m (Camilo (952) vs Amir (990))
m (Camilo (952) vs Amir (990))
Line 566: Line 566:
  
 
1. e4 e6 { French Defense, General } 2. Bc4 c6 3. Nf3 Nh6?! { (-0.21 → 0.57) Inaccuracy. The best move was d5. } (3... d5 4. exd5 exd5 5. Be2 Nf6 6. d3 Bd6 7. c4 O-O 8. Nc3 Be6 9. O-O Nbd7 10. Be3 Ng4 11. cxd5 Nxe3 12. fxe3 Bxd5 13. d4) 4. d3 Bd6?! { (0.08 → 0.96) Inaccuracy. The best move was d5. } (4... d5 5. Bg5 Qd7 6. exd5 cxd5 7. Bb3 Nc6 8. O-O Nf5 9. c4 dxc4 10. Bxc4 h6 11. Bf4 Be7 12. Nc3 O-O 13. Bb5 f6 14. Ne4) 5. Bg5 Be7 6. O-O?? { (0.60 → -2.53) Blunder. The best move was Bxh6. } (6. Bxh6 gxh6 7. Bb3 d5 8. Nc3 Nd7 9. O-O h5 10. Qd2 b5 11. exd5 exd5) 6... f6?? { (-2.53 → 1.27) Blunder. The best move was Bxg5. } (6... Bxg5 7. Nxg5 Qxg5 8. d4 d5 9. Bd3 dxe4 10. Bxe4 Nf5 11. c3 O-O 12. Nd2 Nd7 13. Re1 Rd8 14. Nf3 Qh5 15. a3 g6 16. Nd2) 7. Bxh6 gxh6 8. Nh4 f5?? { (0.79 → 4.23) Blunder. The best move was O-O. } (8... O-O 9. Nf5 Kh8 10. Nxe7 Qxe7 11. Bb3 Na6 12. Nd2 d5 13. c3 b6 14. Re1 Bb7 15. d4 Nc7 16. a3 Qg7 17. g3 e5 18. Qh5) 9. Qh5+ Kf8 10. Qxh6+? { (4.25 → 1.94) Mistake. The best move was Nxf5. } (10. Nxf5 d5 11. exd5 cxd5 12. Qxh6+ Ke8 13. Nxe7 Qxe7 14. Bxd5 Kd8 15. Nc3 Nc6 16. Rae1 Rg8) 10... Ke8? { (1.94 → 4.27) Mistake. The best move was Kg8. } (10... Kg8 11. Nxf5 Bf8 12. Qf4 d5 13. exd5 cxd5 14. Qg3+ Kf7 15. Ne3 dxc4 16. Nxc4 Bg7 17. Nc3 Kg8 18. Ne4 Nc6 19. Rfe1 Nb4 20. Ncd6) 11. Nc3?? { (4.27 → -0.27) Blunder. The best move was Qh5+. } (11. Qh5+ Kf8 12. Nxf5 d5 13. exd5 cxd5 14. Qh6+ Ke8 15. Nxe7 Qxe7 16. Bxd5 Kd8 17. Nc3 Rg8 18. Be4 Nc6 19. d4 Qg5 20. Qxg5+ Rxg5) 11... Bxh4 12. exf5 Bg5?? { (-0.55 → 2.76) Blunder. The best move was Qg5. } (12... Qg5 13. Qxg5 Bxg5 14. fxe6 dxe6 15. Ne4 Be7 16. c3 Na6 17. f4 Nc7 18. Rae1 Nd5 19. Ng5 Nxf4 20. Nxe6 Nxe6 21. Bxe6 Rf8 22. Bb3) 13. Qh5+ Ke7?? { (2.81 → 6.39) Blunder. The best move was Kf8. } (13... Kf8 14. fxe6 dxe6 15. Ne4 Bf4 16. g3 b5 17. Bb3 Rg8 18. Qf3 Qh4 19. Kh1 Qg4 20. Qxf4+ Qxf4 21. gxf4 Rg4 22. a4 Rxf4 23. axb5) 14. Qxg5+ Ke8 15. Qg7? { (6.38 → 4.91) Mistake. The best move was Qh5+. } (15. Qh5+ Ke7 16. fxe6 dxe6 17. Ne4 Qf8 18. Qg5+ Ke8 19. Qe5 Kd8 20. Ng5 Rg8 21. Rfe1 Bd7) 15... Rf8 16. Rae1? { (4.67 → 3.29) Mistake. The best move was fxe6. } (16. fxe6 dxe6 17. Rae1 Qe7 18. Qd4 Na6 19. Bxa6 bxa6 20. Ne4 e5) 16... d5? { (3.29 → 5.27) Mistake. The best move was Rxf5. } (16... Rxf5 17. Qxh7 Qe7 18. Qg8+ Rf8 19. Qg3 Kd8 20. d4 d6 21. a3 Na6 22. Ne4 Kc7 23. Ng5 Rf6 24. Qb3 Qg7 25. f4 d5 26. Bxa6) 17. Rxe6+ Bxe6 18. fxe6?? { (5.06 → 1.43) Blunder. The best move was Re1. } (18. Re1 Rf6 19. Rxe6+ Rxe6 20. fxe6 Qe7 21. Qg8+ Qf8 22. Qxh7 Qe7 23. Qg8+ Qf8 24. Qg6+ Kd8 25. Bxd5 Nd7 26. exd7 cxd5 27. Qh5 Qe7) 18... dxc4? { (1.43 → 3.38) Mistake. The best move was Qe7. } (18... Qe7 19. Qe5 dxc4 20. Ne4 c3 21. Nd6+ Kd8 22. Re1 b6 23. bxc3 Na6 24. g4 Nc7 25. Nf5 Rxf5 26. gxf5 Ne8 27. d4 Kc8 28. d5) 19. dxc4?? { (3.38 → 0.00) Blunder. The best move was Qxb7. } (19. Qxb7 cxd3 20. Qxa8 Qb6 21. Na4 Qc7 22. cxd3 Ke7 23. Rc1 Kxe6 24. Nc5+ Kf7 25. Ne4 Kg8 26. Rc3 Qa5 27. a3 Qb6 28. b4 Rd8) 19... Qf6?? { (0.00 → 5.48) Blunder. The best move was Qe7. } (19... Qe7 20. Qe5 Rf6 21. Re1 Na6 22. Ne4 Rxe6 23. Qh8+ Qf8 24. Qxh7 Rd8 25. Qh5+ Ke7 26. Qh7+ Ke8) 20. Qxb7 Na6?? { (4.72 → Mate in 1) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Qe7. } (20... Qe7 21. Qxa8 Qc7 22. Re1 Ke7 23. Re3 Rd8 24. Rh3 Kxe6 25. Rh6+ Kf5 26. g3 Rd2) 21. Qxa8+?! { (Mate in 1 → 15.68) Lost forced checkmate sequence. The best move was Qd7#. } (21. Qd7#) 21... Qd8 22. Qxc6+ Qd7?! { Black loses on time (42.36 → Mate in 1) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Ke7. } (22... Ke7 23. Nd5+ Qxd5 24. cxd5 Kf6 25. Qxa6 Kg7 26. Qxa7+ Kg8 27. d6 h5 28. e7 Re8) 1-0
 
