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01-01 December COver_Layout 1 15/11/2015 15:09 Page 1 A A Chess Opening Repertoire for Blitz & Rapid Sharp, Surprising and Forcing Lines for Black and White Evgeny & Vladimir Sveshnikov 416 pages - £19.99 NEW! Every day, countless numbers of rated blitz and rapid games are being played in online and over-the-board competitions. In blitz, even more than in classical chess, it is important to make the right decisions quickly and almost instinctively. World-famous opening expert GM Evgeny Sveshnikov and his son, IM Vladimir Sveshnikov, have created a repertoire that is forcing, both narrow and deep, and aggressive. The Sveshnikovs want you to end up in positions where it is relatively easy to keep finding the moves with the greatest practical effect. Mastering Chess Middlegames Lectures from the All-Russian School of Grandmasters Alexander Panchenko 272 pages - £16.99 NEW! The secrets of GM Alexander Panchenko’s success were his dedication as a teacher combined with his outstanding training materials. Now, his classic Mastering Chess Middlegames is for the first time available in translation. It presents almost 450 examples and tests on the most important topics of middlegame technique. Defence and counterattack are two of his main themes, and his concise training material on realising the advantage and two minor pieces against a rook may be the best ever seen. Panchenko’s didactic brilliance shines through in this book and his aim is always: taking practical decisions. Bologan’s Ruy Lopez for Black How to Play for a Win against the Spanish Opening Victor Bologan 544 pages - £22.99 NEW! With his bestselling Bologan’s Black Weapon’s in the Open Games he shook up the world of repertoire books. Now Bologan is back with the much awaited companion volume on the Ruy Lopez, presenting an eminently playable repertoire with hundreds of theoretical improvements, alternatives and fresh weapons. At its heart are the Breyer Variation and the Marshall Attack. Featured again are innovations such as ‘The Fast Lane’, the ‘The Very Fast Lane’ and the much-applauded ‘Arsenal of Strategic Ideas’. Bologan presents two different options against every line: a common sense approach and an aggressive weapon. The Double Queen’s Gambit A Surprise Weapon for Black Alexey Bezgodov NEW! 272 pages - £18.99 Former Russian Chess Champion Alexey Bezgodov provides a complete repertoire for Black against 1.d4, starting with the sharp and surprising 2...c5! against both 2.c4 and 2.♘f3. There is comparatively little to study and Black is able to solve most of his opening problems and get a position that is both solid and active. “What more can one ask?”, says Alexey Bezgodov. He provides dozens of exercises to test your understanding of his system. Bezgodov promises: “It will bring many practical successes and much creative satisfaction!” available at the London Chess Centre - www.chess.co.uk/shop 03-03 Contents_Chess mag - 21_6_10 16/11/2015 15:43 Page 3 Chess Founding Editor: B.H. Wood, OBE. M.Sc † Executive Editor: Malcolm Pein Editors: Richard Palliser, Matt Read Associate Editor: John Saunders Subscriptions Manager: Paul Harrington Twitter: @CHESS_Magazine Twitter: @TelegraphChess - Malcolm Pein Website: www.chess.co.uk Contents Editorial.................................................................................................................4 Malcolm Pein on the latest developments 60 Seconds