Wednesday, August 31, 2022

The Reorder of Things

David Navara – Matthias Blübaum
2nd World Fischerandom Chess Championship Qualifier 2; Final match game 4; time control: 15 minutes plus 2 seconds per move; chess.com, August 31, 2022
rnkrbqnb/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/RNKRBQNB w DAda - 0 1

Position #651

1. f4 f5 2. g3 g6 3. Nc3 Nc6 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. e3 e6 6. d4 d5 7. Ne5 Ne4 8. Bxe4. Finally breaking the symmetry, but no initiative will come from it. 8. ... dxe4. 8. ... fxe4 9. Qh3 Qe7 is also perfectly playable. 9. Qc4 Qe7 10. a3 Nxe5 11. dxe5 Rxd1+ 12. Nxd1 0-0-0 13. Nf2 b6


14. a4! White goes for the attack, thus signaling that he won’t castle. On the other hand, 14. 0-0-0 Rxd1+ 15. Nxd1 Bg7 is nothing special for White. 14. ... Rd5?! 15. b4 Kb8 16. h4?! This is cryptic and useless. White could and should consolidate his bind on the position with Nf2-d1-c3-e2-d4. 16. ... Bg7 17. Kb2 Qd8 18. Qb3 Bf8 19. Bc3 Be7 20. Qc4? White achieved very little so far, and again he would probably have done better to recycle his Knight to the centre via h3, g1 and e2.


20. ... Qc8? Much better seems 20. ... Bxa4! 21. Qa6 b5 22. Qxe6 c5 with an overwhelming advantage for Black. 21. Be1 Qd8 22. Qe2 Qc8 23. Qc4 a6 24. Nd1 b5 25. axb5 (25. Qa2! c5 26. axb5 cxb4∞) 25. ... Rxb5 26. Kc1 c5


27. Nc3? 27. bxc5 Bxc5 28. Qa2 Rb6= was apparently good enough to hold balance. 27. ... Rb6! 28. Na4? Tantamount to capitulation. However, if 28. bxc5 Bxc5 29. Qe2 then 29. ... a5! 30. Rxa5 Bb4 winning the Exchange. 28. ... Bxa4 29. Rxa4 cxb4 30. Qxc8+ Kxc8. Now, with a Pawn ahead and the much better Bishop, the ending is easily won. 31. Ra5 Kb7 32. Kb2 Rc6 33. Ra4 Bc5 34. Bxb4. Or 34. Bd2 Rc8 35. Kb3 Rd8−+ sooner or later forcing the White Bishop to take on b4. 34. ... Bxe3 35. Bd6 Bf2 36. c4 e3 37. c5 e2 38. Rb4+ Ka7 39. Bb8+ Ka8 0 : 1.

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Последний император (The Last Emperor)

Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev, the last President of the Soviet Union, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and ideologist of glasnost and perestroika, “died this evening after a serious and long illness”, the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow said, quoted by the Interfax, TASS and RIA Novosti news agencies. He was 91. In a world split in two, he dreamed to have the best of both worlds. Among his many highlights, Gorbachev can also boast the unique privilege of crowning — as pictured above — the Queen of Chess, 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), at the awarding ceremony of the 35th Women’s World Championship in Tirana, Albania on November 30, 2011. Photo: Hektor Pustina/AP.

The Eleventh

The renowned Czech chess historian Jan Kalendovský is the author of many books, including “Královna šachu Věra Menčíková” (JAKURA, Prague, 2016), and is constantly engaged in the search for missing games and scoresheets of his objects of desire. The following game, played in the round 11 of the 6th Women’s World Chess Championship Tournament between Vera Frantsevna Menchik and Florence Frankland Thomson, is the most likely decipherment of the original scoresheet — “A gift from Swedish friends”, as he says.

Vera Frantsevna Menchik – Florence Frankland Thomson
6th Women’s World Chess Championship Tournament; Stockholm, August 1937
English Opening A28

1. c4 e5 2. Nc3 Nf6 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. d4 exd4 5. Nxd4 Nxd4 6. Qxd4 Be7 7. e4 d6 8. Be2 0-0 9. 0-0 Re8


10. f3. Far from any theoretical absolute, it is just worth mentioning here that the distance between past and present may not be as deep as one thinks: 10. Bf4 Nd7 11. Qd2 Nf8 12. Nd5 Ng6 13. Be3 Bf8 14. f3 c6 15. Nc3 Qc7 16. Rad1 Ne5 17. b3 a6 18. Rc1 Qa5 19. b4 Qc7 20. Kh1 f5 21. Rfd1 Kh8 22. Bd4 Qf7 23. c5 Be6 24. Qb2 Rad8 25. Rd2 Nc4 26. Bxc4 Bxc4 27. exf5 Qxf5 28. cxd6 Qg6 29. Bc5 Bxd6 30. Bxd6 Rxd6 31. Ne4 Rxd2 32. Qxd2 Bd5 33. Nc3 Qe6 34. Rd1 h6 35. Nxd5 Qxd5 36. Qxd5 cxd5 37. Kg1 Re2 38. Rxd5 Rxa2 39. b5 Kh7 40. bxa6 bxa6 41. h4 ½ : ½ Goryachkina – Pogonina, 70th Russian Women’s Chess Championship Superfinal, Moscow 2020.
10. ... b6 11. Kh1 Bb7 12. Rd1 Nd7 13. Nd5 Bf6 14. Nxf6+ Qxf6 15. Qd2 Re6 16. Qc2 Rae8 17. Bd2 Qg6 18. Bf1 Ne5 19. Be1 h5 20. Qf2 Qh7 21. Bc3 h4 22. h3 Ng6 23. Qd2 Ne5 24. b4 Bc8


25. f4 Nd7 26. Bd3 Qh5 27. Re1 Bb7 28. Be2 Qh7 29. Bg4 R6e7 30. e5 Nf8 31. Bd1 dxe5 32. Ba4 c6 33. fxe5 Qg6 34. Qf4 Nd7 35. Rac1 Qg3 36. Qxg3 hxg3 37. Re3 Nxe5 38. Rxg3


38. ... Nxc4?? A tragic blunder which loses at once a still defensible game (if only Thomson had played 38. ... f6). It is very plausible that Black was terribly short of time.
39. Rxg7+ Kf8 40. Rh7 f5 41. Rh8+ Kf7 42. Bb3 Ba6 43. Rh6 Re6 44. Rh7+ Kg6 45. Rxa7 Re2 46. Rxa6 Ne3 47. Rxb6 1 : 0.