1. e4 e6 { French Defense, General } 2. Bc4 c6 3. Nf3 Nh6?! { (-0.21 → 0.57) Inaccuracy. The best move was d5. } (3... d5 4. exd5 exd5 5. Be2 Nf6 6. d3 Bd6 7. c4 O-O 8. Nc3 Be6 9. O-O Nbd7 10. Be3 Ng4 11. cxd5 Nxe3 12. fxe3 Bxd5 13. d4) 4. d3 Bd6?! { (0.08 → 0.96) Inaccuracy. The best move was d5. } (4... d5 5. Bg5 Qd7 6. exd5 cxd5 7. Bb3 Nc6 8. O-O Nf5 9. c4 dxc4 10. Bxc4 h6 11. Bf4 Be7 12. Nc3 O-O 13. Bb5 f6 14. Ne4) 5. Bg5 Be7 6. O-O?? { (0.60 → -2.53) Blunder. The best move was Bxh6. } (6. Bxh6 gxh6 7. Bb3 d5 8. Nc3 Nd7 9. O-O h5 10. Qd2 b5 11. exd5 exd5) 6... f6?? { (-2.53 → 1.27) Blunder. The best move was Bxg5. } (6... Bxg5 7. Nxg5 Qxg5 8. d4 d5 9. Bd3 dxe4 10. Bxe4 Nf5 11. c3 O-O 12. Nd2 Nd7 13. Re1 Rd8 14. Nf3 Qh5 15. a3 g6 16. Nd2) 7. Bxh6 gxh6 8. Nh4 f5?? { (0.79 → 4.23) Blunder. The best move was O-O. } (8... O-O 9. Nf5 Kh8 10. Nxe7 Qxe7 11. Bb3 Na6 12. Nd2 d5 13. c3 b6 14. Re1 Bb7 15. d4 Nc7 16. a3 Qg7 17. g3 e5 18. Qh5) 9. Qh5+ Kf8 10. Qxh6+? { (4.25 → 1.94) Mistake. The best move was Nxf5. } (10. Nxf5 d5 11. exd5 cxd5 12. Qxh6+ Ke8 13. Nxe7 Qxe7 14. Bxd5 Kd8 15. Nc3 Nc6 16. Rae1 Rg8) 10... Ke8? { (1.94 → 4.27) Mistake. The best move was Kg8. } (10... Kg8 11. Nxf5 Bf8 12. Qf4 d5 13. exd5 cxd5 14. Qg3+ Kf7 15. Ne3 dxc4 16. Nxc4 Bg7 17. Nc3 Kg8 18. Ne4 Nc6 19. Rfe1 Nb4 20. Ncd6) 11. Nc3?? { (4.27 → -0.27) Blunder. The best move was Qh5+. } (11. Qh5+ Kf8 12. Nxf5 d5 13. exd5 cxd5 14. Qh6+ Ke8 15. Nxe7 Qxe7 16. Bxd5 Kd8 17. Nc3 Rg8 18. Be4 Nc6 19. d4 Qg5 20. Qxg5+ Rxg5) 11... Bxh4 12. exf5 Bg5?? { (-0.55 → 2.76) Blunder. The best move was Qg5. } (12... Qg5 13. Qxg5 Bxg5 14. fxe6 dxe6 15. Ne4 Be7 16. c3 Na6 17. f4 Nc7 18. Rae1 Nd5 19. Ng5 Nxf4 20. Nxe6 Nxe6 21. Bxe6 Rf8 22. Bb3) 13. Qh5+ Ke7?? { (2.81 → 6.39) Blunder. The best move was Kf8. } (13... Kf8 14. fxe6 dxe6 15. Ne4 Bf4 16. g3 b5 17. Bb3 Rg8 18. Qf3 Qh4 19. Kh1 Qg4 20. Qxf4+ Qxf4 21. gxf4 Rg4 22. a4 Rxf4 23. axb5) 14. Qxg5+ Ke8 15. Qg7? { (6.38 → 4.91) Mistake. The best move was Qh5+. } (15. Qh5+ Ke7 16. fxe6 dxe6 17. Ne4 Qf8 18. Qg5+ Ke8 19. Qe5 Kd8 20. Ng5 Rg8 21. Rfe1 Bd7) 15... Rf8 16. Rae1? { (4.67 → 3.29) Mistake. The best move was fxe6. } (16. fxe6 dxe6 17. Rae1 Qe7 18. Qd4 Na6 19. Bxa6 bxa6 20. Ne4 e5) 16... d5? { (3.29 → 5.27) Mistake. The best move was Rxf5. } (16... Rxf5 17. Qxh7 Qe7 