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Accidents in the opeming
Compiled by pdoaks
--*--

Cloned.

"Do the difficult things while they are easy and do the great things while they are small. A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step." — Lao Tzu

"Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere." — Albert Einstein

"Chess is a fairy tale of 1,001 blunders." — Savielly Tartakower

"Pawns are the soul of chess." — François-André Danican Philidor

"To free your game, take off some of your adversary's men, if possible for nothing." — Captain Bertain, The Noble Game of Chess (1735)

"I play my king all over the board. I make him fight!" — Wilhelm Steinitz

"A righteous wife can make a poor man feel like a king." — Boonaa Mohammed

"Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for – in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it." — Ellen Goodman

"You have enemies? Good; that means you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." — Winston Churchill

May-23-23 Rdb: Hey <fredthebear> , do you know that your buddy... everyday ?

Great ! Awesome.

You are so righteous.

Let no one say that great crusader <fredthebear> is dishonest.

"All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me... You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you." ― Walt Disney

"Win with grace, lose with dignity!" ― Susan Polgar

"What does it take to be a champion? Desire, dedication, determination, personal and professional discipline, focus, concentration, strong nerves, the will to win, and yes, talent!" ― Susan Polgar

"No matter how successful you are (or will be), never ever forget the people who helped you along the way, and pay it forward! Don't become arrogant and conceited just because you gained a few rating points or made a few bucks. Stay humble and be nice, especially to your fans!" ― Susan Polgar

* Brilliant (and mostly famous)! Game Collection: Brilliant Miniatures

* Blackburne strikes! games annotated by Blackburne

* Brutal Attacking Chess: Game Collection: Brutal Attacking Chess

* Bishop's Opening Miniatures: https://www.chessonly.com/bishop-op...

* Bowman's Beginner's Guide:
http://chess.jliptrap.us/BowmanBegi... Not perfect but dedicated, passionate.

* Capablanca's Double Attack — having the initiative is important: https://lichess.org/study/tzrisL1R

* Checkmate brevities: Game Collection: Art of Checkmate

* Beat the QGD Exchange: Game Collection: Queen's Gambit Declined: Exchange Variation

* Giannis says: https://www.suffernchessclub.com/se...

* PGN Language Conversion: http://www.code.gr/chess-converter/...

* Red States: https://www.redhotpawn.com/

* Simple tactics course using miniatures:
http://exeterchessclub.org.uk/x/FTP...

* Short Match: Game Collection: Match Short-Karjakin

* Today's Titans: search "Sergey Karjakin vs Magnus Carlsen"

* Tim's list of records: https://timkr.home.xs4all.nl/record...

* Loser: User: ljfyffe

* Same Loser: User: Larryfyffe

* Predator On-line: https://www.bustedmugshots.com/ohio...

* Dec-12-20 MissScarlett: My advice to <acapo> is to close the pop-up ads by clicking on the little <x> in the top right corner.

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

Alaska: Kodiak
Established in: 1792

Kodiak is the main city in Kodiak Island and was founded in 1792 by Aleksandr Andreyevich Baranov. It was first called Pavlovsk Gavan, which is Russian for Paul's Harbor, and was the first capital of Russian Alaska. You can still find a large Russian Orthodox church there, as well as plenty of beautiful views.

* Chess History: https://www.britannica.com/topic/ch...

WTHarvey:
There once was a website named WTHarvey,
Where chess puzzles did daily delay,
The brain-teasers so tough,
They made us all huff and puff,
But solving them brought us great satisfaction today.

There once was a website named WTHarvey
Where chess puzzles were quite aplenty
With knight and rook and pawn
You'll sharpen your brain with a yawn
And become a master of chess entry

There once was a site for chess fun,
Wtharvey.com was the chosen one,
With puzzles galore,
It'll keep you in store,
For hours of brain-teasing, none done.

There once was a website named wtharvey,
Where chess puzzles were posted daily,
You'd solve them with glee,
And in victory,
You'd feel like a true chess prodigy!

High Flight
BY JOHN GILLESPIE MAGEE JR.

Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings; Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth of sun-split clouds,—and done a hundred things You have not dreamed of—wheeled and soared and swung High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there,
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air ....

Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
I've topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace Where never lark nor ever eagle flew—
And, while with silent lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

"No one has ever won a game of chess by taking only forward moves (What about Scholar's Mate?). Sometimes you have to move backwards in order to be able to take better steps forward. That is life." — Anonymous

Drive sober or get pulled over.

"For surely of all the drugs in the world, chess must be the most permanently pleasurable." — Assiac

"I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have." ― Thomas Jefferson, chess player

"The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others." ― Mahatma Gandhi

You can't make bricks without straw

You can't run with the hare and hunt with the hounds

You can't take it with you when you die

You can't teach an old dog new tricks

You can't judge a book by its cover

You can't win them all

You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar

You pays your money and you takes your choice

You reap what you sow

You win some, you lose some

Youth is wasted on the young

The Camel and the Floating Sticks

The first who saw the humpbacked camel
Fled off for life; the next approached with care; The third with tyrant rope did boldly dare
The desert wanderer to trammel.
Such is the power of use to change
The face of objects new and strange;
Which grow, by looking at, so tame,
They do not even seem the same.
And since this theme is up for our attention,
A certain watchman I will mention,
Who, seeing something far
Away on the ocean,
Could not but speak his notion
That It was a ship of war.
Some minutes more had past, –
A bomb-ketch It was without a sail,
And then a boat, and then a bale,
And floating sticks of wood at last!

Full many things on earth, I wot,
Will claim this tale, – and well they may;
They're something dreadful far away,
But near at hand – they're not.

Chessgames.com will be unavailable August 28, 2023 from 1:00AM through 1:30AM(UTC/GMT) for maintenance. We apologize for this inconvenience.

Psalm 107:1
Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; his love endures forever.

"A God you understood would be less than yourself." ― Flannery O'Connor

Psalms 31:24 - Be of good courage, and he shall strengthen your heart, all ye that hope in the LORD.

* Red States: https://www.redhotpawn.com/

* 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

FACTRETRIEVER 2020: Even though dragonflies have six legs, they cannot walk.

'A stitch in time saves nine'

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

Q: How do you know which cow is the best dancer? A: See which one has the best moo-ves.

Q: What does the cow band play?
A: Moo-sic!

slaw1998: In my spine there sends a shiver
When a player sends his pieces up the river
Into loose en prise encapture, enrapture,
Does it to my heart receive it well
Yet other players bring me down
Their defense sends my attack the other way around And Tal and others would be quite displeased
Like I, to have the attack no hope of being released

So I'll go on shedding pieces
With combos, like a magic stall,
And hope that some day
I can beat them all.

"Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves" — J.M. Barrie (1860 - 1937)

A man who spent his life delighting the masses with his words, perfectly understood that you reap what you sow, and that when we make other people happy, we often find happiness ourselves.

"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

Psalm 96: 1-3
Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing to the Lord, praise his name; proclaim his salvation day after day. Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples.

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.

"The great thing about chess is it's a game for oneself. You don't work on what you can't control, you just work on yourself. And I think if more people did that, we'd all be a lot better off." — Daniel Naroditsky

<Writing from his experience of the devastation of World War I, Edwardian poet Alfred Noyes' well-known "On the Western Front" speaks from the perspective of soldiers buried in graves marked by simple crosses, asking that their deaths not be in vain. Praise of the dead was not what the dead needed, but peace made by the living. An excerpt:

We, who lie here, have nothing more to pray.
To all your praises we are deaf and blind.
We may not ever know if you betray
Our hope, to make earth better for mankind.>

"Rooks need each other in the middlegame. This is why one should keep their rooks connected until the opposing queen is off the board. She'll snare 'em (usually from a centralized square on an open diagonal or perhaps a poisoned pawn approach of the unprotected b2/b7 and g2/g7 square next to the occupied corner) if the two rooks aren't protecting each other." ― Fredthebear

"In baseball, my theory is to strive for consistency, not to worry about the numbers. If you dwell on statistics, you get shortsighted; if you aim for consistency, the numbers will be there at the end." ― Tom Seaver

"We are what we repeatedly do; excellence, then, is not an act but a habit." — Aristotle

"If you are patient in one moment of anger, you will escape a hundred days of sorrow." — Ancient Chinese Proverb

This is ten percent luck, twenty percent skill
Fifteen percent concentrated power of will
Five percent pleasure, fifty percent pain
And a hundred percent reason to remember the name! ― Fort Minor

chess writer and poet Henry Thomas Bland.

