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Subject: Re: E00 = New move = GM Magnus Carlsen vs Sergei Dolmatov, Moscow 2004

Author: gerold daniels

Date: 11:37:06 11/12/04

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On November 12, 2004 at 12:27:22, José Antônio Fabiano Mendes wrote:

>1. Nf3 f5 2. d3 d6 3. e4 e5 4. Nc3 Sc6 5. exf5 Bxf5 6. d4 Nxd4  7. Nxd4 exd4
>8. Qxd4 Nf6 9. Bc4! [the new move, improving on Romanishin-Malaniuk, Tallinn
>1987, that went 9. Bd3 Bxd3 10. Qxd3 c6 11. 0-0 Be7 =]
>Sources ==> http://chessbase.de/2004/sos-preis/partie.htm [in German]
>            http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1274856
>
>================================================================================
>
>The Carlsen Watch [by GM Lubomir Kavalek, washingtonpost.com, February 23, 2004]
>
>Last month we saw the 13-year-old Norwegian prodigy Magnus Carlsen winning the
>Corus C-group in Wijk aan Zee, the Netherlands. He is now playing in Moscow,
>where he smashed former world championship candidate Sergey Dolmatov of Russia
>in a mere 18 moves.
>
>Carlsen is an avid reader of opening books and articles, and he could have seen
>an intriguing work by Jereon Bosch, a Dutchman who is widely read, even by top
>grandmasters. Bosch's "Secrets of Opening Surprises," issued by New in Chess, is
>a fascinating new book that arms players with unusual and almost supernatural
>opening ideas. In one chapter, Bosch provides a blueprint on how to combat the
>Dutch defense. Carslen retooled the concept, and his pieces were soon swarming
>around Dolmatov's king.
>
>Carlsen-Dolmatov
>
>1. Nf3 f5 2. d3!? (The Lisitsin gambit 2. e4, with the idea 2...fxe4 3. Ng5 d5
>4. d3, might be playable. But why not simply prepare the advance of the e-pawn?)
>2...d6 3. e4 e5 4. Nc3 Nc6 5. exf5! Bxf5 6. d4! (The double-jump of the d-pawn,
>together with the threat 7. Bb5, places tremendous strain on black's pawn
>center.) 6...Nxd4 (A proposed way to equality. After 6...Nb4 7.Bb5+ c6 8. Ba4 e4
>9. Ng5 d5 10. f3! white opens the game to his advantage.) 7. Nxd4 exd4 8. Qxd4
>Nf6 (At this point Bosch only shows 5. Bd3, a move that led to draws in a few
>games.)
>
>9. Bc4! (Carlsen's new idea, preventing short castling.) 9...c6 10. Bg5 b5
>(Black can't blunt the range of the bishop on c4 with 10...d5 because after 11.
>0-0-0 Be7 [11...dxc4 12. Qe5+ Qe7 13. Qxf5 is even worse] 12. Rhe1 0-0 13. Qe5
>white's pressure is too strong.) 11. Bb3 Be7 12. 0-0-0 Qd7 13. Rhe1 (White
>developed his pieces extremely well and is threatening to take twice on f6.)
>13...Kd8?! (The black king can't find peace, but it is hard to combat white's
>fire power. After 13...0-0-0 14. g4! Bxg4 15. Rxe7! decides.)
>
>14. Rxe7! (After this timely sacrifice the black empire crumbles.) 14...Qxe7 (On
>14...Kxe7 15. Bxf6+ gxf6 16. Re1+ Kd8 17. Qxf6+ Kc7 18. Re7 wins.) 15. Qf4 Bd7
>16. Ne4 d5 (Black can't cope with the pressure on his knight. After 16...Rf8
>comes 17. Nxd6 h6 18. Qb4! with mating ideas, for example 18...a5 19. Qc5 Ra6
>20. Be3! Nd5 21. Rxd5 cxd5 22. Qb6+! Rxb6 23. Bxb6 mate.) 17. Nxf6 h6 (On
>17...Rf8 18. Nxd5! wins.) 18. Bh4 g5 19. Qd4! (A fine final touch. Black is done
>after 19...gxh4 20. Nxd5!, e.g. 20...Qf8 21. Nb6! or 20...cxd5 21. Qxh8+ Qe8 22.
>Qxh6. And 19...Rf8 20. Nxd7 Qxd7 21. Bg3 is hopeless in a long run.) Black
>resigned.

thanks for the game nice to watch it also.most exciting.
gerold.



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