July - September 2007
Transcription
July - September 2007
From Your Editor’s Desk Already, the 61st Annual New Jersey Open shown above has just finished as we ready Atlantic Chess News for our readership. With TD Ken Thomas at the helm directing, this year’s 61st Annual New Jersey Open drew a record-breaking 215 entrants across all 4 sections including a handful of re-entries. GM Alexander Stripunsky captured clear 1st Place in the Open section scoring 5/6, Nikita Panasenko & your Editor shared 1st & 2nd in the U1900 section with 5/6, Long Xu dominated the U1600 with 5½/6, & William L. Chen with took top honors with 5/6 in the U1300 section respectively! Steve Ferrero, Editor Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com www.NJSCF.org or www.njoychess.com Joe Ippolito, President 1 nk Listed below are the NJSCF chairmen, officers, and board members along with their addresses, and email addresses for your convenience. Please keep in mind that many of these people donate their time in the form of meetings (usually on Saturdays / Sundays several times per year) and also during the year promoting chess in NJ to make your chess playing experience as rewarding as it can be! I encourage all comments, criticisms, and recommendations of what you’d like to see ACN transform into since it has been and always will remain a publication BY the chess-playing community FOR the chess-playing community within NJ! Contents Breaking News! …………………………………………………………… Page 2 Upcoming Tournaments Throughout NJ & Pennsylvania ………. Page 3 Chess Clubs Throughout New Jersey ………………………………… Page 4 From Our President by Joe Ippolito, Pres. NJSCF …………………. Page 5 Games From Around The State by Steve Ferrero …………………. Page 5 Scholastic Spotlight by Joe Ippolito, Pres. NJSCF …………………. Page 11 Rethinking The Queen’s Pawn Game – Part II by Terese & David W. Hatch Page 12 Budapest Gambit - Farajarowicz Variation by James R. West …. Page 15 Beating Masters With The Blackmar-Diemer by Lev D. Zilbermints Page 17 Chess Gems by Peter J. Tamburro, Jr. ……………………………….. Page 19 Stranded On A Desert Island … by Ken Calitri ……………………… Page 20 Tips For Chess Organizers! by Daren Dillinger……………………… Page 22 Problem Solver’s Corner by Steve Ferrero ………………………….. Page 23 Games From Around The State (continued) by Steve Ferrero ….. Page 24 Elena Didita – Scholastics Committee Elena_didita@yahoo.com George Phoenix - Trustee perrito.hiker@gmail.com Executive Board Joe Ippolito - President 43 Oak Road, Boonton Township, NJ 07005 973-402-0049 Ippy1@aol.com Roger Inglis - Vice President 49-A Mara Road, Lake Hiawatha, NJ 07034 973-794-4601 ringlis@NJoyChess.com Glenn Petersen - Secretary 44-D Manchester Court, Freehold, NJ 07728 732-252-8388 chesslies@aol.com Ken Thomas - Treasurer 115 West Moore Street, Hackettstown, NJ 07840 908-852-0385 ACN@goes.com NJSCF Board Members Aaron Kiedes - Technology 4 Seymour Terrace, Hackettstown, NJ 07840 973-343-3260 Akiedes@gmail.com Anthony Cottell - Past President 334 Ninth Street, Carlstadt, NJ 07072 201-438-6140 acabonack@yahoo.com Bill Bluestone - Disabled & Handicapped Chess PO Box 552, Metuchen, NJ 08840 732-603-8850 hipbob1@yahoo.com Bill Coburn - Seniors Chess 85 Jamestown Road, Basking Ridge, NJ 07920 908-604-2680 W.coburn2@verizon.net Bill Cohen - Clearinghouse 29 Hickory Street, Metuchen, NJ 08840 732-548-8432 chessuu@yahoo.com Craig Gross - Trustee 776 Evans Drive, Apt. 3C, Hillsborough, NJ 08844 856-905-0196 Dojoone@yahoo.com Dean Ippolito - Collegiate 141 Main Street, Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889 908-534-4318 dean@deanofchess.com Hal Sprechman - Scholastics Committee 198 Overbrook Drive, Freehold, NJ 07728 732-577-1457 HSprechman@aol.com Henry Feltman Jr. - Publicity 856-845-5094 WB2MSH@comcast.net Herman Drenth - Past President & Ethics Committee 235 Roosevelt Avenue, Elmwood Park, NJ 07407 201-797-9043 Hermaril@aol.com James Mennella – Ethics Committee 8 Magnolia Avenue, North Plainfield, NJ 07060 BBJMPARIS@aol.com Joe Lux - Membership 627 Summit Avenue, Apt. 17A, Jersey City, NJ 07306 201-792-1606 JoeLuxChess@aol.com Leo Dubler III - Corporate Funding 146 West Centennial Drive, Medford, NJ 08055 856-396-0961 LBDIII@aol.com Leroy Dubeck - Nominating Committee 932 Edgemorr Road, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 856-428-0304 lwdubeck@aol.com Michael Somers - Parliamentarian 29 Oakland Avenue, West Caldwell, NJ 07006 973-228-7039 Hammer64@comcast.net Mike Goeller - Webmaster goeller@rci.rutgers.edu Mike Khodarkovsky – Masters Affairs 80 Jesse Court, Montville, NJ 07045 973-299-0932 MKhodarkovsky@yahoo.com Noreen Davisson - Scholastics Committee davisson@optonline.net Peter J. Tamburro, Jr. – Tournament Publicity & Columnist 22 Budd Street, Morristown, NJ 07960 973-984-3832 PTamburro@aol.com Rick Costigan - Nominating Committee 927 Belmont Avenue, Haddon Township, NJ 08108 856-854-2376 RCSTGN@aol.com Ronald Groseibl - Bylaws ronaldp@cybernex.net Dr. Francis Schott - Finance Committee 311 Cantrell Road, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 201-445-1743 FHSandBWS@aol.com Steve Ferrero - Atlantic Chess News Editor PO Box 337, Glen Gardner, NJ 08826-0337 908-537-0878 Ferrero@cyberdude.com E. Steven Doyle - Tournaments 17 Stonehenge Road, Morristown, NJ 07960 973-538-1697 esdoyle@aol.com Todd Lunna - Masters Affairs 36 Maple Drive, Colts Neck, NJ 07722 732-946-7379 Lunnaco@aol.com 2 Advertising Rates: Approx. 3½” x 1” Box $25 Per Issue Approx. 3½” x 2¾” Box $50 Per Issue Approx. ½ Page Box $175 Per Issue Approx. Full Page Box $300 Per Issue Approval of content for any and all advertisements are at the sole discretion of the Editor and NJSCF Executive Board. All ½ page and full page advertisements are conditional based on available space in Atlantic Chess News. We offer a 10% discount for advertising in two consecutive issues, 15% discount for four consecutive issues. Analysis Of Games: Most games are analyzed with the assistance of the extensive and exhaustive chess playing programs, Fritz 8, Rebel II Chess Tiger 13.0, or Chess Genius© 5.028A and Grandmaster Books© add-on program running on an Intel Pentium 4 2.53 Ghz PC with 512 megabytes of RAM running Windows XP Professional. We welcome all comments, criticism, and ’ feedback from readers and don t forget to submit your games to me from the tournaments! Sponsorship Levels: Gold $100/year (ACN Sent 1st Class) Silver $50/year (ACN Sent 1st Class) Bronze $25/year (ACN Sent 1st Class) Out Of State $15/year (ACN Sent 1st Class) Regular $10/year (ACN Sent Bulk Mailing) Columnists This Issue: Daren Dillinger James R. West Joe Ippolito Ken Calitri Lev D. Zilbermintz Peter J. Tamburro, Jr. Steve Ferrero Terese Hatch & David W. Hatch Breaking News!: GM Alexander Stripunsky just won the 61st Annual New Jersey Open held in Somerset, NJ scoring 5 out of 6 to lock up clear 1st place while an 8-way tie availed itself for the top NJ title at 4½/6! New Jersey’s own IM Dean Ippolito turned the tables against none other than GM Alexander Shabalov in an extraordinary queen and rook vs two rooks and a knight late middlegame to reel in the full point in the New England Masters 2007! Upcoming Tournaments Throughout New Jersey & Pennsylvania October 20 Hamilton Chess Club Quads November 10 Kids R Kool - K-12 3RR 40/80 15/30 15/30. Full K. Ray Dwer Recreation Center 392 Church St. Groveville, NJ 08620 Quads open to all EF $10. $25 per Quad. Reg: 9-10:30/am. Rds. 10:30/am-1:30/pm-4:30/pm NJ State Chess Federation, no dues magazine Subscription per year, OSA NS NC W. Church of the Little Flower, 110 Roosevelt Ave., Berkeley Heights, NJ 07922. In 3 Sections: High School Championship, open to High School age. 5SS, G/30. Grade 6 to 8, open to Grades 6-8. 5SS, G/30. Grades K-5, open to Grades K-5. 5SS, G/30. ALL: EF: $20 by 11/5, $25 at site by 9:45 am. Trophies to all who finish event. Two byes allowed (rds. 1-4) if rec’d. with EF. ENT: Ken Thomas, 115 West Moore St., Hackettstown, NJ 07840. INFO: Ken Thomas (908) 763-6468, acn@goes.com. NS, NC, W. October 20 King’s Chess Club Quads Morning quads and afternoon quads, G/30, K-12, Bethlehem Church, 758 Route 10, Randolph, NJ. EF: None. Reg: 9-9:20 am., 1st rd. 9:40. Medal to each quad winner. Info: Bethlehem Church 973-366-3434 or Bob McAdams 973-694-3988, rwm@fambright.com. November 10 Greater Cherry Hill Chess Swiss / Quad Cherry Hill Public Library, 1100 Kings Highway North, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034. Reg.: both events 9:30 to 10:00! QUADS: 3RR, G/60. Pre-reg. online for $15, $20 at site. $$ 40 to winner. Rds.: 10-12:15 -2:30. SWISS: 5SS, G/30. Pre-reg. online for $25, $30 at site. 1st Prize $100, 2nd Prize $75: BOTH GUARANTEED, Exp./A ($60), B ($60), C($60); D/E/Unr.($60), Class $$/30. More than one player/section for prize. Rds.: 10:30-11:45-1-2:15-3:30. ***ALSO, KIDS U800 SWISS-4 GAMES/G45 LIMITED TO 1ST 30 TO REGISTER. TOP 5 WIN TROPHIES. Pre-reg.at www.eventbrite.com/event/73628224. For more info: visit www.greaterchchess.com or contact Dan Herman (856) 287-2393 or hermanator3@comcast.net. October 20 Viking Kids K-8 Swiss U1200 in 12 Player Groups 5SS, G/30, Stardust Diner, 28 Rt 46, Hackettstown NJ 07840. Open to 1199 & under. EF: $20 if mailed by 10/15, $25 at site by 9:45am. Prizes: Trophies to all. Rds: 10am, then ASAP with a lunch break. 2 byes allowed (rds 1-4) if rec’d with EF. ENT: Aaron Kiedes, 4 Seymour Terr, Hackettstown NJ 07840. INFO: Ken 908-763-6468 acn@goes.com. NS NC W. October 27 Viking Last Saturday Quads Courtyard Marriot, 15 Howard Blvd, Mt. Arlington, NJ at Exit #30, Route #80. 3RR, G/90. EF: $20. $$G $40. 