18. Qg8+ Rf8 19. Qg3 Kd8 20. d4 d6 21. a3 Na6 22. Ne4 Kc7 23. Ng5 Rf6 24. Qb3 Qg7 25. f4 d5 26. Bxa6) 17. Rxe6+ Bxe6 18. fxe6?? { (5.06 → 1.43) Blunder. The best move was Re1. } (18. Re1 Rf6 19. Rxe6+ Rxe6 20. fxe6 Qe7 21. Qg8+ Qf8 22. Qxh7 Qe7 23. Qg8+ Qf8 24. Qg6+ Kd8 25. Bxd5 Nd7 26. exd7 cxd5 27. Qh5 Qe7) 18... dxc4? { (1.43 → 3.38) Mistake. The best move was Qe7. } (18... Qe7 19. Qe5 dxc4 20. Ne4 c3 21. Nd6+ Kd8 22. Re1 b6 23. bxc3 Na6 24. g4 Nc7 25. Nf5 Rxf5 26. gxf5 Ne8 27. d4 Kc8 28. d5) 19. dxc4?? { (3.38 → 0.00) Blunder. The best move was Qxb7. } (19. Qxb7 cxd3 20. Qxa8 Qb6 21. Na4 Qc7 22. cxd3 Ke7 23. Rc1 Kxe6 24. Nc5+ Kf7 25. Ne4 Kg8 26. Rc3 Qa5 27. a3 Qb6 28. b4 Rd8) 19... Qf6?? { (0.00 → 5.48) Blunder. The best move was Qe7. } (19... Qe7 20. Qe5 Rf6 21. Re1 Na6 22. Ne4 Rxe6 23. Qh8+ Qf8 24. Qxh7 Rd8 25. Qh5+ Ke7 26. Qh7+ Ke8) 20. Qxb7 Na6?? { (4.72 → Mate in 1) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Qe7. } (20... Qe7 21. Qxa8 Qc7 22. Re1 Ke7 23. Re3 Rd8 24. Rh3 Kxe6 25. Rh6+ Kf5 26. g3 Rd2) 21. Qxa8+?! { (Mate in 1 → 15.68) Lost forced checkmate sequence. The best move was Qd7#. } (21. Qd7#) 21... Qd8 22. Qxc6+ Qd7?! { Black loses on time (42.36 → Mate in 1) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Ke7. } (22... Ke7 23. Nd5+ Qxd5 24. cxd5 Kf6 25. Qxa6 Kg7 26. Qxa7+ Kg8 27. d6 h5 28. e7 Re8) 1-0
 +
</pgn>
 +
 +
== Amir (955���) vs Santiago (1001����) ==
 +
 +
<pgn>
 +
[Event "Casual game"]
 +
[Site "http://lichess.org/VeyYsCZC"]
 +
[Date "2015.03.23"]
 +
[White "Amir"]
 +
[Black "Santiago"]
 +
[Result "1-0"]
 +
[WhiteElo "?"]
 +
[BlackElo "?"]
 +
[PlyCount "63"]
 +
[Variant "Standard"]
 +
[TimeControl "-"]
 +
[ECO "A00"]
 +
[Opening "Mieses Opening, Reversed Rat"]
 +
[Annotator "lichess.org"]
 +
 +
1. d3 e5 { Mieses Opening, Reversed Rat } 2. Nf3 d6 3. Bg5 f6 4. Be3?! { (0.10 → -0.46) Inaccuracy. The best move was Bd2. } (4. Bd2 f5 5. c4 Nf6 6. Nc3 Nc6 7. e3 Be7 8. Be2 O-O 9. O-O Bd7 10. a3 h6 11. d4 e4 12. Nh4) 4... Nc6 5. Nc3 f5 6. Bg5 Be7 7. Nd5?! { (-0.25 → -1.17) Inaccuracy. The best move was Bxe7. } (7. Bxe7 Ngxe7 8. e3 d5 9. Be2 d4 10. exd4 exd4 11. Nb1 O-O 12. O-O Be6 13. Nbd2 Nd5 14. Re1 Re8) 7... e4?! { (-1.17 → -0.63) Inaccuracy. The best move was Bxg5. } (7... Bxg5 8. Nxg5 Nf6 9. c4 Nxd5 10. cxd5 Qxg5 11. dxc6 bxc6 