You are on page 1of 119

Ts.

Mohd At-Tarmizi Bin Abu Hassan

i|P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

POLITEKNIK SULTAN IDRIS SHAH


KEMENTERIAN PENGAJIAN TINGGI

First Edition 2021

Copyright © 2021 Politeknik Sultan Idris Shah

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted
in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or
mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case
of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses
permitted by copyright law.

eISBN: 978-967-2096-98-6

Published by:
Politeknik Sultan Idris Shah,
Sungai Lang, 45100 Sungai Air Tawar,
Selangor Darul Ehsan.

Phone Number: 03 3280 6200


Fax Number : 03 3280 6400
Website : https://psis.mypolycc.edu.my/

ii | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

iii | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

iv | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

‫ﭑﻟﺮ ۡﺣ َﻤ ٰـ ِﻦ‬
‫ﯿﻤ ﱠ‬ ‫ِﺑ ۡﺴ ِﻢ ٱ�ِ ﱠ‬
ِ ‫ٱﻟﺮ ِﺣ‬
This book is dedicated to all the chess students, men, and women who commit themselves
to learn about chess.

v|Pa g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

Chess Notations is written for polytechnic students who are pursuing subject MPU24011 –
Sukan (Chess) in diploma courses in engineering, tourism and hospitality, management,
and culinary arts. Students of other institutions from primary and secondary school, the
university may also find this book useful.

The content was design to improve chess skills ability through variations bunch of
legendary chess game notation. “Practice makes perfect!”

vi | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

I would like to acknowledge the assistance and encouragement of our families, friends,
and top management of Politeknik Sultan Idris Shah who have actively contributed to
the successful publication of this book.

Ts. Mohd At-Tarmizi Bin Abu Hassan

vii | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

Title i

Copyright ii

PSIS Chess Club Logo iii

Chess Quotes iv

Dedication v

Preface vi

Acknowledgements vii

Table of Contents viii

Chessboard 1

Chess Pieces 2-8

Chess Notations 9-11

Chess Notations Score Sheet 12

Checkmate Position 13-20

Chess Puzzle 21-25

Legendary Chess Notation 26-105

References and Further Reading ix

Chess Glossary x

viii | P a g e
1|P age

CHESS BOARD
Chess a board game of strategic skill for two players played on a chequered board on which
each playing sixteen pieces is move according to precise rules. The object is to put the
opponent's king under a direct attack from which escape is impossible (checkmate).

Chessboard

Ranks

Files
2|P age

CHESS PIECES
Six unique pieces of chess
i. The Pawn iv. The Bishop
ii. The Rook v. The Queen
iii. The Knight vi. The King

The table below shows how the chessmen are represent in printed material, the symbol given
to it and its value.

Chessman Name Symbol Value

The King K Invaluable

The Queen Q 9 point

The Rook R 5 point

The Bishop B 3 point

The Knight N 3 point

The Pawn 1 point


3|P age

i. The Pawn

a. Each player starts with eight.


b. Least powerful piece with the most complicated rules.
c. The pawn typically moves one square forward.
d. There are three exceptions to this rule.
e. A pawn may only attack diagonally forward.
f. A pawn may move two squares forward on ONLY its first move / from its
original starting position.
g. There is a special capture a pawn can make called “en passant”.
4|P age

ii. The Rook

a. Each player starts with two.


b. A rook can move horizontally or vertically forwards or backwards.
c. A rook moves until it captures or hits a piece of the same color.
5|P age

iii. The Knight

a. Each player starts with two.


b. Moves two squares horizontally or vertically and then one square diagonally
(moves from one corner in any 2x3 set of squares / L shaped jump)
c. The ONLY piece that can jump other pieces.
6|P age

iv. The Bishop

a. Each player starts with two.


b. The bishop moves in a straight diagonal line forwards or backwards.
c. There are two bishops for each player one black and one white.
d. Black bishop can only move in black diagonals and white bishop in white.
7|P age

v. The Queen

a. Each player starts with one.


b. The queen moves like the rook and bishop combined / moves any number of squares
diagonally, vertically, or horizontally.
c. The most powerful piece.
d. Always starts on a square of her own color.
8|P age

vi. The King

a. Each player starts with one.


b. Moves like the queen except only one square at a time.
c. The most valuable piece. The side who’s King is captured first loses
d. Always starts on a square that is NOT his color.
9|P age

CHESS NOTATIONS
Notations: are various systems that have developed to record either the moves made
in a game of chess or the position of pieces on a chessboard.