Another example of his way with words is the start of ‘Internal Fires', a poem published on page 57 of the March 1930 American Chess Bulletin:

I used to play chess with the dearest old chap,
Whom naught could upset whatever might hap.
He'd oft lose a game he might well have won
But made no excuse for what he had done.
If a piece he o'erlooked and got it snapped up He took it quite calmly and ne'er ‘cut up rough'.

"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

Annabel Lee
by Edgar Allan Poe

It was many and many a year ago,
In a kingdom by the sea,
That a maiden there lived whom you may know
By the name of Annabel Lee;
And this maiden she lived with no other thought
Than to love and be loved by me.

I was a child and she was a child,
In this kingdom by the sea,
But we loved with a love that was more than love— I and my Annabel Lee—
With a love that the wingèd seraphs of Heaven
Coveted her and me.

And this was the reason that, long ago,
In this kingdom by the sea,
A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling
My beautiful Annabel Lee;
So that her highborn kinsmen came
And bore her away from me,
To shut her up in a sepulchre
In this kingdom by the sea.

The angels, not half so happy in Heaven,
Went envying her and me—
Yes!—that was the reason (as all men know,
In this kingdom by the sea)
That the wind came out of the cloud by night,
Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.

But our love it was stronger by far than the love Of those who were older than we—
Of many far wiser than we—
And neither the angels in Heaven above
Nor the demons down under the sea
Can ever dissever my soul from the soul
Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;

For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side Of my darling—my darling—my life and my bride, In her sepulchre there by the sea—
In her tomb by the sounding sea.

Deuteronomy 6:6-9: "These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates."

Isaiah 66:24
24 "And they will go out and look on the dead bodies of those who rebelled against me; the worms that eat them will not die, the fire that burns them will not be quenched, and they will be loathsome to all mankind."

Matthew 19:26
But Jesus looked at them and said, 'With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.'

"The only time my prayers are never answered is on the golf course." — Billy Graham

"Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle." — Plato

"Happiness is like a butterfly. The more you chase it, the more it eludes you. But if you turn your attention to other things, it comes and sits softly on your shoulder." — Henry David Thoreau

<What four-letter word can be written forward, backward, or upside down, and can still be read from left to right?

Answer: NOON.

* Riddle-xp-dee: https://www.briddles.com/riddles/ch...

Grandpa went out for a walk and it started to rain. He didn't bring an umbrella or a hat. His clothes got soaked, but not a hair on his head was wet. How is this possible?

Answer: Grandpa's bald!>

"What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." — Ralph Waldo Emerson

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

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

Ah, St. Marher, 1225:
"And te tide and te time þat tu iboren were, schal beon iblescet."

5zshhz! fish spawn afta shave long promotion run up riva.

^Dudz

Removing the guard
K Kulaots vs J Geller, 2002 
(C45) Scotch Game, 8 moves, 1-0

Massacre in Warsaw
J Sajtar vs Sliwa, 1947 
(D23) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 12 moves, 1-0

The Knightmare with a little help from the Bishop
Onischuk vs A Kovacevic, 1991 
(A27) English, Three Knights System, 12 moves, 1-0

Blowback in the Sicilian counter-attack
K Treybal vs J Rejfir, 1933 
(B40) Sicilian, 11 moves, 1-0

Failed fork
K Treybal vs J Foltys, 1936 
(C02) French, Advance, 9 moves, 0-1

Little combination winning a Pawn .... and the game
K Spraggett vs Smyslov, 1985 
(E11) Bogo-Indian Defense, 14 moves, 0-1

