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yKID Warlords Roast Kip
Compiled by fredthebear
--*--

Site under construction by Fredthebear.

See DA Kid, a large collection compiled by parmetd

* Nose-to-Nose: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/mos...

* MadBishop's Collection: Game Collection: The King's Indian Defence

* Black wins: Game Collection: K.I.D B wins E98

* ChessMaster shows how to tackle the London System: Game Collection: A48 London System # 3 (Black)

* Happy Days! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slv...

* Mr. Harvey's Puzzle Challenge: https://wtharvey.com/

St. Cecelia

King's Indian Defense
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7

King's Indian Defense (Averbakh Variation)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. Be2 O-O 6. Bg5

King's Indian Defense (Classical Variation)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. Nf3 O-O 6. Be2

King's Indian Defense (Fianchetto System)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. g3 Bg7 4. Bg2 O-O 5. Nc3 d6 6. Nf3

King's Indian Defense (Four Pawns Attack)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f4

King's Indian Defense (Makogonov Variation)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. h3

King's Indian Defense (Old Indian Defense)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 d6

King's Indian Defense (Panno Variation)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3 O-O 6. Be3 Nc6

King's Indian Defense (Reversed)
see King's Indian Attack

King's Indian Defense (Robatsch Defense)
see Modern Defense

King's Indian Defense (Sämisch Attack)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3

King's Indian Defense (Sämisch-Orthodox Variation) 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3 O-O 6. Be3 e5

King's Indian Defense (Yugoslav Line)
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. g3 Bg7 4. Bg2 O-O 5. Nc3 d6 6. Nf3 c5

Dick Cavitt: "And you like that moment of just crushing the guy?"

RJ Fischer: "Right *nodding and smiling*, yeah."

Confessed faults are half mended. ~ Scottish Proverb

<IF
Poet: Rudyard Kipling

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make allowance for their doubting, too:
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting.
Or being lied about, don't deal in lies,
Or being hated, don't give way to hating.
And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise:

If you can dream — and not make dreams your master; If you can think — and not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two imposters just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truths you've spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools.
Or watch the things you gave your life to broken. And stoop and build'em up with worn-out tools;

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch and toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breathe a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone.
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will, which says to them: "Hold on";

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with Kings — nor lose the common touch, If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you; If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it.
And — which is more — you'll be a Man, my son.

About the poem, If by Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Morris wrote: "The central idea of this poem is that success comes from self-control and a true sense of the values of things. In extremes lies danger. A man must not lose heart because of doubts or opposition, yet he must do his best to see the grounds for both. He must not be deceived into thinking either triumph or disaster final; he must use each wisely--and push on. In all things he must hold to the golden mean. If he does, he will own the world, and even better, for his personal reward he will attain the full stature of manhood.">

Riddle Question: Three doctors all say Robert is their brother. Robert says he has no brothers. Who is lying?

Riddle Answer: No one—the doctors are Robert's sisters.

Armenian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Armenian Chess Championship

Austrian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Austrian Chess Championship

British Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: British Chess Championship

Bulgarian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Bulgarian Chess Championship

Croatian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Croatian Chess Championship

Cyprus Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Cypriot Chess Championship

Dutch Chess Championship:
Wikipedia article: Dutch Chess Championship

Finnish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Finnish Chess Championship

French Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: French Chess Championship

German Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: German Chess Championship

Greek Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Greek Chess Championship

Hungarian Chess Championship:
Wikipedia article: Hungarian Chess Championship

Icelandic Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Icelandic Chess Championship

Irish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Irish Chess Championship#:~:text=Irish%20Champions%20%20%20%20Year%20%20,%20Alexander%20Baburin%20%2054%20more%20rows%20

Israeli Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Israeli Chess Championship

Italian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Italian Chess Championship

Latvian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Latvian Chess Championship

Lithuanian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Lithuanian Chess Championship

Nordic Chess Championship:
Wikipedia article: Nordic Chess Championship

Polish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Polish Chess Championship

Portuguese Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Portuguese Chess Championship

Romanian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Romanian Chess Championship

Russian Chess Championship:
Wikipedia article: Russian Chess Championship

Scottish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Scottish Chess Championship

Spanish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Spanish Chess Championship

Swiss Chess Championship:
Wikipedia article: Swiss Chess Championship

Turkish Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Turkish Chess Championship

Ukranian Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Ukrainian Chess Championship

Welsh Chess Championship: Wikipedia article: Welsh Chess Championship

That's enough for now.

The Wolves and the Sheep

By-gone a thousand years of war,
The wearers of the fleece
And wolves at last made peace;
Which both appeared the better for;
For if the wolves had now and then
Eat up a straggling ewe or wether,
As often had the shepherd men
Turned wolf-skins into leather.
Fear always spoiled the verdant herbage,
And so it did the bloody carnage.
Hence peace was sweet; and, lest it should be riven, On both sides hostages were given.
The sheep, as by the terms arranged,
For pups of wolves their dogs exchanged;
Which being done above suspicion,
Confirmed and sealed by high commission,
What time the pups were fully grown,
And felt an appetite for prey,
And saw the sheepfold left alone,
The shepherds all away,
They seized the fattest lambs they could,
And, choking, dragged them to the wood;
Of which, by secret means apprised,
Their sires, as is surmised,
Fell on the hostage guardians of the sheep,
And slew them all asleep.
So quick the deed of perfidy was done,
There fled to tell the tale not one!

From which we may conclude
That peace with villains will be rued.
Peace in itself, it's true,
May be a good for you;
But It's an evil, nathless,
When enemies are faithless.

Riddle Question: Where does today come before yesterday?

Riddle Answer: In the dictionary.

My Wage
by Jessie Belle Rittenhouse

I bargained with Life for a penny,
And Life would pay no more,
However I begged at evening
When I counted my scanty store;

For Life is a just employer,
He gives you what you ask,
But once you have set the wages,
Why, you must bear the task.

I worked for a menial's hire,
Only to learn, dismayed,
That any wage I had asked of Life,
Life would have paid.

<Chess has six different kinds of pieces, and they all interact in myriad ways. Your opponent's own pieces can often be used against him.

While the Queen is the strongest piece, it is the weakest defender; and while the pawn is the weakest piece, it is the strongest defender.

José Raúl Capablanca used the principle "Cutting off pieces from the scene of action.">

Site "Kiev RUE"
Event "Simul, 30b"
Date "1914.03.02"
EventDate "?"
Round "?"
Result "1-0"
White "Jose Raul Capablanca"
Black "Masyutin"
ECO "A83"
WhiteElo "?"
BlackElo "?"
PlyCount "37"

1.d4 f5 2.e4 fxe4 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bg5 c6 5.f3 exf3 6.Nxf3 e6 7.Bd3 d5 8.O-O Nbd7 9.Ne5 Be7 10.Bxf6 Bxf6 11.Qh5+ Ke7 12.Bxh7 Nf8 13.Qf7+ Kd6 14.Nc4+ dxc4 15.Ne4+ Kd5 16.Rf5+ Kxe4 17.Re1+ Kxd4 18.c3+ Kd3 19.Rd5# 1-0 Discovered Double Checkmate!!

"As an adult, Capablanca lost only 34 serious games. He was undefeated from 10 February 1916, when he lost to Oscar Chajes in the New York 1916 tournament, to 21 March 1924, when he lost to Richard Réti in the New York International tournament. During this streak, which included his 1921 World Championship match against Lasker, Capablanca played 63 games, winning 40 and drawing 23. In fact, only Marshall, Lasker, Alekhine and Rudolf Spielmann won two or more serious games from the mature Capablanca, though in each case, their overall lifetime scores were minus (Capablanca beat Marshall +20−2=28, Lasker +6−2=16, Alekhine +9−7=33), except for Spielmann who was level (+2−2=8). Of top players, only Keres had a narrow plus score against him (+1−0=5). Keres's win was at the AVRO 1938 chess tournament, during which tournament Capablanca turned 50, while Keres was 22." ― Wikipedia

The Chess Machine: https://chessville.com/jose-raul-ca...

Learn from the World Champions: https://www.chessable.com/blog/famo...

According to Chessmetrics, Lasker was #1 for longer than anyone else in history: 292 different months between June 1890 and December 1926. That's a timespan of 36 1/2 years, in which Lasker was #1 for a total of 24 years and 4 months. Lasker was 55 years old when he won New York 1924.

Q: What's the best thing about Switzerland?
A: I don't know, but the flag is a big plus.

The City Rat and the Country Rat

A city rat, one night,
Did, with a civil stoop,
A country rat invite
To end a turtle soup.

On a Turkey carpet
They found the table spread,
And sure I need not harp it
How well the fellows fed.

The entertainment was
A truly noble one;
But some unlucky cause
Disturbed it when begun.

It was a slight rat-tat,
That put their joys to rout;
Out ran the city rat;
His guest, too, scampered out.

Our rats but fairly quit,
The fearful knocking ceased.
"Return we," cried the cit,
To finish there our feast.

"No," said the rustic rat;
"Tomorrow dine with me.
I'm not offended at
Your feast so grand and free, –

"For I have no fare resembling;
But then I eat at leisure,
And would not swap, for pleasure
So mixed with fear and trembling."

Ever wanted to be able to clean your ears with your tongue? Then you'd probably fancy being a giraffe. They're able to do this thanks to having tongues which are around 21 inches long!

Question: What is the only number spelled out in English that has the same number of letters as its value? Answer: Four

Concrete-like structures began to appear for the first time in northern Jordan and southern Syria regions around 6500 B.C.E. Comprised of rough composite mixed with fluid cement, concrete is the most widely used man-made material. The mix hardens over time, making a sturdy, strong structural foundation. However, when it's still wet, the material is very easy to manipulate into different shapes.

Question: The U.S.A. $10,000 bill was last printed in 1945 and is the largest denomination ever in public circulation; whose portrait appeared on it? Answer: Salmon P. Chase – Secretary of the Treasury

Giraffes have unique markings. They are like our own fingerprints in that no two giraffes will ever have the same markings.

Tilt

The Cat and the Old Rat

A story-writer of our sort
Historifies, in short,
Of one that may be reckoned
A Rodilard the Second, –
The Alexander of the cats,
The Attila, the scourge of rats,
Whose fierce and whiskered head
Among the latter spread,
A league around, its dread;
Who seemed, indeed, determined
The world should be unvermined.
The planks with props more false than slim,
The tempting heaps of poisoned meal,
The traps of wire and traps of steel,
Were only play compared with him.
At length, so sadly were they scared.
The rats and mice no longer dared
To show their thievish faces
Outside their hiding-places,
Thus shunning all pursuit; whereat
Our crafty General Cat
Contrived to hang himself, as dead,
Beside the wall with downward head,
Resisting gravitation's laws
By clinging with his hinder claws
To some small bit of string.
The rats esteemed the thing
A judgment for some naughty deed,
Some thievish snatch,
Or ugly scratch;
And thought their foe had got his meed
By being hung indeed.
With hope elated all
Of laughing at his funeral,
They thrust their noses out in air;
And now to show their heads they dare;
Now dodging back, now venturing more;
At last on the larder's store
They fall to filching, as of yore.
A scanty feast enjoyed these shallows;
Down dropped the hung one from his gallows,
And of the hindmost caught.
"Some other tricks to me are known,"
Said he, while tearing bone from bone,
"By long experience taught;
The point is settled, free from doubt,
That from your holes you shall come out."
His threat as good as prophecy
Was proved by Mr. Mildandsly;
For, putting on a mealy robe,
He squatted in an open tub,
And held his purring and his breath; –
Out came the vermin to their death.
On this occasion, one old stager,
A rat as grey as any badger,
Who had in battle lost his tail,
Abstained from smelling at the meal;
And cried, far off, "Ah! General Cat,
I much suspect a heap like that;
Your meal is not the thing, perhaps,
For one who knows somewhat of traps;
Should you a sack of meal become,
I had let you be, and stay at home."

Well said, I think, and prudently,
By one who knew distrust to be
The parent of security.

'Ask no questions and hear no lies

* The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played: 62 Masterpieces of Chess Strategy by Irving Chernev - https://lichess.org/study/KMMrJvE1

* Legendary: Game Collection: The 12 Legendary Games of the Century

* Knight Power: https://fmochess.com/the-power-of-t...

'Ask a silly question and you'll get a silly answer

<<<Leonid Zakharovych Stein> (Ukrainian: Леонід Захарович Штейн; November 12, 1934 – July 4, 1973) was a Soviet chess Grandmaster from Ukraine. He won three USSR Chess Championships in the 1960s (1963, 1965, and 1966 https://www.wikiwand.com/en/article... ), and was among the world's top ten players during that era. https://historyoftheworlds.com/2023...

Stein was born in Kamenets-Podolsky. He was a Jewish Ukrainian who served in the Soviet Army. Stein achieved the national Master title for chess at the relatively late age of 24, but, as his Army titles against strong competition attest, he was likely at that strength somewhat earlier. https://www.chess.com/article/view/...

Leonid Stein was one of few players who had an even score against Vasily Smyslov, Tigran Petrosian, and Mikhail Botvinnik. Stein had plus records against Mikhail Tal, Boris Spassky, and Paul Keres. He excelled in sharp openings such as the King's Indian systems with both colors, the Grunfeld Defense, and the Sicilian Defense. https://rafaelleitao.com/stein-x-po...