3-0 plays free next month. Rds: 10-1-4. Info: Ken Thomas, cell 908-763-6468 or acn@goes.com. Ent: Before 10am at site. NS, NC, W. October 27 Viking K-8 Kids Kwads (Limited to K-8), 15 Howard Blvd, Mt. Arlington, NJ at Exit #30, Route #80. 3RR, G/30. EF $15. Trophy to first each quad or $30 & other prizes. 3-0 plays free next month. Rds: 10:30 them asap. Info: Ken Thomas, cell 908-763-6468 or acn@goes.com, Ent: Before 10:30 am at site. NS, NC, W. October 28 Westfield Scholastic Quick #5 5SS Game/10. Westfield Y, 220 Clark Street, Westfield, N.J. Sections k-2, 3-5, 6-12 gold medal to first, silver medal to second, bronze medal to third. EF: $10 Reg.: 3:30-4:00 p.m. Rounds 4:15, 4:40, 5:05, 5:30, 5:55 p.m. (tiebreaks). Info: http://www.westfieldchessclub.com/ please bring identification to enter the building. Todd Lunna 732-946-7379. October 28 Westfield Quads (Also Same Format For Nov. 10) 3 RR Game/45, Full k. Westfield Y, 220 Clark Street, Westfield, N.J. Prizes $50 to first in each section EF: $20, $15 Members. Reg.: 2-2:15 p.m. Rds.: 2:30-4:20-6:10 p.m. Info: http://www.westfieldchessclub.com/ please bring identification to enter the building. Todd Lunna 732-946-7379. November 3 Princeton Day School 650 The Great Road. Sections: FUTURE MASTERS G/60 (Players K-12 over 1300), CLOSED G/45 (K-12 over 1000), all other sections G/30. 4 rounds: OPEN (Players K-12 U-1000), RESERVE (K-12 U-800) NOVICE II (K-8 U-600), NOVICE I (unrated K-6), K-1 (unrated) NO SCORE K-1. Info and Register online: http://www.pds.org/page.cfm?p=549. Inquiries to Chessteach@gmail.com EF: $30 On-site registration $40. Reg.: 11:30-12:30. Rds.: 1, 2, 3, 4pm. (times will be accelerated if possible). FUTURE MASTERS and CLOSED begins 10:45 (must preregister). PLAQUES to top three teams and top five in each section. Medals to all. November 4 Ernesto Labate Grand Prix (Grand Prix Pts: 30) 5 Round Swiss Game/40 Westfield Y, 220 Clark Street, Westfield N.J. $2000 Gtd: $650-$350-$250-$150-$100 U2200: $200 U2000 $150 U1800: $100 Best game prize $50 (Judge Ernesto Labate) EF: $75, $60 by October 28th Reg: 9:30-11:30 a.m. Rds: 12:00,1:35,3:10,4:45,6:20 p.m. early EF: Todd Lunna, 36 Maple Drive, Colts Neck, New Jersey 07722. Make checks payable to Westfield Chess Club please bring identification to enter the building. www.westfieldchessclub.com Todd Lunna 732-946-7379. Photo provided courtesy of Steve Ferrero Dragan Milovanovic (left) and IM Mikhail Zlotnikov early on in the New Jersey Open! Dragan spun off a spectacular game to bring home the full point in this encounter. November 10 Union County K-12 Open Trophies Galore - Church of the Little Flower, 110 Roosevelt Ave. Berkeley Heights NJ 07922. In 3 Sections Union HS Championship: 5SS, G/30, Open to High School. Union Grade 6 - 8 Championship: 5SS, G/30, Open to Grades 6-8. Union Grade K - 5 Championship: 5SS, G/30, Open to Grades K-5. ALL: EF: $20 by 11/05 $25 at site by 9:45am. Trophies to all, Top in grade is County Champion. 2 byes allowed (Rds 1-4) if rec’d with EF. ENT: Ken Thomas, 115 West Moore St. Hackettstown, NJ 07840-2233. INFO: Ken Thomas, (908) 7636468. acn@goes.com. NS NC W. November 17 Viking 4-County Open (GPP: 20 Enhanced) 4SS, G/90 (rds 1-2 G60 G75), STARDUST DINER, 28 RT 46, Hackettstown, NJ 07840. EF: $35 if mailed by 11-12, $45 at site by 9:45am. $$GTD: $250-150-150-100-100. 75 minimum to top A, B, C, D, E/F. 75 each. No duplicates/pooling. call for details. Top Hunterdon, Morris, Sussex, Warren are Champs (play-off required). Rds: 10-12-36. 2 byes allowed (rds 1-3) if rec’d with EF. ENT: Ken Thomas, 115 W Moore ST Hackettstown, NJ 07840-2233. INFO: Ken 908-763-6468 ACN@GOES.COM. NS NC W. 3 Chess Clubs Throughout New Jersey (listed alphabetically by club name) Bloomfield Chess Club Bloomfield Civic Center 84 Broad Street, Bloomfield 07003 International Chess Academy 185 Court Street, Teaneck 07666 Meets Fridays 7:30pm – 10:00pm Contact: 201-797-0330 Contact: Diana Tulman 201-287-0250 Contact: Fred Sharpell 973-696-1748 Contact: 201-833-1741 17-10 River Road, Fair Lawn 07410 Chess Club Of Greater Somerset County Pheasant’s Landing Restaurant 311 Amwell Road, Hillsborough 08844 Restaurant Phone# 908-281-1288 www.pheasantslanding.com Meets Mondays 6:00pm – 11:00pm (Fair Lawn) Email: d.fulton@att.net Website: http://home.att.net/~nwalthall/GSCC/ http://home.att.net/~nwalthall/cjcl/ Meets Tuesdays 7:00pm – 11:00pm Contact: Greg Tomkovich Contact: David Fulton 908-672-4792 ** Largest In NJ!! ** Dumont Chess Mates Dumont High School 101 New Milford Avenue Dumont 07628 Contact: Harrison Coleman 25 Beacon Street, Haworth 07641 Meets Mondays 7:00pm – 11:00pm Dumont Scholastic Chess Club Dumont High School 101 New Milford Avenue Dumont 07628 Contact: Harrison Coleman 25 Beacon Street, Haworth 07641 Meets Mondays 5:30pm – 7:30pm Elmwood Park Chess Club Elmwood Park Municipal Bldg. 182 Market Street Elmwood Park 07407 Contact: Roy Greenberg PO Box 487, Elmwood Park 07407 TD: Ron Groseibl 22-50 Maple Avenue Fairlawn 07410 Meets Sundays 1:00pm Hackettstown Chess Club Hackettstown Community Center 293 Main Street Hackettstown 07840 Contact: Harold Darst 111 Moore Street, Hackettstown 07840 908-852-5925 Meets Mondays 7:30pm – 11:00pm (except certain major holidays) Hamilton Chess Club Ray Dwier Recreation Bldg. Mercer County Road, Route 609 Groveville 08620 Contact: Ed Sytnik 609-758-2326 Website: www.hamiltonchess.org Meets Wednesdays 7:30pm – 10:30pm Hillsdale – Montvale Chess Club Montvale Municipal Building Memorial Drive Montvale 07645 Contact: Gerald Freel 78 Magnolia Street, Pearl River, NY 10965 Contact: Stephen Ohayon 18 Cardinal Court, Montvale 07645 Contact: Gerald Freel 78 Magnolia Street, Pearl River, NY 10965 Meets Wednesdays 7:00pm Fee: $14/Year Club Membership Kenilworth Chess Club Kenilworth Community Center Boulevard, Kenilworth 07033 Plainsboro Chess Club Plainsboro Library 641 Plainsboro Rd., Plainsboro 08536 Contact: Viraf Kapadia 609-799-4368 Email: plainsborochess@yahoo.com Meets Sundays 1:15pm – 4:45pm (Recommend Calling First Before Going!) Princeton Landing Chess Club Contact: Chuck Denk 609-720-0595 Meets Sundays 3:30pm – 5:30pm (for kids 7+) Email: GTomkovich@aol.com Meets Thursdays 8:00pm – Midnight Rutherford Chess Club 176 Park Avenue, Rutherford 07070 Livingston Recreation & Parks Contact: Thomas McKenna 19 North Ridge Road, Livingston 07039 Meets 1st Thurs. Of Month (Summer Only) 6:00PM – 8:00PM Meets Fridays 7:30pm (except holidays) Mays Landing P.A.L. Chess Club Oakcrest Estates Clubhouse, Oakcrest Drive (Off Black Horse Pike) Mays Landing 08330 Contact: T. McKeen t-mcKeen@comcast.net 609-926-5909 Meets Saturdays 10:00am – 2:00pm Contact: Simon Thomson 908-522-6543 Mendham Chess Club Garabrant Center 4 Wilson Street (1/8 Mile North Of Traffic Light From Black Horse Inn), Mendham 07945 Contact: Lucy Monahan 973-543-2610 Email: McMon4@msn.com Meets 1st Thurs. Of Each Month During The Summer 6:00pm – 8:00pm Metuchen Chess Club Metuchen – Edison YMCA Lake Street, Metuchen 08840 Contact: Bill Cohen 732-548-8432 Meets Fridays 8:00pm – 10:00pm Monmouth Country Chess Club Monmouth County Library Headquarters 125 Symmes Drive, Manalapan 07726 Contact: Jim Mullanaphy 732-294-9372 Email: jmull@aol.com Meets Saturdays 10:00am – 1:00pm Morris County Industrial Chess League Honeywell Corporate Headquarters Colombia Road, Morris Township 07960 Contact: Gordon Pringle 908-464-0757 Meets Tuesdays 7:00pm (Sept. – June) New Jersey Children’s Chess School “Geller Kids” Chess Camp 862 DeGraw Avenue, Forest Hill (North Newark) 07104 Contact: Arkady Geller 973-483-7927 Email: chesscamp@hotmail.com Website: www.kidschesscamp.com Meets Fridays 6:30pm – 9:00pm July – August on Weekdays 9:00am – 5pm Northfield & Ventnor Chess Club Ventnor Library 6500 Atlantic Ave., 2nd Fl., Ventnor 08406 Site Phone: 609-823-4614 Contact: Gerry Sakura 609-601-1268 Email: Sakura999@aol.com Meets Tuesdays & Saturdays 1:00pm (Also Inquire About Backgammon!) Contact: Bill Hotaling 201-998-7318 Summit Area Chess Club Myrtle Avenue (Recreation Center At Memorial Field) Summit 07901 Meets Mondays 7:00pm – 10:30pm Toms River Chess Club Town Hall, Washington St., Toms River Contact: aaikin@comcast.net Meets Thursdays 7:00pm Wayne Township Chess Club Board Of Education Building Hamburg Tpke & Church Lane, Wayne Contact: Anthony Buzzoni 973-694-8943 Meets Thursdays 7:00pm – 10:00pm West Orange Chess Club Degnan Park Field House (off Pleasant Valley Way) Alyssa Drive, West Orange 07052 Contact: John Hagerty 973-736-3433 4 Karam Circle, West Orange 07052 Meets Tuesdays 8:00pm – Midnight Westfield Chess Club Westfield YMCA, Ferris Place Contact: Todd Lunna 2124 Audonon Ave., So. Plainfield 07080 Bill Cohen (TD) 29 Hickory Street, Metuchen Contact: Todd Lunna 732 946-7379 Meets Sundays 2:30pm – 8:00pm Willingboro Chess Club Willingboro Kennedy Center 429 John F. Kennedy Way, Willingboro 08046 Contact: Curtis Warner 609-871-5700 Meets Saturdays 10:00am – 3:30pm Meets Tuesdays 6:00pm – 9:00pm Wizards of the Mind 30 Church Mall, Springfield 07081 Contact: Mark Schwartzman Website: www.wizardsofthemind.com 917-841-5589 Meets Saturday & Wednesday Nights Woodbury Chess Club Presbyterian Church South Broad Street, Woodbury 08096 Contact: Henry Feltman 856-845-5094 Meets Tuesdays 7:00pm n Contact Steve Ferrero at Ferrero@cyberdude.com if you would like your chess club listed for free! 4 From Our President Games From Around The State by Joe Ippolito, President New Jersey State Chess Federation by Steve Ferrero ‚ |Ì K n  Since our last issue of ACN, the summer was filled with much high-level chess. Our state hosted a very successful US Open in Cherry Hill, a Futurity, the New Jersey Open with one of the highest turnouts in years, and the United States Chess League (USCL). The USCL has seen our team