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http://www.chessmail.

com ISSN 1393-385X

Ten grandmaster norms & still counting...


we profile Horst Rittner at 70

1/2001

6th CC World Champion Horst Rittner


(right) talking with the late CC-GM
Dick Smit at the 1996 ICCF Congress

Email Chess World Championship report


Great games issue: sizzling play!
Theory: Traxler Attack in the Two Knights
Ectool 6.0 email CC program reviewed
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www.chessmail.com 1/2001
Contents Looking to the future
G
Horst Rittner at 70 REETINGS to our new subscribers and
Introduction: pages 2-3 welcome back to those of you who have
Rittner interview already renewed your subscriptions. If
Pages 4-6 you have been slow to react, we offer a reminder
that this is the last issue you will receive if you
Career highlights don’t do something about it quickly!
Page 7 It is some source of amazement to us that,
Games by Rittner almost five years after the Chess Mail concept
Pages 8-15 was devised, we are still mailing out a printed
magazine instead of distributing it wholly via
Estrin Memorial the Internet and/or CD. No final decision has
Tournament report been taken but I have serious doubts that there
Pages 16-22 will be a printed/posted Chess Mail after 2001
Four new GM games or at latest 2002.
Pages 23-25 In 1996 we already foresaw Adobe’s Acrobat
PDF electronic file format as the way of the future
1st ICCF Email World
as it allows the distant reader of a document
Championship report to view and print out exactly what its creator
Pages 26-33 intended. Now PDF is being increasingly used
37th Hungarian CC in chess publishing as it gets around the figurine
Championship font/diagram issues that plague webmasters
Pages 34-37 writing chess websites in HTML. If you like a
printed magazine to read in bed, at the fireside or
New Swedish CC on journeys, PDF makes this possible.
Champion’s games As for magazine content this year, we have
Pages 38-44 heard a plea to include less historical material
Theory: Traxler Attack and more recent games. This issue is indeed
Pages 45-49 largely filled with news and games, and our next
issue will focus on Internet and computer issues,
Ectool email program including reviews of electronic books and our
Software review
annual survey of the best chess websites.
Pages 50-51, 64
We always send the new issue out some weeks
ICCF Results before the end of the old year, hoping to avoid
Pages 52-62 the most difficult weeks with the postal service
Book Reviews (late December and early January), because
Page 63 of the long time-lags involved in worldwide
distribution. So, for those of you who receive this
ECO Openings Index issue in time, we wish you a Merry Christmas and
Page 64 a Happy New Year.
Tim Harding (Editor)

www.chessmail.com 1
The sixth correspondence
chess World Champion
Horst Like it or not (& some
certainly don’t like
Rittner it), at 70 years
of age, a World
speaks Champion has
earned the right
his to have his say...
mind

H
ORST Rittner, the 6th CC World may never be equalled, and it certainly
Champion, is a somewhat con- cannot be ruled out that he will eventually
troversial figure in his homeland. add a few more to that total.
You can see that for yourself in the Horst Rittner was born in July 16,
following interview, in which the views 1930 in Breslau (home town of Adolf
he expresses are his own and are not Anderssen), which is now the Polish
endorsed by Chess Mail. However, a city of Wroclaw. He grew up during the
world champion is entitled to his say. turbulent years of World War II. As an
A few months ago, he reached the age adult he lived in Berlin and was a citizen
of 70 but is still competing at a high level. of the communist-governed DDR.
In the opinion of his predecessor Dr Hans He had learned chess (depending
Berliner, Rittner is one of the best CC on which source you consult) at the
players ever and made very few errors in age of 12 or 13 (i.e. during WW2) from
the games played in his prime. his father, joined his local chess club
As Dr Fritz Baumbach has put it, Rittner in 1948 and took up CC in 1949. His
is “the world champion of grandmaster first tournament was Group 20 of the
norms”. His record of ten CC-GM norms Deutschen Schachblätter, taking first

2 1/2001
place with 13/14. A succession of good an impression on the world stage. In the
results led to qualifying for the final of USSR-Germany match (1955-57) he lost
the 2nd German championship, 1951-53 both games on top board to GM Dubinin
(from the DDR preliminaries) in which but then he achieved the grandmaster
he took a high position. He then won the title by winning top board of the 3rd
final of the 3rd German Ch., 1953-56. Olympiad Final (1967-1971) with a 7.5/9
Three times in the 1950’s he entered score. This was followed by a convincing
the OTB championship of the DDR but, two-point margin of victory (with only
as he put it himself, “only with moderate 10 games!) in the very strong Ragozin
success”. He has been a CC specialist for Memorial (1963-66), as a result of which
most of his life. he was invited to play in the final of
At this early stage in his career, he told the 6th World Championship. (He never
the Fernschach editor, “Chiefly I play 1 played a semifinal.)
e4 but in recent times also equally 1 d4 In the year subsequent to winning the
and 1 Nf3. I prefer a positional game to World Championship, Rittner concen-
a combinative game. I don’t hold much trated mostly on invitational grandmaster
with the so-called advantage of the first tournaments organised by national fed-
move. Chess theory constantly discovers erations, usually playing two or more
new ideas for Black, and in CC one can simultaneously. He also scored a note-
directly give them a good trial.” Later in worthy victory against Tigran Petrosian,
Fernschach (1971) he said that he began the former FIDE world champion, in the
postal chess to improve his middle-game early 1970s.
and endgame play for OTB but soon The reunification of Germany a decade
learned that CC was an art in itself. ago eventually brought his editorial
Up to 1954 he worked in a bank but career to a close, but he continued to
then got his DDR sports job which was play strong CC. He then surprised the
followed by editorial work. Evidently chess world in 1998 by taking up his
it wasn’t a great handicap for Rittner’s long-deferred qualification place in
career to have access to the latest World Championship Final XVI.
chess information and opening theory, We begin with the interview he gave
sometimes even before publication, but to “Schach” a few months ago, now
other players have had similar advantages published in English for the first time
without capitalising on them. (with a few cuts). There follows a survey
After winning the German Champ- of Rittner’s career with tables and a
ionship, it wasn’t long before he made selection of his games.

CORRESPONDENCECHESS.COM
http://www.correspondencechess.com
John C. Knudsen Email: knudsenjohnc@hotmail.com

www.chessmail.com 3
A Life Full of Chess: Rittner at 70
by Sibylle Heyme (Berlin)

H
ORST RITTNER has lived through
chess history. In 1954, at the
age of only 24, the Breslau-born
player took over as General Secretary
of the German Chess Association of the
GDR. In the 1960s he changed to become
the chief trainer of the club TSC Berlin
and in that role he coached the genera-
tion of Fuchs, Golz, Zinn, and Baumbach.
From 1965 until his retirement in 1991 he
managed the journal “Schach”.
His greatest sporting achievement
culminated in 1971 when he won the Rittner in 1971 at the time he became
6th Correspondence Chess World Cham- World Champion
pionship.
On July 16, 2000 Horst Rittner cel- president of the official sport federation
ebrated his 70th birthday. On this occ- of the GDR, the Deutscher Turn- und
asion, we paid him a visit to ask him Sportbund (DTSB). I received a gift of
some questions about the world of honour. Later I got the Friedrich-Ludwig
(correspondence) chess. Jahn Medal, the only sports functionary
to receive it. But at Sportverlag, my
World Champion 1971 colleagues were proud of my World
In those days there were no chess Champion title.
computers. An advantage for me was As for alternatives, I once wanted to
that I could use the 24-volume openings become a singer. I had a good tenor
book series from Sportverlag, which had voice and formerly I sang in a choir.
just been published at this time. As a
result I often reached the middle game 16th CC World Ch.
with a big advantage. I am now playing once more in the
I mostly analysed alone, but sometimes World Championship. I sought a great
with Kurt Richter whom I visited once a tournament, because I no longer get
week. All his life, Richter was an untiring so many invitations. As a former World
attacker, and I could profit very much Champion, I was entitled to a free place,
from his wealth of tactical ideas. as was also Jørn Sloth, who like me never
My world title in 1971 brought me no tried to defend his title.
special prestige in East Germany. I was I have no ambitions for the title.
cited by Roland Weißig, at that time vice Meanwhile, I am playing too quickly

4 1/2001
and impatiently in this tournament. development in the Baltic States which
Yet perhaps it will bring me the 11 th now have similar postal times to central
fulfillment of the GM norm, which in this Europe.
Category 16 tournament (the strongest In 1990, I began a Dutch corres-
World Championship of all time) requires pondence tournament, in which I played
8½ points form 16 games. only under the condition that I could post
my cards not in the letterbox near my
ICCF and BdF home, in the East, but a mere kilometer
For 30 years, from 1961-91, I was a away in West Berlin. Moves from East
Vice President of ICCF and Chairman Berlin would take 10 days to arrive, from
of the Qualifications Commission. Four the West only two. It was so curious that
times I was re-elected with a big majority. I was even accompanied by a TV crew
The biggest problem I had was to get the and filmed doing it.
permission of the DTSB to put forward
my candidacy. CC versus OTB
Since 1990, I am in conflict with the Correspondence chess is qualitatively
German CC organisation, especially with higher: more accurately, there are fewer
Messrs Soltau and (Eckhard) Lüers. I was blunders. I have won against several
flung out of my function at ICCF. Our grand-masters in postal chess, against
last quarrel was over the selection of the whom I wouldn’t have had any chance
Olympiad team. over the board.
Although I had achieved ten GM- CC players are amateurs, who pay
norms (a world record!), and also bel- money out and receive none, because
onged on the team by Elo rating, I was not it is an expensive hobby. Most players
nominated for the first Olympiad team. regard CC simply as a substitute for OTB
Other players should “gain experience”. play, which they cannot practise any
“Gain experience” – that is just absurd in longer for various reasons.
postal chess, where a tournament lasts I might also be critical about the
five years. Ability should always be the prizes for the World Championship,
criterion. which cannot be compared with those
In BdF, there are too few democratic in OTB. There is only a prize of honour:
decisions, it is only a pseudo-democracy. the World Champion receives a silver
We have no selection congresses, no plate on which the tournament table is
discussions. ICCF is more democratic, engraved.
but here it displeases me that English has
become the main language. Computers in CC
Many CC players stopped their activi-
Postal times ties because of chess computers. I have
The postal traffic with Russia and also thought about it, but I decided to
the Ukraine is still catastrophic, and continue because I need the challenge
even with Poland a card can take an of mental work.
eternity. Praiseworthy, however, is the The computer offers, however, also

www.chessmail.com 5
an enormous saving of time concerning In general, we were not free to choose
analysis: one can reach with a click of a the contributions ourselves. The boss of
button the current position, so you avoid the publishing house Sportverlag had the
the burdensome setting up of the pieces. right to allow or forbid every article!
Games develop tidily, tactical oversights The CC part was longer than it is today.
are practically a thing of the past, and Furthermore, we published reports of
the proportion of draws is undoubtedly chess events involving children and
increased. But the fun has definitely young players. Of course the magazine
been reduced. carried no advertisements (in the GDR,
I first played against van Oosterom there was no advertising at all!).
about 20 years ago and beat him
with Black in 20 moves. Later he got
Older
computers. The next time we played was One can continue in CC longer than
in a little Dutch tournament; I could with in OTB but the playing strength declines
great difficulty hold him to a draw. slowly with age. In CC a border lies at
about 60 years of age.
The future of CC I no longer follow developments in
In its present form, correspondence chess so intensively. I don’t play OTB
chess has no future. The technique should chess any more and I don’t deal with
be improved so that the exchange of published games in magazines. In CC
moves by email becomes compulsory. I still trust in my old openings and
The time question is the most imp- keep them up to date with the newest
ortant. Many older players still prefer to Informators.
send their move by postcard. Thus in
the current World Championship I am 70 & a little bit wiser
playing only two games by fax; the rest “To win a world title in CC, one must
of the opponents are sending the good devote at least as much time as is required
old postcard. for a doctorate,” observed in 1971 the
One way to a prosperous future would new World Champion Horst Rittner,
be, to introduce quite young people “which is why I have not defended my
to CC. Correspondence chess has a title”.
high training value because you are Why then after a further 30 years
forced to deal with opening theory and, has he changed his mind and entered a
furthermore, it develops your ability to strength-stealing world final?
analyse. “I might show that I am not yet a spent
force,” explained Rittner, “but above all,
“Schach” also some defiance to BdF, when they
From 1965 to 1990 there were no did not select me for the olympiad team,
changes in the journal “Schach” apart despite my record achievement of ten
from its format. We had the very good GM norms”.
regular series, School of Combinations Many thanks for the conversa-
and Chess Problems. tion.

6 1/2001
6th CC World Champ. FInal 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Pts.
1 Rittner, Horst Robert DDR * ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 12½
2 Zagorovsky, Vladimir P USSR ½ * ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 12
3 Estrin, Yakov B. USSR 0 ½ * 1 ½ 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 0 1 1 1 10
4 Thiele, Erich DDR 0 0 0 * 1 0 1 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 9
5 Sanakoev, Grigory K. USSR ½ ½ ½ 0 * 1 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 0 1 8½
6 Kellner, John Vincent AUS 0 ½ 1 1 0 * ½ 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 ½ 1 8½
7 Stern, Dieter BRD 0 0 ½ 0 1 ½ * 1 ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 8½
8 Hybl, Jaroslav CZE ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 0 0 * ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 7½
9 Kauranen, Risto FIN ½ 0 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ * ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 1 7
10 Nyman, Sture Valentin SVE 0 0 ½ 0 0 1 ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 7
11 De Carbonnel, Heinz BRD 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ * 0 1 ½ ½ 0 6
12 Karker, Norbert BRD 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 1 * 0 0 1 ½ 6
13 Ljungdahl, John SVE 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 1 * ½ 1 ½ 5½
14 Sevecek, Rudolf CZE ½ 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ * ½ 1 5
15 Aarseth, Sverre NOR 0 0 0 0 1 ½ 0 ½ 1 0 ½ 0 0 ½ * 0 4
16 Jansen, C. NLD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 ½ ½ 0 1 * 3

Reply from Grandmaster Soltau

W
E INVITED Messrs H-E. Indeed there is some lack of democracy
Lüers and A.Soltau to reply to in BdF. But you cannot organize a
remarks made by GM Rittner meeting of all 6000 members as a
in his interview as they were unfavour- general assembly. The members of
ably mentioned. We received the follow- the presidium are therefore elected by
ing comment from GM Achim Soltau. postcard. Normally the proposal of the
IT IS true that Rittner was ICCF Vice old board is accepted by the members.
President and a favourite of Hans-Werner If I knew a better method...
von Massow — up to that moment, when
Rittner refused a hommage to Bertl von Rittner’s ten GM norms
Massow in “Schach” after her death.
From that moment von Massow was his The tournaments in which GM Rittner
enemy. Even “Shakhmatny Byulleten” achieved his ten CC-GM norms were as
printed an hommage. follows: CC Olympiad III Final 1958-61
BdF did not “fling out” Rittner. He (best result on board 1); Ragozin Mem-
retired by himself because BdF was not orial 1963-65 (1st); World Ch. VI Final
willing to pay Rittner’s expenses for the 1968-71 (1st); BdF-25 1970-74 (3rd place,
job of ICCF Vice-president. He was at 10/14); Perfors Memorial 1976-80 (4th,
that time Chefredakteur of the magazine 8/12); Purdy Memorial 1979-84 (2nd);
“Schach”, which belonged at that time to NBC-15 Volmac A 1982-86 (1st, 11/14);
the “Springer-Verlag”, the biggest and Dr R.Blass Mem. 1987-92 (2 nd on
richest publishing house in the German tiebreak, 10/14); ASIGC 2000-A 1995-99
Federal Republic. He could have paid (9/14, tie for second); Lewkowitz Mem-
these expenses from his own salary. orial B 1994-99 (4th, 10.5/16).

www.chessmail.com 7
Bishop’s Opening (C30) If 26 ¦hc1 b5–+ or 26 e5 ¦d8+ 27 ¢e4
E. Serbe (Groitzsch) - £e2+ 28 ¢xf4 g5+ 29 ¢g3 ¦d3+.
Horst Rittner (Werdau) 26...¦d8+ 27 ¢c4
Germany ch (DDR-prelim), 1951 XIIIIIIIIY
Notes by Kretschmar 9-+-tr-+-+0
1 e4 e5 2 ¥c4 ¤f6 3 d3 ¤c6 4 ¤c3 9zppzp-+kzp-0
¥c5 5 f4 d6 6 ¤f3 ¥e6 7 ¥xe6 9-+n+p+-zp0
7 ¥b5 a6 8 ¥a4 b5 9 ¥b3 0–0 10 f5 9+-wQ-+-+-0
¥xb3 11 axb3 h6 12 h3 b4 13 ¤e2 d5 9-+K+Pzp-+0
Schneiders-Firmenich, corr 1946. 9+-zP-+-+-0
7...fxe6 8 fxe5 dxe5 9 ¤a4 £d6 10 9Pwq-+-+PzP0
¤g5 ¢e7 11 ¤xc5 £xc5 12 c3 ¦ad8 9tR-+-tR-+-0
13 £b3 ¦d6 14 ¢e2 ¦hd8 15 ¥e3 xiiiiiiiiy
£a5 16 £c4
Threatens ¥c5 but better 16 ¦ad1. 27...b5+! 28 £xb5 ¦d4+!! 0–1.
16...h6! If 29 cxd4 £c2 mate.
16...b5 17 £c5 threat a4!.
17 ¤h3 Tarrasch French (C06)
XIIIIIIIIY K. Henning (Kiel) -
9-+-tr-+-+0 Horst Rittner (Werdau)
9zppzp-mk-zp-0 2nd German CC Ch 1951-54, Final
9-+ntrpsn-zp0 Notes by Rittner, Fernschach 1954
9wq-+-zp-+-0 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 ¤d2 ¤f6 4 e5 ¤fd7
9-+Q+P+-+0 5 ¥d3 c5 6 c3 ¤c6 7 ¤e2 cxd4 8
9+-zPPvL-+N0 cxd4 ¤b6 9 0–0 ¥d7 10 f4 g6 11 ¤f3
9PzP-+K+PzP0 h5! 12 a3 a5! 13 £c2 ¦g8 14 ¥e3
9tR-+-+-+R0 a4 15 ¤c3 ¤a5 16 ¥f2 ¥e7 17 ¤g5
xiiiiiiiiy ¦c8 18 h4 ¤b3 19 ¦ad1 ¤c4 20 ¢h2
£c7 21 £e2
17...¦xd3 18 ¤f2 21 ¥xc4 £xc4 threat ...¥xa3.
18 £xd3 ¦xd3 19 ¢xd3. 21...¤xb2 22 ¤xd5
18...¦xe3+!! Avoids the loss of a pawn but does
18...¦3d7 19 a4! …19...£a6 20 £xa6 not improve White’s position.
bxa6 21 b4 ¦b8 22 ¦hb1 idea b5. 22...exd5 23 £xb2 £c3 24 £a2
19 ¢xe3 £b6+ 20 ¢f3 If 24 £e2 Black should probably not
20 ¢e2 £xb2+. capture on a3 at once but secure himself
20...¦f8 21 ¤d3 ¤d5+ 22 ¢e2 ¤f4+ somewhat against the e5-e6 threat by
23 ¤xf4 24...£c6.
23 ¢d2 ¦d8!. 24...¢f8 25 ¥e1
23...£xb2+ 24 ¢d3 Attempting to give up a pawn for
24 ¢f3 ¦xf4+ 25 ¢e3 £f2+ 26 ¢d3 ¦f8!. some attack.
24...exf4 25 £c5+ ¢f7 26 ¦he1 25...£xd4 26 ¥b4 ¥xb4 27 ¥b5

8 1/2001
¢e7 35 ¢f1 ¤d4! 36 ¦xd4 £xd4 37
£b2 ¥xf2 0–1.

Queen’s Gambit (D56)


Horst Rittner (Werdau) -
O. Rüster (Krölpa)
2nd German CC Ch 1951-54, Final
Notes based on those by the players
1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 ¤f3 d5 4 ¥g5
¥e7 5 ¤c3 0–0 6 e3 h6 7 ¥h4 ¤e4
8 ¥xe7 £xe7
HR: By transposition, we have arrived
at the elastic Lasker variation. This is a
really arid way of playing that I certainly
had not expected from Rüster.
9 £c2 c6 10 ¥e2 ¤d7 11 0–0 ¤xc3
12 £xc3 dxc4 13 ¥xc4 c5?
HR: The first departure from theory.
Better is 13...b6 14 e4 ¥b7 15 ¦fe1 ¦fc8
etc. (Gilg-Eliskases, 1939).
OR: I am thoroughly in agreement
about the dubiousness of this move; I
Rittner in the mid-1950s when he won risked it in order to go my own way.
the 3rd Gernan CC Championship 14 ¦fd1 b6 15 ¥b5!
HR: This is why: Black’s 13th move
¥d2! 28 ¥xd7 ¦c3 29 ¢h1 £c4 30 has made the b5 square available so that
e6 f6 31 ¤h3 in the following moves the c5-pawn
XIIIIIIIIY becomes weak.
9-+-+-mkr+0 15...¥b7 16 ¥xd7 ¥xf3 17 gxf3
9+p+L+-+-0 £xd7 18 dxc5 £c6 19 e4 £xc5
9-+-+Pzpp+0 OR: My original plan was to recapture
9+-+p+-+p0 with the pawn, then ...¦ac8 followed
9p+q+-zP-zP0 by ...f5. Then I suddenly saw the pos-
9zPntr-+-+N0 sibility that Rittner points out in his note
9Q+-vl-+P+0 to move 27, and calculated the game
9+-+R+R+K0 continuation as far as move 30. At first
xiiiiiiiiy this variation appeared good to me, but
I had overlooked that if I play 31...¦xf3
31...¦xh3+! White does not have to capture on a7
This soon brings about the collapse of immediately.
the white position. HR: 19...bxc5 is no better as Black
32 gxh3 £e4+ 33 ¢g1 ¥e3+ 34 ¦f2 must reckon with the threat b4.

www.chessmail.com 9
20 £xc5 bxc5 21 ¦ac1 ¦fb8! 22 b3 ¤xe4 14 ¥xe4 ¥h3 15 ¦e1 f5? 16 ¥d5+.
¦b5 23 ¦d7 ¦a5 24 ¦c2 ¦b8 25 ¦c7 11 ¤d2 ¤f8 12 e4 dxe4 13 ¤dxe4
¦bb5 26 ¦d2 ¦b8 27 ¦dd7 c4! 28 ¤xe4 14 ¥xe4 ¥h3 15 ¦e1 £d7
¦xc4 15...f5? 16 ¥d5+.
If 28 bxc4 ¦b1+ 29 ¢g2 ¦g5+ 30 ¢h3 16 ¥d2 f5 17 ¥h1 ¢h8 18 d5 c5 19
¦bg1 etc. £d3 a6 20 a4 ¤g6
28...¦xa2 29 ¦cc7 ¦xb3 30 ¦xf7 XIIIIIIIIY
¢h8! 31 ¦xg7 9r+-+r+-mk0
XIIIIIIIIY 9+p+q+-zpp0
9-+-+-+-mk0 9p+-vl-+n+0
9zp-tR-+-tR-0 9+-zpP+p+-0
9-+-+p+-zp0 9P+-+-+-+0
9+-+-+-+-0 9+-sNQ+-zPl0
9-+-+P+-+0 9-zP-vL-zP-zP0
9+r+-+P+-0 9tR-+-tR-mKL0
9r+-+-zP-zP0 xiiiiiiiiy
9+-+-+-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy 21 f4? c4!
The opening of the diagonal a7-g1 is
31...¦b1+? immediately decisive. Instead of f4, White
31...¦xf3 32 ¦h7+ ¢g8 33 ¦cg7+ ¢f8 should have exchanged the rooks.
34 ¦xa7 ¦xa7 35 ¦xa7 ¦f4 36 ¦a4 would 22 £f3
keep a few drawing chances but Rüster 22 £xc4 ¦ac8 23 £d3 ¥c5+ 24 ¥e3
wanted to end the game quickly. £d6 25 ¥g2 ¤xf4 26 gxf4 £g6-+.
32 ¢g2 ¦bb2 33 ¦ge7 ¦xf2+ 34 ¢g3 22...¥c5+ 23 ¥e3 ¦xe3 24 ¦xe3 ¦e8
¦g2+ 35 ¢f4 e5+ 25 ¦ae1
Black cannot avoid the loss of another 25 ¤d1 £e7 26 ¢f2 ¥g4.
pawn: 35...¦a6 36 ¦xa7 ¦xa7 37 ¦xa7 25...¦xe3 26 ¦xe3 £e8 0–1.
¦xh2 38 ¦e7. If 27 ¢f2 ¥g4 or 27 ¤d1 £xa4.
36 ¦xe5 1–0.
Winawer French (C19)
Catalan Opening (E01) Leonardo Lipiniks (ARG) -
E. Ziems (Dölme) - Horst Rittner (DDR)
Horst Rittner (Berlin) CCOL3 final, bd.1, 1958-61
3rd German CC Ch 1953-56, Final 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 ¤c3 ¥b4 4 e5 c5 5
Notes by Rittner, Fernschach 1957 a3 ¥xc3+ 6 bxc3 ¤e7 7 a4 ¤bc6 8
1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 g3 d5 4 ¥g2 ¤bd7 ¤f3 £c7 9 £d2 f6
5 cxd5 exd5 6 ¤c3 c6 7 ¤f3 9...¥d7 10 ¥d3 b6 11 0–0 c4 12 ¥e2
Better is 7 ¥f4. ¤f5 13 ¥a3 (13 g4! ¤fe7 14 ¤h4 0–0
7...¥d6 8 0–0 0–0 9 £c2 ¦e8 10 e3 15 ¥a3²) 13...h5 14 ¦fe1 f6 15 ¥f1 h4
£c7 (15...0–0–0 16 g3! ¢b7) .
10...£e7 11 ¤d2 ¤f8 12 e4 dxe4 13 ¤dxe4 10 exf6 gxf6 11 ¥a3

10 1/2001
11 ¥e2 c4 12 £h6 (12 0–0!?; 12 ¤h4!?) 37...d2 38 ¦xc2 d1£ 39 ¦xd1 ¦xd1+
12...¤g6 13 ¤h4 ¦g8 14 ¥h5 £g7=. 40 ¢g2÷.
11...c4 12 ¥e2 ¤g6 13 0–0 ¥d7 14 38 ¢g2 ¤xf3 39 ¦f2
¤e1? 39 ¦xf3 d2.
14 ¦fe1. 39...¤e1+! 0-1.
14...0–0–0 15 g3 h5 16 h4 e5 17 dxe5 White resigned as after 40 ¦xe1 ¦xf2+
¤gxe5 18 ¥c5 ¥g4 19 ¤g2 £a5 20 41 ¢xf2 d2 42 ¤xd2 ¦xd2+ 43 ¢f3 ¦d1
¥b4 44 ¦e8+ ¢xa7 45 ¦c8 c1£ 46 ¦xc1 ¦xc1
XIIIIIIIIY the endgame with two pawns versus ¦
9-+ktr-+-tr0 is hopeless, since the black ¢ can get in
9zpp+-+-+-0 front of the passed pawns: 47 g4 ¢b6 48
9-+n+-zp-+0 h5 ¢c5 49 ¢e4 ¢d6 50 ¢f5 ¢e7 51 ¢g6
9wq-+psn-+p0 ¢f8 52 g5 ¢g8 and zugzwang will soon
9PvLp+-+lzP0 be inevitable: 53 ¢f6 ¢h7 54 ¢f5 ¦f1+
9+-zP-+-zP-0 55 ¢g4 ¦h1 56 h6 ¢g6 etc.
9-+PwQLzPN+0 Rittner had two great clashes with
9tR-+-+RmK-0 Moscow grandmaster Simagin. Here is
xiiiiiiiiy the encounter which he won.