Stein was a tobacco smoker and died of a heart attack at the age of 38 at the Rossiya Hotel in Moscow as he prepared to leave for the European chess championships in Bath, England. Leonid Stein was buried in Kyiv, in his native Ukraine. Wikipedia article: Leonid Stein>

Stein puzzles: https://chesspuzzle.net/es/Player/L...

1959: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kF...

1960: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6s_... - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZy...

1961: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNQ... - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNQ...
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkW...

1962: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GH...

1964: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qx2...

1965: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ec_...

1966: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YC... - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztp...

1967: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1D...

1968: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIH...

1969: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-a...

1971: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-j... - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYG...

1972: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7U... - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RdD...
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-b...
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDh...

1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AG_...

Those were the days: https://www.europe-echecs.com/art/l...

2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eM8...

Raymond Keene's book: https://archive.org/details/leonids...

Engqvist Thomas. Stein: Move by Move
Everyman Chess, 2016. — 496 p. — ISBN: 9781781942697. Leonid Stein was a three-time Soviet Chess Champion and one of the World's strongest players during his career, which was tragically cut short at its peak by his premature death in 1973. Stein was a fierce competitor who defeated virtually all of his closest rivals and enjoyed excellent results even against World Champions....

Gufeld Eduard. Leonid Stein: Master of Risk Strategy Davenport: Thinkers Press Inc., 2000. — 156 p. — ISBN: 978-0-938650-96-3. Leonid Stein, Soviet chess grandmaster and champion, believed in "correct" chess. However, when faced with drifting into a draw against a weaker player or a lost game, he believed in Risk! His unrestrained imagination and creativity elevated his play beyond mere mortals. It was another genius, Bobby Fischer...

Vlastimil Hort says: https://en.chessbase.com/post/hort-...

- https://www.scribd.com/document/742...

2700chess.com : https://2700chess.com/players/stein... >

A "strong" move met by a sting in the tail: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/_XOV... - https://www.youtube.com/shorts/HvXh...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/tyHa...

Analyzing tips: https://rafaelleitao.com/tips-train...

Shortest sermon: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/8IBG... - https://www.youtube.com/shorts/n-BP...

"Believe in yourself. Have faith in your abilities. Without humble but reasonable confidence in your own powers, you cannot be successful or happy." ― Norman Vincent Peale

"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy." ― Martin Luther King Jr.

Dinner Prayer Hymn

Lord, bless this food and grant that we

May thankful for thy mercies be;

Teach us to know by whom we're fed;

Bless us with Christ, the living bread.

Lord, make us thankful for our food,

Bless us with faith in Jesus' blood;

With bread of life our souls supply,

That we may live with Christ on high.
Amen.

Q: How do poets say hello?
A: "Hey, haven't we metaphor?"

Q: Why was the King only a foot tall?
A: Because he was the ruler.

Q: What do you call a cow jumping on a trampoline? A: A milkshake.

Rundown

George Henry Thomas Is An Unsung Hero Of The Civil War After serving in the Mexican-American War, <George Henry Thomas> remained as a Southern Unionist in the US Army during the American Civil War. He served as a general and was one of the lead commanders in the Western Theater. During the war, he never lost a battle starting with his first victory at Mill Springs.

George Henry Thomas won several decisive victories throughout the war, even saving the Union Army, earning the nickname "the Rock of Chickamauga." Although he was undefeated during the war, his refusal to promote his legacy led him to be overshadowed by generals such as Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman.

The Gulf of Tonkin Incident led to a full United States intervention in Vietnam.

On August 2, 1964, the US spy ship USS Maddox sailed in the Gulf of Tonkin only to find itself attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats. They fired back, damaging all three ships and forcing the attackers to retreat. On August 4, the USS Maddox and USS Turner Joy detected more torpedo boats and opened fire. In hindsight, however, the second attack proved nothing more than panic, and that the USN may have detected and fired on simply flying fish. At the time, though, it led the US Congress to call on US President Lyndon B. Johnson to take the necessary measures to stop communist aggression. President Johnson responded by beginning a three-year bombing campaign over Vietnam, and later, across Indochina.

Identify knight forks.

Q: What do you call a cat that likes to eat beans? A: Puss 'n' Toots!

Q: What do you call a clown who's in jail?
A: A silicon!

Q: What do you call a deer with no eyes?
A: No eye deer!!

Q: What do you call a three-footed aardvark?
A: A yardvark!

Q: What do you call a dancing lamb?
A: A baaaaaa-llerina!

Q: What do you call a meditating wolf?
A: Aware wolf!

Q: What do you call a witch who lives at the beach? A: A sand-witch!

Q: What do you call an avocado that's been blessed by the pope? A: Holy Guacamole!

Jul-05-21
Which chessgames.com users have kibitzed the most? 1. HeMateMe (72,002)
2. saffuna (52,158)
3. Jim Bartle (50,025)
4. WannaBe (45,695)
5. jessicafischerqueen (44,873)
6. OhioChessFan (44,247)
7. chancho (40,065)
8. harrylime (38,059)
9. whiteshark (37,326)
10. cormier (36,146)>

‘The Unchecked Pawn': A Chess Poem by Julian Woodruff

The Unchecked Pawn
Quickly Black castled king-side and planned his attack. White then countered with confidence, primed for a sack, with the sneakiest strategy he could contrive:
nonchalantly he pushed his f-pawn to rank 5.
I'll just nab it, thought Black, but wait … what's going on? Devil take it, I'm sure that's a poisonous pawn!

Black surveyed the board carefully. Ah, yes! I see, that white bishop is poised to attack from c3.
Black was pleased with himself: he was using his head in advancing his own pawn to g5 instead.
In response White paused briefly to stifle a yawn, then dispatched the black bishop with his cheeky pawn.

Now White's move left that pawn hanging, out on e6, over-ripe for the picking; but oh, what a fix
Black was in, with a troublingly weakened back rank, and good reason, besides, to beware his left flank. Delay now, and the chance to fight back will be gone. Black played rook to a5, disregarding White's pawn.

Well, there's pawn to b4 … White considered a while. An attack on Black's rook would be showing some style. No, it's better I simply play pawn to e7:
Remember Alekhine in 1911!
What a nuisance! thought Black, frowning. Oh, how I long To be rid of that confounded d7 pawn!

But there's also White's queen, lurking there … what a fright! I'll block her with the bishop while threatening his knight. With a faint smile, White then replied, sealing Black's fate: pawn takes knight and promotes to queen—instant checkmate! Black stared down at the board, his face pallid and drawn; he'd been crushed through ignoring White's bantam-weight pawn.

Alekhine: Alexander Alekhine (1892-1946) was a Russian and French chess champion.

"He who takes the Queen's Knight's pawn will sleep in the streets!" - anonymous

Proverbs 26 Berean Standard Bible

1 Like snow in summer and rain at harvest,

honor does not befit a fool.

2 Like a fluttering sparrow or darting swallow,

an undeserved curse does not come to rest.

3 A whip for the horse, a bridle for the donkey,

and a rod for the backs of fools!

4 Do not answer a fool according to his folly,

or you yourself will be like him.

5 Answer a fool according to his folly,

lest he become wise in his own eyes.

6 Like cutting off one's own feet or drinking violence

is the sending of a message by the hand of a fool.

7 Like lame legs hanging limp

is a proverb in the mouth of a fool.

8 Like binding a stone into a sling

is the giving of honor to a fool.

9 Like a thorn that falls into the hand of a drunkard

is a proverb in the mouth of a fool.

10 Like an archer who wounds at random

is he who hires a fool or passerby.

11 As a dog returns to its vomit,a

so a fool repeats his folly.

12 Do you see a man who is wise in his own eyes?

There is more hope for a fool than for him.

13 The slacker says, "A lion is in the road!

A fierce lion roams the public square!"

14 As a door turns on its hinges,

so the slacker turns on his bed.

15 The slacker buries his hand in the dish;

it wearies him to bring it back to his mouth.

16 The slacker is wiser in his own eyes

than seven men who answer discreetly.

17 Like one who grabs a dog by the ears

is a passerby who meddles in a quarrel not his own.

18 Like a madman shooting firebrands

and deadly arrows,

19 so is the man who deceives his neighbor

and says, "I was only joking!"

20 Without wood, a fire goes out;

without gossip, a conflict ceases.

21 Like charcoal for embers and wood for fire,

so is a quarrelsome man for kindling strife.

22 The words of a gossip are like choice morsels

that go down into the inmost being.

23 Like glaze covering an earthen vessel

are burningb lips and a wicked heart.

24 A hateful man disguises himself with his speech,

but he lays up deceit in his heart.

25 When he speaks graciously, do not believe him,

for seven abominations fill his heart.

26 Though his hatred is concealed by deception,

his wickedness will be exposed in the assembly.

27 He who digs a pit will fall into it,

and he who rolls a stone will have it roll back on him.

28 A lying tongue hates those it crushes,

and a flattering mouth causes ruin.

"Chacun voit midi à sa porte." ― (Everyone sees noon at his own door, or Everyone sees things their own way.)

'A stitch in time saves nine'

* Crafty Endgame Trainer: https://www.chessvideos.tv/endgame-...

A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush ― Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, "Don Quixote"

Old Russian Proverb: "The elbow is close but you cannot bite it. (Близок локоток, да не укусишь.)" Close is no cigar.

Ya might be ah redneck if'n ya thunk "lol" means low on liquor.

"If you ain't the lead dog, the view never changes."

"Here's a two-step formula for handling stress... Step number one: Don't sweat the small stuff. Step number two: Remember it's all small stuff." ― Tony Robbins

Proverbs 3:5-6
Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.

"Friend, you don't have to earn God's love or try harder. You're precious in His sight, covered by the priceless blood of Jesus, and indwelt by His Holy Spirit. Don't hide your heart or fear you're not good enough for Him to care for you. Accept His love, obey Him, and allow Him to keep you in His wonderful freedom." — Charles F. Stanley

"To what greater inspiration and counsel can we turn than to the imperishable truth to be found in this treasure house, the Bible?" — Queen Elizabeth II

"Many have become chess masters, no one has become the master of chess." ― Siegbert Tarrasch

"Don't ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive." ― Howard Thurman

"You can't hold with the hare and run with the hounds."

wordsyfun
48xp L Zaid Tacocchio peeked up eza wally's pride b4 HOCF askd CIOD to open athe zodiacaleon bad zappasta gaspd last requested Dzagnidze instead of Dzindzi's line of playday.

Trolling is cyberbullying. The troll should be banned from the website for good.

Internet trollz are people who want to provoke and upset others online for their own amusement. Here's how to spot the signz that someone is a troll, and how to handle them.

What Are Internet Trollz?
If you've been on the internet for any period of time, you've likely run into a troll at some point. An internet troll is someone who makes intentionally inflammatory, rude, or upsetting statements online to elicit strong emotional responses in people or to steer the conversation off-topic. They can come in many forms. Most trolls do this for their own amusement, but other forms of trolling are done to push a specific agenda.

Trollz have existed in folklore and fantasy literature for centuries, but online trolling has been around for as long as the internet has existed. The earliest known usage of the term can be traced back to the 1990s on early online message boards. Back then, it was a way for users to confuse new members by repeatedly posting an inside joke. It's since turned into a much more malicious activity.

Trolling is distinct from other forms of cyberbullying or harassment. It is normally not targeted towards any one person and relies on other people paying attention and becoming provoked. Trolling exists on many online platforms, from small private group chats to the biggest social media websites. Here's a list of places online where you're likely to see online trolls:

Anonymous online forums: Places like removed to prevent more trolling are prime real-estate for online trolls. Because there's no way of tracing who someone is, trolls can post very inflammatory content without repercussion. This is especially true if the forum has lax or inactive moderation. Twitter: Twitter also has the option to be anonymous, and has become a hotbed for internet trolls. Frequent Twitter trolling methods involve hijacking popular hashtags and mentioning popular Twitter personalities to gain attention from their followers.

Comment sections: The comment sections of places such as YouTube and news websites are also popular areas for trolls to feed. You'll find a lot of obvious trolling here, and they frequently generate a lot of responses from angry readers or viewers.

You'll find trollz anywhere online, including on Facebook and on online dating sites. They're unfortunately pretty common.

Signs Someone Is Trolling
It can sometimes become difficult to tell the difference between a troll and someone who just genuinely wants to argue about a topic. However, here are a few tell-tale signs that someone is actively trolling.

Off-topic remarkz: Completely going off-topic from the subject at hand. This is done to annoy and disrupt other posters.

Refusal to acknowledge evidence: Even when presented with hard, cold factz, they ignore this and pretend like they never saw it.

Dismissive, condescending tone: An early indicator of a troll was that they would ask an angry responder, "Why you mad, bro?" This is a method done to provoke someone even more, as a way of dismissing their argument altogether. Use of unrelated images or memes: They reply to others with memes, images, and gifs. This is especially true if done in response to a very long text post. Seeming obliviousness: They seem oblivious that most people are in disagreement with them. Also, trolls rarely get mad or provoked. The list above is by no means definitive. There are a lot of other ways to identify that someone is trolling. Generally, if someone seems disingenuous, uninterested in a real discussion, and provocative on purpose, they're likely an internet troll.