Blinding Light


Four-time Women’s World Chess Champion 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), whose fame is known throughout all the universe, was the guest star at the opening ceremony of 20th Sports Games of 江苏省 (Jiāngsū), which officially kicked off in 泰州 (Tàizhōu) on Sunday, August 28, 2022.

Monday, August 29, 2022

Fractals and Chaos

Vincent Keymer – Alexander Anatolyevich Donchenko
2nd World Fischerandom Chess Championship Qualifier 2; time control: 10 minutes plus 2 seconds per move; chess.com, August 29, 2022
bnqbnrkr/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/BNQBNRKR w HFhf - 0 1

Position #17

1. c4 Nf6 2. b3 e6 3. e3 b6 4. Bf3 Na6 5. Nc3 Be7 6. d4 Rd8 7. e4 d5 8. cxd5 exd5 9. e5 Ne4 10. Be2 c5 11. Nf3 0-0 12. Rd1 Nb4 13. a3 Nc6 14. 0-0 cxd4 15. Nb5 Rfe8 16. b4 a5 17. bxa5 bxa5 18. Qf4 Bb7 19. Nbxd4 Nxd4 20. Nxd4


20. ... Bxa3!? A somewhat risky Pawn grab, although Black might be able to hold his own with correct play. Of course here 20. ... Bg5 was to be considered, on which there could follow 21. Qf5 Qxf5 22. Nxf5 g6 with a more or less balanced game. 21. Bb5


21. ... Rf8? This obvious reply is in fact mistaken and leaves White with a free hand on the h-side. Black’s only chance was 21. ... Ba6! 22. Bxe8 Rxe8 23. Rfe1 Bb4 24. Nf5 Bxe1 25. Rxe1 Qc5! 26. Nxg7! Qb4 27. Rd1 Nc3 28. Qxb4 axb4 29. Bxc3 Rb8 30. Bxb4 Kxg7 31. Bd6 Be2! 32. Re1 d4 33. Bxb8 d3 with a likely draw. 22. Nf5 Qe6 23. f3 Qb6+ [23. ... Nc5 24. Qg5 g6 25. Nh6+ Kg7 (25. ... Kh8? 26. Nxf7!+−) 26. Ng4+−] 24. Bd4 Qxb5 (24. ... Nc5 25. Qg3 g6 26. e6!+−) 25. fxe4 Bc5 26. Qg5 g6 27. Nh6+ Kg7 28. Nf5+ Kg8


29. Qf6! gxf5 30. Qg5+ Kh8 31. Qf6+ Kg8 32. Rxf5 Bxd4+ 33. Rxd4 Qb1+ 34. Kf2 Qb2+ 35. Kg3 h6 36. Qxh6 Qc3+ 37. Kh4 1 : 0.

Lifetime Passes

Four-time Women’s World Chess Champion 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) has participated as a lecturer and speaker at the 16th Harvard Summit for Young Leaders in China (HSYLC), the most cosmopolitan inter-university conference of higher education in Asia, which was held simultaneously in 北京 (Běijīng), 上海 (Shànghǎi), and 杭州 (Hángzhōu) over three sessions (July 17–23, July 31–August 6, and August 14–20). With regard to this year's conference theme, “Unlock the Greatness Within You”, 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) herself, 9-dan Go Grandmaster 常昊 (Cháng Hào), and pair skater 隋文静 (Suí Wénjìng) & 韩聪 (Hán Cōng), discussed their experiences and opinions and feelings in connection with their own success story, what matters most — whether talent, hard work, choice, chance, love — and they all agreed that only love can last a long time.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

A Friday in September

The die is cast, the stage is set: the grand finale match of the 4th Online Women’s Speed Chess Championship Main Event between four-time Women’s World Chess Champion 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) and Ekaterina Aleksandrovna Lagno will be held Friday, September 2, 4.00 A.M. PT/13.00 CET at chess.com. For further details and information, click here.

Going Alien

The victory in the Qualifier 1 of the 2nd World Fischerandom Chess Championship gave Russian Grandmaster Vladimir Vasilyevich Fedoseev a date for the Grand Finale at Reykjavík in October. Yet, as he himself said in the interview afterwards, it was anything but easy for him to extricate himself from the “going alien”. “Fischerandom is the game you cannot control. It’s absolutely impossible”, Fedoseev said. “Positions during this tournament were so crazy that it was impossible to judge them correctly. Because of this, I mostly feel like an idiot who tries to find solutions in an absolutely different world. That’s why I stayed calm in any trouble and was ready to play any hopeless position”.

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Not the Last Goodbye

Robert James Fischer – Boris Vasilievich Spassky
World Chess Championship match game 6; Reykjavík, July 23, 1972
Queen’s Gambit Declined D59

Notes by Grandmaster Mario Monticelli, “Fischer – Spasskij. La Sfida del Secolo”, U. Mursia & C., Milan, 1972, pp. 92-96.

“Nothing succeeds like success”, so goes an English proverb. And since Bobby Fischer wins (he has already regained the two points of disadvantage he had after two games) the attitude of the public towards him has changed. When Spassky arrived on time in the Sports Hall for the beginning of the sixth game, the applause was more sparse than usual. Instead, when Fischer appeared (late as usual, this time by ten minutes) there was almost an ovation.

