try" to aate. Black fonrthe opened heFiles, 19 843 Said have Seem much better, Pelnealtine fhe sptlon of Stiy~ Ehee"heS" or Aba, “thus Freeing the Dlshop a £1 fot work along Yes Droper diagonal? bich?: 2 Re 2 SRS ae trey Boe Es Reshevehy's ski11fs) queen a- clean tua enc eesTnot nt’ Eo trade. queens, feScing eo" go, lees am efdgans CEREAL Ratguny pours hive absolutely must bring his bpeshop gut via ei’en 26, andi ten terest Sow tne the’ tine! 39 act Bip ROY TSNow cieted tapos ites SB'Rel"ete ta rover cone Elmuarion of his defenses although White's gaze fay by snd isrge, ale Fes colts, Blac, ound'ES 6, Soneimwing thecassauit on” iinive’s" hanging pawns, ee boas Mo doubt Euve overlooked this decisive sueate. 58, Stainerg—teros aveen's Gam) ‘the reader has certainly o~ iced by"thie cise ant wll SePaoid deestted exantnatten o€ pening variations, When twp sfesinSech to eke teetfet elo take” that one could never des ibe S17 oP" them: wo shall iiike an exceptions since RescPTenploys,sTushents shoe, ts 2 chsh ORES 8S esse lect tel sles ony eens Re Balopete PaO Ss see lesen Frese rin aie seen recedes ope cee ter antl ae SD choo mabe tera Urn att cael 6. gatas ini tas gained he tion te GESAEE Shoes wien. Neb. There would heve"becy 36 potat sn pane by €'de eo) eft Ke? 80:d8+ Eide 9 Ye, since the payn on tT will fall sooner or later. 6 605 pelts a Ip Inver games (Nos, 155 and 210), Najsots and Gelier played HR agatast teres, tot they” ‘Saucer uith an unfamiliar var= Selon, Stamibeeg" could not rick "sharp contimuat tone 5 ‘e8 acfoes Newoes This freeing possibility ts an Sant isk fa this sy tess IE Teno then 1a R B apPanggrst112 stalks shi hite"conos cut"s plece 15, Red eesde fe, “Sores asae Keres" new system has success ahs waahstoog’ ies Napeiem of feveives afound the pax at de Fete isolaeed, but azo passed: lack sould Like ta captuee | but hevmise blockade it first. ght eR # ae Stahtberg wants co give Ais opponents weak pawn £00" Rchteg Rees genes Mishel lee, Refomntainedy tat Es" hard to form, the Black king is better ES Soe cet ct ipestetedt ing: Sphlnat dunce Se ees Bpesent caren however, the whice Ehe last ove, 30:.°g6y which lala bare" the’ sevench fank, cer Eaimy ais nos ‘incronee Black's ‘winnie chances. a. Rete me. Ofead Now White has some theeats of hit bem Bo. ee7-aue 35) niche toch Bede 7 sig ey ei tthen’ 5 aze2)go1t 3b a2 Que" Pelee BE Bo, An7-ho 351 geltiee 7 Here and two soves tater White faisses asimple draw: 38 hay with the threat 3b Qg5t and 27°Q07h Bai, BE 3 geet et 38. QE8-c5 ad With, queens off, the rook ending volla™sd's oss for'mhices ogres Micke Beers t is possible to draw queen endings With very accurate play. Keres" intends eo” set up 8 po a6 14, 82g fe 15. Bed ge? 8 TCE Bad no fee inte este ah tee ae Sie REI cone gs be Pato. Rattle tetee 2 foie Biaeatth Meta tit Salat of imowiedge £5 Skecution tn thie gate was Steed by an innecutacy fron inte.” 7 ve, ut Ste 1a 6 05.2.,NED NCE 3, da c@ al wide he’s Ned a6 6,895 06 5, Rit’ por', oboro'G-0'on Fe 5 A theoretical novelty, intron duced in this gate, stich Fee ‘the USSR Championships, and was fabs hh 45. Qe, QED* 6. Ki ES a5." Qube’ xg ake gute Khe BS) guises 58. gai Kes Si: Gert a3 32: doit med 335 GRE ESD Ses GE ss.cone ned Se qaie eed 85" ube fo, error that helps Black set up'the winning. position. 