How Should I Handle Them?
A "Danger: Do not feed the troll" sign on a computer keyboard.

The most classic adage regarding trolling is, "Don't feed the trollz." Trollz seek out emotional responses and find provocation amusing, so replying to them or attempting to debate them will only make them troll more. By ignoring a troll completely, they will likely become frustrated and go somewhere else on the internet.

You should try your best not to take anything trollz say seriously. No matter how poorly they behave, remember these people spend countless unproductive hours trying to make people mad. They're not worth your time of day.

If a troll becomes spammy or begins to clog up a thread, you can also opt to report them to the site's moderation team. Depending on the website, there's a chance nothing happens, but you should do your part to actively dissuade them from trolling on that platform. If your report is successful, the troll may be temporarily suspended or their account might be banned entirely.

California and Alaska each have eight national parks. Mount McKinley in the Alaska Range of Denali National Park is the highest point in the USA national parks at 20,302 feet.

Riddle Question: People make me, save me, change me, raise me. What am I?

According to statistics, the average American spends roughly 17,600 minutes behind the wheel annually. That's equivalent to over 293 hours or nearly 12 days!

Riddle Answer: Money

Tourists can visit two USA national parks in a day going to Yellowstone National Park and Grand Teton National Park. They are just 10 miles apart in northern Wyoming.

The Oracle and the Atheist

That man his Maker can deceive,
Is monstrous folly to believe.
The labyrinthine mazes of the heart
Are open to His eyes in every part.
Whatever one may do, or think, or feel,
From Him no darkness can the thing conceal.
A pagan once, of graceless heart and hollow,
Whose faith in gods, I'm apprehensive,
Was quite as real as expensive.
Consulted, at his shrine, the god Apollo.
"Is what I hold alive, or not?"
Said he, – a sparrow having brought,
Prepared to wring its neck, or let it fly,
As need might be, to give the god the lie.
Apollo saw the trick,
And answered quick,
"Dead or alive, show me your sparrow,
And cease to set for me a trap
Which can but cause yourself mishap.
I see afar, and far I shoot my arrow."

"Zeitnot" is German for "time pressure."

"....his countrymen, Kolisch and Steinitz, are greatly indebted for their later success to their having enjoyed early opportunities of practicing with the departed amateur whose death is also greatly deplored amongst all who knew him personally." — Wilhelm Steinitz, regarding Karl Hamppe

The first appearance of the (John) Cochrane gambit against Petrov's defense C42 was in the year 1848 against an Indian master Mohishunder Bannerjee.

"Sorry don't get it done, Dude!" — John Wayne, Rio Bravo

"Gossip is the devil's telephone. Best to just hang up." — Moira Rose

A Patience Worth Blessing
by Patience Worth

This hour, this hour, a chalice. Unto its golden cup We have poured our love, for there be not one man Who may honestly disclaim that he hath taken within His heart, God. Mayhap to refuse Him an abiding place; But His shadow hath rested upon him.
Behold, from this instant we disperse and His shadow Shall follow thee. I say that tomorrow at some instant Of time, each of thee shall stop, and I, like a moth Shall flit thee, and thou shalt remember Him.
I charge thee; it shall be!

"Character is like a tree and reputation like a shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing." — Abraham Lincoln

Chessgames.com will be unavailable December 7, 2024 from 2:00PM through 2:45PM(UTC/GMT) for maintenance. We apologize for this inconvenience.

<* Book: Game Collection: From Shenk's The Immortal Game

From Shenk's The Immortal Game
Compiled by angelbeck
--*--
The five games provided in full in David Shenk's great history and exploration of chess, including Anderssen and Kieseritzky's "Immortal Game," which is depicted move by move.

"The Immortal Game"
Anderssen vs Kieseritzky, 1851 (C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 23 moves, 1-0

Fischer's "Game of the Century"
D Byrne vs Fischer, 1956 (D92) Grunfeld, 5.Bf4, 41 moves, 0-1

Morphy's "Opera Game"
Morphy vs Duke Karl / Count Isouard, 1858 (C41) Philidor Defense, 17 moves, 1-0

Steinitz's "Battle of Hastings"
Steinitz vs von Bardeleben, 1895 (C54) Giuoco Piano, 25 moves, 1-0

Rubinstein's "Polish Brilliancy"
Rotlewi vs Rubinstein, 1907 (D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 27 moves, 0-1

"One of Kasparov's Finest"
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1993 (E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 27 moves, 0-1>

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 King James Version

16 Rejoice evermore.

17 Pray without ceasing.

18 In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.

"My kingdom for a horse!"
Mel Brooks' satirical retelling of Robin Hood's folklore is filled with references to classical literature, particularly that of Shakespeare. For instance, people throw their ears at Robin Hood, after he delivers the famous Julius Caesar's line, "Lend me your ear". A more dramatic moment occurs when the vigilante swims to England all the way from Jerusalem. Without offering any context, he exclaims "My kingdom for a horse!" The randomness makes the scene funny but avid readers of the Bard would know that this dialogue is actually taken from Act 5, Scene 4 of <Richard III>. In the play, the titular protagonist desperately searches for his horse on a battlefield when he loses the creature. The line is meant to be an exaggeration by the hero that he would give anything to have a horse in that moment. However, it makes for a funny setup in Robin Hood: Men in Tights as, shortly after saying this, Robin discovers his kingdom has been taken away.

"Risk" by Anais Nin

And then the day came,
when the risk
to remain tight
in a bud
was more painful
than the risk
it took
to blossom.

"You cannot swim for new horizons until you have courage to lose sight of the shore." ― William Faulkner

"Sometimes in life, and in chess, you must take one step back to take two steps forward." — IM Levy Rozman, GothamChess

So much, much, much better to be an incurable optimist than deceitful and untrustworthy.

Old Russian Proverb: "Scythe over a stone." (Нашла коса на камень.) The force came over a stronger force.

"It had long since come to my attention that people of accomplishment rarely sat back and let things happen to them. They went out and happened to things." ― Leonardo da Vinci

The G.O.A.T. Robert James "Bobby" Fischer (1943-2008) became the US Junior Chess Champion in 1956, scoring 8½/10 to become the youngest-ever Junior Champion at age 13, a record that still stands.

In 1957, Fischer had the rank of Master, the youngest player to earn that title up to that point. In July, he successfully defended his US Junior title, scoring 8½/9 at San Francisco. In August, he scored 10/12 at the US Open Chess Championship in Cleveland, winning on tie-breaking points over Arthur Bisguier. This made Fischer the youngest ever US Open Champion. Fischer then won the 1957-58 US Championship, two months shy of turning 15. Fischer became the youngest person ever to qualify for the Candidates and the youngest-ever grandmaster at the time, aged 15 years, 6 months, 1 day.

Bobby Fischer played in eight US Championships, winning all of them by at least a one-point margin. Wikipedia article: US Chess Championship In his eight US Chess Championships, Bobby Fischer lost only three games combined. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/DBT2...

When Fischer was 16, his mother moved out of their Brooklyn apartment to pursue medical training. The apartment was on the edge of Bedford-Stuyvesant, a neighborhood that had one of the highest homicide and general crime rates in New York City. Fischer attended Erasmus Hall High School at the same time as Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond, but dropped out of high school when he turned 16, the earliest he could legally do so. "You don't learn anything in school," he said.

In 1960, Fischer tied for first place with Soviet star Boris Spassky at the strong Mar del Plata Tournament in Argentina, winning by a two-point margin, scoring 13½/15 (+13−1=1), ahead of David Bronstein. Fischer lost only to Spassky; this was the start of their lifelong friendship and rivalry.

From July to September 1972, Fischer played Spassky in Reykjavík, Iceland for the World Chess Championship. Fischer won the match 12½–8½ and became the 11th World Chess Champion. After that, Fischer did not play a competitive game in public for nearly 20 years. ― Source: Wikipedia https://www.youtube.com/shorts/tDXF...

At age 22, Russia's Garry Kasparov became the youngest world chess champion in 1985; the second youngest was Norwegian Magnus Carlsen, who was also 22 when he earned his world title in 2013. Kasparov was ranked the world's No. 1 player for a record 255 months as well. Carlsen holds the record for the longest unbeaten streak at the elite level in classical chess at 125 games. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/qlXZ...

India's Gukesh Dommaraju made history in 2024 by becoming the eighteenth and youngest-ever undisputed World Chess Champion breaking Kasparov's record. At just 18 years and 195 days, he claimed the title after defeating China's Ding Liren. Although the rating system is badly inflated, Gukesh was also the youngest player ever to reach a 2750 rating. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/mzq9...

Question: What's the brightest star in the sky? Answer: Sirius – also known as the Dog Star or Sirius A, Sirius is the brightest star in Earth's night sky. The star is outshone only by several planets and the International Space Station.

Q: What kind of tea did the American colonist want? A: Liberty

Question: What's the difference between a cemetery and a graveyard? Answer: Graveyards are attached to churches while cemeteries are stand-alone.

Patty Loveless "You'll Never Leave Harlan Alive" https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...

"These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends..."
The Twilight Saga: New Moon / Romeo & Juliet
Like many other romantic films, The Twilight Saga: New Moon also uses quotes from <Romeo & Juliet> to depict the tumultuous romance shared between the ancient Edward Cullen and young human Bella Swan. In fact, the film opens with this monologue from the classic tragedy. It is unsurprising as countless stories of forbidden romance have taken inspiration and paid homage to Shakespeare's famous doomed love story. In the case of Twilight, the rival families can be replaced by vampires and humans and the unconventional romance that blooms between a couple like Edward and Bella. In the original source, Friar Lawrence says these lines to Romeo warning him of the dangers of loving a girl from a rival family. Romeo, however, believes that he would still get joy even if he could meet Juliet for just one moment. In the case of Twilight, the rival families can be replaced by vampires and humans and the unconventional romance that blooms between a couple like Edward and Bella.

<<<Five Preliminary Endgame Rules> according to CJS Purdy>

1. Before even beginning to think of making a passed pawn, put all your pieces into as good positions as possible.

2. Avoid pawn-moves while you are getting your pieces well positioned because pawn-moves create lasting weaknesses and thus make your task harder.

3. Try to free your position from weaknesses; and if possible, make it hard for the opponent to do likewise.

4. When trying to win, keep pawns on both wings. When trying to draw, play to eliminate all the pawns on one wing. With pawns on one wing only, a pawn plus is usually insufficient for a win.

5. If you are a pawn up or more, exchange pieces (not pawns) wherever you can do so without losing in position.

Exception: do not rush an exchange that will leave you with a single bishop running on the opposite color to the enemy's single bishop. Also, refrain from exchanging if it will give your opponent two bishops against bishop and knight.> Posted by Chessbuzz

Never let your feet run faster than your shoes. ~ Scottish Proverb

* Pawn Endgames: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUq...

* Crafty Endgame Trainer: https://www.chessvideos.tv/endgame-...

A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush ― Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, "Don Quixote"

Cajun: Joie de vivre (Jhwa da veev) – Joy of living.

Take care of your pennies and your dollars will take care of themselves. ~ Scottish Proverb

"Fire and Ice" by Robert Frost

Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.

Psalm 27:1
The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?

Proverbs 29:25
Fear of man will prove to be a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is kept safe.

1 John 4:18
There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love.

"God has given us two hands, one to receive with and the other to give with." — Billy Graham

"My home is in Heaven. I'm just traveling through this world." — Billy Graham

"Whatever you are doing in the game of life, give it all you've got." — Norman Vincent Peale

"What you do today can improve all your tomorrows." — Ralph Marston

This poem is dedicated to Harris my chessplayer friend and literary commentator.

Chess The Final Metaphor

It was in a cesspool behind the place of his cousin Nick

That in this pool of sewage, was born the freak called frick.

On dark nights he hysterically wailed in his pool of slimy mess:

"Oh why oh why, can't I play the game that humans call chess"?

As the morning sun rose, begged the queen of the mighty king:

Sire, can you not order the death of this awful filthy thing"?

Wisely he replied: "no, I'll let frick live forever in distress

While he must watch others enjoy themselves playing chess."

* Riddle-ziggy-bean: https://www.briddles.com/riddles/ch...

"Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that." ― Martin Luther King Jr.

"Never reply to an anonymous letter." ― Yogi Berra, MLB Hall of Fame catcher

"Even Napoleon had his Watergate."
― Yogi Berra, 10-time World Series champion

Weiord Funn:
8two After Columbia Zan Francoppa pagan ideology Zajogin free papal map to Zaza Varkondzhova for zborris63 outr space, force, time, andrew j...son K safety.

French Proverb: "Il ne faut rien laisser au hasard." ― (Nothing should be left to chance.)

"There are more adventures on a chessboard than on all the seas of the world." ― Pierre Mac Orlan

"You can only get good at chess if you love the game." ― Bobby Fischer

"As long as you can still grab a breath, you fight." — The Revenant

Weord Maze:
3z Darby's samichz haz da bst pigz eyez, no birdz eyez annie pig snoutz. Shout, shout, let it all out. Theez rtha things Ivan duel without. C'mon Mikhail Talkin youtube.