12.Nd5!!
Korchnoi vs Spassky, 1948 
(B71) Sicilian, Dragon, Levenfish Variation, 12 moves, 1-0

Discovered attack
Korchnoi vs Simagin, 1960 
(E46) Nimzo-Indian, 9 moves, 1-0

Viktor the Terrible in action
S Tatai vs Korchnoi, 1978 
(C01) French, Exchange, 14 moves, 0-1

Dubious opening backfired
Szabo vs O'Kelly, 1946 
(D06) Queen's Gambit Declined, 16 moves, 1-0

Lady in distress
V Chekhov vs Razuvaev, 1982 
(A04) Reti Opening, 11 moves, 1-0

Failed pin
T Pirttimaki vs V Chekhov, 1983 
(B03) Alekhine's Defense, 9 moves, 0-1

Oops!
E Ghaem Maghami vs V Chekhov, 2000 
(A04) Reti Opening, 14 moves, 1-0

Omitted move
J Lokvenc vs Pachman, 1943 
(E33) Nimzo-Indian, Classical, 8 moves, 1-0

Benoni memento
Smejkal vs S Tatai, 1973 
(A62) Benoni, Fianchetto Variation, 14 moves, 1-0

Trapped Rook
Tal vs Uhlmann, 1970 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 14 moves, 1-0

Fork and pin - easy win
Uhlmann vs B Andersen, 1964 
(E12) Queen's Indian, 9 moves, 1-0

Fork in 2
Sliwa vs Uhlmann, 1956 
(E80) King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 15 moves, 1-0

Never ignore moves of your opponent!
Bronstein vs Uhlmann, 1971 
(A07) King's Indian Attack, 15 moves, 1-0

Bishop fork
Velimirovic vs H Ree, 1994 
(C13) French, 12 moves, 1-0

Discovered attack
Velimirovic vs N Ristovic, 1995 
(C13) French, 10 moves, 1-0

French havoc
Tal vs Vaganian, 1973 
(C04) French, Tarrasch, Guimard Main line, 12 moves, 1-0

How not to play the Vienna Game
J Gallagher vs Miles, 1990 
(C28) Vienna Game, 11 moves, 0-1

To memorize book lines is good, to think about them is better!
A Zapata vs Anand, 1988 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 6 moves, 1-0

Black Death on Black Fields
Adorjan vs S Reuben, 1973 
(B30) Sicilian, 15 moves, 1-0

The Rook Is Gone with the Wind
P Petran vs Adorjan, 1985 
(E15) Queen's Indian, 12 moves, 0-1

The most effective losing move
P Theon vs G Andruet, 1986 
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 13 moves, 1-0

Helpmate to the Queen.
Timman vs Polugaevsky, 1973 
(B96) Sicilian, Najdorf, 15 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Vespers
B Kurajica vs Velimirovic, 1972 
(B50) Sicilian, 15 moves, 1-0

A little variation on the theme of Fool's Mate
R Nicevski vs Ljubojevic, 1975 
(B51) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 12 moves, 1-0

Havoc in Jaenisch Gambit
V Liberzon vs A Geller, 1960 
(C63) Ruy Lopez, Schliemann Defense, 14 moves, 1-0

Overlooked cross-pin
Shirov vs Bareev, 1994 
(C00) French Defense, 15 moves, 1-0

Poisoned Bishop
K Aseev vs Bronstein, 1982 
(B16) Caro-Kann, Bronstein-Larsen Variation, 14 moves, 0-1

Sacrificed Pawn, lost piece
Bogoljubov vs L Prokes, 1922 
(A52) Budapest Gambit, 14 moves, 1-0

Discovered attack and weak back rank
B Andonov vs Lputian, 1987 
(A09) Reti Opening, 12 moves, 0-1

Watch the Queen, not Arlette!
A van Weersel vs F Kuijpers, 2000 
(C00) French Defense, 10 moves, 1-0

The Desolation of Smaug
I De Los Santos vs S Polgar, 1990 
(B27) Sicilian, 11 moves, 0-1

