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yEG Rookie Plus Endings Rock Fredthebear
Compiled by rpn4
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Most of these games were acquired in the process of studying famous players, famous games, and various openings. This is not a duplicate of someone else's endgame collection.

The level of difficulty and quality of play varies greatly in this loosely assembled endgame collection. Some inclusions are really late middlegames and early resignations without much of an endgame battle due to the skilled foresight of the losing master understanding it was a technical loss. (Analyzing the final position and coming to the same conclusion is an excellent training practice.) No doubt there are other endgame collections with SUPERIOR examples to this one.

These Rook Plus endgames allow other pieces to join in so long as the rooks play a role while on board. Some of these are rather basic, but it's good to be reminded of basic principles in action; same song, next verse, tried and true. Many players just do not know where to put their rooks in the endgame (or the middlegame, for that matter) and give away a precious tempo to the opponent, and perhaps another tempo when they try to correct their previous misplacement. Timing is significant in the endgame, yet easy to mishandle.

Some endgames last much longer than others. Some just serve as a reminder and are not worthy of detailed analysis. For on-line studies, don't start at the beginning of the game!! Save yourself some time and start the study of each endgame NEAR THE END by mouse clicking on the last five moves of the game score given below the board. Play out the last five moves. (Try to predict what will happen in the position before you actually follow the moves.) Then go back and play out the last ten moves. Then go back and play out the last fifteen moves, understanding how one position arrived at the other. At some point going farther back, you'll reach the middle game. If the game is still of interest to you, go all the way back to the beginning and replay all of it. Do check the blogger notes for endgame comments before leaving the page. Take note of who the blogger is; some commentators are more accurate and insightful than others. You will develop favorite bloggers just like you have favorite players.

The dogmatic quote: "Two pieces plus one Pawn always win against a Rook. Rook plus one Pawn vs. two pieces is normally a draw, while Rook plus two Pawns vs. two pieces is always won." (BTW what about R vs 2 pieces?) Generally true but of course depends on positions and if there are Ns or Bs.

Some Late MG/Early EG tips:
0) The endgame is an entirely different animal than the opening and middle game. The endgame focuses on creating and promoting a passed pawn for material gain to force checkmate with the help of the new piece. Thus, pawns race up the board in the chess ending as if an aquatic newborn headed out to sea. The king comes out of his shell to assist the advance of his own pawns, as well as prevent the advance of the enemy king and pawns. Often, the most aggressive king wins in the endgame, whereas the safest, passive king is often better off in the middle game. (The endgame arises after some exchanges when the confined king no longer fears being checkmated due to the lack of material remaining on board.) The isolated pawn is a hindrance in the middle game, but if the isolated pawn is an outside passer in the ending, it is often decisive. The endgame features more skewers, zugzwangs, triangulations, rook activity and stalemates, among other things. 1) Don't consider yourself as having a material advantage until the opposing queen has been swapped off the board. Anything can happen if she's still around -- never underestimate the power of a queen on an open board. (For example, a short-handed queen is really good at forcing a perpetual check draw to negate your material advantage.) Otherwise, if you're ahead a full piece, one can usually trade down like pieces to a won endgame. It's usually a winning advantage to be up the exchange (rook for minor piece) if the other pieces have been removed. 2) Keep your rooks connected (protecting each other) until the opposing queen is off the board. She's really good at rounding up loose (undefended) rooks. Connected rooks do not get sniped off and are good at bullying the queen, forcing her to retreat w/a loss of tempo. Of course, you were trying to penetrate two hogs on the 7th in the middle game, or at least control the open files. 3) With the rook becoming more active in the endgame, tactical skewers become much more common than in the middlegame. Often, a rook will aim through -- skewer -- the opposing king (forcing it to move out of check) and nab an unprotected unit on the other side of the king. "Aim one of mine at/through two of his" can be a winning tactical approach in all three phases of chess. 4) A passive rook sitting on guard duty won't do. In the endgame, it's usually better to leave a pawn(s) unguarded for the taking rather than make a rook sit still guarding the pawn(s). (Of course, this is a general principle that does not apply universally to all rooks and pawns.) The rook must be active, gobbling up the opposing pawns and cutting off the opposing king from getting involved. Of course, Tarrasch's Rule nearly always applies: The rook belongs behind a passed pawn of either color. 5A) Advanced connected passed pawns are often devastating, as either one can advance to become protected by the other. You probably already know that a lone rook cannot stop two connected passers (side-by-side) on the sixth rank (unless the rook can immediately capture one pawn on the sixth and threaten to take the other pawn on the sixth, which begs the question why the pawns were side-by-side to allow such to happen). As the rook moves into position to capture one of the two pawns, one of the pawns will advance to the seventh rank and remain protected. A lone rook cannot capture and stop promotion at the same time without itself being captured. 5B) A lone king can blockade two connected passed pawns, but dare not capture the backward pawn because the forward pawn will promote. The connected passers would tie the lone king down to blockade guard duty to prevent their advance, which allows the opposing king time to roam about inflicting damage or come to assist the connected passers. 6) Acquiring and promoting a passed pawn into a new piece for extra material is the whole point of any true endgame. The passer is converted into a new piece for a decisive material advantage like a caterpillar becomes a beautiful butterfly. First get your pieces in the proper position to do battle before advancing the pawns (unless you have a sure fire promotion before the opponent can get over to capture it). IMHO, THE MOST COMMON ENDGAME ERROR IS BEING IN A HURRY TO ADVANCE A PAWN(S) INSTEAD OF HAVING FIRST PLACED THE REMAINING PIECES ON THEIR IDEAL SQUARES. Don't get in such a big hurry! Stop and see the big picture. Figure out where your pieces (and the opposing pieces) belong first -- that is the plan. The pieces belong where they can prevent the opponent from pawn promotion and/or support their own passed pawn(s). It's important to control (protect) the promotion square on the back rank with a piece. 7) When the pawn promotes, always consider underpromotion to a knight first. Don't get into the bad habit of automatically replacing the promoted pawn with a new queen, especially on the c- and f-files where a known stalemate is possible! Although rare, the new knight might be able to give a devastating check upon the opposing king. Consider the knight first, then bishop and rook, but in the vast majority of cases, making a new queen is the best selection. 8) The king is a fighting piece -- use it. Many endgames are decided by having the more aggressive, advanced king. Be quick to recognize when the threat of checkmate no longer exists and then centralize thy king rapidly so it can "gain the opposition" in the opponent's half of the board. An easy win may occur if your rook seizes the open line that cuts off the opposing king before he can get to pawns. (The king often finds itself the last defender against a passed pawn if it can get to the promotion square in time.) 9A) Know and follow Capablanca's Rule: In a pawn majority (2 vs 1, 3 vs 2, etc.), advance the "extra" unopposed pawn first. The unopposed pawn becomes the candidate passer. Otherwise, one pawn can hold back two as the backward pawn will not be able to advance w/out being captured and giving away a new passer on the adjacent file. This pawn majority situation happens a lot and there's no good reason for rank amateurs to blow it as they do. 9B) The defensive pawn that is preventing the advance of the candidate passer from the adjacent file is an excellent target for a minor piece sacrifice in certain endgame situations. This falls under the concept of Remove the Defender (via sacrifice). With the preventive pawn removed, the defense must resort to another method of defense to prevent promotion, which often stretches the defense too thin to cover all parts of the board. This creates Capablanca's concept of inflicting two weaknesses on the opponent, here and there. 9C) Know how to break through when the pawns are equal in number without the help of a king kept busy on the other side of the board.

Those who need to learn about the endgame should not begin with an exclusive endgame book. It's just too overwhelming to attempt the entire subject in one gulp. Instead, read the endgame CHAPTER from introductory instruction books that teach the rules of chess. Reserve a half-dozen beginners books from your local library if necessary and read the endgame chapter in each one. By and large, they will discuss the same few topics, but the positions will be different. You will learn how to APPLY THE SAME CONCEPT PATTERN TO DIFFERENT POSITIONS. The endgame has a chess language all it's own.

Older chess books written in descriptive notation by deceased authors generally do a better job of explaining the endgame for learners, IMHO. I prefer I.A. Horowitz and Frank Marshall for the basics of endgame play. Samuel Reshevsky, Harry Golumbek and Larry Evans wrote good CHAPTERS on the endgame in their general instruction books. Of course, world champions Jose R. Capablanca, and Emanuel Lasker wrote excellent chapters on the endgame; intermediate level players can grasp their writings. The legendary Siegbert Tarrasch, EDWARD Lasker, and Aaron Nimzowitsch publications are too advanced to start with but must be studied after gaining initial knowledge and confidence. I've seen too many young players become discouraged when told to read these thick classic manuals and give up on their chess studies. Endgame knowledge is best acquired gradually and systematically from a base of understanding much like sequential mathematical studies: name the numbers, count forwards and backwards, addition, subtraction, borrowing, multiplication tables, division, remainders, fractions, etc. First things first; be razor sharp on the simple fundamentals and don't try to jump ahead.

General instruction endgame chapters tend to focus on simple forced checkmates against a lone king chased to the edge of the board (which you should be able to deliver every time w/out hesitation like tying your shoes). Know how to promote a pawn and stop it from promoting to force a draw. A rook's pawn on the outter file is more drawish. Then tackle multiple pawn positions with pawns on both sides of the board. Once basic king and pawn endgames are fully understood, add a piece or two to complicate the position. Sacrificing a piece to eliminate the opponent's last remaining pawn can leave the opponent with insufficient winning material. Or, sacrificing your piece to break through for promotion by removing an obstructive defensive pawn is a tactical situation less often discussed in chess books but well worth knowing. Rook endgames are the most common at grandmaster level, but one should understand pawn endings first. Grandmasters understand pawn endings so well there is no need to play them out... resignation occurs instead.

Determined students who have read and understand a few of the above suggested selections will now be ready for books dedicated entirely to the third and final phase. Yuri Averbakh's Chess Endings: Essential Knowledge is just that. Next is the more extensive Practical Chess Endings by Paul Keres. These two books should be faithfully read and re-read. You likely will have to purchase them used; do know that both have been reprinted in algebraic notation if you prefer -- be careful which version you order, although any self-respecting chess player can easily read both algebraic and descriptive notation.

Follow Keres' book with the 300 puzzles book of the exact same name -- Practical Chess Endings by Irving Chernev. This will allow you to self-test your endgame understanding, which should be excellent at this stage of your studies. Then read Capablanca's Best Chess Endings: 60 Complete Games, also by Irving Chernev to gain understanding of the formulation of plans coming out of the middle game. Compared to a grandmaster, Chernev is certainly not the best endgame teacher, but his examples of various endgame positions are excellent. Chernev wrote other endgame books as well, such as the applauded Chessboard Magic, but I recommend sticking to the two mentioned above for their volume and instructive value crafted to educate and somewhat entertain the reader.

Follow Averbakh, Keres and Chernev's writings with your choice of the following: Practical Endgame Lessons by GM Edmar Mednis, Practical Rook Endings by GM Edmar Mednis, A Practical Guide to Rook Endgames by Nikolay Minev, Endgame Strategy by Mikhail Shereshevsky, Vasily Smyslov: Endgame Virtuoso by Vasily Smyslov and/or Botvinnik: One Hundred Selected Games by Mikhail Botvinnik.

Eventually, A Guide to Chess Endings by Dr. Max Euwe and Reuben Fine's Basic Chess Endings (a poorly named classic; the word "Basic" should have been replaced with "Comprehensive") are critical reference works to be used like an encyclopedia to look up a certain type of ending that might have given you trouble. You have a couple years of less complicated study ahead of you before these reference books will be needed.

Pick the above author that is appropriate for your level of understanding. If the information is too puzzling to comprehend, stop and back up to an earlier book selection. Chess studies should be easy for you to follow along. Being overwhelmed with material that is too advanced is a waste of your time. Once you've read an entire chess book -- ANY chess book -- always re-read it from cover-to-cover immediately.

