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Vladimir Nenarokov vs Alexander Alekhine
1st Category tournament (1915), Moscow RUE, Oct-??
Queen's Indian Defense: Kasparov Variation (E12)  ·  0-1

ANALYSIS [x]

FEN COPIED

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Kibitzer's Corner
Nov-03-05  yunis: why not 26.Bxe5 and 28.Rxe5? some thing wrong in this game perhaps!
Nov-03-05  sneaky pete: 23... Nb8 is a strange move as well, the Knight is going nowhere and will be missed on d7. Black may have played 23... Kb8. The game must come from a Russian source. In Russian (Cyrillic) notation K stands for Knight and Kp for King, so it's easy to make a mistake when translating into Olde English Descriptive Notation (K for King and Kt for Knight).

Of course, if black did play 23... Kb8 and Nd7 was guarding pawn e5 all the time, 24.Nf3 .. was a miscalculation. After 23... Kb8 Nenarokov may have intended 24.Nf3? Nxe4 25.Qc2 f5 26.Rfe1 g4 27.Rxe4 fxe4? 28.Ng5 .. when white regains the exchange, overlooking 27... gxf3 winning for black.

Nov-03-05  Calli: <Sneaky Pete> & <yunis> The score is correct. Skinner & Verhoeven give Alekhine's original notes from Shakhmatny Vestnik. Here are a few of them:

23...Nb8!? eliminates the threat, but maybe at too high a price.

24.Nf3! Nxe4 25.Qc2? too cautious. The move Nxe5! would undoubtedly have given White better chances to draw.

25...f5 26.Rfe1! 26.Bxe5 was bad on account of 26...Qg6 with winning a attack.

26...g4! 27.Rxe4? this blunder spoils it at once

Feb-17-06  drnooo: The sort of game that Petrosian might have played. Opening himself up to a seeming attack, manuevering in limited space, gaining all the right files, then it's over in a few quick moves: like watching a boa constrictor work.

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