Friday, September 30, 2022

Wheat and chessboard problem

Forgive us our debts

Giorgio Agamben, Quodlibet, September 28, 2022

The prayer par excellence — the one that Jesus himself dictated to us (“pray like this”) — contains a passage that our time strives at all costs to contradict and which therefore will be good to keep in mind, especially today that everything seems to be reduced to the only ferocious two-sided law: credit/debit. Dimitte nobis debita nostra... “forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors”. The original Greek is even more peremptory: aphes emin ta opheilemata emon, “let it go, dismiss our debts from us”. Reflecting on these words in 1941, in full world war, a great Italian jurist, Francesco Carnelutti, observed that, if the assumption that what has happened cannot be canceled is a truth of the physical world, the same cannot be said for the moral world, which defines itself precisely through the possibility of remitting and forgiving.
First of all, we have to dispel the prejudice that a genuinely economic law is in question in the debt. Even leaving aside the problem of what is meant when we speak of an economic “law”, a brief genealogical investigation shows that the origin of the concept of debt is not economic, but juridical and religious — two dimensions that the more one goes back to prehistory, the more they tend to get confused. If, as Carl Schmitt has shown, the notion of Schuld, which in German means both debt and fault, is at the basis of the edifice of law, no less convincing is the intuition of a great historian of religions, David Flüsser. One day, while he was reflecting in an Athenian square on the meaning of the word pistis, which is the term that in the Gospels means “faith”, he saw written in large letters before him: trapeza tes pisteos. It did not take him long to realise that he was standing in front of a bank sign (Credit Bank) and at the same instant he understood that the meaning of the word about which he had been thinking for years had to do with credit — the credit that we enjoy with God and that God enjoys with us — once we believe. This is why, in a famous definition, Paul can say that “faith is the substance of things hoped for”: it is what gives reality to what does not yet exist, but in which we believe and have faith, in which we put at stake our credit and our word. Something like a credit exists only insofar as our faith can give it substance.
The world we live in today has appropriated this juridical and religious concept and transformed it into a lethal and implacable device to which any human needs must bow. This device, in which all our pistis, all our faith was caught, is money, meant as the very form of credit/debit. The Bank — with its gray officials and experts — took the place of the Church and its priests and, by governing credit, it manipulates and manages the faith — the scarce, uncertain trust — which our time still has in itself. And it does so in the most irresponsible and unscrupulous way, trying to make money from the trust and hopes of human beings, by establishing the credit that everyone can afford, and at what price (even the credit of the States, which meekly abdicated their sovereignty). In this way, by governing credit, it governs not only the world, but also the future of mankind, a future that emergency wants ever shorter and expiring. And if politics no longer seems possible today, this is because financial power has in fact kidnapped all faith and all future, all time and all hopes.
The so-called emergency we are going through — but it is now clear that what we call emergency is just the normal way capitalism of our time works — began with an inconsiderate series of credit operations, on credits that got discounted and resold tens of times before they could be realised. This means, in other words, that financial capitalism — and banks which are its main organ — works by playing on credit — that is, on the faith — of mankind.
If today, a government — in Italy as elsewhere — really wants to move in a different direction from that which is being imposed everywhere, it has first of all to resolutely question the money/credit/debit device as a system of governance. Only in this way a politics will become possible again — a politics that does not accept being strangled by the false dogma — pseudo-religious and non-economic — of universal and irrevocabile debt and restores to mankind the memory and faith in the words that they have so often recited as children: “forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors”.

(English translation by I, Robot)

Stanley Spencer, Christ Overturning the Money Charger’s Table, 1921. Courtesy of WikiArt.

Well, Edna, as they say, it is better to lose than lose more

Thursday, September 29, 2022

A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far, Far Away

Alexandra Konstantinovna Kosteniuk – Ekaterina Aleksandrovna Lagno
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 29, 2022
Four Knights Game C47

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. d4 exd4 5. Nxd4 Bb4 6. Nxc6 bxc6 7. Bd3 d5 8. exd5 cxd5 9. 0-0 0-0 10. Bg5 Be6. This was a recommendation by Siegbert Tarrasch.
11. Qf3 Be7 12. Rfe1 (12. Qg3 Nh5 13. Bxe7 Qxe7 14. Qe5 Nf6 16. Rae1 c6= Euwe – E. Grünfeld, Vienna 1921)
12. ... h6


13. Bxh6!? A petite combinaison which forces the draw.
13. ... gxh6


14. Rxe6! fxe6 15. Qg3+ Kh8 (15. ... Kf7?? 16. Qg6#)
16. Qg6


And now, in view of 16. ... Qe8 17. Qxh6+ Kg8 18. Qg5+ Kh8 19. Qh6+ a draw was agreed in Alekhine – Em. Lasker, exhibition game, Moscow 1914.
16. ... Qe8 17. Qxh6+ Kg8 18. Qg5+ Kh8 19. Qh6+ Kg8 20. Qg5+ Kh8 21. Qh6+ ½ : ½.

Thanks to today’s book draw, Lagno (centre) won the 1st stage of FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23 — with Aleksandra Yuryevna Goryachkina (right) coming second and 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr) (left) third. Prizes, medals and trophies were awarded by FIDE President Arkady Vladimirovich Dvorkovich and top tennis player Andrey Andreyevich Rublev. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Nay, Edna, self-criticism is not their forte

Lost & Found

Alina Anatolyevna Kashlinskaya – 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr)
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 28, 2022
Nimzo-Indian Defence E57

