Tag: kingside attack

Thrilling play in the Classical King’s Indian

Usually at this time (Monday evening, 11 PM) I’m about to finish my games at the Marshall Chess Club in the Fide Monday tournament that I regularly play in. And if it’s a second round, like it was today, more often than not, history shows that it’s a sour loss as I’m paired against a higher-rated opponent. Neither of this happened today- I’ve been at home for almost 2 hours already, and I won my game. What’s a bit funny about it is that I played an opening that before the round I actually had not wanted to play- King’s Indian Defense.  It is one of my main responses to 1.d4 but I had other plans for tonight; with the opening move order used by my opponent however, I decided to transpose to the KID.Gligoric People who know me well are aware that I am addicted to this opening- it’s risky to play it and can require a lot of memorization in some lines, but all attempts to drag me away from it have been futile; I fell in love with this opening many years ago and a cause of big part of that is the book by Serbian grandmaster Svetozar Gligoric ” King’s Indian Defence- Mar del Plata variation”, about the line he first played in 1953,which has become a mainstay in the chess opening theory ever since- a lot of very strong players (including World Champions Tal, Fischer, Kasparov among many others) and amateurs alike have used it as a non-compromise weapon. So this is what it happened to be the opening in my game tonight, and I was actually a bit anxious seeing my opponent play his opening moves very fast, automatically…so I wondered-  how much more of this sharp theory he had memorized than me? Somewhere around moves 13-14 I had to make sure I remembered the move order, but he kept playing without thinking ! We reached the position after 20.Nf2 and I knew it had to be OK for me, despite being down a pawn, but I needed to continue the game in the right direction, because it’s a complicated position and I’m down a pawn against a higher-rated opponent who seems to have seen and memorized this position.LuxRudowski1 I could develop the bishop with Bd7, but I decided it was more important to continue my kingside attack, so I chose 20..Ng6, which would help to advance the h-pawn and bring my knights closer to the holes near his king. White of course has his own play on the queenside , which may be very dangerous for me. Because it’s a race on the opposite sides of the board, slowing down may be fatal- it’s too early after such a complicated game to formulate an exact verdict, but it seems to me that his move 21.Kh1 is just that slowing factor that gives me some valuable tempi in my kingside attack. Well, you can check for yourself how it ended- no heavy commentary from me this time as the game finished just few hours ago- obviously White didn’t play the best defensive moves (28.Nxf4 looks pretty suicidal for example), but still I’m glad that I was able to get the right plan going in a complicated position, complete with an accurate calculation. Perhaps King’s Indian Defense could become your exciting chess adventure, too.

Simon

GM Kekelidze is the winner of the 95th Annual Marshall Chess Club Championship

Tonight the final round of the 95th Annual Marshall Chess Club concluded and we here at Brooklyn64 congratulate GM Kekelidze on becomming the 2011 Marshall Chess Club Champion. Here are complete crosstables for the event. In the final round, the 12 year old Wu needed only to draw to clinch the championship, but lost a tough positional battle to FM Ostrovskiy who managed to succeed with an interesting queenside plan against Wu’s Najdorf. Up until the last round, Wu had been a likely contender for clear first, and so the following game was closely watched by hundreds of spectators on ICC.

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Two Knight’s Defense: Modern Attack

If you play 1.e4 and wish to avoid the Spanish, than the Italian game with 3.Bc4 is the best option. Black’s logical responses are basically the Two Knights Defense, 3…Bc5(Italian game), or the Hungarian (3…Be7.) Naturally, against 3…Bc5 the Evans gambit is a fun option, but against the two knights defense I think the modern attack 4.d4 is actually easier and more straightforward than the mainline 4.Ng5. Here are three games from a big proponent of the variation, Asa Hoffmann.