5? Qeit Fre eS th S652, “eeeping {the'king Our of the queens 37g KOS 98s O53" Has. 59. be ee d0,Q00 7G Oghe Hae 2. Ge) arte ss, kha ede oem oe OB. dea" gens Ob. Has cet OF al Ghee = since Black now has every point onthe cutlle franc) Lo ERNE Support’ an exchange of estas Alter 38 fed" d8s 63 2 ‘4, Boleslavsty—Smysiow ‘Queen's Gama 1, de d8 2, ch ob 3. NEI MEG 4 eS a's 'ai BES 8! Geb aah A defensive syston prepared sqprlee For the"Zicteh' stents A drawing atl four games in short Grdees*r ses consider this = Gittizule "variation for Slack: Soysloy fad'te'dicptay a erent, Seeauatiges and Es opponent portunittes"to the fullest. After TRE, te other, shaters made much e810 eS 2885 cats bas inalty found nok quite eaten ractory for Mack. “in this Rotoy avoids risk by quick fist plification: 20, Wie be 11, fe de 12. 93 aida Teverast Bade 18, pca°ges TS a3 bar Sey Ral Bet 17 aS 4B, Bea ns 13, Nez fee 25,85 ma Ti, Nez MES 2: Nes ROUND Sx 15. naEM beet Pa meer 37. nebeed Ts has 1t3 lope, but 13,48 BOREN Mee looks far more gttractive, jemon wh. . oka fae coFe SEED ee; deme, seetow plays simply and ei= 7 : gp se ammenis peally weak oe alt sectlys grasuniiy, biz pteces Gin wf oh cleterl ct Peving Hat ts, eae toe Bee he a 4 SSE te aha hase? 2. ngs iB wa ftee ane frais he re welt CBr? a8 16 Ea 8 eek a a te sojuiow spd Kotow my be herd to 1 WiSs NGG ie" bed NEE). Boy doube about what the opening 1G. mezice Stet 3a Ghucee a A aS a2 STE pate Pes sb? Bo RRS hs ee Mites nes idee z variably Pepliae't! "es." Snyslov conee up with an ox: ae mn eee Me a Bug A THis tine, Kotow alters the Seward plan of doubling gookee wistds JORTE os eteLoh cout a eRe his aii Baten fo, ee gery dueeicte to penetrate, a Seer CLE Ee leap, ‘Haseena eters eeeree ha le Sg fehat"es Peake an piays 1, Nets bats Erol of the sqiace et. 36. RedieS | me aca tore tio” One Ll" ne- hg song snwppropriate so Be Sse Seytlo's fie play hae bona LOLA iTagsietmhe, — Bly‘after 19 ate aes toy arate, alstshely, to Se BP isactrcetate Sil"Eha on eA NG EST SB a5°E5 poor obisuats gaat tat {Se tpl 0 gaat Dd 2 es BOGS BSE Heer eltgnoizet etane Eee Gea ty then 3 fea mie NESS SIS amaeye SELES nap’ Sct od UE eae dns ts eet Seen STUOe Tchebe aeET Hon a diced 2. tetses Ella Peete: Snystov's omission of 2s Ba | Bes eget? wAPUEE Seesthia, hate i 3 adits BEE playea‘S6,2°58, Wee sti nae jouw awe 22 eS would oe a Meee AE | ace teplicd i St be 2) ads Ne a we pein Be view O25. ah RES af SES kon‘ sldaene queen ie Soa CAE pa canoe te fen, ow «2,08 ts wholly usb ject fon In mow w qlinthoy to0k or bistegy Ff then An essential checks 1f 42 Ric’ Wheriall Sat'GniZe i plese SESE ESE RTH ear Me epesnnhacmebieh a BS Seiad contecT° CE Eas aha sane ET