CBM 224: The Indian juggernaut rolls on!

CBM 224: The Indian juggernaut rolls on!

ChessBase Magazine offers a window to the world of professional chess. Our columnist, Nagesh Havanur takes a look at the current issue, CBM 224. 209 games from the Tata Steel Tournament, 15 annotated, 11 opening surveys, 4 opening videos, 7 demo. lectures and several exercises for training. Annotators include Anish Giri, Nodirbek Abdusattorov, Praggnanandhaa and Karsten Müller among others. The icing on the cake is a special feature on Viktor Korchnoi with 24 annotated games.

Review by Nagesh Havanur

Even as I write these lines, the Paris Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tournament is in progress. It’s a star-studded field with Carlsen, Caruana, Nakamura, Abdusattorov and Keymer among others. The Indian contingent is led by Dommaraju Gukesh. The young FIDE World Champion had the baptism of fire in Weissenhaus Freestyle Grand Slam Tournament. Success eluded him here with too many draws and losses to Carlsen and Firouzja. As Carlsen put it, Gukesh has not had much exposure to freestyle chess, having devoted most of his time for the more regular formats of play. This time he is expected to do better with all the experience he has gathered in the last freestyle tournament.

That brings us to his performance in the recent Tata Steel Chess Tournament. Here he shared first and second place with Praggnanandhaa in the main event with a score of 8.5/13 (+5, -1, =7). Then they had to play a Blitz Match to resolve the tie. After both had drawn level with 1-1 score, Praggnanandhaa won the final game to claim first prize in this prestigious tournament. In the main this issue is devoted to the Tata Steel Chess Tournament. Among others I would pick the game annotated by Anish Giri, an encounter that he lost to Gukesh, the newly crowned World Champion.

After this game both spectators and commentators said. Gukesh was lucky. However, Anish Giri shows, nothing was so simple and Gukesh’s victory was no fluke. One game that deserved to be annotated in this issue was the final game of the Tie-break Blitz Match. I have done it for readers:

CBM 224: The Indian juggernaut rolls on!

Photo: Gukesh Dommaraju’s frustration after misplaying a drawn knight endgame | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

An incredible game in which the loser deserves as much as the winner!

A Viktor Korchnoi Special

CBM 224: The Indian juggernaut rolls on!

This issue has a special feature on Viktor Korchnoi. There are 24 annotated games. His opponents include Fischer, Tal, Petrosian, Kasparov and Karpov among others. I would have loved to see encounters with other great players like Spassky, Geller, Larsen and Portisch. In the MegaBase there are more than 5000 games played over a period of 70 years (1945-2015)!

Opening videos

There are 4 opening videos in this issue.

Michael Prusikin introduces opening traps in the French advance Variation (C02)

1. e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 c5

In the second video Surya Ganguly offers an introduction to a rare line in the Sicilian (B40):

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 e6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Qxd4 Nc6 5. Qe3 Nf6 6.Nc3 Bb4 (6…d5 among others is an alternative).

In the third video Felix Blohberger offers a discussion of an unorthodox idea that defies White’s options in both the regular Queen’s Gambit and also the Queen’S Indian (E10):

1.d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 h6!?

This is a kind of waiting move. If White plays 4. Nc3, Black replies with 4…Bb4 transposing to the Nimzo-Indian. One line ruled out for White is the Leningrad as Black’s 3…h6 move does not allow Bg5.

In the fourth video Daniel King offers a demo. Lecture on an offbeat line in the Queen’s Gambit Declined Exchange Variation (D35):

1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. cxd5 exd5 5. Bg5 Be7 6.e3 h6 7. Bh4 Bb4!?

Take your pick.

 

Opening Surveys

There are as many as 11 opening surveys ranging from the Italian to the King’s Indian in this issue. I would first single out the survey on the 3…Nxe4 line in the Petroff Defence by Balász Csonka. His analysis is vindicated by a recent correspondence game:

Among others the analysis of a trendy line with h4 against the Grünfeld by Sergey Grigoriants is of interest. Again one can see how correspondence chess players pick up these ideas fast:

Besides opening surveys, this issue has standard features on tactics, strategy and the endgame.

In Practical Tips for the Tournament Player Jan Markos offers a demo.lecture on the slow manouevering play by Carlsen. An object lesson patience. Former World Champion, Tigran Petrosian was a past master in “The Art of Doing Nothing” as Harry Golombek used to call it. Carlsen has gone one step further.

“A slow approach has a number of practical advantages: it exerts psychological pressure on the opponent who does not know when you are about to implement a concrete plan. In addition careful manoevering can help you to wait for the right moment to start activity. And last but not least, playing with patience can help you to gain an advantage on the clock!”

Endgame Play

In the regular column “Fundamental Endgame Knowledge” Karsten Müller offers a demo. lecture on knight versus endings. He also analyses a number of rook endings in Korchnoi’s games. The war lord was an authority on rook endgames, having authored a whole book on these endings, Practical Rook Endings

Photo

One difficult theme in the endgame is the fortress. In the last issue, CBM 223 Dorian Rogozenco had dealt with queen versus rook and pawn endings. This time he offers a demo. Lecture on queen and pawn versus rook and pawn endings.

This section also offers a column, “Readers write” in which we find contributions on the endgame by experts like Zoran Petronijevic, Alex Fishbein. Wolfram Schoen and Rene Kalmes

 

Summing up

The main database of the issue has 209 games of which 15 are deeply annotated. There is much else in this DVD that deserves to be explored. Apart from the players I have already mentioned, the commentators include Nodirbek Abdusattorov, Praggnanandhaa and Karsten Müller among others. It may be noted that there are more annotated games in the opening and training sections of this issue. Well, practice makes perfect.

Note: The final moment of the Tata Steel Tie-breaker Blitz Match may be seen in the official video at

1:06/1:13:

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