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Z Einoris vs Garry Kasparov
USSR Junior Championship (1975), Baku, rd 3, Jan-??
Sicilian Defense: Boleslavsky Variation (B59)  ·  0-1

8
7
6
5
4
3
2
a
1
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
White to move.
ANALYSIS [x]
Notes by Stockfish 9 v010218 (minimum 6s/ply)better is 12...Qc8 13.Be3 Rd8 14.Bb6 Re8 15.Bxa5 Nc6 16.fxe5 Nxe5 = 0.00 (21 ply)better is 13.Qe2 b6 14.Rd1 Qc8 15.g4 Nd7 16.f5 h6 17.Be3 Rd8 18.Rd2 ⩲ +0.55 (22 ply)= -0.19 (24 ply)better is 17.Bd2 d5 18.Bxa5 Nd7 19.c4 Nc5 20.cxd5 Nxb3 21.Bxc7 = +0.15 (21 ply) ⩱ -0.60 (23 ply) 22.Nd4 Nc5 23.h5 Qd7 24.Nb5 Nxb5 25.axb5 Rfd8 26.cxd5 = -0.29 (23 ply) ⩱ -1.29 (24 ply) after 22...Kh8 23.Rc1 Bd6 24.Qd2 Bb4 25.Qe3 Qd7 26.h5 Rad8 better is 24.Qd2 Rfd8 25.Rfd1 Kh8 26.h5 d4 27.Bc4 d3 28.h6 Nd5 ⩱ -1.27 (19 ply) 24...Bxc5 25.Bxc7 Nxc7 26.Nxb7 Ba7 27.a5 Ne6 28.a6 Nd4 ∓ -1.90 (22 ply) 25.Bxc7 Qxc7 26.Qxd5+ Kh8 27.Nc4 Rad8 28.Qe5 Qxe5 ⩱ -0.56 (26 ply) ∓ -2.44 (25 ply) 29.Qa4 Qe7 30.Rae1 Rac8 31.Qa3 Qxa3 32.bxa3 Ne8 33.Rc1 ∓ -1.65 (22 ply)-+ -2.99 (21 ply) 30.Qb3 Qd4 31.Rae1 Bb6 32.Qc3 Nxa6 33.Qxd4 Bxd4 34.Nd6 ∓ -2.29 (22 ply)-+ -5.58 (22 ply) after 30...Nd5 31.Bxd5 Qxd5 32.Kg2 Rfc8 33.Nc5 Rab8 34.Qe1 d2 32...Nxa6 33.Rae1 Nxb4 34.Rxe3 Nxa2 35.Rh3 Nc3 36.Nd6 -+ -5.08 (23 ply) 33.Nc5 Rfd8 34.h5 Rb8 35.h6 Qh3+ 36.Qh2 Qxh2+ 37.Kxh2 -+ -3.24 (22 ply)-+ -6.97 (23 ply) 35...d1=R 36.Raxd1 Rxd1 37.Rxd1 Qxf4+ 38.Kh1 Qf3+ 39.Qg2 -+ -13.17 (28 ply)-+ -5.37 (22 ply)-+ mate-in-11 after 42.Rhxe1 Rxe1 43.Nc4 Rxa1 44.Nxd2 Ra2 45.Kg243.Kh3 Nd5 44.h5 Nxf4# -+ mate-in-20-1

rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/RNBQKBNR w KQkq - 0 1
FEN COPIED

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Given 7 times; par: 58 [what's this?]

Annotations by Stockfish (Computer).      [35437 more games annotated by Stockfish]

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Kibitzer's Corner
Dec-07-04  Nomen Nescio: Black's passed pawns cannot be stopped.
What is an alternative to 13.Nd5?
Jul-19-05  BlackHowling: Well, the point of 13.Nd5 goes to the heart of the Sicilian Defense. The move ...d5 is the prime objective for the defense. This move gives black a a freer game. Now, white could simply play such moves that defends the e-pawn, but that would allow black to play for ... d5. So, I believe the thought of 13.Nd5 was to prevent black from playing the ...d6-d5 move.
Apr-20-06  pawn to QB4: Wow, stumbled on this blast from the past. First time many keen players heard of Garry Kasparov was when Leonard Barden stuck this game in his column ("The Guardian" in England, variously syndicated in India, possibly elsewhere?) and tipped young Weinstein as "the player to take the world championship for the Soviet Union into the next century". Half right: Gazza made it, the Soviet Union didn't. Rightly proud of this prediction, Barden mentioned it now and then for the next 20 years.
Feb-13-07  Tacticstudent: 16. g4!. White has more options in the knigside, and Black generally has a better endgame than white in the Sicilian. It's time to attack!

17. Bd2. White is just creating weak holes in black's side.

21. c4!. Black's center was not estabilized; So, White just go for crumbling it.

24. Nxa5. Keep the initiative, don't matter it's price!

25. ..., Be4 is a better alternative.

29. a6?. White has gave up of attacking to defend from Black's pawns.

34. Nb7? Ne7+!

Jan-05-08  DanLanglois: <Tacticstudent> I'm fine with '16. g4!'

I'm not sure what this means: '17. Bd2. White is just creating weak holes in black's side.' I take it that White's play is being praised, in which case it's not '17. Bd2' but 18 Bd2. And, I imagine that 18 Be3 is at least as good.

I don't agree with: '21. c4!' In fact, White wound up staring at two connected passed center pawns on the 7th rank, so I don't see how White could have failed more miserably at 'crumbling' Black's center.

I don't agree that White has or keeps the initiative with 24 Nxa5. Black has the initiative.

I can't parse what '25. ..., Be4 is a better alternative' might mean. Are we talking about some suggestion for White on the 25th move? Indeed, I am critical of 25 Bxc4, and suggest 25 Bxc7.

I think the suggestion: '34. Nb7? Ne7+!' was meant as 34 Nf7+! However, (34 Nf7+) Rxf7 and White can resign.

Nov-22-11  sicilianhugefun: Passed pawns must be pushed!
Jul-14-13  BlackFront: <First time many keen players heard of Garry Kasparov was when Leonard Barden stuck this game in his column ("The Guardian" in England, variously syndicated in India, possibly elsewhere?) and tipped young Weinstein as "the player to take the world championship for the Soviet Union into the next century".>

See http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/...

Jul-15-13  pawn to QB4: wow, to see that article again after all these years. My thanks. I see my memory is failing: in trying to recall it I had conflated it with another from a few years later, which began something like - "Gary Kasparov, just 16, looks more and more the player to extend the Soviet Union's domination of the world title into the 21st century". Again, there have been worse predictions.
Nov-14-13  MrJafari: Isn't it better for White to take e8 rook by d6 knight instead of return to b7?
Nov-14-13  Shams: <MrJafari> Your question isn't clear. Please give move numbers.
Mar-02-14  MrJafari: <shams> in 34 and 35, white's knight can attack to rook as I think.
Mar-02-14  shivasuri4: MrJafari, 34...d2 threatens Qh3#, so 35.Kh2 is necessary.
Apr-10-14  MrJafari: <shivasuri4> Thanks to answer,I meant before 34...d2,Of course finally White loses!

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