Pawns nature is to advance
Fischer vs Berliner, 1960  (B03) Alekhine's Defense, 36 moves, 1-0
Passed Pawns
Rubinstein vs Duras, 1908  (D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 39 moves, 1-0
Phalanx of pawns
Petrosian vs Kozali, 1954  (D35) Queen's Gambit Declined, 29 moves, 1-0
Rook and pawn endgame
Smyslov vs Reshevsky, 1948  (C75) Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense, 52 moves, 1-0
Weak Squares and Open Files
H K Mattison vs Nimzowitsch, 1929  (E21) Nimzo-Indian, Three Knights, 23 moves, 0-1
King in the center
Tartakower vs M Frentz, 1933  (A18) English, Mikenas-Carls, 35 moves, 1-0
Endgame Technique (middlegame exchange sac)
R Domenech vs Flohr, 1935  (B40) Sicilian, 30 moves, 0-1
Double bishop sac
Lasker vs J Bauer, 1889  (A03) Bird's Opening, 38 moves, 1-0
The shifting attack
Reshevsky vs Najdorf, 1957  (E42) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3 c5, 5.Ne2 (Rubinstein), 33 moves, 1-0
Every move a threat
M Porges vs Lasker, 1896  (C67) Ruy Lopez, 33 moves, 0-1
Pressure Point
Petrosian vs Korchnoi, 1946  (A90) Dutch, 23 moves, 1-0
The king side attack
Tarrasch vs Von Scheve, 1894  (D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 30 moves, 1-0
Art of exchanging pieces
Menchik vs Capablanca, 1931  (A47) Queen's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1
Tartakower vs R Domenech, 1934  (A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 37 moves, 1-0
|