1. c4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. d4 Nf6 4. Nc3 Be7 5. Bg5 0-0 6. e3 h6 7. Bh4 b6. By transposition, the game has reached an ancient line of the Queen’s Gambit Declined, the so-called “Tartakower Variation”. And in fact the game is so far identical with the game Capablanca – Tartakower of the London 1922 tournament: nihil sub sole novi!
8. cxd5. Thus Capablanca also played, and Black recaptured with the Pawn.
8. ... Nxd5 9. Bxe7 Qxe7 10. Nxd5 exd5 11. Rc1 Be6 12. Qa4 c5. All these moves are given by Tartakower in the notes to his London game (“My Best Games of Chess, 1905–1930”): however, 13. ... c5 is there preceded by 12. ... Rc8.
13. Qa3 Rc8 14. Bb5 a6? No doubt a lost tempo, albeit the purpose of the move is to bring the a8-Rook to a7. Tartakower recommends at this point 14. ... Kf8.
15. dxc5 bxc5. With the King on f8, one could consider 15. ... Rxc5, bearing the isolated Pawn on d5.
16. 0-0 Ra7 17. Be2 Nd7 18. Nd4 Qf8. Spassky pondered for 35 minutes before retiring the undefended Queen which constituted the main weakness of his position. But now another one will be created.


19. Nxe6! One of the characteristics of Fischer’s play is the promptness with which the American is able to transform a manifest but not yet realisable positional advantage into another kind of superiority, intended to give greater fruit: and the exchange of the d4-Knight for the e6-Bishop is an example. He now goes on to attack the light squares in the enemy camp, desisting from exerting a stubborn pressure on the c5-Pawn.
19. ... fxe6 20. e4 d4. Taking on e4 would make Black’s Pawn position even worse; but now Fischer has his new target.
21. f4 Qe7 22. e5 Rb8 23. Bc4 Kh8 24. Qh3 Nf8. Inconsistent with the last two moves. As things go, White easily achieves the opening of the two diagonals he needs for the attack against his opponent’s castling: c4-g8 and d3-h7. So Spassky might have ventured on 24. ... Rxb2 25. Bxe6 Nf8 26. Bb3 a5! or 25. Qxe6 Qxe6 26. Bxe6 g6 followed by ... Kh8-g7 and Black is still fighting on.
25. b3 a5 26. f5 exf5 27. Rxf5 Nh7 28. Rcf1 Qd8 29. Qg3 Re7 30. h4 Rbb7. By 30. h4 White was threatening Rf5-f7 (which would have been ineffective immediately because of the exchange of Rooks followed by ... Qd8-g5). Now the advance of the passed Pawn prepares for a decisive irruption.
31. e6 Rbc7 32. Qe5!


Black is now completely paralysed.
32. ... Qe8 33. a4 Qd8 34. R1f2 Qe8 35. R2f3 Qd8. Black is reduced to making waiting moves.
36. Bd3! Qe8 37. Qe4 Nf6. White’s threat was Rf5-f8+.
38. Rxf6 gxf6 39. Rxf6 Kg8 40. Bc4 Kh8 41. Qf4 1–0.

Friday, August 26, 2022

Who’s Who

To whom is the word addressed?

Giorgio Agamben, Quodlibet, August 23, 2022

In any epoch, poets, philosophers and prophets lamented and denounced without reservation the vices and shortcomings of their time. However, they who thus groaned and blamed, did address themselves to their fellows and spoke in the name of something common or at least shareable. It has been said, in this sense, that poets and philosophers always spoke in the name of an absent people. Absent in the sense of being missing, of something that was missed and was therefore somehow still present. Albeit in this negative and purely ideal mode, their words still supposed an addressee.
Today, perhaps for the first time, poets and philosophers speak — if they speak — without having any possible addressee in mind. The philosopher’s traditional extraneousness to the world in which he lives has changed its sense, it is no longer just isolation or persecution by hostile or enemy forces. The word must now deal with an absence of addressee that is not episodic but constitutive, so to say. It has neither destination nor destiny. This can also be expressed by saying, as many do, that humanity — or at least its wealthier and more powerful part — has come to the end of its history and that therefore the very idea of transmitting and passing on something no longer makes any sense. When Averroes in 12th century Andalusia claimed that the purpose of thought is not to communicate with others, but to join in the single intellect, he took it, however, for granted that the human species were eternal. We are the first generation of modernity for which this certainty has been revoked into doubt, for which, indeed, it appears probable that the human genre — at least what we meant by this name — could cease to exist.
If, however — as I am doing right now — we continue to write, we cannot but ask ourselves what may be a word that in no case will be shared and heard by others, we cannot escape this extreme test of our condition as writers in a condition of absolute non-belonging. Of course the poet has always been alone with his language, but this language was by definition shared, which is no longer so obvious to us now. In any event, it is the very meaning of what we do that is being transformed, perhaps it has already been completely transmuted. But this means the we have to rethink our mandate in the word over again — in a word that no longer has an addressee, which no longer knows to whom it is addressed. The word becomes here similar to a letter which was sent back to the sender because the addressee is unknown. And we cannot reject it, we must hold it in our hands, perhaps because we, ourselves, are that addressee unknown.

Some years ago, an English-language magazine asked me to answer the question “To whom is poetry addressed”. I give here the Italian text(*), still unpublished.

To whom is poetry addressed?
It is only possible to answer this question if one understands that the addressee of poetry is not a real person, but an exigency.
This exigency does not coincide with any of the modal categories with which we are familiar: the object of an exigency is neither necessary nor contingent, neither possible nor impossible .
Rather, it will be said, that one thing demands another, when, if the first thing is, the other too will be, without the first thing’s either logically implying the second or forcing it to exist on the level of facts. It is, simply, beyond any necessity and beyond any possibility. Like a promise that can be fulfilled only by the one who receives it.
Benjamin wrote that the life of Prince Myshkin demands to remain unforgettable, even if everyone forgets it. In the same way, a poem needs to be read, even if no one reads it.
This can also be expressed by saying that, insofar as it demands to be read, poetry must remain illegible. Properly speaking, there is no reader of poetry.
This is perhaps what César Vallejo, has in mind when, upon defining the ultimate intention and the dedication of all his poetry, he found no other words but
por el analfabeto a quien escribo. Just do consider the apparently redundant formulation: “for the illiterate person, to whom I write”. Here Por means less “to” than “in place of”, just as Primo Levi said he was bearing witness for — that is, “in place of” — those called “Muslims” in the jargon of Auschwitz, who could not in any case have borne witness. The true addressee of poetry is the one who is not able to read it. But this also means that the book, which is destined to the one who cannot read it — the illiterate — has been written with a hand that, in a way, does not know how to write — an illiterate hand. Poetry gives all writing back to the illegible from which it comes and towards which it keeps on travelling.