Notation uses this symbol:


K - King
Q - Queen
R - Rook
B - Bishop
N - Knight
(Blank) – Pawn

The board squares is identify by their rank (column) and file (row) names.
For instance, the lower left square is a1. The upper right square is h8.

In Short Algebraic Notation, the format for recording moves is:


(piece symbol) (target square). For pawn moves, the symbol is left off.
Instead of “Pe3”, you would write just “e4”. Using the example, the pawn and knight
moves would be 1. e4 Nc6
10 | P a g e

Annotations are add to provide additional insight into the move.


+ - Check
++ - Checkmate
Capture indicated with an “x”. Example: Nxd4
Promotions use an “=”. Example: f7=Q
Castling, king-side: 0-0
Castling, queen-side: 0-0-0

Sometimes more information is need for ambiguous references for example:

If the knight took the pawn, writing “Nxf5” would not be adequate to indicate which white
knight is used. How could we tell the difference? We include the rank and write Nh4xf5.
We have a similar situation with the black pawns taking the white. We need to include the
file of the attacking pawn and write d5xe4.
11 | P a g e

Notation Exercise!
Recreate on your chessboard this game from the 1600’s involving a queen sacrifice.
12 | P a g e

Chess Notations Score Sheet


13 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

1.1 QUEEN AND ROOK MATE

1.2 QUEEN AND ROOK MATE


14 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

2. TWO ROOK MATE

3. QUEEN AND BISHOP MATE


15 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

4. QUEEN AND KNIGHT MATE

5. KING AND QUEEN MATE


16 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

6. KING AND ONE ROOK MATE

7. KING AND TWO-BISHOP MATE


17 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

8. KING, KNIGHT AND BISHOP MATE

9. ARABIAN MATE
18 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

10. FOOL’S MATE (Two-Move-Checkmate)

11. SCHOLAR’S MATE (Four-Move-Checkmate)


19 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

12. LEGAL’S MATE

13. BACK RANK MATE


20 | P a g e

CHECKMATE POSITION

14. SMOTHERED MATE

15. ANASTASIA’S MATE


21 | P a g e

CHESS PUZZLE

Garry Kasparov vs Vasyl Ivanchuk 1988 (1-0) – White to win


1. f6 Bxd5 2. Re8+ Bg8 3. f7 Nxf7 4. Nxf7#

Victor Kortschnoj vs Anatoly Karpov 1978 (0-1) – Black to win


1. … Nf3+ 2. gxf3 Rg6+ 3. Kh1 Nf2#
22 | P a g e

CHESS PUZZLE

Eldar Gasanov vs Igor Kovalenko 2016 (0-1) – Black to win


1. … Qe6+ 2. Kxg5 Qf6+ 3. Kg4 Rh4+ 4. Kg3 Qg5#

Martyn Kravtsiv vs Ding Liren 2017 (0-1) – Black to win


1. … a1=N#
23 | P a g e

CHESS PUZZLE

Mikhail Tal vs Mikhail Botvinnik 1960 (1-0) – White to win


1. Rxa6+ bxa6 2. Qb6+ Ka8 3. Qxa6+ Ra7 4. Qxc8#

Andrei Macovei vs Siva Mahadevan 2020 (0-1) – Black to win


1. … Ra1+ 2. Kxa1 Qa6+ 3. Kb1 Qd3+ 4. Rc2 Qxc2+ 5. Ka1 Ra8+ 6. Qa5 Rxa5#
24 | P a g e

CHESS PUZZLE

George Mortimor Kramer vs Ilia Serpik 1996 (1-0) – White to win


1. Bf7+ Kd7 2. Qh3+ Kd6 3. Bf4+ Ne5 4. Qa3+ Kc6 5. Nxe5+

Magnus Carlsen vs Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 2006 (1-0) – White to win


