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FSR
Member since Aug-27-05 · Last seen Oct-04-25
I am Frederick Rhine. The United States Chess Federation awarded me the titles of National Master (at OTB chess) in 1983, and Senior Master of Correspondence Chess in 1997. In February 2024, less than a year after I began playing in the ICCF, it awarded me the title of Correspondence Chess Master. It looks like later this year I will qualify for the title of International Correspondence Chess Master.

As of September 2025, I am the second highest rated USCF correspondence chess player, just three rating points behind Gordon Magat. https://www.uschess.org/assets/top_...

The August 2020 issue of Chess Life magazine had a profile of me (for the text, see Frederick Rhine (my August 1, 2020 comment in the forum)).

I played in the 1997 USCF Absolute Championship (open to the top 13 correspondence players who accept their invitations), scoring 6-6 (+2 =8 -2). The late Alex Dunne wrote in his book on the Absolute Championships, "This was Rhine's only Absolute and he held his own against the best. His two losses were against previous Absolute winners." http://bit.ly/1NB55YP That book contains my games F Rhine vs R Lifson, 1997 and F Rhine vs D Burris, 1997.

But the 1997 event was not my only Absolute. I have also played in the 2023-25 events. In the 2023 edition, I drew all 12 games. That was enough to tie for second! Unlike the 1997 event, this one was under ICCF auspices and allowed the use of engines. There was only one decisive game! https://www.iccf.com/event?id=101114 In the 2024 Absolute, I have ten draws and a win(!), with just one game left, which will very likely be drawn. https://www.iccf.com/event?id=105325 This time +1 will probably only be enough to tie for fourth. In the 2025 Absolute, I have drawn all twelve games. So far there are no decisive games in the event.

I have played first board for the Rogue Squadron in the Chicago Industrial Chess League. I have played online for the Shropshire & Friends team in the 4 Nations Chess League (4NCL), and the Oswestry team in the Shropshire League.

I attended Lane Technical High School in Chicago with the late Chessgames.com co-founder Alberto A Artidiello until he moved out of Chicago. Lane's chess team won the Illinois state championship my junior and senior years, becoming the first school ever to win consecutive championships. Albert also became a master, as did my teammates Kenneth Mohr and Christopher Kus. The late FIDE Masters Albert Charles Chow and Morris Giles were also Laneites.

In July 2013, I played in my second and third regular-rated tournaments of the millennium(!), the Greater Midwest Classic and the Chicago Class (under-2200 section). I tied for second, undefeated, in both, winning $700 and $550, respectively, and brought my rating back over 2200. http://www.uschess.org/assets/msa_j... http://www.uschess.org/assets/msa_j...

I have contributed to hundreds of chess-related articles on Wikipedia under the handle Krakatoa, notably "First-move advantage in chess," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-... "George H. D. Gossip," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George... and "Swindle (chess)," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_..., all of which are almost entirely written by me. The first two of those have been Today's Featured Article, the highest honor a Wikipedia article can receive, one attained by about one out of every 1,400 articles. I have received various Wikipedia awards, including the Imperial Triple Crown Jewels and the Timeless Imperial Triple Crown (which only 12 Wikipedians have received). My user page is at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:K.... Al Lawrence in the aforementioned Chess Life article referred to my "erudite chess articles on Wikipedia." Chess historian Edward Winter in his article "Wikipedia and Chess" commended my Wikipedia articles on Gossip and Hugh Edward Myers. (The latter article is at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_....) https://www.chesshistory.com/winter...

I am the editor and proofreader of the book "Tournament Battle Plan: Optimize Your Chess Results!" by Daniel Gormally. I was the proofreader of the book "Triple Exclam!!! The Life and Games of Emory Tate, Chess Warrior" by Daaim Shabazz.

I was a contributor to the now-defunct Chicago Chess Blog, http://chicagochess.blogspot.com. I discovered, and documented in my blog post https://chicagochess.blogspot.com/2..., what Taylor Kingston calls "the Mortimer Effect," which has lowered the Morphy Numbers of many modern players (maybe you!). https://chesscafe.com/the-skittles-... I have a Morphy Number of 4 by virtue of L Barden vs F Rhine, 2010 as well as two simul games I lost to Arthur Bisguier when I was in high school.

