Sep-18-12 M Socko vs W Ju, 2012 
Sep-18-12 L Ruan vs M Socko, 2012 
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dorn: Not <33...g5> but <35...Rf8> was a crucial blunder. |
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Oct-06-10 M Socko vs I K Sukandar, 2010
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dorn: White wasted a good position in two moves
32.Ne4?? (Rxc6 ) 32...Qxe5
33.Nf2?? (Rxc6 ) 33...Qd5? (Ng5! ) |
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Feb-17-10 K Dragun vs M Oleksienko, 2010
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dorn: Yes, because of 36.Rxd7? (Rc8!). Both sides were in timetrouble. |
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Feb-17-10 M Apicella vs K Dragun, 2009 
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dorn: 57. Ke3 Rxa2? (Kxg5!!) 58. Bxd6! Bb2! - Black just had seen that position after 58... Bxd6? 59. Rb6 is a theoretical draw. This young man understands chess. |
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Apr-25-08 Swiercz vs A Iljin, 2008 
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dorn: <Gilmoy> After 21...e4 22.Bxe4 Qd6 Black has two pawns advantage and quite comfortable position, e.g. 23.fe6 Rxf1+ 24.Rxf1 de4 25.e7+ Kh7! 26.Nf4 Bd2! -=
Of course the position is very complex and hard to calculate otb. |
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Jan-21-08 Krasenkow vs G Sargissian, 2008 
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dorn: 19...Qd2 and 20...Qxe1 seem doubtful. Black trades active figure and weakens his kingside pawns. I think 19...Ng6 was better. |
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Dec-01-07 Sasikiran vs Macieja, 2007 
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dorn: It's not so easy. We've just proved that black cannot exchange his rook (so white pawn f3 is save for a moment), but 42.e4 Rh3 43.Rf2 Ke5(!) is probably the best defense, rather not sufficient but there is a lot of play here. Anyway 42.e4 seems stronger then 42.ef4. |
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Nov-28-07 A Galkin vs M Bartel, 2007 
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dorn: In fact the endgame is drawish. 95...Ba5? is a blunder. Black has to gain control of field b6 by his King. For example:
95...Bd6 96.Bd8 Kc4! 97.Bc7 Be7 98.Bf4 Bd8 98.Be3 Kb5= 95...Bd6 96.Bd8 Be5? 97.Bc7 Bf6 98.Bf4 Bd8 99.Be3! and 100.Bb6 wins. |
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Nov-16-07 J Rudd vs J Thomas, 2006 
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dorn: After 20... Ne3 21.fe3 de3 22.Bb4 Black cannot play ef2 because there is no pawn on f2. |
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