Your endgame knowledge will reward you again and again and again. Endgame knowledge does not change; its reliable, reusable and repeats its rewards. Once you learn endgame concepts well, middle game pawn structures and positional play will make much more sense and you're not obliged to risk it all for checkmate earlier in the game. Instead, you can sit back and play sound, solid chess without taking unnecessary risks, wait for your opponent to make a mistake and hand you the advantage. Otherwise, match move for move and continue to grind it down to a few pieces and pawns. Superior understanding provides a vast and permanent competitive edge against most amateur opponents who lag far behind in endgame knowledge, the weakest part of their game. As combinational opportunities diminish with reduced material on board, the younger amateur weakens -- s/he has fewer tactical resources and less knowledge of how best to proceed. Furthermore, mistakes are likely compounded in the endgame when in time trouble and/or emotionally fatigued from the long battle. Your knowledge of endgame concepts will save you much time on the clock in finding the winning plan based upon the pawn structure and remaining piece placement. (Often your plan is to simply stop your opponent from executing her/his winning plan but you must first realize that plan exists.) You recognize the correct plan for both sides and proceed with confidence. Boy howdy... I have won or drawn MANY, MANY positions I should have lost because of my superior endgame knowledge (or the opponent's ignorance if you please). An extra half-point often makes a BIG difference in the final tournament standings, your rating, and your outlook.

In my case, I'd go so far as to say that my chess rating would be 600-800 points lower without my endgame performances over the years, especially with the Black pieces. In fact, I'd surely have given up playing tournament chess by now if it weren't for the saving endgame. Case in point: It just so happens that in each of my last three rated tournaments in the fall of 2016, there was a game in each where I played solidly and offered draws early in the endgame to slightly higher rated opponents who declined to accept. I went on to win the ending when each of my opponents gave away a tempo by making a less-than-best move that did not accurately fit the ever-changing position, allowing me to suddenly seize a superior position with better piece placement. (Twice my rooks took control of a more active line and once my king was allowed to advance one square closer toward the action -- subtle but deadly improvements with lasting consequences.) These sudden acquisitions of a victorious advantage after hours of face-to-face combat made all the difference in my personal satisfaction from competitive tournament play! I went home happy and eager to play again, motivated to review study material to reinforce my understanding!

Update summer of 2017: At our local chess club, I won a dead lost game under quick time controls by pinning my opponent to slow his momentum, stepped my king over one file so it could get to a certain pawn cluster as needed without being cut-off, and then placed my rook exactly where it needed to be to round up two of his passed pawns. Had my opponent stopped to think where my rook was required for defensive purposes, he could have prevented it and won the game. Instead, he hurried and lost a game he thought he was surely going to win. I did not play better; he planned worse and left the barn door open. The outcome was about a 25 point rating swing for me. These types of narrow escapes happen almost every tournament for me, especially when time gets short. American players tend to be weakest in the endgame.

Endgame knowledge also gives me the confidence and desire to continue to fight on in worse middle game positions knowing that at some point my opponent is likely to make an inferior move that allows me to force a draw instead of resignation. Knowledge of drawing methods comes in quite handy just like knowing checkmate patterns. Gaining a 1/2 point out of a worse position can be almost as satisfying as a win and certainly less damaging to one's rating. Hang in there, be stubborn, hard to kill! Force your opponent to prove s/he knows the proper finish.

"One bad move ruins forty good ones." -- I.A. Horowitz

rnbqkbnr
""""""""

^^^^^^^^
RNBQKBNR

Here's a quote from Reuben Fine's "Basic Chess Endings", New York 1941, page 460: - "Two pieces plus one Pawn always win against a Rook. Rook plus one Pawn vs. two pieces is normally a draw, while Rook plus two Pawns vs. two pieces is always won. With more material on the board, positional considerations may alter these rules."

* Rook & Pawn endings - KNOW THIS: http://dictionary.sensagent.com/Roo...

* EG Technique (all pieces): Game Collection: Endgame technique

* 7 Year Old's Endgame Technique Is Scary! Golan vs. Richard https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANS...

* Glossary: https://www.peoriachess.com/Glossar...

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.

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...

QGD. Modern Variation (D50) 1-0 Basic endgame K&R mate lone K
A Guillot vs O Yalcin, 2001 
(D50) Queen's Gambit Declined, 86 moves, 1-0

QGD Exchange. Positional Variation (D35) 1-0 Connected passers
Karjakin vs Kramnik, 2014 
(D35) Queen's Gambit Declined, 72 moves, 1-0

The Dancing Knight, Diligent Rook & Dastardly Minority Attack
L Evans vs H Opsahl, 1950 
(D51) Queen's Gambit Declined, 81 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def. Two Pawn Attack. Lasker Var (B02) 1-0 Slick promo
P Dubinin vs Aronin, 1947 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 50 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: General (C23) 0-1 Connected passers
Sheldon vs Philidor, 1790 
(C23) Bishop's Opening, 31 moves, 0-1

First called "partie du pion roi d'un pas" by Philidor
Westminster CC vs Paris CC, 1834 
(C01) French, Exchange, 27 moves, 0-1

Scotch Gambit. London Def (C44) 1/2-1/2 g-file battle, R ending
I Calvi vs Kieseritzky, 1842 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

Queen's Gambit Declined: General (D30) 0-1 Rob the pin
Saint-Amant vs Staunton, 1843 
(D30) Queen's Gambit Declined, 66 moves, 0-1

Ponziani Opening (C44) 1-0 A good tussle of time in chess
Horwitz vs Harrwitz, 1846 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 44 moves, 1-0

QGA Old Variation (D20) 1/2-1/2 Oops in the corner
E Williams vs Harrwitz, 1846 
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 84 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicil Hyperaccelerated Dragon (B27) 0-1Instructive heavy pieces
W Tuckett vs J Medley, 1849 
(B27) Sicilian, 54 moves, 0-1

Morphy gets Fried by 3 cooks in Hoboken, NJ
Fiske / Fuller / Perrin vs Morphy, 1857 
(C58) Two Knights, 51 moves, 1-0

Game 12: 150 Chess Endings by suenteus po 147
Morphy vs Paulsen, 1857 
(B40) Sicilian, 64 moves, 1-0

Paul smacks Sam with the ol' 1-2 punch!
Morphy vs S Boden, 1859 
(C58) Two Knights, 50 moves, 1-0

Owen Defense (B00) 0-1 Exchange sac, Rook ending
Morphy vs J Owen, 1858 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 46 moves, 0-1

Owen Defense (B00) 1-0 Impressive pawn majority will promote
S Boden vs J Owen, 1858 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 39 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Closed. Morphy Attack (C78) 0-1 Both promote Qs
P Journoud vs de Riviere, 1859 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 66 moves, 0-1

Scotch Gambit. Advance (C44) 0-1 Now that's Queen harrassment!
G Dufresne vs Anderssen, 1861 
(C45) Scotch Game, 46 moves, 0-1

Italian Game: Giuoco Pianissimo. Normal (C50) 0-1 Better EG
S Dubois vs Steinitz, 1862 
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 37 moves, 0-1

French Def. - Advance (C00) 0-1Delayed Anderssen's Opening 2.a3
J Laroche vs de Riviere, 1862 
(C00) French Defense, 52 moves, 0-1

Black rook edges out king, ushers in new queen in K+P ending.
Morphy vs de Riviere, 1863 
(C38) King's Gambit Accepted, 56 moves, 0-1

Italian Game: Giuoco Pianissimo. Normal (C50) 1-0 Tremendous!
de Riviere vs Morphy, 1863 
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 64 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Classical (C45) 0-1 Well-placed K escorts passer
W N Potter vs Zukertort, 1875
(C45) Scotch Game, 45 moves, 0-1

Center Game: Paulsen Attack (C22) 1-0 Connected Ps, in style!
Blackburne vs D Forsyth, 1883  
(C22) Center Game, 48 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Exchange. King's Bishop Var (C68) 1/2-1/2 Desperado Rs
E Schallopp vs Blackburne, 1887 
(C68) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, 42 moves, 1/2-1/2

Vienna Game: Paulsen / Hungarian (C25) 1-0 Underpromotion+
J Mieses vs B Richter, 1887 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 76 moves, 1-0

French 3...Nf6 Classical. Rubinstein (C14) 0-1 Exchange sac!
M Harmonist vs Tarrasch, 1887 
(C14) French, Classical, 38 moves, 0-1

Vienna Game: Anderssen Defense (C25) 0-1 Nifty EG
Mackenzie vs C Golmayo, 1888 
(C25) Vienna, 66 moves, 0-1

Fine play by Black's rooks and in comes their monarch
M Kuerschner vs Tarrasch, 1888 
(D32) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 43 moves, 0-1

French Classical. Delayed Exch (C11)0-1 W is cut-off; OCB+Rs EG
Chigorin vs E Delmar, 1889 
(C11) French, 135 moves, 0-1

Dutch Staunton Gambit. Chigorin Var (A83) 1-0 Clever finish
Gunsberg vs Chigorin, 1890 
(A83) Dutch, Staunton Gambit, 78 moves, 1-0

The most instructive R+P ending ever played??
Tarrasch vs E Thorold, 1890 
(C07) French, Tarrasch, 56 moves, 1-0

Slav Defense: Exchange (D13) 1/2-1/2 Older vs younger brother
B Lasker vs Lasker, 1890 
(D13) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Exchange Variation, 43 moves, 1/2-1/2

Scotch Game: Schmidt Var (C47) 1-0 U will find out in a hurry
C Golmayo vs Blackburne, 1891 
(C45) Scotch Game, 48 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Schmidt Variation (C47) 1-0 Older man wins
C Golmayo vs Blackburne, 1891 
(C45) Scotch Game, 68 moves, 1-0

Steinitz "masters" rook ending to tie match
Steinitz vs Lasker, 1894 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 60 moves, 1-0

Three Knights Opening: Steinitz (C46) 0-1 EL makes an EG of it
Schiffers vs Lasker, 1895 
(C46) Three Knights, 45 moves, 0-1

Vienna Game: Mieses Var (C26) 1-0 Build a bridge
Lipschutz vs Showalter, 1895 
(C26) Vienna, 95 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Berlin Def. Hedgehog (C66)0-1 a-pawn is the difference
Schiffers vs Steinitz, 1898 
(C66) Ruy Lopez, 60 moves, 0-1

French Def: Winawer. Fingerslip Kunin Double Gambit (C15) 1/2-
Marshall vs Chigorin, 1901 
(C15) French, Winawer, 60 moves, 1/2-1/2

KGA Schallop Defense (C34) 1-0 Volatile game; B bests N
Marshall vs J Mieses, 1903 
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 43 moves, 1-0

Masterful Rook Use: Penetrate, Capture, Cut-off, Support
Schlechter vs Mason, 1903 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 47 moves, 1-0

The Crazy Rook Draw: Immunity or Stalemate capture
E Post vs A Nimzowitsch, 1905 
(D07) Queen's Gambit Declined, Chigorin Defense, 98 moves, 1/2-1/2

Scotch Game 6...QxQc3+ (C45) 1-0 Connected pasers on 6th
A Nimzowitsch vs J W Baird, 1905 
(C45) Scotch Game, 38 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Schliemann Def (C63) 1-0Heavy pieces ending w/accuracy
Maroczy vs Marshall, 1905 
(C63) Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense, 58 moves, 1-0

Nimzovich annotates an endgame plan true to 'His System'
F J Lee vs A Nimzowitsch, 1907  
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 54 moves, 0-1

Spanish, Morphy Def. Steinitz Deferred (C79) 1/2- Cornered K
Schlechter vs Janowski, 1907 
(C79) Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defense Deferred, 77 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 5: The Passed Pawn, T62MIGOCEP by Chernev
Rubinstein vs Duras, 1908  
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 39 moves, 1-0

Akiba Rubinstein's Rook Endings - A Masterpiece
Marshall vs Rubinstein, 1908 
(D31) Queen's Gambit Declined, 48 moves, 0-1

Odd f3 Stonewall Attack (D00) 1-0 Black underpromotion won't do
Marshall vs Alapin, 1908 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 78 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Exchange Variation (C68) 1-0 Zugzwang finish
Lasker vs Tarrasch, 1908 
(C68) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, 55 moves, 1-0

Game 48 in 'Lasker's Manual of Chess' by Emanuel Lasker
Tarrasch vs Lasker, 1908 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 119 moves, 1/2-1/2

London System (D02) 1-0 Horrible endgame blunder ends it
F Duz-Khotimirsky vs Alapin, 1908 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 78 moves, 1-0