with... ...........................................................................................7 Grandmaster Yannick Pelletier The Rose on Tour ..............................................................................................8 Steve Barrett reports from the European Club Cup Studies with Stephenson............................................................................12 Thinking of the upcoming Hastings, Brian looks back to 1995 Subscription Rates: United Kingdom 1 year (12 issues) 2 year (24 issues) 3 year (36 issues) £49.95 £89.95 £125 Europe 1 year (12 issues) 2 year (24 issues) 3 year (36 issues) £60 £112.50 £165 USA & Canada 1 year (12 issues) 2 year (24 issues) 3 year (36 issues) $90 $170 $250 Rest of World (Airmail) 1 year (12 issues) 2 year (24 issues) 3 year (36 issues) £72 £130 £180 Distributed by: Post Scriptum (UK only), Unit G, OYO Business Park, Hindmans Way, Dagenham, RM9 6LN - Tel: 020 8526 7779 LMPI (North America) 8155 Larrey Street, Montreal (Quebec), H1J 2L5, Canada - Tel: 514 355-5610 Views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the Editors. Contributions to the magazine will be published at the Editors’ discretion and may be shortened if space is limited. No parts of this publication may be reproduced without the prior express permission of the publishers. All rights reserved. © 2015 Chess Magazine (ISSN 0964-6221) is published by: Chess & Bridge Ltd, 44 Baker St, London, W1U 7RT Tel: 020 7288 1305 Fax: 020 7486 7015 Email: info@chess.co.uk, Website: www.chess.co.uk FRONT COVER: Cover Design: Matt Read Cover Photography: CCSCSL & Ray Morris-Hill US & Canadian Readers – You can contact us via our American branch – Chess4Less based in West Palm Beach, FL. Call toll-free on 1-877 89CHESS (24377). You can even order Subscriber Special Offers online via www.chess4less.com How Good is Your Chess? ..........................................................................14 Daniel King on Yannick Pelletier’s crushing win against Nakamura London Calling ................................................................................................18 James Coleman previews the final leg of the Grand Chess Tour Who Else?..........................................................................................................20 Magnus Carlsen retained his World Rapid title in Berlin Go East! .............................................................................................................24 Carl Strugnell concludes his chess-themed tour of Eastern Europe Readers’ Letters.............................................................................................28 Chess Engulfed in Fresh Cheating Scandal.........................................29 Our correspondent Fi Day explains What is it about those Welsh Girls?......................................................30 Richard Stevenson investigates the rise of girls’ chess in Wales Carlsen’s Stonewall Dutch .........................................................................32 Dutch expert Mark Lyell explains how to play the opening like Magnus Back to Basics .................................................................................................35 Nick Ivell explains the intricacies of the combined method Stocking Fillers ...............................................................................................36 Sean Marsh has some suggestions for Christmas Good Old Informator ...................................................................................38 John Cox enjoyed