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 d5 4. Bg5 dxc4 5. e3 c5 6. Bxc4 cxd4 7. exd4 Be7 8. Nf3 Nc6 9. 0-0 0-0 10. a3 b6 11. Qd3 Bb7 12. Rad1 h6!? Once upon a time long, long ago: 12. ... Nd5 13. Bxe7 Ncxe7 14. Ne2 Ng6 15. Bxd5 Bxd5 16. Qe3 Rc8 17. Nc3 Bb7 18. Rd2 Ne7 19. Ng5 h6 20. Nge4 Nd5 21. Qg3 Nxc3 22. Nxc3 Bd5 23. f4 Qd7 24. h3 Rc6 25. Qe3 Rd8 26. Re1 Rd6 27. Qg3 Kh8 28. Qd3 Bc6 29. Red1 Ba4 30. Nxa4 Qxa4 31. f5 Rd5 (31. ... e5! 32. d5 Rxd5 33. Qxd5 Rxd5 34. Rxd5 Kh7⩱) 32. fxe6 fxe6 33. Qe3! Qd7 34. Rf2! e5 35. Rdf1 exd4?? (35. ... Rxd4) 36. Rf8+! Rxf8 37. Rxf8+ Kh7 38. Qe4+ g6 39. Re8! Qd6 40. Re6 Qc5 41. Qxg6+ 1 : 0 Anderssen – Schwarz, 12th Westdeutscher Schachbund Congress, Frankfurt 1878.
13. Bc1 Qd6 14. Rfe1 Rad8 15. Ba2 Rfe8


A standard isolated d-Pawn position has arisen, whose potential was gravely overestimated by White:
16. Bxh6? This seems to be much exaggerated.
16. ... gxh6 17. Rxe6!? The pointe, but...


17. ... Qf4! This is kind of a refutation, and, unfortunately for White, was not too difficult to spot. Of course 17. ... fxe6?? was unplayable because of 18. Qg6+ K~ 19. Qxh6+ Kg8 20. Qg6+ K~ 21. Ng5+− winning at once.
18. g3? Another mistake, and a losing one. White’s best was 18. Rxc6 Bxc6 19. Ne5, though after 19. ... Be4 20. Bxf7+ Kg7 21. Qe2 Bb7 22. Bxe8 Rxe8 Black firmly holds the upper hand, but victory must still be won.


18. ... Nb4!−+ 19. gxf4 Nxd3 20. Rxf6 Bxf6 21. Rxd3 Rxd4 22. Re3 Rxe3 23. fxe3 Rd3 24. Kf2 Bxc3 0 : 1.

After a couple of days of eclipse, the sun finally returned to shine brightly for 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr). Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Because the Night


There are seven parts of night: vesper, crepusculum, conticinium, intempestum, gallicinium, matutinum and diluculum.


1. Vesper.

“Evening is named vesper from the western star which follows the setting sun, and precedes the ensuing shadows”.

Vesper is the sunset of the West, announced more than a century ago and therefore now definitively accomplished. Thus, we are in the darkness which follows the setting sun, of which the dusk is the first figure. It is peculiar that since Spengler drew up his irrefragable diagnosis no one amongst the smartest readers has disputed its validity. That the West were mature for the sunset was then as now a widespread sensation, even if, then as now, we pretend that everything continues as before. Thinking about the end, even just being able to represent it, is indeed a hard task, for which we lack adequate terms. The ancients and Christians of the early centuries, who awaited the end of the world as imminent, albeit incalculable, envisioned an unprecedented catastrophe, after which a new world would begin — a new sky and a new earth. The fact is that thinking of the end as a punctual event, after which everything — even time — would cease, offers so little to thought, that we prefer to imagine without realising it a sort of extra time, in which we — who yet rappresentiamo it to ourselves — are non-existent. Spengler, on his part, thought of a morphology of history, in which civilisations are born and decline and, in the exemplary case, the West, whose decline would coincide “with a phase of history che will embrace several centuries and of which we are currently living the beginning”. The hypothesis I wish to suggest is that the West includes the sunset not only in its name, but also in its very structure — that it is, i.e., from the beginning to the end, a vespertine civilisation.
Vesper, the western star, continues to shine throughout the night that we believe we are getting through and in which instead we dwell; the sunset — being in every instant at the end — is the normal condition of Western man. For this his night does not wait for diluculum or aurora. But the sunset, the interminable crisis that he pursues and which he uses as a lethal weapon that he tries by all means to dominate, is slipping from his hand and will end up turning, as it is already happening, against him. Security has become his password because the West has long since ceased to feel safe.

2. Crepusculum.

Crepusculum is wavering light. We say that creper is “doubtful”, that is, between light and darkness”.

Isidore is copying a passage from Varro’s treatise On the Latin Language, where we read that “doubtful matters are called creperae ‘obscure’, because dusk is a time when to many it is doubtful whether it is even yet day or is already night”. It’s been a long time that we’ve been in the dusk, and it’s been a long time that we become unable to distinguish between light and darkness — that is, between truth and falsehood. Because who no longer know at which point they are, who are in doubt between day and night and no longer even know what is true and what is false and it is this doubt that one wants to entertain at all costs in the souls and minds. In this sense, dusk has become a paradigm of governance, perhaps the most effective, which mobilises the media apparatus and the culture industry at its service. Thus a whole society lives in the dusk, in doubt about light and darkness, true and false — until the doubt itself wears out and disappears and a lie repeated to such an extent that it can no longer be distinguished from the truth instaurates its desperate dominion in every sphere and order. But a life which darkens in the lie and lies to itself, constantly, destroys its very conditions of survival, it is no longer able to perceive the light, not even the “faint glow” of a match struck in the night. Even those who believed to rule over the dusk no longer know what is true and what is false, where is darkness and where is light; and even if someone insists on bearing witness to the light, that light which is the very life of mankind, it cannot listen to him. And if a lie that has become absolute is that condition in which hope is no longer possible, our vespertine and crepuscular time is desperate in any way.

3. Conticinium.

Conticinium is when all is silent, for conticiscere is ‘to be silent’”.