If 20 ¥d4?! ¤xd4 or 20 ¥e3?! d4. Richter-Rauzer Sicilian (B66)


20...¥xe2! 21 £xe2 ¤xb4 22 cxb4 Horst Rittner (DDR) -
£xb4 23 ¤f4 d4 24 £e4 Vladimir Simagin (USSR)
24 ¤xh5?! d3 25 cxd3 cxd3 26 £d1 Ragozin Memorial 1963-66
£e4 27 ¤xf6 ¤f3+ 28 ¢h1 ¦xh4+ 29 Notes by Rittner in Schach
gxh4 £f4. 1 e4 c5 2 ¤f3 ¤c6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4
24...£d6 25 £f5+ ¢b8 26 ¤xh5 d3 ¤f6 5 ¤c3 d6 6 ¥g5 e6 7 £d2 a6 8
27 c3 £c6! 28 f3 £b6+ 29 ¢h1 £b2 0–0–0 h6 9 ¥e3 ¥d7
30 ¤xf6 £xc3 31 ¦ab1 £d4 32 £e4 It’s known that 9...¤g4 10 ¤xc6 bxc6
b6 33 a5 c3! 34 axb6 £xe4 35 bxa7+ 11 ¥c5 ¥b7 12 h3 dxc5 13 £xd8+ ¦xd8
¢a8 36 ¤xe4 14 ¦xd8+ ¢xd8 15 hxg4 gives Black an
XIIIIIIIIY unfavourable endgame because of the
9k+-tr-+-tr0 weakness of his queenside.
9zP-+-+-+-0 10 f3
9-+-+-+-+0 10 f4 appears more active but the text
9+-+-sn-+-0 move also has its cunning points. It’s
9-+-+N+-zP0 hard for Black to find a safe place for his
9+-zpp+PzP-0 ¢ because kingside casling can be met
9-+-+-+-+0 by the pawn-storm g4-g5.
9+R+-+R+K0 10...b5 11 ¤xc6 ¥xc6 12 £f2 £c7
xiiiiiiiiy 13 ¥d3 b4
A long time ago, GM Simagin had
36...c2 37 ¦bc1 ¦hf8! written in Shakmaty, subjecting the 4th

www.chessmail.com 11
match game Smyslov-Botvinnik (1957) 27...fxe6 28 £xe6+ ¦f7 29 ¤f4.
to a precise analysis. He found that after 28 ¤f4 ¥d8
13...¥e7 14 £g3 g6 15 ¢b1 0–0–0 White 28...fxe6 29 £xe6+ ¢h7 30 £f5+ ¢g8
could have achieved an advantage by 31 ¤g6+-.
16 a4! (instead of 16 £f2 ¢b7). It was 29 ¦c8! fxe6 30 £xe6+ £f7 31 £xa6
therefore very interesting for me to see ¤e4 32 £e6 ¤g5 33 £xd5 £xd5
how Simagin would solve his opening 34 ¤xd5
problem. Black continued this totally lost end-
14 ¤e2 d5 15 e5! ¤d7 game for half a year.
After 15...£xe5 16 ¥f4 £h5 17 g4 34...¤e6 35 ¥e3 ¦f1+ 36 ¢xa2 ¢f7
Black must give up a piece to save his 37 ¦c2 ¢e8 38 b4 ¢d7 39 ¢b3 ¥g5
£. 40 ¥c5 h5 41 ¢c4 h4 42 d4 ¥d8 43
16 f4 ¥b5 17 ¢b1 ¥xd3 18 cxd3 b3 b5 g5 44 b6 h3 45 b7 1–0.
19 ¦c1 bxa2+ 20 ¢a1 £b7 21 ¦c2! If 45...¦b1 46 ¥b6! ¥c7 47 ¥xc7 ¤xc7
¦c8 48 ¤b4.
If 21...¥e7 22 ¦hc1 0–0 23 ¦c7 £b5 In the World Championship Final, his
24 ¤d4. compatriot Erich Thiele donated a half
22 ¦xc8+ £xc8 23 ¦c1 £b7 24 f5! point, but this was not a fix: the solution
XIIIIIIIIY was very hard to see.
9-+-+kvl-tr0
9+q+n+pzp-0 Catalan Opening (A13)
9p+-+p+-zp0 Horst Rittner (DDR) -
9+-+pzPP+-0 Ernst Thiele (DDR)
9-+-+-+-+0 6th CC World Ch Final 1968-71
9+-+PvL-+-0 1 ¤f3 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 g3 d5 4 ¥g2
9pzP-+NwQPzP0 dxc4 5 0–0 c6 6 a4 ¤a6 7 ¤a3 ¥xa3
9mK-tR-+-+-0 8 ¦xa3 ¤b4 9 b3! cxb3 10 ¦xb3 a5
xiiiiiiiiy 11 d4 0–0 12 ¥a3 £c7 13 £b1!?
13 ¥xb4 axb4 14 ¦xb4 ¤d5 15 ¦c4
No great research was needed before ¤b6 16 ¦b4 ¤d5=.
playing this pawn sacrifice, because it 13...¤fd5 14 e4 ¤b6 15 ¥xb4 axb4
can hardly be accepted. 16 ¦xb4 ¤xa4 17 ¦c1 ¦a7 18 £b3
24...exf5™ b5 19 ¤e5
If 24...¤xe5 25 fxe6 fxe6 (25...¤xd3 19 e5.
or 26 exf7+) 26 £g3 the ¢ must remain 19...¥d7 20 ¤xc6 ¥xc6 21 d5 exd5
in the centre. 22 exd5 ¤c5!ƒ 23 ¦xc5 ¦a1+ 24 ¥f1
25 ¥d4 £e7! 25 £e3 £d6! 26 £c3
Not 25 £xf5 g6 26 £h3 ¥g7. 26 dxc6? £d1.
25...¥e7 26 £xf5 0–0 27 e6 ¤f6 26...¥d7 27 ¢g2 ¦d1 28 ¦d4 ¦xd4
Black has managed to castle but he 29 £xd4 ¦b8 30 £b4 ¦b6 31 ¥d3
is lost on account of the weaknesses at White offered a draw.
d5 and g6. 31...g6 32 h4 h5 33 ¥e2 £e5 34 ¥f3

12 1/2001
¦a6 35 ¦c1 ¦f6 36 ¥e4 ¢g7 37 f4 and Black draws) 57...¦f7! 58 ¢e8 ¦g7!
£d6 38 £d4 £b6 39 £e5 ¢g8 40 59 £e5 ¥d7+ 60 ¢d8 ¥g4 61 £e8+ ¢h7
¦c7 ¥g4 62 d7 ¥f5! (62...¥xd7? 63 £xd7 ¦xd7+
Too late, Black offered a draw. 64 ¢xd7 ¢g7 65 ¢e7+-) 63 ¢c7 ¥xd7!
XIIIIIIIIY 64 £xd7 ¢g8!! (The reserve tempo!) 65
9-+-+-+k+0 ¢d6 ¦xd7+ 66 ¢xd7 ¢f7=.
9+-tR-+p+-0
9-wq-+-trp+0 Tarrasch French (C09)
9+p+PwQ-+p0 Joop van Oosterom (NLD) -
9-+-+LzPlzP0 Horst Rittner (DDR)
9+-+-+-zP-0 NBC Volmac-A 1982
9-+-+-+K+0 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 ¤d2 c5 4 exd5
9+-+-+-+-0 exd5 5 ¤gf3 ¤c6 6 ¥b5 ¥d6 7 dxc5
xiiiiiiiiy ¥xc5 8 ¤b3 ¥b6 9 0–0 ¤ge7 10 ¦e1
0–0 11 ¥e3 ¥g4 12 ¥xb6 axb6 13
41 ¥xg6! fxg6 c3 £d6 14 ¥e2 ¤g6 15 h3 ¥e6 16
41...¦xg6? 42 ¦c8+. ¥f1 ¤f4 17 £d2 h6 18 £e3 ¥f5 19
42 £e7 £xc7 43 £xc7 ¦f7 44 £b8+ £xb6?! ¥e4 20 £e3 ¦fe8 21 ¤bd4
¢g7 45 £xb5 ¥f5 46 ¢f3 ¥g4+ 47 ¤xd4 22 ¤xd4?
¢e3 ¥f5 48 ¢d4 ¥g4 49 ¢c5 ¥f5 XIIIIIIIIY
50 £e8 ¥g4 51 ¢c6 ¥h3 52 £e3 9r+-+r+k+0
¢h7 53 d6 ¥g2+?! 9+p+-+pzp-0
53...¢g7! holds. 9-+-wq-+-zp0
54 ¢b6 ¥h3 55 £e7 1-0. 9+-+p+-+-0
XIIIIIIIIY 9-+-sNlsn-+0
9-+-+-+-+0 9+-zP-wQ-+P0
9+-+-wQr+k0 9PzP-+-zPP+0
9-mK-zP-+p+0 9tR-+-tRLmK-0
9+-+-+-+p0 xiiiiiiiiy
9-+-+-zP-zP0
9+-+-+-zPl0 22...¥xg2! 23 £g3?!
9-+-+-+-+0 23 £xe8+ ¦xe8 24 ¦xe8+ ¢h7 …25
9+-+-+-+-0 ¥xg2? £g6!.
xiiiiiiiiy 23...¥xf1 24 ¢xf1 £a6+ 25 ¢g1
¤e2+ 26 ¤xe2 ¦xe2 27 ¦ed1 ¦xb2
Thiele resigned in a drawn position in 28 ¦xd5 £e2 0–1.
view of 55...¢g7? 56 ¢c7 or 55...¦xe7? That was the miniature to which Rit-
56 dxe7 ¥d7 57 ¢c7 ¥a4 58 ¢d8 ¢g7 tner referred in the interview.
59 e8£ ¥xe8 60 ¢xe8. The game between ex-world cham-
However, he could have played 56 pion Petrosian and the East German
¢c7 ¦g7!! 57 ¢d8 (57 £xg7+ ¢xg7 58 d7 broadcasting organisation was supervised
¥xd7 59 ¢xd7 ¢f7 with the opposition, by Rittner. Each week a move was made.

www.chessmail.com 13
Dr Fritz Baumbach says that Rittner ¤f4 ¢d7 24 £d2 ¢c8 25 ¤d3 ¤xg5
practically played the game himself. 26 hxg5 ¥f8 27 ¢g2 ¥e7 28 ¦h1
¢b7 29 ¦h2 ¦af8 30 ¤f4 £d8 31
Winawer French (C16) ¤h3 ¦h7 32 ¦bh1 ¦fh8 33 ¤fg1
DDR TV viewers - £f8 34 c3 £d8 35 ¤e2 ¢a7 36 f4
Tigran Petrosian (USSR) £g8 37 ¤hg1 ¢b8 38 ¤f3 ¢c7 39
Television corr. game 1970-71 ¦h3 ¢d7 40 ¦1h2 ¢e8 41 £c1 ¢f8
1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 ¤c3 ¥b4 4 e5 b6 5 42 ¢f2 ¢g7 43 £h1 ¥d8 44 ¤e1
a3 ¥f8 6 ¤f3 £d7 ¥e7 45 ¤d3 ¥f8 46 ¤ec1
XIIIIIIIIY
9rsnl+kvlntr0 XIIIIIIIIY
9zp-zpq+pzpp0 9-+-+-vlqtr0
9-zp-+p+-+0 9+-+-+pmkr0
9+-+pzP-+-0 9p+p+p+p+0
9-+-zP-+-+0 9zPp+pzPnzPp0
9zP-sN-+N+-0 9-zP-zP-zP-+0
9-zPP+-zPPzP0 9+-zPN+-zPR0
9tR-vLQmKL+R0 9-+-+-mK-tR0
xiiiiiiiiy 9+-sN-+-+Q0
xiiiiiiiiy
Against Nedeljkovic (Vienna 1957),
Petrosian had played 6...¤e7 and eventu- 46...h4 47 g4 ¤g3 48 £e1 ¥e7 49
ally drew. This time he follows the ¤e2 £d8 50 ¤xg3 hxg3+ 51 ¢xg3
move Korchnoi played against the same ¦xh3+ 52 ¦xh3 ¦xh3+ 53 ¢xh3
opponent in that event. Nedeljkovic £h8+ 54 £h4 £c8 55 ¢g3 ¢g8 56
replied 7 ¥e2 but nowadays 7 ¥b5 c6 8 ¤e1 £d7 57 ¤f3 £c8 58 £h3 ¢g7
¥a4 is usually preferred. 59 ¢f2 £d7 60 ¤h4 ¢g8
7 b4 c6 (Baumbach’s book “52-54 Stop” has
a) 7...¤e7 8 ¥d3 c5 9 bxc5 bxc5 10 the misprint 60...¢h8, but then White
¤b5 ¤f5 11 dxc5 ¥xc5 12 c3 ¤c6 13 0–0 would play ¤xg6+ and mate next.)
a6 14 g4 ¤fe7 15 ¤bd4 £c7 16 ¦e1 ¥d7 XIIIIIIIIY
17 £e2 £a7 18 ¤b3 ¥b6 19 ¦b1 ¤g6 20 9-+-+-+k+0
a4 ½–½ Ciocaltea-Maric, 1969. 9+-+qvlp+-0
b) 7...¤c6 8 ¥d3 a5 9 b5 ¤a7 10 ¤g5 9p+p+p+p+0
f5 11 exf6 ¤xf6 12 0–0 ¥e7 13 ¦e1 £d6 9zPp+pzP-zP-0
14 £f3 0–0 15 ¥f4 £d8 16 £h3 h6 17 9-zP-zP-zPPsN0
¤xe6+-Spassky-Pech, 1990; 9+-zP-+-+Q0
8 ¦b1 ¤e7 9 ¥d3 ¥a6 10 0–0 ¥xd3 9-+-+-mK-+0
11 £xd3 £b7 12 a4 g6 13 ¤d1 ¤d7 9+-+-+-+-0
14 ¤e3 b5 15 ¤g4 h6 16 ¥d2 ¥g7 xiiiiiiiiy
17 h4 h5 18 ¤e3 a6 19 a5 ¤f8 20
g3 £c7 21 ¤g2 ¤f5 22 ¥g5 ¤h7 23 61 f5 exf5 62 gxf5 ¥xg5 63 e6 ¥xh4+

14 1/2001
XIIIIIIIIY
64 £xh4 fxe6 65 fxg6 £g7? 9r+l+-trk+0
According to Dr. Baumbach, 65...e5 9+pwq-+pzpp0
was necessary, although after 66 £h7+ 9p+-vlpsn-+0
£xh7 67 gxh7+ ¢xh7 68 dxe5 ¢g6 69 9+-+-+-+-0
¢e3 ¢f5 70 ¢d4 ¢e6 71 ¢c5 ¢xe5 72 9-+LsN-+-+0
¢xc6 ¢e4 73 ¢b6 ¢d3 74 ¢xa6 ¢xc3 75 9+P+-+Q+P0
¢xb5 d4 76 a6 d3 77 a7 d2 78 a8£ d1£ 9PvLP+-zPP+0
79 £a3+ White has winning chances with 9tR-+-+RmK-0
queen and pawn against queen. xiiiiiiiiy
66 £d8+ £f8+ 67 £xf8+ ¢xf8 68
¢e3 1–0.
In the same year (1998) that he started In the event of 14 a4, to prevent the
World Championship XVI, Horst Rittner ...b5 advance, there follows 14...e5! 15
completed the following game against ¤e2 (15 ¤f5? e4) 15...¥d7 16 ¤g3 ¦ae8!
the reigning world champion. This sup- and Black stands well.
ports his claim that he is still strong 14...b5!
enough to play on the German team in This is not my discovery, but is known
an olympiad final. for a long time. Now 15 £xa8 doesn’t
work because of 15...¥b7 16 £xf8+ ¥xf8
Tarrasch French (C07) 17 ¥d3 e5!–+; and 15 ¥d3 ¥b7 16 £d1
Tõnu Õim (EST) - (16 £e2 e5!–+) 16...¦ad8 is somewhat
Horst Rittner (GER) favourable to Black.
H-W. von Massow Memorial, 1996-99 15 ¥xb5
Notes by Rittner in Schach Õim’s ¥ sacrifice is not new and was
1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 ¤d2 c5 4 ¤gf3 cxd4 perhaps planned at move 13. He obtains
5 exd5 £xd5 6 ¥c4 £d6 7 0–0 ¤f6 a pawn-roller on the queenside.
8 ¤b3 ¤c6 9 ¤bxd4 ¤xd4 10 ¤xd4 15...axb5 16 ¤xb5 ¥h2+ 17 ¢h1
a6 11 b3 £b8 18 a4?!
More current in these times is 11 In the game L.Vajda-M.Galyas, Buda-
¦e1 £c7 12 ¥b3 ¥d7 (Kramnik) or pest 1995, there occurred 18 c4 ¥b7 19
the sharper, very extensively analysed, £e2 ¤e4 20 a4 ¦d8 (20...¥e5!?) 21 ¦ad1
variation 12...¥d6 13 ¤f5 ¥xh2+ 14 ¢h1 ¦xd1 22 ¦xd1 ¥e5 23 ¢g1 ¥xb2 24
0–0 15 ¤xg7. £xb2 £f4 25 £d4 g5 26 £b6 ¦b8 27 a5
11...£c7 12 £f3 ¥d6 13 h3 ¤d2 28 ¤d6 ¤f3+ 29 ¢f1 ¤h2+ 30 ¢g1
It’s astonishing that the double World ¤f3+ 31 ¢f1 ¤h2+ ½–½ .
Champion proceeds so cautiously. Black 18...¥b7 19 £e2 ¤e4 20 ¦fd1 ¥e5
has more problems after 13 ¦e1 0–0 14 21 ¥xe5?
¥b2 b5 (14...¥xh2+ 15 ¢h1 £f4 could Better 21 c4 as now the black £
be investigated) 15 ¥d3 ¥b7 16 £h3 immediately creates threats.
¦fe8 17 ¤f5!? exf5 18 ¥xf6! ¥e4!= (but 21...£xe5 22 ¢g1 £g5 23 £e3
not 18...gxf6? 19 ¥xf5!) . Õim surely has not played this move
13...0–0 14 ¥b2 gladly. The white pawn structure is now

www.chessmail.com 15
Grigory Sanakoev and Horst Rittner at the 1996 ICCF Congress in Bad Neuenahr

decisively ruined. This is the end of a forced sequence.


23...£xe3 24 fxe3 ¦fc8! 25 c4 ¢f8 White can only trust in his passed
26 ¤d6 pawns.
The mighty ¤ must be driven out. XIIIIIIIIY
26...¤xd6 27 ¦xd6 ¥e4! 9-+-+-mk-+0
However, its place is taken just as 9+-+-+pzpp0
strongly by the ¥ which now threatens 9PtR-+p+-+0
...¥c2. 9+-+-+-+-0
28 ¦b6 ¦d8 29 ¦a2 ¦d1+ 30 ¢f2 9-+P+l+-+0
¦ad8 31 a5 ¦8d2+ 32 ¦xd2 ¦xd2+ 9+P+-zP-+P0
33 ¢e1 ¦xg2 34 a6 9-+-+-+r+0
9+-+-mK-+-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Chess Books for sale 34...g5!
Rare, Secondhand, Out-of-Print. Write However, a very quick Black break-
or e-mail to receive regular catalogues. through clarifies the front.
Books also purchased. Tony Peterson, 35 ¦b5 ¦a2 36 ¦xg5 ¦xa6 37 ¦b5
19 Browning Avenue, Southend-on-Sea, ¦a2 38 b4 ¦c2 39 c5 f5!
Essex, SS2 5HF, England. The next pawn steps forward.
Email: tonypeterson@callnetuk.com 40 ¦b8+ ¢f7 41 ¦c8 e5! 42 b5 f4 43
exf4 exf4 44 b6 f3 45 ¦d8 f2+ 46 ¢f1
¥f5 0-1.

16 1/2001
Estrin Memorial event completed
Estrin Memorial 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts.
1 Samarin, Igor RUS * ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 10
2 Kivimäki, Jaakko FIN ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 10
3 Blasberg, Gabriel S ARG 0 ½ * ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 9½
4 Khlusevich, Sergey RUS ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 9
5 Morgado, Juan S. ARG ½ ½ 1 ½ * ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 9
6 Grodzensky, Sergey RUS 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ * ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 9
7 Rubinchik, Leonid Y. UKR ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 8½
8 Kopylov, Igor A RUS ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ * 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 8
9 Gipslis, Aivars P. † LAT ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ 0 * 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 8
10 Pyshkin, Alexander † RUS ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 * ½ ½ 1 1 1 7½
11 Minakov, Yury M. RUS 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ * ½ 1 1 1 5½
12 Sliwa, Bogdan S. POL 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ * ½ 1 1 4½
13 Borisov, Veniamin I. RUS ½ 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 0 0 ½ * 1 1 4
14 Muravyev, Sergey UKR 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 0 0 * 1 2½
15 Naivelt, Mikhail R RUS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0

T
HE Yakov Estrin Memorial was some of his games. Last year both GM
organised by the Russian CCA to Gipslis and IM Pyshkin died but they
honour the 7th CC World Cham- had both finished their participation in
pion, Yakov Borisovich Estrin (1923-87). this tournament.
The tournament, which began in 1995, The following games are instructive.
was completed a few months ago. Sergey
Grodzensky has produced a handsome Igor Samarin (RUS) -
commemorative booklet with all the Gabriel Blasberg (ARG)
games. It includes some games by Estrin Estrin Memorial corr, 1995
and photographs of him with his family Notes by Tim Harding
and other players. XIIIIIIIIY
The tournament was in Category XII 9-+-+-tr-+0
(GM=8.5pts) and resulted in victory 9+ptR-+-+p0
for Igor Samarin (Russia) on tiebreak 9-+-wQ-+lmk0
from Jaakko Kivimäki (Finland). Several 9+-+-+-+-0
players obtained the grandmaster title as 9-+-+p+-+0
the contenders scored heavily against the 9+-+-+-zPL0
tail-enders who included GM Sliwa. 9-+-+PzPK+0
Some games already appeared in 9wq-+-+-+-0
CM (e.g. Morgado-Gipslis, Blasberg- xiiiiiiiiy
Grodzensky and the Minakov-Borisov
miniature, also in my book). Black has been under pressure for
One player, Naivelt, dropped out some time and now offers an ending
early and Muravyev only completed with a pawn less.

www.chessmail.com 17
41...£f6 42 £xf6 ¦xf6 43 ¦xb7 ¦a6 Wijk aan Zee 1994.
44 ¦b5 ¦a2 45 e3 ¥h5 46 g4 ¥g6 15 ¤b3 b6 16 £e2 £b7 17 ¥d3 ¤d8
47 g5+ ¢g7 48 ¥f5 ¥xf5 49 ¦xf5 18 ¤fd2! a5 19 a4 f5?!
¢g6 50 ¦e5 ¦a4 51 ¢g3 h6 52 gxh6 19...¢f8.
¢xh6 20 0–0–0! f4 21 gxf4 exf4 22 e5!
XIIIIIIIIY 22 ¥d4? 0–0!.
9-+-+-+-+0 22...¤f8! 23 ¥xf4 ¤de6 24 ¥e3
9+-+-+-+-0 ¥xa4
9-+-+-+-mk0 XIIIIIIIIY
9+-+-tR-+-0 9r+-+ksn-tr0
9r+-+p+-+0 9+qzp-vl-+-0
9+-+-zP-mK-0 9-zp-+n+-+0
9-+-+-zP-+0 9zp-+-zP-+p0
9+-+-+-+-0 9l+-+-+pzP0
xiiiiiiiiy 9+NzPLvL-+-0
9-zP-sNQzP-+0
53 ¦f5 ¦a6 54 ¦f4 9+-mKR+-+R0
The ¦ cuts off the black ¢ and ties the xiiiiiiiiy
black ¦ to defence of the e-pawn.
54...¦g6+ 55 ¢h3 ¦e6 56 ¢g2 25 ¦hf1!!
The ¢ marches to the queenside and Better than 25 ¥b5+ ¥xb5 26 £xb5+
eventually forces the black ¦ to adopt the c6! 27 £xb6.
inferior lateral defence of the e-pawn. 25...¥d7 26 f4 gxf3 27 ¤xf3 a4 28
56...¢g5 57 ¢f1 ¦e7 58 ¢e2 ¦e5 ¤bd4 a3 29 b3 £d5 30 ¤xe6 £xe6
59 ¢d2 ¦d5+ 60 ¢c3 ¦d3+ 61 ¢c2 31 ¥c4 £h3 32 ¤g5 ¥xg5 33 ¥f7+
¦a3 62 ¢d2 ¦a2+ 63 ¢e1 ¦a4 64 ¢d8 34 ¥xg5+ ¢c8 35 ¦d3 £g4 36
¢f1 1–0. ¥xh5 £xe2 37 ¥xe2 ¤e6 38 ¥g4
The ¢ marches back to g3 after which ¤xg5! 39 ¥xd7+
f2-f3 is a decisive threat. 39 ¦xd7 ¦xh4 40 ¦d4+ ¢b8.
39...¢b7 40 b4!!
Spanish (C70) 40 hxg5? a2 41 ¢b2 a1£+! 42 ¦xa1
Leonid Rubinchik (UKR) - ¦h2+.
Jaako Kivimäki (FIN) 40...¤f7
Estrin Memorial 1995 If 40...¦xh4 41 b5! or 40...a2 41 ¢b2
Notes by Kivimaki in Kirjeshakki ¦xh4 42 ¢a1!.
1 e4 e5 2 ¤f3 ¤c6 3 ¥b5 a6 4 ¥a4 41 ¦e3! ¦xh4 42 b5?
¤ge7 5 c3 d6 6 d4 ¥d7 7 ¥e3 h6 8 Black now uses his passed a-pawn to
¤bd2 g5 9 dxe5 dxe5 10 h4 g4 11 force a dramatic draw.
¤h2 h5 12 ¤hf1 ¤g6 13 g3 ¥e7 14 Correct is 42 ¢b1! with winning chanc-
¥c2 £c8 es. This slip may have cost the Finnish
14...¥e6 15 ¥b3 £d7 16 ¥xe6 £xe6 player first prize in the tournament but it
17 £b3 £xb3 18 axb3 Anand-Yusupov, took great play to expose it.

18 1/2001
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+-+-+-+0 13 £c2
9+kzpL+n+-0 White could not break Black’s position
9-zp-+-+-+0 after 13 f4 ¤g4 14 £e2 f6 15 f5 ¤h6 in
9+P+-zP-+-0 Tempone-Slipak, Clarin GP 1995.
9-+-+-+-tr0 13...c6
9zp-zP-tR-+-0 “Observing” the white queen at c2.
9-+-+-+-+0 14 dxc6
9+-mK-+R+-0 a) 14 £c3 cxd5 15 cxd5 ¥d7 16 ¦fc1
xiiiiiiiiy ¦fc8 17 £a3 ¥b5 18 ¥h3 ¦xc1+ 19 ¦xc1
a4 (½-½ in 54 moves) Farago-Drasko,
Sarajevo 1983;
42...¦f4!! 43 ¥c6+ ¢c8 b) 14 ¦fc1 ¤d7 15 a3 ¤dc5 16 ¤xc5
43...¢b8 44 ¦g1!. ¤xc5 17 b4 axb4 18 axb4 ¦xa1 19 ¦xa1
44 ¢c2! ¤a6 20 £c3 c5 21 b5 ¤b4 (½-½ in 76
44 ¦xf4 a2–+. moves) Yusupov-Vyzmanavin, Moscow
44...¦xf1 45 e6 ¦c1+! 46 ¢b3 a2 47 1981.
exf7 ¦a3+ 48 ¢c4 ¦a4+ ½–½. 14...bxc6
White cannot go to the d-file because From this point, the game is “out of
of ...¦d1+ and ...¦d8. the books”.
15 £c3
Bogo-Indian Defence (E11) XIIIIIIIIY
Aleksandr Pyshkin (RUS) - 9r+l+-trk+0
Gabriel Blasberg (ARG) 9+-+-wqpzpp0
Estrin Memorial 1995 9n+pzp-sn-+0
Notes by GM Gabriel Blasberg 9zp-+-zp-+-0
1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 ¤f3 ¥b4+ 4 ¥d2 9-+P+P+-+0
£e7 5 g3 ¤c6 6 ¥g2 ¥xd2+ 7 ¤bxd2 9+-wQN+-zP-0
d6 8 0–0 a5 9 e4 e5 10 d5 ¤b8 11 9PzP-sN-zPLzP0
¤e1 0–0 9tR-+-+RmK-0
A different plan was chosen by the xiiiiiiiiy
young player Tal Shaked against Piket:
11...h5 12 h3 ( or 12 ¤ef3 V.Tukmakov- 15...¤c5!?
K.Arkell, Reykjavik open 1990) 12...h4 13 A very important decision. In view
g4 ¤bd7 14 ¤d3 g5 15 b3 ¤f8 16 a3 ¤g6 of the threat £xa5, I make this “ugly”
17 ¦e1 0–0 18 b4 ¥d7 19 f3 b6 20 £c2 c5 move, that allows White to “destroy” my
Piket-Shaked, Fontys, Tilburg 1997. queenside pawns. I did not like 15...a4
12 ¤d3 ¤a6 or 15...¤c7.
12...h6 13 £c2 ¤a6 14 a3 ¤c5 15 b4 16 ¤xc5 dxc5
¤xd3 16 £xd3 ¤h7 17 £c3 axb4 18 axb4 We have arrived at a pawn structure
¦xa1 19 ¦xa1 f5 led to a draw in 38 similar to the drawn game Portisch-
moves in J. Lopez Martinez-D. Suarez, Fischer, Sousse 1967, which started with
Spanish Ch, Torrevieja 1997. a King Indian! These structures were

www.chessmail.com 19
XIIIIIIIIY
investigated by Botvinnik in the 1930’s 9-trl+rsnk+0
and 1940’s. 9+-wq-+pzpp0
17 h3 9-+p+-+-+0
White’s plan is f4 and ¤f3, but he does 9+-zp-+-+-0
not hurry. 9-+P+PzP-+0
a) 17 f4 ¦e8 18 £xe5 £xe5 19 fxe5 9+P+-wQN+P0
¦xe5 20 ¦ae1 ¥g4 21 h3 (21 ¤f3 ¥xf3) 9-+-+-+L+0
21...¥e6÷; 9+-+R+RmK-0
b) 17 ¤f3 ¦e8 18 ¤h4 ¦d8 19 ¤f5 xiiiiiiiiy
£c7÷.
17...¦e8
Sadly, it seems that there is not enough An interesting position: White has
time for the manoeuvre 17...¤e8-c7- more space, but all the black pieces are
e6-d4. well placed, awaiting developments. I
17...¤e8? 18 f4 f6 (18...exf4 19 gxf4 f6 think the chances are balanced.
20 e5±) 19 fxe5 fxe5 20 ¦xf8+ ¢xf8 21 25 ¦d3
¤f3+-. In view of this I had to choose a Supporting the b3-pawn and still
different trip for my knight. working on the open file.
18 ¦ad1 £c7 If 25 £xc5 ¤e6! (25...¦xe4? 26 ¤d4±)
Black intends to play ...¤d7-f8-e6. 26 £e5 £b6+ 27 ¢h2 ¥a6 Black rec-
For this reason he puts his queen on c7, overs the pawn and gets a comfortable
supporting both the a5 and e5 pawns. position.
19 £e3 25...¤g6 26 ¤d2
This move makes difficult the black The start of a manoeuvre to place
knight’s manoeuvre. From this point, the ¤ on g3. The £ cannot take on c5
the game was played via email. We had without losing her own f4-pawn.
spent 13 months to make the first 18 26...f6
moves (mostly from the theory); we spent Controlling the e5 square in a solid
only 7 months to make the remaining way.
44 moves! 27 ¦f2 ¦a8
19...¤d7 20 f4 With b3 well defended, the ¦ is acti-
It was also interesting to consider to vating in another direction.
move the knight to the king side, 20 ¤f3 28 ¤f1 ¦a1 29 ¢h2 £e7 30 ¤g3
for ¤h4-f5, and then the push f2-f4. ¤h4 31 ¦fd2
20...¦b8 The position is complex, and it is
Using the open file as a compensation possible that when White was able —
for the weak pawns. finally! — to double his ¦’s on the open
21 b3 a4 file, he overestimated his chances.
Now the weak a-pawn disappears, If 31 e5 ¤xg2 32 ¦xg2 fxe5 33 fxe5
and the white b-pawn becomes weak. £h4 (33...£xe5? 34 £xe5 ¦xe5 35 ¦d8+
22 ¤f3 axb3 23 axb3 exf4 24 gxf4 +-) 34 ¤e4 ¥xh3 35 ¤f6+ (35 £xh3
¤f8! £xe4) 35...¢h8 36 £xh3 (36 ¤xe8?