draw two matches thus far against formidable teams from around the country. This team is anchored by Joel Benjamin, Dean Ippolito, Evan Ju, Mackenzie Molnar, and Mikhail Zlotnikov. So, who says the summers are slow in the chess world. Games still pouring in from the recent 108th Annual US Open from Cherry Hill await you as you turn the pages! Also, you will find some games and plenty of photos to enjoy just in from the 61st Annual New Jersey Open held in Somerset over this past Labor Day Weekend. IM Dean J. Ippolito (2472) GM Alexander Stripunsky (2686) st 6ss 61 NJ Open, Somerset, Rd. 6, TL 40/2 SD/1, Sep 3, 2007,ECO D07 Queen’s Gambit Declined - Chigorin Defense 1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nc6 3.cxd5 Qxd5 4.e3 e5 5.Nc3 Bb4 6.Bd2 Bxc3 7.Bxc3 exd4 8.Ne2 Nf6 9.Nxd4 O-O 10.Nb5 Qg5 11.h4 Qh6 12.Nxc7 Bg4 13.Qb3 Rad8 The summer seems to have been a foreboding of what to expect for the coming year of chess in New Jersey. We’ve got our regular servings on scholastic chess with the kickoff of the Grade Level Championships, more casual chess and tournaments being played at local clubs, schools seeing the light and incorporating chess into their after-school programs. We’ve got some innovative plans to use our recently state purchased sensor boards. You will see these in prominence at state run tournaments. The New Jersey Teachers Convention in Atlantic City, the largest teachers’ event in the country, will once again see the NJSCF’s presence with not one, but two booths. Could this be one of the reasons that schools in the state are seeing more interest in chess? 14.Qxb7 Rd6 15.Nb5 Re6 16.Bc4 Rxe3+ 17.Kf1 Qf4 18.Bxf6 Qxe4+ 19.Kg1 Re2 20.Bg5 Bc8 21.Nd6 Qc5 22.Be3 Qxd6 23.Qb5 Rc2 24.Qa4 Qd3 25.Kh2 Rc4 White Resigns Finally, I would like your comments on the revitalized appearance of the Atlantic Chess News. Steve Ferrero, our editor, has been working very hard to make the issues more attractive and interesting to you – our readers. Also, please note the NJSCF Board Directory on the first page of the issue. We’ve listed members with their emails, phone numbers, or addresses for you to contact them with your concerns, improvements, or acknowledgements of this hard-working group of volunteers to make chess in New Jersey the best it can possibly be. You can go to our website, www.NJSCF.org to find out what is going on in the chess community. You can also find out when our meetings are being held so that you can join us. In closing, the New Jersey State Chess Federation is looked upon by the rest of the state federations as a benchmark of what should be going on in chess. You have made this happen and look forward to your continued support throughout the coming year. Don’t Forget To Play In The Viking 4-County Open Which Is Being Held In Hackettstown, NJ!! November 17th Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes The last round pairings in the NJ Open showed (front left to right) GM Alexander Stripunsky & IM Dean J. Ippolito square off while (rear left – right) Thomas J. Bartell faces off against the experienced IM Anatoly Volovich. 5 Ken Thomas’ Viking Last Saturday Quads from Mt. Arlington on August 25th saw over 40 players including the scholastic players in the Kids Kwads. Results from the quads are below. Tournament directors are encouraged to forward copies of their crosstables to us at Atlantic Chess News for reporting of their tournaments’ results from across the state. Viking Last Saturday Quad#3 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Viking Last Saturday Quad#1 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes A rather unusual pairing came forth in the final round pitting longtime player, Brian Katz (top) against the young Alexander Ross Katz (no relation) in the Open section of the 61st Annual New Jersey Open. Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes Boris Privman (right) faces off with the Black pieces against Daftani Marajudin in round 6 of the 61st Annual New Jersey Open! Viking Last Saturday Quad#4 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Viking Last Saturday Quad#2 – Mt. Arlington, NJ K David A. Cole N 1998 Green Bay Open Champion Is Available For Private Instruction From $35 Hour. Flexible Hours. Group Lessons Also Accommodated. For More Information, Please Contact David At: 551-404-1568 Viking Last Saturday Quad#5 – Mt. Arlington, NJ 6 Viking Last Saturday Quad#6 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Viking Last Saturday Quad#8 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes A visually impaired player, Henry Olynik (right) from White Plains, New York, shown using a Braille chess set competes against Dario Alfred Dell ’Orto in the final round of the 61st Annual New Jersey Open on September 3rd. Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes Here, players from the U1600 section shown during the final round battling for their final places in the New Jersey Open. Everyone had fun in this perennial event. Viking Last Saturday Quad#7 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Viking Last Saturday Quad#9 – Mt. Arlington, NJ Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes Players in the U1900 section of the 61st Annual New Jersey Open getting their games underway in the final round. Viking Last Saturday Quad#10 – Mt. Arlington, NJ 7 Although GM Alexander Stripunsky from New York took clear 1st Place scoring 5/6 in the Open section of this year’s New Jersey Open, the 8-way tie for the title of top New Jersey player included the following players scoring 4½/6: IM Anatoly Volovich (winning the title on tiebreaks), FM Thomas J. Bartell, IM Mikhail Zlotnikov, FM Ilye Figler, IM Edward William Formanek, Victor C. Shen, & Jayson Lian. You may reference the crosstable below to see all of the participants in this section. And in the U1900 section we have the following final crosstable. 8 IM Mikhail Zlotnikov (2413) Dragan Milovanović (2249) st 6ss 61 NJ Open, Somerset, Rd. 3, TL 40/2 SD/1, Sep 2, 2007,ECO A25 English Opening vs King’s Indian w/…Nc6 w/o early d3 1.c4 e5 2.g3 g6 3.Bg2 Bg7 4.Nc3 Nc6 5.Nf3 d6 6.O-O Be6 7.d3 h6 8.Rb1 Qd7 9.Re1 Nge7 10.b4 O-O 11.b5 Nd8 12.Qb3 Kh7 13.a4 Bh3 14.Bh1 f5 15.a5 Ne6 16.b6 axb6 17.axb6 Nc5 18.Qc2 c6 19.Be3 Ne6 20.Ra1 d5 21.Rxa8 Rxa8 22.Na4 e4 23.dxe4 fxe4 24.Nh4 d4 25.Rd1 Rf8 26.Bg2 Bxg2 27.Nxg2 c5 28.Nf4 Nxf4 29.Bxf4 Qc6 30.Rb1 Nf5 31.Qd1 e3 32.f3 d3 33.Qxd3 Qxa4 34.Kg2 Qc6 35.Bxe3 Nxe3+ 36.Qxe3 Re8 37.Qd3 Bd4 38.e4 Ra8 39.Qe2 Qa4 40.Rd1 Qb3 41.Rd2 Qxb6 42.e5 Re8 43.f4 Qc6+ 44.Qf3 g5 45.Qxc6 bxc6 46.Kf3 Ra8 47.h4 Kg6 48.hxg5 hxg5 49.Kg4 gxf4 50.gxf4 Ra1 51.Rh2 Rg1+ 52.Kf3 Rc1 53.Rg2+ Kf7 54.Ke4 Rxc4 55.Kf5 Be3 56.e6+ Kf8 57.Ra2 Rf4+ 58.Ke5 Rd4 59.Ra8+ Ke7 60.Ra7+ Ke8 61.Kf6 Rd5 White Resigns Daniel Stark (1882P) Paul R. Joseph (1885) st 6ss 61 NJ Open, Somerset, Rd. 5, TL 40/2 SD/1, Sep 3, 2007,ECO B23 Closed Sicilian Defense – Lines w/o g3 1.e4 c5 2.f4 Nc6 3.Nf3 d6 4.Nc3 g6 5.Bc4 Bg7 6.d3 e6 7.O-O Nge7 8.Qe1 O-O 9.Qh4 Nd4 10.Nxd4 Bxd4+ 11.Kh1 d5 12.Bb3 b6 13.f5 exf5 14.Bg5 f6 15.Nxd5 Kh8 16.Nxf6 h5 17.Nxh5 gxh5 18.Qxh5+ Kg7 19.Qh6 Checkmate 9 Ola Osanyinjobi (1947) Victor C. Shen (2248) 12.Ngf3 Qe6 13.c4 Nd7 14.Rc1 f4 15.cxd5 Bxd5 16.Bc4 fxe3 17.fxe3 c6 18.Qe2 Bh6 th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 4, TL SD/1, Aug. 2, 2007,ECO B22 Sicilian Defense – Alapin’s Variation 1.e4 c5 2.c3 g6 3.d4 cxd4 4.cxd4 d5 5.exd5 Nf6 6.Nc3 Bg7 7.Bc4 O-O 8.Nge2 Nbd7 9.Bg5 Nb6 10.Bxf6 Bxf6 11.Bb3 Bg4 12.f3 Bd7 13.O-O Rc8 14.Ne4 Bg7 15.a4 Bf5 16.Nc5 Rb8 17.Nc3 Na8 18.a5 b6 19.axb6 Qxb6 20.Re1 R7d8 21.Rxe7 Qf6 22.Re5 Qh4 23.g3 Qf6 24.Rxa7 Rb4 25.f4 Qb6 26.Ra6 Qb8 27.d6 19.Rce1 Rf7 20.Nxe4 Qxe4 21.Bd3 Qg4 22.e4 Be6 23.Bc4 b5 24.h3 Bxc4 25.bxc4 Qh5 26.e5 e6 27.cxb5 cxb5 28.d5 Re8 29.Qxb5 Rb8 30.Qe2 Nf8 31.d6 Nd7 32.Bd4 Nb6 33.Rb1 Rfb7 34.Qf2 Nd5 35.Rxb7 Rxb7 36.Nh2 g5 37.Ng4 Bg7 38.Qf3 Qg6 39.Rc1 Qe8 40.Nf6+ Bxf6 41.exf6 Qg6 42.f7+ Black Resigns Ola Osanyinjobi (1947) Gerald Larsen (2127) 27…Bxe5 28.fxe5 Nb6 29.g4 Bc8 30.Rxb6 Rxb6 31.Nd5 Rbxd6 32.exd6 Qxd6 33.Ne4 Qa6 34.Ndf6+ Kg7 35.g5 Qb6 36.Nc5 Qd6 37.Nce4 Qf4 38.d5 Bf5 39.Qd4 Kf8 40.Nxh7+ Ke7 41.Qf6+ Kd7 42.Nc5+ Kc8 43.Qa6+ Kc7 44.Qc6+ Black Resigns th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 6, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 2, 2007,ECO B22 Sicilian Defense – Alapin’s Variation 1.e4 c5 2.c3 d5 3.exd5 Qxd5 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 Bg4 6.Be2 cxd4 7.cxd4 e6 8.Nc3 Bb4 9.O-O Bxc3 10.bxc3 O-O 11.h3 Bh5 12.c4 Qd6 13.a4 Rd8 14.a5 Nc6 15.a6 b6 16.Bg5 Rac8 17.Bxf6 gxf6 18.Re1 Bxf3 19.Bxf3 Nxd4 Donald Donlag (2036) Thomas S. Levine (1850) th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 7, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 3, 2007,ECO D85 Grunfeld Defense – Exchange Variation 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.Nf3 Bg7 6.g3 O-O 7.Bg2 Nxc3 8.bxc3 c5 9.O-O cxd4 10.cxd4 Nc6 11.e3 Be6 12.Rb1 Bxa2 13.Rxb7 Na5 14.Rb4 Bd5 15.Re1 Be4 16.Qa4 Bc6 17.Qa2 Bd5 18.Qe2 Rc8 19.Ba3 Nc4 20.Ra4 Qd7 21.Qd1 Nb6 22.Ra5 Nc4 23.Rxd5 Qxd5 24.Bxe7 Rfe8 25.Bc5 Qd7 26.Qd3 Rxc5 White Resigns 20.Bb7 Rc5 21.Qd3 Qc7 22.Re4 Nf5 23.Qc3 Nd6 24.Rg4+ Kf8 25.Qxf6 Rf5 26.Qh6+ Ke7 27.Qh4+ Kd7 28.Rd1 Qc5 29.Rgd4 Kc7 30.Rxd6 Rxd6 31.Qe7+ Kb8 32.Qe8+ Black Resigns Dean W. Brown (1458) Anthony P. Andrews (1800) th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 8, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 4, 2007,ECO A15 English Opening (by transposition) 1.Nf3 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.g3 Bg7 4.Bg2 O-O 5.O-O d6 6.d4 Re8 7.Nc3 Nbd7 8.e4 e5 9.d5 Nb6 10.b3 c6 11.Bg5 h6 12.Bh4 g5 13.Nxg5 hxg5 14.Bxg5 Bg4 15.Bxf6 Bxd1 16.Bxd8 Raxd8 17.Raxd1 cxd5 18.Nxd5 Nd7 19.Nc7 Re7 20.Rxd6 Rc8 21.Nd5 Black