CHESS

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
By Lubomir Kavalek
Special to The Washington Post
Monday, March 23, 2009

Europe has two new champions and both are Russian. Evgeny Tomashevsky won the 10th European Individual Championship on Wednesday in Budva, Montenegro. Scoring 8 points in 11 games, he shared first place with 11 other players, but won the knockout tiebreak. The powerful field of 306 players included 139 grandmasters.

The 10th European Individual Women's Championship with 168 participants finished Friday in St. Petersburg. Tatiana Kosintseva took the title, defeating Armenia's Lilit Mkrtchian in a tiebreak after both scored 8 1/2 points in 11 games.

The event was severely weakened since it collided with the FIDE Women's Grand Prix tournament in Istanbul that ended Thursday. The victory went to the Indian grandmaster Humpy Koneru. With an 8 1/2 -2 1/2 score, the top-seeded Koneru edged Armenia's Elina Danielian and China's Hou Yifan by a half point.

Swedish Queen's Gambit

At 45, the Swedish grandmaster and former European Women's champion Pia Cramling still creates beautiful attacks. She scored 50 percent in Istanbul, but her victory against Betul Cemre Yildiz of Turkey in the Queen's Gambit Accepted is full of marvelous power moves.

Cramling-Yildiz

1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.Nf3 c5 4.e3 cxd4 5.Bxc4 Qc7 (5...dxe3? 6.Bxf7+! wins.) 6.Bb3!? (Cramling sacrifices a pawn, playing a real gambit. Saving the pawn with 6.Qb3 e6 7.exd4 is possible. Black should avoid 6.Qb3 Be6? since after 7.Bxe6! Qxc1+ [or 7...fxe6 8.0-0!] 8.Ke2 Qxh1 9.Bxf7+ Kd8 10.Qxb7 white wins.) 6...e6 (Accepting the pawn 6...dxe3 gives white the edge after 7.Bxe3 e6 8.Nc3 Bd7 9.Rc1 Qa5 10.0-0 Nf6 11.Nd2!? Be7 12.Nc4 Qa6 13.Bg5! 0-0 14.Ne4! with strong pressure.) 7.0-0 d3 (Black is returning the pawn, hoping to slow white's development.) 8.Qxd3 Nf6 9.Nc3 Nbd7 10.Qe2 (Against 10...Nc5.) 10...a6 11.e4 Nc5 (11...Bd6 does a better job preventing the e4-e5 advance.) 12.Bc2 b5 13.Bd2 Bb7 14.Rfc1! (X-raying the black queen on the same file and preparing a queenside assault.) 14...Qd8 (After 14...Be7 15.b4 Ncd7 16.e5! black has problems.)

15.b4 Ncd7 16.a4! (Cramling is relentless.) 16...bxa4 (After 16...Bxb4 17.Nxb5! black could go down quickly, for example 17...Bc5 [on 17...Bxd2 comes 18.Nd6+! Ke7 19.Qxd2] 18.Nbd4 0-0 19.Rab1 Rb8 20.e5 Nd5 and now the classic bishop sacrifice 21.Bxh7+ should win after 21...Kxh7 22.Ng5+ Kg8 23.Qd3 g6 24.Ndxe6 Qe7 25.Nxc5 Nxc5 26.Rxc5 Qxc5 27.Qh3, threatening 28.Qh7 mate.) 17.Bxa4 Bxb4 18.Nd5! (A smashing leap, exposing the black king in the long run. The advance 18.e5! is also troublesome for black, e.g. 18...Bxc3 19.Bxc3 Bxf3 20.Qxf3 Nd5 21.Ba5! Qe7 22.Bc7, threatening 23.Bd6.) 18...Bd6 (After 18...Nxd5 comes 19.exd5 Bxd2 20.Qxd2 0-0 [on 20...Bxd5 21.Ne5 wins] 21.dxe6 Nb6 22.Qxd8 Rfxd8 23.e7; and after 18...Bxd2 19.Nc7+ Kf8 20.Qxd2 Rb8 21.Rab1 white has decisive pressure, for example 21...Bxe4?! 22.Rxb8 Qxb8 23.Ne5! Nxe5 24.Qd6+ Kg8 and the pretty deflection 25.Nd5!! ends the game.) 19.Nxf6+ gxf6 (After 19...Qxf6 20.Qd3 Qe7 21.e5 Bb8 22.Bg5 f6 23.exf6 gxf6 24.Bxf6! wins.) 20.Qd3 Qe7 21.Rab1 Rb8? (There is no hope anyway. After 21...Bc8 22.e5 fxe5 23.Qe4 wins.) 22.Rxb7! (On 22...Rxb7 23.Rc8+ follows.) Black resigned.

Solution to today's three-mover by H. Weenink (White: Kd1,Qb1,Rf5,Rg8,P:d2,f2; Black: Kf1,P:b3,c4,d4,d5,e5): 1.Qe4! dxe4 2.f4! exf3 3.Rxf3 mate; or 2...exf4 3.Rxf4 mate; or 2...b2 3.fxe5 mate.



© 2009 The Washington Post Company