IM Bill Hartston features this game in his "Kings of Chess."
Marshall vs Capablanca, 1909 
(D33) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 49 moves, 0-1

Get an advantage, keep it and convert in endgame. Brilliant!
Rubinstein vs Lasker, 1909  
(D30) Queen's Gambit Declined, 40 moves, 1-0

QGA Q's Knight Var (D31) 0-1 A witty trap - notes by Dr. Lasker
A Speijer vs Rubinstein, 1909  
(D31) Queen's Gambit Declined, 55 moves, 0-1

From the 40th move the ending is a single profound study
Spielmann vs Rubinstein, 1909  
(C84) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 75 moves, 0-1

3...Qd8 Ilundain Var (B01) 1-0 R+ Deflection sac allows promo
R Raubitschek vs L Hopper, 1909 
(B01) Scandinavian, 43 moves, 1-0

QGD Orthodox Def. Rubinstein Var (D61) 1-0 Tactical; Smart EG
Alekhine vs Yates, 1910 
(D61) Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack, 46 moves, 1-0

Slav, Suchting Variation (D15) 1-0 Very instructive
Rubinstein vs Alekhine, 1911 
(D15) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 76 moves, 1-0

Dutch, Staunton Gambit. Lasker Var (A83) 1-0 Protected Passer
Marshall vs C Jaffe, 1911 
(A83) Dutch, Staunton Gambit, 61 moves, 1-0

Absolutely fantastic save in a rook ending - being down 2 pawns
Tarrasch vs Rubinstein, 1911 
(C10) French, 46 moves, 1/2-1/2

Capablanca's Best Chess Endings (Irving Chernev)
L Carranza vs Capablanca, 1911 
(C46) Three Knights, 44 moves, 0-1

Owen Defense (B00) 1-0 Pawn chain is a tough nut to crack
Capablanca vs W Allnutt, 1911 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 63 moves, 1-0

Game 26 in The Greatest Ever Chess Endgames by Stephen Giddins
Schlechter vs Rubinstein, 1912 
(C11) French, 41 moves, 0-1

French Advance. Nimzowitsch System (C02) 1-0 Notes by A.N.
A Nimzowitsch vs S von Freymann, 1912 
(C02) French, Advance, 50 moves, 1-0

Game 2 in Chess Fundamentals by Jose Raul Capablanca
Capablanca vs Janowski, 1913 
(C66) Ruy Lopez, 52 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit: Declined. Sorensen Def (C21) 1-0 Interference!
Marshall vs Duras, 1913 
(C21) Center Game, 81 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Game: Ranken Variation (C48) 1-0 R ending
Capablanca vs Janowski, 1913 
(C48) Four Knights, 54 moves, 1-0

French Classical. Rubinstein Var (C14) 0-1 Interesting R ending
J Perlis vs Spielmann, 1913
(C14) French, Classical, 48 moves, 0-1

Scotch Göring Gambit. Declined (C44) 1/2-1/2 St. Louis R ending
Reti vs Breyer, 1914 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 63 moves, 1/2-1/2

Valiant but losing battle of the passer down the exchange
Duras vs Tartakower, 1914 
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 72 moves, 0-1

Game 73 in Tarrasch's Best Games of Chess by Fred Reinfeld
O Bernstein vs Tarrasch, 1914 
(C80) Ruy Lopez, Open, 69 moves, 0-1

Slav Defense: Three Knights (D15) 0-1 Notes by Drazen Marovic
Janowski vs Capablanca, 1916  
(D15) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 46 moves, 0-1

Instructive endgame, demonstrating the power of an active rook.
Schlechter vs A Kaufmann, 1916 
(D31) Queen's Gambit Declined, 49 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Marshall Attack (C89) 0-1 Just after intro w/Capa
J Morrison vs Marshall, 1918 
(C89) Ruy Lopez, Marshall, 84 moves, 0-1

Spanish Exchange. Keres Var (C68) 0-1B vs R; restricted K loses
Schlechter vs Rubinstein, 1918 
(C68) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, 38 moves, 0-1

QGD Cambridge Springs (D52) 1/2-1/2 A drawn rook ending?
Rubinstein vs Schlechter, 1918 
(D52) Queen's Gambit Declined, 36 moves, 1/2-1/2

"Senor Capablanca's zugzwang sympnony" (Tartakover)
Capablanca vs Kostic, 1919 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 86 moves, 1-0

Italian, Classical. De la Bourdonnais (C53) 1-0 Know your R EG
Euwe vs G Kroone, 1919 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 54 moves, 1-0

"Learn from the Legends" - Mihail Marin
Rubinstein vs A Nimzowitsch, 1920 
(A10) English, 60 moves, 1-0

French Def. Classical. Delayed Exchange (C11) 1-0 R vs B
Breyer vs Tarrasch, 1920 
(C11) French, 75 moves, 1-0

Video link: a wonderful demo of how to play against the IQP
Lasker vs Capablanca, 1921  
(D61) Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack, 68 moves, 0-1

"The perfect game" says Chernev to Fredthebear
Reti vs Kostic, 1922 
(B40) Sicilian, 58 moves, 1-0

QGD Barmen Var (D37) 0-1 Heavy pieces ending
Janowski vs Reshevsky, 1922 
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 65 moves, 0-1

Torre Attack: Classical Def (A46) 0-1 Stockfish, 34...?
V Wahltuch vs Capablanca, 1922  
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 40 moves, 0-1

"The Immortal Games of Capablanca" by Reinfeld
J Morrison vs Capablanca, 1922  
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 57 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann, Two Knights Attack (B10) 1-0 Cornered K vs R on 7th
Tarrasch vs Reti, 1922 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 40 moves, 1-0

Center Pawns in the Endgame
Reti vs Rubinstein, 1923 
(A06) Reti Opening, 50 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange. Rubinstein Var (B13) 1-0 Outside P
Lasker vs Tartakower, 1923 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 42 moves, 1-0

Endgame lessons by Capablanca (notations by Alekhine & Reti)
Capablanca vs Tartakower, 1924  
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 52 moves, 1-0

Game 84 in Chess Praxis by Aron Nimzowitsch
A Nimzowitsch vs A Nilsson, 1924 
(A15) English, 54 moves, 1-0

Slav Defense: General (D10) 1-0 sneak past the pin
Marshall vs Bogoljubov, 1925 
(D10) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 54 moves, 1-0

Janowski salvages draw using the Take My Rook stalemate trick
Janowski vs Gruenfeld, 1925 
(A47) Queen's Indian, 66 moves, 1/2-1/2

Shereshevsky's Endgame Strategy, Chapter 6
Bogoljubov vs Lasker, 1925 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 52 moves, 1/2-1/2

K's Gambit: Declined. Classical (C30) 1-0? DRAWN POSITION
Rubinstein vs Weingarten / Silberschatz, 1925 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 57 moves, 1-0

Lucena's position shows up to haunt Alekhine in 1926.
Alekhine vs Gilg, 1926 
(A52) Budapest Gambit, 67 moves, 0-1

London System BxBg3 (D02) 0-1 Mistimed pawn advances
Lasker vs I G Gilbert, 1926 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 42 moves, 0-1

Game 82 in 'Chess Praxis' by Aron Nimzowitsch.
A Nimzowitsch vs Spielmann, 1927 
(A06) Reti Opening, 55 moves, 1-0

Game 74 in Chess Praxis by Aron Nimzowitsch
A Nimzowitsch vs V Buerger, 1927 
(A16) English, 61 moves, 1-0

Capablanca & Alekhine trade mistakes in Queen & Rook ending.
Capablanca vs Alekhine, 1927 
(D52) Queen's Gambit Declined, 66 moves, 0-1

Ponziani Opening (C44) 1-0 Instructive Rook ending
Tartakower vs Reti, 1928 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 53 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Three Knights Game (C42) 1-0 Q bests R&B EG
A Becker vs Euwe, 1929 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 56 moves, 1-0

English, Agincourt Def. Keres Def(A13/D41) 1-0Rook EG promotion
Capablanca vs Menchik, 1929 
(A14) English, 64 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

Textbook penetration; keen sacs connect passers - shock
A Yurgis vs Botvinnik, 1931 
(A15) English, 37 moves, 0-1

Slick little endgame puzzle after 78...Kh8. Check it out.
Santasiere vs Marshall, 1931 
(D38) Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation, 84 moves, 1-0

"The Pearl of Poznan"; Bird Opening, sacs for passers
Tylkowski vs A Wojciechowski, 1931 
(A03) Bird's Opening, 40 moves, 0-1

Bird Opening: Dutch Var (A03) 1-0 Rook ending promotion
Capablanca vs I Turover, 1931 
(A03) Bird's Opening, 65 moves, 1-0

Queen's Gambit Declined: Modern Variation (D50) 1-0 R EG
V Rauzer vs M Yudovich Sr, 1931
(D50) Queen's Gambit Declined, 53 moves, 1-0

Dutch, Staunton G. Tartakower Var (A82) 0-1 Connected passers
Alekhine vs R E McBride, 1932 
(A82) Dutch, Staunton Gambit, 56 moves, 0-1

Spanish Closed (C84) 1-0 Mobile R defeats B&N on guard duty
H Grob vs P Johner, 1932 
(C84) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 55 moves, 1-0

Torre Attack: Classical Def Bb7 (A46) 1-0 Tricky Rs & Ns ending
Alekhine vs C M Sequeira, 1933 
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 62 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: Exchange (B03) 0-1 Lost to his own opening
Alekhine / Gosselin vs Tartakower / Villeneuve, 1933 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 57 moves, 0-1

Mikhail Shereshevsky's Endgame Strategy
Znosko-Borovsky vs Alekhine, 1933 
(C79) Ruy Lopez, Steinitz Defense Deferred, 55 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Classical / Yugoslav (B72) 1-0 Lesser known nemesis
F Bohatirchuk vs Botvinnik, 1933 
(B58) Sicilian, 58 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Classical. Center Holding Var (C53)1-0 g-file pin
Eliskases vs Gruenfeld, 1933 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 53 moves, 1-0

WC 1935 Nimzo-Dutch. Alekhine Var (A90)"The Pearl of Zandvoort"
Euwe vs Alekhine, 1935 
(A90) Dutch, 47 moves, 1-0

Scandi 2.e5?! c5 (B01) 0-1 W loses the center vs French Advance
Keres vs F Kibbermann, 1935 
(B01) Scandinavian, 71 moves, 0-1

Zukertort, Tennison Gambit (A06) 1-0 Qs &Rs ending
Keres vs L Luck, 1935 
(A06) Reti Opening, 49 moves, 1-0

Colle System (D02) 1-0 Basic lesson on pins by a Rook
Keres vs D Adamson, 1935 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 53 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def. Prins Variation (B54) 1/2-1/2 Simple won't do
Keres vs Capablanca, 1937 
(B54) Sicilian, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

16th World Championship Match, Game 5
Alekhine vs Euwe, 1937 
(A09) Reti Opening, 62 moves, 1-0

Nimzowitsch Def. Scandi. Bogoljubow Var. Nimzo G (B00) 1-0 R EG
I Raud vs L Prins, 1937 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 40 moves, 1-0

QGD Semi-Tarrasch Def. Pillsbury (D41)1-0 N fork flips = ending
Botvinnik vs Alekhine, 1938 
(D41) Queen's Gambit Declined, Semi-Tarrasch, 51 moves, 1-0

NID: Spielmann Var (E22) 0-1 Active Rs & Ps ending
Stahlberg vs Keres, 1938 
(E22) Nimzo-Indian, Spielmann Variation, 66 moves, 0-1

Game 15 in "Learn from the Legends" - Mihail Marin
Alekhine vs Eliskases, 1939 
(B14) Caro-Kann, Panov-Botvinnik Attack, 47 moves, 1-0

Nimzowitsch-Larsen Attack (A06) 0-1 The K aggressor wins EG
P Rethy vs Euwe, 1940 
(A06) Reti Opening, 62 moves, 0-1

Bishop's Opening 3.Qf3 (C23) 1-0 Simul swap down, close call
Koltanowski vs W McHenry, 1939 
(C23) Bishop's Opening, 52 moves, 1-0

King's English. Nimzowitsch Var (A20) 0-1 Connected Passers
V Chekhover vs Alatortsev, 1940
(A20) English, 72 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