1. Nf5+ gxf5 2. Qxf6+ Kh7 3. Bxf5+ Kg8 4. Be6+ Kh7 5. Qxf4
25 | P a g e

CHESS PUZZLE

Fabiano Caruana vs Ruslan Ponomariov 2014 (1-0) – White to win


1. Ba6 KxBa6 2. Qa8#

Samuel Reshevsky vs Robert James Fischer 1970 (0-1) – Black to win


1. … Qf2 2. Qb5 Re1 3. h3 Rxf1+
26 | P a g e

International Master Federico Manca vs Braga 1992 (1-0)

Glucksberg vs Najdorf 1929 (0-1)


27 | P a g e

Benjamin vs Carter 1975 (1-0)

Albert Einstein vs Oppenheimer 1933 (1-0)


28 | P a g e

The World Champion Magnus Carlsen vs Ernst 2004 (1-0)

Grand Master Mark Paragua vs Debashis 2012 (1-0)


29 | P a g e

Samuel Rosenthal vs Allies 1887 (1-0)

Kazic vs Vukovic 1940 (1-0)


30 | P a g e

Frank Parr vs Wheatcroft 1938 (1-0)

Grand Master Alexander Beliavsky vs Larsen 1981 (1-0)


31 | P a g e

Edward Lasker vs Thomas 1912 (1-0)

Byrne vs Grand Master Robert James Fischer 1963 (0-1)


32 | P a g e

Anderssen vs Max Lange 1859 (0-1)

Per Ofstad vs Uhlmann 1963 (1-0)


33 | P a g e

Hermann vs Hussong 1930 (0-1)

Alexander Fritz vs Mason 1930 (1-0)


34 | P a g e

Women International Master Polina Shuvalova vs Afonasieva 2019 (1-0)

Grand Master Zhao Jun vs Deshun 2011 (1-0)


35 | P a g e

Svidler vs Grand Master Dmitry Andreikin 2018 (0-1)

Grand Master Vasily Malinin vs Andreev 1989 (1-0)


36 | P a g e

Zambelly vs Geza Maroczy 2019 (0-1)

Mikhail Botvinnik vs Checkover 1935 (1-0)


37 | P a g e

Vladas Mikenas vs Lebedev 1941 (1-0)

NN vs Emil Joseph Diemer 1978 (0-1)


38 | P a g e

Efim Korchmar vs Poliak 1937 (1-0)

Geza Maroczy vs Chigorin 1903 (1-0)


39 | P a g e

Friedrich Saemisch vs Herzog 1924 (1-0)

The World Champion Alexander Alekhine vs Kaufmann 1863 (1-0)


40 | P a g e

Gusev vs Auerbach 1946 (1-0)

Bagirov vs Eduard Gufeld 1973 (0-1)


41 | P a g e

Fleissig vs Carl Schlechter 1893 (0-1)

Adolf Anderssen vs Kieseritzky 1854 (1-0)


42 | P a g e

Alexander Stanishevsky vs Nikonov 1981 (1-0)

Carlos Torre Repetto vs Banks 1924 (1-0)


43 | P a g e

MacDonnell vs Samuel Boden 1869 (0-1)

David Norwood vs Marsh 1992 (1-0)


44 | P a g e

Dr. Ralf Runau vs Schmidt 1972 (1-0)

Young vs Leonard Barden 1945 (0-1)


45 | P a g e

Rosanes vs Adolf Anderssen 1863 (0-1)

Liu Wenzhe vs Donner 1978 (1-0)


46 | P a g e

Aron Nimzowitsch vs Alapin 1914 (1-0)

Nicolas Rossolimo vs Romanenko 1948 (1-0)


47 | P a g e

Jens Enevoldsen vs Andersen 1937 (1-0)

Bai vs Grand Master Liren Ding 2017 (0-1)


48 | P a g e

Grand Master Fabiano Caruana vs Alekseenko 2020 (1-0)

Mikhail Tal vs Gulko 1969 (1-0)


49 | P a g e

Paul Keres vs Szabo 1955 (1-0)

Eero Einar Book vs Ingerslev 1929 (1-0)


50 | P a g e

Viswanathan Anand vs Ding Liren 2019 (1-0)

Paul Morphy vs Schrufer 1859 (1-0)


51 | P a g e

Grand Master Hou Yifan vs Sebag 2011 (1-0)

National Master Marvin Dandridge vs D. Gurevich 1991 (1-0)


52 | P a g e

Karjakin vs Viswanathan Anand 2006 (0-1)

Molinari vs Luis Roux Cabral 1943 (0-1)