A pencil maker told the pencil 5 important lessons just before putting it in the box:

1. Everything you do you will always leave a mark.

2. You can always correct the mistakes you make.

3. What is important is what is inside of you.

4. In life, you will undergo painful sharpening which will only make you better.

5. To be the best pencil, you must allow yourself to be held and guided by the hand that holds you.

Lead Pb 82 207.2 1.8

Riddle Question: What invention lets you look right through a wall?

Sing it Frank X! https://www.youtube.com/shorts/abgt... - https://www.youtube.com/shorts/qBlP...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/oj7d...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/GGgb...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/k_8x...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/UVxM...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/lO1a...
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/a_lf...

Riddle Answer: A window!

KID. Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1 Second N lurks
Jacobsen vs Port, 1952 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 8 moves, 0-1

Dbl Fio Reti vs KID 6...c5 Yugoslav (A05) 0-1 Early Q lures N
S Macagno vs M Wilder, 1985 
(A05) Reti Opening, 10 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox Positional Defense Closed Line (E94) 0-1 B skewer
Vladimirov vs V Chekhov, 1975 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 11 moves, 0-1

KID. Zinnowitz Var (E90) 1-0 Youth off-hand game
Fischer vs J Altusky, 1954 
(E90) King's Indian, 12 moves, 1-0

KID: Accelerated Averbakh Var (E70) 1-0 Anticipated P fork
A W Conger vs Fischer, 1955 
(E70) King's Indian, 12 moves, 1-0

KId. Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 1-0 The Qs zoom to/from corners
A Feuerstein vs J E Bennett, 1955 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 13 moves, 1-0

KID. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 Kolty offers three minors
Koltanowski vs NN, 1958 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 15 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1-0 White wins a B
Keres vs S Johannessen, 1967 
(E92) King's Indian, 15 moves, 1-0

KID Fianchetto. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 Knight strikes
Najdorf vs H Rossetto, 1956 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 15 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Positional Defense Closed Line (E94) 0-1
A Geller vs M Kislov, 1991 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 17 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Def: Saemisch (E80) 1-0 Firepower on h-file
Hort vs R Byrne, 1962 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 18 moves, 1-0

Black took the pawn w/the wrong piece and White pinned it
Kasparov vs Nunn, 1986 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 18 moves, 1-0

Round 26, Game 104 - Worst day in Smyslov's career?
Smyslov vs Gligoric, 1959 
(E61) King's Indian, 18 moves, 0-1

KID: Four Pawns Attack (E76) 1-0 b-pawn strikes the Q
I Bilek vs E Paoli, 1958 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 18 moves, 1-0

Game 25 in Dynamic Chess by R.N. Coles, Dover publications 1966
Colle vs Euwe, 1926 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 19 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Def. Saemisch Var (E86) 1-0 Smothered Mate in 1
J Murey vs E Mortensen, 1982 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 20 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch. Steiner Attack (A65) 0-1 Q pin to the mate square
W Estrada Degrandi vs Gligoric, 1962 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 20 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Classical System Benko Attk (E99) 0-1N fork lurks
P Cramling vs J Reyes, 1987 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 20 moves, 0-1

Fischer's Greatest Game from the Lengendary 63 US Championship
R Byrne vs Fischer, 1963  
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 21 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Kavalek Def (E62) 0-1 Pawn giveaway
A Galliamova vs J Mestel, 1993
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 22 moves, 0-1

KID Six Pawns Attack (E77) 1-0 Weakened dark squares
Seirawan vs Ivanchuk, 1997 
(E77) King's Indian, 22 moves, 1-0

Shirov crushes the Four Pawns Attack with Greco mate threat
J Elbilia vs Shirov, 1993 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 22 moves, 0-1

KID. Makagonov (E71) 0-1White shuffles developed pieces, no O-O
Chernin vs Kasparov, 1994 
(E71) King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3), 22 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1 Two ways to mate!!
D Pacheco vs J Ye, 1989
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 22 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E80) 0-1 Q trap
V Puri vs E Perelshteyn, 2009 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 22 moves, 0-1

Game 21 in Fischer's
Letelier vs Fischer, 1960 
(E70) King's Indian, 23 moves, 0-1

KID / Benoni (A48) 1-0 N sac blunder boomerangs into N mate
E Post vs J Mieses, 1914 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 23 moves, 1-0

KID Normal (E90) 0-1 Centralized Knight, R decoy sac, N+ fork
J Thomason vs Fischer, 1955 
(E90) King's Indian, 23 moves, 0-1

KID 4 Pawns, Dynamic Attack (E76) 1-0His name erased from books
B Soos vs Geller, 1962 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 23 moves, 1-0

KID Accelerated Averbakh Var (E70) 0-1 Simply spellbinding! 
Stein vs Geller, 1966 
(E70) King's Indian, 23 moves, 0-1

Benoni 2...c5/KID Four Ps. Dynamic Attk (E76)1-0 Overworked Bg7
Korchnoi vs Gheorghiu, 1986 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 23 moves, 1-0

KID. Normal. Standard (E73) 1-0 Positional N sacrifice!
Uhlmann vs Robatsch, 1963 
(E73) King's Indian, 23 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Aronin-Taimanov Def (E97) 0-1
I Sokolov vs Shirov, 1999 
(E97) King's Indian, 24 moves, 0-1

KID, Double Fianchetto Attack (A54) 0-1 WWII battle
S Belavenets vs Bronstein, 1941 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 24 moves, 0-1

Geller destroys Botvinnik in 24 moves with little combinations
Botvinnik vs Geller, 1969 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 24 moves, 0-1

KID. 4 Pawns Attack. Normal (E77) 0-1 One rook or the other.
Z Peng vs J Polgar, 1990 
(E77) King's Indian, 24 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Classical System Misc (E98) 0-1 Battery
R G Wade vs J Penrose, 1961
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 24 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Positional Defense Main Line (E96) 1-0
Stein vs L Vadasz, 1971 
(E96) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, Main line, 24 moves, 1-0

KID. Saemisch. Double Fianchetto (E82) 0-1 Cramped
M Tamburini vs Botvinnik, 1960 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 25 moves, 0-1

Game 67: "Leonid Stein - Master of Attack" by GM Raymond Keene.
E Poltoranov vs Stein, 1955 
(A49) King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4, 25 moves, 0-1

Najdorf's flashbolt ...Bd4!! sparks a come-from-behind win
L Rellstab vs Najdorf, 1950 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 25 moves, 0-1

KID: Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 1-0 Sting in the tail
Kmoch vs L Steiner, 1925 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 25 moves, 1-0

KID: Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 0-1Correspondence
G Schoenbuchner vs A Acevedo Milan, 1997
(E92) King's Indian, 25 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch-Panno. Yates Def (E83) 0-1 Kavalek kicks
Gheorghiu vs Kavalek, 1969 
(E83) King's Indian, Samisch, 25 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Debrecen Def (E67) 0-1 Lolli's Mate to be
F Apsenieks vs K Havasi, 1924 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 25 moves, 0-1

Bonnerjee Mohishunder helped generate the term "Indian Defense"
Cochrane vs Moheschunder, 1853 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 39 moves, 1-0

KID: Six Pawns Attack (E77) 1-0 Notes by Stockfish
A Schwarz vs Paulsen, 1879
(E77) King's Indian, 66 moves, 1-0

English, Anglo-Indian Def. KID 1-0 Exchange sac removes key def
Reti vs A Pokorny, 1923 
(A15) English, 30 moves, 1-0

KID Fianchetto. Karlsbad Var (E62) 0-1 Yates
Alekhine vs Yates, 1923 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 50 moves, 0-1

Game 37 in Chess Praxis by Aron Nimzowitsch
A Nimzowitsch vs Reti, 1923  
(A15) English, 50 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 7 in My Games 1920-1937 by Machgielis Euwe.
Tarrasch vs Euwe, 1923 
(E90) King's Indian, 34 moves, 0-1

KID. Petrosian. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 Battery battle for g-file
J Grondman vs Euwe, 1923 
(E92) King's Indian, 36 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox (E91) 0-1 Yates
Bogoljubov vs Yates, 1925 
(E91) King's Indian, 55 moves, 0-1

Pirc Defense: Classical. Two Knights System (B08) 1/2 Yates
Janowski vs Yates, 1925 
(B08) Pirc, Classical, 61 moves, 1/2-1/2

Old Indian Defense delayed Nc6 (A53) 1-0Compromised Black Kside
Alekhine vs Znosko-Borovsky, 1925 
(A53) Old Indian, 24 moves, 1-0

KID: Four Pawns Attk. Dynamic Attack (E76) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Saemisch vs Euwe, 1925 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 30 moves, 0-1

Immortal Blindfold - in a simultaneous!
Alekhine vs N E Schwartz, 1926 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 54 moves, 1-0

G210 in My Best Games of Chess: 1908-1937 by Alexander Alekhine
Alekhine vs Euwe, 1926 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 35 moves, 1-0

A strong argument for the (good old) Deferred Fianchetto vs KID
Botvinnik vs K Kholodkevich, 1927 
(E72) King's Indian, 36 moves, 1-0

This game was awarded the brilliancy prize by Max Euwe.
G Thomas vs Yates, 1927 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 33 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Positional Def (E94) 1/2- Active central battle
Colle vs Bogoljubov, 1928
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 57 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1 Yates
Kmoch vs Yates, 1928
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 44 moves, 0-1

Torre Attack: Fianchetto Def. Euwe Var(A48) 1-0Anastasia's Mate
Vidmar vs Euwe, 1929 
(A48) King's Indian, 37 moves, 1-0

English Dbl Fio vs KID (A15) 1-0 Expansion & penetration
Capablanca vs Yates, 1929 
(A15) English, 32 moves, 1-0

Story came from Gerald Abrahams in his book Not Only Chess.
W Fairhurst vs T Tylor, 1929 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 38 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID: Averbakh. Benoni Def Advance Var (E75) 0-1 Hamburg
E Andersen vs C Carls, 1930 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 38 moves, 0-1

Near structural symmetry after 20.Rdd1 but Black win in 5 moves
R Pruun vs Keres, 1931 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 24 moves, 0-1

KID: Normal. K's Knight Var (E60) 0-1 Stockfish; photo link
V Goglidze vs Flohr, 1935 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 29 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 Stockfish notes
V Chekhover vs G Kasparian, 1936 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 33 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Uhlmann-Szabo System (E62) 1-0 Corrected
A Kots vs P Lebedev, 1937 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 34 moves, 1-0

G39 in How to Reassess Your Chess, 4th edition by Jeremy Silman
A Ebralidze vs Ragozin, 1937 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 45 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch (E80) 1-0 The Dutch Evergreen
C de Ronde vs H Kamstra, 1938 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 50 moves, 1-0

Indian Game: Anti-Grünfeld. Advance Variation (E60) · 0-1
W Fairhurst vs Fine, 1938
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 28 moves, 0-1

KID, Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1/2-1/2 Passive Q blockade
Veresov vs Boleslavsky, 1940 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 41 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Fianchetto. Karlsbad Var (E62) 0-1 P grabbing Q is trapped
H Heinicke vs K Junge, 1940 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 27 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Bobotsov-Korchnoi-Petrosian Var (E81) 0-1 Stock
Kotov vs Smyslov, 1940 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 51 moves, 0-1

KID Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 kNight initiates Kside blows
Kotov vs Bronstein, 1944 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 31 moves, 1-0

Polish Opening: Zukertort System vs KID (A04) 0-1 Player notes
Santasiere vs Bronstein, 1945 
(A06) Reti Opening, 50 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Positional Def Closed Line (E94) 0-1 Back ranker
B Tot vs Pirc, 1945
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 35 moves, 0-1

KID Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 0-1 No sacs, just weak squares
L Stumpers vs Euwe, 1946 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 30 moves, 0-1

E69 1/2-1/2 42
Denker vs Najdorf, 1946 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 42 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 20, p. 47 in "The Golden Dozen," by Irving Chernev
F Zita vs Bronstein, 1946 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 30 moves, 0-1

KID: Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1
C Kottnauer vs Bronstein, 1946 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 58 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal. Rare Defenses (E90) 0-1 wwall notes to finish
Y Solntsev vs Bronstein, 1946 
(E90) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Positional Def Closed Line (E95) 0-1 Sharp
I Nei vs Petrosian, 1946 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 28 moves, 0-1

Middlegame Combinations by Peter Romanovsky
Stahlberg vs Najdorf, 1947 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 36 moves, 1-0

One of Bronstein's greatest games E64 0-1 31
Pachman vs Bronstein, 1946 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 31 moves, 0-1

KID Normal Var. Deferred Fianchetto (E72) 1/2-1/2 Saved!
Lilienthal vs Tolush, 1947 
(E72) King's Indian, 43 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 SCB, mutual promotions
Pachman vs Gligoric, 1947 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 127 moves, 1-0

Game130: Chess Highlights of the 20th Century by Graham Burgess
Ragozin vs I Solin, 1946 
(E70) King's Indian, 35 moves, 1-0