NINE passed pawns aboard after 59.Rxf6
Smyslov vs Botvinnik, 1941 
(C77) Ruy Lopez, 60 moves, 0-1

Spanish Morphy Def. Neo-Archangelsk (C78)1-0 Cut-off opposingK
Euwe vs W Koomen, 1941
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 40 moves, 1-0

Tarrasch Def. Swedish, Central Break (D33) 0-1 Photo correction
B Rabar vs G Stoltz, 1941 
(D33) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 57 moves, 0-1

King's English. Four Knights (A28) 0-1 R ending promo race
Keres vs K Richter, 1942  
(A28) English, 59 moves, 0-1

Slav Def. Czech. Classical System ML (D19) 0-1 Qside P majority
G J Wood vs Euwe, 1946 
(D19) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch, 36 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Classical (B58) 1-0 R ending - Lucena
Tartakower vs Denker, 1946 
(B58) Sicilian, 62 moves, 1-0

Indian Game: Wade-Tartakower Defense (A46) 0-1 Pawn race
Sliwa vs E Zahorski, 1946 
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 59 moves, 0-1

C-K Two Knights Attack. Mindeno Var Exchange (B11) 0-1 Zugzwang
G Kasparian vs Petrosian, 1946 
(B11) Caro-Kann, Two Knights, 3...Bg4, 54 moves, 0-1

Colle Zuk / Odd Stonewall Dutch (D02) 0-1 Hellacious Black EG!!
Denker vs G Abrahams, 1946 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 43 moves, 0-1

Tarrasch Def: Swedish, Central Break (D33) 1-0Don't give ground
Gligoric vs Kostic, 1947 
(D33) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 81 moves, 1-0

Game 53: Move by Move - Botvinnik (Lakdawala)
Keres vs Botvinnik, 1948 
(C07) French, Tarrasch, 72 moves, 0-1

KID Immediate Fianchetto (E60) 1-0 R traps N on the rim
Euwe vs T van Scheltinga, 1948
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 41 moves, 1-0

NID: Classical. Noa Var (E34) 1-0 Simple positions
Kotov vs Pachman, 1948 
(E34) Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Noa Variation, 44 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Morphy Def. Modern Steinitz Def (C75) 1-0 R & P ending
Smyslov vs Reshevsky, 1948 
(C75) Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense, 52 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

Game 19: 125 Selected Games by Vasily Smyslov ...d5 pawn sac
Petrosian vs Smyslov, 1949 
(B84) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 46 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Closed. Chigorin Def (C98) 1-0 Rook roller
Simagin vs V Chekhover, 1949
(C98) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin, 68 moves, 1-0

Vienna Game: Vienna Gambit. Kaufmann Var (C29) · 1-0
P Michel vs A Pomar, 1949 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 40 moves, 1-0

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

NID Spielmann Var (E22) 1-0 Early Q exchanges to centralized Rs
Euwe vs H Kramer, 1950
(E22) Nimzo-Indian, Spielmann Variation, 41 moves, 1-0

Italian Classical. Greco Gambit Traditional (C54) 1-0 20.Ne6!?
Rossolimo vs A Dunkelblum, 1950 
(C54) Giuoco Piano, 42 moves, 1-0

Game 16 in 'Simple Chess' by Michael Francis Stean
C van den Berg vs H Kramer, 1950 
(D53) Queen's Gambit Declined, 53 moves, 1-0

A great example of minority attack on a Rook ending.
Kotov vs Pachman, 1950 
(D63) Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense, 68 moves, 1-0

B-D Gambit: Euwe Def (D00) 1-0 Artful EG sac for passer
E Diemer vs Berner, 1951 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 76 moves, 1-0

Game 2 in The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal
Tal vs K Klasups, 1952 
(A80) Dutch, 64 moves, 1-0

Copycat, early knight sortie becomes Q vs. 2 rooks ending
Barcza vs L Prins, 1952 
(A06) Reti Opening, 80 moves, 1/2-1/2

QGA Classical Def. Steinitz Exchange (D26) 1-0 Tight race R EG
Euwe vs G Fuster, 1953
(D26) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 45 moves, 1-0

G167 'Zurich International Chess Tournament, 1953' by Bronstein
Reshevsky vs Geller, 1953 
(E34) Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Noa Variation, 60 moves, 1/2-1/2

Czech Defense (B06) 1-0 Q creates passer to beat R pair
Tal vs Simagin, 1956 
(B07) Pirc, 45 moves, 1-0

King's English. Two Knights' Fianchetto (A24) 1-0 Semi-closed
Taimanov vs I Livshin, 1954 
(A24) English, Bremen System with ...g6, 89 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Najdorf (B95) 0-1 White's P clean-up falls short
E Paoli vs Larsen, 1954 
(B95) Sicilian, Najdorf, 6...e6, 76 moves, 0-1

King's Indian Attack vs Dragon (A07) 0-1 R decoy sac for promo
Geller vs Averbakh, 1954 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 46 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Marshall Cntrattack 3...d5 (B40) 1-0 Excellent EG tech
Unzicker vs E Lundin, 1954 
(B40) Sicilian, 64 moves, 1-0

Old Sicilian. General (B30) 0-1 47...?
Gipslis vs Tal, 1955 
(B30) Sicilian, 57 moves, 0-1

Declining the Smith-Mora with 3...Nf6 and Beginner's Book Draw?
J Tamargo vs Fischer, 1956 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 40 moves, 0-1

R+B vs. R+B. Ratings man comes a cropper...
A Elo vs Fischer, 1957 
(B93) Sicilian, Najdorf, 6.f4, 49 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Closed. Keres Def (C92) 1/2-1/2 Befuddled
Fischer vs Bronstein, 1958 
(C92) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 62 moves, 1/2-1/2

NID: Normal. Gligoric System Smyslov Var (E54) 0-1 Masterly
Gligoric vs Smyslov, 1959 
(E54) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Gligoric System, 50 moves, 0-1

36. Be5 removes all doubt by pinning promotion defender
Fischer vs Euwe, 1960 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 36 moves, 1-0

KG Accepted. Bishop's G. Bogoljubow (C33) 1-0 EG Qside majority
Spassky vs M Nurmamedov, 1960 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 36 moves, 1-0

Cntr Cntr Leonhardt Gambit b4 (B01) 1-0 Poisoned h-pawn
Koltanowski vs W Windom, 1960 
(B01) Scandinavian, 35 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: 4 Pawns Attk. Trifunovic Var (B03) 1-0 Rooks EG
K Darga vs K Palda, 1960 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 63 moves, 1-0

QGD Semi-Tarrasch Def. ML (D42) 0-1 Active, deep, exchange sacs
Reshevsky vs Fischer, 1961 
(D42) Queen's Gambit Declined, Semi-Tarrasch, 7.Bd3, 57 moves, 0-1

Mednis in "How to Beat Bobby Fischer" - 50...Rb2+? loses
Reshevsky vs Fischer, 1961 
(E97) King's Indian, 60 moves, 1-0

Karpov's endgame arsenal !
G Timoscenko vs Karpov, 1961 
(C10) French, 53 moves, 0-1

Hungarian Opening e5, d5 (A00) 1-0 13.Re5 lift is rare indeed!
Larsen vs Gruenfeld, 1961 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 55 moves, 1-0

Fischer puts on a clinic in a rook-and-pawn endgame
Fischer vs Portisch, 1962 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 68 moves, 1-0

Old Sicilian. Open (B32) 1-0 Photo; classic ending
Fischer vs Tal, 1962 
(B32) Sicilian, 63 moves, 1-0

Botvinnik's "Half a Century of Chess" (Pergamon 1984)
Botvinnik vs Fischer, 1962 
(D98) Grunfeld, Russian, 68 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spanish Game: Exchange. Gligoric Var (C69) 0-1 2 promotions
E German vs A Bisguier, 1962 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 67 moves, 0-1

Page 190, box 158 (modified) (See Zorts' kibitz re move 41).
Fischer vs Reshevsky, 1962 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 54 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def. Exchange (B03) 1-0 2Rs, 2Ns beat 2Rs, 2Bs
Fischer vs H Berliner, 1962 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 45 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def: Paulsen Var (B46) 1/2-1/2 R ending diagrams
D Minic vs Taimanov, 1962 
(B46) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 75 moves, 1/2-1/2

Like a moth drawn to the fire...tactical slugfest w/Tal
Tal vs H Hecht, 1962 
(E12) Queen's Indian, 49 moves, 1-0

Incredible rook (reciprocal sac) end game!
Gligoric vs Stein, 1962 
(E70) King's Indian, 57 moves, 0-1

QGD Exchange Var (D35) 0-1 A King walks up to the bar...
H Berliner vs Fischer, 1963 
(D35) Queen's Gambit Declined, 53 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Karpov Var (B17) 1-0 blitz; Stockfish notes
Fischer vs Benko, 1963 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 51 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Dragon Yugoslav Attack ML (B77) 1-0 Q vs 2 Rooks
Fischer vs D Byrne, 1963 
(B77) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 46 moves, 1-0

QID Fianchetto. Nimzowitsch Attack (E15) 0-1 Rooks ramschackle
Benko vs Keres, 1963 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 42 moves, 0-1

Bogo-Indian Defense: Grünfeld Var (E11) 1-0 Trapped pair of Rs
Ivkov vs I Kanko, 1963 
(E11) Bogo-Indian Defense, 41 moves, 1-0

Slav Def. Czech. Classical System ML (D19) 1/2-1/2 Surprise!
V F Titenko vs J Murey, 1963 
(D19) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Dutch, 54 moves, 1/2-1/2

Falkbeer Countergambit. Charousek Gambit Accepted (C32) 1/2-1/2
Spassky vs A Matanovic, 1964 
(C32) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 41 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicilian 2c3 Nf6 3e5 Alapin S-M Declined (B22) 0-1 IQP loses
R Garcia vs Najdorf, 1964
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 42 moves, 0-1

BFTC: Box 121, page 148 (modified)
Fischer vs I Bilek, 1965 
(C11) French, 40 moves, 1-0

NID Normal. Bronstein (Byrne) Variation (E45) 0-1 R domination
A Saidy vs Fischer, 1965 
(E45) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Bronstein (Byrne) Variation, 38 moves, 0-1

QG Accepted: Classical Def. ML (D27) 1-0 Convert one to another
Benko vs K Burger, 1965 
(D27) Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical, 40 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Morphy Def. Breyer Def Zaitsev Hybrid (C95) 1-0 Shrewd
Spassky vs Antoshin, 1965 
(C95) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer, 68 moves, 1-0

100 best games of 20th century by Andrew Soltis
Y Estrin vs H Berliner, 1965 
(C57) Two Knights, 42 moves, 0-1

London System 5...Qb6 6.b3 (D02) 1/2-1/2 Active central battle
L Vadasz vs A Whiteley, 1965 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 81 moves, 1/2-1/2

"Bobby Fischer's Outrageous Moves" by Bruce Pandolfini
Fischer vs J Durao, 1966 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 46 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Najdorf. English Attack (B90) 0-1 R obstructs bad B
Rossolimo vs Fischer, 1966 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 70 moves, 0-1

Stalemate looms if RxNf8
Petrosian vs Najdorf, 1966 
(A05) Reti Opening, 86 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Paulsen. Bastrikov Var (B49) 0-1 Seize open lines
A Mesa Fernandez vs M Cebalo, 1966 
(B49) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 35 moves, 0-1

"I Play Against Pieces" (game of the day Aug-15-2012)
Tal vs Gligoric, 1968 
(C93) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Smyslov Defense, 46 moves, 0-1

Bird Opening: Buenos Aires Var (A02) 1-0Blitz; Minority Attack
Fischer vs Smyslov, 1970 
(A02) Bird's Opening, 64 moves, 1-0

Neo-Grünfeld Def Ultra-delay Exchange (D79) 0-1 Kside Rs ending
Geller vs Fischer, 1970 
(D79) Neo-Grunfeld, 6.O-O, Main line, 72 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

Modern Def. 2Knts. Suttles (B06)1/2-Arabian Stalemate w/Crazy R
Matulovic vs Suttles, 1970 
(B06) Robatsch, 77 moves, 1/2-1/2