deans TERRE TE MAE pr eS EO cet haw after ade -heb ethontrtnela tne [a owe, tetas fond enya, uate of EET Sheree af ie ane GAB SAB watts Witte tas fod 2 Ee Eeiee 0 ee Se om mentee eee aoe rie ef PALE atthe ne ing Grow ts setil thdeey with) 14, Ne& and 14,. Nad were both 22, Bed-g5 ee ‘DRAW salted meg ata ee lak Sone ie Forced’ ie such a nove a8 ena tet ee Cacccart ys thes Eee cthewmshich dea, Now tor enna fomttice dishernnious take” SRM FIDE aeeaeke Es Se tiie cogent og ey 27 tae Bataty porieient ZaBieb i 1E“heb 25 NGG La bad Blacks"position becones critical a ates Datenea) We eee BeB-06 inked retreat from b7. Be. Nare? BL eared ey 3. Nise eres A radical seans of avoiding oth) the Sangsch, ane the oe sbliged €o'flancheteo his bishop, Sie tay play instead. BED, 1£,4 ey Black gains © tempo for development ithe. ed BQsae fee, ageer' watch he way play «k= thet GsccBe? of ere ges Andon Bigs d's" grate Kedey blacks King fevfelts, casting, fut vii exploiting Black's arty e-pavm © Save IP cen Ene tic cMRe CEES oe ideas. = be Netse eea? St Beis TE aks 2, 6 a 65 seerered. th aicogees of ee, BRA tote ear ice Set brett Bh ae Seg Gee Sheed GN tarot fesnt att tar Makceta Ete tt SET b Ss ae Ee IEEE Ee ie Gith’no'fear of +1 eSeet, since REGIE hog, tice BESHISRS pot ada Boleslavsty, sho has worked sees yi tte Shen for sc Yeels hinielt mor Spinions; for ehis games he has. Besnard, gt gayi nw’ ve seen" rok. agitie ies : bat not be enter Bolestavsky*s’ Sain" Tines ho seh Beith 336 St neaas Groin ausntsppese’gn's SSSMN§ 22cm ee eee Meant Sl Slat hal Shuteed Sfthop wblie' retaining Rie. oem, eect thao a? Mattar Bund TelYacoe hia peevtonsay™ SeSOTETADMET SSE fos fae Stack, ‘The attack will be based on the fort that the‘cenerallzed: knsahe iS ot of play: at. the shofe Sook op" aecsbive threats inthe Shove Zags 1c What Esk oplee to fimighe aac fo the cenvers eged the following’ tine, in'enich nis datkequare bighep plays the Tenge io AicTs Rae Ti Neat a5 12"Ren Boe 1) ha2 tes ia Re? ged 15 S'nfb najaort'. recommenda 92. Qde Gb gaa ReS 11 Nee3. Be? Lewes eeita geet eae de 0-0 Sbueg Tavacioanfty’ #lact's bao?” Yr wossible continuation being: io2Q:a6 Bic3. 17 be Qec3t TE KDI BPI el bets G00. 30, Raicbt the simple gove which Botestav- say everioaged” tm hls preparatory Baye tetra tol nich Rasy eke Sire" 11 it wou1d be no" probien, ce be wll Rave the For black, ‘Rec on SED ae ehhh, ERTL rebated. 10. aes zie AL Netsa8 Navmes Blushing furiously at bis aise oko, Bolesiavsky connits, another, ‘Hruey 12.. 43 would have’ been use Toes’ pow without the check. on bes bor Bes gy would stil have kope Gprsoné’setblance of an atescts Eorvenanple, 1} Rel Ga} 1e-Q82 NS. [PARE ESA Nek Gpthe talahe Se sete ett tive awn co fhe Force the exchange of queens with tea of precise nowtsy and sh danger io liguldatea” LACK Reston 28. shores (Queen's ‘Gane ate he Svea Variations gent fgroryecae Selbiecesot sees HecEcceeheptaed See edo: defeats Sieh hes, Wendie Be nrtve, AS Rast ice econo pasoeds and Ele’ dawat eta