Why have you been silent? That times were obscure, that dusk reigned everywhere will not be enough to justify you. Why have you been silent? Even if you could no longer distinguish light from darkness, at least you should have said it, you should have at least shouted in the dusk, in the uncertain hour between dog and wolf. Yours was not the silence of who know they cannot be heard, of who, in the universal lie, have something to say and for this step forward and remain silent. Yours was the conniving silence of who, in the night, keep silent because everyone does so. “It’s true” — you will say — “It was unfair, but I kept silent because everyone was silent”. Yet the lie spoke and you listened to it. And your silence also covered the voice of who, despite everything, tried to speak, to get the third part of night out of its silence.

4. Intempestum.

“The dead of the night, intempestum, is the middle, lifeless, time of night, when nothing can be done and all things are quiet in sleep. A time period by itself, tempus, is not understood except through human activities. The middle of the night lacks activity. Therefore the lifeless middle of the nights are as if without time, tempus, that is, without the activity by which time is distinguished. Whence also, ‘You have arrived intempestive (inopportunely)’”.

The time that we measure so carefully does not exist in itself, it becomes knowable, it becomes something that we can have only through our actions. If all action is suspended, if nothing more is to happen, then we have no more time, delivered to the false stillness of a drowsiness without dreams or gestures. We have no more time, because in the night in which we are immersed, time has become unknowable to us and the powers of the world keep us by all means in this intempesta night, “as if without time, tempus, that is, without the activity by which time is distinguished”. “As if” without time, because the abstract, linear time — the chronological time that devours itself — is actually present, but by definition we cannot have it. For this we must build museums in which to put the past and, as is increasingly the case today, even the present.
What is missing is the Kairos, which the ancients portrayed as a winged young man running hovering over a sphere, with a bald nape which leaves no hold to who try to grab him as he passes. He has a thick tuft on the forehead and holds a razor in his hand. Seizing the day is possible only for who suddenly stands in front of him, takes him by the tuft with a decided gesture and stops his unreal rush. This gesture is the thought, whose purpose is to grasp the missing time in the night. His gesture is inopportune, because each time it stops and interrupts the course of time. Hence the unexpected conclusion: “You have arrived inopportunely (intempestivum venisti)”. Turning the inopportunity against itself, the thought stops and catches time in the night “as if without time”. And this gesture of thought, sharp as a razor, is the primeval political action, which opens up the possibility of all actions just when in the middle of the night every action seemed impossible.

5. Gallicinium.

“Day-break is named gallicinium because galli, roosters, are the harbingers of light”.

The cry of the rooster does not announce the dawn. Its — if you listen to it carefully — is the heartbroken cry of who keep watch in the night and until the end do not know if the day will come. For this its chant — or, rather, its cry — is just addressed to us, who, like it, keep watch in the dark and like it we ask: “At what point is the night?”. The cry of the rooster is, like ours, only a probe thrown into darkness not to measure its bottom — it would not be possible — but to sustain and almost calibrate our wakefulness, the duration of which we don’t know. And in this there is something like a small light, a spark in the dark.

6. Matutinum.

“The morning, matutinum, is between the withdrawal of darkneess and the arrival of dawn. It is so-called because this period is the beginning of morning, mane”.

Between darkness and light. Like vesper was between light and darkness. Inchoante mane, the inchoate morning: mane is the neuter of the adjective manis, which means “good” and applied to time signifies “of early hour”. The morning is par excellence “the good hour”, just as the Greeks called the early light “good” (phos agathos). “Mature” is what happens at the right time and Matuta, the goddess of dawn, was for Latins par excellence the good goddess. Matins is the thought in its birth, before it gets fixed in the round of formulas and passwords. It is better, in the morning, not to be a hurry, linger in the good hour, give it all the time it needs. For this in our world everything conspires instead to shorten the good hour and take time away from awakening. Because the awakening is the time of thought, poised between darkness and light, between dream and reason. And one tries, in all ways, to take time away from the thought — the matins — so that today many are awake but not conscious, shiny but not glossy. In one word: ready to serve.

7. Diluculum.

“Dawn, diluculum, is as if ‘now begins the small light of day, diei lux’. This is also aurora, which precedes the sun”.

For now we can only imagine this “small light”. Diluculum, dawn, is the imagination that always accompanies the thought and prevents it from despairing even in the darkest and barbaric of times. Not because “there are so many dawns that have yet to shine”, but because we no longer wait for any dawns. Compline, complete, is the last of canonical hours and for us every hour is compline, it is the last hour. In it the seven parts of night coincide, they are in truth one only hour. And the one for whom every instant is the last one cannot be captured in the devices of power, which always require to suppose a future. The future is the time of power, compline — the last hour, the good one — is the time of thought.

(English translation by I, Robot)

After all, Edna, the secret of perfection lies in contemplating mistakes

Artwork © Moon

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Behind the Day

Aleksandra Yuryevna Goryachkina – 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr)
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 26, 2022
English Opening A28

1. c4 e5 2. Nc3 Nf6 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. e4 Bc5 5. Nxe5 Nxe5. If 5. ... Bxf2+ 6. Kxf2 Nxe5 then, by transposition, 7. g3 c5 8. d3 d6 9. h3 h5? (9. ... 0-0 10. Be2 Ne8 11. Kg2 Nc7 12. Be3 Ne6) 10. Be2 Nh7 11. Kg2 h4 12. g4 Ng5 13. Be3 Bd7 14. Qd2 Ne6 15. b4 b6 16. Rab1 Bc6 17. Rhf1 Bb7 18. Kg1 Nc6 19. Nd5 Ncd4 20. Bd1 f6 21. Kh2 Bc6 22. a4 a5 23. bxa5 bxa5 24. Qf2! Ra7 25. g5! 0-0 26. g6! f5 (26. ... Be8 27. Qg1! f5 28. exf5 Rxf5 29. Rxf5 Nxf5 30. Qg4+−) 27. Rb8! 1 : 0 Botvinnik – Keres, 5th Soviet Team Chess Cup, Moscow 1966.
6. d4 Bb4 7. dxe5 Nxe4 8. Qf3 Nxc3 9. bxc3 Ba5 10. Bf4 0-0 11. Be2. If, instead, 11. 0-0-0 then 11. ... Qe7 12. Kb2 Rb8 13. Bd3 b5 14. cxb5 Bb7 15. Qh3 g6 16. Qe3 Rfe8 17. Rhe1 Bc6 18. a4 a6 19. Bg5 Bxc3+! 20. Kxc3 Qa3+ 21. Kd2 Qb4+ 22. Ke2 Qg4+ 23. Kd2 Qb4+ 24. Ke2 Qg4+ 25. Kd2 ½ : ½ Carlsen – Caruana, 1st FIDE Grand Swiss Tournament, Santon 2019. “I knew the move 11. Be2. My opponent did not have such games, so I was not ready to castle, and in general, 11. Be2 is not such an easy line”, Goryachkina said afterwards.
11. ... d6 12. Rd1 Re8