Mess in the French
C Cranbourne vs Timoshenko, 1991 
(C18) French, Winawer, 14 moves, 1-0

Grab Grab's Queen...:-)
W Schmidt vs B Grabarczyk, 1991 
(D07) Queen's Gambit Declined, Chigorin Defense, 10 moves, 1-0

Fork in Sveshnikov's domain
Kholmov vs Sveshnikov, 1986 
(B32) Sicilian, 11 moves, 0-1

Why not defend the pawn in the Queen's Gambit Accepted
Krasenkow vs Kharlov, 1991 
(D21) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 12 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Catastrophe
Smirin vs Y Afek, 1992 
(B30) Sicilian, 10 moves, 1-0

11...Bxg2?? - a successful suicide
V Beim vs E Schmittdiel, 2002 
(A25) English, 14 moves, 1-0

End of Pawneater
V Yemelin vs Jobava, 2003 
(B60) Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer, 10 moves, 1-0

Pin Is Win
B Socko vs S Ernst, 2002 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 14 moves, 1-0

Blowback in the centre
Barsov vs A Al-Rakib, 2003 
(D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 14 moves, 1-0

Blitzkrieg
M Sabol vs J Votava, 1995 
(A45) Queen's Pawn Game, 10 moves, 1-0

Sin of Sicilian Incorrectness
A Beliavsky vs Quinteros, 1986 
(B27) Sicilian, 15 moves, 1-0

Olympic quickie
A Beliavsky vs M Stean, 1982 
(B97) Sicilian, Najdorf, 15 moves, 1-0

Springer am Rande...
Vasiukov vs Razuvaev, 1972 
(B06) Robatsch, 8 moves, 1-0

Steinitz would have known better what to play...
Vasiukov vs A Zaitsev, 1968 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 15 moves, 1-0

9...Ne5?
Vasiukov vs A Yasseen, 1992 
(B53) Sicilian, 10 moves, 1-0

Smothered mate to the Queen
Vasiukov vs S Giterman, 1960 
(C64) Ruy Lopez, Classical, 8 moves, 1-0

Two hanging pieces
Gligoric vs K Langeweg, 1971 
(D80) Grunfeld, 12 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann[ot]
Gligoric vs R Toran, 1952 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 14 moves, 1-0

Surprizing 8...Nxd7!!
Razuvaev vs Kupreichik, 1970 
(A27) English, Three Knights System, 15 moves, 0-1

Jugulate Gruenfeld
Razuvaev vs L Gutman, 1976 
(D86) Grunfeld, Exchange, 15 moves, 1-0

Not a premature resignation
Razuvaev vs Geller, 1988 
(E04) Catalan, Open, 5.Nf3, 15 moves, 1-0

Lost Rook
Razuvaev vs D Gurevich, 1996 
(A13) English, 15 moves, 1-0

Traxler and the burnt pine
J Sosna vs M Muron, 1987 
(C57) Two Knights, 15 moves, 0-1

Lovely shot
Plachetka vs L Zinn, 1974 
(A04) Reti Opening, 13 moves, 1-0

Double attack
Plachetka vs J Pribyl, 1982 
(B29) Sicilian, Nimzovich-Rubinstein, 12 moves, 0-1

English trap
P Petek vs L Ptacnikova, 1995 
(A27) English, Three Knights System, 9 moves, 1-0

14...Nxb4!! turns white position in completely bound wreckage
Jobava vs Kramnik, 2006 
(E12) Queen's Indian, 15 moves, 0-1

Pirc-lover's Nightmare
Kramnik vs Svidler, 2004 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 15 moves, 1-0

15.Qxc6+! - lovely mating shot
Benjamin vs N Gamboa, 1995 
(A18) English, Mikenas-Carls, 15 moves, 1-0

Queen's suicide.
Bronstein vs D Tomic, 1970 
(B31) Sicilian, Rossolimo Variation, 12 moves, 1-0

Pierced by Pierce
F J Perez vs Alekhine, 1943 
(C25) Vienna, 12 moves, 1-0

Botvinnik's "incomplete analysis" trap
Botvinnik vs Spielmann, 1935 
(B13) Caro-Kann, Exchange, 12 moves, 1-0