ESSEC Eacee? a eias eta oe fchefet"Ee ciendenss fet i Sayrae etch OF the tated seed’ EES Se patear aes aetely Tale gPeoEPeS acta Eh A dgtevekysoveys 13 ms so Etna ener tg a SMR RS eco ot dat ibtel tps latte Ppa ee oe REgAS &f Hde ceteate SAEs SLI Ss EH SOSG ad at SU gies and unite Sccavers the” fayuinad™s feise Fog en Sevipmy GREE EMA SEO: EAE, eh Se SNMsMe See Teak meth ale L anes it RE NESE a ceeeas Me ae HE ncitea totity fo" play" his biehop tee, wher there woutd. follow 33-Nhi Rise Ao Beat giga 3 Nees wat Weed G68 a eds la. 88 GeNates, Oe SESE EE Ty AS as GE? and the white pieces would be uch nore harmoniously placed Than the black 19 06 Ysa threat, Ue 'uhich capturing, an 2 ie no dequate de¥ense, in view of 20°QI5, eorking bsahop and enighe. 1, eddie ie) male is 28 ie. daca ed Playing forcefully and conerece- ay REREeGS BNE Spponeat OE a single’ free breaths. Black ts Tohetnnally torece Cowal off die eokiDiestel Sih pe" ylneage of the toieney"s best: ee Lith the obvious sntention of ggteing apricots hy ar BS, “mut iiee does not this etthers 22. Bld ES-06 Bi mscebs ed ‘The pawn at d6 is, loose, and che opty Beactackee four gl Piet fou1d loco eaverial for Blacks $Eahtoerg’ contenty hinoelE sth Sniefvand aljowing the’ queen to E vould not have be seni 2u Rieey vith Block's Gueen snd kaight’ s0"far auay from Sele Eng “ale yam esky a {hg the bout Variations woul hhbve to be caicvigted cea, nat Gralay, bucef don't believe the Took Yio bags T'wours recone! that the reader examine. 23 MoS, ae well as 29° Gel end 25 Bhi, for inselt. Reshevaky's actual move 2 al- soustrong, and partly’ the prod Gee'of thnetprensuces Having no tle’ iafe"forealcatactone Paes ine eo. 9 technical chert sey iN'shich chere could be no doubt af bo his advantages 2asey bh 25, RibS REDS. 26.9:b5 gehicbyt sha Se'2eh Reso nive's pieces are beautifully developed, while Blgck’s Ae wen and suse fall before ‘the faraiding bishops and Fook. 30. Net Be? 31. BCS Bre5 32.¥re3 33. Nea6 808 36, BE3 ND335.Kg2 ped se"Ral BES 37, Ral Be? BS: mg? ES, 99, Rab Boo 40. ner ied Hi Bes BLACK. RESTNED 30, Bronsteln—Eowe (imeoindtan Deron cenpeigr te akon gee te sSRTEINI tee Steady, Sen ity BEES Son Ee Se aa” See camel gh eis SOIT lege Betis 2 Si ea le DEL ay Sth ae te te 4 present game ts an example, of theTistter ffpe, ine ebfender'» chats Topponese nade full woe’ of BIE Ble? at ove pfony t bal wae SEE op calchiations in order wreak Styles dust who is attack ether here? sie Peet seer soit ees atene the"fecling that somevhere T hed Bur icreatnt ate ae rea rapier gant Bebe aehetes Tae aces ee Las alec a i eee Pala get lively! ane tncevest log oe anna sheet ss Oc ate 8: Bie 10) abies {of thewe opening oves were Eek hase tow nite Segthe Bre= Parations Zor’ eaves, HL. Bebeas esee5 i Quite: eiscet This, to ney seems stronger shan es ee toe Ces the THh"Clyeptad against Botvin= TB ae7 1 de Mies Nees Sse ga igh eg 8 Kence fs, Seg in, he Istter fone, of EEE RIE Pie oe ee wero 1a, oaeet oseaa Bue could have forced the