Resigns Final Position Clive Usiskin (1739) Alan Kobernat (2000) th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 7, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 3, 2007,ECO A80 Dutch Defense 1.d4 f5 2.Nd2 Nf6 3.e3 b6 4.Ngf3 g6 5.b3 Bg7 6.Bb2 O-O 7.Be2 d6 8.O-O Bb7 9.Ng5 Qd7 10.Bc4+ d5 11.Be2 Ne4 “Games From Around The State” Continued On Back Cover 10 support, as well as Michael Khodarkovsky who helped take her game to the next level. Some of her favorite tournaments that you can catch her in are the World Amateur Team East, NJ Junior, Susan Polgar Invitational, and the All Girls Nationals. Anna also recommends the following chess books to improve your game – Kasparov’s My Great Predecessors, and Dvoretsky’s Endgame Manual. She also offers some insightful tips on improving your game which include analyzing your own games (whether it’s with Fritz or a coach), reviewing your tactics, and just trying to uncover your mistakes and correct them. Scholastic Spotlight On Anna Matlin by Joe Ippolito, President New Jersey State Chess Federation K Ì Ø If the name Anna Matlin looks familiar, it should. She was our special writer in the last ACN issue on how it felt to be playing in the Susan Polgar Invitational. So we thought it would be a special tribute to actually see how this young talent got started in becoming one of the top female players in the state. Our Columbia Middle School 7th grader, a straight “A” student enjoys math, science, and reading. She particularly likes tennis and sports in general. Anna’s lofty chess goal is to make the US Women’s Olympiad team. For those of you that have seen Anna in action, you know that it will be just a short matter of time before she realizes her goals. For those of you that have never seen her in action, here is one of her favorite games from the NJ Junior where she defeats an opponent rated over 100 points above her. Karsten McVay (1898) Anna Matlin (1780) NJ Junior, Apr.29, 2007,ECO E48 Nimzo Indian Defense – Rubinstein Variation 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3 O-O 5.Bd3 d5 6.Nge2 Nbd7 7.O-O c6 8.a3 Bd6 9.h3 dxc4 10.Bxc4 Nb6 11.Bd3 e5 12.Qc2 h6 13.Rd1 Qc7 14.b4 a6 15.Bb2 Be6 16.Na4 Nxa4 17.Qxa4 e4 18.Bb1 Bc4 19.Nc3 Rfe8 20.Qc2 a5 First, we have to realize that this young Berkeley Heights resident is only 12 years old. She is nationally listed at #17 in the Top 50 for her age group, and #4 in the Girls Under 13. She has a cadre of over 50 trophies by virtue of her playing approximately 90 rated games per year. Her awards seem endless but she is most proud of her 1st Place finish in the All Girls Nationals 8 and Under, and 1st Place in New Jersey for 5th grade. Anna started playing chess at the age of 6. As Anna puts it, “My dad taught me how to move the pieces, followed by the tactics and strategies. Then I joined the Wizards of the Mind Chess Club.” Here, Anna gives credit for her success to Mark Schwartzman, who taught her all of the basic principles and really taught her to enjoy the game. She also includes her parents for her success for their steadfast 21.Nxe4? Bh2+ 22.Kh1 Nxe4 23.g3 Bxg3 24.fxg3 Qxg3 White Resigns 11 game is no guarantee of avoidance. For example, after 1.d4 d5 2.e4 e6 White can play 3.Be3 tempting Black to submit to 3...dxe4 leading into 3.Nc3 Nf6 5.f3; in the Caro-Kann Defense 1.d4 d5 2.e4 c6 the BDG can be reached with 3.Nc3 and if …dxe4 4.f3; and in the unusual Veresov Opening, after 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nc3 d5 3.e4, again, the BDG has been reached. Rethinking The Queen’s Pawn Game – Part II by Terese and David W. Hatch QP Ì The Blackmar-Diemer Gambit has an interesting and entertaining history, a fervent following and a multifaceted reputation. Its detractors will call it dubious for White and its devotees will label it dangerous for Black. Its following is fanatical and depending upon which blog or book or magazine you are reading, the BDG has been called both spurious and sound. Much like the Colle, the Grob, the St. George and the New York Yankees, the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit is loved by its fans and mocked by its critics as it is both one of the most misunderstood and maligned of chess opening systems and one of the most feared. The Blackmar-Diemer Gambit 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.f3 “At amateur level, all openings are sound.” Lombardy A gambit is an opening ploy in which one side graces the other side with the gift of a pawn. The gambit injects excitement into the game as early as the second move; it unbalances the position; it immediately puts the question to the opponent to make a critical decision; and it gives the gambiteer a chance to steer the game into a direction he wishes it to go. While gambits are not for the weak-kneed or the faint-of-heart, neither should one be too cavalier about playing a gambit. As Siegbert Tarrasch said, playing a gambit “to acquire a reputation of being a dashing player [comes] at the cost of losing a game.” Not all grandmasters had the same opinion as Tarrasch. As Jose Capablanca pointed out, there is honor in playing and accepting a gambit. When confronted with Frank Marshall’s taunt in the original Marshall Gambit game of 1909, Capablanca intuitively declared, “I felt that my judgment and skill were being challenged by a player who had every reason to fear both. I considered the position and then decided that I was honor bound, so to speak, to take the pawn.” But perhaps it is the inspirational words of Theodore Roosevelt that best captures the philosophy of a gambit: “It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled, or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who . . . at the best, knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who, at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly; so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.”1 The history of the BDG dates back to the early 1880s when American Armand Edward Blackmar introduced his analysis of the opening moves 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.f3 in an article he wrote for a chess magazine. The sacrificial concept of this opening along with its uncharted theory and the tactical opportunities the gambit produced inspired and confounded chess players until the turn of the century when an antidote to the lethal BDG appeared in the form of a counter gambit: 3…e5. (An example of how Black usurps all of White’s initiative is Walter v. Baum, 1984: 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.f3 e5 4.fxe4 Qh4+ 5.Kd2 Nf6 6.Bd3 Nxe4+ 7.Bxe4 Qxe4 8.dxe5 Bg4 9.Nf3 Nc6 10.Nc3 O-O-O+ 0-1). Then, in 1932, a significant theoretical novelty appeared by way of German tactician, Emil Joseph Diemer, who breathed new life into the opening by interpolating the move 3.Nc3 before f3 to counter the 3…e5 refutation. From 1932 to 1959, Diemer enjoyed enormous success with the BDG, and the strategy and tactics of the gambit forced players of the Black pieces to develop a variety of creative countermeasures. A century after Blackmar and 50 years after Diemer first played it, another resourceful American, Charles Diebert, again gave credibility and respect to the BDG by fearlessly employing it at the highest levels against opponents like Silman, Benjamin, Gulko, Kudrin, Rohde and Bisguier. Today, the BDG still enjoys success and notoriety in club, tournament, correspondence and OTB theme tournaments where some configuration or another of the BDG is being accepted, declined, deferred or avoided. One opening that is a gambit in the boldest sense of the word is the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit. In the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit, White intends to play in true gambit style by willingly forfeiting a pawn with no intention of recouping it. White’s follow up plan is to take control of open files for his rooks and long diagonals for his bishops. To be fair, however, Black is not totally without compensation. Accepting the pawn in the BDG will give Black an immediate material advantage. His goal will be to consolidate his position with an eye toward using that extra pawn to his advantage in the endgame. The following games give us a sense of (as Diemer said) “playing for mate from the first move.” Armand Edward Blackmar Farrar New Orleans, 1882 The genesis of the BDG. The Blackmar-Diemer Gambit is an anomaly in chess opening theory. The paradox of this opening is that, at first blush, White appears to be sacrificing a center pawn when in fact it is the sacrifice of the pawn on f3 that defines this gambit. On its face the sacrifice appears to be unsound and the games that usually ensue are played out in a swashbuckling style capable of producing wild, Tal-like sacrifices and tactics. Black can try to avoid the BlackmarDiemer by playing a quieter, closed opening such as the French Defense or the Caro-Kann Defense, however, the BDG is so transpositional that even shifting to an e-pawn 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.f3 exf3 4.Nxf3 e6 5.Bd3 For the price of a pawn White has a substantial lead in development. Black has expended time and given up space. 5...Nf6 6.c3 Be7 7.0–0 Nc6 8.Nbd2 h6 9.Ne4 White’s queen and bishops are raking the board, his rook is on a half-open file and his knights are in position to initiate a winning textbook combination. 9...0–0 10.Neg5 hxg5 11.Nxg5 White’s attack is pure and his plan is simple and straightforward. 1 Citizenship in a Republic - a speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, France by Theodore Roosevelt 23 April 1910. 