Desperado
J Perlis vs Tartakower, 1907 
(B22) Sicilian, Alapin, 11 moves, 0-1

Power of double-check
Reti vs Tartakower, 1910 
(B15) Caro-Kann, 11 moves, 1-0

Tartakower's Variation
Tartakower vs J Mieses, 1925 
(A82) Dutch, Staunton Gambit, 15 moves, 1-0

Too many hanging pieces
Tartakower vs G Fuster, 1948 
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 13 moves, 1-0

Sideline to disaster
Yermolinsky vs Filippov, 2005 
(A04) Reti Opening, 14 moves, 0-1

Smothered Queen
Blatny vs T Likavsky, 2001 
(A48) King's Indian, 8 moves, 1-0

Queen fork
Balashov vs Botvinnik, 1970 
(B14) Caro-Kann, Panov-Botvinnik Attack, 14 moves, 0-1

Failed combo
Balashov vs V S Zhidkov, 1972 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 15 moves, 0-1

Trapped Lady
L Basin vs Balashov, 1988 
(E73) King's Indian, 13 moves, 1-0

Lady in distress once again
A Lugovoi vs Balashov, 2003 
(E52) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Main line with ...b6, 12 moves, 1-0

Interference with double attack
Hort vs V Zheliandinov, 1967 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 12 moves, 1-0

Lightning on light squares
W Von Holzhausen vs Tarrasch, 1912 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 14 moves, 1-0

How not to play Philidor for beginners.
N Karaklajic vs A Fuderer, 1955 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 7 moves, 1-0

How not to play Philidor for experts.
Van der Wiel vs J van Baarle, 1983 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 16 moves, 1-0

Long-range Queen's Fork
L Christiansen vs Karpov, 1993 
(E12) Queen's Indian, 12 moves, 1-0

First class blunder.
J Mieses vs Euwe, 1921 
(C45) Scotch Game, 12 moves, 1-0

Running into mating net.
Anderssen vs M Lange, 1859 
(C61) Ruy Lopez, Bird's Defense, 19 moves, 0-1

Compromised Defense compromised.
G Neumann vs Anderssen, 1865 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 15 moves, 1-0

Trapped in crossfire
Zukertort vs Anderssen, 1865 
(C60) Ruy Lopez, 12 moves, 1-0

Classic sac to open h-file
C Mayet vs Anderssen, 1851 
(C64) Ruy Lopez, Classical, 12 moves, 0-1

Kicked out defender
Anderssen vs L Eichborn, 1854 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 13 moves, 0-1

Waiting for disaster
Anderssen vs E Schallopp, 1864 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 14 moves, 1-0

How not to play Sicilian
E Lubarsky vs L Christiansen, 1982 
(B57) Sicilian, 10 moves, 1-0

Rook Under Lock
P Frydman vs Najdorf, 1938 
(D16) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 15 moves, 1-0

Overlooked pin
Najdorf vs H Rossetto, 1956 
(E67) King's Indian, Fianchetto, 15 moves, 1-0

Bad idea busted by zwischenzug
L Palau vs Najdorf, 1939 
(B24) Sicilian, Closed, 12 moves, 0-1

Noteless mistake led to notable disaster
D Kumaran vs Miles, 1993 
(D02) Queen's Pawn Game, 15 moves, 1-0

Trapped Queen
Cochrane vs Staunton, 1843 
(B20) Sicilian, 9 moves, 0-1

Little combo busted by great cross-pin
Robatsch vs Jansa, 1974 
(A10) English, 14 moves, 1-0

Originality Gone Astray
Boleslavsky vs B Gurgenidze, 1960 
(B32) Sicilian, 13 moves, 1-0

When Alekhine works...
Z Radojevic vs Bagirov, 1973 
(B02) Alekhine's Defense, 13 moves, 0-1

Berlin Ementhal Wall
Ljubojevic vs R Calvo Minguez, 1973 
(C67) Ruy Lopez, 14 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Razgrom
Bronstein vs A Kinzel, 1967
(B45) Sicilian, Taimanov, 17 moves, 1-0

