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.They all remain sidelinedManizales 1979, patiently regrouped with out of the game, while Black's rooks govern15.%àe2 $àh8! 16.'àb3 f5! 17.(àg5!? 'àg8 the open files., before charging his a- and e-pawns to 28.%àc1? &àe2! Plus the seventh rank spellsvictory.game over.The rest is too painful to watch, a; 11.%àh4 doesn't change our plan of 'àg7 bit like soap operas or reality shows.12.0-0 'àe6.The Serbian IM in S.Ruzicic-M.Television is so full of trash nowadays that IPopovic, Belgrade 2009, was already better don't even own one anymore.after 13.(àc3 %àe7 14.(àxd5?! cxd5 29.'àf2 %àe4 30.b3 f3 31.gxf3 %àd3 32.%àf415.'àb5+ $àf7! , when the central pawn duo &àbe8 33.'àd4 'àxd4+ 34.%àxd4+ %àxd4+turned out far more relevant than manual 35.cxd4 'àh3 36.&àfc1 &àg2+ 37.$àh1 &àee2castling.)] "It must be clearly understood that Soviet10.e5 11.%àd1 'àg7 12.c3 While Black players do not seek simple systems in thenaturally completes development, White opening, but try to formulate opening systemspassively curls up into a ball.in which everything is complicated, distinctive,[ He would like to kick our dominating knight or new." Mikhail Botvinnik.by 12.0-0 0-0 13.c4 , but that would 0-1surrender the d4 outpost to (àc7 14.(àc3(àe6! , as in T.Nguyen Thi Thanh-A.NguyenT Thanh, Can Tho 2001.In case you were B34wondering, yes, I did have to turn off my Fishbein,Aspellchecker a long time ago.] Hodgson,J12.0-0 13.(àa3 f5! The three-time world Stavanger 1989champion seizes the initiative, and never gives [Peter Lalic]it back."Botvinnik himself was always right at the 1.e4 c5 2.(àf3 (àc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.(àxd4 g6front in chess theory; what becomes known to 5.'àe2!? 'àg7 6.(àb3 (àf6 7.(àc3 0-0 8.0-0us today, was known to him yesterday." a5 9.a4 (àb4! By substituting Be2 for Be3,David Bronstein.White stands better than in Panagiotopoulos-14.'àc4 'àe6 15.%àa4 %àc7 In no matter what Papadopoulou.Firstly, he can castle onemove earlier, thereby dodging any bullets like to c2 like gold-diggers to Larry King.Given.Nxc2+.The second difference is that his the bishop, rook, and now knight, thec1-bishop has not wasted a move.Not only upcoming combination is inevitable.does it watch over b2, but it is less "It is a profound mistake to imagine that thesusceptible to.Nd5.For all these reasons, art of combination depends only on naturalwe must time our counterplay very precisely.talent, and that it cannot be learned.Every10.'àg5! This is the only test, seeing as the player knows that all (or almost all)alternatives are innocuous: combinations arise from a recollection of[ a) 10.'àe3 is asking for d5!.Here 11.e5 familiar elements." Richard Reti.( 11.exd5 (àfxd5 would revert straight back 19.'àe5 (àxc2! 20.'àxc2into Panagiotopoulos-Papadopoulou ) [ White would lose the pawn the same way in11.(àe4 would bring back the interesting case of 20.(àxc2 %àxd1 21.&àaxd1 'àxc2French structure: 22.'àxc2 &àxc2.]A) After 12.f4 , White has fared well from 20.'àxc2 21.(àxc2 %àxd1 22.&àaxd1 &àxc2(àxc3 ( and 12.'àf5.; Instead, I am 23.g3 e6! 24.'àxg7 $àxg7 The rest is aimpressed by 12.g5!? , a novelty of the matter of technique, and the extra pawn is notfirst ever Kyrgyz GM, Leonid Yurtaev, who hard to convert in this double-rook ending.died recently.In D.Barua-L.Yurtaev, Sangli 25.&àd7 &àxb2 26.&àxe6 &àd8! 27.&àxd8 fxe62000, he beat the Indian GM by isolating By swapping off a pair of rooks, Hodgsonthe e-pawn with 13.(àd4 gxf4 14.'àxf4 facilitates the king's march.(àc6.); 28.$àg2 &àb4 29.$àf3 $àf6B) 12.(àxe4 dxe4 13.%àxd8 &àxd8 [ 29.&àxa4 30.&àd7+ $àf6 31.&àxb7 &àb4deserts both the c2- and e5-pawns, I.would also be technically winning, but it isJurcisin-A.Cvicela, Nove Zamky 1999.preferable to maintain the pressure.This is"Help your pieces so they can help you." an opening book, not an endgame manual,Paul Morphy.; so let's cut to the chase.]C) 12.-- ] 30.&àd7 b6 31.&àb7 $àe5 32.$àe3 g4 33.&àb8[ b) If White desperately stops.d5 by 10.'àf3 &àb3+ 34.$àe2 $àe4 35.&àe8 $àd5 36.&àg8, as in J.Tompa-J.Hodgson, Copenhagen &àb4 37.$àe3 h5 38.$àd3 &àb3+ 39.$àd2 $àc41983, then there is no shame in entering a 40.&àb8 &àd3+ 41.$àe2 &àd5 42.&àe8 &àe5+standard Dragon through d6.While that 43.$àd2 $àb3 44.&àb8 &àd5+ 45.$àc1 &àc5+bad bishop blocks his f2-f4 plan, we can 46.$àb1 $àxa4 "In a rook and pawn ending,assault the queenside with our knight the rook must be used aggressively.It mustanchored at b4.The Colombian GM in N.either attack enemy pawns, or give activeCarvajal-G.Garcia, Cali 2003, won by the support to the advance of one of its owncounterattack 11.&àe1 'àd7 12.'àg5 &àc8 pawns to the queening square." Siegbert13.%àd2 (àg4! 14.'àxg4 'àxg4 15.(àd5? Tarrasch.&àxc2! 16.(àxe7+? $àh8 17.(àxg6+ fxg6 0-118
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