KID Fianchettos / Hungarian (A53) 1-0 Tactical finish
V Chekhover vs F Duz-Khotimirsky, 1949 
(E68) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4, 48 moves, 1-0

K's Indian Def. Exchange (E92) 0-1 Active Rooks at all cost
Flohr vs Geller, 1949 
(E92) King's Indian, 61 moves, 0-1

King's English Variation (A20) 0-1 Snookered
Barcza vs Bronstein, 1949 
(A20) English, 36 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal. Rare Defenses (E90) 0-1 Zwischenzug
Lilienthal vs Panov, 1949 
(E90) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

G38 inThe Soviet Champships by Mark Taimanov & Bernard Cafferty
Kotov vs Geller, 1949 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 40 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Normal Var (E70) 0-1 33...?
M Lubensky vs Geller, 1949 
(E70) King's Indian, 34 moves, 0-1

KID Pomar System (E72) 0-1 Superior R&P endgame technique
Najdorf vs Bronstein, 1950 
(E72) King's Indian, 81 moves, 0-1

KID Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1/2-1/2 Weak draw offer?
Bronstein vs Lilienthal, 1950 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 34 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1
Bronstein vs Boleslavsky, 1950 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 65 moves, 0-1

Game 37 in 50 Essential Chess Lessons by Steve Giddins
Flohr vs Suetin, 1950 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 51 moves, 1-0

IM Jeremy Silman's book "How to Reassess Your Chess" p. 104-107
O'Kelly vs Najdorf, 1950 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 39 moves, 0-1

The Road to Chess Mastery by Max Euwe - Tactical themes
Euwe vs V Nestler, 1950 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 25 moves, 1-0

KID Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 passed f-pawn march
Euwe vs K Skold, 1950 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 32 moves, 1-0

Game 50 in Kings of Chess: ...by William Winter
Botvinnik vs Bronstein, 1951 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 57 moves, 1-0

Game 162 in The Sorcerer's Apprentice by David Bronstein
Botvinnik vs Bronstein, 1951 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 64 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Normal Var (E70) 0-1 Long range attack
O Moiseev vs Simagin, 1951 
(E70) King's Indian, 30 moves, 0-1

London System vs KID Dbl Fio (A48) 0-1Bad B can't beat N pair
L Bauza vs Eliskases, 1952 
(A48) King's Indian, 41 moves, 0-1

A48 0-1 31
M Madeira de Ley vs Bolbochan, 1952 
(A48) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

Game 130 in Pawn Structure Chess by Andrew Soltis
I Kan vs Boleslavsky, 1952 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 30 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal. King's Knight Variation (E60) · 0-1
Sliwa vs Geller, 1952 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 39 moves, 0-1

Indian Game: Kingside Fianchetto (A48) · 0-1
V Nestler vs J de Souza Mendes, 1952 
(A48) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

KID. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 Pins & Passer
G Stoltz vs Kotov, 1952 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 42 moves, 0-1

King's Indian. Fianchetto(A49) 1/2-1/2 R&Q sacs force stalemate
G Danielsson vs W Lange, 1952 
(A49) King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4, 55 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Immediate Fnchtto (E60) 1-0 W just climbs aboard, takes off
Euwe vs Najdorf, 1953 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 37 moves, 1-0

London System vs KID (A48) 0-1 Bishops Restrict Knights
Bondarevsky vs Smyslov, 1953 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 41 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Yugoslav Var Rare Lines (E64) 1-0 Late Nighter
Reshevsky vs Boleslavsky, 1953 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 38 moves, 1-0

Game 88 in 'Soviet Chess Strategy' by Alexey Suetin.
Taimanov vs Najdorf, 1953 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 43 moves, 0-1

Game 75 in Pawn Power in Chess by Hans Kmoch, re-issue edition
Szabo vs Spassky, 1953 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 29 moves, 0-1

Game 78 in 'I Play Against Pieces' by Svetozar Gligoric.
Eliskases vs Gligoric, 1953 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 42 moves, 0-1

Round 13, Game 91. DB quoted by EmperorAtahualpa in notes.
Reshevsky vs Bronstein, 1953 
(E68) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4, 65 moves, 0-1

Game 57 in The Greatest Ever Chess Opening Ideas by C. Scheerer
Kotov vs Boleslavsky, 1953 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 68 moves, 0-1

KID. Double Fianchetto Attack (E64) · 0-1
Euwe vs Boleslavsky, 1953 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 53 moves, 0-1

Game 77 in I Play Against Pieces by Svetozar Gligoric
Najdorf vs Gligoric, 1953 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 48 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Classical System Misc. Lines (E98) 0-1 Coming ++
G Berner vs Yanofsky, 1953 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 31 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Simagin Var (E62) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Najdorf vs Geller, 1953 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 42 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Orthodox (E94) 0-1 Rivals
Larsen vs F Olafsson, 1953 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 38 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto. Long Var (E68) 1-0 28.?
Panno vs J Sherwin, 1953 
(E68) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4, 33 moves, 1-0

Game 62 from Think Like a Grandmaster (Kotov)
Kotov vs Gligoric, 1953 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 41 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Four Pawns Attack (E76) 1-0 Blindfold; Bs best Ns ending
A Bisguier vs Kashdan, 1954
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 47 moves, 1-0

KID Accelerated Averbakh (E70)1-0 Q trap; W gives back material
A Bisguier vs Reshevsky, 1954 
(E70) King's Indian, 44 moves, 1-0

Tal sacs two Ns, pawn wedge supports penetration, discovered+
M Neibults vs Tal, 1954 
(E92) King's Indian, 29 moves, 0-1

Chaos from Corner to Corner E67 0-1 33
Botvinnik vs Smyslov, 1954 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 33 moves, 0-1

R wins over B due to mate threats; King in wrong corner
Lisitsin vs Tal, 1954 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 73 moves, 1-0

October 20: A Horse of a Different Color
Geller vs E Etcheverry, 1954 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 28 moves, 1-0

KID. Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 0-1 Extra passed pawns
J Sajtar vs Uhlmann, 1954
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 41 moves, 0-1

Game 113 in The Sorcerer's Apprentice by David Bronstein
Golombek vs Bronstein, 1954 
(E97) King's Indian, 38 moves, 0-1

KID. Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Botvinnik vs Smyslov, 1954 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 72 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Karlsbad (E62) 1-0 Interesting final position
Euwe vs C van den Berg, 1954 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 34 moves, 1-0

KID: Fianchetto. Yugoslav Var (E65) 0-1 18...?
A Bannik vs Tal, 1955 
(E65) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav, 7.O-O, 31 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Closed Var (E87) 0-1 Kingside battle
Portisch vs Benko, 1955 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 36 moves, 0-1

KID: Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 Excellent!
Tal vs R Skuja, 1955 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 43 moves, 1-0

Game 308 in Golden Treasury of Chess (Wellmuth/Horowitz)
G Idigoras vs Panno, 1955 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 41 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch (E86) 0-1 Incredible, Incredible Mikhail Tal
J Szukszta vs Tal, 1956 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 20 moves, 0-1

Valery Beim annotates in "How To Calculate Chess Tactics"
Polugaevsky vs Petrosian, 1956 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 35 moves, 0-1

KID Averbakh. Benoni Def Advance (E75) 1-0 Boden's Mate threat
Stahlberg vs A Matanovic, 1956 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 41 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Positional Def Closed Line (E95) 1/2-1/2
Bronstein vs Petrosian, 1956 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 29 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Yugoslav Exch (E66) 0-1 Petro returned to table, blundered
Petrosian vs Bronstein, 1956 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 36 moves, 0-1

KID/Dutch Leningrad kingside sacrifices beats English/Reti
Petrosian vs Vasiukov, 1956 
(A05) Reti Opening, 37 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 1/2-1/2 Q giveways
A Zamikhovsky vs R Nezhmetdinov, 1956 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 41 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spassky hangs a Knight sac for some active counter-play??
Averbakh vs Spassky, 1956 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 73 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Averbakh. Benoni Def Advance (E75) 0-1 Tal punishes 0-0-0?
E Chukaev vs Tal, 1956 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 27 moves, 0-1

E63 0-1 33
G Badilles vs Uhlmann, 1956
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 33 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Yugoslav Variation Advance Line (E66) · 0-1
Petrosian vs Gligoric, 1956 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 26 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Bobotsov-Korchnoi-Petrosian Var (E81) 0-1
S Khalilbeili vs Tal, 1956 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 56 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Yugoslav, Advance Line (E66) 0-1 Q sac
V Bergraser vs Ragozin, 1956 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 44 moves, 0-1

Incredible game by Bronstein - triple pawn sac to open lines!
I Aloni vs Bronstein, 1956 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 29 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Classical System Misc. Lines (E98) 0-1 Kside #
E Asfora vs M Madeira de Ley, 1956
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 28 moves, 0-1

E80 0-1 50
Lutikov vs B Gurgenidze, 1957 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 50 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Attack: Smyslov Var (A05) 1-0 Exchange sac runs K
M Otteson vs Fischer, 1957 
(A05) Reti Opening, 49 moves, 1-0

BFTC: Box 75, page 97, 30...? to win (modified)
M Surgies vs Fischer, 1957 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 30 moves, 0-1

John Emms' Ultimate Chess Puzzle Book Set 3: 27...?
A Bannik vs Tal, 1957 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 45 moves, 0-1

KID, Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 Q fork fails Fischer
Santasiere vs Fischer, 1957 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 42 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch Variation. Normal Def (E81) 1-0
Pachman vs Gligoric, 1957 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 42 moves, 1-0

English, Anglo-Indian Def. Q's Knight Var (A16) 1/2-1/2 Photo
Petrosian vs Fischer, 1958 
(A16) English, 67 moves, 1/2-1/2

http://www.chess.com/article/view/tals-sacrifices-explained
Bobotsov vs Tal, 1958 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 30 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Yugoslav Variation Rare Lines (E64) 0-1 Notes
R Byrne vs D Byrne, 1958 
(E64) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav System, 53 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E86) 0-1 Stockfish notes
G Fuster vs Fischer, 1958 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 36 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Classical Main Line (E69) 0-1 Stockfish
Kotov vs Tal, 1958 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 48 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Yugoslav Var Advance Line (E66) 1-0 Stockfish
Euwe vs Yanofsky, 1958
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 37 moves, 1-0

Game 28 in The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal
Tal vs Fischer, 1959 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 41 moves, 1-0

KID Fianchetto. Uhlmann-Szabo System (E62) 1/2- Retains title
R Byrne vs Fischer, 1959 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 28 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 41: Mammoth Book-Greatest Games (Nunn/Burgess/Emms)
Tal vs Fischer, 1959 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 34 moves, 1-0

BFTC: Page 328, box 271 (Position after 38...Ra8)
J de Souza Mendes vs Fischer, 1959 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 38 moves, 0-1

KID. Smyslov Var (E61) 0-1 Exchange sac, central occupation
B Wexler vs Fischer, 1959 
(E61) King's Indian, 38 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Uhlmann-Szabo System (E62) 0-1 whittled away
J H Donner vs Fischer, 1959 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 44 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch (E80) 0-1 Stockfish notes; 34...?
R H Steinmeyer vs H Berliner, 1959 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 42 moves, 0-1

KID: Petrosian Var (E92) 1-0 Notes by Stockfish; constriction
Petrosian vs Lutikov, 1959 
(E92) King's Indian, 42 moves, 1-0

Game 59 in Garry Kasparov's On My Great Predecessors (4)
Uhlmann vs Fischer, 1960 
(E79) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, Main line, 43 moves, 0-1

Zwischenzug! and 2 perplexing N sacs. E69 0-1 47
Botvinnik vs Tal, 1960 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 47 moves, 0-1

"Insane in the Ukraine" (game of the day Oct-04-2011)
N Krogius vs Stein, 1960 
(E92) King's Indian, 43 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Positional Def, Closed Line (E95) 1-0
S Holm vs Larsen, 1960 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 43 moves, 1-0

KID Accelerated Averbakh (E70) 1-0 B pair, R on 7th, Passers
A Bisguier vs R Byrne, 1960
(E70) King's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

KID. Petrosian. Normal Def (E93) 0-1 Tie down, cross pin, zw+
B Wexler vs Fischer, 1960 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 40 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Closed Var (E87) 0-1 Royal assassination
V Liberzon vs Boleslavsky, 1960 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 29 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch. Closed Variation 7…c6 (E88) · 0-1
O'Kelly vs Pachman, 1960 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 46 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1
Y Kots vs R Nezhmetdinov, 1961
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 36 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Aronin-Taimanov Def (E97) 1-0 Exchange of DSB
Reshevsky vs Fischer, 1961 
(E97) King's Indian, 60 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch (E80) 0-1 Knight vs 2 Bishops ending
Botvinnik vs Tal, 1961 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 83 moves, 0-1

Game 30 in 'My 60 Memorable Games' by Robert James Fischer.
Gligoric vs Fischer, 1961 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 33 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Saemisch. Orthodox Var (E85) 0-1 Expensive P grab
Bronstein vs Gufeld, 1961 
(E85) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Variation, 41 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Orthodox (E85) 0-1 62nd US Open
J G Sullivan vs Z Kovacs, 1961
(E85) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Variation, 31 moves, 0-1