Olympic Record
R G Wade vs A Kinzel, 1962 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 9 moves, 1-0

Power of Double-check
Koltanowski vs A Dunkelblum, 1923 
(B18) Caro-Kann, Classical, 15 moves, 1-0

Careless Zwischenzug
S Tatai vs R Debarnot, 1977 
(E92) King's Indian, 16 moves, 0-1

Lost in Terra Incognita
Hort vs P Ostermeyer, 1982 
(D01) Richter-Veresov Attack, 14 moves, 1-0

How not to play Englesh for black
Adorjan vs L Zsinka, 1982 
(A32) English, Symmetrical Variation, 12 moves, 1-0

Overlooked Zwischenzug
G Welling vs R Douven, 1982 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 9 moves, 1-0

13.Bf4?? - Effective Self-pinning
Huebner vs Tal, 1982 
(C69) Ruy Lopez, Exchange, Gligoric Variation, 13 moves, 0-1

Leaving a piece en prise
J Lechtynsky vs E Prandstetter, 1983 
(E17) Queen's Indian, 14 moves, 1-0

Deadly Check Overlooked
Mason vs Chigorin, 1889 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 13 moves, 1-0

Subtle Killer
Chigorin vs Walbrodt, 1896 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 13 moves, 1-0

Chigorin's Bad Day
Chigorin vs Burn, 1905 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 13 moves, 0-1

Victim of Mieses' Speciality
J Mieses vs Chigorin, 1906 
(C23) Bishop's Opening, 15 moves, 1-0

Leap into a mating net.
Chigorin vs Gossip, 1889 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 15 moves, 1-0

Trapped Knight
J Mieses vs Bogoljubov, 1920 
(B20) Sicilian, 15 moves, 1-0

11...Nd5?! and 12...Rxd5? led to forced loss of material.
J Mieses vs L Forgacs, 1909 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 13 moves, 1-0

Unorthodox Opening Busted in Classic Style
J Mieses vs Tarrasch, 1920 
(B20) Sicilian, 14 moves, 0-1

Poorly Covered Bishop
J D Tresling vs Swiderski, 1899 
(C28) Vienna Game, 12 moves, 1-0

Too Automatic Reply
Tarrasch vs Alapin, 1889 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 6 moves, 1-0

12...Qc7? allowed 13.e5! with decisive effect
B Fleissig vs J Bauer, 1889 
(B32) Sicilian, 15 moves, 1-0

Miscalculated Complications
G Neumann vs J Minckwitz, 1870 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 15 moves, 1-0

Smothered mate in the 6th move
Keres vs E Arlamowski, 1950 
(B10) Caro-Kann, 6 moves, 1-0

Trapped Queen
V Castaldi vs Reshevsky, 1950 
(A06) Reti Opening, 13 moves, 0-1

Budapest mess
J F Donovan vs A Bisguier, 1950 
(A51) Budapest Gambit, 14 moves, 0-1

Why 6...Bg7 against the Levenfish is not a good idea
E Pedersen vs A Zografakis, 1950 
(B71) Sicilian, Dragon, Levenfish Variation, 10 moves, 1-0

Failed Pin
M Charosh vs L Jaffe, 1936 
(A43) Old Benoni, 8 moves, 1-0

The Queen trapped again
R Nezhmetdinov vs A I Konstantinov, 1936 
(C02) French, Advance, 14 moves, 1-0

Castling into Black's tactical shot
G van Doesburgh vs Stahlberg, 1936 
(C01) French, Exchange, 12 moves, 0-1

Careless intrusion with witty refutation
J Bednarski vs K Burger, 1978 
(C05) French, Tarrasch, 13 moves, 1-0

Marshall not dead
Marshall vs F Duz-Khotimirsky, 1911 
(D21) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 13 moves, 1-0

Queen trapped in the middle of board
J Krejcik vs Reti, 1922 
(D06) Queen's Gambit Declined, 10 moves, 1-0