13. c5 Qh4 14. Bg3 Qg5 15. cxd6 cxd6 16. h4 Qf5 17. exd6 Qxf3 18. gxf3 Bxc3+ 19. Kf1 Bd7 20. Bc4 h5 21. Rc1 Be5 22. Kg2 Bxg3 23. Kxg3 Rad8 24. Rhd1


“I think she did not manage to equalise, but then it became messy, and I was not sure about the evaluation”, Goryachkina says.
24. ... Be6?! Maybe not an error but a sign of erratic inconsistency. With 24. ... Kf8 25. Bb3 Bc6 Black can rightly stake a claim for equality.
25. Bb5 Bd7?? A fatal blunder of judgment, which loses the game. Despite everything, the ending ensuing after 25. ... Rf8 26. Rc7 Bxa2 27. Rxb7 Rb8! 28. Rxb8 (28. Rxa7?? Bb3 costs the Exchange) 28. ... Rxb8 29. Kf4 Kf8 should still be holdable for Black.
26. Bxd7 Rxd7 27. Rc7 Red8 28. Rxd7 Rxd7 29. Kf4


The ending is easily won for White, because of the paralysing power of her passed Pawn.
29. ... Kf8 30. Ke5 Rd8 31. Kd5 g6 32. Rc1 Ke8 33. Re1+ Kf8 34. Re7 Rb8 35. Rc7 Ke8 36. Ke5 a5 37. Re7+ Kf8 38. Kf6 b5 39. Rxf7+ Kg8 40. Rg7+ Kf8 41. Rh7 Kg8 42. Ra7 Rf8+ 43. Kxg6 1 : 0.

“In general, after yesterday’s not-so-good game, it was important for me just to get out there and play”, Goryachkina said eventually. “All in all, today I liked my game a lot”.Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Well, Edna, after all tomorrow is another day, but why wait?

Monday, September 26, 2022

Whatever It Takes

Bibisara Erkhanovna Assaubayeva – 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí)
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 26, 2022
Queen’s Gambit Declined D35

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 exd5 5. Bg5 c6 6. e3 Bf5 7. Qf3 Bg6 8. Bxf6 Qxf6 9. Qxf6 gxf6 10. Nf3 Nd7 11. Nh4 Be7 12. Ne2 f5 13. g3 Bxh4 14. gxh4 Nf6 15. Rg1. Or, alternatively, 15. Nf4 Nh5 16. Kd2 Nxf4 17. exf4 Ke7 18. Be2 h5 19. Rae1 Kd6 20. Bd3 Rae8 21. Re3 Rxe3 22. fxe3⩲ Goryachkina – 居文君 (Jū Wénjūn), Vladivostok 2020, Women’s World Chess Championship match game 10. “I hadn’t prepared this opening, but she had. I faced this opening last year, and I played the same way I did in that game”, 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) said afterwards. She alludes to 15. Nf4 Nh5 16. Bd3 Nxf4 17. exf4 Kd7 18. Kd2 Rae8 19. b4 Kd6 20. Rhe1 Rxe1 21. Rxe1 Rg8 22. Rg1 Re8 23. Re1 Rxe1 24. Kxe1 b6 25. Kd2 h6 26. Kc3 f6 27. a3 Ke6 28. Ba6 Be8 29. Bd3 Bd7 30. Bc2 Kd6 31. Bd3 c5 32. bxc5+ bxc5 33. Bc2 Bb5 34. Bxf5 Be2 35. Bg6 Bf3 36. h5 a5 37. h4 Kc6 ½ : ½ 徐铭辉 (Xú Mínghuī) – 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí), 2021 Chinese Chess Team Tournament, 聊城 (Liáochéng) 2021.
15. ... Ke7 16. Bh3 Rhg8. 16. ... Rae8 gave raise to a model strategic game: 17. Nf4 Kd6 18. Kd2 Re7 19. a4 a5 20. Ra3 Rhe8 21. Rb3 Kc7 22. Rc1 Kd6 23. Bg2 Nh5 24. Nxd5! cxd5 25. Rb6+ Kd7 26. Bf1 Kd8 27. Bb5 Re4 28. Rxb7 Nf6 29. b4+− f4 30. bxa5 fxe3+ 31. fxe3 Rxh4 32. Bxe8 Rxh2+ 33. Kc3 Ne4+ 34. Kb3 Nd2+ 35. Kb4 Nc4 36. Bb5 Rb2+ 37. Kc5 Nxa5 38. Rd7+ Kc8 39. Kxd5+ Kb8 40. Rd8+ Kb7 41. Kd6 Kb6 42. Ra8 1 : 0 Kramnik – Aleksandrov, 43rd Chess Olympiad, Batumi 2018.
17. Nf4 Nh5 18. Nxh5 Bxh5 19. Rg3 Kf6 20. Kd2 Rg6 21. Rag1 Rh6


22. Rg8 Rxg8 23. Rxg8 Bf3 24. Bf1 Rxh4 25. h3 Re4 26. Ra8 a6 27. Ra7 Re7 28. Kc3?! White undertakes an adventurous King march towards b6, aiming at the Queenside Pawns. Objectively, it might be safer for White to play 28. a4 h5 29. a5 h4 30. Ra8 Kg7 31. Ra7 Kf6= with a likely draw.
28. ... h5 29. Kb4 h4 30. a4. If 30. Kc5 then 30. ... f4! 31. Kb6 fxe3 32. fxe3 Rxe3 33. Rxb7 Re1 34. Bxa6 Bg4!⩱ with the upper hand for Black.


