Well, playing this game I felt rather optimistic. Specially when I recovered a piece that I was down on move 21, only to find out that it was a set up for the Steam Roller Effect...Crash...Bang ...Boom. Before I knew it, my oponent was wiping his chops, while I was still trying to clean the poop outta me eyes....
I think that my best and most dignified move in this game was the resignation..
Originally posted by Dies Irae if a 2300 rated player "blunders" a knight and you are thinking hey material is now even, I'd change your chess thought process
That's exactly what I was thinking. It seemed pretty obvious to me, especially since white had his queen and bishop attacking the kingside.
That said, I don't see any reasonable defense either way.
Originally posted by Dies Irae if a 2300 rated player "blunders" a knight and you are thinking hey material is now even, I'd change your chess thought process
Fair enough...however, as a result of this "exercise" , the only chess thought process that going to change to me, is the fact that I will be even more determined.
Bearing in mind the second best move or a slight oversight of a certain chess postion, or combination can be regarded as a "blunder"
and if I can recall recently, a top player like Kramnick missed a very obvious checkmate against Deep Blue and consequently lost the series against it. So anybody can blunder regardless of their rating. It might be very unlikely, but still possible, thats why I will always believe that I have a chance.
Originally posted by kNIGHTHEAD Fair enough...however, as a result of this "exercise" , the only chess thought process that going to change to me, is the fact that I will be even more determined.
Bearing in mind the second best move or a slight oversight of a certain chess postion, or combination can be regarded as a "blunder"
and if I can recall recently, a top player like Kramnick ...[text shortened]... be very unlikely, but still possible, thats why I will always believe that I have a chance.
Good points. He had a pretty strong attack no matter what you did, so taking the knight really wasn't the biggest mistake. He had material to burn. But good job playing someone 600 points above you. I'm sure you learned a lot from it.
Wow, what an amazing attack from white!! It seems 13...Qe6 may have been a mistake, since after 14.Bb2 black's already in trouble. I see why 14...Rd8 to try for d5, but 15.Nd5! had to be prevented (I'm guessing you didn't see he takes the bishop on g4 with a mate threat when you calculated that tactical sequence). Very tricky!
18...Qxc2 may have been a mistake because of the queen entering the dark square complex a1 - h8 diagonal. I don't know what the move should have been though. It's very hard to find a good move here. Maybe you needed 17...f6 instead of g6 to prevent the diagonal from getting so weak. The if he played Qd4 you could just take on c6. Although he probably had something else in mind then.
Originally posted by Spacetime Wow, what an amazing attack from white!! It seems 13...Qe6 may have been a mistake, since after 14.Bb2 black's already in trouble. I see why 14...Rd8 to try for d5, but 15.Nd5! had to be prevented (I'm guessing you didn't see he takes the bishop on g4 with a mate threat when you calculated that tactical sequence). Very tricky!
18...Qxc2 may have been ...[text shortened]... robably had something else in mind then.
This is an amazing game, thanks for posting it.
Thanks for all your comments guys, they are very welcome.......