(*) A chi si rivolge la poesia?
È possibile rispondere a questa domanda, solo se si comprende che il destinatario di una poesia non è una persona reale, ma un’esigenza.
L’esigenza non coincide con nessuna delle categorie modali che ci sono familiari: ciò che è oggetto di un’esigenza non è né necessario né contingente, né possibile né impossibile.
Si dirà, piuttosto, che una cosa ne esige un’altra, quando, se la prima è, anche l’altra sarà, senza che la prima la implichi logicamente né la obblighi a esistere sul piano dei fatti. Essa è, semplicemente, al di là di ogni necessità e di ogni possibilità. Come una promessa che può essere adempiuta soltanto da colui che la riceve.
Benjamin ha scritto che la vita del principe Myškin esige di restare indimenticabile, quand’anche tutti l’avessero dimenticata. Allo stesso modo, una poesia esige di essere letta, anche se nessuno la legge.
Ciò si può anche esprimere dicendo che, in quanto esige di essere letta, la poesia deve restare illeggibile, che non vi è propriamente un lettore della poesia.
È quello che aveva forse in mente César Vallejo, quando, per definire l’intenzione ultima e quasi la dedica di tutta la sua poesia, non trovava altre parole che
por el analfabeto a quien escribo. Si consideri la formulazione apparentemente ridondante: “per l’analfabeta a cui scrivo”. Por non vale qui tanto “a”, quanto “al suo posto”, come Primo Levi diceva di testimoniare per — cioè “in luogo di” — quelli che nel gergo di Auschwitz si chiamavano i “musulmani”, cioè coloro che in nessun caso avrebbero potuto testimoniare. Il vero destinatario della poesia è colui che non è in grado di leggerla. Ma ciò significa anche che il libro, che è destinato a colui che non può leggerlo — l’analfabeta — è stato scritto con una mano che, in un certo senso, non sa scrivere, con una mano analfabeta. La poesia restituisce ogni scrittura all’illeggibile da cui proviene e verso cui si mantiene in viaggio.

(English translation by I, Robot)

齐白石 (Qí Báishí), A lone sail, 1910. Courtesy of WikiArt.

A Lake in the Forest

Tourists enjoy a boat ride in a Metasequoia forest in 渌洋湖湿地公园 (Lùyáng Lake Wetland Park) in 扬州 (Yángzhōu), 江苏省 (Jiāngsū province), China. Photo: VCG/Getty Images.

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

King Without a Castle

Vladimir Vasilyevich Fedoseev – Benjamin Bok
2nd World Fischerandom Chess Championship Qualifier 1; Quarterfinal match game 1; time control: 15 minutes plus 2 seconds per move; chess.com, August 23, 2022
bnqbrnkr/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/BNQBRNKR w HEhe - 0 1

Position #113

1. e4 c5 2. b3 b6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Bxd4 Ne6 5. Bb2 0-0 6. Ng3 Bc7 7. Bg4 Bf4 8. Qd1 Nc6 9. Nc3 Be5 10. Nge2 Qb8. White has not yet castled, and Black does not intend to allow him to do it. 11. Bc1? White doesn’t succeed in solving his development issue(s) and soon falls into an uncomfortable pattern. Probably best was 11. h4! b5 12. Rh3 (developing and pseudo-castling) 12. ... b4 13. Na4 with an interesting game in true hypermodern style. 11. ... Ncd4 12. Nd5 Nxe2+ 13. Bxe2 Nc5 14. f3 e6 15. Ne3 d5 16. exd5 exd5 17. Ng4 Bc3 18. Bd2 Bd4+ 19. Nf2


Black has already an appreciable advantage in his much better development, but that does not seem enough for Bok, who, quite adventurously, does not hesitate to sacrifice a Knight for the sake of preventing White from castling h-side: 19. ... Ne4?! 20. fxe4 dxe4 21. c3 Bxf2+ 22. Kxf2 f5 23. Be3 f4 24. Bd4 f3? Now it is consistent, but too hasty. In fact by allowing White to get the two Bishops against Black’s castle cannot but bring disgrace on the defender. Correct was 24. ... b5! 25. Rhf1 (or 24. Bg4 e3+ 25. K~ b4!) 24. ... f3! with interesting compensation. 25. Bc4+ Kh8 26. g3 b5 27. Bf1 b4 28. Qd2 Rd8 29. Qe3 Qc7 30. Bc4 Qa5 31. Ra1 bxc3 32. Bxc3 Qf5 33. Rhd1 Rd7 34. Rxd7 Qxd7


35. Rd1! Qe7. The Rook is taboo, for if 35. ... Qxd1 then 36. Bxg7+! Kxg7 37. Qg5+ Kh8 38. Qe5+ followed by mate. In any event, what follows is only a cat and mouse affair, which Fedoseev handles with merciless coolness. 36. h4 Bc6 37. Qg5 Qc7 38. Be5 Qb6+ 39. Bd4 Qc7 40. Be3 Qc8 41. Bf1 a6 42. Qc5 Rg8 43. Rc1 Qd7 44. Qxc6 Qe7 45. Qc5 Qe6 46. Qc4 Qe5 47. Qd4 Qe6 48. Rc7 a5 49. Qd7 Qe5 50. Bd4 e3+ 51. Bxe3 Qb2+ 52. Qd2 Qe5 53. Rc5 Qe6 54. Qd4 a4 55. Qxa4 Qf6 56. Qd4 Qe6 57. Rc7 Qf5


58. g4! A beautiful deflection. Nevertheless, 58. Rxg7! would force mate in a few moves. 58. ... Qb1 59. Qxg7+! Rxg7 60. Rc8+ Rg8 61. Bd4# 1 : 0.