Game 36 in 50 Essential Chess Lessons by Steve Giddins
Shamkovich vs R Nezhmetdinov, 1961 
(E97) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

KID: Accelerated Averbakh Var (E70) 0-1 On the run!
F J Perez vs J Durao, 1961 
(E70) King's Indian, 43 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Positional Defense Closed Line (E95) 0-1
J H Donner vs E Spanjaard, 1961 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 43 moves, 0-1

"Positional Chess Handbook" by Israel Gelfer
Botvinnik vs Tal, 1961 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 63 moves, 1-0

KID: Fianchetto. Yugoslav Var Exchange Line (E66) 1-0 Stockfish
Spassky vs Tal, 1961 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 35 moves, 1-0

KID: Normal. Standard Development (E73) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Petrosian vs Geller, 1961 
(E73) King's Indian, 50 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Kramer Var (E70) 0-1
Forintos vs Gligoric, 1961
(E70) King's Indian, 46 moves, 0-1

KID Normal Variation (E70) 0-1 A real cliff-hanger
Gligoric vs Stein, 1962 
(E70) King's Indian, 57 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch (E80) 1-0 Double Check
Spassky vs L Evans, 1962 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 26 moves, 1-0

KID. Normal. Rare Defenses (E90) 1-0 30.?
G Abrahams vs J H Beaty, 1962 
(E90) King's Indian, 32 moves, 1-0

KID: Fianchetto. Uhlmann-Szabo System (E620 0-1 Reload
Korchnoi vs Fischer, 1962 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 44 moves, 0-1

40.? is #234 in Lev Alburt's 'Chess Training Pocket Book'
I Bilek vs Gligoric, 1962 
(E92) King's Indian, 42 moves, 1-0

KID. Fianchetto. Long Variation (E68) 0-1 Fredthebear snuck out
Z Doda vs Hort, 1962 
(E68) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4, 35 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Positional Def (E94) 0-1
J E Hawkes vs Keene, 1962  
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 28 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch. Double Fianchetto (E82) 1-0 Unpunished error
Spassky vs Gufeld, 1963 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 32 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch. Closed 7…c6 (E88) 0-1 Positional sac of Queen
Korchnoi vs Geller, 1963 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 56 moves, 0-1

G51 in Genius in the Background by Tibor Karolyi and Nick Aplin
Portisch vs K Honfi, 1963 
(E90) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

NID. Ragozin Def (E46) 0-1 Qside P majority methodical passer
Furman vs Kholmov, 1963 
(E46) Nimzo-Indian, 41 moves, 0-1

A remarkable game - should have been an immortal draw.
Bronstein vs Larsen, 1964 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 30 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Lesser Simagin (Spassky) (E62) 0-1 40...?
Ivkov vs R Garcia, 1964 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 43 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Double Fianchetto (E82) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Z Vranesic vs Stein, 1964 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 34 moves, 0-1

Gligorich's first-ever loss to Ivkov. E56 0-1 36
Gligoric vs Ivkov, 1965 
(E56) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line with 7...Nc6, 36 moves, 0-1

Torre Attack: Fianchetto Def (A48) 0-1 Small but elegant combo!
W Pietzsch vs Smyslov, 1965 
(A48) King's Indian, 30 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Panno (E84) 0-1 Deflect her from the diagonal
G Ustinov vs Stein, 1965 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 30 moves, 0-1

Indian Game: Przepiorka Var (A49) 0-1 Stockfish notes; 39...?
Averbakh vs Korchnoi, 1965 
(A49) King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4, 39 moves, 0-1

"Dizzyness Due to Success"
L Day vs A Kalotay, 1965 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 37 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch. Closed Var (E87) 0-1 Stockfish
Korchnoi vs Stein, 1965 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 44 moves, 0-1

Game 32 in 'Stein: Move by Move' by Thomas Engqvist.
Stahlberg vs Stein, 1965 
(E78) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, with Be2 and Nf3, 36 moves, 0-1

Game 54 'The Most Amazing Chess Moves of All Time' by John Emms
L Schmid vs Gligoric, 1965 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 35 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Zinnowitz Var (E90) 1/2-1/2
Uhlmann vs Bobotsov, 1965 
(E90) King's Indian, 52 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Panno Blockade Line (E63) 1-0 A memorable combination
Petrosian vs Spassky, 1966 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 30 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1/2-1/2 Photo
Reshevsky vs Fischer, 1966 
(E92) King's Indian, 42 moves, 1/2-1/2

"They met in a chess club, when Fischer was a fourteen-year-old
Benko vs Fischer, 1966 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 42 moves, 0-1

KID 5...c5 Four Ps Attk. Normal (E77) 0-1 Clear middle, Pin
L Liptay vs Geller, 1966 
(E77) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Classical Main Line (E69) 0-1 Promotion Mate
J Sherwin vs Fischer, 1966 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 100 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch. Double Fianchetto (E82) 0-1
Eliskases vs Stein, 1966 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 28 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Simagin Var (E62) 1-0 Conflicting judgement
Mecking vs Korchnoi, 1967 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 45 moves, 1-0

A48 1-0 41
Spassky vs Najdorf, 1967 
(A48) King's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

KID. Averbakh. Benoni Def Advance Var (E75) 0-1 Dbl N#
Polugaevsky vs Gufeld, 1967 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 38 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E80) 0-1 Jan beats Jan
Timman vs J M Greben, 1967 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 32 moves, 0-1

KID: Petrosian Variation. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Gligoric vs Stein, 1967 
(E92) King's Indian, 36 moves, 0-1

"Indian T.P." (game of the day Oct-08-2008)
L Schulman vs Petrosian, 1967 
(E77) King's Indian, 41 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Orthodox Variation (E85) · 1-0
Portisch vs S Bouaziz, 1967 
(E85) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Variation, 41 moves, 1-0

KID Fianchetto. Simagin Var (E62) 0-1 Cramped into Zugzwang
Quinteros vs Panno, 1968 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 34 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch. Panno (E83) 1-0 Anastasia's Mate!
Spassky vs Korchnoi, 1968 
(E83) King's Indian, Samisch, 35 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Positional Def (E94) 1/2-1/2 Double Take final
Najdorf vs S Schweber, 1968 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 64 moves, 1/2-1/2

Indian Game: London System (A48) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
Taimanov vs Smyslov, 1968
(A48) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

KID. Petrosian Variation. Normal Def (E93) 0-1 Stockfish notes
J H Donner vs Gligoric, 1968 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 28 moves, 0-1

KID: Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 Black Q for 3 pieces
H Kokkoris vs Kavalek, 1968 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 28 moves, 0-1

KID Makagonov Var (E71) 1-0 Black's position is a horrid mess.
Larsen vs Westerinen, 1969 
(E71) King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3), 29 moves, 1-0

KID Six Pawns Attack (E76) 1-0 Exposed K gets whacked
S Mariotti vs Gligoric, 1969 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 38 moves, 1-0

A04 0-1 39 Forks plus forks plus fork threats = 0-1
J Lewi vs J Adamski, 1969 
(A04) Reti Opening, 29 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Classical System Misc. Lines (E98) 0-1 Pin POWER
Larsen vs Tal, 1969 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 40 moves, 0-1

KID Normal. K's N Var (E60) 0-1Attack foiled by brilliant R sac
Z Doda vs Portisch, 1969 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 39 moves, 0-1

KID Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 Splendid Super Nezh!
V Timofeev vs R Nezhmetdinov, 1970 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 29 moves, 0-1

KID. Fianchetto. Yugoslav Exchange Line (E66) 0-1
E Bukic vs Gligoric, 1969 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 42 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch Dble Fianchetto (E82) 0-1 Pins are a pain in the r
Hort vs Gligoric, 1970 
(E82) King's Indian, Samisch, double Fianchetto Variation, 41 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Positional Def Closed (E94) 0-1 R Breakthru
Gligoric vs Fischer, 1970 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 65 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Positional Def Closed Line (E94) 0-1 27...?
N Spiridonov vs Tal, 1970 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 36 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1 Notes by Bobby Fischer
Korchnoi vs Fischer, 1970  
(E97) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 1-0 Penetration eventually wins
Botvinnik vs Larsen, 1970 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 75 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1/2-BF notes
Reshevsky vs Fischer, 1970  
(E92) King's Indian, 47 moves, 1/2-1/2

Gligoric's Pawn Sacrifice: ... e5-e4! in the KID
Petrosian vs Fischer, 1970  
(E77) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

Game9 - Endings in book: Leonid Stein - Master of Risk Strategy
Vaganian vs Stein, 1970 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 40 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1/2-1/2
Hort vs S Kagan, 1970 
(E92) King's Indian, 62 moves, 1/2-1/2

Indian Game: West Indian Defense (E61) 0-1 Outside passer
Smyslov vs Gligoric, 1970 
(E61) King's Indian, 43 moves, 0-1

A most brilliant King's Indian by Svetozar Gligoric.
Petrosian vs Gligoric, 1970 
(E97) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 Simul
Fischer vs E Gomez, 1970 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 41 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E86) 0-1 B vs N
R A Lee vs P C Griffiths, 1970 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 46 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto. Karlsbad Var (E62) 0-1
O'Kelly vs Stein, 1970 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 25 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1 Devestating Kside attack
Larsen vs Fischer, 1971 
(E97) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

KID, Korchnoi Attack (E97) 0-1 Maintain pins, shut her in!!
B Harper vs R Zuk, 1971 
(E97) King's Indian, 39 moves, 0-1

"To Fischer, a theoretical edge is an extra queen."--Kashdan
Taimanov vs Fischer, 1971 
(E97) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Bobotsov-Korchnoi-Petrosian Var (E81) 1-0 B sac
L Evans vs Uhlmann, 1971 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 38 moves, 1-0

KID. Fianchetto. Simagin Var (E62) 0-1
Quinteros vs V Ciocaltea, 1971 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 25 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox Variation. Korchnoi Attack (E97) · 0-1
Taimanov vs Fischer, 1971 
(E97) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

Game 89 in 'I Play Against Pieces' by Svetozar Gligoric
T Avery vs Gligoric, 1971 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 40 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Variation (E80) 0-1 54...?
Shamkovich vs Bronstein, 1971 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 56 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Korchnoi Attack (E97) 1/2-1/2
Korchnoi vs Geller, 1971 
(E97) King's Indian, 34 moves, 1/2-1/2

Pawn chain and two bishops dominate two rooks.
A Pomar vs Smejkal, 1972 
(A49) King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4, 35 moves, 1-0

KID. Averbakh Variation. Flexible Defense (E73) · 0-1
P Cassidy vs A G Kerr, 1972 
(E73) King's Indian, 34 moves, 0-1

English vs Anglo-Indian Def. KID Formation (A15) 0-1
Andersson vs Uhlmann, 1972 
(A15) English, 34 moves, 0-1

Eduard Gufeld (1936-2002) Gufeld's Mona Lisa
Bagirov vs Gufeld, 1973 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 32 moves, 0-1

K's Indian Defense: Fianchetto. Panno Var (E63) 1-0Magical Mate
Quinteros vs Tukmakov, 1973 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 42 moves, 1-0

KID. Fianchetto. Kavalek Def (E62) 1-0 Notes by Raymond Keene
Keene vs C Micheli, 1973  
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 31 moves, 1-0

Indian Game: London System (A48) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Taimanov vs Korchnoi, 1973 
(A48) King's Indian, 63 moves, 0-1

p.76 (DA) from Yusupov's Build Up Your Chess: The Fundamentals
Reshevsky vs R Byrne, 1973 
(E92) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto. Panno Var (E63) · 1-0
Stein vs Ribli, 1973 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 36 moves, 1-0

Game 90 in 'I Play Against Pieces' by Svetozar Gligoric
Larsen vs Gligoric, 1973 
(E70) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID: Fianchetto Variation. Classical ML (E69) 1-0 Swindle
S Webb vs Reshevsky, 1973 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 77 moves, 1-0

KID: Averbakh. Geller Defense (E73) 1-0 Black missed it
Uhlmann vs A Planinc, 1973 
(E73) King's Indian, 39 moves, 1-0

Game 11 in Twenty-five Annotated Games by Robert Huebner
Huebner vs J Kaplan, 1974 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 42 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox Variation. General (E91) 0-1 Stockfish notes
J Cooper vs Petrosian, 1974 
(E91) King's Indian, 49 moves, 0-1

Two promotions, against two "promotion-wannabies" by DB
Vaganian vs Bronstein, 1975 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 58 moves, 1-0

English Opening: Anglo-Indian Def. KID formation (A15) 1/2-1/2
M Stean vs Vaganian, 1975
(A15) English, 22 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Four Pawns Attack. Normal Attack (E77) · 0-1
V Doroshkievich vs Tal, 1975 
(E77) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 0-1 paralysing pin
L Zaid vs V Chekhov, 1975 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 50 moves, 0-1