12. Rc1 Rb8 13. Rxc6 Rxb2 14. Rxc7 O-O 15. Rc2 Rxc2 16. Qxc2 Be6 17. h4) 8. dxe4 fxe4 9. Nh4?? { (-0.70 → -4.54) Blunder. The best move was Bxe7. } (9. Bxe7 Ncxe7 10. Nxe7 Nxe7 11. Nd4 e3 12. fxe3 c5 13. Nf3 Qb6 14. Qd2 Qxb2 15. Rd1 d5 16. e4) 9... Bxg5 10. e3? { (-4.79 → -6.63) Mistake. The best move was g3. } (10. g3 Nf6 11. Ng2 Ne5 12. h4 Bh6 13. Ndf4 O-O 14. Qd4 c5 15. Qc3 b6 16. Ne3 Nfg4 17. Qb3+ Kh8 18. Ned5 Bb7 19. Bg2 Bxf4) 10... Nf6? { (-6.63 → -4.91) Mistake. The best move was Bxh4. } (10... Bxh4 11. Nxc7+ Qxc7 12. Qh5+ Qf7 13. Qxh4 Nf6 14. Be2 O-O 15. O-O Ne5 16. Qf4 Bd7 17. Rfd1 Qe7 18. Qh4 Rac8 19. c3 d5 20. a3) 11. Bb5? { (-4.91 → -7.17) Mistake. The best move was g3. } (11. g3 O-O 12. Be2 Ne5 13. Ng2 c6 14. Nxf6+ Bxf6 15. c3 d5 16. h4 a5 17. Nf4 a4 18. O-O a3 19. b4 Bd7 20. Rc1 g6) 11... Bg4?? { (-7.17 → -2.18) Blunder. The best move was Bxh4. } (11... Bxh4 12. g3 a6 13. Be2 Bg5 14. h4 Bh6 15. g4 Be6 16. Bc4 Ne5 17. Nxf6+ Qxf6 18. Bxe6 Qxe6 19. g5 Nf3+ 20. Kf1 Qc4+ 21. Qe2) 12. f3?? { (-2.18 → -8.80) Blunder. The best move was Nxf6+. } (12. Nxf6+ Qxf6 13. Qxg4 O-O 14. O-O Bxh4 15. g3 Bg5 16. Qxe4 Rae8 17. Qd5+ Kh8 18. a4 Re5 19. Qg2 Rc5 20. f4 Bh6 21. c3 a6) 12... Be6?? { (-8.80 → -5.41) Blunder. The best move was Bxh4+. } (12... Bxh4+ 13. Ke2 Bd7 14. Nc3 exf3+ 15. gxf3 Qe7 16. Kd2 O-O-O 17. Qe2 Rde8 18. Rhg1) 13. f4?? { (-5.41 → -9.34) Blunder. The best move was Nf4. } (13. Nf4 Bd7 14. g3 Bxh4 15. gxh4 Ne5 16. Bxd7+ Nfxd7 17. fxe4 Qxh4+ 18. Kd2 O-O 19. Kc1 Rae8 20. a4 Rf7 21. Qe2 Nc5 22. Ra3 Nxe4) 13... Bxd5?? { (-9.34 → -2.53) Blunder. The best move was Bxh4+. } (13... Bxh4+ 14. g3 Nxd5 15. Qh5+ g6 16. Qxh4 Qxh4 17. gxh4 Nxe3 18. Kd2 Ng2 19. h5 e3+ 20. Kd3 Bf5+ 21. Ke2 Bg4+ 22. Kd3 e2 23. Kd2) 14. fxg5 Nd7?? { (-2.62 → 0.39) Blunder. The best move was Be6. } (14... Be6 15. gxf6 Qxf6 16. Qh5+ g6 17. Qh6 Qxb2 18. Bxc6+ bxc6 19. O-O Qe5 20. Qf4 O-O-O 21. Qxe5 dxe5 22. a4 Rd2 23. c3 Rhd8 24. Rf6) 15. Qh5+?? { (0.39 → -4.79) Blunder. The best move was Qxd5. } (15. Qxd5 Nce5 16. Nf5 Qxg5 17. Qe6+ Kd8 18. Bxd7 g6 19. O-O-O Nxd7 20. Nxd6 cxd6 21. Rxd6 Qe7) 15... g6 16. Qh6 a6? { (-4.87 → -3.55) Mistake. The best move was Nce5. } (16... Nce5 17. Qg7 Rg8 18. Bxd7+ Qxd7 19. Qxd7+ Kxd7 20. b3 Nf7 21. Rf1 Nxg5 22. O-O-O Be6 23. Kb2) 17. Be2? { (-3.55 → -4.87) Mistake. The best move was Bxc6. } (17. Bxc6 bxc6 18. Nxg6 Rg8 19. Nf4 Qxg5 20. Qxh7 O-O-O 21. O-O-O Nf6 22. Qh3+ Kb7 23. Kb1 Bf7 24. Rhf1 Rh8 25. Ne6 Bxe6 26. Qxe6 Nd5) 17... Nde5 18. Rf1 Nb4? { (-5.59 → -3.70) Mistake. The best move was Qe7. } (18... Qe7 19. O-O-O Bxa2 20. b3 O-O-O 21. Kb2 Nb4 22. Rd4 d5 23. c3 c5 24. Rxb4 cxb4 25. Kxa2 bxc3 26. Rc1 Qc5 27. Qg7) 19. Rf6?? { (-3.70 → -8.71) Blunder. The best move was O-O-O. } (19. O-O-O Nxa2+ 20. Kb1 c6 21. Nxg6 Nc3+ 22. bxc3 Qb6+ 23. Ka1 Qa5+ 24. Kb1 Nxg6 25. c4) 19... Nxc2+ 20. Kd2 Nxa1 21. Qg7? { (-8.50 → -10.08) Mistake. The best move was Nxg6. } (21. Nxg6 Nxg6 22. Rxg6 hxg6 23. Qxh8+ Kd7 24. Bg4+ Be6 25. Qg7+ Qe7 26. Bxe6+ Kxe6 27. Qxg6+ Kd5 28. Qf5+ Kc6 29. Qa5 Rf8 30. h4 Rf2+) 21... Qd7?? { (-10.08 → 0.42) Blunder. The best move was Rg8. } (21... Rg8 22. Qxh7 c6 23. Kd1 Qd7 24. Qxd7+ Kxd7 25. b3 Raf8 26. Rf4 Rh8 27. Rxf8 Rxf8 28. Kd2 Rh8 29. g3 Rf8 30. Ng2) 22. Qxh8+ Ke7 23. Qg7+?? { (0.99 → -2.41) Blunder. The best move was Qxa8. } (23. Qxa8 Qa4 24. Rf8 Bxa2 25. Qd8+ Ke6 26. Qxc7 Qb4+ 27. Qc3 Nb3+ 28. Ke1 Qxc3+ 29. bxc3 Nc1 30. Rh8 Nxe2 31. Kxe2 Kd7 32. Rxh7+ Kc6) 23... Bf7 24. Rf4? { (-2.48 → -4.86) Mistake. The best move was Rxf7+. } (24. Rxf7+ Nxf7 25. Qxh7 Re8 26. Qxg6 Qe6 27. Qxe6+ Kxe6 28. Bg4+ Ke7 29. Ng6+ Kd8 30. h4 b5 31. b3 Ne5 32. Bf5 Nxg6 33. Bxg6 Re6) 24... Rg8?? { (-4.86 → -0.12) Blunder. The best move was Qa4. } (24... Qa4 25. Rxf7+ Nxf7 26. Qxh7 Qa5+ 27. Kd1 Qd5+ 28. Kc1 Re8 29. Qg7 Kd8 30. Nxg6 Qxa2 31. Bg4 c5 32. Nf4 Qc4+ 33. Kb1 Nb3 34. Qf6+) 25. Qxh7?? { (-0.12 → -5.81) Blunder. The best move was Rxf7+. } (25. Rxf7+ Nxf7 26. Qxg8 Nxg5 27. Qg7+ Kd8 28. Qh6) 25... Qe6 26. Bg4?? { (-5.91 → -11.63) Blunder. The best move was Rxf7+. } (26. Rxf7+ Qxf7 27. Qxf7+ Kxf7 28. g3 Rh8 29. b3 Kg7 30. h3 Rf8 31. Ng2 Rf2 32. Nf4 Nf3+ 33. Kc3 Nxg5 34. h4 Nf3 35. a3 Ne5) 26... Qd5+ 27. Ke2 Qc4+ 28. Kf2 Qc2+?? { (-9.75 → -3.63) Blunder. The best move was Nd3+. } (28... Nd3+ 29. Kg3 Nxf4 30. Kxf4 Qb5 31. Kxe4 Qxg5 32. h3 Qd5+ 33. Kf4 g5+ 34. Kg3 Qe5+ 35. Kf2 Qxb2+ 36. Kg1 gxh4 37. Qxh4+ Ke8 38. Bf3) 29. Kg3 Nd3?? { (-2.93 → Mate in 2) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Qxb2. } (29... Qxb2 30. Rxf7+ Nxf7 31. Qxg8 Qe5+ 32. Kf2 Qxg5 33. Qh7 Qxg4 34. Nxg6+ Kf6 35. Nf4 Nc2 36. Qxe4 Qh4+ 37. g3 Qxh2+ 38. Ng2 Na3 39. Qxb7) 30. Qxf7+ Kd8 31. Qxg8+?! { (Mate in 1 → Mate in 1) Not the best checkmate sequence. The best move was Qd7#. } (31. Qd7#) 31... Ke7 32. Rf7# { Black is checkmated } 1-0