I myself have had a lot of luck with this line in blitz games as of late. Some common themes for white are using his e and f pawns as battering rams to attack black’s kingside or in the alternative threaten to create a passed pawn. Black’s queenside dark square weaknesses are a key thematic idea as well, such that after the opening, if you remove all of the pieces from the board, the simple king and pawn ending would be winning for white, so white has that as an insurance policy in the middle game should he need it. Another idea worth mentioning comes from GM Dzindzichashvili, who advocates white develop his queenside knight to c3, allowing his pawns to be doubled. This is a theme we see in the following games as well.

When I asked Asa Hoffmann why he plays this line his answer answer was pretty simple: “It gives great practical attacking chances!”

The Pribyl Defense

The following game is amusing for a number of reasons. First of all, it is the only time that my fellow Marshall Chess Club compatriot Ed Frumkin has defeated FM Asa Hoffmann in tournament chess, and he did it with Hoffmann’s favorite opening, 1.Nc3. Secondly, we see the Pribyl tackled head on with a king-side pawn avalanche that effortlessly opens lines and decimates black’s position.

Having said that, I rather like the Prybil. First of all, no one has heard of it, and most people will immediately take it as an inferior Pirc, which it probably is. However, the benefit of the Prybil lies not so much in its surprise value, but in its ability to transpose into other favorable systems, often into a kind of French with the light square bishop outside the pawn-chain. The following game-annotations are by Mr. Frumkin himself. Enjoy!

A Counter-Punch Sveshnikov Line

As a sveshnikov player I value piece activity over everything else- structure, material, pish posh- give me an attack. The following game follows a not too uncommon line in the Sveshnikov, where on move 12 black really lays down the gauntlet with a gambit. In theory, white should be ok but the traps that lay in wait are far from obvious.

7 Ways to Smash the Sicilian

Yuri Lapshun and Nick Conticello, two members of the Marshall Chess Club where I work part-time, have assembled an incredibly instructive game collection organized in an interesting way. The table of contents to this book gives you a very accurate idea of what to expect:

Chapter 1 The Knight Sacrifice on d5
Chapter 2 The Knight Sacrifice on e6
Chapter 3 The Bishop Sacrifice on e6
Chapter 4 The Knight Sacrifice on f5
Chapter 5 The Knight Sacrifice on b5
Chapter 6 The Bishop Sacrifice on b5

Naturally, these ideas are not brand new and many of them are even rote theory at this point. However, this book’s contribution isn’t to theory, but to instruction. By assembling all of these games in one place and according to this unique format, Lapshun and Conticello have authored a manual on how to attack the Sicilian with thematic sacrifices. Playing through some of the games, I’m inspired to get on FICS and see what I can do. The book reads like a greatest hits volume of sacrificial attacks on the sicilian that leaves me wondering who would play an opening that begs to be so viciously attacked? 7 Ways to Smash the Sicilian is highly recommended for the e4 player who wants to rip his opponents to shreds in the middle game. It’s hard to select a decent game that would be representative of this volume, so I’ve grabbed these two almost at random.

Notable Game Contest Winner

As I announced last week, I’m giving away a new hardbound copy of Frank Brady’s “Endgame” to the person who submitted the most interesting game to the blog. Congrats to Frank Fortune, to whom I will be sending a copy of the book for this fantastic game with his annotations. I really like the move 13.Nf5, as well as the sac on g7 that precipitates white’s attack. I think the game is both creative and instructive, and I hope our readers get as much pleasure from looking it over as I did.

Thanks to everyone who submitted games and if your game wasn’t selected don’t be discouraged, I’m planning on having a few more of these in the future.

The Czech Benoni: An Incredibly Instructive Game


Last week I had the pleasure of attending a lecture by Asa Hoffman at the Marshall Chess Club on “unorthodox openings.” Since Asa plays exclusively off-beat openings, the lecture was really a selection of his games which he thought were particularly instructive. One such game was the following, which I begged him for a copy of and he surprisingly allowed me to have. The game is instructive for a few reasons, but if nothing else it is an amazing introduction to the Czech Benoni with annotated ideas that give enough material to even start playing the opening immediately. Another reason I love this game is because of the interesting plans that Asa finds. The most aesthetically interesting one involves the geometric pattern he traces with his bishop in order to arrive at an ideal square.