20 1/2001
¥xg2+) 36...£f4+ 37 £g3 £h6+ 38 £h3 36 ¦d1 ¦e2+ 37 ¤f2 ¦xd1–+.
£f4+ with perpetual check. 35...¥xe4 36 ¤xe4 £xe4 37 £xe4
31...¤xg2 32 ¢xg2 h5! ¦xe4
A temporary sacrifice, making use Arriving at a double rook endgame. I
of the weakness of the e4-pawn and trusted I could win, in view of the weak
the undefended £ at e3. 32...¥e6 was pawns of h3, f4 and b3, and the exposed
also playable. situation of the white king.
33 £f3 38 ¢f3 f5 39 ¦d1
Taking on h5 would not be good. 33 White could not permit ...¦h1 or
¤xh5 ¥f5! and now: ...¦g1.
a) 34 ¢f2 £xe4 35 £xe4 ¦xe4 36 ¦g3 39...¦a3
¢f8 37 ¤xg7 (37 ¦xg7 ¦d4) 37...¦xf4+ I thought that I could get a bigger
38 ¢e3 ¦e4+ 39 ¢f3 ¦e5; advantage before simplifying. Now the
b) 34 ¤g3 34...¥xe4+ 35 ¤xe4 £xe4+ threat is 40...¦d4.
36 £xe4 ¦xe4=. 40 ¦d8+ ¢h7 41 ¦1d3
33...h4 34 ¤h1? 41 ¦8d3 ¦d4 42 ¦xd4 cxd4 43 ¦xd4
A mistake that will cost a pawn. Until ¦xb3+ 44 ¢g2 ¦c3–+ 45 ¢h2 g6 46 ¦d7+
now, White had played with ambition ¢h6 47 ¦d4 c5 48 ¦d8 ¦xc4 49 ¦h8+
but carefully. It was necessary to play ¢g7 50 ¦xh4 ¦e4–+.
34 ¤e2 with the possible continuation 41...¦e1
34...¥e6 35 ¤c3 ¦b8 36 £h5 ¦aa8 37 Better than 41...¦d4 42 ¦8xd4 cxd4
£xh4 ¦xb3 and the chances are even. 43 c5³.
34...¥f5! 42 ¦f8
The bishop makes his first move on If 42 ¢g2 then 42...¦aa1 would win,
move 34 and is sacrificed! However, e.g. 43 ¦d2 ¦g1+ 44 ¢f2 ¦h1 45 ¢g2
White cannot take it, because of the ¦ag1+ 46 ¢f2 ¦g3 47 ¦2d3 ¦h2+ 48
weakness of his first rank. Not 34...£xe4? ¢f1 ¦hxh3–+.
35 £xe4 ¦xe4 36 ¦d8+ +-. 42...¦f1+!
The idea is ...¦h1, but this important
XIIIIIIIIY intermediate check has the virtue to
9-+-+r+k+0 separate more the white king from the
9+-+-wq-zp-0 h3-pawn. There was a trick: 42...g6?? 43
9-+p+-zp-+0 ¦d7+ ¢h6 44 ¦h8#.
9+-zp-+l+-0 43 ¢e3
9-+P+PzP-zp0 43 ¢g2? ¦xf4.
9+P+R+Q+P0 43...¦h1
9-+-tR-+K+0 Now a forced sequence.
9tr-+-+-+N0 44 ¦xf5 ¦xh3+ 45 ¢d2 ¦xd3+ 46
xiiiiiiiiy ¢xd3 ¦xb3+ 47 ¢e2!
A good decision. The king goes to the
35 ¤f2 kingside in order to control the h-pawn.
35 exf5?? would lose after 35...£e1 The alternative 47 ¢c2 would lose faster:

www.chessmail.com 21
47...g6! 48 ¦f7+ (48 ¦xc5? h3 49 ¦xc6 h2 (48...¦g6? fails in view of 49 ¦h5+ ¦h6
50 ¦c7+ ¢h6 51 ¦c8 ¦b7–+) 48...¢g8 49 50 ¦xc5 h3 51 ¢g1) and now:
¦c7 (49 ¦f6 ¦g3 50 ¦xc6 h3 51 ¦xc5 h2 a) 49 ¢f3 has the defect of drawing
52 ¦c8+ ¢g7 53 ¦c7+ ¢h6 54 ¦c8 ¦a3! away the king from g1 and h1: 49...¦g6 50
55 ¦h8+ ¢g7 56 ¦h4 ¦a8!–+) 49...¦g3 ¦e5 (50 ¦xc5 h3 51 ¦h5+ ¦h6 52 ¦xh6+
50 ¦c8+ ¢g7 51 ¦c7+ ¢h6 52 ¦xc6 h3 gxh6!! winning the pawn endgame.)
53 ¦c8 ¢h5 54 ¦xc5+ ¢g4–+. 50...¢h6 51 f5 ¦g1 52 ¢f2 ¦c1 53 ¦xc5
h3 54 ¦xc6+ ¢g5 55 ¢g3 ¦c3+ 56 ¢h2
XIIIIIIIIY ¢xf5 57 ¦d6 g5 58 ¦d5+ ¢g4 59 ¦d4+
9-+-+-+-+0 ¢h5 60 c5 g4 61 ¦d5+ ¢h4–+;
9+-+-+-zpk0 b) 49 ¦h5+ ¢g6 50 ¦xc5 ¦xf4+ 51
9-+p+-+-+0 ¢g2 ¢h6 52 ¦xc6+ ¢h5–+.
9+-zp-+R+-0 48...¢g6 49 ¦xh4 ¢f5 50 ¢f2 ¦g6
9-+P+-zP-zp0 Threatening 50...¦h6 51 ¦xh6 gxh6,
9+r+-+-+-0 winning. For this reason, the next move
9-+-+K+-+0 is forced.
9+-+-+-+-0 51 ¦h5+
xiiiiiiiiy Not 51 ¢f3? ¦h6 52 ¦xh6™ gxh6–+.
In this case, the doubled pawns are very
47...¦g3!! useful, e.g. 53 ¢g3 h5 54 ¢h4 ¢xf4 55
The most difficult move of the entire ¢xh5 ¢e4 56 ¢g4 ¢d4 57 ¢f3 ¢xc4 58
game. It cost me many hours of analysis. ¢e2 ¢b3 59 ¢d2 c4 60 ¢c1 c3 61 ¢b1
Black decided to lose the h-pawn in c2+ 62 ¢c1 c5–+.
order to activate his king. 51...¢xf4 52 ¦xc5 ¦e6
a) 47...h3? 48 ¢f2 ¦b2+ 49 ¢g1 ¢g6 Now Black is winning.
50 ¦xc5 ¦g2+ 51 ¢h1 ¦f2 52 ¦xc6+ ¢f5 53 ¢g2
53 ¦c7! g6 54 ¦f7+ ¢g4 55 ¦g7 with a If 53 ¦a5 g5 54 ¦a6 g4 55 ¢g2 ¢e5
probable draw. 56 ¢g3 (or 56 ¦a4 ¦g6 57 c5 ¢d5 58
b) 47...g6? 48 ¦xc5 ¦g3 49 ¦xc6 h3 ¦a5 g3 59 ¦a1 ¢xc5–+) 56...¦g6 57 ¦a2
50 ¢f2 ¦g4 51 ¦c7+ ¢h6 52 ¦c8 ¢g7 ¢d4 58 ¦a4 (58 ¦c2 ¢d3 59 ¦c1 c5)
53 ¦a8 h2 54 ¦a1 ¢f6 55 c5 ¢f5 56 c6 58...c5–+.
¦xf4+ 57 ¢g3=. 53...¢e4!
48 ¦h5+ Allowing ¦g5, but the c-pawn decides
The other reply I had to foresee the fight.
when I played 47...¦g3 was 48 ¢f2 ¦g4! 54 ¦g5 ¢d4 55 c5 ¦e5 56 ¦xg7 ¢xc5
57 ¢f3 ¢d4 58 ¦g1 c5 59 ¦d1+ ¢c3
60 ¢f4 ¦h5 61 ¢e3 c4 62 ¦g1 ¢b3
Play a GM with us! 0–1.
Sadly, the IM Alexander Pyshkin,
GM Tunc Hamarat v our readers a gentleman, died after finishing this
h t t p : / / w w w. c he s s mai l. co m tournament, in which I obtained the
GM title.

22 1/2001
Four games from top events
Sicilian, English Attack (B80) ½–½ Shirov-Anand, Olympic exhibition,
Roberto Alvarez (ARG) - Sydney 2000.
Hans-Marcus Elwert (GER) 28...¦f8 29 £g2 £c4 30 ¦xf8+ ¥xf8
CAPA X Jubilee email, 1999-2000 31 g6 1–0.
1 e4 c5 2 ¤f3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4
¤f6 5 ¤c3 a6 6 ¥e3 e6 7 f3 b5 8 g4 Scheveningen Sicilian (B85)
h6 9 £d2 ¤bd7 10 0–0–0 ¥b7 11 David Kilgour (SCO) -
h4 b4 12 ¤a4 £a5 13 b3 ¤c5 14 a3 Ulf Andersson (SVE)
¤xa4 15 axb4 £c7 16 bxa4 d5 17 e5 CCOL12 Final bd.1, 1998-99
¤d7 18 f4 ¤b6 19 f5 ¤xa4 20 fxe6 From Korrschack 4/2000
¤c3 21 exf7+ ¢xf7 22 ¥d3 ¥xb4 1 e4 c5 2 ¤f3 e6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4
23 ¦df1+ ¢g8 24 £f2 ¥a3+ 25 ¢d2 ¤f6 5 ¤c3 d6 6 ¥e2 ¤c6 7 0–0 ¥e7
¤e4+ 26 ¥xe4 dxe4 8 ¥e3 0–0 9 f4 £c7 10 ¢h1 a6 11
XIIIIIIIIY a4 ¦e8 12 ¥f3 ¤xd4 13 £xd4 e5
9r+-+-+ktr0 14 £d2 exf4 15 ¥xf4 ¥e6 16 ¦fd1
9+lwq-+-zp-0 ¦ad8 17 h3
9p+-+-+-zp0 XIIIIIIIIY
9+-+-zP-+-0 9-+-trr+k+0
9-+-sNp+PzP0 9+pwq-vlpzpp0
9vl-+-vL-+-0 9p+-zplsn-+0
9-+PmK-wQ-+0 9+-+-+-+-0
9+-+-+R+R0 9P+-+PvL-+0
xiiiiiiiiy 9+-sN-+L+P0
9-zPPwQ-+P+0
27 g5! 9tR-+R+-+K0
Roberto Alvarez’s novelty, which xiiiiiiiiy
improves on 27 £f5 ¥b4+ 28 ¢d1 £c4
29 ¤e6 £d5+ 30 ¢e2 £c4+ 31 ¢d1 £d5+ 17...h6
32 ¢e2 £c4+ ½–½ Anand-Gelfand, FIDE Improving on 17...£c8 18 £f2± 1–0,
World Cup, Shenyang 2000. 41 in Panchenko-A.Sokolov, Moscow
27...¥d5 28 e6! 1981 [INF 31/298].
A few days after this game ended, 18 £f2 ¢h8 19 a5 ¤d7 20 ¤d5 ¥xd5
Shirov got the same position but he 21 ¦xd5 ¤e5 22 ¥h5 g6 23 ¥d1
continued 28 gxh6 which Alvarez had ¥f8 24 c3 ¥g7 25 ¥b3 ¤c4 26 ¦ad1
rejected as it leads only to a draw: ¦xe4 27 ¥xc4 £xc4 28 ¥xh6 £c7
28...¥b2 29 ¦b1 ¥c3+ 30 ¢c1 ¥xd4 31 29 ¥f4 ¢g8 30 ¥xd6 £c4 31 ¦5d2
¥xd4 e3 32 £xe3 ¥xh1 33 ¦b6 ¦c8 34 ¥h6 32 ¦d3 ¦e6 33 £f3 £b5 34 b4
£b3+ £c4 35 hxg7 ¦xh4 36 ¦b8 £xb3 ¥g7 35 ¥g3 ¦xd3 36 ¦xd3 ¢h7 37
37 ¦xc8+ ¢xg7 38 cxb3 ¦xd4 39 ¦c7+ ¦d1 £c4

www.chessmail.com 23
XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-+-+-+0 Benoni Defence (A65)
9+p+-+pvlk0 Grigory Sanakoev (RUS) -
9p+-+r+p+0 Roberto Alvarez (ARG)
9zP-+-+-+-0 CAPA X Jubilee email, 1999-2000
9-zPq+-+-+0 1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 c5 3 d5 g6 4 ¤c3 d6 5
9+-zP-+QvLP0 e4 ¥g7 6 ¥d3 0–0 7 ¤ge2 e6 8 0–0
9-+-+-+P+0 exd5 9 cxd5 ¤a6 10 h3 ¦e8 11 ¤g3
9+-+R+-+K0 ¦b8 12 f4
xiiiiiiiiy XIIIIIIIIY
9-trlwqr+k+0
9zpp+-+pvlp0
Presses on c3 and prevents £xf7 9n+-zp-snp+0
because of the reply ...¦e1+. 9+-zpP+-+-0
38 £xb7 9-+-+PzP-+0
Andersson, in conversation with Korr- 9+-sNL+-sNP0
schack editor Lars Grahn, indicated: 9PzP-+-+P+0
a) 38 ¢h2 ¦e7© as with the queen on 9tR-vLQ+RmK-0
c4, White cannot play ¥h4. xiiiiiiiiy
b) 38 ¦d7 ¦f6 39 £xb7 ¦f1+ 40 ¢h2
¥xc3 (Threatening ...¥g7, ...£a2-a1) Black now plays an interesting pawn
and if 41 ¦c7 ¥d4! 42 ¦xc4 ¥g1+ 43 ¢h1 sacrifice.
¥d4+ with perpetual check. 12...c4!? 13 ¥xc4 b5 14 ¥d3 b4
38...¦e3 14...¤c5 15 ¥xb5 ¦xb5 16 ¤xb5 £b6
There are several threats and Black 17 ¤d4 (17 e5!) 17...¤cxe4 18 ¤ge2
has f7 protected. ¤xd5 19 ¢h2 ¥a6 20 ¦e1? ¤f2 and Black
39 ¢h2 went on to win in Ruth Sheldon-Alan
39 £c7 £b3 (Threat ...¦xc3) 40 ¦c1 Norris, Hampstead 1999.
£a3 41 ¦c2 £b3 and now not 42 ¥f2?? 15 ¤a4 £a5 16 a3 ¥d7 17 axb4 ¦xb4
(nor 42 ¥f4?? ¦e1+ 43 ¢h2 £xc2) 42... 18 ¥c2
£b1+ 43 ¢h2 ¥e5+. Instead White might XIIIIIIIIY
play 41 ¦f1 ¦xc3 42 £xf7 ¦xg3 43 9-+-+r+k+0
¦f4 threatening mate, when Black has 9zp-+l+pvlp0
43...¦g5 44 ¦h4+ ¦h5 45 ¦xh5+ gxh5 9n+-zp-snp+0
46 £xh5+ ¢g8 47 £d5+ ¢h7 with a 9wq-+P+-+-0
draw. 9Ntr-+PzP-+0
39...¦xg3! 40 ¢xg3 ½–½. 9+-+-+-sNP0
Andersson intended 40...£e2! which 9-zPL+-+P+0
threatens a ¥ check on e5. Lars Grahn 9tR-vLQ+RmK-0
gives the variation 41 ¦d5 £e3+ 42 ¢h2 xiiiiiiiiy
£f4+ 43 ¢g1 £c1+ 44 ¢f2 £c2+ 45 ¢f3
£xc3+ and White cannot avoid perpetual Now Black exploits the overloaded
check. bishop:

24 1/2001
18...¤xe4! 19 ¤xe4 ¥xa4 20 ¦xa4 Memorial corr 1998.
¦xa4 21 ¥xa4 ¦xe4 22 ¥c2 £c5+ 21 ¦df1 ¤c4 22 ¦xf6 ¦xf6 23 ¥xd7
23 ¢h1 ¦d4 24 £e2 £c4 25 £xc4 ¦h6
¦xc4 26 ¥d3 ¦a4 27 b3 ½–½. This was presumably the point of van
Oosterom’s innovation, since 23...£xd7
Najdorf Sicilian (B99) 24 ¤xf6 gxf6 25 £h6 is clearly unsatisfac-
Hans-Marcus Elwert (GER) - tory on positional grounds: an ending
Joop van Oosterom (NLD) with Black a pawn down is likely to
NBC Millennium Email corr, 2000 arise soon.
1 e4 c5 2 ¤f3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4 24 £f5
¤f6 5 ¤c3 a6 6 ¥g5 e6 7 f4 ¤bd7 8 24 £g4 ¤e5.
£f3 £c7 9 0–0–0 ¥e7 10 g4 b5 11 24...¦xh4 25 ¦d1
¥xf6 ¤xf6 12 g5 ¤d7 13 f5 ¥xg5+ 25 ¦xh4?? £xh4–+.
14 ¢b1 ¤e5 15 £h5 £d8 16 h4 25...£f8?
“It is surprising that this move is not White has two active minor pieces for
more popular” wrote GM John Nunn in a rook and pawn. Black hopes to make
‘The Complete Najdorf, 6 ¥g5’ (1996). some trouble with his kingside pawns
16...¥f6 17 fxe6 0–0 18 ¥h3 ¢h8 19 after the queens are exchanged but his
¤d5 fxe6 20 ¥xe6 pawns on the other wing are too easily
XIIIIIIIIY gobbled up.
9r+lwq-tr-mk0 25...¤d2+ 26 ¢a1 may also be good
9+-+-+-zpp0 for White; however 26...¤xe4 27 ¤c6!?
9p+-zpLvl-+0 £f8 is an improvement on the game.
9+p+Nsn-+Q0 26 ¤e6 £xf5 27 exf5 ¤e5
9-+-sNP+-zP0 The white bishop appears trapped
9+-+-+-+-0 but help is on the way.
9PzPP+-+-+0 28 ¤ec7 ¦f8 29 ¥e6
9+K+R+-+R0 Now the knights can start their meal.
xiiiiiiiiy XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-+-tr-mk0
Black has tried several moves here, 9+-sN-+-zpp0
most usually 20...¤c4 which has had 9p+-zpL+-+0
dreadful results. Nunn’s book mentions 9+p+NsnP+-0
20...g6 and 20...¦a7 but van Oosterom 9-+-+-+-tr0
tries something else. 9+-+-+-+-0
20...¥d7 9PzPP+-+-+0
20...¤c4 21 ¤c6 £e8 22 £xe8 ¦xe8 23 9+K+R+-+-0
¤xf6 gxf6 24 ¥xc4 bxc4 25 ¦xd6 ¦xe4 xiiiiiiiiy
26 ¦xf6 ¥d7 27 c3 ¢g7 28 ¦d6 ¥f5 29
¢c1 ¥g4 30 ¤d4 ¥e2 31 ¦e1 ¥d3 32 29...¤f3 30 ¤xa6 ¤d4 31 ¤ac7 ¤xf5
¦xe4 ¥xe4 33 ¤e6+ ¢g8 34 ¤c5 ¥f3 35 32 ¦f1 g6 33 a3 ¦e4 34 ¤c3 ¦e5 35
¦xa6 1–0 Hyldkrog-Tanggaard, Korning ¤3xb5 ¢g7 36 a4 h5 37 a5 1–0.

www.chessmail.com 25
Progress report on the ICCF First
Email Chess World Championship

I
N MAY 1999, 14 semifinal sections second email world championship
began with 154 players in the first (WC25) may also start later this year, but
ICCF Email Chess World Champion- possibly this is subject to sponsorship
ship, sponsored by New In Chess. After deals.
about 18 months, the sections are draw- SECTIONS 1-7
ing to a close with some qualifiers already
decided. TD: Juan Antonio S.
Here we shall look at each section in Goncalves (Brazil)
turn, and give a few games. Thanks to
the two TD’s for providing up-to-date Section 1
information close to press time.
The next-stage, Three-Quarter Finals With three games left, Christian
or Candidates sections, should start Sender (Germany) is assured of qualify-
around mid-2001. Two players qualify ing with 8/10. The other place is between
from each of the 14 semifinals groups but Chris Sergel (USA), who has finished
they can be joined by a number of other on 7½, and Carlos Evanir Costa who
players: qualifiers from postal groups has the same score and one game still
who choose to switch, players with a in play.
fixed rating over 2600 etc.
Section 2
So far four sections have been
completed. Probably all groups will be This was the first section to be com-
complete early in 2001. pleted and we already gave the crosstable
As it is the intention of ICCF to in CM 8/2000 page 56. The qualifiers
start semifinals of postal and email were Osman Kosebay (TRK) 9½ pts (!)
championships in alternate years, the and Miklós Träger (HUN) 7pts; see their

Come and play Go in Ireland next July!


45th European Go Championship, 21st July — 4th August 2001, Dublin, Ireland
Sponsored by: FUJITSU SIEMENS COMPUTERS http://ireland.european-go.org
This event will be a unique festival of Go and entertainment hosted at a central city venue by
the Irish Go Association in co-operation with the British Go Association.
10 Round McMahon European Championship plus Weekend Tournament on July
28-29. Also professional coaching, other events and outings. For more information, email:
ireland @ european-go.org or write to: John Gibson, 30 Lakelands Park, Dublin 6W.

26 1/2001
game below. ICCF Deputy Email Wch-1 sf-01 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
President (Tournaments). 1 T. Kokkila FIN ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 0 5
Eckhard Lüers (GER) also 2 A. Gonzalez F. ESP ½ ½ . 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 0 . 4 (2)
scored 7 and missed out on 3 C. Sender GER 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 8
4 S.G. Simonenko TKM ½ 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 4 (1)
tiebreak. 5 T. Thomson SCO ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 0 0 4½
Section 3 6 G. Siviero ITA
7 F. Kristensen DEN
½ ½
0 0
0 0 ½
0 0 0 0
1 . ½ 0 0 3 (1)
0 0 0 0 0
8 J.Cesar Luzardo URU 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 . 1 0 0 0 2 (1)
The only remaining game
9 M.J.P.Schroeder NLD ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 0 ½ 6½
cannot affect the top places 10 C.T. Sergel USA ½ 1 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 7½
so we print the table. The 11 C.E. Costa BRS 1 . ½ 1 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ 7½ (1)
qualifiers are Jan Marcink-
iewicz (POL) and Dr Ian Email Wch-1 sf-03 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
S. Brooks (ENG), who is 1 V. Andriulaitis LIT ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ . 1 ½ ½ 5½ (1)
2 I. Brooks ENG ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 7
TD for sections 8-14; they
3 C. Gatto ITA ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 4½
both scored 7/10. 4 E. Osbun USA ½ ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 0 0 3
Section 4 5 H. Behling GER
6 J. Marcinkiewicz POL
0 ½
½ 0
½ 1
½ 1 1
0 1
1
1 1 1 ½ 6½
½ 1 ½ 1 7
7 M.B. de Oliveira BRS ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 4½
In semi-final 4, Her-
8 Z. Krecak CRO . 0 1 1 0 ½ ½ 1 0 1 5 (1)
mann Rhode (GER) has 9 L. Luk HKG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
7/10 and must wait to see 10 J-C. Lüers GER ½ ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 6½
what happens. Michiel 11 R. Anil Kumar IND ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 1 0 4½

Plomp (NLD) is safe on


Email Wch-1 sf-04 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
7½/9, still playing against 1 H-E. van Kempen GER 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 0 1 0 ½ 1 5½
P. Kaczorowski (POL) who 2 F.A.Camaratta USA 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ . 0 ½ 4½ (1)
has 5½/8 and needs at least 3 M.P. Plomp NLD ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 . 1 1 7½ (1)
a point and a half (a tiebreak 4 I. Christov BLG 0 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 2½
5 H. Rhode GER ½ ½ 0 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ 1 7
favours him). 6 A. Mrugala CAN 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 4½
Section 5 7 A. Satici TRK 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 5
8 M. Tarmak EST 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 1 3
In this section (see table) 9 P. Kaczorowski POL 1 . . 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 5½ (2)
10 Z. Nyvlt CZE ½ 1 0 1 ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 6
the gulf between high and 11 L.E. Esquivel PAN 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 1 0 0 0 2
low-scorers was very pro-
nounced and totals that Email Wch-1 sf05 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
would have won some 1 M. Koch GER ½ 0 0 ½ . 1 1 1 . 0 4 (2)
other groups are insuf- 2 H. Namyslo GER ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 8½
3 S.E. Stolyar RUS 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 0 2½
ficient here. The two out- 4 H. Neto POR 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 8
standing games don’t affect 5 T. Barnsley ENG ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 7
the qualifiers, who are 6 A. Yeremenko UKR . 0 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ ½ 6 (1)
Holger Namyslo (GER) 7 K. Josefsson SVE 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 ½ 0 2½
8 P. Salcedo M. CUB 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2
8½/10 and Horácio Neto 9 M. Horvat SLO 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2½
(POR) 8/10. 10 J. Jaluvka CZE . ½ 0 0 0 ½ ½ 1 0 0 2½ (1)
11 P. Ilyes NOR 1 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 7½

www.chessmail.com 27
Email Wch-1 sf-06
1 S.Teichmeister OST
1 2
1
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 0 1 1 8
Section 6
2 L. Pecot FRA 0 0 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 . 5½ (1)
3 C.Cranbourne ARG ½ 1 1 ½ 1 0 1 0 1 . 6 (1)
Although as many as
4 A.J. Moura POR 0 0 0 ½ 0 1 1 1 0 3½ (1) five games are still open,
5 D.S. Finnie SCO ½ ½ ½ . 1 ½ 1 0 1 0 5 (1) the players involved
6 C. Løfgren DEN 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 . 0 1 . 1½ (2) cannot catch up (see
7 A. Blum GER 0 0 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 1 6
8 C. Posylek CAN 0 ½ 0 0 0 . ½ 0 1 ½ 2½ (1)
table). The qualifiers,
9 D. Menéndez ARG 1 ½ 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 8 both on 8/10, are Daniel
10 F. Acosta Ruiz CUB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Menéndez (ARG) and
11 M. Rybak CZE 0 . . 1 1 0 ½ ½ 1 4 (3)
Dr Sven Teichmeister
(OST). The game Pecot-
Email Wch-1 sf-07 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 Pts. Cranbourne from this sec-
1 G. Cardelli ITA ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 11 7½1 tion was published in CM
2 A. Gysi SWZ ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 1 0 ½1 5½
½ 1999/11 (page 31).
3 H. Schorra GER 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 01 ½3
4 M. Hedrera ARG ½ 1 1 0 1 ½ ½ 11 6½
0 Section 7
5 I. Schrancz HUN ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 11 6½1
6 G. Sapundjiev BLG 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 1 11 5½ (1) The winner is known:
7 T. Craig SCO ½ 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½
½ 1 6
Gabriel Cardelli (ITA)
8 P. Bratholm DEN ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 4½
½
9 L. Lamarche R. CUB 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 1 3½
7½/10. The second place
10 J. Wimmer GER 0 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ 1 1 1 5½ (1) tie-break appears to
11 M. Hryniw CAN 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 depend on the outcome
of the final game between
Email Wch-1 sf-08 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
Georgy Sapundjiev (BLG)
1 H. Broß GER 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 7
2 C. Blanco G. GUA 0 ½ 1 1 0 1 1 1 ½ 6 and Gerhard Wimmer
3 H.F. Glaser GER ½ ½ 1 . 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 6½ (1) (GER) who have 5½/9
4 G.H. Lambers NLD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 while two players are
5 V.V. Aleshnia RUS ½ 0 . 1 1 . 0 1 1 ½ 5 (2)
already on 6½/10: Marcelo
6 A.P.Mascarenhas BRS ½ 1 0 1 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 5
7 H. Onoda JAP ½ 0 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 0 5½ (1) Hedrera (ARG) and István
8 Y. Dothan ISL 0 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 0 1 1 ½ 5½ Schrancz (HUN).
9 D. Blair IRL ½ 0 0 1 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 2 However, if ICCF
10 J.L. Rodriguez ARG ½ 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 0 1 1 5
employs its usual
11 Z.Timar HUN 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 0 5½
Sonneborn-Berger
Email Wch-1 sf-09 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts. tiebreak then it is not too
1 A. Kamenets UKR 0
1 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 6½ hard to see that Schrancz
2 A.A.Kozlowicz ARG 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 8½
gets the second spot
3 L.M.T. Quaresma POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
4 H-D. Vötter GER 0 0 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 6
whatever happens. This
5 W.T.Brandhorst USA ½ 0 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 1 0 5½ is because SB penalises
6 P.M Giulian SCO 0 ½ 1 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 4½ consistent players and
7 P. Berclaz SWZ 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 7
favours those who score
8 A. Kubasky SLK 0 0 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 2½
9 G. Boonet BEL ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 7 against those higher in
10 A. Beyer PER 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 1½ the table (he beat both
11 D. Grossu ROM ½ 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 0 1 6 Hedrera and Wimmer)

28 1/2001
and drop points to weaker Email Wch-1 sf-10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
opponents. This is the 1 J.A.Goncalves BRS 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 6½ (1)
2 D. Rost GER 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 1 5½ (1)
arbitrary criterion underlying 3 R.Raijmaekers NLD 1 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 4½
SB and I am doubtful 4 T. Schmidt GER 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 1 5
5 A. Mukherjee ENG 7½
whether players should be ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ 1 0 1
6 C. Guizar MEX 0 0 1 ½ 0 1 0 ½ 1 4 (1)
excluded from a Three- 7 E. Miciak SLK ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 1 5
Quarter Final place under 8 K. Johansson SVE ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 7½
9 D. Simic YUG 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 1½
such flimsy grounds. It is 10 K. Prabhakar IND 0 ½ 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 5½ (1)
not a like a Final where 11 R. Navarro COL 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½
there must be a winner or
a World Cup which has a Email Wch-1 sf-11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
fixed number of places in a 1 V.V.Pankratov RUS 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 7
2 J. Aldrete Lobo MEX 0 0 0 1 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 3
final or semifinal.
3 P. Coleman ENG ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 7
Rules for tiebreaks are 4 J. Watson SCO 0 1 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 0 0 2½
one of the discussion topics 5 J. Bohak SLO ½ 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 3
that were deferred until the 6 K-F. Grimm GER ½ ½ 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 5
7 S. Terada JAP 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 0 3½
2001 Congress. 8 T. Strand NOR ½ 1 0 1 ½ 1 1 1 ½ ½ 7
9 H. Brusila FIN 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 0 2

SECTIONS 8-14 10 R. Lutzenberger GER


11 O. Uralde ARG
½ ½
½ ½
½ 1 1 1
1 1 ½ 1
1 ½
1 ½
1
1 ½
½ 7½

TD: Dr Ian S. Brooks


(England) Email Wch-1 sf-12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 Pts.
1 O. Sande NOR 1 1 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 5½
½
Section 8 2 E. Werner GER 0 ½ 0 1 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 4½
½
3 K-U. Groth GER 0 ½ ½ 0 1 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 3
4 S. Kudela CZE 1 1 ½ ½ 1 1 0 ½ 1 7
½
Horst Broß (GER) has 5 R. Degerhammar SVE ½ 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 1 6
1
certainly qualified, with 6 M. Millstone USA 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 ½ ½3 (1)
seven points in the bag. 7 P. Callens BEL 1 0 1 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 3½
½
8 U. Lauk EST ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 6
½
There are now several pos- 9 O. Buraschi ARG ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 6½
½
sibilities arising from the two 10 P. Toth HUN ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 5
unfinished games involving 11 Z. Brkic YUG ½ ½ 1 0 0 1 ½ ½ 0 4 (1)
Valery V. Aleshnia (RUS).
If Aleshnia wins both his Email Wch-1 sf-13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.
1 G. Branding GER ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 7
games he qualifies, but if
2 H-J. Hofstetter GER ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 7
he doesn’t beat Helmut F. 3 S. Smithers USA ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 0 ½ 7
Glaser (GER) then Glaser 4 D. Matic CRO 0 0 0 ½ 1 1 0 ½ 0 ½ 3½
5 M. Davila Texeira URU 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 3½
qualifies instead. If he beats ½ ½ 0 ½
6 W.J. Jordan AUS ½ 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 2
Glaser but only draws with 7 G. Rivas Romero PER 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 0 1½
Hirokaz Onoda, then they 8 M. Rocius LIT 0 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 5
would be equal on 6½ points 9 C.M. de Holanda BRS ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 5½
10 V. Birarov ISL ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 8
but I think Aleshnia is slightly 11 C. Menghi LUX 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 5
ahead on tiebreak.

www.chessmail.com 29
Section 9 second qualifying spot half a point
behind him.
This completed group was won by Section 13
Alejandro A. Kozlowicz of Argentina
with 8½. Joint second on 7, with an This section has ended in clear victory
equal SB tiebreak if I am not mistaken, for Israeli master Vladimir Birarov
are Philippe Berclaz (SWZ) and Guido but there is a three-way tie for second
Boonet (BEL). between Gerd Branding (GER), Dr.
Section 10 Hans-Joachim Hofstetter (GER) and
Steven A. Smithers (USA). If an SB
This is the only group with no certain tiebreak is enforced, this will benefit
qualifier at the time of going to press. Ajoy Branding.
Mukherjee (ENG) and Krister Johansson Section 14
(SVE) have finished on 7½ but Jose
Antonio Goncalves (TD for sections 1-7) See the crosstable below. The last
can equal this if he beats Detlef Rost. open game cannot affect the result. Josep
The other unfinished game could have a Mercadal Benejam (ESP) has won with
bearing on tiebreaks. 8/10 and Sergey Anatoli Romanov (RUS)
gets the second qualifying place.
Section 11
Section 11 has been won by R. Lut- Games Selection
zenberger (GER) and Oscar Uralde
(ARG). Surprisingly, V. Pankratov failed Nimzowitsch Defence (B00)
to qualify. Marcelo Hedrera (ARG) -
István Schrancz (HUN)
Section 12
Email Wch sf07, 1999
One game remains open: between Notes based on those by Schrancz,
Brkic and Millstone. In this hard-fought Tavsakk Feb 2000.
group, the winner is Stanislav Kudela 1 e4 ¤c6 2 d4
of the Czech Republic (7 pts.) with Or 2 ¤f3 ¤f6 3 e5 ¤g4!? 4 d4 d6 5 h3
Osvaldo Buraschi (ARG) taking the ¤h6 and now:

Email Wch-1 sf-14 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10


11 Pts.

The Kibitzer 1 S.A. Romanov RUS


2 J. Mercadal B. ESP ½
½ ½ 1 ½
1 1 ½
1
1
½
1
½
1
1
½ ½
1 7½
1
1 8
3 W. Siewert GER ½ 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½1 6
A new column by Tim 4 C. O'Hare IRL 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 3½
0
Harding is posted on the 5 J. Vetter GER ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½1 6
second Wednesday of 6 P.P. Taboada CHI 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 1 2½ (1)
7 M. McArthur CAN ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 4
every month. 8 A.Dzwikowski POL ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 0 1 5½
9 Y.S. Grodzensky RUS 0 ½ ½ 0 0 1 ½ 0 0 0 2½
w w w.c he s s c a f e . c om 10 H. Jurca ROM 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 ½ 6 (1)
11 G. Altanoch MGL 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 ½ 2½