 +
</pgn>
 +
 +
== Amir (982) vs Carlos (1013) ==
 +
 +
<pgn>
 +
[Event "Casual game"]
 +
[Site "http://lichess.org/xAoftldq"]
 +
[Date "2015.03.24"]
 +
[White "Amir"]
 +
[Black "Carlos"]
 +
[Result "0-1"]
 +
[WhiteElo "?"]
 +
[BlackElo "?"]
 +
[PlyCount "42"]
 +
[Variant "Standard"]
 +
[TimeControl "-"]
 +
[ECO "A00"]
 +
[Opening "Mieses Opening, Reversed Rat"]
 +
[Annotator "lichess.org"]
 +
 +
1. d3 e5 { Mieses Opening, Reversed Rat } 2. f3?! { (0.03 → -0.67) Inaccuracy. The best move was Nf3. } (2. Nf3 Nc6 3. c4 Bb4+ 4. Nbd2 Nf6 5. a3 Bxd2+ 6. Bxd2 d6 7. e3 O-O 8. Be2) 2... d5 3. Qd2 Nf6 4. Qe3 Nc6 5. d4 Bd6 6. Qb3?? { (-1.91 → -9.19) Blunder. The best move was dxe5. } (6. dxe5 Bxe5 7. Qd2 O-O 8. e3 Re8 9. Ne2 Bf5 10. c3 Bd6 11. Na3 a6 12. Nc2 Bg6 13. Ng3 Qe7 14. Be2 Nd7) 6... Nxd4 7. Qb5+?! { (-9.32 → -13.08) Inaccuracy. The best move was Qd3. } (7. Qd3 Bf5 8. Qd1 Nxc2+ 9. Kf2 Nxa1 10. Na3 Bc5+ 11. e3 d4 12. Be2 d3 13. b4 dxe2 14. Nxe2 Qxd1 15. Rxd1 Bxb4 16. e4 Be6) 7... Nxb5 8. e3 Bf5 9. Bxb5+ c6 10. Ba4 Qa5+ 11. Kf1 Qxa4 12. e4 dxe4 13. Bg5 Qc4+ 14. Kf2 Nh5 15. fxe4 Bc5+ 16. Be3?! { (-29.51 → Mate in 9) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Ke1. } (16. Ke1 Qxe4+ 17. Ne2 Qxg2 18. Rf1 Qxg5 19. b3 Bxc2 20. Nbc3 Rd8 21. Rf3 e4 22. b4) 16... Qxc2+?! { (Mate in 9 → -31.37) Lost forced checkmate sequence. The best move was Bxe3+. } (16... Bxe3+ 17. Kxe3 Qd4+ 18. Ke2 Nf4+ 19. Kf1 Qd1+ 20. Kf2 Qxc2+ 21. Nd2 Qxd2+ 22. Kf3 Bxe4+ 23. Kxe4 Qd3+ 24. Kxe5 Ng6#) 17. Nd2?! { (-31.37 → Mate in 4) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Ne2. } (17. Ne2 Bxe3+ 18. Kxe3 Qxe4+ 19. Kf2 Nf4 20. Nbc3) 17... Bxe4?! { (Mate in 4 → -29.93) Lost forced checkmate sequence. The best move was Qxd2+. } (17... Qxd2+ 18. Kf1 Qxe3 19. Nh3 Bxh3 20. gxh3 Qf2#) 18. Kf1?! { (-29.93 → Mate in 6) Checkmate is now unavoidable. The best move was Ke1. } (18. Ke1 Bxe3 19. Nxe4 Qxe4 20. Nh3 Qxg2 21. Rg1) 18... Bxe3 19. Ke1 Qxd2+ 20. Kf1 Bd3+?! { (Mate in 1 → Mate in 1) Not the best checkmate sequence. The best move was Bxg2#. } (20... Bxg2#) 21. Ne2 Qxe2# { White is checkmated } 0-1
 