12 6.Bg5 Be7 7.Bd3 Nbd7 8.0–0 h6 9.Bf4 c6 10.Kh1 0–0 11.Qd2 Re8 Black’s position is cramped; his bishop on c8, which is locked in by the pawns on e6 and c6, looks particularly dismal. At the cost of a mere pawn, White has completed his development and his pieces have scope and mobility. This is a position that BDGers are born for. 12.Bxh6 It doesn’t take much prompting for White to start sacrificing material in order to launch a swift and dangerous attack. Objectively, any computer worth its megabytes will rate this move as unsound, but that totally misses the swashbuckling spirit of the BDG. 12…gxh6 13.Qxh6 As with most BDG games, White has now come to the point of no return and must continue the attack by striking first before Black has a chance to consolidate his pieces and benefit from his huge material advantage. 11...Bd7? 11...g6 was necessary here. 12.Rxf6! Bxf6 13.Qh5 Re8 14.Bh7+ Kh8 15.Nxf7# 13...Bf8 14.Qh4 Bg7 15.Ne5 Qe7? Emil Josef Diemer Stefan Weinmann Baden Baden, 1980 15...c5 was Black’s last opportunity for counterplay as after 16.Ne4 Nxe4 (16...cxd4? does not work because of 17.Nxf6+ Nxf6 18.Rf3) 17.Qxe4 Nxe5 18.dxe5 Qg5 not only has White’s attack dissipated, he is down material and must defend against numerous threats. The BDG almost always lends itself to a quick kingside attack for White. This game is a good example of how White’s knights can wreak havoc in the BDG. Take note in this game how White’s knights have command of the board and are in complete control of the game. 16.Rf3 Nf8 16…c5 now would not work because 17.Rg3 Ne4 18.Qxe4 f5 19.Qf4 cxd4 20.Qxd4 Qc5 21.Qxc5 Nxc5 22.Bc4 Kf8 23.Ng6+ Kf7 24.Rf1 Bxc3 25.Rxf5+ wins. 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nc3 d5 3.e4 dxe4 4.f3 exf3 5.Nxf3 g6 6.Bc4 Bg7 7.0–0 0–0 8.Qe1 b6 9.Qh4 Qd7 10.h3 Ba6 11.Ne5 Qe8 12.Bxa6 Nxa6 13.Bh6 Nh5 14.Bxg7 Nxg7 15.Nd5 f6? 16.Nc6 17.Rh3 c5 18.Rf1 cxd4 19.Rff3 White intuitively presses on with his attack knowing his positional advantage is his only chance to secure the win. 19...dxc3? Objectively, Black must forego winning more material and concentrate on keeping the position as level as possible with 19...Ne4 20.Qxe4 dxc3 21.Qh7+ Nxh7 22.Bxh7+ Kh8 23.Nxf7+ Qxf7 24.Bg6+ Kg8 25.Bxf7+ Kf8 26.Bh5+ Ke7 27.Rf7+ Kd6 28.Rd3+ Ke5 29.Rxg7 cxb2 and although White still has an advantage, his initial attack has been repelled. 20.Rfg3 Ng6 21.Bxg6 Qd6 22.Bd3 Not 22.Bxf7+? because the pawn is poisoned and after 22...Kf8 23.Re3 cxb2 leads to a winning position for Black. 22...Kf8 23.Qg5 Ng4? If 23…Ke7 24.bxc3 Rh8 and Black can at least play on. 24.Ng6 Black must have been hoping to swindle White into playing 24.Nxg4?? when capturing this knight would cost White the game after 24...cxb2 25.Rf3 b1(Q)+ 26.Rf1 Qxf1+ 27.Bxf1 e5 and Black’s material advantage should be enough to win. 16...Rf7? 17.Ncxe7+ Kh8 18.Nxg6+ Kg8 19.Nge7+ Kh8 20.Nxf6 1-0 Charles Diebert John F. Burke US Amateur Team, 1987 24...fxg6?? This move opened the floodgates. 24…Kg8 would have been no better as the science of computer technology shows us 19 forced moves leading, mercifully, to checkmate: 24...Kg8 25.Rxg4 cxb2 (25...fxg6?? leads to instant demise in 4 26.Qxg6 Qxh2+ 27.Rxh2 Re7 28.Rh8+ Kxh8 29.Qh7#) 26.Rh8+ Bxh8 27.Nxh8+ Kf8 28.Ng6+ Kg8 29.Ne5+ Kf8 30.Qh6+ Ke7 31.Qh4+ f6 32.Rg7+ Kd8 33.Nf7+ Kd7 34.Nxd6+ Re7 35.Qa4+ Kc7 36.Qc4+ Kd8 37.Rg8+ Kd7 38.Qb5+ Kxd6 39.Qb4+ Kd5 40.Bc4+ Kc6 41.Bb5+ Kd5 42.Qc4+ Ke5 43.Qc5+ Kf4 44.Qd4+ Kf5 45.Bd3#. 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nc3 d5 3.e4 dxe4 After Diemer breathed new life into the BDG with 3.Nc3, a veritable cornucopia of defenses emerged. Black steers clear of the Hubsch Gambit (3…Nxe4 4.Nxe4 dxe4) in order to keep an important defender on the board. 4.f3 exf3 5.Nxf3 e6 Black selects the Euwe Defense. 13 25.Rf3+ Bf6 26.Rxf6+ Ke7 27.Rh7+ Kd8 28.Rf8+ 1-0 Instead of getting distracted with 28.Qxg4 cxb2 29.Rf1 Bd7 30.Bxg6 Rg8 and still having to work for the win, White chose the correct continuation with 28.Rf8+ as 28…Nf6 29.Qxf6+ Qe7 30.Qxe7#. Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes Here, we see players in several sections shown, some deep in thought during this year’s New Jersey Open during the final round. 11.Bxd5 Nc6 12.0–0 Rb8 Bxc2 14.Bxc6+ What followed after 13...Bxc2? was pretty uncomfortable for Black as 14.Bxc6+ pretty much gave White clear sailing (Roger Gotschall). Roger Gotschall (1410) Anila Shah (1789) 2007 US Open - Cherry Hill, NJ Mr. Gotschall graciously provided us with his comments for this game. 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.Nc3 Bf5 4.f3 e5 It seems that we got off of the beaten path when Black played 4...e5. I was expecting 4...exf3 or 4...Nf6 (Roger Gotschall). Off the beaten track indeed. We found this position in only two games in our BDG mega database, Lemke – Morjan (Corr. 1984 1-0) and lovejudges – CyniK (ICC 1998 0-1). Obviously, the merits of 4…e5 have yet to be determined. Photo provided courtesy of Aaron Kiedes 5.d5 Bb4 6.Bc4 Nf6 7.Bg5 h6 8.Be3 exf3 9.Nxf3 Bxc3+ 10.bxc3 Nxd5? Danny Balter (left) shown in round six slugging it out with Nikita Panasenko in the U1900 section of the 61st Annual New Jersey Open. Nikita and your Editor shared 1st & 2nd place respectively with 5/6 each scoring 4 wins and 2 draws. I think Black had the advantage until 10...Nxd5? After that White had a pretty good grip on the center with 11.Bxd5 or 11.Qxd5. (At that point I thought Black's best response was 11...c6) (Roger Gotschall). 14…bxc6 15.Qxc2 Qd5 16.Bxa7 Rb7 17.Bf2 0–0 18.Rfe1 f6 19.Rad1 Qc4 20.Re4 Qf7 21.Nh4 Rfb8 22.Nf5 Rb2 23.Qd3 Rxa2 24.Rg4 Kh8 25.Rxg7 Qe8 26.Qh3 Rxf2 26...h5 only holds off mate for a few more moves 27.Qg3 Qf7 28.Rxf7 Rg8 29.Qxg8+ Kxg8 30.Rg7+ Kf8 31.Rd8#. Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! 27.Qxh6# 1–0 All in all, the BDG is simply fun to play. It has been a long time favorite of mine (Roger Gotschall). Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com 14 White might have tried 30.b4 axb4 31.axb4 hoping for 31...Qxb4?! 32.Rea3, but 31...R8d3 maintains Black's edge. Opening Forum: Budapest Gambit Fajarowicz Variation 30...Qc5 31.b4 axb4 32.Qb2 R8d3 33.Rxd3 Qg1+ 34.Kg3 Rxd3+ White Resigns by Life Master James R. West It is interesting to note that White's rook and bishop stayed parked on their original squares! nÌ Ê Ñ Game #2 Sandi Hutama (2219) James R. West (2200) In March 2007, while playing in a tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, I bought “The Fighting Fajarowicz” [Chess Digest, 1996, 228 pages] by Tim Harding. One advantage to purchasing a book in person rather than on-line or by mail is that it affords you the opportunity to browse before buying. My shopping spree has already paid dividends, as I have defeated a couple of masters and drawn another with the Fajarowicz after the opening moves 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4. There has also been a draw against a master who declined the Budapest Gambit with 3.d5. 3rr Mt. Arlington Quads, TL G/90, April 28, 2007,ECO A51 Budapest Gambit Declined 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.d5 Bc5 4.e3 O-O (4...d6 5.Nc3 O-O 6.Nf3 c6 7.Be2 cxd5 8.cxd5 Bf5 9.O-O a6 10.a4 Nbd7 was equal, however, it was 0-1 in 41 moves, Bekmuhkamedova-Vo, Bratislava 1993) 5.Nc3 c6 6.g4 (6.Bd3 cxd5 7.cxd5 a6 8.a3 b5 9.b4 Bb6 10.Bb2 Re8 11.Nge2 d6 12.Ng3 Bb7 13.Qb3 Nbd7 14.h3 Rc8 15.O-O with a small advantage for White although 0-1 in 72 moves, Pixton-Monokroussos, Internet Chess Club 2000) The Fajarowicz Variation is to 1.d4 what the Philidor Counter Gambit is to 1.e4, namely fighting chess! You will not find many positional moves in these sharp lines. 6…cxd5 7.cxd5 Qa5 8.Bg2 d6 9.g5 Ne8 10.Nge2 f6 11.h4 b5 12.Bd2 b4 13.Ne4 Na6 14.gxf6 Nxf6 15.Nxf6+ Rxf6 16.Ng3 Bd7 17.Ne4 Rg6 18.Bf3 Rf8 19.h5 Rh6 20.Rg1 Bb6 21.Ng5 Nc5 22.Be2 Bd8 Game #1 Mark Kernighan (2215) James R. West (2200) 3rr Hamilton Quads, TL 40/80 15/30, April 21, 2007,ECO A51 Budapest Gambit – Fajarowicz Variation 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4 4.Nf3 Bb4+ 5.Nbd2 Nc6 6.Qc2 d5 7.exd6ep Bf5 8.Qd1 Qxd6 9.e3 (9.a3 Bxd2+ 10.Bxd2 O-O-O 11.Qc1 Rhe8 12.b4 Nd4 13.Nxd4 Qxd4 14.Be3 Qe5 15.Bf4 Rd1+! 16.Qxd1 Qc3+ 17.Bd2 Nxd2 18.Qxd2 Qxa1+ 19.Qd1 Qxa3, 0-1, ZiewitzHagen, Schleswig 1963) 9…O-O-O 10.Be2 Qf6 11.Qb3 Nc5 12.Qd1 Nd3+ 13.Bxd3 Bxd3 14.a3 Bxd2+ 15.Nxd2 Ne5 16.f4 Nxc4 17.Nxc4 Bxc4 18.Qg4+ Kb8 23.a3 Bxg5 24.axb4 Qd8 25.bxc5 Bh4 26.Rg2 Black now seizes the opportunity to force a draw by perpetual check. 26...Rxf2 27.Rxf2 Bxf2+ 28.Kxf2 Qh4+ 29.Kg1 Qg3+ 30.Kh1 Bf5 31.Ra4 Qh3+ 32.Kg1 Qg3+ 33.Kh1 Draw Agreed Game #3 FM Ilye Figler (2300) James R. West (2200) Marshall Chess Club, TL G/30, July 29, 2007,ECO A51 Although material is even with bishops of opposite colors, Black has a huge plus due to his lead in development. Budapest Gambit – Fajarowicz Variation 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4 4.Nf3 Bb4+ 5.Bd2 Nxd2 6.Nbxd2 Nc6 7.a3 Bxd2+ 19.Kf2 Rd6 20.Re1 Rhd8 21.Qf3 Bb3 22.e4 Rd3 23.Re3 Bd1 24.e5 Qb6 25.Qg3 g6 26.h4 a5 27.Kg1 Bc2 28.Qf2 Rd1+ 29.Kh2 Bf5 30.a4 (7...Bf8!? 8.Qc2 g6 9.Qc3 Bg7 10.Ne4 Nxe5! 11.Nxe5 Qe7 12.f4 d6 =/+, Vol-Glaskov, Moscow 1990) 15 5.exd6 Bxd6 6.Nd2 8.Qxd2 Qe7 9.Qc3 O-O 10.Rd1 Re8 11.Rd5 b6 12.e3 Bb7 13.Bd3 White avoids the trap 6.Nf3?? Nxf2! 7.Kxf2 Bg3+!! (13.Be2 Rad8 14.O-O Nb8 15.Rc1! Bxd5 16.cxd5 d6 17.Bb5 Rf8 18.e4 a6 19.Bd3, Smyslov-Steiner, Groningen 1946 when Smyslov recommends 19...Rfe8!? 20.e6 fxe6 21.dxe6 c5 22.Bc4 as Black's best try, a position which Fritz 8 evaluates as = after 22...Rc8) 6...Bf5 7.Ngf3 Bc5?! Chess for Veterans The NJSCF has decided to provide chess equipment to the Veterans in the various hospitals in NJ. We are asking the chess players to assist us in this project by either donating a computer chess game set that you no longer use, but is in good condition, or make a donation. (not tax deductible). 