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Ten Minutes in the Fourth Dimension

Denis Lazavik – Luca Moroni
2nd World Fischerandom Chess Championship Qualifier 1; time control: 10 minutes plus 2 seconds per move; chess.com, August 22, 2022
bnrkqnrb/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/BNRKQNRB w GCgc - 0 1

Position #243

1. b3 b6 2. e4 e5 3. 0-0-0 g6 4. g3 f5 5. exf5 Bxh1 6. Rxh1 gxf5 7. d4 e4. Fixing the centre may make Black’s situation just a little uneasy, so perhaps 7. ... Ng6 8. dxe5 f4 was here to be considered. 8. Ne3 Qg6 9. Nc3 0-0-0 10. Ncd5 Nc6 11. Qe2 Kb7 12. Nf4 Qf7 13. d5 Ne5 (13. ... Bxa1? 14. dxc6+ Ka8 15. Qa6 Rb8 16. Qb5+−) 14. Rd4 Nfg6. 14. ... Ra8 15. Ra4 a6 also seems playable. 15. Ra4 a5


16. b4! Sometimes less is better than more as the showy sacrifice 16. Rxa5!? is neutralised by 16. ... Ra8! (but not 16. ... bxa5?? by reason of 17. Qb5+ K~ 18. d6!+−) 17. Rxa8 Rxa8 18. Kb1 Nxf4 19. gxf4 Ng6 20. Bxh8 Nxf4 21. Qxd2 Rxh8= with equality. 16. ... Nxf4? This is probably Black’s crucial mistake. He had to play at once 16. ... Ra8 17. bxa5 Ra6 18. Qb5 Rga8 with a sufficient defence. 17. gxf4 Ng6 18. Bxh8 Rxh8 19. bxa5 Ra8 20. Qc4 Rhc8. Not 20. ... Nxf4? on account of 21. a6+! Kc8 (21. ... Kb8 22. a7+!+−) 22. a7!+− winning. 21. Kd2! Making room for the other Rook. 21. ... Qf6 22. Rb1 Nxf4


23. Qb5? Throwing away the win: consistent was 23. Qc5! Ra6 (now neither 23. ... Qd6 nor 23. ... Qh4 are playable for Black because of 24. Rxb6+!+−) 24. Nc4 with an irresistible attack. 23. ... Qd6? (23. ... Qh4!⇄) 24. Ke1 Rg8 25. Kd2


25. ... Ra6? As Tarrasch said, “When you don’t know what to do, wait for your opponent to get an idea — it’s sure to be wrong!”. 26. axb6 Rxb6 (26. ... Qxb6 27. Qa6+!+−) 27. Qa6+!   1 : 0.

Lose to Win

Valentina Evgenyevna Gunina – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán)
4th Online Women’s Speed Chess Championship Main Event; Semifinal match game 2; time control: 5 minutes plus 1 second per move; chess.com, August 22, 2022
Queen’s Gambit Declined D38