</pgn>
 
</pgn>
  

Revision as of 16:51, 24 March 2015

Contents

PolaChess

The PolaChess tournament is the ongoing PolaFlow chess tournament. It is a Round-robin, 15 minutes time, 0 increment tournament played during coffee time. Both a PolÆlO rating and centipawns are computed. The person in charge is Juan Pablo.

Polachess-first-game.jpeg

PolÆlO

An Elo is computed, with a $K=32$ constant and with 5 provisional ratings for players not part of the PolaChess pool (we assumed established ratings for everybody who joined the tournament at $t=0$, which is not a problem as their ratings will converge but we need to take into account occasional games as provided by visitors). Specifically, the $K$ factor is scaled by $3/\big(4(5-i)\big)$ (i.e., down) for the established player and by $3-(i-1)/2$ (i.e., up) for his opponent for the first $i<5$ games of the new player, after which point $K=32$ again. Explicitly, the $K$ constants for the new player go:

96, 80, 64, 48, and 32 thereafter

while it goes, for the established player:

6, 8, 12, 24, and 32 thereafter

Games

Carlos (1000) vs Camilo (1000)

13 February (2015)

Fabrice (1000) vs David (1000)

16 February (2015)

Carlos (1016) vs Stefan (1000)

17 February (2015) (photo)

Pablo (1000) vs Fabrice (1016)

18 February (2015)

Santiago (1000) vs Carlos (1031)

Camilo (984) vs Stefan (985)

David (984) vs Carlos (1046)

23 February (2015)Blunderful.

Stefan (1001) vs Pablo (985)

Santiago (985) vs David (1003)

Pablo (970) vs David (1018)

David (1032) vs Fabrice (1031)

Fabrice (1047) vs Stefan (1016)

The end was not recorded as it was too fast for the transcript (Pablo). Apparently an illegal move was made with a rook. The game ended in checkmate in a race to flag for time.

David (1016) vs Stefan (1001)

Fabrice (1062) vs Carlos (1027)

Pablo (956) vs Camilo (968)

Camilo wins on time. Interestingly, 24. Qd6+?! is not a blunder (only a mistake). The next move, however, is a proper queen panick moment.

Stefan (1018) vs Fabrice (1076)

The end was not recorded as it was too fast for the transcript (Pablo). The game ended in checkmate shortly after the last position shown.

Santiago (970) vs Camilo (983)

Shortest game so far, which left us time to play a king of the hill variation (which Camilo won, against Fabrice, by checkmate on a too daring king).

Santiago (987) vs Pablo (941)

In a raging fury against our Colombian community, Santiago proceeds to calmly walk his way back up the ladder of the tournament, methodically resisting the attacks of White who, in their traditional style, succumb to their own pressure and split out to surrender their queen on an otherwise leading position. The shat queen moment—this move of the game where Juan Pablo becomes chess-blind and positions his dame in front of a pawn, bishop or right below the roofs of a knight—occurred here on the (Friday the) 13th move. It was then just a matter of carefully moving the heavy Black artillery left around, with little but enough time left to enforce checkmate. Playing with psychology on his side, Santiago allowed himself the occasional glance through the window, à la Bobby, which was a nice touch.

Camilo (966) vs David (999)

A game of tension, of tension going too far. First 10 moves or so have been slowly, carefully considered by both sides and getting the pot to almost boiling point. Then David blunders his queen away, 11. Bd3?? Even then, to strike mercilessly, Camilo took his time, and brought the heavy knight falling with all the weight of an actual horse on the square that meant defeat for our French contender. But there's nothing that you can do to vex David's attitude. He regarded this move as mere trifle, displaced his king and carried on with a face of steel. Time was still equal. But with time passing and nothing to loose, it was easy for Black to arrogantly pretend they could still play, and with the face of conquest, advance a minuscule little pawn towards recovering the wasted queen. White started to play faster (which is good) and with too much confidence (which is not), with some irrational fixation on delivering check. See 22. Qc4+?, letting the knight go away. At this point, or not too far, a girl who popped out of nowhere tried to get under the table to reach something below Camilo's bench. Upon inquiry, and thankfully, it turned out to be only for a coin that rolled all the way from the vending machine to our competitor. We had to pay the girl to go away. Too late. On 26th move, the blunder of the day changed the game's fate. In a mate-in-5 position, when everybody started to relax and think about the coin below the bench, Camilo spin out of control: first sacrifice of a bishop, 26. Bxa6+? then throwing the queen in its wake, 27 Qxa6+?? The move was stopped in mid-air, in a frozen time and space with only a resounding "too late, too late" from David, detonating in a cafetaria getting a moment's interest into an apparent scandal. Then in time trouble, psychologically ruined, pursuing illusory checkmates through pointless checks, only defeat could follow for White, who lost on time.