30 1/2001
a) 6 ¥xh6 gxh6 7 ¤c3?! ¥g7 8 ¥b5 13 £e1 b6 14 £g3 ¤cd8 15 ¥e3 ¤b7
0–0 9 0–0 dxe5 10 ¥xc6 exd4 11 ¤e2 L.Lamarche-Schrancz, Email Wch 1999)
bxc6 12 ¤exd4 £d6 13 c3 c5 14 ¤b3 ¦b8 4 c3 f6 5 f4 e6 6 ¤d2 ¤h6 7 ¤df3 ¥e4
15 £c2 c4 (0–1, 31) P.Donka-Schrancz, 8 ¤h3 £d7 9 ¤f2 f5 10 ¥b5 a6 11 ¥a4
Debrecen (OTB) 1998. ¥e7 12 0–0 0–0 13 ¥e3 ¤g4 14 ¤xg4
b) T.Craig-Schrancz, in the Email Wch, fxg4 15 ¤e1 h5 16 ¤d3 £e8 Oksanen-
went instead 6 ¤c3 a6 7 ¥g5!? dxe5 8 d5 Schrancz, Finland-Hungary email match
¤b8 9 ¤xe5 g6 10 £d2 ¤f5 11 g4!? ¤d6 1999 (0–1, 40).
12 ¥h6 ¤d7 13 ¤xd7 ¥xd7 14 0–0–0! 3...¤f6!? 4 e5 ¤d7 5 e6!? fxe6 6 ¤f3
¥b5!? (At this point, Craig explains in his 6 ¥d3 ¤f6 (6...g6 7 h4 ¥g7 8 h5 ¤f8=
notes in the Scottish CC magazine, White Bobkov-Sokolov, corr 1960) 7 ¤f3 g6 8
decided to incur a first etl rather than h4 ¥g7 9 h5 ¤xh5 10 ¤g5 ¤f6 11 ¤xh7
make a hasty reply. Under the old rules ¤xh7 12 ¥xg6+ ¢d7 13 ¥xh7 ¤xd4 14
this is a valid tactic but he won’t be able ¥e3 c5 15 ¦h5 ¢c6 16 £g4 ¥f6 17 0–0–0
to get away with this any more.) 15 ¢b1! e5 18 £g3 £a5–+ L.Kotan-Schrancz,
¥xh6 16 £xh6 ¥xf1 17 £g7! ¢d7 18 Sarospatak (OTB) 1999.
¦hxf1 £f8 19 £d4! ¦e8 20 ¦fe1 £h6 6...g6!
21 ¦d3 £h4 XIIIIIIIIY
XIIIIIIIIY 9r+lwqkvl-tr0
9-+-+r+-tr0 9zppzpnzp-+p0
9+pzpkzpp+p0 9-+n+p+p+0
9p+-sn-+p+0 9+-+p+-+-0
9+-+P+-+-0 9-+-zP-+-+0
9-+-wQ-+Pwq0 9+-sN-+N+-0
9+-sNR+-+P0 9PzPP+-zPPzP0
9PzPP+-zP-+0 9tR-vLQmKL+R0
9+K+-tR-+-0 xiiiiiiiiy
xiiiiiiiiy
Instead of 6...e5÷ Golubev-Sergeev,
Here Black offered a draw and White Kiev 1995.
used up all his time bar one day to find 7 ¤g5
the winning line. As Craig remarks, in 7 h4 ¥g7 8 h5 e5!? 9 dxe5?! (9 ¤xd5
email you can be confident of being ¤f8!?; 9 hxg6!?) 9...¤dxe5 10 ¤xe5
able to make same-day replies; such ¤xe5 11 £xd5 ¥g4! 12 £xd8+ ¦xd8 13
a policy could be fatal in postal. The hxg6 ¤f3+? (13...hxg6=) 14 gxf3 ¥xc3+
game ended 22 ¤a4! h5 23 ¦de3 ¤b5 24 (14...¥xf3 15 ¥h6±) 15 ¢e2²; 7 ¥b5
£b4! ¢c8 25 c4 ¤d6 26 c5 ¤b5 27 c6! ¥g7 8 h4 0–0 9 ¥xc6 (9 £e2 ¦xf3! 10
b6 28 d6! 1–0. gxf3 ¤xd4³) 9...bxc6 10 h5 e5 11 hxg6
2...d5 3 ¤c3 hxg6 12 £e2 exd4! 13 £e6+ ¦f7 14 ¤g5
3 e5 ¥f5 (3...f6 4 f4 ¥f5 5 ¥b5 e6 6 ¤e5 15 ¤xf7 ¥xe6 16 ¤xd8 ¦xd8 17
c3 £d7 7 ¤f3 ¤h6 8 0–0 a6 9 ¥e2 ¥e7 ¤e2 ¤c4 18 ¥h6 ¥f6 19 0–0–0!? ¤xb2 20
10 ¤bd2 fxe5 11 fxe5 0–0 12 ¤b3 ¤f7 ¢xb2 d3+ 21 ¢c1 dxe2µ Curtis Carlson-

www.chessmail.com 31
John L.Vehre Jr, CCLA North American ¦ae8 22 ¦xc7 ¦e2 23 ¥e3 ¦xe3 24 fxe3
Master Final 1988. £xe3+ 25 ¢h1 d2 26 ¦xb7 (26 £b3+
7...¤f6 8 ¥b5 £d6 9 0–0 ¥g7 10 ¦e1 £xb3 27 axb3 ¦e8–+) 26...¦e8 27 £f1
0–0 11 g3 ¤g4! 12 £xg4 ¤xd4 13 £e1 28 ¥d5+ ¢h8–+.
¥d3 e5 14 £d1 h6 15 ¤xd5 £xd5 20...¥d4 21 ¥e3
16 c3 hxg5 21 £e1 ¥h3 22 ¥xh3 ¥xf2+ 23 £xf2
16...¤f5!? 17 £e2!? ¤d6 (17...e6? 18 ¦xf2 24 ¢xf2 ¦f8+ 25 ¢g1 £d4+–+.
¤f3 ¤xg3 19 hxg3 £xf3 20 £xf3 ¦xf3 21 21...¥xe3 22 fxe3 ¦ac8 23 ¦xc8
¥xg6=) 18 ¥c2! £c6 19 ¥b3+ ¢h8 20 23 ¥g2 £e6 24 ¦xc8 £xe3+ 25 ¢h1
¤e6 ¥xe6 21 ¥xe6©. ¥xc8 26 £e1 £xe1+ 27 ¦xe1 d2–+.
17 cxd4 23...¦xc8 24 ¥g2
XIIIIIIIIY 24 £b3 £xb3 25 axb3 d2 26 ¦d1 ¦d8
9r+l+-trk+0 27 ¥e2 ¥c2.
9zppzp-zp-vl-0 24...£e5 25 £f3
9-+-+-+p+0 XIIIIIIIIY
9+-+qzp-zp-0 9-+r+-+k+0
9-+-zP-+-+0 9zpp+-+-+-0
9+-+L+-zP-0 9-+-+-+p+0
9PzP-+-zP-zP0 9+-+-wqlzp-0
9tR-vLQtR-mK-0 9-+-+-+-+0
xiiiiiiiiy 9+-+pzPQzP-0
9PzP-+-+LzP0
17...¥f5! 9tR-+-+-mK-0
17...exd4!? 18 ¦xe7! ¥h3!? 19 £b3 xiiiiiiiiy
£xb3 20 axb3 ¦ae8 (20...¦fe8 21 ¦xa7!)
21 ¥xg5 ¦xe7 22 ¥xe7 ¦e8 23 ¥g5 ¢h7 25...¥g4! 26 £d5+
24 f3=. 26 £xg4 £xe3+ 27 ¢h1 ¦c1+.
18 ¥f1 26...£xd5 27 ¥xd5+ ¢h8 0–1.
18 ¥xf5 ¦xf5 19 dxe5 £xd1 20 ¦xd1
¦xe5 21 ¥e3 ¦a5!? 22 ¦d7 (22 ¦d2!? ¥f6 English Opening (A28)
23 ¦c1 ¦xa2 24 ¦xc7 b6 25 b3 ¦xd2 26 Rune Degerhammar (SVE) -
¥xd2 ¢f7³) 22...¥xb2 23 ¦b1 ¥f6 24 Michael Millstone (USA)
¦xb7 ¦xa2 25 ¦bxc7 a5–+. Email Wch sf12, 1999
18...exd4 19 ¦xe7 Notes by Degerhammar (shortened)
19 ¥g2 £f7 20 ¥xg5 e5 21 f4 (21 £d2 1 c4 e5 2 ¤c3 ¤f6 3 ¤f3 ¤c6 4 a3!?
c5) 21...¦ae8 22 fxe5 (22 ¥xb7 exf4 23 e4 5 ¤g5 £e7 6 f3!?
¥xf4 ¦xe1+ 24 £xe1 ¦b8) 22...¥xe5 23 6 d3 may be better.
¥xb7 d3 24 £b3 £xb3 25 axb3 ¥xb2µ. 6...exf3 7 ¤xf3 d6 8 d3 ¥g4
19...d3 20 ¦xc7 8...¥e6 9 e4 0–0–0 10 ¥e2.
20 ¥g2 £d4! (20...£c4!?÷) 21 ¥xg5 9 e4 0–0–0
(21 £b3+ ¢h8 22 ¥e3 £xb2 23 £xb2 9...¤d4!?.
¥xb2 24 ¦b1 d2 25 ¦d1 ¦ad8³) 21... 10 ¥e2 ¥xf3 11 ¥xf3 ¤d4 12 0–0

32 1/2001
¤d7?! 13 ¥g4 ¢b8 14 ¥e3 £b1+ 39 ¢h2 £f1 40 £e4 ¤f3+ 41
To develop threats against Black’s ¢g3 1–0.
king. 14 ¤d5!? is another idea.
14...¤e6 15 b4 ¤e5 16 ¥xe6 £xe6 The following game was won by the
17 b5 ¤d7 18 ¤d5 g6 player who made the highest score in the
18...c6?? 19 ¥xa7+! ¢xa7 20 £a4+ semifinals. It was featured as one of the
¢b8 21 bxc6+-. earliest ICCF website Game of the Month
19 a4 series, with notes by the winner and
Possibly 19 £a4 is better but I followed GM Palciauskas. We just give the main
my plan. points and the full notes are available
19...¥g7 20 ¦a2 at www.iccf.com.
My analysis gave equal play after 20
¦a3 f5 21 a5 ¦df8 22 b6 cxb6 23 axb6 Najdorf Sicilian (B87)
a6 24 exf5 ¦xf5 25 ¦xf5 £xf5 26 ¦a5 Osman Kosebay (TRK) -
¦e8 27 g4. Putting the ¦ on a2 is more Miklós Träger (HUN)
flexible. 1st Email Wch, sf02 1999
20...¦df8 21 a5 f5 1 e4 c5 2 ¤f3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4
XIIIIIIIIY ¤f6 5 ¤c3 a6 6 ¥c4 e6 7 ¥b3 b5 8
9-mk-+-tr-tr0 0–0 ¥e7 9 £f3 £c7 10 £g3 0–0 11
9zppzpn+-vlp0 ¥h6 ¤e8 12 ¦ad1 ¥d7 13 f4 ¤c6
9-+-zpq+p+0 14 ¤xc6 ¥xc6 15 f5 ¢h8
9zPP+N+p+-0 XIIIIIIIIY
9-+P+P+-+0 9r+-+ntr-mk0
9+-+PvL-+-0 9+-wq-vlpzpp0
9R+-+-+PzP0 9p+lzpp+-vL0
9+-+Q+RmK-0 9+p+-+P+-0
xiiiiiiiiy 9-+-+P+-+0
9+LsN-+-wQ-0
22 ¥xa7+!! ¢xa7 23 b6+ ¢b8 24 9PzPP+-+PzP0
bxc7+ ¢a8 9+-+R+RmK-0
24...¢c8 25 a6 ¥d4+ 26 ¢h1+-. xiiiiiiiiy
25 exf5
Opens the diagonal h1–a8 for White’s 16 f6!
queen in some variations. A novelty; this sacrifice of the exch-
25...¦xf5 26 ¤b6+ ¢a7 27 ¦xf5 ange seems the best way to maintain
gxf5 28 c8£ ¥d4+ 29 ¢h1 ¦xc8 30 the attack.
¤xc8+ 16...¥xf6
The rest of the game is just tech- 16...gxh6 17 fxe7 £xe7 18 £f4 b4
nique. (18...f5 19 £xh6 b4 20 ¤e2 ¥xe4 21
30...¢b8 31 ¦e2 ¤e5 32 ¤b6 £h6 £xe6 £xe6 22 ¥xe6 ¥xc2 23 ¦d2 =) 19
33 £f1 £h5 34 h3 £g5 35 g4 £d8 36 ¤e2 e5 20 £xh6 ¥xe4 21 ¤g3 ¥g6 22
£xf5 ¥xb6 37 axb6 £xb6 38 £xh7 ¤f5 ¥xf5 23 ¦xf5 with an attack.

www.chessmail.com 33
17 ¦xf6! b4 18 ¤e2 gxh6 19 £f4 25...¦g6!?
¤xf6 This came as a total surprise to me.
Checking immediately with 19...£a7+! I felt for the first time, that victory was
is better because it prevents the game coming soon.
continuation with 21 ¦d4. GM Palciaus- After 25...bxc3! I could not find any-
kas reckoned this would lead to a draw. thing better than 26 ¥c2 f5 27 exf6 ¦a7
Also possible was 19...¥xe4 20 ¦xe6 28 ¦h4 ¦f8 29 £xh7+ ¦xh7 30 ¦xh7+
¥xc2 with an unclear position. ¢g8 31 ¦g7+ drawing.
20 £xf6+ ¢g8 21 ¦d4 ¥b5 26 £f4 ¥e8 27 ¥c2 f5
21...£b6 is met with 22 ¤f4 £a5 (if a) 27...¦g7 28 ¤h5 ¦g5 29 ¦xd6 £e7
22...e5? 23 ¤e6 or 22...£c5 23 ¥d5!) 23 30 ¤f6 ¦g7 31 £h6;
¥d5! b3 24 h3! bxc2 (24...£d8 25 £xh6 b) 27...£g5 28 ¥xg6 £xf4 29 ¦xf4
¢h8 26 ¥xc6! bxa2 27 ¦a4 ¦c8 28 ¥d7! dxe5 30 ¦xf7 hxg6 (30...¥xf7 31 ¥xf7)
¦xc2 29 ¦xa2 ¦g8 30 ¦xa6 e5 31 ¥f5 31 ¦e7 ¢g8 32 ¤e4!;
¦g7 32 ¦xd6 £g8 33 £f6 exf4 34 ¦d8 c) 27...¦g5 28 ¦xd6 £e7 29 £h4.
¦cxg2+ 35 ¢f1 and wins) 25 ¤xe6 c1£+ 28 exd6 +- £f6
26 ¢h2 £g5 27 ¤xg5 hxg5 28 £xg5+ If 28...£a5 29 d7 ¥f7 30 ¥xf5! exf5 31
¢h8 29 £f6+ ¢g8 30 ¦d3 and wins. £xf5 or 28...¥d7 29 c5.
22 ¤g3 29 ¤h5! ¦xg2+ 30 ¢xg2 ¥xh5 31
At first sight 22 ¤f4 seems to be a d7 ¦g8+
move of equal strength, but after 22...£d8 31...¦d8 does not help either 32 ¢f2!
23 £xh6 ¢h8 24 c4 bxc3 25 e5 ¦g8 26 e5 (32...¥f3 33 ¢xf3 e5 34 £xf5 £xf5+
¥c2 ¦g7 27 ¤h5 £g5 28 £xg7+ £xg7 35 ¥xf5 exd4 36 c5; 32...¥g4 33 £e3
29 ¤xg7 dxe5 Black has an advantage. e5 34 ¦d5 e4 35 £d4 £xd4+ 36 ¦xd4
The point is that 27 ¦g4!! is not available f4 37 ¥a4 e3+ 38 ¢e1) 33 £h4 £xh4+
here. 34 ¦xh4.
22...£d8 32 ¢f1 £g7 33 £f2 ¦d8 34 ¥a4 e5
Best. 22...£c5 23 ¥d5! £xc2 24 h4! 35 ¦d3 f4
¥e2 25 ¥xa8 ¦xa8 26 ¢h2 £xb2 27 35...£g5 36 ¦g3 £c1+ 37 ¢g2.
£f2. 36 £h4 1-0.
23 £xh6 ¢h8 24 e5 ¦g8 25 c4 And here Miklós resigned without
XIIIIIIIIY waiting for 36...¦g8 37 £xh5! when:
9r+-wq-+rmk0 a) 37...£g1+ 38 ¢e2 ¦g2+ (38...£g2+
9+-+-+p+p0 39 ¢d1 £f1+ 40 ¢c2 ¦g2+ 41 ¦d2) 39
9p+-zpp+-wQ0 ¢f3;
9+l+-zP-+-0 b) 37...f3 38 £xf3 £g1+ 39 ¢e2 ¦g2+
9-zpPtR-+-+0 40 £xg2! £xg2+ 41 ¢d1;
9+L+-+-sN-0 c) 37...£g2+ 38 ¢e1 £h1+ 39 ¢d2
9PzP-+-+PzP0 ¦g2+ 40 £e2 ¦xe2+ 41 ¢xe2 and the
9+-+-+-mK-0 Black £ will run out of checks.
xiiiiiiiiy

34 1/2001
István Sinka wins the 37th
Hungarian Championship

T
HE 37th Hungarian CC Ch
was won by István Sinka,
who was my opponent
on board 1 in the 5th European
Team Championship prelimi-
naries a few years ago. The final
began on 15 March 1998 and
ended on14 March 2000.
Thanks to Péter Tóth, editor
of the Hungarian CC magazine
Távsakk, for providing the
games and bulletin.
The defending champion,
2601-rated Miklós Tráger, was
also unbeaten but conceded
too many draws and finished
fourth. Also noteworthy is
the fifth place achieved by
Etelka Csom Néméthne. An
ICCF LM, Mrs Nemeth was a
finalist in the 5th ICCF Ladies
World Championship a few
years ago.
Here is one of the most
exciting and original games we
have seen recently, with notes
by the winner in Távsakk.

Sicilian Defence (B22)


István Sinka -
Csaba Szücs
Hungary ch-37, 1998-2000
Istvan Sinka... won the championship with Notes by Sinka
aggressive play. See the crosstable on page 39. 1 e4 c5 2 c3 d5 3 exd5
£xd5 4 d4 ¤f6 5 ¤f3 ¥g4
6 ¤bd2!? ¤c6 7 ¥c4 ¥xf3

www.chessmail.com 35
37th Hungarian CC Ch 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Pts.
1 Sinka, István * 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 13½
2 Szücs, Csaba 0 * 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 13
3 Paróczai, Attila ½ 0 * ½ 0 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 12½
4 Träger, Miklós ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 11½
5 Csom Néméthne, Etelka ½ 0 1 ½ * ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 10
6 Chrobák, Gyula 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ * 1 ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 9½
7 Csillag, Béla 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 8½
8 Gombkötö, Ottó 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 0 ½ 1 1 1 8
9 Timár, Zsolt 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ * ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 8
10 Veres, Endre 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * ½ 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 7½
11 Nemes, Béla ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 ½ * ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 1 7
12 Török, Sándor 0 0 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 ½ 1 ½ * 1 0 ½ 1 1 7
13 Metál, Imre 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 0 * 0 ½ ½ 1 6
14 Pálffy, Dr. István 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 1 * ½ ½ 1 5½
15= Révész, Béla 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * 0 1 4
15= Söreghy, János ½ 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 1 * 1 4
17 Vida, Pál 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * ½

8 £b3 ¤a5 9 £b5+ £d7 10 ¤xf3 14...£c6.


¤xc4 11 £xc4 cxd4 12 0–0!? 15 £e2 ¤d5 16 ¥e5 b1£ 17 ¦xb1
XIIIIIIIIY a6 18 a4 b4
9r+-+kvl-tr0 18...f6? 19 axb5 fxe5 (If 19...£e6 20
9zpp+qzppzpp0 £e4 ¦c8 21 bxa6 ¤c3 22 £b7 ¤xb1
9-+-+-sn-+0 23 a7 ¤d2 24 ¤xd2 fxe5 25 ¤f3+- or
9+-+-+-+-0 19...axb5 20 ¦xb5 fxe5 21 ¤xe5 £d6
9-+Qzp-+-+0 22 ¤c4±) 20 ¤xe5 £e6 21 bxa6 ¤c3 22
9+-zP-+N+-0 £f3 ¦c8 23 a7+-.
9PzP-+-zPPzP0 19 ¦fd1 e6 20 ¦bc1 £b7 21 h4!?
9tR-vL-+RmK-0 21 ¤g5 ¥e7 22 £f3 (22 ¤xf7 0–0!)
xiiiiiiiiy 22...0–0! 23 ¦c7 £b6 24 ¦xd5 exd5 25
¦xe7 £g6 26 h4 h6 27 ¤h3 ¦ae8 28
TH: An enterprising gambit novelty ¦xe8 ¦xe8 29 £xd5 £h5 30 f4 £xh4µ.
which could alter the evaluation of the 21...h6 22 ¤d4!
aggressive 6 ¤bd2 sideline again. 12 XIIIIIIIIY
£xd4 is only equal. 9r+-+kvl-tr0
12...dxc3 9+q+-+pzp-0
12...e6 13 ¦d1 ¦c8 14 £b3 ¥d6 9p+-+p+-zp0
(14...¥c5 15 ¤e5 £d5 16 £a4+±) 15 9+-+nvL-+-0
¦xd4 £c6 16 ¥g5². 9Pzp-sN-+-zP0
13 ¥f4!? cxb2 14 ¦ad1© 9+-+-+-+-0
White has given up in turn the pawns 9-+-+QzPP+0
on d4, c3 and b2 but has great piece 9+-tRR+-mK-0
activity. xiiiiiiiiy
14...b5!?

36 1/2001
22...¤c3? 29...fxe6 30 £xe6 £c7+ 31 ¥e5 £c4
After this mistake, White launches 32 £d7+ ¢f7 33 ¦d4 ¦d8 34 £xd8 ¥xd8
a fierce attack on the ¢ in the centre. 35 ¦xc4 ¤d3 36 ¦d4+-.
The situation would be less clear after 30 ¤g7+ ¢f8 31 £h6 g5™ 32 ¤e6+
22...¦c8 23 £e4!?© or 22...¥e7 23 ¤xe6! ¢e8 33 £h7!+- £xe6
fxe6 24 £h5+ ¢d8 (24...¢f8 25 £f3+ ¥f6 33...¥d6+ 34 f4! … 34...¥xf4+ 35 ¤xf4
26 ¦c7 £xc7 27 ¥xc7 ¤xc7 28 £c6²) 25 gxf4 36 ¦e1++-.
¦c7 £xc7 26 ¥xc7+ ¢xc7 27 £g4÷. 34 £g8+ ¥f8 35 ¥g7 £e7 36 ¦d5!
23 £h5± ¦c8 £c7+
a) 23...¤xd1 24 ¦c7 £xc7 25 ¥xc7 36...f6 37 ¦d1.
¤c3 26 ¤xe6±; 37 g3 ¢e7
b) 23...g6 24 £g4 h5 (24...¤xd1 25 XIIIIIIIIY
¤xe6!? h5 26 £c4) 25 £h3 ¤xd1 (25...¦h7 9-+r+-vlQ+0
26 ¤xe6 fxe6 27 £xe6+ ¦e7 28 £xg6+ 9+-wq-mkpvL-0
¦f7 29 ¦e1+-) 26 ¦xd1! (26 ¤xe6 £e4!) 9p+-+-+-+0
26...¦h7 (26...¦g8 27 ¤xe6 ¦c8 28 ¦e1 9+-+R+-zpp0
¥e7 29 ¥d6 ¦c1 30 ¦xc1 ¥xd6 31 £e3±) 9Pzp-+-+-zP0
27 ¤xe6 fxe6 (27...¥e7 28 ¤c7+ ¢f8 29 9+-+-+-zP-0
¤xa8 £xa8 30 ¦c1+-) 28 £xe6+ ¥e7 29 9-+-+-zP-mK0
£g8+ ¥f8 30 £xg6+ ¦f7 31 ¥f6+-; 9+-sn-+-+-0
c) 23...0–0–0 24 ¤b3 ¦xd1+ 25 £xd1 xiiiiiiiiy
£d5 26 £e2‚.
24 ¤xe6 g6 38 ¥f6+! ¢e8
24...¤xd1 25 ¤c7+. 38...¢xf6 39 £xg5+ ¢e6 40 £f5+ ¢e7
25 £g4 h5 26 £h3! ¤e2+ 27 ¢h2 41 £e4+ ¢f6 42 ¦f5+ ¢g7 43 £d4++-.
¤xc1 39 ¦e5+ £xe5
27...¦xc1? 28 ¦d8+ ¢e7 29 £e3+-. 39...¢d7 40 £xf7+ ¢c6 41 £d5+ ¢b6
28 ¥xh8 ¥e7 42 ¦e6+ ¢a7 43 ¥e5!+-.
28...¤e2? 29 £e3 £e7 30 ¤c7+ ¦xc7 40 ¥xe5 gxh4 41 ¥d6 hxg3+ 42 fxg3
31 ¥f6! …31...£xe3 32 ¦d8#. ¢d7 43 ¥xf8 ¢e6 44 £h7 ¦xf8 45
XIIIIIIIIY £h6+ ¢e7 46 £xc1 1–0.
9-+r+k+-vL0 Also noteworthy is the fifth place
9+q+-vlp+-0 achieved by Etelka Csom Néméthne. An
9p+-+N+p+0 ICCF LM, Mrs Nemeth was a finalist in the
9+-+-+-+p0 5th ICCF Ladies World Championship
9Pzp-+-+-zP0 a few years ago.
9+-+-+-+Q0 All the games of the 37th Hungarian
9-+-+-zPPmK0 Championship will be included in the
9+-snR+-+-0 database on our MegaCorr-2 CD next
xiiiiiiiiy year, as well as several previous Cham-
pionships and other recent Hungarian
29 £e3! £c6 games.

www.chessmail.com 37
New Swedish
Champion
Conny Persson
annotates

C
HESS Mail reader Conny Persson
is the new Swedish Correspond-
ence Chess Champion, winning
SSKK SM 1999 with a game and time to Najdorf Sicilian (B92)
spare. Finally he finished with +10 =4 Lennart Rydholm -
-0 but he was already certain of victory Conny Persson
in August 2000 when he had reached Swedish Corr Ch 1999-2000
11 points. 1 e4 c5
Our table on the next page shows In SSKK SM-96 I played safety first,
the situation when we went to print 1...e5. Now I was striving for more
in late November but you can find the asymmetrical positions with chances for
current crosstable on the Web page both sides.
http://home3.swipnet.se/~w-36794/ 2 ¤f3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 ¤xd4 ¤f6 5
sskk/res/svm_1999.html ¤c3 a6
The new champion is: 54 years of age, The Najdorf is synonymous with the
married, and working as a postman in all-time greats of chess — Tal, Fischer
the famous port city of Göteborg, on and Kasparov. It offers Black the best
the Baltic Sea. of both worlds — excellent winning
He was awarded the CC-IM title by chances without exceptional risks.
ICCF for his achievements for Sweden 6 ¥e2
West on board 5 in the current VII Baltic In my three Najdorf games of SM-99 all
Sea Team Tournament. In the 1996 my opponents chose this more positional
Swedish Championship he won the 3rd line. Rydholm has, by the way, had good
prize. results with 6 f3!?.
Now he is playing in the late-started 6...e5 7 ¤b3 ¥e7 8 0–0 0–0 9 ¥e3
section Semifinal 13 of ICCF World ¥e6 10 £d3
Championship XXIV. One of Lennart’s specialities. More
Here are a selection of his games which common is 10 ¤d5 but White wants to
are submitted with his own notes. prevent 10...¤xd5 11 exd5 ¥f5.

38 1/2001
10...¤bd7 24...£f4 25 ¢f1 a4 26 £d3 £h2 27
More accurate than the immediate £e3 e4 28 £g1 £e5 29 ¦ab1 £d4
...¥xd5. 29...b5!? 30 cxb5 £xd5 31 b3 axb3 32
11 ¤d5 ¥xd5 12 exd5 ¤c5 13 £d2 ¥xb3 c4 favours Black.
13 ¤xc5 dxc5 14 ¦fd1 e4 15 £d2 30 £xd4 cxd4 31 ¥xe4!?
¥d6 16 a4 £c7 17 g3 ¦ae8 18 a5 ¤d7 This bishop sacrifice is probably
gave Black good play in King-Browne, White’s best chance for an active game.
Reykjavik 1990. 31...fxe4 32 ¦xe4 ¥c5 33 ¢e2
13...¤fe4 XIIIIIIIIY
13...£c7 14 f3 h6 15 c4 ¤h7 16 ¤xc5 9r+-+-trk+0
dxc5 17 ¥d3 gave an edge to White in 9+p+-+-zpp0
Apicella-Brunner, Debrecen Echt 1992. 9-+-+-+-+0
14 £b4 a5 15 £b5 £c7 16 f3 9+-vlP+-+-0
New. 16 ¤xc5 dxc5 17 £c4 ¤f6 18 9p+PzpR+-+0
¦fd1 ¥d6 19 a3 ¤d7 20 ¦ab1 ¦ac8 9+-+-+P+P0
21 g4?! £d8 gave Black good play in 9PzP-+K+P+0
Nikolenko-Voitsekhovski, Minsk 1998. 9+R+-+-+-0
16...¤f6 17 c4 ¤fd7 18 ¤xc5 ¤xc5 xiiiiiiiiy
19 ¥xc5 dxc5 20 ¥d1 ¥d6 21 h3
Considering the continuation, I think 33...¦a6!?
21 g3 would have been preferable. Black has good winning chances, but
21...f5 22 ¥c2 £e7 to achieve the win is not easy. If 33...b5
The black queen now becomes very 34 cxb5 ¦fb8 35 ¢d3 ¦xb5 36 ¢c4 ¦ba5
active! 37 ¦be1 and Black has difficulties to
23 ¦fe1 £h4 24 £b3 proceed.
After 24 £b6 could follow 24...£h6 25 I wanted to place my rooks more
¢h1 (25 £xb7? £f4) 25...¦f6 etc. actively before I played ...b5.

Swedish CC Ch. 1999 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts. Unf.