53 | P a g e

Julio Ernesto Granda Zuniga vs Keim 2004 (1-0)

Grand Master Matthias Wahls vs Bjarnason 1985 (1-0)


54 | P a g e

Rudolf Rezso Charousek vs Englander 1894 (1-0)

Almasi vs Grand Master Alexander Khalifman 1997 (0-1)


55 | P a g e

Helmer vs Josef Emil Krejcik 1917 (0-1)

Trippold vs International Master Sophie Millet 2019 (0-1)


56 | P a g e

Grand Master Konstantin Landa vs Shaposhnikov 2005 (1-0)

NN vs Robert Crepeaux 1923 (0-1)


57 | P a g e

Euwe vs Richard Reti 1920 (0-1)

Grand Master Grigory Levenfish vs Goththilf 1924 (1-0)


58 | P a g e

Grand Master Danil Dubov vs Svane 2019 (1-0)

Lenin vs Maxim Gorky 1908 (0-1)


59 | P a g e

Leo Forgacs vs Tartakower 1909 (1-0)

Siff vs Isaac Kashdan 1948 (0-1)


60 | P a g e

Svetozar Gligoric vs Bidev 1946 (1-0)

Grand Master Efim Geller vs Anikaev 2016 (1-0)


61 | P a g e

Grand Master Viktor Kupreichik vs Neto 1989 (1-0)

Grand Master Fabiano Caruana vs Nakamura 2016 (1-0)


62 | P a g e

Alexander Alekhine vs Supico 1941 (1-0)

Alexander vs Oskar Cordel 1870 (0-1)


63 | P a g e

Grand Master Suat Atalik vs Sax 1997 (1-0)

Henri Weenink vs Gans 1923 (1-0)


64 | P a g e

Grand Master Tatiana vs Galliamova 2003 (1-0)

Paul Felix Schmidt vs Nowarra 1941 (1-0)


65 | P a g e

Osmo Ilmari Kaila vs Kivi 1949 (1-0)

Grand Master Sarin Nihal vs Safarli 2019 (1-0)


66 | P a g e

Arvid Sundin vs Anderrson 1964 (1-0)

John Owen vs Burn 1887 (1-0)


67 | P a g e

Grand Master Vassily Ivanchuk vs Shirov 1996 (1-0)

Vladislav Sipetin vs Veleshnja 2018 (1-0)


68 | P a g e

Ekaterina Atalik vs Skripchenko 1996 (1-0)

Smith vs George Derrickson 1860 (0-1)


69 | P a g e

Pallesen vs Grand Master Jacob Aagaard 2002 (0-1)

Albert Whiting Fox vs Bauer 1901 (1-0)


70 | P a g e

Grand Master Evgenij Kalegin vs Yuferov 1990 (1-0)

Albert Pulitzer vs Marco 1896 (1-0)


71 | P a g e

Xiang vs Grand Master Lu Shanglei 2019 (0-1)

Grand Master Valentina Gunina vs Sebag 2019 (1-0)


72 | P a g e

Thomas Bowdler vs Conway 1788 (1-0)

Georgiev vs Grand Master Ian Rogers 1993 (0-1)


73 | P a g e

Burden vs NN 1850 (1-0)

Welv vs Grand Master Jeroen Piket 1996 (0-1)


74 | P a g e

Emmanuel Schiffers vs Nolde 1872 (1-0)

Grand Master Artur Kogan vs Arencibia 2002 (1-0)


75 | P a g e

O’Kellv vs Paul Devos 1937 (0-1)

Grand Master Bruno Parma vs Konci 1960 (1-0)


76 | P a g e

Janssen vs Grand Master Ivan Sokolov 2002 (0-1)

Grand Master Antoaneta Stefanova vs Gurevich 2008 (1-0)


77 | P a g e

Grand Master Joel Benjamin vs Gufeld 1998 (1-0)

Grand Master S. Mamedyarov vs Galstian 2002 (1-0)


78 | P a g e

Grand Master Andrey Esipenko vs Mikadze 2018 (1-0)

Georgy Lisitsin vs Ragozin 1934 (1-0)


79 | P a g e

Kirilov vs Semyon Furman 1949 (0-1)

Leo Tolstoy vs Ivkoff 1900 (1-0)