KID: Four Pawns Attack. Dynamic Attack (E76) 1-0 DYNAMIC!
Szabo vs H Ree, 1975 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 30 moves, 1-0

washingtonpost.com > Chess By Lubomir Kavalek, January 14, 2008
Portisch vs Kavalek, 1975 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 38 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Fianchetto. Classical Main Line (E69) 1-0 Q sac for passer
Hort vs P Biyiasas, 1976 
(E69) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Main line, 35 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E80) 0-1 Shocking moves
Lputian vs Kasparov, 1976 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 38 moves, 0-1

Do you follow? Awesome? E84 1-0 35
A Kuligowski vs J Przewoznik, 1976 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 35 moves, 1-0

KID. Saemisch. Closed Var (E87) 1-0 Simultaneous exhibition
Karpov vs L Falco Segarra, 1976 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 24 moves, 1-0

KID. Classical Fianchetto didn't like Fredthebear (E67) 0-1
Browne vs S Matera, 1976 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 30 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Attack: Yugoslav Var (A07) 0-1
C Brasket vs Shamkovich, 1976 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 36 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch (E80)1-0 Fab 150A Pin, P thrust & his book details
Browne vs E Winslow, 1977 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 20 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox (E91) 1-0 e6 splitter. Q sac for promotion.
N Birnboim vs Dzindzichashvili, 1977 
(E91) King's Indian, 30 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Makagonov Var (E71) 0-1 Knight strike
N Rashkovsky vs Geller, 1977 
(E71) King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3), 42 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Larsen Var (E90) 0-1 How Nasty!
Larsen vs J Mestel, 1978 
(E90) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

Be down the tempo and win! Triangulation in effect.
Alburt vs Kasparov, 1978 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 56 moves, 0-1

Game 5 in Garry Kasparov's Greatest Chess Games (Stohl)
S Yuferov vs Kasparov, 1978 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 59 moves, 0-1

Barry Attack vs KID Yugoslav Bg7 & Bb7 (A48) 0-1
M Shereshevsky vs Kasparov, 1978 
(A48) King's Indian, 32 moves, 0-1

KID Petrosian Variation. Stein Def (E92) 1-0 Remove the Guard
A Veingold vs Kasparov, 1979 
(E92) King's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox Var (E94) 1-0 Exchange sac fails in center
Tal vs Spassky, 1979 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 32 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox (E91) 1-0Unrated 16 yr old wins international tou
Kasparov vs M Vukic, 1979 
(E91) King's Indian, 35 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch vs Gambit 5...c5 (E80) 0-1
Portisch vs E Torre, 1979 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 34 moves, 0-1

KID. Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 K walked into right cross!
Browne vs Knaak, 1979
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 39 moves, 0-1

London System vs KID Yugoslav (A48) 0-1 Who's better w/out Qs?
Polugaevsky vs Gufeld, 1979 
(A48) King's Indian, 46 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Dreev vs Shirov, 1988 
(E97) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov (E92) 1-0 Nf5 w/open g-file
Kasparov vs Chiburdanidze, 1980 
(E92) King's Indian, 40 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Classical (E98) 0-1"Kaplooey!" W can't hold booty
Miles vs Sax, 1980 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 40 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Exchange Var (E92) 0-1 Black bind
S Danailov vs Kasparov, 1980 
(E92) King's Indian, 30 moves, 0-1

Game 56 in Petrosian: Move by Move by Thomas Engqvist
Petrosian vs Jansa, 1980 
(A48) King's Indian, 37 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Korchnoi Attack (E97) 0-1 More checks to come
Dorfman vs Kupreichik, 1980 
(E97) King's Indian, 29 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Closed Var (E87) 1-0 Trapped Q
S Polgar vs Z Kiss, 1980 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 36 moves, 1-0

KID Classical Fianchetto (E67) 1-0 N sac for connected passers
Smejkal vs Petrosian, 1981 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 42 moves, 1-0

Game 307 in Chess Informant Best Games 301-400
Karpov vs Timman, 1981 
(A15) English, 32 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Orthodox, Positional Def (E94) 0-1 Q trap on h-file
Korchnoi vs Nunn, 1981 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 33 moves, 0-1

London System vs KID Yugoslav (A48) 0-1 Qless middlegame
S Farias vs G Carlsson, 1981 
(A48) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Var (E86) 0-1
Knaak vs Uhlmann, 1981 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 32 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch Steiner Attack (E80) 0-1 Black shifts Kside
Gulko vs A Kremenietsky, 1982 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 39 moves, 0-1

Kasparov uses tripled d-pawn to beat the Four Pawns Attack
L Christiansen vs Kasparov, 1982 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 40 moves, 0-1

KID Normal vs 6.h3 (E90) Bold kNights and piling on the pin
Kavalek vs Kasparov, 1982 
(E90) King's Indian, 27 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Positional Def. Closed Line (E94) 1/2-1/2
Plaskett vs Nunn, 1982 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 57 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID: Orthodox. Positional Def Closed Line (E95) 1/2-1/2 debated
Andersson vs Kasparov, 1982 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 28 moves, 1/2-1/2

Among others, White should threaten mate w/22.Bxh6
I Hausner vs S Polgar, 1983 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 29 moves, 0-1

KID 4Ps Attack. Florentine Gambit (E77)  1-0 Masterly sac attk!
T Catalan vs N Alradhi, 1983 
(E77) King's Indian, 30 moves, 1-0

KID. Fianchetto. Yugoslav Variation Advance Line (E66) · 0-1
M Vukic vs Velimirovic, 1983
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 28 moves, 0-1

Game 178 in The Guinness Book of Chess GMs by William Hartston
Kasparov vs Spassky, 1983 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 33 moves, 0-1

KID: Petrosian. Normal Def (E93) 0-1 26...?
S Djuric vs K Spraggett, 1983 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 35 moves, 0-1

KID Averbakh Var. Geller Def (E73) 0-1 Black had to, or else
Alburt vs J Mestel, 1984 
(E73) King's Indian, 61 moves, 0-1

KID. Averbakh. Benoni Defense Advance Variation (E75) · 0-1
M Muse vs Velimirovic, 1984 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 34 moves, 0-1

KID. Averbakh. Flexible Def (E73) 0-1
Alburt vs J Rizzitano, 1984 
(E73) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

Furious Kingside Attack with Anastasia's Mate
G Andruet vs Van der Wiel, 1985 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 33 moves, 0-1

14. Ne4! and 15. Qe2! (see link at Tamar's post for analysis)
A Beliavsky vs Nunn, 1985 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 27 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Positional Defense Closed Line (E94) 0-1
A Huss vs Lobron, 1985 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 45 moves, 0-1

as weak as Mrs Daly's tea on Ganymede..had to cash in his chips
Portisch vs J Mestel, 1986 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 42 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1-0
Speelman vs E De Castro, 1986 
(E92) King's Indian, 39 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox. Positional Def (E94) 1/2- The champ gets swindled
Kasparov vs N McDonald, 1986 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 55 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Saemisch Var (E80) 1-0 N sac, Q trap, Exchange sac
Spassky vs H Pfleger, 1986 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 29 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch. Steiner Attack (E80) 0-1 Award winning brilliancy
J Mestel vs Gufeld, 1987 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 27 moves, 0-1

Offramp goes down the middle
M Gesthuysen vs A O'Brien, 1986 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 50 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch. Bronstein Def (E87) 0-1 early Q exit
B Spycher vs J Piket, 1986 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 36 moves, 0-1

KID Kramer Var (E70) 1-0 Kingside assault
S Vaughan vs J Ramsden, 1987
(E70) King's Indian, 26 moves, 1-0

Queen Pawn Game: Barry Attack. Gruenfeld Var (D02) 1-0
S Polgar vs B Kouatly, 1988
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 53 moves, 1-0

KID. Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 1-0 The Bishop Pair
L Christiansen vs L Gutman, 1988 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 46 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch. Panno (E84) 1-0 A Knight on the 6th, Q in close
L Christiansen vs Nunn, 1988 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 34 moves, 1-0

A48 0-1 42
E Torre vs Kasparov, 1988 
(A48) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

G133: The Soviet Champnships by M. Taimanov & Bernard Cafferty
Kasparov vs Smirin, 1988 
(E97) King's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 0-1 Stockfish
Speelman vs Kasparov, 1988 
(E92) King's Indian, 39 moves, 0-1

Smirin writes in King's Indian Warfare (a must own for all KID
Gavrikov vs Smirin, 1988 
(E97) King's Indian, 46 moves, 0-1

E81 0-1 40
G Laco vs Yermolinsky, 1989 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 40 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Vaganian vs Gelfand, 1989 
(E97) King's Indian, 52 moves, 0-1

This is the longest game in the database with 269 moves!
I Nikolic vs G Arsovic, 1989 
(E95) King's Indian, Orthodox, 7...Nbd7, 8.Re1, 255 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Orthodox. Classical System Neo-Classsical Line (E99) 0-1 P#
G Burgess vs W N Watson, 1989 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 39 moves, 0-1

KID Petrosian Var. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 Q+ & fork LPDO R
K Lerner vs Uhlmann, 1989 
(E92) King's Indian, 49 moves, 0-1

KID Petrosian Var. Stein Def (E92) 1-0 He was so upset...
A Yusupov vs Kasparov, 1989 
(E92) King's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

Game 30 in The Samisch King's Indian Uncovered
Gheorghiu vs Gelfand, 1989
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 36 moves, 0-1

Now this is "in your face" PILING ON THE PIN!
J Piket vs Kasparov, 1989 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 28 moves, 0-1

Game 9 in Fire on Board: Shirov's Best Games by Alexey Shirov
Gheorghiu vs Shirov, 1989 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 28 moves, 0-1

KID 6...c5 Four Ps Attk. Normal (E77) 0-1 Ns shake things up
J de Vries vs C Gouw, 1987 
(E77) King's Indian, 26 moves, 0-1

"David and Goliath" (game of the day Feb-27-2006)
Kasparov vs D Tebb, 1989 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 31 moves, 0-1

KID: Averbakh. Geller Defense (E73) 1/2-1/2
K Lerner vs V Chekhov, 1989 
(E73) King's Indian, 61 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 1/2-1/2
Kasparov vs Nunn, 1989 
(E92) King's Indian, 42 moves, 1/2-1/2

Colin McNab: TRENDS English 1 ... c5, Trends Publications 1990
Hjartarson vs Kasparov, 1989 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 31 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Lobron vs Gelfand, 1990 
(E97) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Aronin-Taimanov Def (E97) 0-1
P Dussol vs Shirov, 1990 
(E97) King's Indian, 35 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Vaganian vs Shirov, 1990 
(E97) King's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

KID Fianchetto. Panno Var (E63) 0-1 Sac those Rooks!!
Lautier vs Shirov, 1990 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 32 moves, 0-1

IM Jeremy Silman's "How to Reassess Your Chess" p. 182
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1990 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 30 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 240 in Soviet Chess 1917-1991 by Andrew Soltis
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1990 
(E92) King's Indian, 53 moves, 1/2-1/2

Lessons w/a GM by Gulko & Dr. Joel R. Sneed. Everyman Chess2011
Gulko vs Kasparov, 1990 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 54 moves, 1-0

KID. Saemisch. Panno (E84) 1-0 A piece for a passer!
Kramnik vs V Isupov, 1990 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 25 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Kazakh Var (E91) 0-1 tactics
D Werner vs G Barbero, 1990 
(E91) King's Indian, 36 moves, 0-1

KID: Four Pawns Attack. Dynamic Attack (E76) 0-1
W Arencibia Rodriguez vs Tal, 1990 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 36 moves, 0-1

Kasparov - Karpov World CC Match (1990) New York, NY USA, rd 11
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1990 
(E92) King's Indian, 24 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID, Saemisch Var (E80) 0-1 Both knights deliver royal forks
M Pavlovic vs G Cabrilo, 1991 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 37 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Bayonet Attack (E97) 0-1
M Gurevich vs Gelfand, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 60 moves, 0-1

A rook VS two knights and a bishop...who will win?
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 114 moves, 1/2-1/2

One of the most spectacular games on record.
Ivanchuk vs A Yusupov, 1991 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 39 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Steiner Attack (E80) 1-0 Sacs for a K walk
S Estremera Panos vs L Cisneros Belenguer, 1991 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 39 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox Variation. Modern System (E97) · 0-1
V Bogdanovski vs M Golubev, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 45 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Epishin vs J Polgar, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 40 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Normal Defense (E81) 1-0 Stockfish notes
Timman vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 35 moves, 1-0

'Thrilla in Manila' fought in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philip
L Y Hsu vs Nunn, 1992 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 27 moves, 0-1

K's Indian Def. 6 Pawns Attack (E77) 0-1 N&R sac opens way
G Horvath vs Kupreichik, 1992 
(E77) King's Indian, 45 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Bayonet Attack (E97) 0-1
Lobron vs Gelfand, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 44 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Aronin-Taimanov Def (E97) 0-1 Bishops rule
Granda Zuniga vs J Polgar, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID Saemisch. Panno (E84) 0-1 Qside Ingenuity!
Spassky vs Fischer, 1992 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 40 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch (E86) 0-1 Knights roam the countryside
Seirawan vs J Piket, 1992 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 67 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Panno (E83) 1-0 h-file spearhead / N snare
Spassky vs Fischer, 1992 
(E83) King's Indian, Samisch, 54 moves, 1-0

