[Event "Surrey - Middlesex County m"] [Site "Surrey ENG"] [Date "1933.10.28"] [EventDate "?"] [Round "?"] [Result "1-0"] [White "Mir Sultan Khan"] [Black "William Winter"] [ECO "D41"] [WhiteElo "?"] [BlackElo "?"] [Source "Daniel King 'Sultan Khan' p.518-519"] [PlyCount "67"] 1. Nf3 Nf6 2. d4 d5 3. c4 e6 4. Nc3 c5 5. cxd5 Nxd5 6. e4 Nxc3 7. bxc3 cxd4 8. cxd4 Nc6 9. Be2 Bb4+ 10. Bd2 Qa5 {Winter has done his homework. I am sure that he knew of the game Flohr-Euwe, Carlsbad 1932, which had continued 11.Bxb4 Qxb4+ 12.Qd2 Qxd2+ 13.Kxd2 Ke7 and Black was very comfortable. Khan improves on White's play.} 11. Rb1 Bxd2+ 12. Qxd2 Qxd2+ 13. Kxd2 O-O {If Black had played 13...Ke7, they would have reached the same position as Flohr-Euwe with White a tempo up... } 14. Rhc1 Rd8 15. Ke3 Na5 16. Rc7 Rd7 17. Rc3 b6 18. Ne5 Re7 19. Rbc1 Bb7 20. Rc7 Rxc7 21. Rxc7 {Khan has won the strategic battle. Winter has a tough choice: defend passively with 21...Rf8; push the knight with 21...f6 but expose the seventh rank; or play for activity. He chooses the latter, though in fact none of them would have solved Black's problems. -Daniel King} Rc8 22. Rxf7 Rc3+ 23. Kd2 Ra3 24. Rd7 Rxa2+ 25. Ke3 g5 26. Bd3 Ra3 27. Ke2 Ra2+ 28. Kf3 h5 29. d5 exd5 30. exd5 Ra3 31. Ke2 Ra2+ 32. Ke3 Ra3 33. d6 Nc6 34. Nc4 1-0