Alekhine Def Four Ps Attack 6...Bf5 (B03) 0-1 Passers abound!
Suetin vs Bagirov, 1971 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 65 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Paulsen. Szen Var (B44) 1-0 EG tactics
Fischer vs Taimanov, 1971 
(B44) Sicilian, 89 moves, 1-0

Spanish Exchange. Gligoric Var (C69) 1-0 Imprisoned Rook
Karpov vs Klovans, 1971 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 42 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Fischer-Sozin Attack (B86) 1/2-White Fortress
Huebner vs Petrosian, 1971 
(B86) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin Attack, 28 moves, 1/2-1/2

Game 105: Russians versus Fischer
Petrosian vs Fischer, 1971 
(A04) Reti Opening, 66 moves, 0-1

Gruenfeld Defense (D80) 0-1 Blind Swine on the 2nd will promote
R G Wade vs J Littlewood, 1971 
(D80) Grunfeld, 47 moves, 0-1

2R vs. R+B. Not one but two tactical ambushes.
Fischer vs Spassky, 1972 
(C95) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Breyer, 56 moves, 1-0

27...f6? does not ease the pin, it just loses the pawn.
Fischer vs Spassky, 1972 
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 40 moves, 1/2-1/2

Alekhine Defense: Modern. Alburt Variation (B04) 0-1 Ballsy
Spassky vs Fischer, 1972 
(B04) Alekhine's Defense, Modern, 74 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Kan. Modern Var (B42) 0-1 Ending: 2Rs vs 2Bs + R
S Garcia Martinez vs Karpov, 1973 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 68 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

King's Indian Attack(A07) 1-0 Qside batteries, Kside deflection
J Hardinge vs J L Watson, 1973
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 49 moves, 1-0

R+B vs. R+ B, then R+P vs. 2P. Both promote.
Korchnoi vs Karpov, 1974 
(A45) Queen's Pawn Game, 79 moves, 1-0

Game 45 in 'Study Chess with Matthew Sadler' by Matthew Sadler
M Dvoretzky vs Smyslov, 1974 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 28 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Exchange (B13) 0-1 W loses 2 backward pawns yet lasts
V Vepkhvishvili vs N Chakhoian, 1974
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 101 moves, 0-1

Creepy Crawly 5 pawns on the 6th; W had no advantage until pin
N Schouten vs P du Chattel, 1975 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 63 moves, 1-0

Game 54 in 'Korchnoi: Move by Move' by Cyrus Lakdawala
Timman vs Korchnoi, 1976 
(C19) French, Winawer, Advance, 40 moves, 0-1

French Def. Classical. Steinitz Var (C14) 1-0Cut-off opposing K
M Rohde vs D Berry, 1976 
(C14) French, Classical, 60 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: Modern. Schmid Var (B04) 1/2-Instructive R vs B
Tseshkovsky vs Alburt, 1976  
(B04) Alekhine's Defense, Modern, 99 moves, 1/2-1/2

Caro-Kann Accelerated Panov Attk. Modern Var (B10) 1/2-Crazy R
K Wockenfuss vs Andersson, 1977 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 88 moves, 1/2-1/2

FR Rubinstein. Blackburne Def (C10) 1/2- Invaluable g-pawn
G Kuzmin vs Petrosian, 1977 
(C10) French, 61 moves, 1-0

Play this from the response to move 41. Good engame challenge.
Petrosian vs Browne, 1978 
(A47) Queen's Indian, 41 moves, 1-0

QGD Exchange. Positional (D35) 1-0 Great technique in R ending
Korchnoi vs Karpov, 1978 
(D35) Queen's Gambit Declined, 71 moves, 1-0

QGD Harrwitz Attack. Main Line (D37) 1-0 Always one step ahead
Korchnoi vs Karpov, 1978 
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 60 moves, 1-0

Positional Chess Handbook by Israel Gelfer
Korchnoi vs Karpov, 1978 
(A19) English, Mikenas-Carls, Sicilian Variation, 79 moves, 1-0

Mikenas Defense 2.d5 3.e4 Q exchange; Unpin w/a Double Attack
Miles vs Z Mestrovic, 1978 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 35 moves, 1-0

46...Ra2+ Zwishenzug saves the pawn, makes all the difference.
P Enders vs Uhlmann, 1978 
(C02) French, Advance, 52 moves, 0-1

English, Anglo-Indian Def. KID (A15) 1-0 Classic K invasion
Andersson vs M J Tempone, 1979 
(A15) English, 31 moves, 1-0

English, Anglo-Indian Def. K's Knight (A15) 1-0Exchange, K attk
Andersson vs Robatsch, 1979 
(A15) English, 33 moves, 1-0

Slav Def. Exchange. Symmetrical Copycat (D14) 1-0 R & P Ending
Kasparov vs Dolmatov, 1979 
(D14) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, Exchange Variation, 65 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Delayed Alapin (B40) 1-0 Long R ending
A Ivanov vs A Vitolinsh, 1979 
(B40) Sicilian, 88 moves, 1-0

Pirc Defense: Chinese Variation (B07) 1-0 R beats B EG
V Vepkhvishvili vs M Chipashvili, 1979
(B07) Pirc, 77 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Attack (A07) 1/2-1/2 Stalemate Swindle
Huebner vs Adorjan, 1980 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 66 moves, 1/2-1/2

Catalan Opening: Closed Variation (E06) 1-0 Instructive R EG
Ribli vs Karpov, 1980 
(E06) Catalan, Closed, 5.Nf3, 55 moves, 1-0

Classic W development, Q extraction saves B, instructive R EG
P Ostojic vs M Basman, 1981 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 63 moves, 1-0

Benoni Defense: King's Indian System (A56) 1-0 Fine R manuevers
Chandler vs J Mestel, 1981 
(A56) Benoni Defense, 57 moves, 1-0

Tricky Tactic #50 in Chess Tactics 4 Kids by GM Murray Chandler
J Lechtynsky vs N Iordanov, 1981 
(D91) Grunfeld, 5.Bg5, 44 moves, 1-0

Macho Grob Spike (A40) 0-1 R sac offer to promote
A Whiteley vs M Basman, 1982 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 57 moves, 0-1

QGD Pseudo-Tarrasch (D30) 0-1 Dreaded K-Q vs K-R ending
Korchnoi vs Kasparov, 1983 
(D30) Queen's Gambit Declined, 77 moves, 0-1

Rubinstein/Bb2 Stonewall Attk: Bogoljubow Def (D05)1-0 Rs tango
V Kovacevic vs G Dizdar, 1983 
(D05) Queen's Pawn Game, 71 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Modern Var (C29) 1/2-1/2 A fighting draw
J Kulbacki vs B Finegold, 1983 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 77 moves, 1/2-1/2

English Agincourt Def. Catalan Def Accepted (A13) 0-1 Outside P
A Afifi vs Andersson, 1984 
(A13) English, 55 moves, 0-1

QID Fianchetto. Check Var. Intermezzo Line (E15) 0-1 R ending
Kasparov vs Karpov, 1984 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 70 moves, 0-1

English Anglo-Indian Def. K's Knight Var (A15) 1-0 Play vs IQP
Andersson vs Portisch, 1986 
(A15) English, 51 moves, 1-0

French Exchange. Monte Carlo (C01) 1/2- Active play, R ending
Gulko vs Psakhis, 1985
(C01) French, Exchange, 72 moves, 1/2-1/2

The Crazy Rook fails where the king can make luft.
Kasparov vs Karpov, 1985 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 67 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Cochrane Gambit. Center 6.Nc3(C42) 1-0Connected P
C Maier vs H Bayer, 1985 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 55 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Three Knights Game (C42) 1-0 P breakthrough
Rozentalis vs V Chekhov, 1985 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 40 moves, 1-0

King, Bishop, Rook vs King, Rook
D Gurevich vs C Hansen, 1986 
(D61) Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox, Rubinstein Attack, 160 moves, 1-0

Gruenfeld Def. 3 Knts. Petrosian System (D90) What do u think?
Seirawan vs Kasparov, 1986 
(D91) Grunfeld, 5.Bg5, 62 moves, 1-0

Semi-Slav Defense (D43) 0-1 This pawn or that one?
V Puri vs Ivanchuk, 1987 
(D43) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 40 moves, 0-1

Catalan Opening (E00) 1/2-1/2 Masterpiece of Swindling
A Beliavsky vs L Christiansen, 1987 
(E00) Queen's Pawn Game, 38 moves, 1/2-1/2

QID Kasparov-Petrosian Var. Kasparov Attk (E12) 1/2-If U Please
J Piket vs L Riemersma, 1987 
(E12) Queen's Indian, 71 moves, 1/2-1/2

Dutch Stonewall. Modern Be6 (A90) 1/2-R shuffle EG w/K blockade
G Flear vs Short, 1987 
(A90) Dutch, 57 moves, 1/2-1/2

Anglo-Indian Def. Mikenas-Carls Var (A15) 1-0 R ending
K Georgiev vs Suba, 1987
(A15) English, 68 moves, 1-0

Benoni Defense: Benoni-Indian Def (A43) 1/2- Active draw
J Kulbacki vs C Diebert, 1987 
(A43) Old Benoni, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

"Opening Preparation," by Dvoretsky and Yusupov, p. 25-28
A Beliavsky vs A Yusupov, 1987 
(A90) Dutch, 54 moves, 0-1

Trompowsky Attack Minority/IQP (A45) 1-0 K&N tough together
Dzindzichashvili vs Vaganian, 1988 
(A45) Queen's Pawn Game, 55 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Paulsen. Bastrikov Var (B48) 0-1 A steady ship
Z Vancsura vs Kotronias, 1988 
(B48) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 49 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Fischer-Sozin Attack. Flank (B87) 1-0 R vs N&B ending
J Polgar vs H Olafsson, 1988 
(B87) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5, 56 moves, 1-0

Pirc Def: Austrian Attack. Dragon Formation (B09) 1-0Dominant Q
Tal vs Spassky, 1988 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 56 moves, 1-0

Center Game: Normal (C22) 1-0 Good doubled pawns & not so good
Velimirovic vs G M Todorovic, 1988 
(C22) Center Game, 37 moves, 1-0

Hungarian Opening: Indian Def (A00) 0-1 Missed R sac stalemate
J Hickl vs S J Solomon, 1988 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 65 moves, 0-1

KGA. B's Gambit Bogoljubow Def (C33) 1-0 Minority passer
Westerinen vs G Timmerman, 1987 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 67 moves, 1-0

Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Modern Var (A01) 1-0 R ending
Bagirov vs K Jakus, 1989 
(A01) Nimzovich-Larsen Attack, 50 moves, 1-0

Colle 5c3 vs Hippo/Horwitz Def (A40) 1-0 Slick R ending
V Kovacevic vs M Drasko, 1989 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 60 moves, 1-0

QGA Central Variation. McDonnell Def (D20) 1/2-1/2 Crazy Rook
Miles vs S Rachels, 1989 
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 78 moves, 1/2-1/2

Vienna Game: Mieses Var (C26) 0-1 Outside passer
J Polgar vs D Lima, 1989 
(C26) Vienna, 51 moves, 0-1

Page 107: Excelling at Technical Chess by Jacob Aagaard
Huebner vs Salov, 1989 
(B62) Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer, 60 moves, 1/2-1/2

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

Indian Game: Nf6, Bg7 vs classic center P duo (A48) 0-1EG video
M Ondrejat vs V Vepkhvishvili, 1989 
(A48) King's Indian, 83 moves, 0-1

Czech Defense (B07) 1-0Exchange sac creates pin, instructive EG
V Vepkhvishvili vs J Rollwitz, 1989
(B07) Pirc, 50 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Closed. Keres Def (C92) 1-0 Black dropped a-pawn
Kasparov vs Karpov, 1990 
(C92) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 57 moves, 1-0

Sicilian McDonnell Attack. Tal Gambit (B21) 1-0 Centralized N
Short vs Kasparov, 1990 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 52 moves, 1-0

FR Rubinstein. Blackburne (C10) 1/2- Early pressure...stalemate
Nunn vs Korchnoi, 1990
(C10) French, 63 moves, 1/2-1/2