1 Per-Erik Berglund Göteborg • ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ . 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 0 5½ 1
2 Jan Viberg Örnsköldsvik ½ • 1 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 8 -
3 R G Hagelin Karlskoga ½ 0 • 1 ½ . 0 . 0 0 ½ . 0 2½ 4
4 Ulf Larsson Lund 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -
5 Sven-Eric Sagström Enköping ½ 0 ½ 1 • ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 0 5½ -
6 Stefan Rilberg Vasta Frölunda 0 ½ . 1 ½ • ½ ½ . 0 ½ . 0 . ½ 4 4
7 Ove Nyhlén Linköping ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ • 1 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 1 . 9 1
8 Christer Thörnros Söderhamn . ½ . 1 ½ ½ 0 • 0 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 4 2
9 Ulf Norevall Uppsala 1 0 1 1 ½ . 0 1 • ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 6½ 1
10 Conny Persson Göteborg ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ • ½ 1 1 1 1 12 -
11 Åke Oskarsson Bräkne-Hoby ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ • 1 1 1 ½ 10 -
12 Johnny Becker Eskilstuna ½ ½ . 1 ½ . 0 ½ ½ 0 0 • ½ ½ ½ 5 2
13 Stefan Andéer Östersund 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 0 ½ • 1 ½ 9½ -
14 Lennart Rydholm Göteborg 1 1 1 1 ½ . 0 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 • 1 7½ 1
15 Peter Backe Örebro 1 ½ . 1 1 ½ . ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 • 7 2

www.chessmail.com 39
34 ¢d3 ¦b6 35 ¦e2 ¢f7 36 ¦be1 Budapest Defence (A52)
¦b4 37 ¦c2 ¦b8 38 ¦e6 b5! 39 cxb5 Conny Persson -
39 ¦c6 bxc4+ 40 ¦xc4 ¦xc4 41 ¢xc4 Christer Thörnros
¥e7–+. Swedish Corr Ch 1999-2000
39...¦8xb5 40 ¦ee2 1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e5
40 ¦a6? ¢e7–+. This gambit is quite a respectable
40...¥b6 41 d6 ¦d5 42 ¦c6 ¥d8 43 opening. White will seek to cause Black
f4 ¦b6 44 ¦c4 ¦a6 45 ¦e4 ¦dxd6 inconvenience due to the sensitive d5-
46 ¦exd4 ¦xd4+ 47 ¦xd4 ¥f6 48 square and the time it takes to regain
¦b4 the e5-pawn.
48 ¦d7+ ¢e6 49 ¦b7 ¦d6+ 50 ¢e2 3 dxe5 ¤g4
¦c6 51 ¢d1 (51 ¦b4 ¦c2+ 52 ¢f1 a3!) 3... ¤e4 is the Fajarowicz, for which
51...¢f5 –+. the editor of Chess Mail is an advocate,
48...a3! 49 b3 ¦d6+ 50 ¢c2 ¦c6+ 51 I believe!?
¦c4 4 e3 ¤xe5 5 ¤h3
The exchange of rooks makes the White avoids an exchange of knights
winning procedure easier, but 51 ¢d1 on f3 and intends to place d5 under firm
¦c3 52 ¦e4 ¢g6 is also hopeless. control. Practice has shown that Black
51...¦xc4+ 52 bxc4 ¢e6 53 g3 ¢d6 has real problems finding counterplay
0–1, in this line.
For example, 54 ¢b3 ¢c5 55 ¢xa3 (55 5...¥b4+
f5 g6! 56 fxg6 hxg6 57 g4 g5–+) 55...¢xc4 5...¤g6!? 6 £h5 ¤c6 7 ¤c3 ¥b4 8 ¥d2
56 f5 ¢d4 57 ¢b4 ¢e4 58 g4 ¢f3 59 a4 d6 9 ¥e2 £f6 10 a3 ¥a5 11 b4 ¥b6 12
¥d8 and Black can trade his bishop for 0–0 £f5 13 £xf5 ¥xf5 14 ¤g5 0–0 15
White’s passed a-pawn. ¤d5 with an edge for White, Shabalov-
Getz, Philadelphia 1992.
6 ¥d2 ¥xd2+ 7 £xd2 d6 8 ¤f4 0–0
Coming soon in your 9 ¤c3 ¥e6
9...¤bd7 10 ¥e2 a5 11 0–0 ¤c5 looks
Chess Mail 2001/2 like a King’s Indian but without the
counterplay.
T h e new I C C F pl ay i ng 10 ¤xe6 fxe6 11 0–0–0 ¤bc6 12 f4
ru les: t ex t & c om me nts ¤d7 13 h4
G M G u i l l e r mo Toro White is starting a general kingside
pawn-push while Black, who is not
in t er v i ew & g a me s ready for a pawn-push on the opposite
Ou r gui d e to the top wing, seeks to counter in the centre.
ch ess we b s i t es 13...e5 14 g4 exf4 15 exf4 ¤c5 16 h5
£d7 17 h6!? £xg4
E lectron i c b ook s a nd
A very risky pawn snatch, but e.g.
n ew CD s r ev i ewe d 17...¤b4 18 ¤b5 a5 19 hxg7 £xg7 20
¢b1 ¦ae8 (20...£xg4? 21 ¥d3 ¤bxd3 22

40 1/2001
¦hg1 +-) 21 a3 ¤c6 22 ¥g2 ¢h8 23 ¦h4 Queen’s Indian Defence (E12)
gives White strong play. Conny Persson -
18 hxg7 ¦f7 Peter Backe
If 18...¢xg7 19 ¤d5 ¦f7 20 ¥e2 £e6 Swedish Corr Ch 1999-2000
21 ¥h5 or 18...£xg7 19 ¥d3 ¤xd3+ 20 1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 ¤f3 b6 4 a3
£xd3 ¦f6 21 ¤e4 — in both cases with Popularized by Petrosian and later
a clear advantage for White. practised by, among others, Kasparov
19 ¤d5 ¦e8 20 £h2 £f5 21 ¥e2! in the eighties. The idea is quite easy:
A move that was hard to find. If 21 b4 To be able to play ¤c3 without being
¤xb4! 22 ¤xb4 £xf4+ 23 £xf4 ¦xf4 24 bothered by ...¥b4.
¦g1 and Black is out of his difficulties. 4...¥a6 5 £c2 c5 6 e4
21...¦e4 22 ¦dg1 ¤d4 23 ¥d1 ¤de6 6 d5 exd5 7 cxd5 ¥b7 (7...g6 8 ¤c3
24 b3 ¥g7 with a Benoni type of position.)
XIIIIIIIIY 8 e4 £e7 9 ¥d3 ¤xd5 10 0–0 ¤c7 is
9-+-+-+k+0 also possible.
9zppzp-+rzPp0 6...cxd4 7 ¤xd4 ¥b7 8 ¤c3 ¥c5
9-+-zpn+-+0 8...¤c6 9 ¤xc6 ¥xc6 10 ¥f4 ¥c5 11
9+-snN+q+-0 ¥e2 is also common. With the move
9-+P+rzP-+0 played Black immediately fights for
9+P+-+-+-0 control over d4.
9P+-+-+-wQ0 9 ¤b3 ¤c6 10 ¥f4
9+-mKL+-tRR0 This has lately been the hottest move
xiiiiiiiiy in the theoretical discussion. If Black
plays 10...e5, White will try to utilise his
White is about to win. Black, who has strongpoint on d5.
burnt his ships, must attack at all costs. 10...0–0
24...¤d3+ 25 ¢b1 ¦e1 A gambit line Black has recently
Leads to the loss of a piece but 25... experimented with.
¤dxf4 26 £xh7+ £xh7 27 ¦xh7 ¤xg7 28 11 ¦d1
¤f6+ loses as well.
26 ¦xe1 ¤xe1+ 27 ¢a1 c6 28 ¤c3
¤xg7
28...¤d3? 29 ¥g4!+-.
29 ¦xe1 £xf4 30 £xf4 ¦xf4 31 ¥c2 h5
Black’s last hope is his passed
h-pawn.
32 ¦d1 ¦f2 33 ¢b1 h4 34 ¤e4 ¦g2
35 ¤xd6 h3 36 ¥e4 1–0.
The bishop blocks the pawn, e.g.
36...¦e2 37 ¥h1 ¦e7 38 ¤c8 ¦e2 39 P ickar d & So n
¤xa7 ¤f5 40 ¤xc6 bxc6 41 ¥xc6 h2 42
a4 and White wins.

www.chessmail.com 41
After careful consideration I decided An interesting endgame has ensued,
to decline the gambit (11 ¤xc5 bxc5 12 where White has certain winning chances
¥d6). I chose between the actual move in spite of bishops of opposite colour.
played and 11 0–0–0. 36 ¥e7 ¢f7 37 ¥d8 e5 38 ¥xb6 ¥e6
11...e5 12 ¥g5 ¤d4 13 ¤xd4 ¥xd4 39 bxa6 ¥xc4 40 a7 ¥d5 41 ¢f2 h5
14 ¥d3 h6 15 ¥h4!? 42 g4 h4 43 ¥d8 ¥c6 44 ¢e3 ¢e6 45
XIIIIIIIIY a5 ¥d5 46 a6 ¥c6 47 ¢d3!?
9r+-wq-trk+0 A move that no computer would
9zpl+p+pzp-0 play!
9-zp-+-sn-zp0 47...¥xf3 48 ¢c4
9+-+-zp-+-0 XIIIIIIIIY
9-+PvlP+-vL0 9-+-vL-+-+0
9zP-sNL+-+-0 9zP-+-+-+-0
9-zPQ+-zPPzP0 9P+-+kzp-+0
9+-+RmK-+R0 9+-+-zp-zp-0
xiiiiiiiiy 9-+K+-+Pzp0
9+-+-+l+-0
In my database there was only one 9-+-+-+-zP0
game, with 15 ¥xf6. The move played 9+-+-+-+-0
invites Black to the following dubious xiiiiiiiiy
combination.
15...¥xc3+ 16 £xc3 g5 17 ¥g3 ¤xe4 48...h3?
18 ¥xe4 ¥xe4 19 f3 ¥c6 20 ¥xe5 Missing the draw which is not easy
f6 21 ¥d6 ¦e8+ 22 ¢f2 ¦e6 23 ¦he1 to find:
£e8 24 ¦xe6 £xe6 25 £d3 £f7 26 48...¥a8 49 ¢c5 e4 50 ¥a5 (50 ¢d4
b4 ¢f7 51 ¢e3 ¢g6 52 ¥e7 f5 53 gxf5+
White has a clear initiative. ¢xf5=) 50...e3! (50...f5 51 gxf5+ ¢xf5
26...¦e8 27 b5 ¥b7 28 ¥b4 ¥c8 29 52 ¥d2!) 51 ¢d4 e2 52 ¢e3 f5 53 gxf5+
a4 a6 30 £c3 £e6 31 £d4 £e2+ 32 ¢xf5 54 ¢xe2 g4 55 ¥e1 h3 56 ¢e3 ¢e5
¢g3 £e5+ 33 £xe5 ¦xe5 34 ¦d6 57 ¥g3+ ¢f5 58 ¢d4 ¢e6 59 ¢c5 ¢d7
¦e6 35 ¦xe6 dxe6 60 ¢b6 ¢c8 =.
XIIIIIIIIY 49 ¢c5 f5 50 gxf5+ ¢xf5 51 ¢d6
9-+l+-+k+0 1–0.
9+-+-+-+-0 If 51...g4 52 ¥h4 ¥a8 53 ¢c7 ¢e6
9pzp-+pzp-zp0 54 ¢b8 etc.
9+P+-+-zp-0
9PvLP+-+-+0 Nimzoindian Defence (E26)
9+-+-+PmK-0 R.G.Hagelin -
9-+-+-+PzP0 Conny Persson
9+-+-+-+-0 Swedish Corr Ch 1999-2000
xiiiiiiiiy 1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 e6 3 ¤c3 ¥b4
“The best defence of the world what-

42 1/2001
XIIIIIIIIY
ever opening” according to Hagelin, but 9r+l+-trk+0
the alternative Queen’s Indian does not 9+p+-+pzpp0
appeal to him very much. 9p+nzp-+-+0
4 a3 9wq-sn-zP-vL-0
The Sämisch is White’s most radical 9-+Pzp-zP-+0
method of “refuting” Black’s fight for the 9zP-+L+-sN-0
centre by means of piece control. 9-+-+-+PzP0
He believes that the doubled pawns 9+R+Q+RmK-0
will reinforce, rather than weaken, the xiiiiiiiiy
centre.
4...¥xc3+ 5 bxc3 c5
This active continuation has enjoyed 18...¤xd3
great popularity, fixing White’s doubled Just one example of how dangerous
pawns and keeping the option for Black White’s attack might be: 18...£xa3 19 ¥f5
of eventually opening the c-file at his dxe5 (19...h6 20 ¥xh6! gxh6 21 £g4+
will. In the long run, White can hardly ¢h8 22 £h4 ¥xf5 23 £xh6+ ¥h7 24 ¤f5
resist Black’s pressure on the queenside. with mate) 20 fxe5 h6 21 ¥c1 £c3 22
Nonetheless, White’s attacking chances ¥xc8 ¦fxc8 23 ¤f5 ¤e6 24 ¦xb7 ¦ab8
on the kingside are considerable, and 25 £g4 ¢h8 26 ¤xh6 with a decisive
this game shows instructively how Black attack.
must try to neutralise his opponent’s 19 £xd3 dxe5 20 f5!?
initiative on that wing. If 20 fxe5 £xe5 and Black should
6 e3 ¤c6 7 ¥d3 e5 win.
7...0–0 8 ¤e2 b6 9 e4 ¤e8 10 0–0 ¥a6 20...f6 21 ¥d2 £c7 22 ¤e4 ¤e7 23
11 f4 f5 is more common but probably g4 ¥d7 24 ¥b4 ¥c6 25 ¤c5 ¦f7 26
not better than the line actually played. ¤e6 £d7 27 ¦fc1 g6
8 ¤e2 d6 9 e4 exd4 Black has strengthened his position
9...0–0 10 0–0 h6 11 d5 ¤e7 12 f3 and White’s attacking chances are
gives the game a quite different, closed exhausted.
character. 28 ¥xe7 ¦xe7 29 ¤c5 £d6 30 ¤e6
10 cxd4 cxd4 11 0–0 0–0 12 ¦b1 e4 31 £b3 gxf5 32 gxf5 ¢h8 33 £b2
White’s rook manoeuvre ends up as ¦g8+ 34 ¢f1 ¦xe6! 0–1.
a loss of tempo. Probably better would White resigned in view of 35 fxe6 e3
have been 12 ¥b2 or directly 12 ¥g5. with a mating attack.
12...£a5!?
12...¤d7 13 ¥b2 ¤c5 14 ¤xd4 ¤e5 King’s Indian Defence (E94)
15 ¥e2 ¤xe4 with an even game in Conny Persson -
Haimovich-Stanec, Graz 1997. Jan Viberg
13 ¦b5 £c7 14 ¥g5 ¤d7 15 f4 Swedish Corr Ch 1999-2000
15 ¤f4!? idea 16 ¤d5. 1 d4 ¤f6 2 c4 g6 3 ¤c3 ¥g7
15...¤c5 16 ¤g3 a6 17 ¦b1 £a5 18 Nowadays I prefer to play White in
e5!? the King’s Indian.

www.chessmail.com 43
XIIIIIIIIY
4 e4 d6 5 ¤f3 0–0 6 ¥e2 e5 7 0–0 9r+lwqr+k+0
¤a6 9+p+-+-vlp0
This variation is one of the most impor- 9-+pzp-zpp+0
tant developments in recent decades. It 9+-+-snPsn-0
turns out that the knight can quickly spring 9p+PsNPtR-+0
to an active post if the position opens up, 9+-sN-vL-+-0
while it is well and flexibly placed for 9PzP-wQL+PzP0
most types of closed centre. 9+-+-+RmK-0
8 ¥e3 xiiiiiiiiy
Considered to be the most trouble-
some move for Black. White supports his
centre and awaits Black’s plan. 21 ¤c2 ¤gf7 22 ¦h4 ¥d7 23 b4 axb3
8...¤g4 9 ¥g5 f6 24 axb3 £c7 25 b4 ¦ec8 26 ¤d4
This is less popular than 9... £e8, but £d8 27 ¤b3 £e7 28 ¦h3
is certainly playable. The rook is to put pressure down the
10 ¥c1 g-file, and at the same time White is
In accordance with the general prin- trying to start a “two-fronts-war” with
ciple that c1 is a better retreat square his knights on the queenside.
than h4 when White has already castled 28...¦e8 29 ¤a5 ¥c8 30 ¤a4 ¤d7
kingside. 31 ¦g3 g5 32 ¤c3 ¤de5
10...¤h6 11 ¦b1! exd4!? Better 32...c5 to stop White’s c-pawn,
11...¤f7 12 dxe5 dxe5 13 b4 c6 14 b5 e.g. 33 ¤d5 £d8 34 ¤b3 b6 is unclear.
¤c7 15 ¥a3 ¦e8 16 bxc6 bxc6 17 £a4 33 ¤b3 £c7 34 c5 dxc5 35 bxc5 ¦d8
¥d7 18 ¦fd1 £c8 19 c5!? gave White a 36 £b2 ¥f8 37 ¦d1 ¦xd1+ 38 ¤xd1
strong position in Benjamin-Kindermann, £e7 39 ¥d4 h6 40 ¤e3 ¥g7 41 ¤d2
Novi Sad OL 1990. ¤d7 42 £c3 ¢h7 43 ¥h5 ¤fe5 44
12 ¤xd4 ¤c5 ¤ec4 ¤xc4 45 £xc4 ¥f8
12...f5? 13 ¥xh6 ¥xh6 14 exf5±. 45...¤e5 46 £c3 would have set up a
13 ¥e3 ¦e8 14 ¤b3 ¤e6 15 £d2 tougher resistance.
¤f7 16 f4 46 h4! 1–0.
16 ¦bd1 b6 17 f3 ¥b7 18 ¦fe1 ¤e5 The final blow. If:
19 ¤d5 ¢h8 20 ¤d4 ¤xd4 21 ¥xd4 c6 a) 46...¥g7 47 hxg5 fxg5 48 e5! ¤xe5
22 ¤c3 £e7 etc. was Gausel-Sandén, 49 ¦e3+-, or
Stockholm 1997. I wanted to play more b) 46...¤xc5 47 hxg5 ¥e6!? 48 ¥g6+ ¢h8
aggressively with the f-pawn. 49 gxf6 £d6 (49...¥xc4 50 fxe7+ ¥g7 51
16...a5 17 f5 ¤eg5 18 ¦f4 f6+-) 50 f7+ ¥g7 51 ¥xg7+ ¢xg7 52 £c3+
The heavy artillery is to be transported to ¢f8 53 £h8+ ¢e7 54 £e8+ ¦xe8 (54...¢f6
the kingside in order to attack Black’s ¢. 55 e5+ ¢xe5 56 ¤c4+ +-) 55 fxe8£+ ¢f6
18...¤e5 19 ¦bf1 a4 20 ¤d4 c6 56 e5+ ¢xe5 57 ¤c4+ +-, or finally
White is slightly better but encounters c) 46...¤e5 47 ¥xe5 fxe5 (47...£xe5
great difficulties penetrating Black’s 48 £f7+ ¥g7 49 ¥g6+ ¢h8 50 ¦d3+-) 48
hedgehog defence. ¤b3 ¢g7 49 hxg5 hxg5 50 £c1+-.

44 1/2001
Turmoil in the Traxler Two Knights
Survey/Review by Tim Harding

F
EW variations in chess are so tacti-
cally complex and fun to investigate
as the Traxler counter-attack in
the Two Knights Defence, 1 e4 e5 2
¤f3 ¤c6 3 ¥c4 ¤f6 4 ¤g5 ¥c5. The
positions that typically arise (especially
when White provokes the piece sacrifice
on f2) are terrifying in their randomness. Part One (C57)
Kings go for walks, knights eat rooks
in the corner, material is unbalanced, computer, you would think this might be
checks and mate threats abound and it, and he has used computers extensively
pieces land up on unusual squares. to analyse the critical positions.
XIIIIIIIIY The Traxler Counterattack CD
9r+lwqk+-tr0 really requires you to have ChessBase
9zppzpp+pzpp0 on your computer (CB6, 7, 8 or the
9-+n+-sn-+0 free ChessBase Light would do) as the
9+-vl-zp-sN-0 analysis and text (54 detailed surveys) are
9-+L+P+-+0 all included in a 1650-game Chessbase
9+-+-+-+-0 database. (However a complete PGN file
9PzPPzP-zPPzP0 is also included.)
9tRNvLQmK-+R0 I decided to compare some of Heis-
xiiiiiiiiy man’s opinions and discoveries with
what is said about this line in the stan-
Researching and analysing this varia- dard reference works and the new
tion in enormous depth has been a book “Zweispringersystem bis Traxler-
labour of love for Dan Heisman (an Gegengambit” by József Pálkövi (Caissa
American OTB player rated 2285 by Chess Books, Kecskemet 2000).
FIDE). The fruits of his work are now This is not intended to be the kind
available as a CD-ROM electronic book of article that makes new analytical
published by Pickard & Son of Dallas, suggestions, but in view of the wide
Texas (www.chesscentral.com or PO Box discrepancy between what different
2320, Wylie TX 75098); price $29.95. sources say about the Traxler, I think
Mr Heisman is a member of the Inter- a comparative survey is useful. I shall
national Computer Chess Association start with the popular 5 ¥xf7+ lines
and worked at both the Kasparov-Deep and in part 2 I shall move on to the
Blue matches. If any opening would lend line where White is coming closest to
itself to new discoveries being made by a a refutation.

www.chessmail.com 45
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+lwqk+-tr0 New evidence may revive the latter.
9zppzpp+pzpp0 It is not easy to find new games which
9-+n+-sn-+0 are not on the CD but here are a couple
9+-vl-zp-sN-0 of recent games which illustrate how
9-+L+P+-+0 White can lose if he puts a foot wrong.
9+-+-+-+-0
9PzPPzP-zPPzP0 Eberhard Rosenhahn (GER) -
9tRNvLQmK-+R0 Jonathan A. Tait (ENG)
xiiiiiiiiy Thematic RC/1/93/final corr ICCF, 2000
1 e4 e5 2 ¤f3 ¤c6 3 ¥c4 ¤f6 4 ¤g5
¥c5 5 ¥xf7+
This move, leading to spectacular 5 ¥xf7+ is the choice of those who
complications, was discovered by Czech follow orthodox theory or just want to
master Karel Traxler in the 1890s and was keep the position under some sort of
much analysed by the Wilkes-Barre Club control. White settles for just an extra
of the USA in the 1930s. Revived in the pawn but it is not easy to prevent Black
1960s by Yakov Estrin, a lot more has from obtaining compensation.
been discovered about it since. 5...¢e7 6 ¥c4!?
When studying sharp openings, it is Better than its reputation says Heis-
usually best to look first at “established” man. 6 ¥d5 or 6 ¥b3 would be normal;
GM sources to see “what the world see the next game.
knows”. Only then can you judge if a 6...¦f8 7 d3²
new idea is actually good. Heisman says “A simple move; Black
This approach to study is particularly cannot do anything drastic.” He gives the
valuable for CC as there are often easy following line to illustrate that: 7...¥xf2+?
points to be won in sharp openings 8 ¢xf2 ¤xe4+ 9 ¢g1 ¤f2 10 £h5 d5 11
against opponents who don’t have good ¤xh7 ¤xh1 12 ¥g5+ ¦f6 13 £g6+-.
reference books or up-to-date databases, 7...d6 8 h3 £e8 9 0–0 £g6 10 ¢h2?
and/or who are too ready to believe what h6 11 ¤f3
the standard works recommend. XIIIIIIIIY
I began with “NCO” (Nunn’s Chess 9r+l+-tr-+0
Openings, 1998) especially as this was 9zppzp-mk-zp-0
one of the sections edited by John Nunn 9-+nzp-snqzp0
personally. He devotes two lines (and 9+-vl-zp-+-0
several notes) to the Traxler. 9-+L+P+-+0
He said the ¤ capture on f7 is losing 9+-+P+N+P0
for White while the ¥ capture promises a 9PzPP+-zPPmK0
slight advantage if followed up by 6 ¥b3!, 9tRNvLQ+R+-0
but 5 ¥xf7+ ¢e7 6 ¥d5 is unclear. xiiiiiiiiy
“ECO” (3rd edition, 1997) on the other
hand considers 5 ¤xf7 is equal whether 11...¤g4+! 12 hxg4 ¥xg4 13 ¤bd2
White continues with 6 ¢xf2 or 6 ¢f1. £h5+ 14 ¢g1 ¤d4 0–1.

46 1/2001
Pavle Hrvacic (CRO) - the only move says Pálkövi, but it leads
István Brindza (YUG) to the same position.) 11 ¦xf2 ¤xf2 12
Mare Nostrum teams, Board 3, 1999 ¢xf2 and now not 12...¥f5 13 d3 £d7 14
1 e4 e5 2 ¤f3 ¤c6 3 ¥c4 ¤f6 4 ¤g5 ¥d5!² as in Bormann-Andrae, corr 1990
¥c5 5 ¥xf7+ ¢e7 6 ¥d5 (cited by Pálkövi) but 12...¥xh3!³.
Before following the main game, let I replied 13 d3 and got a dra.w
us take a look at 6 ¥b3 as recommended Heisman, who rediscovered this line
by Nunn. which other theoreticians have over-
XIIIIIIIIY ooked, thinks 13 gxh3 (not 13 £h1?! £d7)
9r+lwq-+-tr0 may be the lesser evil. Anyway, Black is
9zppzppmk-zpp0 the one playing for a win here.
9-+n+-sn-+0 (Nevertheless 9 h3 may give White an
9+-vl-zp-sN-0 edge. As my old book said, 10 ¥d5!? is
9-+-+P+-+0 better than 10 c3 despite the loss of time
9+L+-+-+-0 with the ¥, and Estrin later agreed.)
9PzPPzP-zPPzP0 Now we return to the game and
9tRNvLQmK-+R0 the 6 ¥d5 line.
xiiiiiiiiy XIIIIIIIIY
9r+lwq-+-tr0
Now play may go 6...¦f8 (6...£e8 and 9zppzppmk-zpp0
6...d6 are also possible.) 7 0–0 d6 8 ¤c3 9-+n+-sn-+0
£e8 9 ¤d5+ ¢d8 10 c3 h6 (10...£g6 11 9+-vlLzp-sN-0
d4 exd4 12 ¤f4+-) 11 d4 exd4 12 ¤xf6 9-+-+P+-+0
¦xf6 13 e5 (Howell-David, Groningen 9+-+-+-+-0
1995) 13...¦f8 14 exd6 hxg5 15 ¥xg5+ 9PzPPzP-zPPzP0
¦f6 16 dxc7+ ¢xc7 17 ¥xf6 gxf6 18 9tRNvLQmK-+R0
¦c1² Howell. See INF 66/278; this is the xiiiiiiiiy
recommended line in ECO too.
However it is not clear that 7 0-0 is 6...¦f8
best; castling may well be premature In a rare outing for the Traxler at
as it clarifies White’s intentions for his GM level, Beliavsky got a draw against
opponent. 7 d3 keeps Black guessing Karpov with 6...d6 at the 1983 USSR
more, and 7 ¤c3 assures White of some Spartakiad. Against Anand in 1991,
advantage says Heisman. Beliavsky preferred 6...£e8 and won, but
After 7 0-0, instead of 7...d6 Black he stood worse in the opening.
can play 7...h6! when the most reliable 7 ¦f1?!
printed source is still “The Italian Game” A very strange move. 7 ¤f3 and 7 0–0
by Botterill & Harding (Batsford, 1977)! are the normal choices.
Harding-Gardner, corr 1975, con- 7...£e8 8 ¥xc6
tinued 8 ¤f3 d6 9 h3! ¤xe4 10 c3 foll- 8 ¤c3 d6 9 h3 £g6 10 d3 h6 11 ¤f3?
owing an old analysis by V.Panov. Then (11 ¥xc6 was necessary.) 11...£xg2
I was hit by 10...¥xf2+! (10...¤xf2 is 12 ¤h4 ¥xf2+ 13 ¦xf2 £g1+ 14 ¦f1

www.chessmail.com 47
£g3+ 15 ¢d2 £g5+ 0–1 Efimov-Shirov, 25 ¢e2 ¦f2+ 26 ¢e1 ¦hf3–+.
Gausdal Arnold Cup 1991. 22...¦f1+ 23 ¢d2 ¦8f2+ 24 ¢c3
8...dxc6 9 d3 ¥g4 10 f3 ¥d7! 11 f4? ¦xh2 25 a4 h5 26 b5 h4 27 d4 h3 28
¥g4 12 £d2 £h5! 13 fxe5!? ¥d8 ¦hh1 29 ¥xc7 ¦xb1 0–1.
From this point the notes to the game
are by the winner. We now move on to the lines where
XIIIIIIIIY White plays the “obvious” capture on f7
9r+-+-tr-+0 with the knight.
9zppzp-mk-zpp0
9-+p+-sn-+0 Readers of Pionierskaya Pravda -
9+-vl-zP-sNq0 GM Mikhail Tal
9-+-+P+l+0 Telephone corr, USSR 1968-69
9+-+P+-+-0 1 e4 e5 2 ¤f3 ¤c6 3 ¥c4 ¤f6 4 ¤g5
9PzPPwQ-+PzP0 ¥c5 5 ¤xf7 ¥xf2+
9tRNvL-mKR+-0 This piece sacrifice is the main point
xiiiiiiiiy of the Traxler. The white king is forced
into an exposed position whatever the
13 ¤f3 ¥xf3 14 gxf3 £h4+ 15 ¢d1 reply. First, what happens if he takes
£h3 16 £e2. the bishop? (Part two will deal with the
13...¤d5!? 6 ¢f1 line.)
13...¤d7? 14 ¤f3 ¥xf3 15 £g5+ £xg5 XIIIIIIIIY
16 ¥xg5+ ¢e6 17 gxf3 h6 18 ¥d2 ¤xe5 9r+lwqk+-tr0
19 f4 ¤g4 20 f5+ ¢e7 21 h3 ¤e3 22 ¥xe3 9zppzpp+Nzpp0
¥xe3 23 ¢e2 ¥b6 24 ¤d2 g6 25 fxg6 9-+n+-sn-+0
¦xf1 26 ¦xf1 ¦g8 27 ¦f7+ +-. 9+-+-zp-+-0
14 ¤f3! 9-+L+P+-+0
14 d4 ¦xf1+ 15 ¢xf1 ¦f8+ (15...£xh2 9+-+-+-+-0
16 dxc5 ¦f8+ 17 ¤f3 ¦xf3+ 18 gxf3 ¥h3+ 9PzPPzP-vlPzP0
19 ¢e1 £g1+ 20 ¢e2 £f1#) 16 ¢g1 ¤f4 9tRNvLQmK-+R0
17 ¤c3 (17 dxc5 ¤e2+ –+) 17...£xg5 18 xiiiiiiiiy
g3 ¤h3+ 19 ¢g2 £xd2+ 20 ¥xd2 ¦f2+
21 ¢h1 ¥f3# () ; 14 £a5?? ¥b4+. 6 ¢xf2
14...¤e3! 15 £f2! ¥b4+ Accepting the piece was once believed
15...¥xf3 16 gxf3 ¦xf3 17 £xf3 £xf3. to lead to an early draw with best play
16 c3 ¤xf1 17 £xf1 ¥xf3 18 gxf3 but nowadays Black is preferred.
¦xf3 19 £g2 ¦af8! 20 £g5+ £xg5 6...¤xe4+ 7 ¢g1
21 ¥xg5+ ¢e6 22 cxb4? 7 ¢e3 £e7µ says Nunn.
22 ¤d2! ¦h3 23 ¤f1 (23 cxb4 h6 24 7...£h4 8 g3 ¤xg3 9 hxg3?
¤b3 hxg5 25 ¤c5+ ¢e7 26 ¤xb7 ¦xh2 White must try 9 ¤xh8 but equality
27 ¦c1 ¦ff2–+) 23...¥e7 (23...¦hf3 24 is the best he can hope for. 9...d5!?
¤d2 ¦h3 25 cxb4 h6) 24 ¥d2 (24 ¥xe7 (9...¤d4=) 10 £f3 ¤f5!µ.
¢xe7 25 ¢e2 g5 26 ¦d1 ¦hf3) 24...¥h4+ 9...£xg3+ 10 ¢f1 ¦f8

48 1/2001
Already with a clear plus for Black (See Grodzensky & Romanov, “Khod
says Nunn. v Konverte”, page 145. This was the
11 £h5 d5! 12 ¥xd5 actual finish but Heisman has it only as
XIIIIIIIIY a variation.)
9r+l+ktr-+0 Moscow schoolboy Vadim Brodsky
9zppzp-+Nzpp0 later showed that Tal had missed a win:
9-+n+-+-+0 26...¤f4+! 27 ¢h6 (27 ¢h4? h5!) 27...¦g6+
9+-+Lzp-+Q0 28 ¢xh7 ¦g7+ 29 ¢h6 (According to
9-+-+-+-+0 Heisman, this position was called a draw
9+-+-+-wq-0 by GM Soltis in the January 16, 2000
9PzPPzP-+-+0 “New York Post’; not 29 ¢h8 ¤g6#)
9tRNvL-+K+R0 29...¢g8! and Black will finish ...¦g6#.
xiiiiiiiiy (Heisman has only rediscovered a win
which Brodsky found 30 years earlier.).
12...¤d4 Can anyone clarify the circumstances
12...¤b4! is recommended for Black of this game? I think it was a CC consulta-
by Heisman. tion game in the USSR. Heisman just
13 £h2 £g4 14 £xe5+ ¥e6 15 ¥xe6 calls it Readers v Tal. We have also seen
£f3+ 16 ¢g1 ¤e2+ 17 ¢h2 £f2+ 18 White given as “White Rook Youth Club”
¢h3 £f3+ 19 ¢h4 £f2+ and as “Chitatelj” (a transliteration of the
19...£xh1+ 20 ¥h3+ ¢xf7 21 £e6#!. Russian word for Readers).
20 ¢h5? The mating position in Brodsky’s
After 20 ¢h3! the game should have variation is an echo of Rotlewi’s win
ended in perpetual check. against Fahrni at Karlsbad 1911:
20...¦xf7 21 ¥xf7+ ¢xf7 22 ¦h2 XIIIIIIIIY
£f3+ 23 ¢h4 g5+ 24 £xg5 ¦g8 25 9-+-+-+-+0
£h5+ £xh5+ 26 ¢xh5 9+-+-+-+k0
XIIIIIIIIY 9-+-+-mK-+0
9-+-+-+r+0 9+-+-+-+-0
9zppzp-+k+p0 9p+-+-sNR+0
9-+-+-+-+0 9+-+-+-+-0
9+-+-+-+K0 9-+-+-+-+0
9-+-+-+-+0 9+-+-+r+-0
9+-+-+-+-0 xiiiiiiiiy
9PzPPzPn+-tR0
9tRNvL-+-+-0 79...a3?? (79...¦b1) 80 ¢f7 ¢h6 81
xiiiiiiiiy ¢g8 1–0.