Beating the Marshall in Blitz

I have a secret to confess. When I face the Marshall in a blitz game my strategy is to weather the storm and win on time. It may sound like a cowardly strategy, but it can be very effective. If you think about it for a moment, in the Marshall, black builds a massive attack at the expense of a pawn and will wind up draining tons of time racking his brain for that elegant “coup de grace” continuation. Meanwhile, if white makes strong defensive and simplifying moves very quickly, then black will soon be faced with the ultimatum of either delivering mate somehow or losing on time. Naturally, as your time advantage grows the merits of your position matter less and less. I offer the following blitz game as an example of this strategy in action:

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Dutch Stonewall Miniature

I played a pleasant stonewall game this afternoon that I thought I would include here since it demonstrates two ideas that I often use in the dutch in general- the first being the maneuver Qd8-e8-h4, and the second being the piercing “dutch-lance” f5-f4. My opponent makes a few blunders (no miniature exists without them) and allows for a quick enveloping attack to coalesce on the king-side. I have won countless blitz games with these straightforward ideas in tandem, though this game I think is technically a “rapid” game.

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The Anatomy of the French Advance

I have always played the advance against the French, and as a French player myself I have faced the advance many times. Naturally, there is no substitute for learning theory, however, the french advance is a forgiving opening in which an understanding of general principals can help you find the right ideas, even deep into the middle game.

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Beating the Philidor: Shirov’s 5.g4 gambit against the Philidor Defense

It’s been a century since the philidor was a popular defense in top level chess, however, despite its reputation for passivity it still makes an occasional debut here and there in modern day tournament chess. Personally, I am not someone who seeks to punish my opponents for playing a less fashionable defense, and so i usually play the quiet lines with 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3. d4 exd4 4.Qxd4 Nc6 5.Bb5… usually after 5…Bd7 I capture on c6 and play for a nagging long term advantage. However, some people like to try and blow their opponent off the board, and certainly the author of “Fire On Board” falls into that category. If the main lines against the philidor aren’t sharp enough for your taste, and you really want to throw the kitchen sink at the philidor, consider Shirov’s 5.g4 gambit as in the following game. The ideas behind this gambit are similar to the ideas behind Shabalov’s gambit in the meran semi-slav, but way crazier.

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Win with the London System

After getting beat up badly by the london a few years ago, I got a copy of “Winning with the London” and started using it occasionally myself in blitz games. I have found that there are a few thematic ideas, but that the london is much more of an “ideas” opening than anything else, and ultimately is a great “patzer basher” because it allows for white to just quickly develop and go for an immediate kingside attack without taking much risk. The following game is a nice example of the theme of a quick kingside attack.

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Sicilian Dragon, Yugoslav attack- with 10…Rb8!?, the Chinese Dragon

drag

In the Sicilian Yugoslav attack where white plays the sharp 9.Bc4 (instead of 9.0-0-0), by far the most popular move is 10.Rc8. However, black does have a few reasonable alternatives such as 10…Qa5 and 10…Rb8. The later is called the Chinese Dragon, and has been gaining in popularity in the last decade. The dragon is notorious for its deep forcing continuations, often involving the exchange sac on c3, and the necessity for learning absurd amounts of opening theory in order to survive white’s kingside onslaught.

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Challenging the Sicilian with 2.a3!?

The Bulgarian chess publisher “Chess Stars” has put out some fantastic literature. Their opening series according to Anand/Kramnik are well known and sought after, and their book entitled “getting an edge against the grunfeld” is one of the most in depth and impressive high level books I own. Unfortunately, there are a few of their books that are so rare and hard to find that they practically don’t exist. “Challenging the Sicilian with 2.a3!?,” by Alexei Bezgodov is one of them.

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