English Opening: Symmetrical. Two Knights (A35) 0-1 Slick R Sac
R Bertholee vs J Polgar, 1990 
(A35) English, Symmetrical, 43 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Scheveningen. Classical General (B83) 0-1 55...?
H Munoz Sotomayor vs H Salazar Jacob, 1990 
(B83) Sicilian, 59 moves, 0-1

London System (D02) 1-0 Heavy piece ending halted by skewer+
O Sarapu vs A F Ker, 1989 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 64 moves, 1-0

FR Rubinstein, Blackburne Def (C10) 1/2-1/2 VA survives bold VK
Anand vs Korchnoi, 1991 
(C10) French, 63 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spanish Game: Open Variations. Main Lines (C80) 1-0 54.?
Dolmatov vs A Yusupov, 1991 
(C80) Ruy Lopez, Open, 61 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann, Classical. ML (B19) 1-0 EG exchange principle mishap
Timoshenko vs P Marusenko, 1991 
(B18) Caro-Kann, Classical, 41 moves, 1-0

Pirc Austrian Attack. Dragon (B09) 0-1 No time for en prise N
Bologan vs Nunn, 1992 
(B09) Pirc, Austrian Attack, 49 moves, 0-1

90. b8=N gives White good drawing chances
Adams vs Miles, 1993 
(B72) Sicilian, Dragon, 122 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spanish Closed. Worrall Attack Castling (C86) 1-0Blindfold R EG
J Polgar vs Short, 1993 
(C86) Ruy Lopez, Worrall Attack, 67 moves, 1-0

Alekhine Def: Scandinavian (B02) 0-1R sac releases dark squares
S Weeramantry vs Shabalov, 1993 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 55 moves, 0-1

Two Knights Def. Polerio Def Suhle Def (C59) 0-1 G-file battle
Morozevich vs A Graf, 1994 
(C59) Two Knights, 59 moves, 0-1

Perhaps VA lost on time but VK had insufficient mating material
Anand vs Kramnik, 1994 
(B31) Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation, 71 moves, 1/2-1/2

K's English. 4Knts Fianchetto (A29) 1-0 Constant pressure on Ks
L Christiansen vs Kaidanov, 1994 
(A29) English, Four Knights, Kingside Fianchetto, 55 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Scotch. Accepted (C47) 1/2-1/2 Rook EG
Nunn vs S Sulskis, 1994 
(C47) Four Knights, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicilian Najdorf. Poisoned P (B97)1/2-Crazy R Arabian Stalemate
J Stocek vs G Pelle, 1994 
(B97) Sicilian, Najdorf, 55 moves, 1/2-1/2

Old Sicilian. Open (B32) 1/2-1/2 Rook ending
Torsten Czech vs W Sonnhalter, 1994
(B32) Sicilian, 82 moves, 1/2-1/2

QGA Rosenthal Var (D21) 1-0 Fine exchange sac R ending
Kramnik vs Ivanchuk, 1995 
(D21) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 50 moves, 1-0

English, Symmetrical. Four Knights (A35) 1-0 Outside passer
Kramnik vs Hjartarson, 1995 
(A35) English, Symmetrical, 40 moves, 1-0

Delayed Alapin (B40) 1-0 Rook & Pawns promotion race
Svidler vs Taimanov, 1995 
(B40) Sicilian, 44 moves, 1-0

QGD. Lasker Defense (D56) 1-0 opposite outside passers
Karpov vs A Yusupov, 1995 
(D56) Queen's Gambit Declined, 52 moves, 1-0

Four Knights Game: Spanish. Symmetrical (C49) 1/2 Pawn skeleton
Adams vs Korchnoi, 1996 
(C49) Four Knights, 39 moves, 1/2-1/2

Secrets of Practical Chess by John Nunn, page 55
Adams vs Van Wely, 1996 
(A45) Queen's Pawn Game, 59 moves, 1/2-1/2

G92 in Garry Kasparov's Greatest Chess Games V2 by Igor Stohl
Topalov vs Kasparov, 1996 
(E00) Queen's Pawn Game, 59 moves, 0-1

QID Fianchetto. Nimzowitsch, Quiet Line (E15) 1-0 Exchange Sac
Anand vs Karpov, 1997 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 100 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def. Kan. Knight Var (B43) 0-1 Underpromo w/notes
M Ashley vs M Bezold, 1997 
(B43) Sicilian, Kan, 5.Nc3, 74 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Richter-Rauzer. Neo-Modern deviations (B62) 1-0 R EG
Hjartarson vs M Ashley, 1997
(B62) Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer, 59 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange (B13) 1-0 Cool EG trap of sorts
J Maiwald vs M Ashley, 1997 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 55 moves, 1-0

French Rubinstein. Blackburne Def (C10) 1-0 Pesky B pair
Nijboer vs R Cifuentes, 1997 
(C10) French, 63 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Berlin Defense (C65) 1-0 R&P sacs for passer
Shirov vs Short, 1997 
(C65) Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense, 50 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Advance. Short Var (B12) 0-1 2 Rs best 1 Q
Shirov vs Anand, 1998 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 55 moves, 0-1

Benoni Def. Classical. New York Var (A70) 0-1 2Rs vs Q - time
Karpov vs J Polgar, 1998 
(A70) Benoni, Classical with 7.Nf3, 82 moves, 0-1

Sac to be followed by check and fork 4A winning EG
Kramnik vs Paulo Gomez, 1998 
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 31 moves, 1-0

Barnes Opening: Hammerschlag (A00) 1-0 Fried Fox? Pork Chop?
S Williams vs M Simons, 1999 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 40 moves, 1-0

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

Four Knights Spanish. Rubinstein (C48) 1/2-1/2 Q for 9 pts.
Ivanchuk vs Svidler, 1999 
(C48) Four Knights, 69 moves, 1/2-1/2

C-K Panov Attack. Modern, Mieses Line (B14) 0-1Decisive passer
V Novichkov vs I Doukhine, 1999
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 57 moves, 0-1

How often do you see five pawns against a rook?
J Polgar vs Bacrot, 1999 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 75 moves, 0-1

Scotch Game: Mieses Var (C45) 1-0 Examine ALL checks!
Kasparov vs Timman, 2000 
(C45) Scotch Game, 36 moves, 1-0

KGA. Bonsch-Osmolovsky Var (C34) 1-0 Protected passer
Grischuk vs H A Gretarsson, 2000 
(C34) King's Gambit Accepted, 51 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Italian Var (C50) 1-0 U12 allows a passer?
M Boudechiche vs A Debbeche, 2000 
(C50) Giuoco Piano, 56 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Fischer-Sozin Attack. Flank Var (B87) 0-1 Aggressive K
Morozevich vs Kasparov, 2001 
(B87) Sicilian, Fischer-Sozin with ...a6 and ...b5, 57 moves, 0-1

French Def. Steinitz. Boleslavsky (C11) 1/2- 1Rook vs 3Pawns
Anand vs Shirov, 2001 
(C11) French, 68 moves, 1/2-1/2

Alekhine Def. Exchange (B03) 0-1 Sac exchange connects passers
D A Herder vs C Harmon, 2001 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 46 moves, 0-1

Fried Fox Def. 1...f6 aided by x$s (A00) 0-1 R builds a bridge
R Kruis vs C van Dongen, 2001 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 80 moves, 0-1

Center Game: Berger Var (C22) 1/2-1/2 BORING but feasible
H Tahmasebi vs F Sadeghian, 2001 
(C22) Center Game, 87 moves, 1/2-1/2

Alekhine Def. Modern. Main Line (B05) 0-1 Wasted K trip
R Navarro Segura vs D Lima, 2001 
(B05) Alekhine's Defense, Modern, 68 moves, 0-1

Scotch Game: Mieses Variation (C45) 1-0 78.?
I Khamrakulova vs E Ubiennykh, 2001 
(C45) Scotch Game, 80 moves, 1-0

K's English. e5-d6-g5 (A21) 0-1 R deflection sac promotes
H Terrie vs E Tate, 2001 
(A21) English, 32 moves, 0-1

French Defense: Two Knights (C00) 0-1 EG race
C W Baker vs A Summerscale, 2001
(C00) French Defense, 55 moves, 0-1

Benoni Defense: Classical (A70) 0-1 2 Passers, too much
G Hertneck vs T Wedberg, 2001
(A70) Benoni, Classical with 7.Nf3, 41 moves, 0-1

Old Indian Defense: Normal Var (A55) 1-0 X-ray def fails
Shulman vs A Kretchetov, 2001 
(A55) Old Indian, Main line, 30 moves, 1-0

QGD Ragozin Def. Vienna Var (D39) 1-0 Morphy Marvelous!
A Jakab vs M Goczo, 2001 
(D39) Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin, Vienna Variation, 53 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Dragon. Yugoslav Attack (B77) 0-1 Gutsy
Deep Fritz vs Germany, 2001 
(B77) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 71 moves, 0-1

White computer sacrifices his rook for a "book" win.
Deep Junior vs Deep Fritz, 2001 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 109 moves, 1-0

Catalan Opening: Open Def. Classical Line (E05) 0-1, 114 moves
Gambit Tiger vs Nimzo-8, 2001 
(E05) Catalan, Open, Classical line, 114 moves, 0-1

Understanding Chess Endgames by John Nunn (#57b).
Bareev vs Topalov, 2002 
(E97) King's Indian, 61 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Morphy Def. Modern Steinitz Def Fianchetto (C76)0-1 Rs
Kharlov vs M Kobalia, 2002 
(C76) Ruy Lopez, Modern Steinitz Defense, Fianchetto Variation, 54 moves, 0-1

QGA Classical Def. ML (D27) 1-0 Impressive Rook triangulation
Kramnik vs Deep Fritz, 2002 
(D27) Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical, 57 moves, 1-0

Spanish, Closed. Smyslov (C93) 1/2-Another protected h-passer
S Jalanskis vs H Ploompuu, 2002 
(C93) Ruy Lopez, Closed, Smyslov Defense, 76 moves, 1/2-1/2

QGA. Central. Alekhine System (D20) 1/2-1/2 Rs ending
Karpov vs Shirov, 2003
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 50 moves, 1/2-1/2

Center Game: Berger Var (C22) 1-0 See the sacs; long EG battle
Z Zhang vs Koneru, 2003 
(C22) Center Game, 95 moves, 1-0

Benko Gambit: Fully Accepted (A58) 1-0 Rook & Pawn EG win
Kramnik vs Topalov, 2003 
(A58) Benko Gambit, 57 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange (B13) 1-0 Connected passers
Morozevich vs Anand, 2003 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 35 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Classical Attack. Jaenisch (C42) 0-1Black K advan
Shirov vs Anand, 2003
(C42) Petrov Defense, 73 moves, 0-1

Benoni Def. Taimanov (A67) 1/2-1/2 Crazy Rook Sac Stalemate
S Ernst vs Stellwagen, 2003 
(A67) Benoni, Taimanov Variation, 63 moves, 1/2-1/2

$ An underpromotion+ saves the draw in a basic R vs P ending
A Evdokimov vs Sveshnikov, 2003 
(D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 86 moves, 1/2-1/2

QID: Spassky System (E14) 1-0 Black can draw down the exchange
B Chatalbashev vs S Kristjansson, 2003 
(E14) Queen's Indian, 71 moves, 1-0

Hector's EG Promotions Zugzwang - As good as Any
J Hector vs J Carstensen, 2003 
(B96) Sicilian, Najdorf, 75 moves, 1-0

Anand shows great technique in a R+2P v R endgame
Anand vs Shirov, 2004 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 56 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Najdorf. English Attack (B90) 1-0 Black hung his Rook
Mamedyarov vs S Zagrebelny, 2004 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 40 moves, 1-0

Did Fredthebear take his medication today??
M Kobalia vs Khismatullin, 2004 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 84 moves, 0-1

Karjakin was 14 years old. Kramnik struggles w/the Nadorf.
Karjakin vs Kramnik, 2004 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 86 moves, 1/2-1/2

Russian Game: Classical Attack. Jaenisch (C42) 0-1 2Rs best Q
Leko vs Kramnik, 2004  
(C42) Petrov Defense, 65 moves, 0-1

Benoni Def. Knight's Tour Var (A61) 1/2-1/2 Notes by Ray Keene
Leko vs Kramnik, 2004  
(A61) Benoni, 65 moves, 1/2-1/2