Now Heisman has the end of the game In part 2 (our next isue), we shall look
mixed up. at the most critical line, 5 ¤xf7 ¥xf2+
26...¤g3+? 27 ¢h6 ¤f5+ 28 ¢xh7 6 ¢f1 where major improvements for
¦g7+ ½–½. White have been found recently.

www.chessmail.com 49
Ectool, a solution for email players
by Tim Harding is your turn to move are highlighted and
you can set “alarms” to warn you when

A
NYONE who plays chess by email your move is overdue.
needs a program to manage the Games are stored by Ectool in separate
games. There are several advan- files with the extension ECT. When
tages to using a specialist chess pro- you start a new game, you enter the
gram rather than just ordinary email game data with such information as the
software; in particular, generating and opponent’s name and email address, the
sending/receiving move messages in colours and what format to use in the
the same program that stores the games email messages.
reduces the risk of “clerical” error. Ectool is very versatile here as it can
The most popular of such programs is produce PGN messages as required
Ectool. Later this year, other software for by clubs like IECG, but can also gen-
this purpose will be reviewed. erate messages in the ICCF template
Email chess software should: using either the numeric or algebraic
a) store the moves/positions and time notations.
data of the games you are playing; Information about opponents (even
b) display positions graphically; pictures) can be stored in an address
c) generate email messages to opp- book. However, at present this address
onents, and collect their replies; book is not linked to the game data.
d) enable your games to be exported When an opponent notified me of an
to chess database programs. email address change, I altered this in the
Ectool does all these tasks and more. address book, assuming the messages
Now in version 6, it is written by Spanish to him would now go to that address
programmer Andrés Valverde, who was (as would be the case with my normal
interviewed in Chess Mail 5/2000. I have email program, Eudora). However, the
been using Ectool for my email games address for the opponent in the game
in recent months. data remained unchanged and he did not
The initial window has several menus get my move although I was unaware
but most of the main functions are of this. I guess this is on the wish-list
accessible in Ectool 6 via three main for version 7.
buttons called Load, Mail, Connect (and To load a game, you click on the
there’s a fourth button, Exit). game list and it brings up the game
window, which you can near the top of
Games Manager the screenshot.
Clicking “Load” brings you to a list of The games window is in two parts. On
all the available games, which will usu- the left is the list of moves, with the dates
ally be all the email games you currently received and sent and the total times.
have in progress. Those games where it On the right is a graphical chessboard,

50 1/2001
A screenshot of Ectool 6 showing the toolbar, the games window
and the mail manager window, which can be maximised.

and you can have the black pieces at penalty would be entered here. Also if
the bottom if you are playing Black in either player’s time for a move has to
the game. Moves are easily made with be reduced because of leave a minus
the mouse and then appear in the list number would be entered here.
on the left. The games window also has menus
Ectool automatically calculates the where you can do such things as add
time taken for a move, assuming that comments to the move (for your eyes
the date received is the same as the only, not the opponent’s).
opponent’s date of sending and that the When you have entered your new
date sent is the current date. However, move, made any necessary adjustments
you can correct this information by and saved the new state of the game,
clicking on the dates. This brings up you can click Message to create an email
a small window called Time Register message to the opponent.
where you can adjust the dates on a little One thing I found difficult with the
calendar. You can enter adjustments program at first was what to do when a
to the time calculation in a box called game ends. In my opinion there should
(somewhat awkwardly) Penalisation. be a button beside the board where you
For example, if your opponent had can quickly enter a result. Instead you
initially sent an illegal move, the time
Concluded on page 64

www.chessmail.com 51
ICCF Tournament Results Service
ICCF Deputy President Tournaments (on leave of absence): Eckhard Lüers, Weidenstr.
9, 26135 Oldenburg, Germany. Fax +49 (0441)-13662. Email: elueers@t-online.de
Title Tournaments Commissioner (from 1/1/2001): Ing. Josef Mrkvicka, Houskova 32,
CZ-326 00 Plzen, Czech Republic. Email: mark.audit@pm.cesnet.cz
Email Tournament Office: Chris Lüers, Email: Chris.Lueers@t-online.de
Zone 2 Director (CADAP): Carlos Cranbourne (ARG) cacranb@attglobal.net
World Tournament Office Controller: Gian-Maria Tani, via Tripoli 20, I-10136 Torino,
Italy. Email: tani@torino.alpcom.it
Paying office: Account of the ICCF, i.e. 125633-70 Credit Suisse (Postgiro 30-3200-1),
CH-5001, Aarau, Switzerland, advising the ICCF Treasurer: C.Flores Gutiérrez, El Recreo
2 - Sport Aljarafe, E-41940 Tomares (Sevilla), Spain. Email: c.flores@retemail.es

World Championship Knebel 1, Stern, Grohde ½ Winge, 72/3.


Herr 1 Knebel, 0 Read (adj). GM-title:
Aleksandr V. Chigishev. (RUS), Yury
V. Gutop (RUS), Thed Klauner (LUX),
XIV final Dr. W. Stern (GER). S4 53/4. Staudler, Mario Versili, (ITA), Otakar Pachman
Tournament Director: Roald Berthelsen, Schuett ½ Olofson, 55/6. Leiber ½ (CZE), Dr. Giora Peli (ISL), Valerijs
Marknadsvägen 75, S-183 78 Täby Mooij, 0 Fleetwood, 57/8. Mooij 1 Krivonosovs, (LAT), Ilmars Graudins
(SVE). Sawatzki, ½ Zitkus, 59. Bulla 1 Paul. (LAT), Conny Persson (SVE).
S5 52/7. Tsoukkerman 1 Kristinsson, Results, S02 6. Staroske ½ Voetter,
Email: roald.berthelsen@swipnet.se
Jorgensen, ½ van Kempen, Nimtz, 7. Satici ½ Marcinkiewicz. S06 4/5.
105. Baumbach ½ Buj ½ (adjudication).
Hefka, 0 Zilberberg, 58/9. Kuehnel ½ Schmitzer 1 Cvetnic, ½ Brobakken,
Final result: see crosstable on p.53.
Kazoks, Hefka, 60. Cuno 1 Jorgensen, 6/15. Thomson 0 vs. all. S07 3/5.
61. Zajontz ½ Hefka. S6 47. Hafner Forsloef ½ Roach, Schneider, Herrmann.
World Championship ½ Butze, 48. Cranbourne ½ Mueller, S11 5/7. Teichmeister 1 Barlow,
XV final 49. Teichmeister ½ Spitz, 50/1. Lüers 1 Baumgartner, ½ Sunna, 8/9. Ernazarov 1
Blanco, ½ Atakisi. Baumgartner, ½ Dufek, 10. Baumgartner
TD: Witold Bielecki, al. Jaworowa ½ Faisst, 11/20. Taboada 0 vs. all.
34a/2, PL 53-123, Wrocław (POL).
World Ch. XXII
Email: polszach@arka.mtl.pl
94. Timmerman ½ Barlow. Semi-final Ladies World Ch. VII
TD: Witold Bielecki Semi-final
World Championship S01 93/4. Bensiek 1 Peli, ½ Edwards, TD: Gianni Mastrojeni, Via A. Smareg-
XVI final 95. Aleshnya 1 Hamilton. S02 92.
Pedersen 1 Kusnetsov. S03 84. Eiben 0
lia, 12,00143 Roma RM (ITA).
Email: mastro@micanet.it
TD: Witold Bielecki, al. Jaworowa Cardelli, 85. Kurth 1 Palsson. S04 98/9. Section 1: 67. Dambrauskaite 1 Siew-
34a/2, PL 53-123, Wrocław (POL). Wang 1, Ugge 0 Matyukhin. Qualified ert.
Email: polszach@arka.mtl.pl for a 3/4-final: M. Rümmele (GER). Section 2: 71.Abolina 0 Rosenfield;
28/9. Kofidis 0 Sevecek, Soltau, 30. S05 85/6. Zawadka 1 Haufe, Chrestani. 72.Barber 0 Roos; 73.Roos 1 Abolina;
Ekebjaerg ½ Mohrlok, 31. Rittner ½ IM-title: A. Zawadka (POL). S06 94. 74.Abolina 0 Bazantova; 75.Jatsenko ½
Soltau. Whiteside ½ Svoboda. S07 IM-title: Botseva; 76. Bazantova 0 Yatsenko.
M. Drtina (SLK). S08 76/8. Kantorik Section 3: 54.Popov ½ Kubikova;
World Championship ½ Espindola, 0 Tsvetkov, Tkaczyk, 79.
Gromotka 0 Espindola. S10 95. Verdier
55.Sukhareva 1 Merino; 56.Abolina 0
Sukhareva.
XIX 3/4-final 0 Jakobetz.
TD: Witold Bielecki Ladies Olympiad V,
S1 56. Bock ½ May, 57. Savage 0 World Ch. XXIV Final
Kratochvil, 58. Marczell ½ Elwert, 59.
Kubach 1 Scuderi, 60. Gessat ½ Lukez,
Semi-final TD: Hans Wiesner (CAN)
61/4. Linna 1 Ludgate, Habermehl, TD: Witold Bielecki
Congratulation to the following player
Scuderi, ½ Marczell. S2 51. Mraz ½ Late section, Section 13 (Start:
for having achieved various titles J.
Polzer, 52. Holmberg ½ Pasko, 53. 31.10.2000 - Category VII; GM: 8
Roos (FRA) LGM Title 5½/8 I. Per-
Grabinger 1 John. S3 67. Haese 1 Kraft, points - IM: 6 points). Players: Toon
evertkina (RUS) LIM Title 4/6 S.
68. Kalinichenko ½ Tochacek, 69/71. Notten (NED), Henk Panman (NED),

52 1/2001
World Championship XIV Final 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts.
1 Õim, Tõnu O. EST * ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 11
2 Ekebjærg, Ove C. DEN ½ * 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 10½
3 Lecroq, Michel OST 1 0 * ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 9½
4 Hamarat, Tunc FRA ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 9½
5 Webb, Simon ENG ½ 0 0 ½ * ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 0 1 1 1 1 8½
6 Morgado, Juan S. ARG 0 0 ½ ½ ½ * ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 8
7 Stern, Dr Werner GER 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ * 0 1 1 1 ½ ½ 1 1 7½
8 Sanakoev, Grigory K. RUS 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 1 * ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 7
9 Anton, Volker-M. GER 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ * ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 7
10 Boll, Peter Albertus NLD 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1 ½ * 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 6½
11 Baumbach, Fritz GER ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 0 0 * ½ 1 ½ 1 5½
12 Franzen, Jozef SLK 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ * ½ 0 1 5½
13 Kristol, Luba ISL 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ * 1 1 5½
14 Buj, Pablo ARG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 0 * 1 3½
15 Cordovil, João POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0

Bengtsson (SVE) LIM Title 4/8. MN/32 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pts.


Results, Board 1 26. Mozna (CZE) 0
1 M. Henk GER ½ 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 8
Jones (ENG), 27. Roos (FRA) ½ Fratila
(ROM), 28. Bengtsson (SVE) ½ Roos, 2 W. Fuchs GER ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 6½
29. Roos 1 Radzikowska (POL), 30. 3 W.M. Vlasveld NLD 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 6
Perevertkina (RUS) 1 Mozna (#21), 4 H. Otte GER 0 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 5½
31. Bengtsson ½ Perevertkina. Board
2 19. Barber (ENG) 1 Aksiuczyc 5 S. De Paz Nistal ESP 0 1 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 5
(POL). Board 3 19. Babulova (CZE) 1 6 A. Kovács HUN 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 5
Karlsson (SVE), 20. Moisoiu (ROM) 7 F. Geider FRA ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 4½
½ Babulova. Board 4 23. Hendrickson 8 J.A. Cornu SWZ ½ 0 1 0 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 4
(USA) 0 Nejezchlebova (CZE). 24.
Nejezchlebova 1 Kopec-Umiastowska 9 R. Nocci ITA ½ ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ 1 1 4
(POL). 25. Kopec-Umiastowska 1 10 H. Alvarez Villar ARG 0 0 1 ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 3½
Legall (FRA) 26. Rufitskaya (RUS) 1 11 J. Sandberg SVE 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 3
Legall, 27. Mihai (ROM) 1 Legall.
BRS 1 Neuschmied OST, 50 Gouw LUX 1 Cvetnik CRO.
Ladies Olympiad VI, NLD 0 Gefenas LIT, Board 3: 41 Team Result: 23 POL-SIP 6-0.
Preliminaries Felicio BRS ½ Sevecek CZE, Board 4:
41 Joao BRS ½ Cody CAN, 42 Mousa
Section 3, Board 1: 44/45 Wallner
OST ½ Stornelli ITA, Aldrete MEX.
TD: Hans Wiesner (CAN) QTR 0 Issler SWZ, Board 5: 51 Al- 46 Hyldkrog DEN ½ Hamilton AUS,
Section 1 Board 1 10. Roos (FRA) Khateeb QTR 0 (silent) Busemann Board 2: 47 Zaric AUS 1 Jardorf
½ Popov (JUG), 11. Roos 1 Hagarova GER, Board 6: CORR: 59 Watson SCO DEN, Board 3: 51 Schelleman CAN
(SLK), 12. Cimina (LAT) 0 Roos, 13. 1 Barata/Mascarenhas BRS 1 Gramer SVE, Board 5: 45 Kolcak
Minescu (ROM) 0 Roos. Board 3 9. Leaves: Shadarevian 2-16/11 (FIDE SLK 1 Degerhammar SVE, Board 6:
Popovic ½ Malahovska (LAT). Board Olympiad), 25/11-15/12 (FIDE IA in 52/53 Cassidy IRL 1 Trehan IND, ½
4 7. Chorvatova (SLK) 1 Legall (FRA), India), Mraz 18/10-1/11 (spec) Cardoso MEX.
8. Legall 0 Mihai (ROM), 9. Matanovic Team Results: 10 LAT-GER 2½-3½ , Team Results: 12 DEN-AUS 2-4, 13
(JUG) 1 Legall, 10, Legall 0 Zimina 11 LAT-CAN 5½-½. IND-IRL 2½-3½.
(RUS). Section 4, Board 1: 46 Mooij NLD ½
New Captain Argentina: Claudio C.C. Olympiad XIII, Dronov RUS, Board 2: 31/32 Karason
ISD ½ Camilleri MLT, Boissel FRA,
Goncalves <drcjg@attglobal.net>
Section 2 Board 3 15. Fonio (ITA) 1 Preliminaries Board 3: 52 Vincenti MLT 0 Pillhock
Tilk (EST). TD: Roald Berthelsen NLD, 53 Herb FRA ½ Pinkovetsky
RUS, Board 4: 44 Maillard USA ½
Email: roald.berthelsen@swipnet.se
C.C. Olympiad XII Section 1, Board 2: 37/38 Baumbach
Thomson SCO, 45/46 van Egmond
NLD ½ Timor HUN, Mirkovic YUG,
Final GER 1 Salcedo CUB, 0 Sande NOR. 39 47 Leotard FRA 1 Sammut MLT, Board
Piccoli BRS ½ Roose BEL, Board 6: 6: 52 Neil SCO ½ Salmins LAT.
Tournament Director: Roald Berthelsen, 33 Ripoll ESP ½ Botchev BLG
Marknadsvägen 75, S-183 78 Täby Team Result: 11 LAT-SCO 4½-1½ 1
Team Result: 11 GER-NOR 4-2. Krivonosovs 1Kilgour, 2 Batakovs 1
(SVE) roald.berthelsen@swipnet.se Section 2, Board 1: 54 Read ENG Borwell, 3 Viksna ½ Gillam, 4 Boleslavs
Board 1: 32 Hamarat OST 1 Portilho 1 Nizynski POL, Board 5: 53 ½ Thomson, 5 Gaujens 1 Sprott, 6
BRS, Board 2: 47/48 Saksis LAT 1 Jedrzejowski POL 1 Oon SIP, Board 6: Salmins ½ Neil
Deidun CAN, ½ Nimtz GER. 49 Cresce 53 Rocius LIT 1 Pierzak POL, 54 Riva Leave: Svacek 18/11-17/12 spec

www.chessmail.com 53
C.C. Olympiad XIV (Email Oly), 1 Schmaus. MN/71: 31. Vötter 1 Auzins. MN/72: 44. Montag
½ Hampl. MN/73: 22. Dalvi ½ Richter. MN/74: 36. Thomsen
Preliminaries 1 Schmelz, 37. Schmelz 1 Fröberg, 38. Ziese ½ Fröberg.
MN/75: 34. Nocci 1 Bensiek. Jungnickel 1.etl vs. Cornu nc.
TD: Roald Berthelsen Email: roald.berthelsen@swipnet.se m. 41 MN/76: 38. Labuz 0 Betzelt. MN/77: 32. Hempel ½
Section 1, Board 6: 1 Petkov BLG 1 Cardoso MEX. Larsen. MN/78: 18. Dondelinger ½ Striepens, 19. Fomin
Title Norms Section 1: Board 1 Category 9 GM-norm 8 ½ Wuttke. MN/79: 15. Schreiber ½ Balta, 16. Schreiber ½
pts IM-norm 5½ pts, Board 2 Category 8 GM-norm 8 pts De Vriendt, 17. Ferré Pérez 0 Baum, 18. Just 0 Engelhardt.
IM-norm 6 pts, Board 3 Category 8 GM-norm 8 pts IM-norm MN/80: 13. Goertz ½ Fields, 14. Niro ½ Goertz, 15. Goertz
6 pts, Board 4 Category 4 IM-norm 7½ pts Rule 4 C, Board 0 Salov. MN/81: 32. Nitsche 1 Reed, 33. Huuskonen ½ Idler,
5 Category 4 IM-norm 7½ pts Rule 4 C, Board 6 Category 4 34. Reed 0 Canal Oliveras. MN/83: 17. Ryska 0 Schaar, 18.
IM-norm 7½ pts ILM-norm 3 pts, Ryska ½ Fischer, 19. Dearnley 1 Schaar. MN/85: 4. Richter
Section 2, Board 3: 1 Rodriguez Abreu CUB ½ May DEN, 1 Mathes, 5. Pechwitz ½ Richter, 6. Mathes ½ Pechwitz.
Board 5: 1-2 Sakai JPN ½ Vega Palma CUB, Grabner OST. MN/86: 1. Winkler ½ Bensiek. MN/87: 7. Koch 0 Liebert.
Title Norms Section 2, Board 1 Category 9 GM-norm 8 pts MN/88: 1. Armani ½ Pommerel.
IM-norm 5½ pts, Board 2 Category 8 GM-norm 8 pts IM-norm Leaves: Canibal 1-9.12, Hallier 20.9-3011 (special), Perea
6 pts, Board 3 Category 7 GM-norm 8½ pts IM-norm 6½ Montero 9-29.10 (special), Reichel 9-18.11, Sandström
pts, Board 4 Category 6 IM-norm 7 pts Rule 4 C, Board 5 17-31.12 + 1-30.1.
Category 4 IM-norm 7½ pts, Board 6 Category 2 IM-norm
8 pts Rule 4 C.
Section 3, Board 2: 1/3 Peres POR ½ Sinka HUN, Holanda Email Master Norm Tournaments
BRS, Coleman ENG, Board 3: 1-2 Hardicsay HUN ½ TD: Carlos Flores Gutiérrez
Delavekouras GRC, Zivkovic CRO, Board 4: 1-3 Barnsley EM/MN/012: 53. Pietrocola ½ Fernandes. EM/MN/013: 54.
ENG ½ Rissanen FIN, Morais POR, Gaujens LAT. Leroy 1 Schmidt. Master result: Leroy (BEL). EM/MN/014:
Title Norms Section 3, Board 1 Category 9 GM-norm 8 pts 49. Lautenbach ½ Smithers, 50. Lautenbach 1 Halwick,
IM-norm 5½ pts, Board 2 Category 8 GM-norm 8 pts IM-norm 51. Shure 1 Lautenbach, 52. Halldorsson 0 Lautenbach.
6 pts, Board 3 Category 5 IM-norm 7 pts, Board 4 Category 5 EM/MN/015: 48. Kruse ½ Buecker, 49. Verducci ½ Rezzuti,
IM-norm 7 pts, Board 5 Category 4 IM-norm 7½ pts, Board 6 50. Buecker 1 Verducci, 51. Verducci ½ Olausson, 52. Schmidt
Category 4 IM-norm 7½ pts Rule 4 C, 1 Beaumont. Master results: Beaumont (ARG) and Buecker
Section 4, Board 1: 1-3 Van Osmael BEL ½ Cardelli ITA, (GER).
Chorfi ICP, 0 Ilyes NOR . 4 Ilyes 1 Cardelli. Rybak CZE ill. Leaves: Blau 10-24.11 (special) (corr.).
Re-start 9/10. Board 2: 1 Tilgham USA ½ Kösebay TRK, TD for new groups starting from 1/1/2000: Grayling V. Hill
2 Siigur EST ½ Johnson IRL, Board 3: 4 Sergel USA ½ (USA). Email: Gvhill@aol.com
Samraoui ICP, Board 5: 1-2 Klausen NOR 1 Albano USA,
EM/MN/016: 53.Huybrecht 0 Kharitonov, EM/MN/017:
Batres GUA.
23.Voetter 1 Wosch, 24.Giobbi 0 Pribyl, 25.Grau Ribas 0
Title Norms Section 4, Board 1 Category 10 GM-norm 7½
Wosch, 26.Berloef 1 Kaczorowski, 27.Blum 0 Kaczorowski,
pts IM-norm 5½ pts, Board 2 Category 7 GM-norm 8½ pts
EM/MN/018: 33.Lagerborg 1 Gierth, 34.Hernaez Fernandez
IM-norm 6½ pts, Board 3 Category 6 IM-norm 7 pts, Board
1 Lagerborg, 35.Rowley 1 Gierth, 36.Gierth ½ Andersen,
4 Category 5 IM-norm 7 pts Rule 4 C, Board 5 Category
EM/MN/019: 29.Bellmann 1 Mary, 30.Rabrenovic ½ Menghi,
4 IM-norm 7½ pts ILM-norm 3 pts, Board 6 Category 3
31.Behling 1 Pietrocola, 32.Montverde 1 Mary, 33.Pietrocola
IM-norm 8 pts,
1 Hariman, 34.Koch ½ Droessler, 35.Menghi 1 Hariman,
Leaves: Simic 6-20/10, Romanov 20-30/10, Kostakiev
36.Menghi 1 Koch, 37.Mary 0 Rabrenovic. Koch 1st etl against
25/9-12/10, Miciak 23/10-3/11, Samtani 1-15/10, Sapundjiev
Rabrenovic, EM/MN/020: 14.Schmelz ½ Bueno, 15.Mrazik 0
4-21/10, Stefanov 10-25/10, Hagelstein 28/9-18/10, Moise
Novak, 16.Alpert ½ Tinjaca, 17.Alpert ½ Limayo, 18.Siviero
18/10-17/11, Salceanu 27/9-16/10, Oikamo , 26/9-25/10,
½ Mrazik, 19.Alpert ½ Siviero, 20.Mrazik 1 Schmelz, 21.
Barnsley 17-27/10, Hnervet 5-10/10+27/10,7/11, Costa 1/11-
Cerqueira Filho 0 Pauwels, EM/MN/021: 17.Krabbe 0 Tay,
30/11+1/12-31/12 (spec), Hardicsay , 18/10-11/11, Hofstetter
18.Tay ½ Castellano, 19.Eilmes 0 Krabbe. Master Norm: Tay
19-31/10 (ill), Arduman and Gurcan 28/10-13/11 (FIDE OLY),
(SIP). EM/MN/022: 12.Agostini 1 Canibal, 13.Senischev ½
Bross 21-28/10, Harding, 16/10-10/11, Vaindl 16-22/10. Kim
Deneuville, 14.Senischev ½ Rosche, 15.Santagata 1 Armani,
25/9-5/10 (techn.problem).
16.Kmiecik ½ Agostini, 17.Santagata ½ Shreiber, 18.Senischev
½ Canibal, 19.Agostini ½ Sabaev, 20.Deneuville 0 Canibal,
Master Norm Tournaments 21.Kmiecik 0 Shreiber, EM/MN/023: 9.Gutsche 1 Nielsen,
TD: Carlos Flores Gutiérrez, El Recreo 2 - Sport Aljarafe, 10.Gutsche ½ Grimm, 11.Thomsen ½ Prabhakar, 12.Grimm
E-41940 Tomares (Sevilla), Spain ½ Thomsen, 13.Grimm ½ Van Unen, 14.Gutsche ½ Schmidt,
EM/MN/024: 2.Blau 1 Schaar, 3.Castellano 0 Balabaev.
Email: c.flores@retemail.es Leaves: Baklanov 13/10-26/10, Berglöf 13/10-29/10 (special),
MN/20: 53. Feytens ½ Levertov. MN/23: 53. Pankratov 1 Kaczorowski 07/10-05/11, Prabhakar 21/10-04/11, Sabaev
Karásek. MN/32: 55. Kovács 1 Nocci. MN/40: 50. Berriot 11/10-25/10.
½ Litovicius. MN/52: 52. Kruchem 1 Sánchez Ródenas.
MN/57: Diani 1.etl vs. Shishkov nc. m. 21 MN/59: 45.
Kriese 1 Moreno Ramos, 46. Kriese 0 Macs. MN/63: 42.
Sánchez Ródenas ½ Nocci. MN/65: 33. De Abreu 1 Schreiber,
H-W. von Massow Memorial
34. Klein 1 Galvan, 35. Chorvát ½ Pesonen. MN/66: 43. Organised by BdF. Tournament Director: Roald Berthelsen,
Castellano 0 Bergmann. Master result: Bergmann (GER). Marknadsvägen 75, S-183 78 Täby (SVE).
MN/67: 48. Fogagnolo ½ Gibney. MN/68: 42. Lachmann 1 Email: roald.berthelsen@swipnet.se
Romero Sánchez, 43. Romero Sánchez 0 Krüger, 44. Vasilev 89 Timmerman 1 Baumbach, 90 Timmerman ½ Sanakoev, 91
½ Rosin. MN/69: 46. Szczepaniewicz 1 Lennox, 47. Lennox Webb ½ Morgado. Webb has concluded all games 7 pts/14.

54 1/2001
Millennium WT/M/GT/371 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts.
Email 1 Castelli, S. ITA 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12½
Organised by NBC. 2 Gilbert, Ch. FRA 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12
TD Nol van’t Riet 3 Prokopp, H. GER ½ ½ 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12
AA.Riet@inter.NL.net 4 Schmidt, T. GER ½ 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11½
9. van Oosterom ½ Anders- 5 Gnirk, H. GER ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 9
son, 10. Andersson. ½Tar- 6 Lagergren, H. FIN 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 9
nowiecki. 7 Mostowik, D. POL 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 8½

CAPA-X 8 Tobies, R.
9 Horst, L.
GER
GER
0 0
0 0
0 0 ½ ½
0 0 0 ½
0
½ ½
½
½
1 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

7
Jubilee 10 Bullockus, T. USA 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 6
TD: Marcelo Esses (ARG) 11 Chladek, V. CZE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 4
8. Morgado ½ Alvarez. 9. 12 Waldrep, C.E. USA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 3
Berdichesky 0 Rause, 10.
Elwert 0 Sanakoev, 11. 13 Dashkevich, V.I. RUS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2
Morgado ½ Berdichesky. 14 Koser, E. GER 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
15 Jacimovic, Z. YUG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

World Tournaments: Master Class Vacations: Blauhut (special), Canibal, Engelhardt, Hallier
(special), Heinig, Heise, Hill, Kotelnikov, Kröncke, Martin.
Sections from 764: Rubens Battistini, via A. Costa 106/2, Pihlajinen, Pohle, Schwertel, Woldmo.
I-40134 Bologna (ITA) rig4592@iperbole.bologna.it GT (except #389: Tani): Rubens Battistini, via A. Costa 106/2,
WT/M/765 17. Jasak 0 von Rein. 770 16. Taiana 1 Weyand, I-40134 Bologna (ITA)
17. Vins 0 Taiana. 775 17. Pakroff 1 Rodriguez F. 18. Sandberg WT/M/GT/358 102. Grigoriev 0 Miettinen. 103. Vlasveld
½ Cane, 19. Zmokly ½ Pakroff. 776 20. Peetoom ½ Gorochov. ½ Grigoriev. 359 103. Martschenko ½ Dannehr. 367 103.
779 17. Greiner ½ Donatini. 780 11. Oon 0 Bauer. 781 18. Liukmanov 1 Gnirk. 371 105. Mostowik ½ Gnirk. (see the
Malmberg 0 Fields, 19. Fields 1 Heinig. 782 16. Zanetti Fay, crosstable) 375 104. Petrov 1 Eilers. 377 100. Bacon ½ Bohak.
17. Gajarsky ½ Litz. 785 20. Incelli 0 Wilshusen. 787 18. 378 99. Serafimovic 0 Kosebay, 100/1. Stoliar 0 Serafimovic,
Starke 0 Baroin, 19. Baroin 0 Schmidbauer. 788 13. Tinjaca 0 Schmalstieg. 381 100. Thal 0 Tria. 101. Radoslavic 0
½ Schmidbauer. 789 15. Lawrwnce ½ Groth. 790 18. Dege Shchebenjuk. 383 94. Alfimov ½ Gebhardt. 387 98. Nakic 0
½ Mehlhorn. 19. Fleischanderl 1 Hymas. 791 16. Pihlajnen Brusila. 388 98. Wagner ½ Drysdale, 99. Gertz 0 Drysdale.
0 Niro, 17. Norris ½ Pihlajnen, 18. Pihlajnen 0 Vosahlik. Bothe 1st etl. vs Horvat. 390 89. Katzl 1 Astanin. 90. Katzl 0
792 19. von Rein 1 Karelin, 20. Grabowski 0 von Rein. Delfs, 91/2. Schönbeck 1, Drazkowski 1 Katz. 391 61. Hill ½
794 13/4. Boschek 0 Korchut, 0 Schmidt. 795 10. Kaiser 1 Saveljev, 62. Saveljev 1 Silfver, 63. Lafarge ½ Saveljev, 64/5.
Kevicky. 796 16. Andersson ½ Kastner. 797 16. Six 0 Lunek. Hill 1 de Boer, 1 Hüttmann, 66. Hill ½ Pawlowski. 67. Lafarge
17. Johannesson 1 Giddins, 18. Lunek 1 Svendsen. 798 12. 1 de Boer, 68. Pipitone ½ Bortolin, 69. Mogilny ½ Saveljev.
Tramacere 1 Diener, 13. Johannesson 0 Tramacere. 799 11/2. 392 88. Gatto ½ Kharitonov. 393 53. Chiva Vega 1 Lagergren,
Rehor ½ Schröder, ½ Lertora. 800 8. Daum 1 Milgram, 9. 54. Sparnacini 0 Chiva Vega, 55. Simon 0 Goedkoop, 56.
Milgram 0 Packroff. 801 4. Chrobak 1 Lertora. Wilkes 1st Ilyin 1 Golovkin. 57. Cordoba 1 Sparnacini, 58. Spendowski
etl vs Chrobak. 802 5. Günther 1 Svensson. 803 7. Carlson 0 Goedkoop, 59. Chiva Vega ½ Cordoba. 394 79. Jakubov-
1 Schmidt. 8. Papenfuß 1 Schmidt. 804 4. Einarsson ½ Karkuth continues, 81. Ciprian 0 Gromotka, 82. Caldieri ½
Kuntermann. 805 15. Maruhn 0 Costa. 806 11. Bighi ½ Pitters, 83. Jakubov 0 Pitters, 84. Gronkowski 1 Jakubov.
Richter, 12. Richter 1 Schirmer. 13. Andersson ½ Dodgson. 395 69. Pukropski ½ Chmelik, 70. Sneppe 1 Weber. 71.
807 10. Lane ½ Hallberg. 11. Malmberg 1 Hallberg. 808 7. Amann 1 Chomicki, 72. Gebhardt 0 Sneppe. 396 69. Zautzig
Detmer 0 Sandberg, 8/9. Sandberg ½, Detmer 0 Goudlaugsson, 1 Arbrile, 70. Herold ½ Frijling. 71. Arbrile 1 Herold, 72.
10/1. Sagström 1, Fischer 1 Detmer. Zmuk ½ Duben. 397 74. Rawlings 1 Nazarov. 75. Nazarov
Vacations: Dushin, Carlson, Heise, Hill, Kisters, Salgaocar, 1 Rasmussen, 76. Pietruske 0 Rawlings, 77. Trushnikov ½
Richter. Incelli, 78/9. Goldt ½ Chomicki, 1 Incelli. 398 58. Shablinsky
New series, WT/M/1001 15. Standke ½ Höglund. 1002 5/6. 1 Ansorge, 59. Wsciubiak 0 Nicholson, 60. Jodice ½ Mokrys.
Antin 0 Arounopoulos, ½ Schulze, 7. Hallier 1 Schulze, 61. Smolensky 0 Garcia Riera, 62. Mokrys 1 Nicholson, 63.
8. Vasseur ½ Chessing. 9. Schulze 0 Arounopoulos. 1003 Garcia Riera 1 Wsciubiak. 399 80. Marusiak 0 Jeninson. 81.
5. Staf ½ Giorgi. 6. Kretschmer ½ Fischer, 7. Fischer ½ Steinberger 0 De Smet, 82. Jenkinson 0 Keuter, 83. Marusiak
Staf, 8. Staf ½ Gromotka, 9. Gromotka ½ Kretschmer. 1004 0 Jenkinson, 84. de Boer 0 Marusiak. 400 46/7. Tödter 1
13/4. Arounopoulos ½ Kröncke, ½ Pohle, 15/6. Otte ½ Denaro, 0 Vornanen, 48. Hymas 0 Keitsch, 49. Keitsch 1
Arounopoulos, 1 Pohle, 17. Dege ½ Pohle, Kröncke 1st etl. vs Hug, 50. Hymas 0 Talmadge. 51. Kaluza ½ Vornanen, 52.
Pohle. 1005 5. Blauhut ½ Drazkowski, 6. Gindl ½ Sacerdotali, Hymas 0 Langschmidt, 53. Belis 1 Hymas, 54. Talmadge ½
7. Schumacher ½ Gindl, 8/9. Andersson ½ Trottnow, ½ Belis. 401 25. Nefedov 0 Wolff, 26. Pampa 0 Kugeler. 27.
Schumacher, 10. Trottnow ½ Schumacher. 1006 5. Gundrum Danzanvilliers ½ Mrkvicka, 28. Mrkvicka 1 Kugeler, 29.
0 Heidtmann. 6. Roux ½ Grigat. 1007 1. Ward 0 Isigkeit Norin ½ Walther, 30. Walther ½ Pampa, 31/2. Montgomery
(errata), 15. Isigkeit ½ Keuter. 16. Bialas ½ Blokland. 1008 1. 0, Walther 0 Danzanvilliers, 33. Mrkvicka 1 Gnirk. 402 39.
Packoff ½ Molzahn. 1009 1. Phillips 1 Heinig. 1010 Detmer Isikeit 1 Ciprian, 40. Ciprian 0 Bergerhoff, 41/2. Korchut
vs all: games cancelled. 0 Eilers, 0 Rain, 43. Saslowski 0 Moscovic, 44. Roelens ½