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Bb4 5. Bg5 h6 6. Bxf6 Qxf6 7. e3 0-0 8. Rc1 dxc4 9. Bxc4 c5 10. 0-0 cxd4 11. Ne4 Qe7 12. a3. Alternatively, White can play 12. exd4 Rd8 13. Qe2 Nc6 14. Rfd1 Ba5 15. Bb5 Bd7 16. Nc5 Be8 17. d5 Rxd5 18. Rxd5 exd5 19. Qxe7 Nxe7 20. Nxb7 Bb6 21. Nd6 Bxb5 22. Nxb5 Nf5 23. Kf1 h5 24. Rd1 Rd8 25. Nc3 Ne7 26. Ne5 Ba5 27. Na4 Rc8 28. Nd3 Rc4 29. Nac5 Bb6 30. Nb3 f6 31. Nd2 Rc2 32. Nf3 g6 33. Nfe1 Rc4 34. b3 Re4 35. Nc2 Kf7 36. g3 g5 37. Ndb4 Re5 38. Ne1 Ba5 39. Nbd3 Re6 40. Nc2 Bb6 41. Ndb4 Re5 42. Nd3 Re6 43. Ncb4 Ba5 44. Rc1 Bb6 45. Nc5 Rd6 46. Na4 Ke6 47. Ke2 Kd7 48. Nxb6+ axb6 49. Kd3 Re6 50. Nc2 Nc6 51. Rd1 Ne5+ 52. Kc3 Rc6+ 53. Kb2 Rc5 (53. ... Nf3) 54. b4 Rc8 55. Rxd5+ Ke6 56. Rb5 Nc4+ 57. Kb3 Nd2+ 58. Kb2 Nc4+ 59. Ka1 Rd8 60. a4 Rd2 61. Ne3 Nxe3 62. fxe3 Rxh2 63. Rxb6+ Kd7? (63. ... Kd5! 64. a5 Kc4 65. Kb1 h4 66. gxh4 gxh4 67. Rxf6 Kb3 68. Kc1 Kc3 69. Kd1 Kxb4=) 64. a5+− (64. Rxf6? h4! 65. gxh4 Rxh4=) 64. ... h4 (64. ... Kc7 65. Rb5 Kc6? 66. a6!+−) 65. gxh4 Rxh4 66. a6 Kc7 67. Rb7+ Kc8 68. b5 Rb4 69. Ka2 g4 70. Ka3 Rb1 71. Ka4 f5 72. Rg7 Kb8 73. Ka5 Rb3 74. b6 Ra3+ 75. Kb5 Rb3+ 76. Kc5 Rc3+ 77. Kd4 1 : 0 Ruck – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), 18th Corsican Circuit, Bastia 2014, Semifinal match game 2 (time control: 15 minutes plus 3 seconds).
12. ... Ba5 13. Qxd4 Nc6. Out of superstition, 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) varies from 13. ... Bd7 14. Qe5 Bc6 15. Ng3 Bxf3 16. Qxa5 Bc6 17. Bd3 Rd8 18. Rfd1 Nd7 19. Be4 Bxe4 20. Nxe4 Nf6 21. Nxf6+ Qxf6 22. Rxd8+ Rxd8 23. h3 a6 24. Qb4 b5 25. Kf1 Qf5 26. Kg1 Qe5 27. Qe7 Qd6 28. Qxd6 Rxd6 29. Rc8+ Kh7 30. Rc2 Rd1+ 31. Kh2 Rb1 32. Kg3 Kg6 33. Kf4 Kf6 34. Ke4 h5 35. Kd4 Rd1+ 36. Kc5 Rd5+? (36. ... g5! 37. Kb6 Rd6+ 38. Rc6 Rd2 39. b4 Rd3 40. Kxa6 Rxa3+ 41. Kxb5 Ra2 seems to be tenable) 37. Kb6 Rd6+ 38. Kb7 (38. Rc6 Rd2 39. b4 Rd3 40. Kxa6 Rxa3+ 41. Kxb5 Ra2 42. Rc4!+−) 38. ... h4 39. b4 g5 40. f3 Kf5 41. Rc5+? (41. Rc6+−) 41. ... e5 42. Rc2 f6 43. Ra2 e4 44. a4 bxa4 45. Rxa4 exf3 46. gxf3 Rd3 47. Ra5+ Kg6 48. Kxa6 Rxe3 49. b5 Kf5 50. Ra4 Rxf3 51. b6 Re3? (51. ... Rb3 52. Ra5+ Kf4 55. b7 Rxb7 56. Kxb7 f5=) 52. b7 Re8 53. Rc4 Rb8 54. Ka7 Re8 55. b8=Q Rxb8 56. Kxb8 Ke5 57. Kc7 f5 58. Kd7 f4 59. Rc5+ Ke4 60. Ke6 g4 61. hxg4 h3 62. g5 h2 63. Rc1 Kf3 64. g6 1 : 0 Gunina – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), 1st Silk Road Women’s International Rapid & Blitz Tournament, 韩城 (Hánchéng) 2016 (time control: 25 minutes plus 10 seconds per move). It should be noted, however, that the outcome had nothing to do with theoretical issues.
14. Qc5 Bd8. Just a bit clumsy, but perfectly sound. Probably simpler is 14. ... Qxc5 15. Nxc5 Bb6 16. Bd3 Bxc5 17. Rxc5 Bd7 18. Rfc1 Rfc8 19. Be4 Rab8 20. h4 Kf8 21. Bxc6 Rxc6 22. Ne5 Rd6 23. Rc7 Ke7 24. h5 Rd5 25. f4 f6 26. e4 Rd4 27. Nf3 Rd3 28. Kf2 Kd8 29. g4 Rc8 30. Rxc8+ Bxc8 31. e5 Bd7 32. exf6 gxf6 33. g5 Bc6 34. Rc3 Rd5 35. Kg3 fxg5 36. fxg5 Rf5 37. gxh6 Rxh5 38. Nd4 Bd7 39. Nf3 Rxh6 40. Ne5 Be8 41. Kf4 Rh2 42. b4 Re2 43. Re3 Rc2 44. Nf3 Rf2 45. Ke5 Ke7 46. Nd4 Bd7 47. Ke4 ½ : ½ Dubov – Donchenko, 2nd FIDE Grand Swiss Tournament, Riga 2021.
15. Qh5!? A novelty in the style of Gunina. More scientific is — or it is supposed to be — 15. Rfd1 Qxc5 16. Nxc5 Bf6 17. Rc2 Ne5 18. Be2 Nxf3+ 19. Bxf3 Rb8 20. b4 b6 21. Nd7 Bxd7 22. Rxd7 Rfc8 23. Rcc7 Rxc7 24. Rxc7 a5 25. g3 Bb2 26. bxa5 bxa5 27. a4 Ba3 28. h4 g6 29. h5 g5 30. Bb7 Kg7 31. Kg2 Rd8 32. Bc6 g4 33. Bb5 Rd5 34. Be2 Rg5 35. Rc4 f5 36. Rc6 e5 37. Rc7+ Kh8 38. Rb7 Bb4 39. Rb5 Kg7 40. Rxe5 Kf6 41. Rb5 Bc3 42. Bd3 Bb4 43. Bc2 Bc3 44. Kf1 Rxh5 45. e4 Bd4 46. Rxa5 Bxf2 47. Kxf2 Rh2+ 48. Ke3 Rxc2 49. Rxf5+ Kg6 50. Rd5 h5 51. Rd2 Rc4 52. Ra2 Rc3+ 53. Kf2 Rf3+ 54. Kg2 Re3 55. a5 Rxe4 56. a6 Re8 57. a7 Ra8 58. Ra5 Kh6 59. Kf2 Kg6 60. Ke3 Kh6 61. Kf4 Rf8+ 62. Rf5 Rg8 63. Rf6+ Kh7 64. Ra6 1 : 0 小島慎也 (Shinya Kojima) – Wiedenkeller, 43rd Chess Olympiad, Batumi 2018.
15. ... Bb6. 15. ... f5!? 16. Nc5 Kh7 17. b4 e5 is surely worth of further analysis since on it depends the assessment of 15. Qh5.
16. Rfd1. 16. g4! at once was better timed and was more forcible, as instead the text gives Black a valuable tempo to defend.
16. ... Bd7 17. g4 Be8 18. Qh3. Obviously not 18. g5?? on account of 18. ... f5! winning material.
18. ... Na5 19. Bd3 Ba4


20. g5! Bxd1 21. Rxd1 Rad8. If, instead, 21. ... Rfd8 there might follow 22. Ne5 (Δ Ne5-g4) 22. ... Rd5 23. Nf6+! (23. Ng4? Rxg5!∓) 23. ... gxf6 24. Qxh6 Rxd3 25. gxf6 Rxd1+ 26. Kg2 Qf8 27. Qh5 with an inevitable draw by perpetual check.