Yusupov-Rubinstein System / Colle + c4 (A46) 1-0 R ending
D Kosic vs T Gelashvili, 2004 
(A46) Queen's Pawn Game, 55 moves, 1-0

French Tarrasch (C03) 1-0 Both give up Qs; Black wants passer
G Lane vs Short, 2004 
(C03) French, Tarrasch, 46 moves, 1-0

C-K Panov Attack. Modern, Mieses Line (B14) 0-1Decisive passer
A J Fulton vs P Khetho, 2004 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 35 moves, 0-1

Q's Gambit Declined: Harrwitz Attack. ML (D37) 1-0 Black IQP
Carlsen vs Short, 2004 
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 54 moves, 1-0

French Advance. Paulsen Attack (C02) 1-0 R vs B ending blunder
Nakamura vs I Ibragimov, 2004 
(C02) French, Advance, 66 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Closed (B23) 1-0 Simplify to a won ending
Nakamura vs Karjakin, 2004 
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 55 moves, 1-0

Korchnoi wins on time, but was the ending a win?
Korchnoi vs Carlsen, 2004 
(D34) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 40 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Scheveningen. English Attk (B90) 1-0Wheelin' & Dealin'
Browne vs A Wojtkiewicz, 2004 
(B80) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 74 moves, 1-0

Elephant Gambit Declined 3.d4 (C40) 1-0 Q vs R ending
M Golubev vs E Grabowski, 2004 
(C40) King's Knight Opening, 106 moves, 1-0

96 The Unbearable Lightness of rook endgames
Macieja vs McShane, 2005 
(A48) King's Indian, 100 moves, 1-0

1.e4 e5 2.Qh5? Parham Attack (C20) 0-1 a-pawn w/wrong color B
Nakamura vs Sasikiran, 2005 
(C20) King's Pawn Game, 87 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Karpov. Modern ML (B17) 1-0 racing wing Ps
Kramnik vs Ponomariov, 2005 
(B17) Caro-Kann, Steinitz Variation, 60 moves, 1-0

QID Fianchetto. Check Var Intermezzo Line (E15) 1-0 Promo race
Topalov vs Anand, 2005 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 52 moves, 1-0

English Opening: Symmetrical. Hedgehog Def (A30) 1/2-1/2 R EG
Ponomariov vs Anand, 2005 
(A30) English, Symmetrical, 54 moves, 1/2-1/2

Russian Game: Nimzowitsch Attack (C42) 1-0 Remove the Defender
Anand vs Carlsen, 2005 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 30 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Closed (B23) 0-1 Rook ending
Adams vs Hydra, 2005 
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 50 moves, 0-1

French Advance. Euwe Var (C02) 1/2- Coordinating Rs & Bs
N Mayorga vs L Rojas Keim, 2005
(C02) French, Advance, 54 moves, 1/2-1/2

Zugzwang!! Clever K retreat leaves the White R no place to go.
Karpov vs G Needleman, 2005 
(E62) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 96 moves, 0-1

"World Wrestling Entertainment(WWE) Chess!"
Y Shen vs J Zhou, 2005 
(B92) Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation, 114 moves, 0-1

E7) Sicilian Najdorf, English Attack (B90) 0-1 b-file attack
C Wei vs D Maghalashvili, 2005 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 48 moves, 0-1

C-K Advance Van der Wiel Attack (B12) 1/2- Unusual draw finish
Fritz vs Kasimdzhanov, 2005 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 54 moves, 1/2-1/2

E6) Sicilian Najdorf, English Attack (B90) 1/2-Just take it now
M Afshari vs R Ibrahimov, 2005
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 55 moves, 1/2-1/2

Russian Game: Three Knights Game(C42) 1-0Well-played both wings
R Masiyazi vs S Namangale, 2005 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 62 moves, 1-0

KGA B's Gambit Bogoljubow Def (C33) 1/2-Battle to promote
B Grabarczyk vs A Aleksandrov, 2005 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 77 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spanish Game: Closed (C88) 1/2-1/2 Which pawn? Which rook?
Anand vs Aronian, 2006 
(C84) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 66 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicilian Najdorf (B90) 1-0 Exchange sac, rich endgame dual
Anand vs Gelfand, 2006 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 66 moves, 1-0

Q's Gambit Declined: Barmen Var (D37) 1-0Straight into R ending
Nyback vs T Michalczak, 2006
(D37) Queen's Gambit Declined, 61 moves, 1-0

B90 Sicilian: Najdorf / English Attack 0-1; R vs B&N
Anand vs Topalov, 2006 
(B80) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 61 moves, 0-1

Elephant Gambit Declined 3.d4(C40) 1-0 R escorts 2 connected Ps
A Al Badani vs P Corbin, 2006 
(C40) King's Knight Opening, 67 moves, 1-0

Exciting finish - Speelman authored a brilliant book on R+P EGs
Speelman vs D Howell, 2006 
(A48) King's Indian, 85 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Nezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attk (B51) 1/2-Mad Rook Device
B Lajthajm vs M Zlatic, 2006
(B30) Sicilian, 48 moves, 1/2-1/2

48..Ke8 What a stunning move !! Artistic Zugzwang
Shirov vs Aronian, 2006 
(C89) Ruy Lopez, Marshall, 58 moves, 0-1

Catalan, Open Def. Alekhine Var (E03) 1/2- Machine allows draw
Kramnik vs Deep Fritz, 2006 
(E03) Catalan, Open, 44 moves, 1/2-1/2

NID Classical. Berlin Var Pirc Var(E39) 1/2-K&Q vs cornered K&R
Morozevich vs Jakovenko, 2006 
(E39) Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Pirc Variation, 114 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicilian Najdorf. English Attack (B90) 1/2-1/2 R vs R&B
Carlsen vs Van Wely, 2007 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 109 moves, 1/2-1/2

Aronian sacs bishop pair for rook and two monster passed pawns
Aronian vs Anand, 2007 
(D11) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 48 moves, 1-0

Spanish, l'Hermet Var Berlin Wall Def (C67) 1-0 Dramatic ending
T Abergel vs E Moradiabadi, 2007 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 48 moves, 1-0

English Opening: Symmetrical. Hedgehog Def (A30) 1-0Rook ending
Carlsen vs Aronian, 2007 
(A30) English, Symmetrical, 41 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Richter-Rauzer. Modern (B60) 1/2-1/2 Mad Rook Device
K Arakhamia-Grant vs P Poobalasingam, 2007 
(B60) Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer, 74 moves, 1/2-1/2

London $ystem vs Semi-Tarrasch (D02) 1-0 Minority Attack, R EG
R Appel vs M Sebag, 2007 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 63 moves, 1-0

Owen Defense / Hippo (B00) 0-1 Flight of the h-pawn
B de Jong-Muhren vs N Gaprindashvili, 2007 
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 75 moves, 0-1

52 h4-h5! is the winning move missed by Grischuk and Anand
Grischuk vs Anand, 2007 
(D44) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 74 moves, 1/2-1/2

French Advance. Euwe Variation Bb5 (C02) 0-1 Impatient
C Majer vs W B Wright, 2007 
(C02) French, Advance, 67 moves, 0-1

English, Anglo-Indian Def. Q's Knight (A26) 0-1 "Grant's Tomb"
J Grant vs C Weiss, 2007 
(A16) English, 52 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Paulsen. Bastrikov (B47) 1/2-1/2 Mad Rook Stalemate
I Gaponenko vs B de Jong-Muhren, 2007 
(B47) Sicilian, Taimanov (Bastrikov) Variation, 75 moves, 1/2-1/2

Catalan Opening: Closed (E06) 1-0 Two Q sacs to arrange mate!!
Kramnik vs Leko, 2007 
(E06) Catalan, Closed, 5.Nf3, 62 moves, 1-0

R + h pawn vs R : Karstedt manoeuver
Grischuk vs Anand, 2007 
(E17) Queen's Indian, 102 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Def. Breyer Var (B10) 0-1 W missed draw; see notes
Adams vs Dreev, 2007 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 73 moves, 0-1

Gruenfeld Exchange. Classical (D86) 1/2-Mad R Arabian Stalemate
G Hertneck vs R Ris, 2007 
(D86) Grunfeld, Exchange, 64 moves, 1/2-1/2

Nimzo-Indian Def. Classical. Noa Var (E34) 0-1 R&B vs R ending
T Kotanjian vs K Asrian, 2008 
(E34) Nimzo-Indian, Classical, Noa Variation, 101 moves, 0-1

63...Ra7 is a draw by threefold repetition. Anand blew tie 1st
Radjabov vs Anand, 2008 
(D44) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 85 moves, 1-0

Queen's Gambit Accepted: Alekhine Def (D22) 1-0 Activate Rook!
A Ushenina vs Z Peng, 2008 
(D22) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 69 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Def. Lasker-Pelikan. Sveshnikov Var (B33) 1-0 Dbl R EG
Shirov vs Topalov, 2008 
(B33) Sicilian, 63 moves, 1-0

In a drawn ending Black blocks the bishop's view to the promo.
Carlsen vs Shirov, 2008 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 80 moves, 1-0

Slav Def. Exchange (D10) 1/2-1/2 Blindfold swindle stalemate
Aronian vs Gelfand, 2008 
(D10) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 53 moves, 1/2-1/2

Spanish Game: Classical. Modern ML (C64) 1-0 Sac into Skewer+
Topalov vs F Vallejo Pons, 2008 
(C64) Ruy Lopez, Classical, 62 moves, 1-0

Carlsen conjures up incredible endgame mating net versus Shirov
Carlsen vs Shirov, 2008 
(D43) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 63 moves, 1-0

Sicilian 3.f4 5.Bc5 Grand Prix Attk (B23) 0-1 White is up 4 Ps?
Short vs Karjakin, 2008 
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 60 moves, 0-1

Spanish Marshall Attack. Modern ML (C89) 1-0 White rampage
Vachier-Lagrave vs Kosteniuk, 2008 
(C89) Ruy Lopez, Marshall, 85 moves, 1-0

Two Knights Def. Modern B's Opening(C55) 0-1 Nibbling off pawns
S Jessel vs M Hebden, 2008 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 75 moves, 0-1

Sic Dragon. Yugoslav Attack Old Line (B78) 0-1 Dbl Exchange Sac
Karjakin vs Radjabov, 2008 
(B78) Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack, 10.castle long, 52 moves, 0-1

Spanish, l'Hermet Var Berlin Wall Def (C87) 1-0Amazing ending!!
Jakovenko vs I Cheparinov, 2008 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 50 moves, 1-0

French Exchange 5.c4 (C01) 1-0 Rook endgame
Tkachiev vs Morozevich, 2008
(C01) French, Exchange, 57 moves, 1-0

Sicilian 2c3 Nf6 Alapin Smith-Morra Declined cxd4 cxd4 (B22)1/2
E Moser vs Kotronias, 2008 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 71 moves, 1/2-1/2

Two Knights Def. Polerio Def Bogoljubow Var (C58) 1-0 Q vs 2 Rs
Short vs S P Sethuraman, 2008
(C58) Two Knights, 86 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Schmidt w/Na4 (C45) 1-0 White shepherds passer
G Harutjunyan vs B Kharchenko, 2008 
(C45) Scotch Game, 62 moves, 1-0

Old Sicilian. Open (B32) 1-0 Rapid exchanges into EG dance
A Kovacevic vs P Pazos Gambarrotti, 2008
(B32) Sicilian, 40 moves, 1-0

C-K Advance Van der Wiel Attack Bishop Hunt (B12) 1-0
Shirov vs Topalov, 2008 
(B12) Caro-Kann Defense, 37 moves, 1-0

French Defense: Steinitz. Boleslavsky (C11) 0-1 Build a bridge
R Pruijssers vs F Holzke, 2009
(C11) French, 80 moves, 0-1

Pirc Defense: 150 Attack (B07) 1/2-1/2 R&P ending
E Osuna Vega vs J Hickman, 2009 
(B07) Pirc, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

Semi-Slav, Stoltz. Shabalov Attack (D45)1-0 R EG skewer if Rxh7
Carlsen vs Anand, 2009 
(D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 77 moves, 1-0

