Author: Laurence Chen
Date: 08:16:03 02/04/99
Go up one level in this thread
On February 04, 1999 at 07:42:44, Hans Christian Lykke wrote:
>[Event "SSDF 40-2, DK Bramming"]
>[Site "?"]
>[Date "1999.02.04"]
>[Round "2"]
>[White "Fritz 5.32 P200MMX 46MB"]
>[Black "Chessmaster 6000 P200MMX 16MB"]
>[Result "0-1"]
>[ECO "B33"]
>[WhiteElo "2575"]
>[BlackElo "2520"]
>[Annotator "Test: HC Lykke"]
>[PlyCount "99"]
>
>
>{46848kB, General.ctg. Pentium
>} 1. e4 {0} 1... c5 {32} 2. Nf3 {0} 2... Nc6 {7
>} 3. d4 {0} 3... cxd4 {5} 4. Nxd4 {0} 4... Nf6 {5} 5. Nc3 {0} 5... e5 {5} 6.
>Ndb5 {0} 6... d6 {5} 7. Bg5 {0} 7... a6 {6} 8. Na3 {0} 8... b5 {6} 9. Nd5 {0}
>9... Be7 {283} 10. Bxf6 {0} 10... Bxf6 {256} 11. c3 {0} 11... O-O {276} 12. Nc2
>{0} 12... Be6 {265} 13. Bd3 {0.41/11 258} 13... Bg5 {24} 14. O-O {0.25/11 186}
>14... Ne7 {27} 15. a4 {0.16/12 261} 15... Nxd5 {61} 16. exd5 {0.53/12 84} 16...
>Bd7 {109} 17. axb5 {0.28/13 491} 17... axb5 {5} 18. Qe2 {0.25/12 325} 18... Qb6
>{317} 19. Nb4 {0.22/12 107} 19... Rfc8 {311} 20. Qc2 {0.22/12 462} 20... g6 {
>318} 21. Qe2 {0.09/14 1006} 21... Ra4 {19} 22. Bc2 {0.16/13 362} 22... Ra5 {52}
>23. Rxa5 {0.22/13 229} 23... Qxa5 {6} 24. Bd3 {0.19/13 538} 24... Rc7 {21} 25.
>Rd1 {0.19/12 131} 25... Rb7 {414} 26. Re1 {0.25/12 153} 26... f5 {237} 27. h3 {
>0.09/12 179} 27... Kg7 {331} 28. Qf3 {0.06/12 172} 28... Qc7 {387} 29. Bb1 {
>-0.09/12 195} 29... Ra7 {231} 30. Bc2 {-0.03/14 275} 30... h6 {246} 31. Qe2 {
>-0.19/12 132} 31... Qc4 {311} 32. Bd3 {-0.22/14 576} 32... Qc5 {402} 33. Bb1 {
>-0.25/14 6} 33... Ra1 {268} 34. Nc2 {0.00/13 138} 34... Ra8 {355} 35. Nb4 {
>0.00/14 51} 35... e4 {211} 36. Ba2 {-0.31/12 170} 36... e3 {96} 37. fxe3 {
>-0.22/13 199} 37... f4 {276} 38. Kh1 {-0.34/12 3} 38... Qxe3 {325} 39. Qd1 {
>-0.41/13 249} 39... Qg3 {279} 40. Rf1 {-0.31/13 2} 40... Bxh3 {238} 41. gxh3 {
>-0.47/14 426} 41... Qxh3+ {4} 42. Kg1 {0.00/4 0} 42... f3 {196} 43. Rxf3 {
>-1.09/12 155} 43... Be3+ {26} 44. Rxe3 {-3.16/13 147} 44... Qxe3+ {5} 45. Kh2 {
>-3.19/12 168} 45... Rf8 {348} 46. Qd4+ {-4.09/16 197} 46... Qxd4 {46} 47. cxd4
>{-4.62/15 21} 47... Rf2+ {224} 48. Kg3 {-5.53/18 120} 48... Rxb2 {146} 49. Nc6
>{-5.62/16 27} 49... Rxa2 {241} 50. Kf3 {-7.28/16 197} 0-1
This is a good model game to show what not to do against the Boleslavsky Hole.
Fritz committed the positional sin of allowing the Knight on d5 to be traded off
and forced to capture it by a pawn. After that the game is positionally lost for
White, and the rest is a matter of technique which CM 6000 demonstrates in this
game. 13. Bd3? is a mistake by Fritz because it allows Black to exchange the
Knight on d5 and it forces the pawn to recapture the piece. Black does not trade
off the bishop for the knight so it manouevers the pieces to allow the knight to
go to e7 and trade off the White Knight on d5, I think this manouevering is
unnecessary because it allows White the opportunity to bring support to the
Knight on d5, but White fails to do so. It seems to me that Fritz does not
understand the strategical strength and importance of d5 square, the "hole" in
Black's position, and allows Black to trade off the Knight and forces the
capture by a pawn. This allows Black to have total domination in the center, a
mobile central pawn wedge, which paralysis White's pieces completely. You will
notice that Fritz plays the pieces back and forth, note the Bishop and Rook
moves, because it has no way to break nor stop the central pawn wedge to move
forward, and White has no counterplay at all.
Laurence Chen
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