Now Gunina unleashes a pair of sacrifices which gain the Queen at the cost of too much material (two Rooks and Bishop), but stripping the Black King just enough to hope for a draw.
22. Nf6+! gxf6 23. Bh7+! Kxh7 24. Qxh6+ Kg8 25. gxf6 Rxd1+ 26. Kg2 Qxf6 27. Qxf6 Rd5 28. Qf4? The wrong track. 28. Qh6! was White’s only move, as if 28. ... Rfd8 then 29. e4 R5d7 30. Ne5 Nc6! 31. Ng4! (Δ Ng4-f6#) 31. ... Bd4 32. e5 Bxe5 33. Qg5+ with a likely draw.
28. ... Rfd8? Returning the favour. After 28. ... f6! 29. Qe4 Kf7 30. Qh7+ Ke8 Black should consolidate her material advantage.
29. e4 R5d7 30. Ne5 Nc6! 31. Ng4?! Objectively speaking, White should content herself to strive for a draw or something with 31. Nxd7 Rxd7 32. Qg5+, but, given the time control, her tactical gamble not only makes sense, but it also proves to be a winning strategy.
31. ... Rd2?! 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), too, believes in the triumph of her attack. However, it is important to note that 31. ... Kf8! at once would have deprived White of most, if not all, of her attacking possibilities.


32. Qf6? Most dramatically, it is a misstep that could cost Gunina dear. The right move was 32. Qh6! (Δ Ng4-f6#) 32. ... f6! 33. e5! fxe5 34. Qxe6+ drawing by perpetual check.
32. ... Kf8! 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) seizes the day! Now White is dead lost.
33. h4


33. ... Rxf2+?? But Black, apparently oblivious of a trivial tactic, throws it all away! Instead, after 33. ... Re2! White could well resign, for she is absolutely helpless against the double threat of ... Bb6xf2 and ... Rd8-d2.
34. Nxf2 Rd2 35. Qh6+ 1 : 0.

“The winner”, as Tartakower used to say, “is the one who makes the next-to-last mistake”. Screenshot from the live stream.

Valentine’s Day Approximately

In her post-match interview to Grandmasters Alexandra Konstantinovna Kosteniuk and Irina Borisivna Krush, four-time Women’s World Chess Champion 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) humbly commented on her almost unbelievable comeback after six straight losses in the 5/1 segment: “To be honest, I really had no idea what was going on in the match because I had a very poor start. I missed a couple of very good positions, so I thought: it’s not a match. It’s Valentina’s day. I tried to fight back in the segment of 3+1 while I just decided to play something random, and somehow it worked... I felt like I was very lucky to win a match that way. It shouldn’t be like this”, she said. Screenshot from the live stream.

Monday, August 22, 2022

The Bright Sharpness of Being

侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) – Valentina Evgenyevna Gunina
4th Online Women’s Speed Chess Championship Main Event; Semifinal match game 13; time control: 3 minutes plus 1 second per move; chess.com, August 22, 2022
English Opening A11

1. c4 c6 2. Nf3 d5 3. g3 Bg4 4. Bg2 e6 5. 0-0 Nf6 6. Ne5 Bh5 7. d4 Nbd7 8. Nc3 Bd6 9. Bf4 Qe7. If, instead, 9. ... Qb8 then 10. cxd5 exd5 11. Nxd7 Nxd7 12. Bxd6 Qxd6 13. Qb3 Nb6 14. e4! with advantage to White, Romanishin – Robson, 12th Essent Open, Hoogeveen 2008.
10. Qb3 Rb8 11. e4 dxe4 12. Nxe4 Nxe4 13. Bxe4 0-0 14. Qc2 Bg6 15. Nxg6 hxg6 16. Be3 a6 17. Bg2 Rbd8 18. Rfe1 Nf6 19. Bg5 Qc7 20. Rad1 Qa5 21. h4 Rd7 22. a3 Rfd8


23. d5! 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) claims the initiative with a well-timed breakthrough.
23. ... cxd5 24. cxd5 e5. After 24. ... exd5 25. h5 gxh5 26. Bxf6 gxf6 27. Qf5 White’s attack on the light squares should more than compensate for her material deficit.


25. Qe2? Too slow. White should have played at once 25. h5! with the attack unfolding similarly to the game.
25. ... Re7? The wrong Rook, and particularly bad as it self-pins both Rooks! Instead, 25. ... Re8! is correct, and especially is that correct as it unpins the Rook!
26. h5! So now it’s all okay again.
gxh5 27. Bxf6 gxf6 28. Qxh5 Rc7 29. Be4 Kf8 30. Kg2 Ke7 31. Rh1 Rc4 32. Qf5 Qa4


33. Rde1. Or 33. Rh7! Rxe4 34. Qe6+ followed by mate.
33. ... Qb3 34. Rh6 Qxb2 35. Qxf6+ Kd7 36. Qxd6+ Kc8 37. Bf5+ 1 : 0.

侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) only showed her sharpness by winning most of the blitz and bullet games. Screenshot from the live stream.

The Epic of a Dragonfly

Valentina Evgenyevna Gunina – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán)
4th Online Women’s Speed Chess Championship Main Event; Semifinal match game 8; time control: 5 minutes plus 1 second per move; chess.com, August 22, 2022
Queen’s Indian Defence E16