30. ... f4! “Indeed, I wanted to play ... f5-f4 early in the game... But the exact time was after I had played the Bishop to h1 because then I can play ... f4-f3, a strong manoeuvre”, 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) then argued. “I had to be careful because I would lose if I didn’t play exactly”.
31. a5 Bh1!? After 31. ... c5+! 32. Kxc5 (32. dxc5 fxe3 33. fxe3 Re4+−+) 32. ... Rc7+ 33. Kb6 Rc2 34. Rxb7 Rxf2 35. Bxa6 Rxb2+ 36. Kc6 Rxb7 37. Bxb7 fxe3 38. a6 e2 39. a7 e1=Q 40. a8=Q Qe6+ 41. Kc5 Qe7+ 42. Kb5 Kg7 43. Bxd5 Qg5 Black is winning according to the engines, but of course it was not an easy line to calculate from a human standpoint.
32. Kc5 f3 33. Ra8 Kg7


34. Bd3? The losing move. White ought to play 34. Ra7! Bg2 35. Bxa6 Rxe3! 36. Rxb7 Re2! 37. Bd3 Rxf2 38. a6 Bf1 39. a7 Bxd3 40. a8=Q Rc2+ 41. Kd6 f2 42. Rb8 Bh7 43. Qa1 Bd3 44. Qa8 Bh7 with a draw.
34. ... Bg2 35. Bf5 Rxe3! 36. fxe3 f2 37. Bd3 Bxh3 38. Re8 Bf5! 39. e4 (39. Bf1 h3−+)
39. ... dxe4 0 : 1.

“I wanted the game to be competitive, but I didn’t know if she’d accept the unbalanced aspects of the game”, 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) said eventually. “But it would not be a draw”. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Yeah, Edna, it’s never easy to find a new suitor when a partnership business ends

Artwork © BenjaminHopkins

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Nighty Night

谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) – Alina Anatolyevna Kashlinskaya
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 25, 2022
Tarrasch Defence D32

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 c5 5. e3 Nc6 6. a3 dxc4 7. Bxc4 a6 8. 0-0 b5 9. Ba2 Bb7 10. Qe2 cxd4 11. Rd1 b4 12. axb4 Nxb4 13. Rxd4 Qa5 (13. ... Qc7 14. Bb3!⩲ Barus – Mahmud, Jakarta 1996)
14. Nd2 Nxa2 15. Rxa2 Qg5 16. e4 Be7 17. Nb3 Qe5 18. g3 Qc7 (⌓ 18. ... Rc8)
19. Rc4 Qd7 20. Bf4 Rc8 21. Rd4 Qc6 22. Na5 Qb6 23. Rc4 Rxc4 24. Qxc4 Ng4 25. Qa4+. Better and simpler was 25. Qe2 h5 26. Nxb7 Qxb7 27. Qxa6 winning a clear Pawn.
25. ... Kf8 26. Nd1 Ba8 27. Ne3 Nxe3 (⌓ 27. ... g5 28. Bxg5 Bxg5 29. Nxg4 Kg7=)
28. Bxe3 Qb4 29. Qxb4 Bxb4 30. Nc4 Bxe4. Who knows, perhaps 30. ... Bb7 31. Ra4 can be a better version of the same ending.
31. Rxa6


White’s obvious threat is Ra6-b6 winning a piece.
31. ... Ke7? This is the losing move for Black. The ending resulting from 31. ... Be7! 32. b4± is anything but appealing, but at least still defendable.
32. Ra7+ Kf6. If 32. ... Ke8 then 33. Bf4! Bd5 34. Bd6! Bxc4 35. Bxb4 keeping Black in a bondage.
33. Bd4+ Kg6 34. Ne5+ Kh5


35. f3 f6 36. Nf7 Rc8 37. fxe4 Kg4 38. Kf2 e5


39. Nxe5+! fxe5 40. Rxg7+ Kh5 41. Bxe5 Rc2+ 42. Kf3 Kh6 43. Rg8 1 : 0.

“From the beginning I could see that my opponent was well-prepared, but during the game she gave me the initiative”, 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) said afterwards. “I think we both played well, but at some point, during the game I think she was feeling less confident and I was able to win due to her bad time management”. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

On the other hand, Edna, according to ontological mathematics, to have the highest chance of picking the best suitor, you need to date and then reject the first 37% of your group of lifetime suitors

Artwork © Yonebayashiis

Saturday, September 24, 2022

White Silence

Thus, since September 22, 2022, Russian Grandmaster Sergey Alexandrovich Karjakin is back in the great chess family, after serving a six-month ban for his pro-Russia stance with regard to the Russo–Ukrainian war. “So my six-month disqualification is over! True, but there’s little joy in it, because the concrete opportunity to take part in international competitions is still very remote...”, he wrote on his Telegram account. “My participation is possible only if FIDE tournaments are held in friendly countries and if I can play under the Russian flag, without being obliged to change it with FIDE or CFR flags. Furthermore, it is also possible that FIDE, under pressure from the Western chess community, may change its mind”. Yet, even beyond the bombastic rhetoric of the “good” and the “bad”, this latter hypothesis is quite unrealistic as the rule of law of the free world is concerned, because, juridically speaking, nemo bis punitur pro eodem delicto. What will most likely happen is that Karjakin won’t be invited anywhere in the West anymore.

Hi, Edna, do you still want tiramisu, or are you on a diet?