reading his first Chess Informant in many a year Expand Your Club!.........................................................................................39 Charles Higgie explains how best to attract new members Find the Winning Moves .............................................................................40 The Indignity of Grovelling: Part II........................................................44 Matthew Lunn looks at two games where one side was out-rated Never Mind the Grandmasters.................................................................46 Carl Portman very much enjoyed playing Peter Hempson Home News.......................................................................................................48 Mark Hebden and Ameet Ghasi came top at the British Rapidplay Overseas News ...............................................................................................50 Hikaru Nakamura triumphed in the Millionaire Chess tournament Solutions............................................................................................................54 New Books and Software...........................................................................55 Saunders on Chess ........................................................................................58 Printed in the UK by The Magazine Printing Company using only paper from FSC/PEFC suppliers www.magprint.co.uk www.chess.co.uk Photo credits: Agon (pp.20-23), Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis (pp.1, 18-19, 33), Calle Erlandsson (p.48), Fédération Suisse des Echecs (p.7), Hip Hop Chess Federation (p.5), Bob Jones (p.47), David Llada (p.53), Arnold Lutton (p.31), Marjan Mitkov (p.11, top right), Ray Morris-Hill (pp.1, top left; 4, left; 5, centre; 14), Brendan O’Gorman (p.49), John Saunders (p.5, bottom right), Elizabeth Spiegel (p.58), Fiona Steil-Antoni (pp.8-9; 11, top left), Richard Stevenson (p.30). 3 08-11 EuroClubCup_Chess mag - 21_6_10 16/11/2015 16:41 Page 8 The Rose on Tour Steve Barrett reports from an action-packed week at the European Club Cup, while Malcolm Pein annotates Stuck up a mountain with no obvious way to traverse the 15 miles to the airport, where our planes were due to depart in the next two hours, was not how the White Rose chess team envisaged ending its trip to Skopje for the European Club Cup. Lacking the wise counsel of our skipper, Paul Townsend, who had departed early at 5am to get a bus to Greece, myself, board one Peter Wells, board two James Adair, and Kieran O’Driscoll had made the unwise decision late Sunday morning to head up to see the Millennium Cross. The Cross dominates the Skopje skyline at night when it is lit up and appears to be hanging unsupported in the air, and since we’d spent the whole week with our heads down playing chess, we wanted to experience at least one piece of local culture. In reality, the plan had become somewhat derailed the night before, when the team joined most of the rest of the participants of what is essentially the Champions League of chess in letting their hair down after a tough seven days of high-level competition. Having experienced salsa night in a local Cuban restaurant, fluorescent green cocktails The impressive Millennium Cross of Skopje coupled with the previous night’s celebrations nearly caused the White Rose team to miss their flights home. 8 in the Irish bar of choice for the chess players (there’s always an Irish bar), the White Rose contingent somehow ended up at a Macedonian heavy