Instructive R endgame technique, played to the end
T L Petrosian vs A Volokitin, 2009 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 66 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Closed Anti-Marshall (C84) 1-0 4Rs ending
Karjakin vs Aronian, 2009 
(C84) Ruy Lopez, Closed, 34 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Scheveningen. English Attack (B80) 0-1Chaotic Insanity
Morozevich vs Vachier-Lagrave, 2009 
(B80) Sicilian, Scheveningen, 76 moves, 0-1

Old Korchnoi isn't called "The Terrible" for nothing.
Timman vs Korchnoi, 2009 
(C07) French, Tarrasch, 59 moves, 0-1

Don't drop pawns in symetrical endgame positions.
A Ulanov vs E Homiakova, 2009 
(A04) Reti Opening, 58 moves, 1-0

Spanish Berlin Wall Defense (C67) 1-0 Rule of thumb fails here
Stellwagen vs Khenkin, 2009 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 41 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Attack (A07) 1-0White will promote outside passer
Smirin vs Stellwagen, 2009
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 50 moves, 1-0

Nimzo-Indian Defense: Saemisch. Keres Var (E25) 1-0 R endings
M Richter vs M de Verdier, 2010 
(E25) Nimzo-Indian, Samisch, 42 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Nimzowitsch Attack (C42) 1-0 Doubled Ps win!?!
Topalov vs Gelfand, 2010 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 62 moves, 1-0

Magnus squeezes a rook endgame win from a dead drawn position
Carlsen vs Aronian, 2010 
(C48) Four Knights, 68 moves, 1-0

[Q] vs [R+R] and P's..............draw
Anand vs Topalov, 2010 
(E53) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, 83 moves, 1/2-1/2

QGD Lasker Defense (D56) 0-1 EG kNight is trapped
Topalov vs Anand, 2010 
(D56) Queen's Gambit Declined, 56 moves, 0-1

French Defense: Tarrasch. Morozevich Variation (C03) 0-1 R vs B
The Baron vs Rybka, 2010 
(C03) French, Tarrasch, 41 moves, 0-1

Classical Tarrasch Gambit(D34) 0-1Worlds longest roller coaster
B Gundavaa vs S Collins, 2010 
(D34) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 101 moves, 0-1

Catalan Opening (E00) 1-0 Isolani line opener to create R+ fork
Nakamura vs Eljanov, 2010 
(E00) Queen's Pawn Game, 40 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Closed/Grand Prix (B23) 1-0 Early exchange of Qs
G Jones vs Rublevsky, 2010
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 61 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Morphy Defense (C78) 1-0 Massive complications
Nakamura vs Shirov, 2011 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 93 moves, 1-0

l'Hermet Berlin Wall Defense (C67) 1-0 Rook is trapped by Pawns
D Kokarev vs E Alekseev, 2011 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 36 moves, 1-0

Slav Defense: Slav Gambit. Alekhine Attack (D10) 1-0 Photo
Aronian vs F Vallejo Pons, 2011 
(D10) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 53 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Berlin Def (C65) 0-1 Monster Passed Pawns
McShane vs Kramnik, 2011 
(C65) Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense, 69 moves, 0-1

Zukertort Opening: Symmetrical (A04) 1-0 Instructive R ending
Turov vs T Sachdev, 2012 
(A04) Reti Opening, 68 moves, 1-0

K Pawn Leonardis Var (C20) 1/2-1/2Instructive manuevers to R EG
J Ingvason vs J Hardarson, 2012 
(C20) King's Pawn Game, 53 moves, 1/2-1/2

Sicilian Najdorf. Poisoned P Acceptd (B97) 1-0 Horse breaks leg
Karjakin vs D Kokarev, 2012 
(B97) Sicilian, Najdorf, 66 moves, 1-0

Tarrasch Defense: Classical. Reti Var (D34) 0-1 Nice EG
A Ramirez Alvarez vs Robson, 2012 
(D34) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 63 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Najdorf (B90) 1-0 Black sacs Q for B&R
F Vallejo Pons vs Topalov, 2012 
(B90) Sicilian, Najdorf, 54 moves, 1-0

KID Orthodox Variation (E94) 0-1 B&P traps Rook ending
Gelfand vs Radjabov, 2012
(E94) King's Indian, Orthodox, 56 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Kan. Polugaevsky Var (B42) 1-0 Lucena position ahead
Potkin vs Vitiugov, 2012 
(B42) Sicilian, Kan, 73 moves, 1-0

Guimard Defense Main Line (C04) 0-1 Black space advantage
J Sheng vs W Duckworth, 2012
(C04) French, Tarrasch, Guimard Main line, 58 moves, 0-1

French Winawer. Positional Variation (C19) 1-0 EG Blunder
Caruana vs Carlsen, 2012 
(C19) French, Winawer, Advance, 91 moves, 1-0

KIA vs Sicilian (A07) 1-0 The passer dictates
B Amin vs G Gajewski, 2013 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 52 moves, 1-0

R + P vs R: Lucena's winning position.
Carlsen vs Ivanchuk, 2013 
(B48) Sicilian, Taimanov Variation, 90 moves, 0-1

English Opening: Symmetrical (A30) 0-1 The chink in the armor
Carlsen vs H Wang, 2013 
(A30) English, Symmetrical, 79 moves, 0-1

Dbl Fio Reti 5.c4 Yugoslav (A07) 0-1R endings take time to mast
Carlsen vs Caruana, 2013 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 62 moves, 0-1

Gruenfeld Defense: Exchange (D85) 1-0 Barrier limits Black King
Nakamura vs Karjakin, 2013 
(D85) Grunfeld, 52 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Alapin Barmen Defense Modern Line (B22) 0-1 Grinder
Kaidanov vs Areshchenko, 2013 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 91 moves, 0-1

QGD Tartakower Defense (D58) 1-0 2 Rooks w/2 pawns beat Queen
Kramnik vs D Andreikin, 2013 
(D58) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tartakower (Makagonov-Bondarevsky) Syst, 63 moves, 1-0

Hungarian Opening/English, Rev Sicil (A00) 0-1 Early N invasion
Morozevich vs V Laznicka, 2013 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 74 moves, 0-1

French, Fort Knox Bg7, NxNd7 (C10) 1-0 The bridge is ready
Tiviakov vs J Wegerle, 2013 
(C10) French, 75 moves, 1-0

QGD Lasker Defense (D56) 1-0 Alternative 10...f5 Stonewall Def
Aronian vs Nakamura, 2013 
(D56) Queen's Gambit Declined, 42 moves, 1-0

Sicilian, Canal Attack. Main Line (B52)1-0 R ending, missed 1/2
Carlsen vs P H Nielsen, 2014 
(B52) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 68 moves, 1-0

NID: Normal. Gligoric System Bernstein Defense (E56) 1-0
I Krush vs T Abrahamyan, 2014 
(E56) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line with 7...Nc6, 76 moves, 1-0

English, Symmetrical. Two Knights Line (A37)0-1 Two Hogs on 2nd
Fressinet vs Y Yu, 2014 
(A37) English, Symmetrical, 37 moves, 0-1

Barry Attack (D00)Instructive EG; R interpose to protect passer
Jobava vs Korneev, 2014 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 45 moves, 1-0

Modern Def: Standard Line (B06) 0-1 P sac breakthrough
I Shahaliyev vs M Iskandarov, 2014 
(B06) Robatsch, 75 moves, 0-1

Very interesting pawn play all 3 phases; w/immunity
Gelfand vs Grischuk, 2014 
(D83) Grunfeld, Grunfeld Gambit, 66 moves, 0-1

Spanish Game: Morphy Def. Anderssen Var(C77) 0-1Black sacs 3Qs!
V Gunina vs Sevian, 2015 
(C77) Ruy Lopez, 69 moves, 0-1

Spanish, Berlin Def. Rio Gambit Accepted (C67) 1-0 R trap
Robson vs So, 2015 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 42 moves, 1-0

King's Indian Attk: Keres Var (A07) 1-0 A tale of two kings
Saric vs A Sharafiev, 2015 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 76 moves, 1-0

Spanish Game: Exchange. Normal (C69) 0-1 R ending
Jakovenko vs Svidler, 2015 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 57 moves, 0-1

Indian Game Bf4, f3, g4 (A45) 0-1 Another misplayed R ending
Jobava vs Nakamura, 2015 
(A45) Queen's Pawn Game, 80 moves, 0-1

Nimzowitsch Def: Lean Var. CO Countr Accepted (B00) 0-1 Q vs RR
V Onyshchuk vs I Schneider, 2015
(B00) Uncommon King's Pawn Opening, 99 moves, 0-1

Caro-Kann Def: Breyer Variation vs Dbl Fio (B10) 1-0 Passer
V Fedoseev vs Eljanov, 2015 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 43 moves, 1-0

G48 in Most Instructive Endgames of 2016 by Naiditsch & Balogh
Krasenkow vs J L Hammer, 2016 
(D38) Queen's Gambit Declined, Ragozin Variation, 50 moves, 0-1

Gruenfeld, Russian. Hungarian Var (D97) 1/2-1/2 Q vs 2 Rs EG
Navara vs Giri, 2016 
(D97) Grunfeld, Russian, 42 moves, 1/2-1/2

KID Orthodox. Bayonet Attack (E97) 1/2-1/2 R sac for Stalemate
Khalifman vs D Yuffa, 2016 
(E97) King's Indian, 43 moves, 1/2-1/2

Initiative against IQP counts in R+N endgames
Karjakin vs Anand, 2016 
(A06) Reti Opening, 43 moves, 1-0

Rat Def./Leningrad Dutch (A41) 0-1 Rather UNIQUE play!
Goryachkina vs A Bodnaruk, 2016 
(A41) Queen's Pawn Game (with ...d6), 77 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Def: Richter-Rauzer. Classical (B65) 1-0 Pesky Rook
Navara vs Jobava, 2016 
(B65) Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...Be7 Defense, 9...Nxd4, 42 moves, 1-0

Semi-Slav Defense: Stoltz Var (D45) 0-1 R ending zugzwang
Le Quang Liem vs Ganguly, 2016 
(D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 77 moves, 0-1

QGD: Austrian Def (D06) 1-0 Doubled Outside Passers
M Mchedlishvili vs K Shanava, 2017 
(D06) Queen's Gambit Declined, 73 moves, 1-0

QGD Exchange. Reshevsky Var (D36) 1-0 Castle opposite
Caruana vs Kramnik, 2017 
(D36) Queen's Gambit Declined, Exchange, Positional line, 6.Qc2, 67 moves, 1-0

QID: Fianchetto. Check Intermezzo Line (E15) 1-0 2Rs vs R&N
P Palachev vs N Shirshov, 2017 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 91 moves, 1-0

London System (D02) 1/2-1/2 K-R vs K-R-B ending
D Gordievsky vs V Kovalev, 2017 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 109 moves, 1/2-1/2

London System/Barry Attack (D02) 1-0 Intermezzo Knight
T Nabaty vs R Hovhannisyan, 2018
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 50 moves, 1-0

Rook Trio: Underpromotion prevents Q sac for Stalemate
D Wagner vs Kosteniuk, 2018 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 117 moves, 0-1

Bogo-Indian Def: Grünfeld Var (E11) 1-0 Kibitz for R ending
B Roselli Mailhe vs G Cerda Albornoz, 2018 
(E11) Bogo-Indian Defense, 66 moves, 1-0

145 moves with no change of material (K+R vs. K+R+P)
Stockfish vs AlphaZero, 2018  
(C14) French, Classical, 255 moves, 1/2-1/2

K's English. 4 Knights Fianchetto Lines (A29) 1/2-1/2 Sow's ear
Carlsen vs Naiditsch, 2019 
(A29) English, Four Knights, Kingside Fianchetto, 60 moves, 1/2-1/2

King's Indian Defense (E60) 1/2-1/2 Promotion wins
F Hand vs J C Pigott, 2019 
(D70) Neo-Grunfeld Defense, 41 moves, 1/2-1/2

Russian Game: Modern Attack. Center Var (C43) 1-0 R ending
Xiong vs Duda, 2019 
(C43) Petrov, Modern Attack, 55 moves, 1-0

QGD: Semi-Tarrasch Def. Exchange Var (D41) 1/2-1/2 A race
Carlsen vs Xiong, 2020 
(D41) Queen's Gambit Declined, Semi-Tarrasch, 56 moves, 1/2-1/2

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