13…Rad8 14.h4 Nb8 Anyone wishing to donate a chess computer game should contact Herman Drenth at: 201-797-9043 or hermaril@aol.com. Financial donations may be sent to our Treasurer, Ken Thomas made out to the NJSCF, 115 West Moore Street, Hackettstown, NJ 07840. Please signify “Veterans Fund“ on the check. Thank You. Moving this piece twice is inaccurate. Black should play 7...O-O with a lead in development. 15.b4 c5 16.Rh3 8.e3 O-O 9.Be2 Black answers 16.Rd6 with 16...f6 giving a slight advantage to White. White could have exploited Black's 7th move by 9.b4! Qf6 10.Ra2. 16...cxb4 17.axb4 Bxd5 18.cxd5 Rc8 19.Qd4 d6 20.e6 fxe6 21.dxe6 9...Qf6 10.Qb3 Nc6 11.Nxe4 Bxe4 12.Bd2 Rfe8 13.h4 h6 14.h5 a5 15.Bc3 Qe6 16.Qa4 Ra6 White misses 21.Qe4 g6 22.h5 exd5 23.Qxd5+ Qe6 24.Qxe6+ Rxe6 25.Rg3 which is approximately equal. 21...Nc6 22.Bxh7+?! Kh8 Capturing the bishop looks risky, but Black should win after 22...Kxh7 23.Ng5+ Kh6 24.Qf4 Ne5. 23.Qe4 d5 24.Qxd5 Qxb4+ 25.Kf1 Qa5 26.Qe4 Qa1+ 27.Ne1 Ne5 28.f4 Rc1 29.fxe5 Rxe1+ 30.Kf2 Rf1+ 31.Kg3 Qe1+ 32.Kg4 Qd1+ 33.Kg5 On 33.Rf3 Rxf3 34.gxf3 Qg1+ 35.Kh5, a drawn queenand-pawn ending is the result after 35...Rxe6 36.Bg6 Rxg6 37.Qxg6 Qxe3. 33...Qd8+ 34.Kg4 Qd1+ 35.Kg5 Qd8+ Draw Agreed Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! 17.Rh3 Bb4! I had counted on this move to take the sting out of 18.Rg3. 18.Rc1 Bxc3+ 19.Rxc3 Rb6 20.Rb3? Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com White must play 20.b3, but Black is already better because of White's poorly placed queen. Game #4 Lorand Kis (2207) James R. West (2203) 20...Bc2 21.Bd1 Rxb3 22.Bxc2 Rxb2 23.Kf1 Rd8 24.Rh4 Qf6 25.Kg1 Qc3 26.Bf5 Qb3 27.c5 Qxa4 28.Rxa4 Rb5 29.Rc4 Rd5 30.g4 Rbxc5 31.Re4 Rd8 32.Kg2 Kf8 6ss NJ Open, Somerset, TL 40/2 SD/1, Sep. 2, 2007,ECO A51 Budapest Gambit – Fajarowicz Variation 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4 4.a3 d6 An easier win is 32...b5 followed by 33...b4. 33.Rf4 Rd6 34.Kg3 Rf6 35.Re4 Ne7 36.Bd7 Rd6 37.Ba4 b5 38.Bb3 a4 39.Ba2 Rc2 40.Bb1 Rb2 White Resigns (4...Qh4?! 5.g3 Qh5 6.Bg2 Qxe5 7.Nf3 Qh5 8.O-O d6 9.Nd4 Nf6 10.Nc3 Be7 11.e4 Qxd1 12.Rxd1 O-O 13.Bf4 +/- and 1-0 in 62 moves, Flear-Bellon, Bern 1991) 16 6.h3 Bh5 7.g4 Bg6 8.Ne5 e6 9.Qf3 c6 10.g5 Nd5 11.Bd3 Nbd7 Defeating Masters With The Blackmar-Diemer by Lev D. Zilbermints, Chess Champion of Essex County 11…Qc7 was seen in Lev D. Zilbermints – Ivan Kaplan, 25th Nassau Class Championship, 6/18/2007. That game continued 12 Bxg6 hxg6 13 Nxd5 cxd5 14 0-0 Bd6? 15 Qxf7+! Qxf7 16 Nxf7! Rxh3 17 Nxd6 Ke7 18 Nxb7 Nc6 19 c3 Rah8 20 Bf4 R8h4 21 Kg2 Rd3 22 Rf3 Rxf3 23 Kxf3 Kd7 24 Nc5+ Ke7 25 Re1 Nd8 26 Bc7 Nf7 27 Rxe6+ Kf8 28 Nd7+ Kg8 29 Re8+ Kh7 30 Nf8+, Black Resigns. Å Ñ n As faithful readers of Atlantic Chess News know, I have been playing the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit (BDG) since 1991 in tournaments, blitz, correspondence, and on the Internet. I have had some nice wins over strong masters, thereby proving the skeptics wrong. Below you will find two of my games against masters, plus a few in the notes, played recently. 12.Nxg6 hxg6 13.Nxd5 cxd5 14.0-0 Qe7 A classic BDG position has arisen. Black’s pieces are all hunched around his King, while White goes on attacking. Believe it or not, this position is very common in the Teichmann Defense. Lev D. Zilbermints (1981) Mark Kernighan (2200) Westfield Quads, June 3, 2007, ECO D00 Blackmar-Diemer Gambit 1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.Nc3 This is Diemer’s improvement over the original 3.f3?! as proposed by Armand Edward Blackmar. The point is that after 3.f3 e5! Black has a great game, whereas White has to struggle for equality. 3…Nf6 4.f3 White’s 4th move constitutes the BlackmarDiemer Gambit. 15.Kg2! A subtle move, the point of which is to prevent …Qg3+ and to protect the h3-pawn. Most people will play something else here, leaving the g3-square vulnerable. I think prophylactics before the final attack is important. After all, White does not want to face a possible …Rxh3 or …Qg3+, right? 15…Nb8 16.c4 dxc4 17.Be4 Here, the idea is to hit the b7-square and bring the Bishop into the game. 17…Nd7 18.Bd2 Rh4 19.a3 0-0-0 20 Bxb7+ Kb8 21.Be4? I missed 21.Qg3! here, winning a Rook for a Bishop. 21…e5 22.Rae1 f5 23.gxf6ep gxf6 24.Qg3 Rh8 25.dxe5 Nxe5 26.Bc3 Bg7 27.Bf3 g5 28.Re4 Rd3 29.Rxc4 Qd6 30.Rb4+ Kc8 31.Bxe5 fxe5 32.Bg4+ Kd8 33.Bf3 Rf8 34.Re4! Rd2+ 35.Kh1 and eventually 1-0. Now 4…e5 is no longer possible, as 5.dxe5! attacks the knight on f6. Sure, that does not stop Black from playing the Elbert Countergambit (that is it’s name), but it does lose very quickly after 5.dxe5 Nd7 6.Nb5 Kd8 7.Bg5+ f6 and White wins a pawn or two. 4…exf3 5.Nxf3 Bg4 Black’s 5th move constitutes the Teichmann Defense. k Life Master James R. West q Is Available For Private Instruction From $40 - $60/Hour During The Evenings. For More Information, Please Contact: 973-820-7525 Other tries: a) 5… c5 Kaulisch Defense 6.d5 e6 7.Bb5+ Bd7 8.dxe6 fxe6 9.Bc4 a6 10.a4 Nc6 11.Qe2 Qe7 12.0-0 0-0-0 13.Re1 g6? 14.Bxa6! Nd4! 15.Nxd4 cxd4 16.Ne4 Nxe4 17.Qxe4 bxa6?? 18.Qa8+ Kc7 19.Qa7+ Kd6 20.Bf4+ e5 21.Bxe5 Qxe5 22.Rxe5 Kxe5 23.Re1+ Kd5 24.c4+ dxc4 25.Rd1+ Kc6 26.Qxa6+ Kc7 27.Qa5+ Kb8 28.Qxd8 Black Resigns Lev D. Zilbermints – Grant Oen, Westfield G/30, 6/10/2007 My next opponent was a lot stronger and somewhat arrogant. We have played before, years ago, and while I managed to beat him in a few games, he usually came out the winner. But this time, things turned out differently! Watch how the contest develops: Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! b) 5…g6 Bogoljubow Defense 6.Bc4 e6? 7.0-0 Bg7 8.Bg5 Nbd7 9.Qe1 0-0 10.Qh4 Qe8 11.Nb5 Nb6 12.Nxc7 Qd8 13.Nxa8 Nxc4 14.Ne5 Nxe5 15.dxe5 Bd7 16.Rad1 Qc8 17.Bxf6 Bd8 18.Rd8 Bxf6 19.exf6! Qxd8 20.Qh6 Qd4+ 21.Kh1 Black Resigns Lev D. Zilbermints – Eugene Vetter, Freeport, Long Island, G/70, 6/28/2007. Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com 17 Lev D. Zilbermints (1999) Ernest Colding (2234) Westfield G/30, June 10, 2007, ECO D00 Blackmar-Diemer Gambit – Euwe Defense 1.d4 Nf6 2.f3 d5 3.e4 dxe4 4.Nc3 exf3 5.Nxf3 e6 constitutes the Euwe Defense. It was recommended in the 1950’s by former World Champion Dr. Max Euwe, after whom it is named. 6.Bg5 Be7 7.Bd3 Nbd7 8.0-0 c5 The last move is not that common. Out of over 2 million games, I could only find 17 games with it in the German www.chesslive.de online computer database. 9.dxc5 Here, other moves are possible: a) 9.Qe1 a6 10.d5!? exd5 11.Nh4 c4 12.Nf5 cxd3 13.Nxd5 0-0 14.Nfxe7+ Kh8 15.Bxf6 Nxf6 16.Rxf6! Be6 17.Qh4 Bxd5 18.Rh6! Be4 19.Rh5 Qd4+ 20.Kh1 Qxb2 21.Rf1 Bxg2+ 22.Kxg2 Qxc2+ 23.Kh1 d2 24.Rd5 Rae8 25.Qb4 a5 26.Qh4 Qc1 27.Qxh7+!! Kxh7 28.Rh5+! Black Resigns Really, I have no idea why Colding played this move, giving up the Queen for two Rooks. Perhaps, as the flow of the game showed, he did not analyze deep enough. Me, I calculated that after 16…Qa3 17.Re3 Qa5 18.Bf6 gxf6 19.Ne5 Black has real problems with development. Admittedly, I analyzed only part of the above-cited variation; the rest was found during the typing of this article. D. Kaczmarczyk – Blasius Nuber, 19th Salzburg Schwarzsach Open – B, 2004.08.21. b) 9.d5 Nxd5 10.Nxd5 Bg5?? 11.Nxg5! exd5 12.Nxf7 Qb6 13.Qe1+ 1-0, Stefan Nussbaum – Frank Entz, Bernkastel – Kues SJR – ch U20, 1996. 17.Rxb2 Nxb2 18.Bc1 9…Nxc5 10.Bb5+ Bd7 Here the database gives only three games with this move order. White emerged the victor in one game while Black won the two remaining games. Mind you, in one game White resigned prematurely! 11.Qe2 a6 This move is not in the database. Previously seen was 11…Qb6, as in Ertel – G. Schuh, correspondence 1998. That game continued 12.Be3 Bxb5 13.Nxb5 a6 14.Nbd4 0-0 15.c3 Nd5 16.Bf2 Bd6 17.Rad1 Qc7 18.c4 Nf4 19.Qc2 Ng6 20.b4 Nd7 21.c5 Bf4 22.Ne2 Nde5 23. Nxe5 Bxe5 24.Bg3 b6 and White prematurely resigned. Sure, he is a pawn down, but so what? He could still fight on and draw the game. Personally, I have fought back from worse odds and prevailed! Though it must be said that my games were over-the-board, not postal! Here I offered a draw, concerned about my opponent’s seeming compensation. Colding replied, “You are asking me for a draw? Draw declined.” I took a look at the position, saw that I could win a free piece, and answered, “Okay, have it your way!” 18…Ba3 19.Nb1! This was the move that Colding missed. … Rd8 Trying for a cheapo on d1. 20.Nfd2 0-0 21.Nxa3 Na4 22.Qf3 Nd5 23.Nac4 b5 24.Ba3 bxc3? Here 24…Rfd8 was best. Now White gets a decisive advantage. 25.Bxf8 Kxf8 26.Qa3+ Ne7 27.h4 c3 28.Ne4 Rd4 29.Nxc3 Rxh4+ 30.Kg1 Nb6 31.Qd6! f6 32.Qxb6 Rc4 33.Qb3 Rc6 34.Ne2 Kf7 35.c4 Rc5 36.Qb6 Rc4 37.Qxa6 Rc6 38.Qb5 Rc2 39.a4 Nd5 40.Nd4 Rc1+ 41.Kh2 Re1 42.Qd7+ Kg6 43.Nxe6 Rd1 44.Nf4+ Kg5 45.Nxd5 g6 46.Qe6 f5 47.a5 h5 48.Qe3+ Black Resigns. After saying “I resign”, my opponent tore up his scoresheet. There was this case, eleven years ago, when International Master Angelo Young got cocky trying to win the game and stalemated me! He had two Queens, a Knight, a Rook, four pawns, and another one about to Queen. I had a lone King with nowhere to move. And, oh yeah, the opening was a Blackmar-Diemer Gambit! I will publish that game next time. 12.Bxd7+ Ncxd7 13.Rad1 Qb6+ 14.Kh1 Qxb2 Uh-oh! This pawn grab must be similar to the Sicilian Defense: Poisoned Pawn Variation! 15.Rd3 I had thought about all kinds of tactics involving sacrifices on f6 and d7, but everything is too well defended. Thus the text move is played. 15…Nc5 16.Rb1 Nxd3? Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! Don’t Forget To Play In The Viking 4-County Open Which Is Being Held In Hackettstown, NJ!! November 17th Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com 18 The editor of the Atlantic Chess News, Steve Ferrero, gave us a heads up on this game. A strong amateur is playing “chess pirate”— using a dubious opening to try and get the edge right off the bat. Chess Gems by Peter J. Tamburro Jr. n q Ä The old chestnut Balasubramanian pulled out was the Tennison Gambit, which had a brief spell of popularity in the late 1800s. The easiest way to meet this gambit is 3...Nc6 4.Nxe4 Nf6 5.Nbc3 Nxe4 6.Nxe4 Bf5 7.Ng3 Bg6; although, we would love to see someone try 3...Qd4 4.d3 Nf6 5.Nc3 Bg4 6.Be3 Bxd1 7.Bxd4 Bxc2 8.dxe4 h6 9.Rc1 hxg5 10.Rxc2 Nc6 11.Bb5 0–0–0 12.Be3 (12.Bxc6 Rxd4) 12...Nd4. There is an old chess saying, “He who takes the queen knight pawn, sleeps in the streets.” Well, there are still people taking the b-pawn and still sleeping in the metaphorical chess streets. Andrei Grekh proves the value of the old wisdom to Valery Grinev at the Third Geller Memorial Open held this month in Odessa in Ukraine. Black, in the game, could also have gone with 4...Be6 5.Qh5 Nc6 6.Bb5 Bd6 7.Nbc3 Nf6. Instead, he opted for sharper play. The opening is very old time, too. White grabs his space advantage in the Advanced Caro-Kann with a style we haven’t seen in a while. Yes, the Advanced Caro-Kann is played a lot, but those familiar with it will notice White’s rather ancient attitude. White had his pitfalls to avoid, too. On move seven, 7.Na4 Bxf2+ 8.Kxf2 Qd4+ 9.Ke1 Qh4+ 10.g3 Qe4+ would have been embarrassing. We were not too fond of 7…e4 and even less so of 10…exd3ep, which just helped White’s development. Better would have been 10…Bb6. However, one really dubious move was 11…c6. A more energetic try would have been 11...Qe7 12.Be3 0–0 13.0–0–0 Ng4 14.Bxc5 Qxc5 15.Rhe1 Rae8. Maybe Black picked up on that, too, and felt he could get away with taking the b-pawn, and after attacking the rook on b7 with Nc5, he could then gobble up the h-pawn on the other side of the board after the rook moved from the knight attack. White had a great move up his sleeve: 20.Nb5! Black’s queen is attacked. There is a mate threat on d7 and White can even plant the knight on d6 with check. What a disaster in just one move! The final nail in the coffin was 13…Qc8?? To get any play at all, Black had to play 13...Qe7 14.Nd6+ (14.Qxe7+ Kxe7 15.Na3 Nb4 16.g3 Nxd3+ 17.cxd3 Ng4) 14...Bxd6 15.Bxa6 (15.Qxa8+ Kf7) 15...Bd7+ 16.Be2 Rb8 17.Qxa7 Rxg2, and it’s still a fight. Don’t take that queen knight pawn!! Andrei Grekh (2355) Valery Grinev (2242) Thus, White’s choice of openings unsettled Black. We hope our readers will take note, so this disaster will not befall them when they’re Black. rd 3 Geller Memorial Open, Odessa Ukraine 2007, ECO B12 Caro-Kann Defense – Advance Variation 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 Bf5 4.Be3 e6 5.Nd2 Nd7 6.f4 c5 7.Ngf3 Bg4 8.Be2 Ne7 9.O-O Nf5 10.Bf2 Rc8 11.c3 Qb6 12.h3 Bxf3 13.Nxf3 Qxb2 Adit Balasubramanian (2181) Geoffrey Herman (1973) th 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 7, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 3, 2007,ECO A06 Tennison Gambit 1.e4 d5 2.Nf3 dxe4 3.Ng5 e5 4.Nxe4 f5 5.Nec3 Be6 6.Na3 Bc5 7.Qf3 e4 8.Qg3 Nf6 9.Nab5 Na6 10.d4 exd3ep 11.Bxd3 c6 14.g4 Ne7 15.c4 dxc4 16.Bxc4 cxd4 17.Rb1 Qa3 18.Nxd4 a6 19.Rxb7 Nc5 20.Nb5 Black Resigns Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com 12.Qxg7 Rg8 13.Qxb7 Qc8 14.Qxa6 cxb5 15.Bxb5+ Kf7 16.Qxc8 Bxc8 17.Bc4+ Be6 18.Bxe6+ Kxe6 19.g3 Ng4 20.O-O Rab8 21.b3 Bd4 22.Bb2 Rbc8 23.Rae1+ Kf7 24.Nb5 Bxf2+ 25.Rxf2 Nxf2 26.Nd6+ Black Resigns 19 so. The Magician from Riga was a monumental player and jovial personality, but even more fortunate for the rank and file he was a first class journalist. This autobiography written in biography form (Tal as interviewer and interviewee!), is as honest a book written by a world class sportsman as you will find. No other chess player before had included so much of his own private and professional life while still competing. Then there were the games, which were presented postscript at the end of each chapter like a wonderful afterthought, a second book themselves. In my opinion, this book sets the standard for which any chess autobiography, biography, or game collection should be measured by. Stranded On A Desert Island? Twelve Modern Chess Books To Pack! by Ken Calitri r Ø c As a chess player one of my greatest fears is being stuck on a desert island without chess books. C’mon, be honest, you’ve had the same uneasy feeling: “I can’t bring my library on this cruise, so what would I pack in the event some glassy-eyed Sea Captain sinks the boat?” Having thought about this at length, I decided on 12 books, 12 Wilson’s if you will -- one for every month just in case no one has the foggiest notion where you are. The 1980’s – The Two Kings 4) Chess at the Top by Anatoly Karpov This game collection covers 1979-1984 when Karpov was nearly invincible. It includes every game from his 1981 Merano World Championship Match, in which he dismantled Viktor Korchnoi. Karpov is a very good teacher; his text annotations are clear and concise and he limits his analysis to key lines to not overwhelm the reader. This collection is a self-portrait of his style and results right before his matches with Kasparov. Most of us forget that if Karpov had moved 33.a6 in game 41 of the first Moscow match he would have won 6-1 and we would probably be considering him the greatest of all time. This is the perfect book to re-discover Karpov and learn from his best games. For the trip, I’m picking the books based on the following criteria: 1. They must be modern i.e. written after 1970 with each decade represented equally 2. Variety is the spice of life – you won’t find 12 Informants on the list! 3. All are masterpieces! An overused phrase to be sure, however, separated into its original form ‘a master’s piece’ – each book is unique and well crafted The 1970’s – End of the Golden Era 5) The Test of Time by Garry Kasparov This book is similar to “Chess at the Top”. It covers all major GM events in Kasparov’s career ending with his Semi-Final Candidates victory over Smyslov in 1984. This heavily annotated collection brims with Kasparov’s youthful exuberance, zeal and genius for the game, while the selected games cover a wide variety of opponents and openings. Reading this book and “Chess at the Top” will provide weeks of happy study and will transport you to a critical juncture in the history of chess, right before they would begin a titanic struggle for the World Chess Crown. 1) Fischer Versus Spassky Reykjavik 1972 by CHO’D Alexander I’ve read every book in English on this match and with all due respect to Robert Byrne and Ivo Nei’s book I keep coming back to this one as my all time favorite. The late CHO’D Alexander’s top shelf writing brings the background drama and games to life like no other book on this match. His insightful introductions and lengthy annotations read like short stories. Reading this book you will think it was an eyewitness account, but in truth Alexander wrote this book from a hospital bed, making it all the more noteworthy. 6) Moscow 1985, Karpov versus Kasparov by Yuri Averbakh and Mark Taimanov This unheralded match book covers both Moscow World Championship matches; the aborted 48 game marathon and the fixed 24 game rematch. This book treats you to 72 chess lessons given by two seasoned Russian Grandmasters. Not only do you get game introductions and heavily annotated games, but also the time allotment for each move as well. Also, you may want to stow away books on the London 1986 and Seville 1987 matches in your partner’s suitcase! 2) Simple Chess by Michael Stean In 1976, GM Michael Stean published this short treatise on positional chess, which quickly faded out-of-print. Years ago I read a comment by Euwe, “You will begin understanding chess when you realize chess is all about SQUARES.” To punctuate his point, Euwe had an empty board diagram accompany the quote. His comment was an epiphany to me, but for me “Simple Chess” was my “AHA!” moment in chess. Twenty years later, I was standing in Fred Wilson’s chess book store in NYC. Fred, over the years, provided consulting to Dover Publishing, recommending chess books they should republish. That day he was asking for ideas and I emphatically suggested to him, “Fred, Simple Chess is an unsung classic!” For months I kept haranguing Fred until one day he happily told me, “Simple Chess” would be republished by Dover. The 1990’s – Long Live the King 7) Five Crowns by Yasser Seirawan and Jonathan Tisdall This book covers the final 1990 New York/Lyon World Championship Match between the two K’s. Seirawan honed his journalistic chops for over a decade as the chief contributor for “Inside Chess” magazine. Here Yasser vividly captures every aspect of the match; the sporting moments, psychological factors and moves themselves 3) The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal by Mikhail Tal This colossal book was an instant classic and deservedly 20 with clarity, conviction and excitement. The chess was particularly bloodthirsty and the result could have easily gone either way. This is a great book and the best one written on this match. Yasser also wrote ‘No Regrets Fischer/Spassky 1992’, which is a must for any chess library. 8) End Game by Dominic Lawson I think we need to start adding a few books for pure chess reading pleasure. “End Game” fits the bill. This is an illuminating prose account of Nigel Short’s odyssey over several candidate cycles to qualify for a World Championship Match and his 1993 London World Championship Match versus Kasparov. Dominic Lawson was a good friend and advisor to Short so this is an insider’s eyewitness account. The score was lopsided, but a closer look reveals it to be as exciting as the “Thrilla in Manilla”. It’s as good a read as any novel. Photo provided courtesy of Steve Ferrero Players in the Open section on day two enjoying themselves during this year’s New Jersey Open from September 1st – 3rd in Somerset, New Jersey. 