metal gig in the old town part of the country’s capital city. Several bottles of Macedonian wine were then consumed back at our hotel before we retired for the night. The skipper barely had time to pack his gear before heading for his bus, and tentative plans were made for the morning to go and see the Cross. Early on Sunday afternoon, as we surveyed the gridlock on the hill that snaked down from the landmark, we started to regret our decision to ‘have a quick look’ before decamping for the airport. Locals told us the snarl-up would not ease for at least two hours. For our intrepid board six O’Driscoll, this was a minor snafu. He had already had a slew of touristic adventures prior to the tournament in a whistle-stop tour around the Balkans, which took in places like Albania, Serbia, Kosovo, and the southern part of Macedonia in Ohrid, where White Rose had made its European Club Cup debut in 2009. For the rest of us, it was a more pressing concern. There is only one plane out of town per day and the prospect of another night in Skopje and missing work or flight connections was not in the least appealing. Someone with an ounce of sense suggested walking – OK, running – to the base of the traffic and calling a cab company to see if they’d come and get us. We weren’t optimistic, but it was our only hope. Miraculously, 30 minutes later we were in a taxi driven by a sunglasses-toting heavy metal fan cab driver who had somehow located us on the hill and appeared to have learned his driving skills from Lewis Hamilton, i.e. just what we needed in the circumstances. A lightning-fast luggage pit stop at our hotel later and finally the Alexander the Great Airport beckoned. Pretty much everything in Skopje is named after Alexander the Great, including The Aleksander Palace hotel where the chess competition was held. The tournament had started seven days earlier, as 50 teams congregated for the Open tournament and 12 for the Women’s event, including 16 of the top 20 rated players in the world. One of the great attractions of playing in this event is the prospect of rubbing shoulders with people such as Kramnik, Aronian, Nakamura, Caruana, Giri, Vachier-Lagrave, Grischuk, Topalov, Karjakin, Yu Yangyi, England’s top player Michael Adams, and so on. This year, England was represented by Cheddleton, Blackthorne Russia, and White Rose; Wales by Abergavenny and Cardigan; Ireland by Gonzaga and Adare. England also had a Midland Monarchs team in the Women’s competition. The first round offered the usual opportunities for amateurs and semiprofessionals to pit their wits against some of the strongest players in the world, and this year’s renewal did not disappoint. Blackthorne Russia’s Adam Hunt started the tournament well, and looked to be on course for a GM norm, especially after an exciting draw with Vassily Ivanchuk from the Macedonian Alkaloid all-star team in round one. A.Hunt-V.Ivanchuk Blackthorne Russia vs Alkaloid Caro-Kann Defence 1 e4 c6 2 d4 d5 3 exd5 cxd5 4 c4 Ìf6 5 Ìc3 e6 6 Ìf3 Íb4 7 cxd5 Ìxd5 8 Íd2 0-0 9 Íd3 Ìc6 10 0-0 Íe7 11 Îe1 Íf6 12 Ìe4 12 Ëe2 Ìxd4 13 Ìxd4 Íxd4 14 Íxh7+ Êxh7 15 Ëe4+ yields a small advantage. 12...Íxd4 12...h6!? was possible. 13 Ìeg5 13...g6 If 13...h6 14 Ìxd4 Ìxd4 15 Ìh7 Îe8 16 Íxh6! e5 17 Ëh5 with a dangerous attack. 14 Ìxd4 Ìxd4 15 Ìxh7 Êxh7 16 Ëh5+ Êg8 17 Íxg6 Ìf6 17...fxg6 18 Ëxg6+ is immediately drawn. 18 Ëh6 fxg6 19 Ëxg6+ Êh8 20 Íc3 (see diagram at top of next page) 20 Îe4 Ìf5 21 Íc3 was an intriguing December 2015 08-11 EuroClubCup_Chess mag - 21_6_10 16/11/2015 16:41 Page 9 possibility, but 20...