The Chess Mind

Author: Dennis Monokroussos.
This is a blog for chess fans by a chess fan who is more than a chess fan - other topics do creep in from time to time, per my interest.
All material here is copyrighted, and may not be reproduced without my prior permission.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

This Week's ChessBase Show: Keres-Smyslov, Moscow/Leningrad 1939
In 1939, both Paul Keres (1916-1975) and Vassily Smyslov (1921- ) were young men near the start of their chess careers. Keres had just burst on the world scene the past year or two, while Smyslov was about a year from making his mark as a leading Soviet player. Neither player was as strong as he eventually would be (though Keres might have been fairly close at that point), but they were already very strong and great battlers.

That tremendous strength and fighting spirit is evident in their game from a 1939 training tournament in Moscow and Leningrad, though to judge from the opening alone one might not have expected much. The opening was a Queen's Gambit Declined, and Black's inaccurate handling left White with a small but persistent positional advantage. One might expect a long maneuvering game in prospect, but Keres found a way to sharpen the play - dramatically. With sacrifices left and right, the Estonian legend threw everything into an attack on Smyslov's king, and yet the younger man defended with equal brilliance for quite a while. All it took was a single error, and under the heavy and sustained pressure of Keres' attack, Smyslov finally went awry.

Despite the error, the game does credit to both players, and is a real pleasure for those of us who will be watching. Also, the low-tech opening makes this game especially valuable to U-2000 players, who may not understand why some of the commonplace finesses of the Queen's Gambit Declined matter. This show will go some way towards clarifying the mysteries of that opening, before we reach the joyful middlegame between these gladiators of the chessboard.

I hope - no, I expect! - to see everyone join in the fun tonight (Wednesday night at 9 p.m. ET); the show is free, after all, and it's easy to watch: Log on to the Playchess server, enter the Broadcast room, and click on Keres-Smyslov game in the games tab at the relevant time. (Further directions here, if necessary.)

See you there!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

This Week's ChessBase Show: Marshall-Lasker, 1907
One of the first great American players was Frank Marshall (1877-1944). His fame continues to the present day on account of his gambit in the Ruy Lopez, and his contributions to opening theory go far beyond that one idea. He was the shock winner of the very strong Cambridge Springs tournament of 1904, U.S. Champion from 1909 to 1936, one of the original five players dubbed grandmasters (at St. Petersburg 1914) and an enormously important figure in American chess. Furthermore, his founding and securing the Marshall Chess Club (which continues to thrive to the present day) is almost as important as his great successes on the chess board.

Marshall, then, is one of the great figures of early 20th century chess. But there's great, and then there's great, and when Marshall played a world championship match against Emanuel Lasker (1868-1941) in 1907, that difference became clear. Lasker, who was not only the world champion from 1894-1921 but also had a Ph.D. in mathematics, faced off against the American in a race to eight wins. Nowadays a match like that might take six months to a year to finish, but in their contest Lasker dismantled Marshall, winning the eighth game without a single loss and only seven draws. Thud.

Despite the lopsided result, almost all of the games were interesting and most carried through to the endgame. That's what happened in the first game of this match, which we shall examine tonight (Wednesday at 9 p.m. ET) in our weekly ChessBase show. After a strategically interesting but brief middlegame, the players reached a rook and minor piece ending. With best play, it would have been equal, but Lasker's virtuoso treatment Marshall needed to play very accurately to hold - and he didn't. This got Lasker off to a great start, and with wins in the next two games as well he never looked back.

There are, as always, good reasons to tune in tonight, and this is especially the case if you're a 1.e4 e5 player. Though our game this week arose via a minor Berlin sideline, the pawn structure is one that can occur in the Scotch and the Two Knights, and as such is one that ought to be understood by 1...e5 aficionados. Additionally, it's simply a great ending by Lasker, and for those with eyes to see, there are lessons to be learned. So please join me tonight - the show is free and runs an hour or so; just go to the broadcast room of the Playchess.com server, select the Marshall-Lasker game at the relevant hour, and enjoy! (Further directions here.) Hope to see you there.
Accessing my ChessBase Shows