80 | P a g e

Zupide vs Sam Loyd 1867 (0-1)

Fyodor Chotimirsky vs NN 1910 (1-0)


81 | P a g e

Grand Master Daniel John King vs Howell 2003 (1-0)

Grand Master Rogelio Antonio Jr vs Dao 2005 (1-0)


82 | P a g e

Grand Master Giorgi Kacheishvili vs Sakaev 2001 (1-0)

The World Champion Magnus Carlsen vs Groenn 2005 (1-0)


83 | P a g e

Grand Master Gawain Jones vs Welv 2007 (1-0)

Grand Master Jiri Lechtynsky vs Pachman 1968 (1-0)


84 | P a g e

Grand Master Robert James Fischer vs Myagmarsuren 1967 (1-0)

Korchnoi vs Grand Master Vladimir Simagin 1960 (0-1)


85 | P a g e

GM Goran Todorovic vs Kraai 2003 (1-0)

Alvis Vitolinsh vs Gutman 1973 (1-0)


86 | P a g e

Anthony G Laster vs Gahtan 1975 (1-0)

Matschego vs Ernst Falkbeer 1973 (0-1)


87 | P a g e

Andersen vs Grand Master Pablo Salinas Herrera 2021 (0-1)

Maczynski vs Wilfred Henry Pratten 1948 (0-1)


88 | P a g e

Jean-Luc Costa vs Grand Master Judit Polgar 1987 (0-1)

Ion Gudju vs Bogdanovsky 1926 (1-0)


89 | P a g e

Yuri Troinov vs Luben Popov 1962 (1-0)

Karl Marx vs Meyer 1867 (1-0)


90 | P a g e

International Master Joshua Waitzkin vs Frumkin 1987 (1-0)

Grand Master Shulman Vladlen vs Feldman 1986 (1-0)


91 | P a g e

Grand Master Ruslan Pogorelov vs Diaz Castro 2004 (1-0)

Napoleon Bonaparte vs Madame De Remusat 1804 (1-0)


92 | P a g e

Adolf Anderssen vs Suhle 1860 (1-0)

Frank Zimmermann vs Huebner 1966 (1-0)


93 | P a g e

Grand Master Wesley So vs Firouzja 2021 (1-0)

Weiss vs William Pollock 1889 (0-1)


94 | P a g e

Philip Richardson vs Delmar 1871 (1-0)

Napoleon Bonaparte vs The Turk (Automation) 1809 (0-1)


95 | P a g e

Women Grand Master Ekaterina Korbut vs Chelushkina 2006 (1-0)

Sergei Prokofiev vs Ravel 1924 (1-0)


96 | P a g e

Erdos vs Lichtner 1922 (1-0)

Ludek Pachman vs Eckert 1940 (1-0)


97 | P a g e

Grand Master Igor Yagupov vs Rustemov 1995 (1-0)

Grand Master Vasilios Kotronias vs Deshun 2011 (1-0)


98 | P a g e

Alexander Alekhine vs Prat 1913 (1-0)

Albert Einstein vs Sell 1913 (1-0)


99 | P a g e

Paul Morphy vs Karl / Isouard 1858 (1-0)

Showalter vs George Hatfeild Gossip 1889 (0-1)


100 | P a g e

Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch vs Romberg 1893 (1-0)

Josef Emil Krejcik vs Krobot 1908 (1-0)


101 | P a g e

Grand Master Alireza Firouzja vs Zarkovic 2019 (1-0)

Paul Morphy vs NN 1850 (1-0)


102 | P a g e

Grand Master Carsten Hoi vs Gulko 1988 (1-0)

Bobotsov vs The World Champion Mikhail Tal 1958 (0-1)


103 | P a g e

The World Champion Magnus Carlsen vs Firouzja 2021 (1-0)

Hastings vs Andrew Philip Law 1994 (0-1)


104 | P a g e

The World Champion Jose Paul Capablanca vs Campos 1927 (1-0)

Grand Master Nick de Firmian vs Nikolic 1985 (1-0)


105 | P a g e

Paul Morphy vs A. Morphy 1850 (1-0)

Schmaltz vs Grand Master Ronen Har-Zvi 2001 (0-1)