9) The King – Chess Pieces by Jan Hein Donner Here is another selection for reading pleasure. It is a compilation of prose articles written for Dutch newspapers and chess magazines over 25 years by the late Dutch GM Jan Hein Donner, who was at the top of top of Dutch chess for twenty years before giving way to Ree and Timman. This volume won Dutch literary awards and the English edition expanded Donner’s reputation worldwide. The stories will have you snorting and chuckling with every cut and thrust of his journalistic pen. Along the way you’ll learn a lot about chess. Think of Art Buchwald and Nigel Short mind melding. 12) San Luis 2005 by Alik Gershon and Igor Nor I just bought this tournament book and it is worth every penny! It’s sumptuously produced; over 400 glossy pages, tons of color photos, in-depth game annotations, player profiles, round-by-round summaries. Plus, the book is supple and lies completely flat when opened. This may be the best tournament book since Zurich 1953. The authors are not David Bronstein but they’ve given us a Herculean effort. The San Luis lineup without Kasparov and Kramnik doesn’t match up to the superstar lineup of Zurich 1953, but it’s still a formidable group, even if the tournament was sadly only a double round robin event. Regardless, this is already one of my favorite tournament books. The 2000’s – Looking Past, Looking Foward 10) Russian Silhouettes by Gena Sosonko Here is another selection for reading pleasure. This is a collection of wonderful nostalgic character portraits of primarily Russian chess personalities from the Golden Era of Soviet chess. GM Sosonko has written very human and honest stories of what it is like to live as a chess player in the former Soviet Union. We experience the highs of those who were able to climb to greater chess heights and those who, for one reason or another, faded to different fates and in some cases miseries. The publication of this book was a literary high water mark for chess. I almost forgot one will need companions on the island so I decided to bring along some “friends”. Bearing in mind the need for a social network and decent tournament lineup I chose the following party animals to come along: Yasser Seirawan, Jan Timman, Jonathan Rowson, Almira Schripchenko, Jennifer Shahade, Antonaeta Stefanova, and Judit Polgar (OK, she doesn’t party but she is the best player of the lot)! 11) Chess Training for Budding Champions by Jesper Hall This instructional book blew me away. It renewed my interest in the chess learning/training process. It is also somewhat of a personal account, as each lesson touches on Hall’s development as player, person, and coach. There are 15 chapters, each roughly 10 pages in length, which do not have to read in order. Each chapter contains an introduction to the learning topic, Hall’s personal experiences and game(s), references to other games to further illustrate the topic, a series of exercises, a closing game, training tips, and further reading suggestions. Each chapter is a joy to read. This is the first chess book I have read where I experienced the “flow” feeling similar to a “runners high”. This is one of my favorite all-time books and definitely my favorite instructional book. Photo provided courtesy of Steve Ferrero IM Mikhail Zlotnikov (right) pondering his move on day two in this year’s New Jersey Open. 21 When dealing with non-chess people negotiating for chess programs or tournaments in schools or public libraries, etc., rather than quote chess related authorities or chess websites about documentation on how beneficial chess is for students. Up front it would be good to first mention citations from academic or other nonchess groups. Tips For Chess Organizers! by Daren Dillinger K Ñ Æ The magic word to use when negotiating with motel people for playing facilities is "Convention!" It can be very helpful when negotiating for playing room rates. If you say "We are going to have a convention of chess players come to town for some events and meetings” rather than say, "We want to have a chess tournament here." -- not good! Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com The National Association of Secondary School Principals regularly includes scholastic chess events on its "National Advisory List of Contests and Activities". Also, with the concept of having a convention you should feel encouraged to approach the Tourist Development outfit in your local area. I can verify to you that when I was in Jacksonville, Florida getting $10,000 of such grant money was key to us bringing the 1990 US Open and also the US Championship to that city. CHALLENGE TO ALL CHESSPLAYERS ! For The Best Chess Game Annotated By The Player Classes Below Submitted To Atlantic Chess News, The NJSCF Will Award The Following: Your Advertisement Could Appear Here For Only $25 ! McCormick Award – Masters Burris Award – Class B & Above Marx Award – Class C & Below Father Finley Award – Scholastic Email: Ferrero@cyberdude.com One should consider selecting someone to go through the local sponsored workshops on grants. Almost every city or county has this resource. Each Winning Submission Will Receive $200 And An Award Plaque! New Jersey’s statewide office can be viewed on the Internet by pointing your browser to: www.state.nj.us/travel/industry.html Posted at this Boy Scouts website is a list of studies that verify chess activities help students to become self-motivated to plan and think ahead, as they develop their cognitive thinking skills that help achieve academic excellence. The website above does have good info pertaining to grants. But checking with local city and county government Tourist Development contacts may prove to be even more helpful. For additional information, point your browser to: Especially For Scholastic Chess Organizers www.scoutchess.org/dojo/8/v.jsp?p=/benefits Don’t Forget To Play In The Viking 4-County Open Which Is Being Held In Hackettstown, NJ!! November 17th 22 Problem Solver’s Corner - by Steve Ferrero July - Sept 2007 Problem #1 White To Move And Mate In 2 July - Sept 2007 Problem #2 White To Move And Mate In 2 July - Sept 2007 Problem #3 White To Move And Mate In 2 July - Sept 2007 Problem #4 White To Move And Mate In 3 July - Sept 2007 Problem #5 White To Move And Mate In 3 July - Sept 2007 Problem #6 White To Move And +- Solutions: Apr. - June 2007 Problem Solver’s Corner (see next issue for solutions to problems above) Problem#1: Actually, it is mate in 7 beginning with Rxg7+!, Kh8 (or ... Kxg7, Rg1+, Kh8, Qxf7+!, Bxf7, Nxf7#), Rdg1, Qg2, R1xg2, Nf6, Qf8+, Ng8, Qxg8# Problem#2: Unbelievably, White has a mate in 11 beginning with Ba1!!, b5 (... Kxa1 leads to: Kc2! keeping the enemy king bottled up which forces, b5, c6, b4, c7, b3+, Kxb3, Kb1, c8(Q), a1(N)+ (if ... a1(Q)??, Qc2#), Kc3, Nc2, Qf5, Ka1, Kxc2, Qa5#), c6, b4, c7, (... b3, c8(Q) mating in 4, b2, Qc3, Kxa1, Qd4, Kb1, Qg1#), Kxa1 which only prolongs the agony, Kc2 now mates in 7, b3+, Kxb3, Kb1, c8(Q), a1(N)+, Ka4, Nc2 as the Black king gets corralled in similar fashion to the above line. Problem#3: The pins available to White are winning. Qb8 pinning the Black rook immediately, d4, Rxg7+, Qxg7, Qxc7, Ng6, Qxg7+, Kxg7, Rd1, a6, Rxd4, Ne5, Kg2 and White should be able to score the full point. Problem#4: Not easy to see but Ba7!! is the winning move because it blocks the rook from getting back to his first rank to sacrifice for the White remaining pawn. There follows:” ... Kxa7 (... Rxa7??, e8(Q) +-), Kd4 preventing the Black rook from getting behind the pawn and sacrificing for it, Ra4+, Kd5, Ra5+, Kd6, Ra6+, Kd7 and Black is out of checks and has to acquiesce to the White pawn promoting which wins for White. Problem#5: It is mate in 13 beginning with the following, forcing line of play: Rxb1+!, Kxb1, Ra1+!, Kxa1, Qa4+, Kb1, Qa2+, Kc1, Qa1+, Kd2, Qxb2+, Kd3, Qc2+, Kd4, Qc4+, Ke5, Qd5+, Kf6, Qf7+, Ke5, Qf5+, Kd4, c5+ tightening the noose!, Kc3, Qc2# Problem#6: Black uncorks a truly beautiful mate in 3 beginning with: ... Qg1+, Kh3 (forced), Qdf1+!, Qg2 (forced), Qh1# taking full advantage that the White remains a bystander since it is pinned at the moment! Legend: +- White Is Winning, -+ Black Is Winning, # Checkmate, ! Excellent Move, !! Brilliant Move 23 IM Mikhail Zlotnikov (2387) Gregory Nolan (2190) Michael Lee (2222) George Chressanthis (2063) 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 7, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 3, 2007,ECO A30 9ss 108 US Open, Cherry Hill, Rd. 7, TL 40/2 SD/1, Aug. 3, 2007,ECO A34 English Opening – Symmetrical Variation 1.c4 c5 2.Nf3 g6 3.g3 Bg7 4.Bg2 Nc6 5.O-O d6 6.Nc3 e5 7.d3 Nge7 8.a3 a5 9.Rb1 O-O 10.Ne1 Be6 11.Be3 Rb8 12.Nc2 f5 13.b4 axb4 14.axb4 cxb4 15.Nxb4 Nxb4 16.Rxb4 d5 17.Bc5 e4 18.Nxd5 English Opening – Symmetrical Variation 1.c4 Nf6 2.Nc3 c5 3.g3 Nc6 4.Bg2 e6 5.Nf3 d5 6.cxd5 exd5 7.d4 Be6 8.O-O Be7 9.dxc5 O-O 10.Na4 Ne4 11.Be3 f5 12.Nd4 Nxd4 13.Bxd4 f4 14.f3 Ng5 15.e3 fxg3 16.hxg3 Qe8 17.g4 Rd8 18.Nc3 h5 19.f4 Bxd5 19.cxd5 b6 20.d6 bxc5 21.Qb3+ Kh8 22.dxe7 Black Resigns 19....Bxg4 20.Qb3 Nh3+ 21.Kh2 Kh8 22.Bxh3 Bxh3 23.Kxh3 Qd7+ 24.Kh2 Qg4 25.Qd1 Qf5 26.Rg1 Bf6 27.Bxf6 gxf6 28.Qb1 Black Resigns th th ------------------------------------------------- C u t H e r e ----------------------------------------------------’ Not yet an Atlantic Chess News subscriber? 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