2012 RHP Championship - Report Two

2012 RHP Championship - Report Two

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Naturally Right

Somewhere Else

Joined
22 Jun 04
Moves
42677
13 Feb 12

Originally posted by tomtom232
Actually in the Art of Attack Vladimir Vukovic shows this defensive theme many times in the classic bishop sacrifice section.
On what page? I can't find it.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
13 Feb 12
4 edits

And still they come.....(mates on f7). This one has an opening twist.

Yesterday Mad Knight - Today Crazy Knight.
We need a game from this lad User 294912 to complete the set.

talzamir - crazyblkknight RHP Ch 2012



crazyblkknight - Erwin Weinzinger RHP Ch 2012

Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12469
13 Feb 12

Originally posted by Mad Rook
And yeah, people who actually read their chess books have an unfair advantage.
Not necessarily... you have to actually learn something from what you read😕.

Richard

t

Joined
15 Jun 06
Moves
16334
13 Feb 12
2 edits

Originally posted by no1marauder
On what page? I can't find it.
Admittedly, it doesn't show the bishop coming to e4 but it shows the bishop coming to f5 and says to watch out for this defensive trick. Which version do you have? The old one or the algebraic one with notes by John Nunn?


Edit: because it maye have been in Nunn's notes but my memory is foggy and I don't have the book with me to confirm... I just remember that this defensive trick stuck with me after reading that section of the book.

Naturally Right

Somewhere Else

Joined
22 Jun 04
Moves
42677
14 Feb 12

Originally posted by tomtom232
Admittedly, it doesn't show the bishop coming to e4 but it shows the bishop coming to f5 and says to watch out for this defensive trick. Which version do you have? The old one or the algebraic one with notes by John Nunn?


Edit: because it maye have been in Nunn's notes but my memory is foggy and I don't have the book with me to confirm... I just remember that this defensive trick stuck with me after reading that section of the book.
The 2008 edition. But you are right; on p.123:

What is more important is that Black's knight should not be able to reach f6 and neither his queen nor bishop should be able to occupy the h7-b1 diagonal unharmed.

Of course, here the bishop can't reach the diagonal "unharmed" and the sac is still correct though not decisive. I admit I didn't see Be4; 30+ games sometimes make you overlook moves. Still, even if Black plays it, White has a very solid advantage though I agree the position isn't resignable.

e4

Joined
06 May 08
Moves
42492
14 Feb 12
1 edit

And still they come....This time the mating Queen does not
come from f3 or h5 but from c8. Read on....

cardd22 - camdenyoruba RHP Ch 2012

Chess Librarian

The Stacks

Joined
21 Aug 09
Moves
113598
15 Feb 12

Originally posted by greenpawn34
And still they come....This time the mating Queen does not
come from f3 or h5 but from c8. Read on....

cardd22 - camdenyoruba RHP Ch 2012

[pgn]
[Event "2012 Championship"]
[Site "http://www.redhotpawn.com"]
[Date "2012.02.01"]
[Round "1"]
[White "cardd22"]
[Black "camdenyoruba"]
[Result "1-0"]
[WhiteElo "1933"]
[BlackElo "1536"]
[EndDate ...[text shortened]... Qc8+ Qd8 9. Bf7+ Ke7 {You are not winning my Queen...} 10. Qe6[/pgn]
OUCH! That's just painful to see.

Houston, Texas

Joined
28 Sep 10
Moves
14347
15 Feb 12

Originally posted by greenpawn34
And still they come.....(mates on f7). This one has an opening twist.

Yesterday Mad Knight - Today Crazy Knight.
We need a game from this lad User 294912 to complete the set.

talzamir - crazyblkknight RHP Ch 2012

[pgn]

1. d4 d5 2. e4 dxe4 3. Nc3 c6 4. Nxe4 {From a Backmar Gambit to a Caro Kann. Two openings with completely different re ...[text shortened]... e4 c5 2. Bc4 Nc6 3. c3 e5 4. Qf3 Nf6 5. g4 d6 6. g5 Nd7 7. Qxf7[/pgn]
So Crazy Knight at f2 was the slayer in one game and the slayee in the other game.

Anyway, in the first game, White didn't even have to use the queen for the mate. Crazy (black) got greedy with pxg3 (N) (see diagram below in which Crazy did pxg3 instead of Nd5 to stop the mate):



In the second game, Crazy's (white) g4/g5 moves here are classic, at least with many white opponents in the thousands of Yahoo blitz games I played years ago. If I ever saw a white g4/g5 coming in that situation as black, I tried to have already played d6 (or d5) before White pushed the pawn to g4. White to move:

Houston, Texas

Joined
28 Sep 10
Moves
14347
15 Feb 12
2 edits

Originally posted by greenpawn34
And still they come....This time the mating Queen does not
come from f3 or h5 but from c8. Read on....

cardd22 - camdenyoruba RHP Ch 2012

[pgn]
[Event "2012 Championship"]
[Site "http://www.redhotpawn.com"]
[Date "2012.02.01"]
[Round "1"]
[White "cardd22"]
[Black "camdenyoruba"]
[Result "1-0"]
[WhiteElo "1933"]
[BlackElo "1536"]
[EndDate Qc8+ Qd8 9. Bf7+ Ke7 {You are not winning my Queen...} 10. Qe6[/pgn]
Annotation: "You are not winning my Queen..."

That's funny. Ofcourse, I guess white could have missed the mate.