www.chessmail.com 55
Bilawer, 45/6. Sacher 1 Isigkeit, ½ Gnirk, 47. Isigkeit ½
Bilawer. 48. Devocelle 0 Bergerhoff, 49. Bergerhoff 1 Rain,
Open Class
50. Moscovic 0 Roelens, 51. Droßler 0 Bergerhoff. 403 56. TD: Carsten R. Thomsen, Skolevej 14,DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark
Hey ½ Bullockus. 57. Hey ½ Lagergren, 58. Fröberg 1 Grube, Email: crt_else@post6.tele.dk
59. Sparnacini 0 Hey, 60. Holschuh 1 Sparnacini. 404 28. 001: 1/6. Musso 0 All 7. Stöckert ½ Haeberle 8. Stöckert 1
Langreder 1 Schneider, 29. Poithier ½ Langreder, 30. Carmel 0 Bhari 9. Bhari 0 van Speybroeck, 002: 1. Sowter 1 Lieske
Gebhardt, 31. Otto 0 Gnirk. 32. Langreder 0 Tobies, 33. Tobies 2. Stöckert 1 de Clercq 3. Lieske 0 Stöckert 4. Heiermann 0
1 Schneider, 34. Poithier ½ Tobies. 405 43/54. Horchman 0 Stöckert 5. de Clercq 1 Lieske, 003: 1. Ribes 0 Stöckert 2.
vs all, 55/6. Engelhardt 1 Preussner, 1 Melson, 57. Melson ½ Buchhauser 0 Stöckert, 004: 1. Stöckert 1 Pettersson, 005: 1.
Knebel. 406 43/4. Lobanov ½, Martin 0 Gebhardt, 45. Vaindl Göritz ½ Maruhn, 006: 4. Mendes 0 Hirstel, 007: 3. Malzan
½ Prokopp, 46. Gebhardt 0 Vaindl, 47. Rieseler ½ Gachon, 1 Bogott 4. Bogott 0 Lüdigk 5. Cecchi 1 Ekmark 6. Ekmark 1
48. Lobanov ½ Rieseler, 49. Rieseler 0 Vaindl. 50/1. Rohde ½ Bogott 7. Ekmark ½ Lüdigk, 008: 8. Hohenberger ½ Malzan
Langreder, 1 Schulze, 52. Lobanov ½ Bärschneider. 9. Riegsecker 0 Malzan 10. Mirbach 1 Hohenberger, 012:
Vacations: Castellano, Garcia Riera, Goedkoop, Keitsch, 7. Kandler 1 Kreßmann, 013: 2. Unger ½ Drevikovsky 3.
Knebel, Mrkvicka, Mokrys, Sacher, Szczepaniak, Walther. Bredenhof ½ Unger 4. Lau ½ Kandler 5. Kandler 1 Unger, 016:
1. Jäger 0 Kaupat, 022: Heel (games cancelled) (He withdrew,
Higher Class before he started to play, with an acceptable excuse).
TD: Joseph Deidun Sr. P.O. Box 371, Bloomfield, On. Canada
KOK 1G0 First Class
Final Results,WT/H/922 20/1. Paglino 0 Disselhorst (adj), TD: Jørgen Axel Nielsen P.O. Box 1861, DK-8270 Højbjerg
0-0 Hudák (dbl. def). Positions: 1. S. Carlowitz (GER) 5½, (DEN). Email: janiccf@private.dk
2. D. Hudák (SLK) 4. 3./4. P. Bauget (FRA), J. Disselhorst Final Results, WT/I/1427: 15.Hurley 1 Kissick. Positions:
(USA) 3, 5. M. Paglino (ARG) 2½, 6. F. X. Kalvoda (GER) 1.B Fister (FRA) 5, 2.Prof. C J Roos (RSA) 3½, 3.R. Drion
½, H. G. Küthe 0. 932 21. Gzel 0 Sardella. Positions: 1./2. A. (BEL) 3, 4.K J Hurley (ENG) 2½, 5.P Kissick (AUS) 1,
Sardella (ITA), K. H. Six (GER) 5½, 3./5. L. Gzel (POL), L. 6.P. Berenquer (FRA) 0 7.B Heinze (GER) annulled. 1439:
Krook (SVE), P. Henschel (GER) 3, 6./7. P. Jonovic (AUS), 18/9.Gräfrath,Hurley 0 Piazza, 20/1. Mühle 0-0 Hurley,
E. Tafner (BRS) 0. 937 21. Naayer ½ Rotkop (adj). Positions: Meslin. 1/2.F Piazza (ITA), B Gräfrath (GER) 5, 3.A.
1. W. Schmidt (GER) 6, 2. M. Naayer (NLD) 4, 3./4. A. Bode Henk (GER) 4, 4/5. D Mühle GER, K J Hurley ENG 2, 6.D
(GER), A. Strebkovs (LAT) 3½, 5. L. Rotkop (USA) 3, 6. D. Meslin (FRA) 1, 7.F F Torre (BRS) 0. 1442: 21.Coelho
T. Bishop (NZD) 1, 7. T. Genestier (FRA) 0. 0 Hartmann. Positions: 1.D. Harmann (FRA) 5, 2.W M
Results, 945 15. Ginzborski 1 Espi Gemeno. 949 20. Coelho (BRS) 4½, 3.T Blanken (GER) 4, 4.T Kolczykiewicz
Schönbeck ½ Wong. 953 12. Moncelsi 1 Krook. 954 11/4. (GER) 31 5/6. G Pfeiffer (GER), J H Zuidhof (NLD) 2, 7.M
de Lima 0 (def) vs rest, 15/7. Aymard 1 Küthe, Moncelsi, A Pintavalle (USA) 0.
Wesslèn. 956 17. Saad 0 Moon. 959 13/4. Flecher, Küthe Results, 1437: 14/5.Haeberle 0 Shura, Piazza. 1445: 19.
0 Grout. 960 18/9. Stevenson 1 Küthe, Schmitt (def). 962 Warnest 0 O’Connor. 1446: 15.de Paulo ½ Brömme. 1451:
corr. 8. Thomas ½ Lukyanets. 12. Lukyanets ½ Bode. 963 11. 12/4.Schulz 1 Vaesen, Hurley, Hoss.
Gräber 1 Wick, 12/3. Bighi 1 Kappel, ½ Lennartz. 965 4/8. Vacations: Hurley.
Stock 0 vs rest. 966 2/3. Dreissen, Zens 1 Zödl, 4/5. Novák 1
WT/I/GT: M. Müller-Töpler, Wesendonkstr. 15a, D-81925
Zödl, 0 Zens. 968 3. Lappka ½ Underwood.
Vacations: Wettstein. Münich (GER) Michael.Mueller-Toepler@icn.siemens.de
Final results, WT/I/GT/35: 103/5. Turner ½ Kracht, Faber,
WT/H/GT: TD Gary Ruben, 1319 Poprad Avenue, Pickering, Legrand. Positions: 1. D. Hanebutt (USA) 11, 2. M. Bär
On, Canada L1W 1K9. Email: gruben@attglobal.net (GER) 11, 3. T. Pagel (GER) 10½, 4. P.A. Legrand (FRA)
WT/H/GT/53: 53. 102. Rubini 0 Fengsrud (adj), 103. 10½, 5. L. Kühner (GER) 9, 6. R.F. Turner (SCO) 8½, 7. C.
Romanzow ½ Rubini (adj), 104. Romanzow ½ Lertora (adj). Quaranta (ITA) 8½, 8. H-A. Faber (GER) 7½, 9. D. Jeschke
57. 100. Gerasimchuk 1 Squires. 58. 78. Rubinstein 1 Goode (GER) 7, 10. B. Ludekus (GER) 6½, 11. M. Aho (FIN) 5½,
79. Rubinstein 1 Hymas 80. Rubinstein ½ Gundrum 81. 12. E. Mittag † (GER) 4, 13. W. Kracht (GER) 3½, 14. R.
Rubinstein 1 Justesen 82. Ogrodnik 0 Rubinstein. 59. 94. Staggat (GER) 2, 15. G. Dipilato (ITA) 0.
Naftalin 0 Serrier 95. Naftalin 1 Rogulski. 60. 79. Mostowik Results, 50 102. Gasparello 1 Ranelli. 54 92. Rynkevich ½
0 Raffaele. 61. 89. Fengsrud ½ Koshakin 90. Fengsrud 0 Cakl, 93. Davis 0 Rynkevich. 56 74. Müller 0 Addis. 57 69.
Mauro, 91. Raffaele 1 Fengsrud 92. Di Lupo 1 Raffaele, 93. Ekmark 0 Cento, 70. Vitvar 0 Künzel, 71. Loomos 1 Vollbrecht.
Kozhakin ½ Raffaele. 62. 49. Anderson 1 Savelli 50. Raffaele 58 71. Wacaster 1 Coope, 71. Harenberg 1 Dostal.
1 Pazdziorko, 51. Raffaele 1 Veroni 52. Bendig ½ Raffaele.
63. 76. Justesen ½ Bruschetta 77. Bruschetta ½ Dobrzycki, 78. Second Class
van Meggelen 0 Bruschetta. 64. 53. Kotel’nikov 1 Gruneberg
54. Kotel’nikov 1 Ribkinskis, 55. Ilnicki 1 Zopanali 56. Ilnicki TD: E. Karelin, a/ja 15 RUS-113534, Moscow, Russia
1 Sisak. 65. 79. Bobel 1 Gladysz 80. Gladysz 0 Borner 81. Email: evgeny.karelin@rinet.ru
Martin 0 Bobel. 66. 70. Vasseur ½ Retzer 71. Polklaser ½ Final Results: WT/II/917. 21.Oliveira 0 Geilen Positions: 1.
Eshoj, 72. Krustkalns ½ Eshoj 73. Denzin ½ Justesen 67. R.L. Hudson (ENG) 6, 2. P. Geilen (GER) 4½, 3. E. Bussola
13. Smolka ½ Strnad 14. Bobel ½ Deville, 15. Deville 1 (BEL) 3½, 4/5. W. Lindberg (USA), A.R. Oliveira (BRS)
Esterbauer 16. Deville 1 Justesen, 17. Gamant ½ Justesen 18. 3, 6. R. Lajeunesse . (CAN) 1, 7. P.S. Heybouer (NLD) 0
Deville 1 Gamant, 19. Simunek 0 Posthoff. 924. 20. Omar 0 Sworowski 21. Omar 0 Gusmano. Positions:
WT/H/1001: 1001. 7. Fredriksson 1 Borner 8. Zielinski 1 1/2.P.Sworowski (POL), J.M.Vermeulen (NLD) 5½, 3.
Borner, 9. Coast 0 Fredriksson, 1008. 1. Sygnowski ½ Clair A.Gusmano (ITA) 4, 4/5. E.Asten (FIN), G.M.Omar (ARG)
2. Mai ½ Clair. 2½, 6.W.Steinberg (GER) 1, 7. N.H.Meltesen (USA) 0.
Vacations: Sygnowski, Winkler, Kotel’nikov. Results, 928.17.Sandrucci 1 Weiss 934. 13.Neve de Mevergnies

56 1/2001
ASIGC 2000-A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts. Pos.
1 Juan S. Morgado ARG ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ 8 7-9
2 Csaba Meleghegyi HUN ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 9 2-6
3 Catello Del Vasto ITA 0 0 ½ 1 0 ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 0 4½ 13
4 Maurizio Tirabassi ITA ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 9 2-6
5 Samuele T. Pizzuto ITA 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 4 14
6 Angelo Peluso ITA ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 9 2-6
7 Rodolfo A. Redolfi ARG 1 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 1 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 6 11
8 Alessandro Miotto ITA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15
9 Horst Rittner GER ½ ½ 1 0 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 0 9 2-6
10 Claudio Casabona ITA ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 9½ 1st
11 Stefan Brzozka POL 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 1 1 ½ 0 1 1 ½ ½ 8 7-9
12 Fabio Finocchiaro ITA ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 1 9 2-6
13 Mladen Gudjev BLG ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 5½ 12
14 Michele Petrillo ITA 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 6½ 10
15 Giorgio Baiocchi ITA ½ 0 1 ½ 1 0 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 0 1 ½ 8 7-9

ASIGC 2000-A Organised by Italy. TD: Mohamed Samraoui, Postfach 1414, D-52114 Herzegonrath (GER)
105. Meleghegyi 1 Baiocchi (adjudicated). Final result, see crosstable above. We hope to have a report in a later issue.

Antonio Pacini Memorial B 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14


15 Pts.
1 Lair Valio Alves BRS 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 0 1 1 1 ½ 9½ (1)
. 1 Antonio
2 Alfredo Lupo ITA 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 11 9
½ Pacini
3 D. Cleto Jr. BRS ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½½ 9
½ Memorial
4 J.E. Deforel ARG 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 0 0 ½ 0 0½ 3
½ Tournament Direc-
5 S.M.F. Dias BRS ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½½ 8½
½ tor: Alberto Mascar-
enhas (BRS)
6 N.C. Ferreira BRS ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 1 1 ½½ 7½
½
The tournament is
7 D. Gimenez ARG ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 8½
½ decided with three
8 R. Grosso ARG 0 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 0½ 7½
½ games still unfin-
9 C. Hernáez F. ESP 1 ½ 0 1 ½ ½ 0 0 1 0 ½ 0 6 (1)
. 1 ished. Lair Valio
10 J.A.P. Moreira POR 0 ½ ½ 1 0 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 ½ 5½ (1)
. 1 Alves is the winner
with a game in hand.
11 N. Morihama BRS 0 0 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½0 5½
½ See crosstable.
12 G. Rivas Romero PER 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 0 11 5
½ IM title: Alfredo
13 F.A.B. da Silva BRS . 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 . . ½ 0 0 4 (3)
½ Lupo and Sérgio
14 Alain Rogemont FRA 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 5½ Dias.
15 R. Thomas ENG ½ 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 7

0 Petricek 936. 12. Krag-Jakobsen 0 Schneider 937. 9.


Holmberg ½ Bukacek.
David Lodge Memorial
GT TD: Leonardo Madonia, Via D’Azeglio 17, I-40123, Organised by BFCC. TD: Alan Rawlings (ENG)
Bologna (ITA) Email: tec4196@iperbole.bologna.it 30. Asquith 1 Dearnley; 31. Asquith ½ Ward; 32. Kovacs ½ Asquith;
WT/II/GT/42 44/6. de Rijk, Roux, D’Amato 1 Hildebrand. 33. Menghi 1 Rhodes; 34. Dearnley ½ Reis; 35. Rhodes 1 Paul.
GT/43 59/60. Brunni, Meherhomji 1 Schwerdtfeger, 61.
Eansworth 0 Bajpai. Wolfgang Heidenfeld Memorial
Organised by Ireland. TD: Alan Rawlings (ENG)
Third Class 38. Winckelmann 1 Knol; 39. Harding ½ Bösenberg.
TD: Poul Rasmussen, Strandboulevarden 25III, DK-2100,
Copenhagen Ø (DEN) Mario Napolitano Memorial
Final result, WT/III/958 21. Eschger 1 McMaaster Positions:
1. U. Eschert (GER) 5, 2/3. R. Gentner (GER) 4½, R. McMaster Tournament Director: Egbert Bösenberg
(IRL) 4½, 4. C. Meador (USA) 4, 5. S. Quiantana (ESP) 2, 6. Y. 38. Jovcic 1 Nienhuis, 39. Nienhuis 0 Mirkovic, 40. Nienhuis 0 Zlender,
Herlinvaux (BEL) 1, 7. H. Ludwig (GER) 0. 41. Toscano 1 Zlender, 42. Nienhuis 0 Toscano, 43. Nienhuis 0 Piccardo,
WT/III/960 18. Schmidt 0 Bogers . WT/III/ 961 18. Schimle 0 44. Bohak 0 Picardo, 45. Sarink 0 Mirkovic, 46. de Blasio ½ Zlender, 47.
Thompson. WT/III/962 17. Whitecotton ½ Bartholome. WT/III de Blasio 1 Sarink, 48. Nienhuis 0 Kalinichenko, 49. Zlender 1 Sarink,
966 10. Mendes 0 Paguan 11. Manarin 1 Mendes. WT/III 967 50. Mirkovic 0 Calzolari, 51. Conti 0 Toscano, 52. Conti ½ Bohak, 53.
13. Manarin 1 Richardson. WT/III 968 7. Jones 1 Selby. Mirkovic ½ Conti, 54. Jovcic ½ Conti, 55. Tsvetkov ½ Conti, 56. Conti 0
Kalinichenko, 57. Conti 0:0 Nienhuis, 58. Piccardo ½ Jovcic.

www.chessmail.com 57
European Tournament Office
Zonal Director &Tournament Office Controller: Egbert Bösenberg, Schulberg 1 D-07586 Oberndorf.
Phone/FAX: 0049 36606 60276 Email: EBoesenberg@t-online.de Website: http://home.t-online.de/home/Eboesenberg

European Championships ½ Ljubicic), 15. Neuvonen FIN 1 Muzas EST, 16. Girod SWZ
0 Marcinkiewicz POL, Matic 1.etl. Makarov (ncm.31). Board
TD: Jørgen Axel Nielsen P.O. Box 1861, DK-8270 Højbjerg 6: 12. Barrios Troncoso ESP ½ Pigg FIN, 13. Pigg FIN 1
(DEN) Email: janiccf@private.dk Strand NOR, 14. Barrios Troncoso ESP ½ Finnie SCO. Board
EU/FSM/59: Kolcak etl vs Salceanu, ncm 56 10/4/00. 61: 7: 14. Lennox SCO ½ Magallon Minguez ESP, 15.Blair IRL
91/2. Gaprindashvili 1 Leconte, Stepanov. Gaprindashvili etl ½ Cvetnic CRO, 16. Blair IRL ½ Bazela SLK, 17. Wojtura
vs Hobusch ncm 50 10/20/00. 62: 88. Dr. Bulla ½ Hotting. POL ½ Kramer SWZ, 18. Cvetnic CRO ½ Magallon Minguez
Pankratov etl vs D’Adamo ncm 28 10/23/00, Podymov etl vs ESP, Andresen 1.etl. Kramer (ncm.30); T.Andresen (NOR)
Hotting ncm 41 10/21/00. withdraws, new player H.Sjøl (time counts from 1/11/00).
Board 8: 15. Baumgartner SWZ 1 Fayne IRL, 16. Aird SCO
63rdEU-FSMSemifinals ½ Karasek SLK. Board 9: 7. Robb IRL 1 Rupsys LIT, 8.
63-2: 68. Obertin 1 Baumgartner. Dr Kuperman etl vs Obertin Lehto FIN 1 Norris SCO, 9. Suarez Sedeno ESP ½ Muri SWZ,
ncm 26 10/16/00. 63-3: 116/7. Peuraniemi, Weinitschke 0 Board 10: Montgomery 1.etl. Maksimov (ncm.8), Novikovas
Chytilek, 118. Weinitschke 1 Wiesinger. 1. and GM norm 1.etl. Vaclav (ncm.21). Board 11: 10. Hrvacic CRO 0 Løvholt
R Chytilek (CZE) 13½ (1), 2. U Burgarth (GER) 12. NOR, 11. Findlay SCO ½ Stankevicius LIT, 12. Rissanen FIN
Congratulations! 63-4: 92. Winckelmann ½ Dambrauskas, 1 Forte IRL, Hrvacic 1.etl. Veselsky (ntl. 15/10/00). P.Hrvacic
93. Tuominen 1 Dr Schepers, 94. Constantinou 0 Rädeker. (CRO) withdraws, new player: N.Piculjan (from 15/10/00).
63-5: 51. Dothan 1 Galvan, 52. Dothan ½ Hase. Papai etl vs Board 12: 13. Freydl SWZ 1 Adamson IRL, 14.Paredes Prats
Galvan 10/16/00 ncm 22 and Galvan 2. etl vs Papai 10/16/00. ESP ½ Jäderholm FIN.
63-6: 93. Sjögren ½ Topchy. 63-7: 71/2. Vandermeulen 1 Leave: Miciak 23/10-03/11/00, O`Siochru spec.leave 06/10-
Podzielny, Schütt, 73. Rissanen 0 Schütt, 74. Lanz Calavia 0 14/11/00, Sheehan 30/09-15/10/00.
Resche. Ljubicic etl vs Schütt ncm 29 10/14/00. Position (25/10/00, after 155/660 games = 23.48%): 1.Slovakia
(9, 5 Pts./16 games/ 59.37%), 2.Finland (24/42/57.14%),
5 EU Teams Final 3.Russia (6/11/54.55%), 4. Norway (19/35/54.29%), 5./6.Spain
& Lithuania (16/31/51.61%), 7. Poland (7/14/50.0%),
TD: Egbert Bösenberg 8.Switzerland (20.5/42/48.81%), 9.Ireland (13.5/29/46.55%),
Board 1: 8. Merilo EST ½ Trapl CZE, Raupp 1.etl Merilo, 10.Croatia 10/24/41.67%), 11.Scotland (13.5/35/38.57%).
Board 2: 12. Rumiancevas LIT ½ Read/Prizant ENG, Board Group 2, Board 1: 12.Hartung Nielsen DEN ½ Pichler OST,
3: 10. Gozman UKR ½ van Kempen GER, 11. van Kempen 13.Atakisi TRK ½ Mihalko HUN, 14. Hartung Nielsen DEN
1 Valerio ENG, Board 4: 4. Malmstig SVE 0 Danek CZE, 5. ½ Tochacek CZE, 15. Sandström SVE ½, Pichler OST. Board
Malmstig 0 Reppmann GER, 6. Malmstig 1 Copar SLO, 7. 2: 14. Christov BLG ½ Schrancz HUN, 15. Schrancz HUN 1
Hefka SLK ½ Copar, Board 5: 6. Hugentobler SWZ 1 Jordan Gerzina SLO, 16. Timson ENG ½ Schrancz HUN, 17. Gerhold
ENG, 7. Cilento ITA ½ Gerhardt GER, Merilo 1.etl Forslöf, OST 0 Hedlund SVE, Board 3: 13. Hribersek SLO ½ Timar
Board 6: 8. Giertz SWZ ½ Savchak UKR, 9. Bohlin SVE HUN, Board 4: 13. Vecek SLO 0 Stagl OST, 14. Lassen DEN
½ Giertz, 10. Giertz ½ Tiits EST, 11. Sedlacek CZE ½ Tiits, ½ Carlsson SVE, 15. Hotting NLD 1 Erdogan TRK (2.etl.), 16.
Board 7: 7. Voss GER 1 Degerhammar GER, 8. Lucchini Smith ENG 1 Lassen DEN, 17. Palsson ISD 1 Lassen DEN,
SWZ ½ Degerhammar, 9. Degerhammar ½ Uogele LIT, Board 5: 8. Gombkötö HUN ½ Berggreen DEN, 9. Stuart
Board 8: 6. Barnsley ENG ½ Siviero ITA, 7. Bondar UKR NLD ½ Berggreen DEN, 10. Berggreen DEN 1 Mayr OST,
½ Rydholm SVE, 8. Kask EST 0 Rydholm, Preziuso 1.etl Board 6: 17. Bilgin TRK ½ Nemes HUN, 18. Bures CZE 1
Rydholm, Board 9: 2. Carleton ENG 0 Hagström SVE, 3. Hansen DEN, 19. Bures CZE ½ Bengtsson SVE, Board 7:
Urban CZE ½ Rakay SLK, 4. Broß GER ½ Urban, 5. Landolfi 18. Rada OST 0 Veres HUN, 19. Sandbom SVE 1 Nielsen
ITA ½ Hribersek SLO, Board 10: Hüls 1.etl Smith, Board DEN, 20. Ignatov BLG 1 Nielsen DEN, 21. Quakkelaar NLD
11: 3. Toothill ENG 0 Blomstrand SVE, 4. Drtina SLK ½ 0 Nielsen DEN, 22. Veres HUN ½ Sandbom SVE, Board
Mannhart SWZ, Kangur 1.etl Kveinys and Mannhart, Board 9: 14. Kristjansson ISD ½ Jotov BLG, 15. Lynn ENG ½
12: 7. Tammemägi EST ½ Rocius LIT. Dikmen TRK, 16. Notten NLD 0 Bäckström SVE, Board 10:
Holidays: Bohak (27.10.-13.11. and 24.11.-03.12.-spec), 12. Znuderl SLO 0 Thompson ENG, 13. Thompson ENG ½
Cilento (16.-25.10. spec), Gerhardt (27.09.-15.10), Jordan Guldberg Hansen, DEN, 14. Valent OST 1 Johansson SVE,
(02.-15.10), Lemke (25.09.-04.10), Mraz (18.10.-01.11), 15. Moucka CZE ½ Guldberg , Hansen DEN, Board 12: 22.
Reppmann (02.-21.10), Richardson (13.-25.10). Sigurmundsson ISD ½ Laursen DEN, 23. Laursen DEN 1
Jaksa SLO, 24. Laursen DEN ½ Svensson SVE, 25. Palffy
6 EU Teams Prelims HUN ½ Jaksa SLO, 26. Svensson SVE 1 Jaksa SLO, 27.
Laursen DEN 1 Stefanov BLG, 28. de Riuter NLD ½ Jaksa
TD: Joachim Walther, Kramerring 8, D-06502 Neinstedt (GER) SLO, 29. Laursen DEN 1 Palffy HUN.
Email: Walther-Neinstedt@t-online. de Leave: Sapundiev spec.leave 04/10-21/10/00, Grabner
Group 1, Board 1: 14. Rauduve LIT 1 Christoffel SWZ, 15. spec.leave 12/10-12/11/00, Laursen 01/11-17/11/00, Berggreen
Rauduve LIT 0 Österman FIN. Board 2: 10. Agejevas LIT ½ 12/10-26/10/00, Karason spec.leave, 26/10-20/11/00.
Filutowski POL. Board 3: 15. Roerosgaard NOR ½ Houston Position (25/10/00, after 190/660 games=28, 79%): 1.
IRL, 16. Craig SCO 0 Martin Clemente, ESP, 17. Michel SWZ Czech Republic (14 Pts./23 games/60, 28%), 2. England
½ Ljubicic CRO, 18. Martin Clemente ESP ½, Luksas LIT. (27/46 =58.70%), 3.Sweden (27/47/57.45%), 4.Iceland
Board 4: corr.13. Makarov RUS ½ Giulian SCO (not Michel (18.5/34/54.41%), 5./7.Denmark (24/48/50%), Austria (18/36

58 1/2001
EU/M/1189 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pts. EU/M/1230 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pts.
1 V. Schulz GER ½ 1 1 1 1 1 5½ 1 H. Heß GER 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 5
2 R. Berglund SVE ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 4 2 J. Braun GER 0 1 1 ½ 1 1 4½
3 Ph. Corde FRA 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 4 3 M. Mathias GER ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 3½
4 H. Dullemond NLD 0 ½ 0 ½ 1 1 3 4 R. Wittstadt GER 0 0 ½ 1 1 1 3½
5 J. B. Garcia ESP 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 1 2½ 5 G.Scaramuzzo ITA ½ ½ 0 0 ½ 1 2½
6 K. Michel GER 0 0 0 0 ½ 1 1½ 6 E. Roth UNG 0 0 ½ 0 ½ 1 2
7 Dr. H.-D. Gierse GER 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ 7 E. Dekeyser (ill) BEL 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

=50%), Bulgaria (7/14/50%), 8.Netherlands (16/33/48.48%), Balow 1 Incelli. 1232 17. Heilmann 1 Kiss. 1233 18. Fries 1
9.Hungary (16.5/36/45.38%), 10.Turkey (14.5/34/42.65%), Hellstroem. 1237 10/15. Tsymbalov 0 in all games = silent
11.Slovenia (7.5/29/25.86%). withdrawal. 1239 9/14. Tsymbalov 0 in all games = silent
Group 3, Board 1: 2. Dauga LAT ½ P.Spitz FRA, 3. Haufe withdrawal. 1240 13. Michel ½ Rasmussen. 1241 16. Weigend
GER 1 Simon LUX, 4. Haufe GER, ½ Cleto POR, 5. Haufe 0 Lemieux. 1242 15. Jensen ½ Zorr 16. Cuno ½ Jensen 1245
GER ½ van Leeuwen BEL, Board 2: 10. Weber LUX ½ 14. Steinhauser ½ Sendobry 15. Lahlum ½ Benedetto 1247 5.
C.Spitz FRA, 11. Zimmermann GER ½ Nikitin EST, Board Schmitzer ½ Hoffmann 1248 15. Hanison 1 Kuehne 16. Boga
3: 5. Maerten GER 1 Mertens LUX, 6. Mertens LUX 1 Roose 0 Buscher. 1251 15. Brobakken 1 v. Lent. 1253 Jongman 0
BEL, 7. Strautins LAT ½ Maerten GER, 8. Maerten GER 1 Roenkkoe. 1254 6. Voliani ½ Wyrwala 7. Hofmann 1 Rochel
Kotsis GRC, Board 4: 9. Amaro POR ½ Blaskowski GER; 1255 12/3. Nagel 0, Vainio ½ Rudolf 14. Packroff 1 Nagel
Amaro 1.etl. Van De Wynkele (ncm.19), Board 7: 9. Negele 15. Winter ½ Lisjutin. 1256 8. Winkler 1 Cattani 9. Cattani ½
GER ½ Riva LUX, Board 8: 14. Pragua GER ½ Teemaee Hess 10. Buettner ½ Metelmann 1257 4. Wystrach ½ Gerold
EST, Board 9: 21. Rei EST ½ Daubenfeld LUX, Board 10: 5/14. Oezel 0 in all games (13A) 15. Rautenberg ½ Wystrach
10. Schartz LUX ½ Glowatzky GER, Board 12: 5. Baufays 16. Anderson 1 Busek. 1258 8/9. Thorn Leeson 1, Zill ½
BEL ½ Kirsch LUX. Beisser 10. Lindberg 0 Wikman 11. Beisser ½ Panciroli 1259
Position (25/10/00, after 134/660 games=20.30%): 1.France 7/13. Meinhardt 0 in open games = withdrawal, illness. 1260
(14 Pts./20 games /70%), 2./3.Germany (30/44/68.18%) 6/7. Oakes ½ Miethke, 0 Gerold 8. Gerold 1 Reichert. 1262
& Israel (15/22/68.18%), 4.Italy (8/13/61.54%), 5.Latvia 4/5. Sellerie ½ Hallier, Michel 6. Goergen 1 Flemming 1263
(6.5/11/59.10%), 6./7. Estonia (9.5/19/50%) & Luxemburg 3. Wieland 1 Lakatos 4/5. Boemelburg, Schloegel ½ Wieland
(21.5/43/50%), 8. Belgium (16.5/34/48.53%), 9.Portugal 6. Donzellotti ½ Braun. Schoegel 1. st etl. vs. Wieland. 1264
(5/15/33.33%), 10.Yugoslavia (4/17/23.53%), 11. Greece 12. Diener 0 Weber. 1265 5/6. Nagel ½ Gullotto, Floegel 7/8.
(5/30/16.67%). Floegel ½ Sacerdotali, Rausch. 1266 2. Hanison 0 Lelenko 3.
Kermer 1 Hanison. 1267 3/4. Mischke 1 Luettke, ½ Packroff
Master Class 5. Lagergren ½ Gundrum 6. Vincent ½ Packroff 7/8. Packroff,
Kuhl ½ Luettke. 1268 12. Buse 1 Beisser 1269 2. Michel ½
TD: H. Otte, Dorfstr. 6, D-17459 Zempin (GER) Floegel 3/4. Mayr 0 Michel, ½ Floegel 1272 1. Wyrwala 1
Email: FSOtte@aol. com Naundorf 2. Larrass ½ Wyrwala.
1164 20. Kuzenkov ½ Vella 1188 19. Garcia ½ v. Willigen
1189 21. Berglund 1 Garcia. See the crosstable. 1194 17. GT to #437, TD: G.Weinitschke, A-Puschkin-Str. 1, D-99842
Kaltchev 1 Dubois. 1217 18. Sellerie ½ Raptakis 1219 19. Ruhla (GER)
Kiss 1 Semmelroth. 1223 20. Bazantova 1 Kudryavtsev. 433 79. Capuano 1 Sarier. 435 103. Titov 0 Duarte Fernan-
1230 21. Scaramuzzo ½ Braun. See the crosstable. 1231 19. dez.