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 b6 4. g3 Bb7 5. Bg2 Bb4+ 6. Bd2 a5 7. 0-0 0-0 8. Bf4 Be7 9. Nc3 Ne4. Or, in friendship mode, 9. ... Na6 10. Rc1 Ne4 11. d5 Nxc3 12. Rxc3 Nc5 13. Rc2 d6 14. Be3 Bf6 15. Nd4 Bxd4 16. Bxd4 e5 17. Bxc5 bxc5 18. e4 Bc8 19. f4 Qf6 20. Qd3 Bd7 21. Rcf2 a4 22. f5 Qh6 23. h4 g6 24. Bh3 f6 25. Rh2 g5 26. Qe3 Rab8 27. Rff2 Rb4 28. Bf1 Kg7 29. Qf3 Be8 30. Rh3 Kh8 31. Rfh2? (⌓ 31. Qe3) 31. ... g4!−+ 32. Qc3 (32. Qxg4 Bh5−+) 32. ... gxh3 33. Bxh3 Rg8 34. Kf2 Bh5 35. Bf1 Qg7 36. Bh3 Rxb2+! 37. Qxb2 Qxg3+ 0 : 1 Inarkiev – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), 3rd China–Russia Junior Match of Friendship, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky 2016, match game 2 (time control: 15 minutes plus 10 seconds per move).
10. Qd3. Varying from 10. Qc2 Nxc3 11. Qxc3 Be4 12. Nd2 Bxg2 13. Kxg2 d6 14. e4 c5 15. Nf3 cxd4 16. Qxd4 Nc6 17. Qd2 Qc7 18. Rfd1 Rfd8 19. Rac1 Rac8 20. h4 Qb7 21. h5 h6 22. b3 b5 23. Qe2 bxc4 24. Rxc4 d5 25. exd5 exd5 26. Rc2 Bf6 27. Qd2 d4 28. Rc4? Nb4 29. Bxh6!? gxh6 30. Qxh6 Bg7 31. Qg5 Rd6?? [31. ... Rd5! 32. Qg4 Rxc4 33. h6 (33. bxc4 Qd7!−+) 33. ... f5!−+] 32. Rdxd4! Rdc6 33. Rg4? (33. h6! Rg6 34. Rxc8+ Kh7 35. Qf5 Bxd4 36. Rf8 Bf6 37. Rxf7+! Qxf7 38. Ng5+ Bxg5 39. Qxf7+ Kxh6 40. f4+−) 33. ... f6? (33. ... f5! 34. Qxf5 Rxc4 35. bxc4 Rf8 36. Qe6+ Kh8 37. Qe3 leaves White with more than enough for the piece, but the game still goes on) 34. Qf5+− Rxc4 35. bxc4 Kf8 36. h6 Bh8 37. Qe6 1 : 0 Gunina – 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán), 4th Online Women’s Speed Chess Championship Main Event, chess.com, August 22, 2022, Semifinal match game 6 (time control: 5 minutes plus 1 second per move).
10. ... Nxc3 11. bxc3 f5 12. Ne1 Bxg2 (12. ... Qc8 13. e4 fxe4 14. Bxe4 Bxe4 15. Qxe4 Nc6 16. Nc2 Bf6 17. Rfe1 Ne7 18. Rab1 Rb8 19. Na3 Ng6 20. Bd2 Be7 21. Nc2 Qa6 22. Ne3 Qa8 23. Qxa8 Rxa8 24. a4 Nh8 25. Ng4 Nf7 26. Ne5 Nxe5 27. Rxe5 Rac8 28. Reb5 Kf7 29. Be3 Ra8 30. c5 bxc5 31. dxc5 Rfc8 32. Kf1 d6 33. Ke2 e5 34. c4 Ke6 35. Bd2 c6 36. Rb7 dxc5 37. Bc3 Bf6 38. Ke3 Kf5 39. f3 h5 40. h3 Bg5+ 41. Ke2 Bf6 42. Ke3 Bg5+ 43. Ke2 Bf6 44. Ke3 ½ : ½ Kaczmarczyk – Baklan, 51st Biel Master Open Tournament, Biel/Bienne 2018)
13. Nxg2 Bf6 14. e4 fxe4 15. Qxe4 Na6? The Knight has little scope here.
16. Rae1 Qe7 17. Ne3 Qa3. A useless foray on the Queenside.


White immediately reminds Her Majesty that she has more urgent duties to attend on the Kingside:
18. Ng4! (Δ Ng4xf6+)
18. ... Be7 19. Ne5 Qa4 20. h4 Rae8 21. h5 d6


22. Nc6? Much stronger was 22. Ng6! winning material, for if 22. ... hxg6?? then 23. Qxe6+ Kh8 24. hxg6 Bg5 25. Qh3+ Bh6 26. Bxh6 with mate in a few moves.
22. ... Bf6 23. h6 Qxc4 24. hxg7 Bxg7 25. Bg5? The loss of the second Pawn should prove decisive. 25. Re3 was called for, with fair prospects of a draw.
25. ... d5 26. Qe2 Qxc6 27. Qxa6 Qxc3 28. Rc1 Qf3 29. Be3 Re7. It is palpable that by playing 29. ... Rf5! at once, followed by ... Rf5-h5 Black would have mated.
30. Rfe1 Rf5. Quite the same now, but a little bit late.
31. Qf1 Rh5? (31. ... e5! 32. dxe5 Bxe5 33. Qg2 Qxg2+ 34. Kxg2 Bd6−+)
32. Qg2 Qxg2+ 33. Kxg2 Rf5 34. Rc6 e5? It is quite close, but it isn’t the same. 34. ... h5! was one way to maintain both the material as well the positional advantages.
35. dxe5 Rfxe5. After 35. ... Bxe5 36. Bd4 White also wins back a Pawn with a drawish ending.
36. Rec1 Re4 37. Rxc7 Rxc7 38. Rxc7 d4


39. Kf3?? A tragic oversight. White ought first to play 39. Bf4 and only then move her King to f3 with a draw in sight.
39. ... dxe3! 40. Kxe4 e2 41. Rc8+. Or 41. Rc1 Bc3!−+ — which Gunina must have overlooked.
41. ... Kf7 42. Rc7+ Ke6 43. Rxg7 e1=Q+ 44. Kd3 Qxf2 45. Rxh7 Qxg3+ 46. Kd2 Qf2+ 47. Kc3 Qe3+ 48. Kb2 Qd4+ 49. Kc1 Qc3+ 50. Kb1 Qd3+ 51. Kb2 Qxh7 0 : 1

侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán) suffered some setbacks in the first games of her semifinal match with Gunina, but at last her ferocious will overcame adversity and her perseverance gave her final success. Screenshot from the live stream.