CHESS NOTATIONS

1. Norazwan Kamaruzaman. (2016). Koleksi Notasi SUKIPT 2016 Kategori Wanita.


Penerbit Umezaki Trading.
2. Dr. Olgun Kulac, Kevin O’Connell. (2014). Elementary Level Chess Class Book
3. Elvira Umanskaja, Ekaterina Volkova. (2014). Chess: The First Year of Study
4. Murray Chandler. (2008). How to Beat Your Dad at Chess. Gambit Publications Ltd.
5. Arena International Master Hafiz Nor. (2018). Advanced Chess. AB Chess Sdn Bhd.
6. Fide [online]. Available: https://www.fide.com/
7. Lichess [online]. Available: https://www.lichess.org/
8. Chess.com [online]. Available: https://www.chess.com/
9. Chessonofficial [online]. Available: https://www.facebook.com/chessonofficial
10. Chesspuzzle.net/Puzzle[online].Available: https://www.chesspuzzle.net
11. Abchess.asia [online]. Available: https://www.facebook.com/abchess.asia/
12. Catur-psis [online]. Available: http://catur-psis.blogspot.com/

ix | P a g e
CHESS NOTATIONS

Anastasia's Mate: This mate is more common after the enemy king has already castled. It
entails one piece obstructing a square adjacent to the enemy king (usually a pawn). To
checkmate your opponent, you'll also need a knight and a rook.
Arabian Mate: The Arabian Mate is reached when a knight and rook work together to
checkmate the king. The knight guards the rook and prevents the king from escaping.
Back Rank Mate: The Back Rank Mate is very common in chess, so it is a good idea to be
able to identify when this pattern appears on the board. This mate includes taking advantage
of your opponent's pieces creating a wall in front of their king, leaving only one rank for it.
You can then checkmate your opponent by attacking that rank with a rook or a queen.
Checkmate: A checkmate (also known as "mate") occurs when a king is place in check and
has no legal moves to escape. When a checkmate happens, the game ends immediately, and
the player who delivered the checkmate wins.
FIDE: Federation Internationale Des Echecs is an acronym for Federation Internationale Des
Echecs (World Chess Federation).
File: The vertical lines on a board are call files. The files (columns) are label from a - h.
Fool's Mate (Two-Move-Checkmate): The Fool's Mate is the fastest checkmate in chess,
happening only after two moves! To achieve this accomplishment, you must play as Black
(White can checkmate in three moves) and your opponent must perform terribly. It entails
targeting either White's weak e1-h4 diagonal or Black's weak e8-h5 diagonal.
Legal's Mate: The Legal's Mate is another opening trap that comes after one-player
sacrifices the queen to force a mate. For this mating pattern to occur, both players must
execute these actions.
NN: An unknown player, usually an amateur.
Rank: The horizontal lines on a board are call ranks. The ranks (rows) are number from 1 - 8.
Scholar's Mate (Four-Move-Checkmate): The Scholar's Mate is an opening trap that
catches many beginners off guard. It's also a fast mate that takes only four moves to
complete and entails attacking the weak f2 and f7 squares.
Score Sheet: When competing in chess competitions, written chess notation is frequently
required. Many competitions require players to keep track of their games on a score sheet.
Smothered Mate: The name "Smothered Mate" comes from the idea that the monarch has no
"breathing room" and hence cannot escape any danger. That's when a knight can enter the fray
and take advantage of the king's limited manoeuvrability to put an end to the game in style!
x|Pa g e
CHESS SCORE SHEET
Event: Section: Page #:

Date: Round #: Board #: Time Control: Opening:

White: Rating: Pairing #:

Black: Rating: Pairing #:

White Black White Black White Black


1 41 81
2 42 82
3 43 83
4 44 84
5 45 85
6 46 86
7 47 87
8 48 88
9 49 89
10 50 90
11 51 91
12 52 92
13 53 93
14 54 94
15 55 95
16 56 96
17 57 97
18 58 98
19 59 99
20 60 100
21 61 101
22 62 102
23 63 103
24 64 104
25 65 105
26 66 106
27 67 107
28 68 108
29 69 109
30 70 110
31 71 111
32 72 112
33 73 113
34 74 114
35 75 115
36 76 116
37 77 117
38 78 118
39 79 119
40 80 120

White won Draw Black won

(circle one)

White Signature: _________________________________________

Black Signature: _________________________________________

You might also like