Ìf3+ 21 gxf3 Ìxe4 forces White to take a draw. 20...Ìf3+ 21 Êh1 Not 21 gxf3?? Îg8 22 Íxf6+ Ëxf6 or 21 Êf1 Ìxh2+. 21...Ìxe1 22 Ëh6+ Êg8 23 Ëg6+ Êh8 24 Ëh6+ Êg8 25 Ëg6+ Êh8 26 Ëh6+ Êg8 ½-½ White Rose faced off against Azerbaijani team Odlar Yurdu in round one, and came away with a creditable 4-2 defeat, despite being outrated by an average of almost 250 points on each board. At one point the ninth-seeded Azerbaijanis must have started regretting resting their two top players – Sutovsky and Durarbayli – against the humble 34th seeds, but they scraped through in the end. James Adair continued his sensational form in a White Rose shirt, though for once he narrowly missed out on a norm. In round one he took out GM Vugar Rasulov in fine style. V.Rasulov-J.Adair Odlar Yurdu vs White Rose The British teams had some tough pairings in the opening round in Skopje, but Adam Hunt most certainly wasn’t intimated by the legend that is Vassily Ivanchuk, who held the draw. I was down to three seconds on three different occasions during the final moves before the time control, which certainly concentrates the mind, but thanks to the 30second increment I just about managed to track my way through the complications to victory. S.Barrett-N.Mamedov White Rose vs Odlar Yurdu In the cold light of day the silicon monster points out the decisive 35...Ëb4!. Instead, play continued: 35...Îa8? 36 Ëd1! Ìe4 Black had missed that 36...bxa2 37 Îxb7 a1Ë fails to 38 Îb8+!. 37 Íxb3 Îb8 38 c5 Êf8 39 Ëc2 Ëb4 40 c6 Ëc3 41 c7 Îc8 42 Ëxe4! 1-0 Other early round upsets included losses for Anish Giri and Hikaru Nakamura in round two, the latter after a fine piece of preparation by Yannick Pelletier. V.Babula-A.Giri Werder Bremen vs SOCAR Abrahams-Noteboom variation 1 d4 e6 2 c4 d5 3 Ìc3 Íb4 4 Ìf3 dxc4 5 e3 b5 6 a4 c6 7 Íd2 a5 8 axb5 Íxc3 9 Íxc3 cxb5 10 b3 Íb7 11 bxc4 b4 12 Íb2 Ìf6 13 Íd3 0-0 14 0-0 Ìbd7 15 Ìd2 Ëc7 16 f4 a4! A typical theme, if 17 Îxa4 Ëc6 31...Íxe6!! 32 fxe6 Îxf4 33 Ìxf4 Íxd4+ 34 Êf1 Íe5 35 Îg4 g5 36 g3 gxf4 37 gxf4? Ëxe6 38 Êg2 Ëh6 39 Îg3 Ëxf4 40 Ëxf4 Îxf4 41 Îa3 a6 42 Îb3 Îf7 43 Íd1 0-1 I managed to beat the highest-rated player I have ever beaten, 2590 GM Nidjat Mamedov, after he went wrong in the time scramble and missed a neat tactic, following which he fell apart, no doubt in disgust at throwing a game away against such a patzer. www.chess.co.uk James Adair has enjoyed a meteoric rise since joining White Rose. Having only previously played for them in the 4NCL, he made his European Club Cup debut and almost got a norm. 9 08-11 EuroClubCup_Chess mag - 21_6_10 16/11/2015 16:41 Page 10 threatens mate on g2 and the rook. 17 Îb1 Ëd6 18 Ëe2 Îfd8 19 e4 It looks like Black is about to be flattened, but he has a resource: 19...Ìc5! 20 e5 20 d5 runs into 20...exd5 21 cxd5 Ìxd5! 22 exd5 Ëxd5. 20...Ëc6 21 dxc5 Îxd3 22 exf6 Îad8 23 Ìf3 Ëxc5+ 24 Êh1 b3? A blunder. Black would stand very well after 24...a3 25 Íe5 b3 26 fxg7 Íxf3 27 Îxf3 Ëxc4. 25 Îbd1 Î3d6 25...Ëxc4 26 Ìe5 Îxd1 27 Ìxc4 wins. 26 Íe5 26 Ìe5! a3 27 Ëh5 is all over, as is here 26...g6 27 f5 exf5 28 Ìxf7!. 26...Îxd1 27 Îxd1 Ëa5 28 Ìd4 g6 29 h3 Ëb6 30 Êh2! h6 31 c5! Ëa6 31...