Artwork © Nerd Stickers

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Black Widow

谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) – Aleksandra Yuryevna Goryachkina
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 22, 2022
Slav Defence D16

1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 dxc4 5. a4 e6 6. e3 c5 7. Bxc4 cxd4 8. exd4 Nc6 9. 0-0 Be7 10. Be3 0-0 11. Ne5 Qd6 12. Nb5 Qd8 13. Nc3 Qd6 (13. ... a6 14. Rc1 Qd6 15. Nxc6 bxc6 16. b3 a5 17. Qe2 Nd5 18. Ne4 Qd8 19. Bd2⩲ Vidit – 倪华 (Ní Huá), 4th Moscow Open, Moscow 2012)
14. Nxc6. 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí) refuses Goryachkina’s offer to repeat moves with 14. Nb5.
14. ... Qxc6 15. Qb3 Qd6 16. h3 Bd7 17. Rfd1 Qb4 18. d5 Qxb3 19. Bxb3 Bb4 20. Nb5 Bxb5 21. axb5 Nxd5 22. Bxd5 exd5 23. Rxd5 a6 24. b6. If 24. Rad1 then 24. ... Rfe8 25. b6 Kf8 26. Rc1 Re7 with near equality.
24. ... Rfd8 25. Rad1 Be7 26. Rd7 Kf8 27. R1d4 Rab8 28. Rc7 Rxd4 29. Bxd4 Bd8 30. Rc2 f6 31. g4 Ke8 32. Kg2 Kd7 33. Kf3 a5 34. Ke4 Ra8 35. Be3 Ra6 36. Rd2+ Ke8 37. Rd6 a4 38. f4 a3 39. bxa3 Rxa3 40. f5 Rb3 41. h4 Be7 42. Re6 Kd7 43. Bd4 Rg3


44. g5? An inexplicable gamble, which, according to Goryachkina, might have been dictated from 谭中怡 (Tán Zhōngyí)’s irrational desire to force the unforceable: “Apparently, she wanted to win too much because her tournament did not go that well so far“.
Perhaps the text move does not lose in absolute terms, but certainly it makes it very, very difficult to save a draw. Much simpler was 44. Kf4, and even stronger may be 44. Kd5! which also proves the validity of Steinitz’s assumption that the King is a strong piece: 44. ... Rxg4 45. Bc5! Bxc5 46. Kxc5 Rxh4 47. Rd6+ Kc8 48. Re6 with a draw in sight.
44. ... Rg4+ 45. Kd3 fxg5 46. h5. Goryachkina noted afterwads that, in spite of everything, “[White] still had good chances to save, but she did not manage to get herself together”. However, it’s not yet the case here, for after 46. Bxg7 gxh4 47. Be5 h3 48. Bc7 Bg5 the ending may be assessed as easier to win for Black than to save for White.


46. ... Bf8. 46. ... Rf4! 47. Bxg7 (or 47. h6 gxh6 48. Rxh6 Rh4) 47. ... g4 seems to give better winning chances.
47. Re2?! This loses a tempo. With 47. Re5! Bd6 (otherwise there follows Bd4-c5) 48. Ra5 Rf4 49. Ra8 Rf5 50. Rh8 White should draw.
47. ... Rf4 48. Re5? 48. Rf2 Rxf2 (not 48. ... Rh4? because of 49. Ra2 followed by Ra2-a8) 49. Bxf2 Bd6 leaves Black with a Pawn ahead in a same-colour Bishop endgame — and still a lot of work is to be done.
48. ... Bd6 49. Ra5 g4 50. Be3


50. ... Rf1 (50. ... Rb4!−+)
51. Ke2? (⌓ 51. Ra4 Rxf5 52. Rxg4 Be5 53. h6 g6)
51. ... Rh1 52. Ra4 Rxh5 53. Rxg4 Be5 54. Kd3 Rxf5 55. Ra4 Bd6 56. Bd4 g6 57. Ke4 Bc5 58. Be5 Bxb6 59. Rb4 Kc6 60. Rc4+ Bc5 0 : 1.

“I like everything so far”, Goryachkina said eventually. “Of course, I would like to win more with White, but if you win with Black, why not”. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Rock On

朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr) – Zhansaya Daniyarovna Abdumalik
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 22, 2022
Sicilian Defence B33

1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 e5 6. Ndb5 d6 7. Nd5 Nxd5 8. exd5 Nb8 9. a4 a6 10. Na3 Be7 11. Be2 0-0 12. 0-0 f5 13. b4 f4 14. Nc4. Theoretically speaking, the most recent reference is 14. a5 Bf5 15. c4 Nd7 16. Nb1 Bf6 17. Bg4 Bxg4 18. Qxg4 e4 19. Ra3 Be5 20. Nd2 Nf6 21. Qe2 f3 22. gxf3 Nh5 23. Nxe4 Qh4 24. Ng3 Rae8 25. Rd1 Bf4 26. Be3 Rf6 27. Rd4 Rh6 28. Qd2 g5 29. Re4 Rxe4 30. fxe4 Nf6 31. Kf1 Bxg3 32. fxg3 Qxe4 33. Kg1 Ng4 34. Qd3 Qe5 35. Qd4?? (⌓ 35. Bd2 Rxh2 36. Bc3) 35. ... Qf5 36. Qd3 Qe5 37. Qd4 Qf5 38. Qd3 Nxe3−+ 39. Qxe3 Qb1+ 40. Kg2 Qc2+ 41. Kf1 Rf6+ 42. Ke1 Qb1+ 43. Kd2 Kf8 44. Kc3 Rf1 45. Qe2 g4 46. Kd4 Rd1+ 47. Kc3 Qc1+ 0 : 1 Abdusattorov – Gukesh, 55th Biel International Chess Festival, Grandmaster Triathlon — Classical, Biel/Bienne 2022.
14. ... Bf5 15. f3 Nd7 16. Bd3 Rc8 17. a5 Qe8. First 17. ... Bxd3! might improve.
18. Bxf5 Rxf5 19. Qd3 Rh5 20. Bd2 Rh6 21. Be1 Qh5 22. h3 Rg6 23. Nd2