pgs gf tuners eves teh cone Basset Ye biee ed 13d Nas, BO Ba5 que i) ase2 Newey tue Se ein sees cepues pene tt 1, cadets 14, od would have, been met by a5'e8! Eine wants Maite to ery" 35 Since} ae ef medeci7 Bint he's fe Keg? 19 Bb2" Rade con Eldering’hts foeieion capable of Sithstanding Phe ateack” Arter the ganey the canplicatione were Foand'te' raver White, bur moo AGSIa Eo Snothers mabe hneri™ 15, grees i Ghee a RES bepfoning an attack on the eebelepicg ca BPs ceil ay! see Bes ee aos tl, scare So RT Nau eth GP Nas ET eh Be eet cee oy oe BL gebtea a ToL ReSces agackS Both sides have played into nis line, ahich.trvolves the Sicritice’of' piece, Black Diaying 18s; go inatend of Dore aiuurai,$3..5,, Because: he Nanted the £5 sqinre’ kept Free For'Rla'Blahops and white Le aaz- {ine Up’ the piece in order to Bet the black king ute fo and Gey find then sszail hia with all Bis 20. Neuetee —Ka8sg7 BL essen) : pleased with ay positions 10 Seeds arter Dh ee Rare Eases “ote Bust ene, fn che Eopfee Susanna Sy ech asks, sity’ oTlktp Sta besiurs eve, Pr erensael ae sige be despale HiehcPOPAMaSaee A002 sion ple. Eade Siomtnatste Gan, Ghote up's once, thereby Fea Sore dtfficutes 22, dued5 too: The tent ie serongerr ie tee Stenting s this: Bodo ee nabed A remmrlable nove: Black brings ‘hive’S Cheats ata stroke, 23°Qh6 and on 33° Bb2*, Black ten che piece, Bven feces E'aas, quite optimistic sc111, ity rasuored witers aeeack would teveil the stronger 22. Betapge ——Neseed Bh PCR : 24 Rad was worth a looky but L ggutdhgot $ee Seything forcing and See|ded hot to Chee Bh ince etety se 25. eich ta efi, the dogo doomed eny= Bean Te beektetas er aa 26 feb Keb 27 Bics Red? ieTs ana Black can i 28 pie? es ven’ though he is the exchange ‘oun, Wee dss Roo dite BES faving recovered ls p ups! now stebek he. Stratepical aieticulties SSiGpibe he “attacks the Serspunged by" ita on pi tien dispaay ata ie des ting is jency ee Stailabic spportunicy. The bing hour him than would be iP ihite were ateacking fled posstion, And fina nite®s ving tucked Bisvoe Elrde rank cone stone ettmy? theo ‘pg Siac, Teeny ave: be hte 11 has posite chine that ‘white Esiled fully to oplotes 27, Qiang) Kebea7 Black would find himself en- snhred fuer 27-00QU2 99 foe and S0'eo4 Ps “> 8 28, Rate nop) would’ have been stronger, Sar Pe eee PaexT OF the quetn and’ two Fook Cece Meee ait, Sect Be Be omaits RES Jol Rake Reaves Zo opeaes techie. Bs 26 to"the strong diagonal here oo) fie he hae piven Sp the" e-saun For noghing’ Now he, could ey SE ATES Pa aes et acer a teh, asPidads eo'S pees 31. gph a5 plz, bad for se, 1 “aeciad on one eattacking'trys te Seine the plabep viatel'co"ES, creating 8 ER ates hi fall. "35 gS eG looked worse han Welder, ee decided to"stop Retpting ace. 35. Renses se Genre? that Paehiqeties Mer, SPath caer Paneadietee, einige cee Fy Sonn ae ‘ole rie fe shea al Sah et Slate ee ay Sasttthet EPaBS Soves"in the line sete forced tia Powe taken the rooky ehave would Re Stare ees Ens"Tarttcoattaulg tesco