Every Wednesday night, I present a live show on ChessBase's playchess.com server, and once the show is over it is uploaded into the server's archives. In this entry I'll explain how to access both live and archived shows.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

This Week's ChessBase Show: Nepomniachtchi-Rublevsky
1990 was a banner year for chess prodigies. First and foremost, there's Magnus Carlsen, who already, albeit unofficially, reigns atop the FIDE rating list. Next, there's Ukranian superstar Sergei Karjakin, currently #15 in the world and still possessor of the record for the youngest grandmaster in history. And then there's the young French star Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, who has skyrocketed the past few months to #24 in the world (unofficially) with a 2715 rating. By rating, those are the big three, but although he's not quite in the top 100 yet - officially - another rapidly rising star is the Russian Ian Nepomniachtchi.

This year, he has already won the super-strong Aeroflot Open, which qualified him for Dortmund, he won the Ordix Open in Mainz (a ridiculously strong rapid event), and is currently leading the Russian Championship Higher League with a 2806 TPR. These outstanding results have not gone unnoticed, and his praises have been sung even by such an elite grandmaster as Peter Svidler.

If Svidler thinks he is worth paying attention to, then we should as well. And in a way, we already have: just a few weeks ago, we presented one of his games in another ChessBase show. That game, however, was a loss; this time, we'll see him in a more positive light. The game is from the 2006 Russian Championship Super-Final, an elite event such that even qualifying was a tremendous accomplishment. As we'll see, his game with Sergei Rublevsky, then the defending champion and a future World Championship Candidate, proved that he belonged.

Nepomniachtchi quickly took Rublevsky out of familiar Kan/Taimanov paths, and the creative play never stopped. Nepomniachtchi castled in a situation that involved both a pawn sac and the destruction of the pawns around his king. The ingenious ideas never stopped, whether they involved maneuvers or tactics. I'd describe them, but then that might take away from the freshness of the game. It's one to experience and savor, so I hope that unless you spend a great deal of time on it beforehand, that you not watch it in advance.

Naturally, I do recommend that you join me tonight - Wednesday night (9 p.m. ET) - as I present this wonderful game in the Broadcast room of the Playchess.com server. For those who haven't attended before, it's an audio/video presentation. The moves and analysis appear on your screen, while my audio commentary comes simultaneously. Best of all, it's free to watch (live; watching afterwards in the archives involves a nominal fee - further details here).

Hope to see you there!

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

This Week's ChessBase Show: Topalov-Ponomariov, MTel 2005
Looking through my recent ChessBase shows and comparing them with the lineup for the Grand Slam Final in Bilbao, it seems that the only player not to have a win presented in the last couple of months is Veselin Topalov. This is an omission to rectify, especially as he's in the final four for the world championship. Another factor that makes him an easy choice is his very aggressive style. Whatever one's views about Topalov and the controversies he has engendered, the man can play some dazzling chess.

Accordingly, we'll look at one of the former world champ and #1's brilliant games from 2005, his banner year. He won everything in sight then: Linares (tied with Kasparov), MTel, and then - destroying the field - the FIDE World Championship in San Luis. That year, he dominated like no one had but Kasparov, and in his style, will to win, and superior opening preparation he also resembled the "Beast from Baku". It is from this annus mirabilis that we take our game of the week, the game Topalov-Ponomariov from the second cycle of the MTel Masters.

Topalov hadn't gotten off to a great start and had lost to former FIDE champ Ruslan Ponomariov in the first cycle, but now he caught fire. Although one rarely associates the Queen's Indian Defense with sharp and lively play, Topalov (with his second, Cheparinov) has detonated many dangerous novelties on the white side of this opening, and we'll see one of them in this game. He came out of his prep with a significant advantage, but the game still needed to be won. That he did it, you all know, but how he did it deserves to be seen and savored. Super-GMs can prepare brilliantly, but they can play brilliantly once the preparation finishes - as you'll see for yourself.

At least, you'll get to see if you join me tonight - Wednesday night - at 9 p.m. ET. The show is free if you catch it live on the Playchess.com server; go into the Broadcast room when the time is right, select the games tab, click on Topalov-Ponomariov, sit back and enjoy! (More details here.) Hope to see you then!