23. ... Rf8? After this Black’s planned attack inevitably ends up in a deadlock. Of course she could not play 23. ... Qxh3?? on account of 24. Qxg6 winning a Rook, but 23. ... e4! was the move, for if 24. Qxe4 (neither 24. fxe4? Bf6−+ nor 24. Nxe4? Ne5 25. Qe2 Qxh3−+ are playable) then 24. ... Re8 25. Kh2 Nf6 26. Qxf4 Qxd5 with good compensation for her Pawn.
24. Kh2 Bh4 25. Ne4 Nf6 26. Nxd6 Qg5


27. Rg1? This is, perhaps, White’s only major slip in the whole game. Best was 27. Qd2! Bg3+ 28. Kg1 leaving Black without prospects.
27. ... Bg3+? But Black, too, misses her opportunity: 27. ... Bxe1 28. Raxe1 Qg3+ 29. Kh1 Ng4! (probably the move overlooked by both them) 30. fxg4 f3 31. Ref1 fxg2+ 32. Rxg2 Rxf1+ 33. Qxf1 Qxh3+ 34. Kg1 Qe3+ 35. Qf2 Qc1+ with a draw by perpetual check.
28. Kh1 Rd8 29. Ne4 Qh4


30. c4. Black is not given a second chance as White’s Pawn avalanche moves forward irresistibly.
30. ... Nh5 31. c5 Bxe1 32. Raxe1 Ng3+ 33. Nxg3 Rxg3 34. Re2 Re8 35. d6 e4 36. d7! 1 : 0.

朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr) continued to stun audiences with her victories. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

And in the end, they lived happily ever after, Edna

Artwork © vv3spa

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

A Lucky Thing

Polina Sergeevna Shuvalova – 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr)
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 21, 2022
Spanish Game C78

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. 0-0 b5 6. Bb3 Bc5 7. c3 d6 8. d4 Bb6 9. Be3 Bg4 10. dxe5 Nxe5 11. Bxb6 Bxf3 12. gxf3 cxb6 13. f4 Nc4 14. Bxc4. Too committal is 14. e5 dxe5 15. Bxc4 bxc4 16. fxe5 Ne4 17. Qg4 Qd5 18. Re1 Nc5 19. Na3 b5 20. Nc2 h5 21. Qd4 0-0-0⩱ Wahls – M. Adams, 15th German Schach Bundesliga, Hamburg 1995.
14. ... bxc4 15. Nd2 0-0 16. Qf3 b5 17. Kh1 g6 18. Rg1 Kh8 19. Rad1 Qe7 20. Rde1 Rad8 21. Re3 Nh5 22. Nf1 Qf6 23. Rg4 d5 24. e5 Qf5 25. Ng3 Nxg3+ 26. hxg3 d4 27. cxd4 Rxd4 28. Kg2 Qh5 29. Re1 Rd3 30. Qe2 Qf5 31. Rh4 (⌓ 31. Rg5 Qe6 32. f5 Qd5+ 33. Kg1 Re8)
31. ... Qe6 (⌓ 31. ... Kg7 Δ 32. Reh1 Rh8)
32. Qe4 Kg7 33. g4 Qd5 34. f5


34. ... Re8? This could cost Black dear. She had to play 34. ... Qxe4+ 35. Rxe4 g5! with at least equality.
35. Qxd5. Or, by inversion, 35. f6+! Kg8 36. Qxd5 Rxd5 37. Rh6! Rexe5 38. Reh1 Kf8 39. Rxh7 Ke8 40. Rg7 with a winning advantage.
35. ... Rxd5 36. f4? White was still in time for 36. f6+! Kg8 37. Rh6! transposing into the line given above.
36. ... g5 37. f6+ Kg8 38. Rh5 gxf4 39. Kf3 b4 40. Ke4 Rd6 41. Rf5 c3 42. bxc3 bxc3 43. Rc1 Rc6 44. Kxf4 c2 45. Ke3 h6 46. g5 Kh7 47. gxh6 Kg6 48. Rf2 Rxe5+ 49. Kd4 Rec5 50. Rh2 Kh7 51. a3 Rc4+ 52. Kd5 Rc3 53. Kd4 Rxa3 54. Rcxc2 Rxf6 55. Rcf2 Raf3 56. Rxf3 Rxf3


Black has an extra Pawn, but with correct play the ending must be drawn.
57. Ke5□ Rb3 58. Kf6 Rb7 59. Ra2 Ra7 60. Ra3 a5 61. Ra4 Kg8


62. Rg4+?? This careless check throws away the draw, allowing Black to win the h-Pawn by a King’s triangulation. White could draw in more ways than one, 62. Kg5 Kh7 63. Kf6!= being an instructive one.
62. ... Kh8!□ 63. Ra4 Kh7!□ 64. Ra1 a4 65. Ra3 Kg8 66. Ke5 Ra6 67. Rg3+ Kh8! 68. Ra3 Kh7 69. Rf3 f6+ 70. Kd4 0 : 1.