Mexico Defense
Marshall vs Torre, 1925 
(A50) Queen's Pawn Game, 7 moves, 0-1

Running into the Stonewall
Gruenfeld vs Torre, 1925 
(A90) Dutch, 13 moves, 0-1

Queen Fork
P Johner vs K Havasi, 1925 
(E10) Queen's Pawn Game, 15 moves, 1-0

Tactical pattern worth to remember
Ruy Lopez vs G da Cutri, 1560 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 12 moves, 1-0

Classical motif with sac of Bishop on f7
von der Lasa vs P Bilguer, 1837 
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 13 moves, 1-0

Failed pin a la Legal
Horwitz vs Bledow, 1837 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 14 moves, 0-1

The Last But One Mistake Wins
Cochrane vs Saint-Amant, 1842 
(B06) Robatsch, 14 moves, 0-1

7...Qh5? invited lovely shot
Falkbeer vs Zytogorski, 1855
(C21) Center Game, 14 moves, 1-0

Not So Iron Tigran
Kotov vs Petrosian, 1949 
(D35) Queen's Gambit Declined, 13 moves, 1-0

Staunton Backfired
J Sikora-Lerch vs J Lechtynsky, 1972 
(A82) Dutch, Staunton Gambit, 12 moves, 0-1

Trapped Bishop
J Lechtynsky vs Z Cakl, 2002 
(D30) Queen's Gambit Declined, 14 moves, 1-0

Trapped Bishop
J Lechtynsky vs M Tupy, 1998 
(E60) King's Indian Defense, 14 moves, 1-0

Poisoned Pawn Eaten, Poisoner Beaten!
Kasparov vs Taimanov, 1978 
(A06) Reti Opening, 14 moves, 1-0

Playing with a Fire
Fischer vs C Garcia Palermo, 1970 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 15 moves, 0-1

Discovered Garde
Huebner vs Kasparov, 1992 
(D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 15 moves, 0-1

Trapped Queen
Steinitz vs Bird, 1866 
(C10) French, 12 moves, 1-0

Good pin, quick win!
G Kozlova vs E Guseva, 1967 
(D20) Queen's Gambit Accepted, 10 moves, 1-0

Double Attack
Timman vs R Cosulich, 1974 
(E45) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, Bronstein (Byrne) Variation, 7 moves, 1-0

Sac for a quick loss.
Timman vs C A Evans, 1970 
(A25) English, 13 moves, 1-0

Queen trapped in Steinitz's Variation of Scotch Game
P Frazer vs Taubenhaus, 1888 
(C45) Scotch Game, 8 moves, 1-0

Trapped Queen (once again)
Robatsch vs S Garcia Martinez, 1974 
(A40) Queen's Pawn Game, 14 moves, 1-0

Unusual opening setup caught black off guard
Miles vs G Wall, 1999 
(A10) English, 15 moves, 1-0

Bravado attack with helpmate
Burn vs J Owen, 1874 
(B07) Pirc, 14 moves, 1-0

Lady in distress
R Dieks vs J G van Eybergen, 1979 
(A09) Reti Opening, 8 moves, 1-0

Convincing refutation of 7...Bxf3 and 8...Qh4+
Spielmann vs Flamberg, 1914 
(C29) Vienna Gambit, 15 moves, 1-0

8.Na3?? loses a piece
M Bluemich vs J Lokvenc, 1926 
(A06) Reti Opening, 9 moves, 0-1

KID Disaster
Petrosian vs N Rashkovsky, 1974 
(E97) King's Indian, 17 moves, 0-1

Bad day in Karlsbad
Euwe vs Colle, 1929 
(E16) Queen's Indian, 13 moves, 1-0

Euwe's Worst Game
Euwe vs W J Muhring, 1947 
(A04) Reti Opening, 13 moves, 0-1

E Steiner vs Capablanca, 1929 
(C71) Ruy Lopez, 32 moves, 0-1

J Finnegan vs R P Allen, 1948 
(C78) Ruy Lopez, 24 moves, 1-0

Erdos vs Lichtner, 1922 
(D00) Queen's Pawn Game, 18 moves, 1-0

164 games

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