KID. Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 0-1 Remove the Defender
L Christiansen vs O Renet, 1992
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 73 moves, 0-1

Game 12 in Starting out: the King's Indian by Joe Gallagher
M Roeder vs M Hebden, 1992 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 52 moves, 0-1

Game 535 in Chess Informant Best Games 501-600
Kamsky vs Kasparov, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 38 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 1-0 Tumbling Knights
Kamsky vs V Spasov, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 38 moves, 1-0

KID: Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
A Beliavsky vs Khalifman, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 53 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
Gligoric vs Fischer, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 43 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Def: Kramer Var(E70) 1-0 Sac another and another
Serper vs I Nikolaidis, 1993 
(E70) King's Indian, 48 moves, 1-0

KID Saemisch (E86) 0-1 GK's most dominating victory over Karpov
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1993 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 27 moves, 0-1

Wow!! One of the best games of the late English GM Tony Miles
S Atalik vs Miles, 1993 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 30 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Glek Def 7.Na6 (E94) 1/2-1/2
Vaganian vs Smirin, 1993
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 48 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1 White Q is AWOL
Ljubojevic vs Kasparov, 1993 
(E97) King's Indian, 29 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 0-1 Pin & P lever
Shulman vs V Babula Sr, 1993
(E92) King's Indian, 44 moves, 0-1

English, Anglo-Indian Defense. KID Formation (A15) 1-0
H Stefansson vs A Whiteley, 1993
(A15) English, 48 moves, 1-0

KID: Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Browne vs Kamsky, 1993 
(E97) King's Indian, 65 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Six Pawns Attack (E77) 0-1
Seirawan vs J Polgar, 1993 
(E77) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

Indian Game: London System (A48) 0-1 Blindfold
Karpov vs J Polgar, 1993 
(A48) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

London System vs KID (D02) 1/2-1/2 Double the e-pawns
D Roos vs M Hebden, 1993 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 52 moves, 1/2-1/2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh5z2YFBkHs
Kramnik vs Kasparov, 1994 
(E92) King's Indian, 39 moves, 0-1

KID Petrosian Var. Normal Def (E93) 1-0 Philidor would be proud
Kramnik vs Kasparov, 1994 
(E93) King's Indian, Petrosian System, 41 moves, 1-0

KID Pomar System (White fianchetto) (E72) 0-1 Knight windmill!
J Kourek vs P Chrz, 1994 
(E72) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1
Gelfand vs Shirov, 1994 
(E97) King's Indian, 63 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Bayonet Attack (E97) 0-1
G Beckhuis vs Shirov, 1994 
(E97) King's Indian, 54 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Variation (E86) · 0-1
V Arbakov vs Kasparov, 1994 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 33 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox Var (E94) 0-1
Van der Sterren vs Glek, 1994
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 37 moves, 0-1

Game 9 in Instructive Modern Chess Masterpieces by Igor Stohl
Timman vs Topalov, 1994 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 40 moves, 0-1

Game #21: p.64 The Bayonet Attack
Kamsky vs Kasparov, 1994 
(E97) King's Indian, 43 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Modern System (E97) 0-1 Stockfish notes; 32...?
V Smirnov vs V Dydyshko, 1994 
(E97) King's Indian, 35 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. General (E91) 1-0 Remarkable Kside assault
Shulman vs C D'Amore, 1994 
(E91) King's Indian, 27 moves, 1-0

KID Petrosian Var. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 N sac fails, then pin
Kramnik vs Kasparov, 1995 
(E92) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal. Rare Defenses (E90) 1-0 Rare because it's bad?
Krasenkow vs C Arroyo, 1995 
(E90) King's Indian, 34 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto. Panno Var (E63) 0-1
I Stohl vs Shirov, 1999 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 31 moves, 0-1

KID: Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1
M Vucic vs B Kreiman, 1995
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 36 moves, 0-1

KID: Petrosian Var. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 Stockfish notes
Kramnik vs Ivanchuk, 1995 
(E92) King's Indian, 57 moves, 0-1

KID. Four Pawns Attack (E76) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
M Bach vs R Schubert, 1996 
(E76) King's Indian, Four Pawns Attack, 53 moves, 0-1

Queen vs 2 Rooks E80 1-0 56
Dreev vs Shirov, 1996 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 56 moves, 1-0

KID. Orthodox. Gligoric-Taimanov System (E92) 0-1 Rapid
Kasparov vs Anand, 1996 
(E92) King's Indian, 44 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Bayonet Attk Sokolov's Line (E97) 1/2-FSR Notes
F Rhine vs A Boerkoel, 1996 
(E97) King's Indian, 33 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Orthodox. Glek Def (E94) · 0-1
Lobron vs Gelfand, 1996 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 33 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. General (E91) 0-1
R Kempinski vs H Tirard, 1996 
(E91) King's Indian, 28 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Classical System Neo-Classsical Line (E99) 0-1
J van Oosterom vs G Timmerman, 1996 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 64 moves, 0-1

Game 708 of Chess Informant Best Games 701-800
Ftacnik vs O Cvitan, 1997 
(E97) King's Indian, 26 moves, 0-1

Rat Defense (A41) 0-1 Promotion tussle won by free king
S Volkov vs Kharlov, 1997 
(A41) Queen's Pawn Game (with ...d6), 54 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch. Steiner Attack (E80) 0-1 Uncastled K loses
K Ceterski vs J Langreck, 1997
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 33 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Bayonet Attack (E97) 0-1
D Zagorskis vs C Gabriel, 1997 
(E97) King's Indian, 45 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox. Positional Defense (E94) 1-0 Brilliancy prize
Korchnoi vs Svidler, 1997 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 31 moves, 1-0

KID, Bayonet Attack (E97) 0-1 Wild game, resembles Bughouse
P H Nielsen vs T Hillarp Persson, 1998 
(E97) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

KID Normal. K's Knight Var (E60) 1/2-1/2 Stalemate blunder
Karpov vs J Polgar, 1998 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 75 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 70 in "Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy" by John Watson
Timman vs Kasparov, 1992 
(E87) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 25 moves, 0-1

KID. Smyslov Var (E61) 1-0 Clean, accurate. Reasonable f3 works
A Yusupov vs T Markowski, 1998
(E61) King's Indian, 53 moves, 1-0

KID: Smyslov Var (E61) 0-1 Defender Deflection for Support Mate
O Danchevski vs V Spasov, 1998 
(E61) King's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1

KID Petrosian Variation. Stein Defense (E92) 0-1
Zvjaginsev vs J Polgar, 1999 
(E92) King's Indian, 41 moves, 0-1

KID Orthodox. Glek Def (E94) 1/2-1/2 Mad Rook forces draw
A Beliavsky vs H Hamdouchi, 1999 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 65 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID 6...c5 Four Pawns Attack. Normal (E77) 1-0 Outside passers
D Blair vs V Aleshnya, 1999 
(E77) King's Indian, 31 moves, 0-1

KID. Averbakh Variation. Modern Defense (E73) · 1-0
R Leitao vs Kasimdzhanov, 1999 
(E73) King's Indian, 36 moves, 1-0

KID. Makagonov Variation (E71) · 0-1
Avrukh vs A Kovalev, 1999
(E71) King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3), 42 moves, 0-1

KID. Saemisch Variation. Panno (E84) · 0-1
P Sjodahl vs V Babula Sr, 1999
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 37 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Classical System Neo-Classsical Line (E99)
V Sakalauskas vs M Ahn, 1999 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 37 moves, 1-0

E97 0-1 82
Belov vs V Prohorov, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 82 moves, 0-1

E88 0-1 38
G Michelakis vs Kotronias, 1996 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 38 moves, 0-1

E63 0-1 32 Chase away the Q defending f2.
Gavrikov vs Gelfand, 1995 
(E63) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Panno Variation, 32 moves, 0-1

KID. Normal (E70) 1-0 It seemed like a casual Rxf7 sac
B Toth vs R Appel, 1999 
(E70) King's Indian, 30 moves, 1-0

E99 0-1 31
Korchnoi vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 31 moves, 0-1

E92 0-1 60
Gelfand vs Kasparov, 1992 
(E92) King's Indian, 60 moves, 0-1

E88 0-1 41
Kamsky vs Kasparov, 1992 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 41 moves, 0-1

E97 0-1 37
Kamsky vs Kasparov, 1992 
(E97) King's Indian, 37 moves, 0-1

E97 0-1 75
Gelfand vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E97) King's Indian, 75 moves, 0-1

E67 0-1 35
Timman vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 35 moves, 0-1

E81 0-1 46
A Beliavsky vs Kasparov, 1983 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 46 moves, 0-1

E75 0-1 29
Tukmakov vs Kasparov, 1981 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 29 moves, 0-1

E83 1/2-1/2 24
Timman vs Kasparov, 1981 
(E83) King's Indian, Samisch, 24 moves, 1/2-1/2

E66 1-0 40
Timman vs Kasparov, 1981 
(E66) King's Indian, Fianchetto, Yugoslav Panno, 40 moves, 1-0

E84 1/2-1/2 28
Timman vs Kasparov, 1982 
(E84) King's Indian, Samisch, Panno Main line, 28 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID. Petrosian. Stein Defense (E92) 0-1 Zugzwang
Bareev vs Kasparov, 1991 
(E92) King's Indian, 45 moves, 0-1

KID: Petrosian. Stein Def (E92) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
Gulko vs Kasparov, 1995 
(E92) King's Indian, 44 moves, 0-1

KID: Saemisch Var (E86) 0-1 Notes by Stockfish
J Piket vs Kasparov, 1996 
(E86) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.Nge2 c6, 39 moves, 0-1

KID: Normal. K's Knight Var (E60) 0-1Black attack arrives first
S Skembris vs J Polgar, 1990 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 36 moves, 0-1

B Andersen vs Petrosian, 1960 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 29 moves, 0-1

Larsen vs Fischer, 1967 
(E97) King's Indian, 61 moves, 0-1

Smyslov vs Geller, 1955 
(E89) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox Main line, 34 moves, 0-1

Z Kozul vs Nunn, 1991 
(E77) King's Indian, 37 moves, 0-1

J Xu vs Y Wang, 1997 
(E73) King's Indian, 77 moves, 0-1

Kramnik vs Gelfand, 1997 
(E97) King's Indian, 66 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID: Saemisch. Normal Def (E81) 0-1 Better ending
R Gunawan vs Gelfand, 1986
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 36 moves, 0-1

Torre Attack: Fianchetto Defense (A48) 0-1 Blitz
Hort vs Fischer, 1970  
(A48) King's Indian, 34 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Defense: Saemisch. Steiner Attack (E80) 0-1
C Ionescu vs M Wahls, 1990 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 37 moves, 0-1

KID: Normal. King's Knight Var (E60) 0-1 Brilliancy prize
Browne vs Benjamin, 1980 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 41 moves, 0-1

KID. Averbakh. Benoni Defense Advance Var (E75) 0-1 17...?
Petursson vs A Wojtkiewicz, 1990 
(E75) King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line, 29 moves, 0-1

Gheorghiu vs Sax, 1975 
(E81) King's Indian, Samisch, 32 moves, 0-1

Timman vs Westerinen, 1977 
(E92) King's Indian, 39 moves, 0-1

P B Knudsen vs Reshevsky, 1979 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 48 moves, 0-1

K Grigorian vs Yurtaev, 1979 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 18 moves, 1/2-1/2

J Piket vs R Douven, 1988 
(E99) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 43 moves, 0-1

38...Qxd4 is #141 in Chess Informant's Encyclopedia
R Teschner vs Keres, 1960 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 41 moves, 0-1

"Sabbages and Kings" (game of the day Nov-26-2006)
N Sabbag vs C de Holanda, 1992 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 26 moves, 0-1

Game 85 from Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy (Watson)
Timman vs Kasparov, 1988 
(E88) King's Indian, Samisch, Orthodox, 7.d5 c6, 45 moves, 0-1

KID: Classical Fianchetto (E67) 0-1 25...?
Portisch vs Geller, 1961 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 40 moves, 0-1

KID: Orthodox Variation. Classical System Misc. Lines (E98) 0-1
Polugaevsky vs G Borisenko, 1954 
(E98) King's Indian, Orthodox, Taimanov, 9.Ne1, 42 moves, 0-1

K's Indian Def Six Pawns Attk (E77) 1-0 Heavies on the 6th/24.?
Yermolinsky vs P Hummel, 1999 
(E77) King's Indian, 37 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Makagonov Var (E71) 0-1
E Agrest vs Shulman, 1996 
(E71) King's Indian, Makagonov System (5.h3), 52 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox. Positional Defense (E94) 0-1 29...?
L Piarnpuu vs Shulman, 1997 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 34 moves, 0-1

KID. Orthodox Variation. Glek Defense (E94) 1-0 31.?
J Piket vs Smirin, 1993 
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 36 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Defense: Zinnowitz Var (E90) 0-1 Stockfish notes
W Estrada Degrandi vs R Nezhmetdinov, 1961 
(E90) King's Indian, 34 moves, 0-1

494 games

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