Thursday, February 12, 2015

国际象棋幻想

Michael Adams – Péter Lékó
1st Fischerandom Chess World Championship; match game 6; Mainz, June 28, 2001
rkqnbrnb/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/RKQNBRNB w KQkq - 0 1

SP811 RKQNBRNB

1. e4. Far from match game 2, when, after 1. c4!? g6! 2. d3 f5 3. Bc3 e5! Black obtained a satisfactory position. 1. ... g6 2. f4 d6 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. d3 f5. Black’s strategy is very similar to that of match game 2. 5. exf5 gxf5 6. Bh4 e6 7. Qd2 Nge7 8. Nc3 Ng6 9. Bf2 Qd7 10. d4 d5 11. g3 0-0-0 12. 0-0-0 Kb8 13. Rde1 Bf7 14. b3 Nge7 15. Na4 b6. In such a position the tendency is towards a mutual blockade. 16. Nb2 Nc8 17. Ne5 Qe8. On 17. ... Nxe5 18. fxe5 is in White’s favour. 18. Qc3 Kb7 19. Qe3 Bg8 20. Nxc6 Qxc6 21. Nc4 Nd6 22. Nxd6+ Qxd6 23. Kb1 Bf6 24. c4 c6 25. Rc1 Bf7 26. Rfe1 h5 27. h4 Rc8 28. c5 Qd7 29. a4 Rb8 30. Re2 Kc7. “White has some initiative, but only 3 minutes left on the clock, whereas Black had more than 6 minutes to the time control on move 40”, Grandmaster Svetozar Gligorić wrote in his book “Shall We Play Fischerandom Chess?”, London, Batsford, 2002, page 122. 31. cxb6+. Otherwise Black could keep the a-side closed by the reply ... b6-b5. 31. ... Rxb6 32. Ka2 Rfb8 33. Rc3 Rb4 34. Qc1 R8b6. After 34. ... Bxd4 35. Bxd4 Rxd4 36. Qe3 the a7-Pawn is hanging. 35. Rec2 Qd6. If 35. ... Bxd4 then 36. Bxd4 Rxd4 37. Qe3 Rdb4 38. a5 Ra6 39. Rc5 “and the Rook on a6 could be trapped after Bh1-f3-e2”, Gligorić wrote (op. cit., p. 122). Better was, however, 35. ... Be8 in order to answer 36. Qd1 by 36. ... Kb8 with roughly even chances. 36. Qd1. The straightforward 36. a5 Ra6 37. Rc5 looks much more promising. 36. .. Kd7 37. Bf3 Qb8 38. Rd2 Qh8 39. Rdd3 a5. 39. ... Kc7 seems a safer course – as Steinitz says: “My King likes to go for a walk”. 40. Rc5 Ra6 41. Be2 Be7 42. Rc1 Bf6 43. Be1 Rb7 44. Bc3 Be8 45. Bb2 Ra8 46. Qe1 Ke7 47. Bd1 Qg8 48. Rc5 Rba7 49. Bc3 Qh8 50. Bb2 Kf7 51. Qe2. “Black has a greater number of weak spots than White, i.e. a5, c6, e6, h5”, Gligorić wrote (op. cit., p. 122). 51. ... Ke7 52. Re3 Qg8 53. Qc2 Kd8 54. Qe2 Kd7. “Finally, Lékó has to make a ‘wrong move’, giving White the chance for a decisive break. Anyway it was impossible to find a good defence with four weak Pawns on a5, c6, e6 and h5. After 54. ... Re7 White could continue 55. Qe1 and the a5-Pawn is under irresistible pressure too”, Gligorić wrote (op. cit., pp. 122-123).


55. Rxc6! A delightfully elegant Rook sacrifice! 55. ... Kxc6 56. Rxe6+ Kd7 57. Rxf6 Rc8 58. Qe5 Rc6 59. Qxf5+ Kc7 60. Qe5+ Kb7 61. Rxc6 Bxc6 62. f5 Qh7 63. f6 Ra8 64. Bxh5 Rh8 65. Bf3 Re8 66. Qg5 Qc2 67. f7 1 : 0.

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