Ëxc5 32 Ìxe6 Îxd1 33 Ëxd1 fxe6 34 Ëd3 wins on the spot. 32 c6! Ëxe2 33 Ìxe2 Îxd1 34 cxb7 Îd8 35 Ìc3 a3 settle for a 3-3 draw and a 50% performance across the week. James Adair rode his luck, but once again prevailed against GM opposition to finish the week on 5-7. If Adair hadn’t suffered an unlucky loss to Robin Swinkels in round three, he may well have achieved that final GM norm, but those are the swings and roundabouts of the ECC, and the luck usually balances itself out by the end of the week. In the upper reaches of the tournament, the seedings were upset slightly as secondranked Siberia pipped top-seeded SOCAR for the number one spot. Siberia was led by the majestic and legendary figure of former world champion Vladimir Kramnik, who showed a magnificent return to form. After sitting out the first two rounds against weaker opposition he reeled off successive victories against Nepomniachtchi, Svidler, and his nemesis Veselin Topalov. In the latter game, Topalov apparently objected to a lamp that Vlad had stationed near his board due to his ongoing eyesight problems, so victory was even sweeter than usual for the indomitable Russian. A fist pump at the end of the game demonstrated how much the win meant to Kramnik. V.Kramnik-V.Topalov Siberia vs SOCAR Colle/e3 Queen’s Indian 1 d4 Ìf6 2 Ìf3 e6 3 e3 c5 4 Íd3 b6 5 0-0 Íb7 6 c4 cxd4 7 exd4 Íe7 8 Ìc3 d5 9 cxd5 Ìxd5 10 Ìe5 0-0 11 Ëg4 f5 Designed to close lines towards the black king, as if 11...Ìf6 12 Ëh4. 12 Ëe2 Íf6 13 Íc4 Îe8 14 Îd1 Ìd7 14...a6 15 Ëh5 Îe7 16 Íxd5 Íxd5 17 Íg5 gives White some initiative. 15 Íb5! Íxe5 16 dxe5 Ëe7 17 Ìxd5 Íxd5 18 Ëh5! 29 Îxd5! exd5 30 e6 Î3c7 White wins too after both 30...Ëg6 31 Íxc3 Îxc3 32 Ëb8+ Êg7 33 e7 and 30...Ëxe6 31 Ëg5+ Êf8 32 Ëg7+ Êe8 33 Íxc3. 31 Îxd5 Ëxe6 32 Ëg5+ Êf8 33 Îxf5 Îf7 34 Ëh6+ Êe8 35 Îe5 Îc6 36 Ëxh5! 1-0 A fourth win in a row, this time against Ivanchuk, followed by a draw in the final round against the super-solid Peter Leko produced a 3100 rating result for Kramnik, which almost propelled him above Anish Giri in the race to the Candidates Tournament, but, mainly, helped his team win the competition. Of the Brits, led by David Howell on top board, Cheddleton came out top (22nd place) by virtue of a superior tie-break over White Rose (27th). Cheddleton’s best performer was FM Ezra Kirk who was on for an IM norm until he lost the last two rounds, but still managed to gain an impressive 30 rating points. Meanwhile IM Vladimir Hamitevici won a sparkling, attacking game on board 2. V.Hamitevici-B.Lindberg Cheddleton vs SK Viking Spanish Four Knights 1 e4 e5 2 Ìf3 Ìc6 3 Ìc3 Ìf6 4 Íb5 Íc5 5 0-0 0-0 6 Ìxe5 Ìxe5 7 d4 Íd6 8 f4! Far more incisive than just regaining material with 8 dxe5. 8...Ìeg4 9 e5 Íb4 10 f5 d6 11 exf6 Ìxf6 12 Íg5 After the early skirmish White emerges with space, a strong pin and copious attacking possibilities thanks to his pawn on f5. Now 12...Íxc3 13 bxc3 h6 was essential. 12...c6? Now it’s White to play and win. 36 Ìb5! Not 36 b8Ë Îxb8 37 Íxb8 b2 and Black wins. 36...a2 37 Ìd6 Îb8 38 h4 Êh7 39 g4 1-0 Our week continued in its usual topsy-turvy tense fashion – White Rose never does anything the easy way – but we ended in 27th place, seven places above our seeding, and with a fair wind in the last round we could maybe have pushed the ball over the line against another Macedonian team, Gambit Asseko See, to post our highest-ever points tally (8) in seven years at the European Club Cup. However, it wasn’t quite to be and we had to 10 Black’s position is uncomfortable and Íc1g5 a threat. Topalov feels obliged to weaken his dark squares and that proves his undoing. 18...g6 19 Ëh6 Îec8 20 Íg5 Ëf7 21 Íxd7 Ëxd7 22 Íf6 Ëf7 23 b3 Ëf8 24 Ëf4 Îc2 25 h4 Îac8 26 h5 Ëe8 27 Îd3 Î2c3 28 Îad1 gxh5? 28...