Not an easy win for 朱锦尔 (Zhū Jǐn’ěr), but one that counts for two. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

It’s written in the sky, Edna, that you and only you have the capacity to turn metal into gold

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Of Much of Little

Alina Anatolyevna Kashlinskaya – Aleksandra Yuryevna Goryachkina
FIDE Women’s Grand Prix 2022–23; 1st stage; Astana, September 20, 2022
Slav Defence D16

1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 dxc4 5. a4 e6 6. e3 c5 7. Bxc4 cxd4 8. exd4 Nc6 9. 0-0 Be7 10. Qe2. Also interesting is 10. d5 exd5 11. Nxd5 Nxd5 12. Bxd5 0-0 13. Be3 Bf5 14. Qb3 Nb4 15. Rfd1 Qa5 16. Ne5 Nxd5 17. Rxd5 Qa6 18. Nd7 Be6 19. Nxf8 Kxf8!? 20. Qb5 Bxd5 21. Qxd5 Rd8 22. Qe4 with an easier game for White, 居文君 (Jū Wénjūn) – Goryachkina, 上海 (Shànghǎi), Women’s World Chess Championship match game 4.
10. ... 0-0 11. Rd1. Just a year ago, Goryachkina was taken by surprise by 11. Be3 b6 12. Rad1 Nb4 13. Ne5 Bb7 14. f4 Ne4 15. f5 exf5 16. Qh5 Nd5? (⌓ 16. ... Bd5) 17. Nxe4 g6 (17. ... fxe4 18. Rxf7+−) 18. Qh6 fxe4 19. Nxf7! with a crushing attack, Cheparinov – Goryachkina, 2nd FIDE Grand Swiss Tournament, Riga 2021.
11. ... Nb4 12. Bg5 a5. This may be a new move. After 12. ... h6 13. Bxf6 Bxf6 14. Ne4 Be7 15. Ne5 U.S. Women’s Chess Champion 叶诗雯 (Carissa Yip) writes: “With chances for both sides; White’s pieces are more active and she can look towards attacking the Kingside, but Black has the two Bishops and potential play against the IQP”. Basically, her assessment maintains its validity even after the text.
13. Ne5 Nfd5 14. Bxe7 Qxe7 15. Ne4 b6 16. Ra3 Bb7


17. Rg3 f6 18. Nd3 Nxd3 19. Qxd3 Rac8 20. Bb3 Nb4 21. Qe2 Bd5 22. Re1 Bxb3 23. Rxb3 Rfd8 24. Rc3 Qd7 25. h3 Nd5 26. Rxc8 Rxc8 27. Ng3 Rc6 28. Nh5 Kf7 29. Ng3 Qc8 30. Qh5+ Kg8 31. Qg4 Rc1 32. Rxc1 Qxc1+ 33. Kh2 Qc6 34. Qe4 g6 35. b3 Kf7 36. Ne2 Ke7 37. g3 Qc7


38. Qh4?? Albeit with some uneasiness, White somehow managed to hold on so far, but this is a gross oversight. 38. h4 was best and if 38. ... f5 then 39. Qe5 Qc2 40. Nf4 Qxf2+ with a likely draw.
38. ... Qc2 39. Qg4 (39. Qxh7+ Kd6 40. Ng1 Qxf2+ 41. Kh1 Qxg3−+)


39. ... Nc3! 39. ... Qxb3 was also not bad, but the text makes things even clearer.
40. Qf3!? Desperation, as after 40. Nxc3 Qxf2+ 41. Kh1 Qe1+ 42. Kg2 Qxc3 another Pawn falls, leaving White with a hopeless endgame. Indeed, the Knight sacrifice offers no real chance of salvation, but if nothing else, it compels Goryachkina to show the best of her Karpovian self.
40. ... Nxe2 41. Qb7+ Kf8 42. Qxb6 Qd1 43. Kg2 Qxd4 44. Qxe6 Qe5 45. Qc8+ Kf7 46. Qd7+ Kg8 47. Qd8+ Kg7 48. Qd7+ Kh6 49. Qd2+ g5 50. Qd8 Nd4 51. Qf8+ Kg6 52. Qg8+ Kf5 53. Qxh7+ Ke6 54. Qg8+ Kd7 55. Qa8 Qc5 56. Qg8 Qc6+ 57. Kg1 Qe6 58. Qh7+ Kc6 59. Qd3 Nxb3 60. h4 gxh4 61. gxh4 Qg4+ 62. Kf1 Nc5 63. Qb5+ Kd5 64. Qxa5 Qxh4 65. Qd8+ Kc4 66. Qc7 Qh1+ 67. Ke2 Qe4+ 68. Kf1 Qd4 69. a5 Qd1+ 70. Kg2 Qg4+ 71. Kf1 Qe6 72. Kg2 Kb5 73. Qd8 Nb7 74. Qb8 Qd5+ 75. Kg3 Kxa5 76. Kf4 Qg5+ 77. Kf3 Nc5 78. Qb1 Qh5+ 79. Kg3 Qe5+ 80. f4 Qe6 81. Qb8 f5 82. Kh4 Qh6+ 83. Kg3 Ne4+ 84. Kg2 Qg6+ 85. Kf1 Qa6+ 86. Ke1 Qb5 87. Qa7+ Kb4 88. Qd4+ Qc4 89. Qb6+ Ka4 90. Qd8 Qc1+ 91. Ke2 Qc2+ 92. Ke1 Qf2+ 93. Kd1 Nc3+ 94. Kc1 Qxf4+ 95. Kc2 Nb5 96. Qf8 Qe4+ 97. Kb2 Qb4+ 0 : 1

Goryachkina quietly but mercilessly took advantage of the only opportunity her opponent offered. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

Bond-Woman

Four-time Women’s World Chess Champion 侯逸凡 (Hóu Yìfán)’s presence in the 杭州银行队 (Hángzhōu Bank Team) made a difference, leading them to victory in the prelims of the 17th Chinese Chess League Division A Regular-Standard and Regular-Rapid “武陵山大裂谷杯” (“Wǔlíng Mountain Great Rift Valley Cup”) which took place in 重庆 (Chóngqìng), China from September 6–19, 2022. The first eight teams will play for the title in a final knockout tournament to be held in 聊城 (Liáochéng), 山东省 (Shāndōng province), China from October 10–16, 2022(*). Photo: 刘毅 (Liú Yì).


(*) But it was then postponed to February 2023 due to the protracted pandemic.

Of course, Edna, she would have given up years ago, and maybe she would never have begun without your encouragement