EU/M/GT/442 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts.
1 Dr. Z. Krecak CRO ½ ½ 1 1 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11½ CXEB-30
2 T. Schmidt GER ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11
Years
3 V. Dell Isola ITA ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11
Organised by Brazil. TD:
4 A. Wosch GER 0 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 10½ TD: Carlos Flores Gutiér-
5 G. Rogala POL 0 ½ ½ 0 1 1 ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10½ rez (ESP)
6 R. Wittstadt GER 1 0 ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 9½ Group A 3. van Kempen
7 Dr. D. Molzahn GER ½ ½ ½ 0 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9½ ½ Felicio 4. Patrici ½
Costa
8 M. Kröncke GER 0 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 1 1 1 1 1 7½ Group B 62. Mascar-
9 R. Loerke GER 0 0 0 ½ 0 1 0 ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 7½ enhas ½ Asker 63. Silva
10 Y.P. Karelin RUS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 ½ 0 1 1 1 1 5½ 0 Benz 64. Silva 0 Rain
11 A.E. Demidov RUS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 4 65. Asker 0 Gonçalves IM
Norm: Gonçalves (BRS)
12 K. Volke GER 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 3
13 D. Unukovic YUG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 3
14 C. Weiss OST 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
15 M. Bak DEN 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

www.chessmail.com 59
GT from #438, H. Otte, Dorfstr. 6, netdinova 38. Fleischanderl 0 Lehmann 97. Sierlak 0 Faure; 269 98/9. Lapse ½
D-17459 Zempin (GER) 39/40. Sifnatsch 1 Jongman, 0 Mayr 467 Goitre, 0 Hildner; 100. Cook ½ Madsen;
442 105. Krecak 1 Rogala (adj.). See the 35/6. Marotz 1 Neri, ½ Heaton 37/8. 101/3. Goitre 0 Tritt, 1 Schroder, ½
crosstable 444 104. Saveliev ½ Gnirk. Heaton 1 Rieseler, ½ Wakolbinger 39. Senay; 270 95. Kwitkowski ½ Querci;
447 92. Packroff ½ Majorov 93. Vaclav Lagergren ½ Heaton. 468 10. Nanauer Polklaser 0 Querci; 97. Panciroli ½
½ Nocci 94. Braczo 0 Perpiglia 95. ½ Schowalter 11. Deisz 1 Torhola 12/3. Kessler; 98. Hanison ½ Mrazik; 271
Majorov ½ Vaclav. 449 93. Onatsevich Weinitschke 1 Deisz, Beth 14. Beth 1 0 272 60. Esterbauer ½ Richter; 273
1 Horvat 94. Kasperavicius 1 Jong- Wilshusen 15/6. Schwieger, Poeltner 56. Jorgensen 1 Kolanek; 57/8. Sousa
man. 450 80/3. Kaminskas 0 Haerting, 0 Weinitschke. ½ Coclet, 0 Hollbach; 59. Wesche 0
Nagel, Freise (5B) 84. Nagel 1 Savenok. corr. of table 440: Kaliwoda 1 Janous; 274 39. Caron 1 Justesen; 40.
451 93. Valent ½ Boccia 94. Klepzyn Jongman, not 0; Kaliwoda place 14. Salzman 1 Frydendal; 41. Caron ½
1 Marotz 95. Djuric 0 Webers 96. Madeiras; 42. Esterbauer ½ Richter.
Webers 1 Kurtovic. 452 83. Marczell 1
Higher Class
Harjunpaeae 84/5. Dubko 1 Holovsky,
Blessing 86. Mayr ½ Dubko. 453 61. TD: Marco Caressa, Via Campolimpido Open Class
Incelli 0 Kulejewski 62. Mulenko ½ 59, I-00010 Villa Adriana (RM), Italy TD: Hans-Jürgen Isigkeit, Arnold-
Rilberg 63. Rilberg 0 Mayr. 454 78. Email: caressa@rdn. it Zweig-Straße 74, D-18435, Stralsund
Dostan ½ Tarascio. 455 75. Dikmen Final Results, 1251 11. Chigishev (GER)
0 Jongman 76. Ylipartanen 0 Dikmen 1 Griffiths (corr.) Positions: 1. A.V. Email: Isigkeit@01019freenet. de
77/84. Tsipin (RUS) 0 in all open games Chigishev (RUS) 5½, 2. W. Bachmann EU/O/001: 10.Cottle 1 Bedbur;
( Engelhardt, Chielewski, Dikmen, (GER) 4½, 3. Z. Nowak (POL), 4. V.W. EU/O/003: 09.Calnot 0 Matozan;
Walther, Ylipartanen, Loeffler, Nyvlt, Griffiths (ENG) 3, 5. G. Grünenberg 10.Kandler 1 Calnot; 11.Denning 1 Cal-
Poeltner) = silent withdrawal 85/6. (GER) 2½, 6. A. Maier (OST) 1½, 7. not; 12.Kandler 0 Denning; EU/O/004:
Antonenko 1 Walther, Beisser. corr. D. Gallo (ITA) 0. 1291 21. Battista 1 08/10.Vagasy 0 Richards, Bydelsky,
51. Walther 1 Beisser, not ½. 456 Lambrechts Positions: 1. L. Battista Campani; EU/O/007: 08.Preuße 0
77/8. Larsen 1, Patzer ½ Kochetov (ITA) 5, 2./3. H.-J. Falke (GER), D. Harvey; EU/O/008: 12.Würebesser
79. Schwieger ½ Larsen 80. Lupo ½ Vincnt (FRA) 4, 4. E. Kratz (GER) ½ Balke; 13.Würzebesser 1 van den
Siigur 81/2. Mogilnyi 1 Vicanek, 0 3½, 5. H.-J. Wastel (GER) 2½, 6. C. Brack; 14/18. Petrof 0 Kristensen, Balke,
Lupo. 457 81. Lisjutin ½ Klausner Lambrechts (BEL) 2, 7. O.K. Hageberg Musso, Würzebesser, van den Brack;
82. Skerlik ½ Luettke 83. Volkas 1 0. EU/O/009: 02/07.Meyer 0 Mrs. Schultz,
Sifnatsch 84. Sifnatsch ½ Malyshev. Results, 1270 18. Vecek ½ Tibbert, Galli, Harvey, Wundahl, Kellerer,
458 78. Mamonovas 1 Jaloszynski 79. 1283 15.Alexander ½ Hauptmann, 16. Plenzick; EU/O/011: 05.Winkler ½
Smuk 0 Mamonovas 80. Hartung 1 Hauptmann ½ Kevicki, 1287 9. Griffiths Geilich; 06.Geilich 1 Jänisch; 07.Jänsch
Jaloszynski. 459 73/4. Andrieux ½, 0 Soetewey, 1292 20. Gerola 1 Retzer, 1 Winkler; EU/O/012: 01.Azzong
Holovsky 0 Prechtel 75/6. Prechtel 1 1294 17. Viakofski 1 Göhle, 18. Casella 0 Fehr; EU/O/013: 01.Gerlach 1
Vadum, 0 Da Riva 77. Holovsky ½ 0 Viakofski, 1297 19. Mayer 0 Bingler, Enderlein; EU/O/014: 01.Hanreich
Sonntag 78. Pechwitz 1 Dziedzic. 460 1300 12. Mika 0 Dubleumortier, 1302 0 Meißner; EU/O/015: 02.Jänisch 1
66/7. Kontulainen 0 Proettel, Laurenc 15. Huber ½ Canal, 1305 2. Viullemin Soja.
68/9. Laurenc 1 Marusiak, ½ Proettel ½ Almarza Mato, 3.Sprenger ½ De
70/1. Johansen ½ Kontulainen, Laurenc
72. Proettel 1 Marusiak. 461 68. Gachon
Waard, 4. Lüddeckens ½ Almarza
Mato, 1306 6. Costa ½ Eschenbacher, First Class
1 Fedukovic 69. Jorda 1 Prokopp 70. 7. Eschenbacher 0 Lilleøren, 8. TD: Hans-Jürgen Isigkeit (GER)
Rakay ½ Gachon. 462 64. Boada 1 Eschenbacher 1 Metschan, 9. Lilleøren
Grassmehl 65. Johnson ½ Pauwels 66. Email: Isigkeit@01019freenet. de
½ Costa, 1307 9. Mosser ½ Denzin, Final result, EU/I/1894: 20.
Lupo 1 Kliesch 67. Kliesch 1 Boada 10. Mosser ½ Wengler, 11. Curnillon ½
68. Lew ½ Rittweger 69. Rettenbacher Eibelshäuser ½ Indrak; 21.Magoni 1
Mosser, 1308 3. Vogel 1 Bonnet, 1309 Pfeiffer. Positions: 1./2. M. Bonte
½ Grassmehl 70/1. Johnsen, Kliesch 4. Di Lao 0 Kern, 1310 3. Kerner ½
½ Zubarev 72. Voveris 0 Mischke. 463 (NLD), Z. Indrak (CZE) 4½; 3. A.
Schmolei, 4. Schmolei 1 Rabouan, Donner (GER) 4; 4./5. S. Eibelshäuser
68. Marcinkiewicz 1 Stojanas (5B) 69. 1311 1. Conti 0 Vogel, 2. Conti 0
Pongrac ½ Lagergren 70. Schoenbeck (GER), J. Magoni (FRA) 3½; 6. G.
Pipper, 3. Conti 0 Muñoz Osorio, 1313 Pfeiffer (GER) 2; 7. U. Koglbauer
0 Marcinkiewicz 71. Marcinkiewicz 1 2.Gräfath 0 Wastel, 3. Valencia Ciordia 0
Sabel 72. Stojanas 0 Spitz (5B) 73/4. (OST) 0;
Nedozral, 4. Valencia Ciordia 0 Gräfath, Results, EU/I/1886: 18.Vlcek 1 Sanz
Devocelle 1 Pongrac, ½ Schoenbeck. 5. Valencia Ciordia 0 Morosi, 1315 2.
464 27. Schcherbin 0 Marcinkiewicz Velez; EU/I/1896: 15.Gronau ½ Ford;
Vetter ½ Holmstrøm. 16.Schluderbacher ½ Ford; 17.Grco
28. Christoffersen 0 Busom 29. Mari- EU/H/GT to #257, TD: Vladimir
ani ½ Hofer 30/1. Hofer ½ Baerschnei- 1 Schluderbacher; EU/I/1898: 14.de
Houdek, 364 52 Žlutice 99 (CZE) Baan ½ Steinbrück; EU/I/1899: 18.van
der, Nitsche 32. Nitsche 1 Holovsky No results this time.
33. Holovsky 0 Marcinkiewicz 34. Leijden ½ Wesseln; 19.Aligeorgiou 1
EU/H/GT TD for 258 onwards: Zdenek Wesseln; EU/I/1902: 15.Eschenbacher
Marcinkiewicz 1 Hansen 35. Mariani Nyvlt, Reneova 28, CZ-621 00, Brno
½ Nitsche 36/7. Presado 1, Hofer 0 1 Danese; EU/I/1904: 13.Vranidis 0
(CZE). Kinez; EU/I/1905: 18.Horn 1 Usavale-
Christoffersen. 465 22. Lauro 0 Hartung
23. Karelin ½ Lauro 24. Daroczy ½ Email: nyvlt@scova. vabo. cz hto; EU/I/1906: 12.Born 1 Miss Hurley;
Feco 25. Mariani ½ Hartung 26. Beth 265 95. Tibbert 0 Gubats; 96. Gubats 1 13.van Leijden 1 Born;
0 Lauro 466 31. Masetti 1 Mayr 32/3. Vecek; 97. Eeckhout1/2 Gubats; 98/9. EU/I/GT/334: 103.Vlcek ½ Moon;
Fleischanderl 1 Masetti, Norrelykke Lebedev ½ Eeckhout, 1 Dobner; 266 104.Ricci ½ Preuß; EU/I/GT/335:
34/5. Norrelykke 1 Mayr, ½ Rohr 36. 101. Remis 0 Lelenko; 267 91. Mrazik 77.Ruszin 1 Köhler; 78.Wedel 1
Zainetdinova 1 Coets 37. Rohr 0 Zai- ½ Dzenis; 92. Dzenis 1 Rautenberg; 268 Ruszin; 79.Ricci 1 Wedel; EU/I/

60 1/2001
GT/336: 77.Hjalmarsson ½ Schweitzer; (GER), 4, 12. O. Valenet, (FRA), 3, Richter GER, Fernand Cipriani FRA,
78.Jungeblut ½ Hjalmarsson; 79.Strick 13. P. Schwan, (GER), 2, 14. H. Bredl, Franz Mosser OST EU/H/1323 Csaba
1 Fava; 80.Prof. Dr. Schüler 1 Fava; (GER), 1, 15. S. Reichel, (GER), 0. Hadrik HUN, Wolfgang Richter GER,
81.Ekmark ½ Vettenburg; 82.Kerner ½ Results: 192 98. De Rijk 1 Lakota, 193 Roland-R. Wick GER, Jacques Parotte
Ekmark; 83.Ekmark 0 Fava; 84.Ekmark 93. Henrick ½ Casalino, 94. Casalino BEL, Jürgen Schulz GER, Bonne
0 Schweitzer; 85.Zebre 1 Bijtelaar. 1 Vaccari, 95. McIntee ½ Zschau, 194 W. Faber NLD, Alberto Veroni FRA
91. Fourrage 1 Lehmann. EU/H/1324 Lauri Huttunen FIN,
Second Class Victor Neyens LUX, Hans-Dieter
TD: Heinz Prokopp, B. -Kellerman-Str. New European Zimmermann GER, Herbert Mayer
GER, Bostjan Benko SLO, Stanislaw
43, D-39120 Magdeburg (GER) Tournaments Schatilow GER, Frank Eastwood
Email: HProkopp@aol. com ENG EU/H/1325 Dominique Senay
Results: EU/II/1222 16. Samonas 1 Start date November 20, 2000 FRA, Adolf Haeberle GER, Wolfgang
Willett, 17/8. Exler, Hahn 0 Randisi, 19. EU/M/1276 Hermann Knoll OST, Steinbrück GER, Ronald Beullens BEL,
Hörburger 0 Hahn, 1228 18. Steinbach Josep Borrellas Comellas ESP, Manfred James Day ENG, Wolfgang Evers GER,
1 Fietkau, 1229 11. Pilz 0 Bartholome, Kröncke GER, Ermanno Ricci ITA, Kjell Johansson SVE.
1230 14. Campani ½ Rolko, 1231 Heinz Wolff GER, Heino Mammen EU/O/024 Rüdiger Weinmesser OST,
10. Hoffmann ½ Scavo, 11. Asten ½ GER, Juraj Vaclav SLK, Franz-Josef Manfred Exler GER, Kevin O‘Farrell
Lüdigk, 12. Scavo 0 Asten, 1232 5/6. Schröders GER, Hajo Gnirk GER, IRL, Joachim Kleine GER, Kurt Förster
Georgi, Meier ½ Carbonell, 7. Georgi Claude Bernard FRA, Bo Lindström GER, Luis Rodenas Balana ESP,
1 Meier. SVE EU/M/1277 Antonio Sardella Ian Mason ENG EU/O/025 Dimitris
Final Result, EU/II/GT/190 103/4. ITA, Reinhard Drobusch GER, Boris Mavreas GRC, Manfred Wermann
Longo 0 Caparros, Aguirre, 105. Aguirre Markovich Gechtman RUS, Karl-Adolf GER, Maximino de la Calle Iturrino
½ Caparros. Positions: 1. F. Nolf Kling GER, Oliver Wiechmann GER, ESP, Gerard P. Gill IRL, Erich Strick
(BEL) 12½, 2. /4. D. Mazza, (ITA), X. Hinderikus Jongman NLD, Michel GER, Michael Fuhr GER, Reijo Neva-
Caparros Fernandez, (ESP), P. Aguirre Pellisseri FRA, Werner Nitsche GER, Juoni SVE EU/O/026 Steve Cole ENG,
Inchaurbe, (ESP), 12, 5. P. Mantovani, Frank Beckmann GER, Herbert Nagel Allan Tholin SVE, Hans Jungeblut
(ITA), 10½, 6. C. Longo, (ITA), 9½, 7. OST, Albi Gmür SWZ. GER, Rosendo Nicolas Andreu ESP,
W. Gölles, (OST), 8½, 8. K. Förster, EU/H/1322 Robert Dagonnier BEL, Fritz Borrmann GER, Heinz Wunderlich
(GER), 7, 9. G. Skrotzki, (GER), 6, 10. Wolfgang Heyn GER, Henryk Gaida GER, Robert Drost NLD.
F. Goguillon, (FRA), 5, 11. L. Lang POL, Karl Shoup GER, Wolfgang

Reg Gillman Mem.


TD: Alan Rawlings (ENG)
Afro-Asia Zone
Section A: 8. McNab ½ Peluso. Tournament Office: Mohamed Samraoui, Postfach 1414,
Section B: 61. Soltau 1 Frostick; 62. Frostick D-52114 Herzegonrath (GER) Email: samraoui@aol. com
0 Andriulaitis; 63. de Groot ½ Sande; 64.
Sande 1 Kazoks; 65. Frostick ½ Soberano;
66. Buraschi 1 Soberano; 67. Andriulaitis 1st Asian CCC Announcements
½ Brooks; 68. Andriulaitis 1 Miettinen [IM 17-18 Balabaev 2 Al Thani 0. AA /open Tournaments
norm: Vytautas Andriulaitis (LIT)]; 69 New tournaments (postal and Email
Brooks ½ Buraschi [GM norm: Osvaldo
Buraschi (ARG)]; 70. Cranbourne 0 2nd Asian CCC with 7 players each) are arranged for
players from Africa and Asia .The
Buraschi; 71. Brooks 1 Rüfenacht [GM 9. Ernazarov 1 Anilkumar0. entries (no fee required) should be
norm: Dr. Ian Brooks (ENG)]. sent to M. Samraoui, postfach 1414,
Section C: 35. Veen 1 Nielsen 3rd African CCC D-52114 H´rath, Germany . Email:
Section D: 90. Uralde ½ Kaczorowski; 91. samraoui@aol.com.
Anil Kumar 1 Quattrocchi [IM title: NR Anil 3.Samy 1Bhari 0, 4. Knol ½ Chorfi ½.
4th Email Afro-Asian Championship
Kumar (IND)]; 92. Gaujens ½ Anil Kumar; 2001- 2002
93. Foldvary ½ Kaczorowski; 94. de Waard Afro-Asian Email The applications for the preliminaries
½ Uralde. Final score: Gaujens 10½, Uralde
7. Section E: 62. Canibal ½ Flores Gutiérrez;
Championships which will start on 15.01.2001 are open
for chessplayers from Africa and Asia.
63. Flores Gutiérrez 1 Brusila; 64. Lüers 0 2ndChampionship,Final The entries (no fees required) should
Zavanelli; 65. Zavanelli 1 Larsson. be sent by Email to samraoui@aol.com
27. Anilkumar 1 Santhosh 0, 28. Høidahl
½ Chorfi, 29.Kagiyama 0 Santhosh 1. not late than 31.12.2000.
Amici Sumus
LADAC/CAPA. TD: Alan Rawlings
3rdChampionshipPrelims Interzonal match
Section A: 80. Rodriguez 1 Diani. Group B: 27. Bambang 1 Brother 0.
TD: Mohamed Samraoui, Postfach
Rodriguez v Pietrobono 1st etl against AAOpenTournaments 1414, D-52114 Herzegonrath (GER)
both players, new counts move 29.
AA/E01: 11 Simons 0 Kucukali 1. Email: samraoui@aol.com
Section B: 67. Flores Gutiérrez 1 Milher H. Odeev (TKM) replaces Al Thani on
AA/E02: no new results. AA/E 03:
[IM norm: Carlos Flores Gutiérrez 1st board for Africa /Asia team
16.A. Sharden ½ Nechadi ½, 17.Hichem
(ESP)]
½ Du Plessis ½..

www.chessmail.com 61
North America Pacific Zone (NAPZ)
Zone Director: Ralph P. Marconi, 540 Saint-Thérèse, Joliette, QC J6E 4A8 Canada Email: marconi@pandore.qc.ca
Zonal online results service: http://correspondencechess.com/campbell/napzlink.htm (c/o J.Franklin Campbell)

8th North American CC Ch 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pts. Pos.


1 William Bogle CAN • 0 ½ 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 ½ 6 10-11
2 Wayne Conover USA 1 • 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 9½ 4-6=
3 Joseph Deidun Sr. CAN ½ 0 • ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 0 0 ½ 6½ 9th
4 Michael Edelstein CAN 0 ½ ½ • 0 0 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 1 1 7 8th
5 Jon Edwards USA 1 1 ½ 1 • ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 11½ 1st
6 Kevin W. Embrey USA 1 1 ½ 1 ½ • 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 0 1 1 10 3rd
7 Paul Hodges USA 0 ½ ½ 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 1½ 15th
8 Robert E. Hux USA 1 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 • ½ 1 1 1 ½ ½ 1 9½ 4-6=
9 Zoltan Leskowsky CAN 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 ½ • 0 0 ½ 0 0 0 2 14th
10 E.S. Martinovsky USA 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 0 1 • 1 0 ½ 1 1 9½ 4-6=
11 Barry K. Nalepa USA 0 0 0 ½ 0 0 1 0 1 0 • ½ 0 0 0 3 13th
12 N. Eric Pedersen USA 1 ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 0 ½ 1 ½ • ½ ½ 1 8 7th
13 Paul L.Thompson USA 1 0 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 ½ • 1 1 10½ 2nd
14 Solomon Weinstock USA 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 1 ½ 1 0 1 ½ 0 • ½ 6 10-11
15 Stephen Wright CAN ½ 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 ½ • 4½ 12th

USA Championship Higher Class First Class


ICCF-US Secretary: Professor Max TD to #41: Thomas Dougherty TD: Clive Murden (AUS)
Zavanelli. Email: dougherty@compuserve.com Email: clivem@sympac.com.au
TD: Allen Wright Web: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/ NAPZ I-43 5. Gustafson ½ Harris.
NAPZ 1-44 15. Pagunsan 0 Loomis.
USCCC13 Final: homepages/dougherty/
H-40 Onstad ½ Lee. Final result, see
Burris ½ Shea, Koppersmith 1 Shea,
Koppersmith ½ Potter, Burris ½ Smith, crosstable below. PATT4
Morss 1 Shea. TD from #42 onwards: Clive Murden Organised by USA. TD: J. Franklin
(AUS) Campbell (Michigan)
NAICCC VIII Email: clivem@sympac.com.au
H-43 Silva ½ Tiling (#5 overlooked
Email: franklin@voyager. net
TD: Ralph P. Marconi (CAN) http://correspondencechess. com/
earlier), 10. Reynolds 1 Silva, 11.
Williams ½ Tiling. marconi/patt4. htm
Email: marconi@pandore.qc.ca
Board 1: 26. Aldrete 1 Jones, 27.
105. Edelstein 0 Edwards (adjudication).
Jones ½ Aldrete. Board 2: 3. Demian
Final result, see crosstable. ]We hope to Open Class ½ Guizar (correction), 5. Guizar ½
have a report in our next issue.
TD: Alan Jones Demian. Board 3: no new results.
Board 4: 6. Lopez ½ Siemms, 7.
NAICCC IX Email: alan.jones@ch.novartis.com
No new results. Correction, NAP- Siemms ½ Lopez, 8. Kusanagi 0 Sunna,
TD: Ralph P. Marconi (CAN) ZO-01: 1. Winbush 1 Moeckel; 2. 9. Sunna 1 Kusanagi. Board 5: 14.
Moeckel 1 Dougherty; 3. Dougherty Keast 0 Fichaud. Sorensen 1 st etl v.
Email: marconi@pandore.qc.ca Raynes in both games. Board 6: no
3. Koppersmith ½ Jacobs, 4. Miettinen 1 Winbush; 4. Winbush 1 Stubbs; 5.
½ Jones, 5. Savage ½ Pedersen, 6. Lord 0 Stubbs. new results. 90 of the 180 total games
Jacobs ½ Bowerman. are now finished (50%).
Gordon Greig has withdrawn due to ill
health. I have annulled his games. The
category remains the same, but the NAPZ H-40 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pts.
norm requirements have changed: 1 David Lee AUS X 0 ½ 1 1 1 1 4½
Category VII, for 13 games: GM
Norm: 10 pts.; IM Title: 7½pts. 2 Gene Estes USA 1 X ½ 1 ½ 1 1 5
3 Paul Onstad USA ½ ½ X ½ ½ 1 1 4
Master Class 4 J. Hymas CAN 0 0 ½ X 1 1 1 3½
5 Th. Brochard USA 0 ½ ½ 0 X 1 1 3
TD: Allen Wright
NAPZ M-70: Oon Soon Tee ½ Katzl. 6 G. Pagunsan USA 0 0 0 0 0 X 1 1
7 F. Pickney USA 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0

62 1/2001
I BO
T’S hard to dislike a he just dives into his material
book which tries to without defining terms.
make chess fun. What is the Hedgehog?

OK S
It’s Your Move by GM Chapter 18 of “The Chess
Chris Ward (Everyman Chess, Analyst” by North American
144pp., stg. £14-99, ISBN CC Champion Jon Edwards
1-85744-296-2) is a puzzle is much more helpful: “I do
book with a difference: per- not think of the Hedgehog as
sonalised multiple choice! an opening at all, but rather
First he introduces five as a structure that players can
characters whom you would Reviewed by reach from many different
probably recognise at your openings... [involving] black
local chess club and then Tim Harding pawns on a6, b6, d6 and e6...
each puzzle is seen through [with] no white d-pawn.”
their eyes. Ambitious Andy, affair. It contains 1001 puzzles, If you want a collection of
Ballistic Bob, Cautious Carol, most of which are likely to lightly-annotated games on
Devious Dave and Steady be new to readers as they this theme, Suba’s book may
Eddie have very different are drawn from recent games be of some value. However,
styles and temperaments and (1998-2000), the author’s if you want to learn how to
they each choose a different own practice and little- play the Hedgehog, then it is
move each time. Your task known USSR Championship not much use unless you are
is to identify which of them games. already an advanced player.
is right about each of the 50 They are graded to begin His text looks as if it was
test positions. with basic tactics and get delivered in a fairly raw state
This is a book which is progressively harder. After and not given much editing,
clearly aimed at the younger page 64, hints disappear and whereas it needed tender
reader, and the typesetters, most positions are presented loving care.
First Rank, have signalled that with no advice: just like real Batsford’s new owners
bytheir choice of the typeface chess! This book would take Chrysalis will have to do a
Comic Sans (except for the a lifetime to exhaust and it lot better than this if they
figurine chess moves). This is would be a good present for want to regain the loyalty
my 10-year-old daughter’s an improving player who of readers and authors. Last
favourite font. However, really needs to be tested. April we made a proposal to
adults could enjoy this book The Hedgehog by Rom- them about co-operation in
too. anian GM Mihai Suba is one our small series of planned
The Ultimate Chess of the few chess books to titles and we didn’t even
Puzzle Book by GM John emerge during 2000 from get the courtesy of an
Emms (Gambit Publications, the Batsford stable (156pp, acknowledgment, despite
240pp. larger format, stg. stg. £14-99, ISBN 0-7134- reminders. I think Everyman
£6-99, ISBN 1-901983- 8696-1). It’s a strange piece Chess and Gambit Public-
34-X) is a very different and of work, packaged in a rather ations don’t have much to
much more heavyweight dull way. It doesn’t help that worry about right now.

www.chessmail.com 63
Ectool email chess program review (from page 51)
have to go to the Tools menu, bring up until I have finished my email session.
the right part of the game data window (I have found, under Windows 98, that
and change the Result marker from “*” for Ectool frequently freezes if I try to look
ongoing game to 1-0, 0-1 or ½-½. at the new messages while Eudora is
checking mail.)
Mail managing The mail windows are the part of
Ectool expects to be connected direct Ectool I like least. You can reorder the
to your POP and SMTP servers. In theory, inbox by sender or date, but I think the
you could use it to generate the messages program badly needs to indicate when
and then cut-and-paste them into an an incoming message is unread, or read
ordinary email program. Andres Valverde but not answered.
warns however that AOL users cannot get Ectool runs under Windows 3.1x, 95,
full value from his program: “AOL doesn’t 98, NT and 2,000. It is shareware so you
support SMTP and POP3 mail protocols. can try before you buy; at move 20, you
Don’t ask me why, ask them.” cannot save the game any more and must
Ectool facilitates management by register to continue. The price is quite
asking you to mark message headers for cheap (15 Euros) and once you have
download. I connect first with Ectool and paid, you get free upgrades. You can buy
see what messages are waiting. I get the at the website http://www.ectool.nu/
ones which are obviously chess moves which has a lot of other information.
and leave the others on the server. Then The program is available in English,
I upload any moves I have queued and Spanish, French, German, Italian, Catalan
check the rest of my mail with Eudora. and Portuguese. Current versions are:
I strongly recommend not making 6.00 for Win 95/98/NT; version 3.00 for
instant reply moves while online and so Windows 3.1x. (shareware) and ECTool
I don’t look at the incoming messages lite (16 bit) is free.

A13 12 B66 11 C16 14 D56 9

A28 32 B80 23
ECO C19 10 E01 10
Index
A52 40 B85 23 C30 8 E11 19

A65 24 B87 33 C06 8 C57 45-49 E12 41

B00 30 B92 38 C07 15 (theory) E26 42

B22 35 B99 25 C09 13 C70 18 E94 43

64 1/2001
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