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Sakkvilág |
A Világbajnokság 2000 első játszmája!
Sakk világbajnokság
2000, London!
A KASZPAROV - KRAMNIK meccs első
játszmája!
Az alábbi angol nyelvű buletin Kaszparov
hírlevelének eredeti kópiája.
RAPID RECAP BY MIG AND KASPAROV TEAM MEMBER IM
MICHAEL KHODARKOVSKY IN LONDON!
(1) Kasparov,G (2830) - Kramnik,V (2751) [C67]
BGN World Chess Championship London (1),
08.10.2000
[Mig Greengard and Kasparov team member IM Michael
Khodarkovsky] 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 And the challenger
plays the first
surprise! Kramnik almost never plays this, usually
prefering the
Petroff Defense with 2...Nf6. With this moove Kramnik
invites
Kasparov’s famous Scotch Opening (3.d4). The champion
has a
great score with this opening, and Kramnik was on
Kasparov’s team
in 1995 and knows many ideas that they worked on
together.
3.Bb5 The Ruy Lopez, or Spanish Game. One of the
oldest and
most complex openings. So Garry decides to not play
the Scotch
and find out what Kramnik has prepared against the
Classical
Spanish. 3...Nf6 4.0–0 Nxe4 5.d4 Here Kasparov was
wondering if
Kramnik was going to play Anand’s favorite Open
Defense to the
Lopez. 5...Nd6 But Kramnik goes for the solid Berlin
Defense
instead, heading for a tough ending. He eliminates
any
chance for
tactical threats in development, avoiding Kasparov’s
greatest
strength and moves into a maneuvering
middlegame.
6.Bxc6 dxc6 7.dxe5 Nf5 8.Qxd8+ Kxd8 This sequence is
part of
the Berlin variation of the Ruy Lopez. Black has a
solid position and
the two bishops, White has more space, and better
pieces. 9.Nc3
Bd7 10.b3
[10.h3 h6 11.Bf4 b6 12.a4 a5 13.Rad1 Kc8 14.b3 Bb4
15.Ne4 Be6
16.c4 c5 17.g4 Ne7 18.Ne1 Bd7 19.Ng3 g5 20.Be3 Ng6
21.Nd3
Bc6 22.f4 gxf4 23.Nxf4 Bc3 24.Nfe2 Bxe5 25.Rxf7 Kb7
26.Rff1
Rae8 27.Rd3 Re6 28.Rf2 Rhe8 29.Bd2 Nh4 30.Kf1 Bd6
31.Nc3
Bxg3 32.Rxg3 Rd8 33.Bc1 Rde8 34.Bd2 Rd8 35.Bc1 Rd7
36.Bf4
Rde7 37.Bd2 Rd7 38.Bc1 Rde7 39.Bd2 Rd7 40.Bc1 Rde7
1/2–1/2
Shirov,A-Almasi,Z/Polanica Zdroj POL 2000/The Week in
Chess
302 (40); 10.Bg5+ Ke8 11.Rad1 h6 12.Bc1 a5 13.Ne4 a4
14.a3
Ra5 15.Rd3 Be7 16.g4 Nh4 17.Nxh4 Bxh4 18.g5 Bxg5
19.Bxg5
hxg5 20.Rfd1 Rd5 21.Nxg5 Rh4 22.f3 Rxd3 23.Rxd3 Bf5
24.Rd2
Rh5 25.f4 Rh4 26.Rf2 Ke7 27.Kg2 f6 28.exf6+ gxf6
29.Re2+ Kf8
30.Ne4 Kf7 31.Kg3 Rg4+ 32.Kf3 Rg1 33.Ng3 Be6 34.f5
Bd5+
35.Kf4 Rg2 36.Rxg2 Bxg2 37.Ne4 Bxe4 38.Kxe4 Kg7
39.Kf4
b5
40.c3 Kh6 41.Kg4 c5 42.h3 c4 43.Kh4 c5 44.Kg4 b4
45.Kh4 Kh7
46.Kh5 Kg7 47.h4 Kh7 48.Kg4 Kh6 49.Kg3 Kh5 50.Kh3 Kh6
51.Kg4
Kg7 52.Kf4 Kh6 53.Ke4 Kh5 1–0
Morisi,E-Vannelli,V/Vitinia
1996/EXT 2000 (53)]
10...h6 11.Bb2 Kc8 12.h3N The first new move of the
game! Here
they diverge from Shirov-Krasenkow, played earlier
this year. In
some lines this pawn will support a g4 push. [12.Rad1
a5 13.h3 b6
14.a4 Bb4 15.Ne2 Re8 16.Nf4 g6 17.g4 Ng7 18.Rd3 Ne6
19.Nxe6
Bxe6 20.Nd4 Bd7 21.Ne2 Bd6 22.f4 f5 23.exd6 Rxe2
24.dxc7 Kxc7
25.Be5+ Kc8 26.Rfd1 Be6 27.Rd6 1–0
Shirov,A-Krasenkow,M/Polanica Zdroj POL 2000/The Week
in
Chess 303 (27)]
12...b6 13.Rad1 Ne7 14.Ne2 Ng6 15.Ne1! This is the
key
move
that made everyone wonder if Black was in real
trouble. Black’s
pieces are very uncomfortable to begin with, but now
Kasparov has
the concrete threat of f4-f5. Kramnik’s reaction
prevents a white g4
and fights for the control of the f5 square. 15...h5
After making all
of his previous moves instantly, Kramnik spent half
an
hour on this
move. Perhaps he was surprised by Ne1. But Kramnik
was
still far
ahead on the clock.
16.Nd3 c5 17.c4 a5 18.a4 h4 19.Nc3?! A "slow-motion"
knight
maneuver to make an outpost on d5, but really it
turned out to be a
waste of time that allows Black to consolidate his
position.
19...Be6! A key defensive move when Black doesn’t
have
many
good options. Kramnik digs in to form a shield that
White can’t
break down.
20.Nd5 Kb7 21.Ne3 Rh5 22.Bc3? This move looks like a
kind of
pass, to see if Black can find anything useful to do
that doesn’t hurt
his position. [22.Rd2] 22...Re8 23.Rd2 Kc8 24.f4 Ne7
25.Nf2 Nf5
Draw.
Közzétette: Lajos Pagony sakkrovat-vezető
2000. október 09., hétfő 00:00
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