Erol; Roxtvery he chose the nore SSELAI"ConEEa on Beas anfafod Sasenty 4 forage, that lack'9 user had saved eo, Attacking the square’ [ly and. ver fesrly went in for ie Rigst Kes” Be keb ete Keb 38 REIS. bo not Impine, deat reader, thet the grandmaivers are spotless fea~ Etxeay they cooy pee, into ines Eegubles emer iet they" fall o aie a vartation Conpietely, Subaallyy they even bist Ressha 36, RES RaTo06 4EL Rabcdey Reece? GL desde Redaee KES Looked, too risky afisk fet Rae ‘The gant was adjourned here, and Buick sented a. e645 Dut there was. no further play, Bice steed Ga" Rast and wae eas 10, Gigorie—sabo rater rye epipe epetderacion tn, Sent ofthe plecsy tet Some Spmenetof the qunen since the Important andthe ost valuable oer ne, Th eiceae ot thetic! configuration by Bbpesaon hoe oe the Bee Plays Tee pares 05°05" tapertane ot only: as Siasane of attacking. the enesy fem center, but also 1p order (oh five the’ queen an effet, CS Spb or 254 This applies es= Eee a apttone Eafe ne Blocking the queen's other diae rats for extaples the Seto lox Queen's Gamble; the Chigo- fin Ruy Lopes, or the Claseteal atiatlon bt the French Defense. anda Sate GES et saree HES 30 ee te title nel tage aa Long as the queen waz BRLSe Roiern, inher Hits goo BL ca" shea cee ae 6. ad=de ‘by=b5, i ge OL edecs - lope the coon On fense othe Lines 94. Be and 9. Be To al (Cf, ‘Gane 70, averbakh = Soaps}, slace the bishop da nore Setatns’ the option of developing Sn the dicha Giagonal. 9. aes BESHe? 10. weitay —Reuces, Seabe departs from the thep= retloat continiation 0s, 0:0 fen would teave Vnive wish Imch'the feecr pane 1. Bbae? —ebegd i MER RSIS lack caonot take the pam be- case ofthe contimuntion 13 Be5 fe3"1e gels winning a piece Ci hafbe’ ah ge ans 15 Rel se 1 lbprovenentS sg'her getreats pam is\really theesteneds but Egor fetpreedede to sett Blati's entive opening. conf gue Grigital’ queen senewvery uapioning his knight and preventing Black {From enselinge 23. genet 7 Ht aitag PESO Thus, Black has developed 11 efhigtninos pleces elle holds BEE Shere ie" he" chen icane BleSE eT ES tho queen, whieh 3 eign aae wal ProePhing which White could, have Sonia io mates a ae EEE ave Eraded’ bishop and prom saben Siete aha eeePatgy but 16 Bes would not ee fore. the itlemme, for White of Berce ae, the porittonal text move does pot Gobt whive his advantage, but PraSeE"cdew tho gene soneohar 1. aka Bea ie) saz-b3 bares fe NED asts iste, tas spogted ohe ste land decides to postpone casting Ee etgeneeTtae" Pina ua Beh META hee soeTHe Si ass Hs Behe te fo: astB1 abs-b5 A chesennster's skill 1ies not solmich in perceiving the correct Elan ag in Carrying gu uy with Eeithe'preaene case, we haven Suet Pectin atta hs tae tested S08 "Fy afoot epee Soar Braet NG Saas we feo delta arth feasaley Grits ea” ee Se a Bald OU ee HSS LE eat 21, GOV. chen 2 fees Agee gine tts ts we 21. aur-ez : garcantnan ee, OF the Sonbinacive. possibile eras DISSE me facet

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