Ëf7 29 Ëg3 Îxd3 30 Îxd3 is still better for White. December 2015 08-11 EuroClubCup_Chess mag - 21_6_10 16/11/2015 16:41 Page 11 Vladimir Kramnik surprised nemesis Topalov with the Colle - and scored a crushing win. 13 Ìe4!! cxb5 14 c3 Ía5 15 Ìxf6+ 15 Íxf6 gxf6 16 Ëh5 was also strong: for example, 16...Êh8 17 Ëh6 Îg8 18 Ìxf6 Îg7 19 Îae1 Íd7 20 Îe3 Ëf8 21 Îh3 threatening Ëxh7+ and wins. 15...gxf6 16 Íh6 Êh8 17 Ëh5 Íd7 18 Îae1 Íc6 19 Îe2 Îg8 If 19...Ëd7 20 Íg7+! Êxg7 21 Îf4 Îg8 22 Îh4 Êf8 23 Ëh6+ Îg7 24 Îg4, mating. 20 Îf4 20...Ëd7 Somehow 20...Íxg2!? might yet have saved Black. 21 Îh4 Íf3 If 21...Íd8 22 Íf8. 22 Ëxf3 Îae8 23 Îe3 d5 24 Ëh5 Îxe3 25 Íxe3 Îg7 26 Íh6 1-0 The rook must move and then 27 Íg5 or 27 Íf8 wins. Special mention must also be given to Michael Adams, who was the star performer for SOCAR, making an impressive 5/6 for a whopping 2943 performance on board 4. M.Adams-M.Matlakov SOCAR vs Mednyi Sadnik Ruy Lopez 1 e4 e5 2 Ìf3 Ìc6 3 Íb5 a6 4 Ía4 Ìf6 5 0-0 Íe7 6 Îe1 b5 7 Íb3 0-0 8 c3 d6 9 h3 Îe8 10 d4 Íb7 11 Ìbd2 Íf8 www.chess.co.uk Champions Siberia minus board 3, Alexander Grischuk: (l-r), Wang Yue, Dmitry Kokarev, a club official, Vladimir Kramnik (4½/5 on board 1!), Levon Aronian, Pavel Maletin and Li Chao. 12 a3 h6 13 d5 Following this Black is more or less obliged to prepare ...c7-c6 after which the d5square becomes of paramount importance. 13...Ìb8 14 Ìh2 Preparing to exchange the defender of the key square. 14...Ìbd7 15 Ìg4 Ìc5 If 15...g6 16 Ìf1 Êh7 17 Ìxf6+ Ìxf6 17 Ëf3 with nagging pressure, but possibly the immediate 15...c6!? was best. 16 Ìxf6+ Ëxf6 17 Íc2 c6 18 b4 Ìd7 19 Ìb3! cxd5 20 Ìa5 Îab8 21 Ìxb7 Îxb7 22 Ëxd5 As ever, in middlegames with opposite bishops, the activity of each side’s bishop is paramount. White’s light-squared bishop soon dominates after Matlakov misses opportunities to free his dark-squared bishop. 22...Îc7 23 Ëd3 Îec8 24 Íd2 White has the edge in view of Black’s weakness on d5 and passive bishop. Matlakov now seeks to blunt White’s bishop. 24...Ìb6 25 a4 Ìc4 26 axb5 axb5 27 Íb3 27 Íe3!? Ìxe3 28 Îxe3 is well met by 28...d5!, and if 29 Îf3 Îxc3! or 29 exd5 g6 30 Ëxb5 Îxc3 31 Îxc3 Îxc3. Likewise, after 27 Íc1 Ìb6 28 Ëxb5 Îxc3 29 Ëxb6 Îxc2 30 Íe3 d5 31 Ëxf6 gxf6 32 exd5 Íxb4 Black should hold the draw. 27...Ìxd2 Missing 27...d5! when Black is better after 28 exd5?! Ìxd2 29 Ëxd2 Îxc3 and even 28 Íxc4 dxc4 29 Ëg3 Îd7 is fine for him. 28 Ëxd2 Îxc3 29 Îe3!! Îxe3 30 fxe3 30...Îc7? Black is fine after 30...d5! 31 Ëxd5 Íxb4 32 Îf1 Ëg5 33 Ëxf7+ Êh8 as his king is quite safe. 31 Íd5! Locking the door. 31...g6 32 Ëd3 Ëg5 33 Îf1 h5 34 Îf3 Black is under great pressure as f7 and b5 are weak. 34...Ëh4?! 34...Êg7 35 Ëxb5 Îc2 was a better defence. 35 Êh2 Íh6?! 36 Ëxb5 Black is already lost here as f7 falls and then g6 as well. 36...Êh7 37 Ëe8 Íg7 38 Íxf7 Îe7 39 Ëd8 1-0 39...Ëg5 40 Ëg8+ Êh6 41 Îg3 wins the queen. As we made our escape from the mountain and just about managed to catch our flights out of Macedonia, we could reflect on another fun week of European Club Cup chess and a reminder of how unforgiving the game is at this level. We look forward to reconvening in Serbia in early November next year, always assuming that White Rose can do the business in qualifying from the 4NCL for the eighth year running. 11 This month’s sample articles are from the December 2015 issue of Chess - The UK’s biggest and best magazine for chess players. If you’re not already a subscriber you might like to consider our introductory offer below. CHESS MAGAZINE THE BEST IN THE UK! 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