Fabrice (1089) vs Javier (1000)

We have a new player, Javier, also the strongest one (playing in a club), so this is great news for our competition. Javier enters with the provisional rating rules, so his rating changes a lot, sinking to 964 as he lost the game, while Fabrice's (yours truly, writing this comment) changes little, winning only 2 points in what was the most difficult game so far. Actually the game was a win for Black, who had a mate position in move 31. Qg4# Chess being a game where a single mistake can overturn everything, since 31. g6+?? was played instead, a Berezina was turned into a Campo Formio. A mate had been announced, and as I had seen the mate with queen, I accepted the claim as valid, but the Referee (Pablo) observed this was not checkmate, so the game carried on, and after forcing the exchange of queens, Black was in the mental despair situation and did not try to fight against the rook. A careless knight move led to his capture on discovering a check, and Black resigned. This is a victory from a lost game. But aren't many victories like that? (especially when involving French players?) Like this, everybody's a winner: the good chess player, who loses on a blunder and the loser, who wins as a patzer. To make things worst, on move 15. a super-castling 15. O-O-O-O was attempted, conveniently getting the king on d1, but of course the referee objected, and everybody laughed his ass off, not letting me add another quantum move up my sleeve of illegal tricks. Still, the game continued.

The main feature of the game as far as I am concerned is my move 7. c3?? which the audience took for what it was: a blunder, but assuming a stupid oversight, while it was really a gambit. Which one? This is the variation I had in mind (you can play it in the game below as the 2nd variation):

7. Nh2 h6xg5 (opening the column)
8. h4xg5 (menacing to take back the sacrificed piece)

The knight has ultimately to move, leaving the Black king naked to an attack from the White queen supported by the king's bishop, and pinned by the White king's bishop. This leads to aggressive attack that, in time battle, may be worth the small loss in material. I'm fairly sure in the queenside castle of Black, this provides an actual advantage (my experience is that strong players tend to reject this gambit). Here, though, the knight was in the way, Javier is a good player, so he had time to develop his pieces to turn this hurried and lame attack into a sound counter-attack. In fact, even if I hadn't shat the horse in the middle, this was a mistake, since, so the computer analyzes:

8. ... d5 (exchanging knight for bishop)
9. Bb3 (holding the pin) Nh7 (keeping the knight)
10. g6

The queen still looks dangerous but the analysis shows that it's still better for Black.

Stefan (1005) vs Amir (1000)

Another new player, Amir Rahmani, joined the tournament to defend the colors of Isfahan against Stefan who took a bye from our club player till Wednesday. A strange opening and a dangerous unconvering of the king-side let Stefan, who was mentally and physically preparing himself to destroy Javier, have an easy win. Tomorrow, Amir vs Juan Pablo. Bets are opened. Will the "shat queen" get in the way of another assured victory? Or will Amir toy again with irregular openings?

Amir (953) vs Juan Pablo (927)

A late PolaChess session today, since Amir was looking for his new place to live (which he found, by the way). Everybody was expecting a bold queen sacrifice from Juan Pablo, which, not disappointingly, duly came on precisely the traditional 12th move. We let you discover this fantastic queen blunder of majestic proportion which, as it should to have all its savor, was played on a strong, if not winning, position.

Polachess-17March2015.jpeg

Stefan (1008) vs Javier (964)

A tense game with a leading White who started to make little mistakes then bigger mistakes then a fatal mistake that let Black recover from a lost piece to a winning position. The message here is: Javier can blunder, so he's reachable, but only once, so remain careful.

Camilo (952) vs Amir (990)

An equilibrated game, that Black loses on time, allowing not to be mated next move, although the mating position had already occured. A couple of times, the battle swung back to a possible win for both sides and even came to a nice confrontation of strong positional advantage against strong material advantage after 19. dxc4??, although the last attack from Camilo, stabbing the rook, was a decisive one. Interestingly, 17. Rxe6+ (where even a mate was announced) is not a mistake, as it allows to pursue the same idea with the other rook, which did not happen in the game, illustrating again how weak is the move that follows a supposed mistake on the board. White wins 7 points, Black looses 35 in this provisional game.

Amir (955���) vs Santiago (1001����)

Amir (982) vs Carlos (1013)

Games to come

Based on Computer's random sampling. Games that cannot take place are either skipped of flushed to the end.

Decided at the last minute on people's availability.