Six hundred and thirty-six of my games are in chessgames.com's database. My favorites are F Rhine vs D Sprenkle, 1981, K Thompson vs F Rhine, 1992, and F Rhine vs A Boerkoel, 1996, each of which has been Game of the Day. Rhine-Sprenkle was published with my annotations in Chess Informant (Volume 32) and cited in the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings (Vol. B (2nd ed.) at 183 n.19). In Volume 33 of Chess Informant, my 18th move (18.Nxd6!) in that game was voted the 8th-9th most important theoretical novelty in Volume 32. The game was also cited in MCO-13 and "The Aggressive Nimzowitsch Sicilian 2...Nf6" by Eric Schiller, and occupies an entire chapter in all three editions of "Beating the Sicilian" by John Nunn. It is game 218 in "1000 TN!! The Best Theoretical Novelties" (Chess Informant, 2012). Anish Giri, in his 2023 Chessable course "Lifetime Repertoires: Giri's 1. e4 - Part 3" recommends this line for White. https://www.chessable.com/lifetime-... Following my game against Sprenkle, he writes after 22.Be3, "The computer evaluates this as completely hopeless for Black and it is. Our king is in fact much safer, thanks to our much better pieces." https://www.chessable.com/learn/159... More than 40 years after I played the game, my line still kicks ass!


click for larger view

Thompson-Rhine was published with my annotations in Chess Informant (Volume 57), and cited in the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings (Vol. B (3rd ed.) at 172 n.163). Jeremy Silman discusses the game and my analysis of it in his book "Winning with the Sicilian Defence" (2nd ed.).

Probably the best game I have ever played is the astonishing F Rhine vs B Lemke, 2025, but it's too deep for me to understand. It was an ICCF game and I was greatly assisted by Stockfish 17.1 (which is legal on ICCF). I doubt that any unaided human could have played that game.

Joel Johnson in his book "Attacking 101: Volume #005" says of my blitz game F Rhine vs NN, 2019, "White played a flawless Smith-Morra Gambit that IM Marc Esserman would have been proud of." Georges Koltanowski published F Rhine vs A Artidiello, 1974 in his syndicated newspaper column. Richard Palliser discusses the opening of F Rhine vs S Nagle, 1997 in his book "tango!"

I have played some theoretically significant correspondence games in the Damiano Variation of Petroff's Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Nxe5 Nxe4!?), demonstrating that Black's third move, commonly regarded as a blunder, is fully playable. https://www.chessgames.com/perl/che... Nikolaos Ntirlis analyzes two of my games in an article on the variation in Volume 158 of Chess Informant. Cyrus Lakdawala and Carsten Hansen include five of my games in their book on the line, "None Shall Pass: The Unbeatable Damiano Petroff: A tricky and surprisingly solid defense."

Jacob Aagaard analyzes the endings of two of my Internet blitz games in his 896-page tome "A Matter of Endgame Technique" (alas, mine was lacking). Cyrus Lakdawala includes my study-like win in F Rhine vs A Zhao, 2019 in his book "Tactical Training in the Endgame." He also mentions me, albeit not by name, in his book "In the Zone: The Greatest Winning Streaks in Chess History" when he refers to "The Classical Sicilian, which as one of my atheist students told me, is the closest thing he has to a religion." Cyrus analyzes my game against Gadir Guseinov in his book "The Makogonov Variation: A ruthless King's Indian killer."

Commentator Mato Jelic somewhat extravagantly calls my game E Sollano vs F Rhine, 1977 "The Greatest Ever Blitz Game Played in Chicago." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl8... See also Suren's analysis at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWa... My 7...Bxc5!! in that game, played the year before Boris Avrukh was born, is a big improvement on the flaccid 7...Bg6, his recommendation in the book "Beating 1.d4 Sidelines" (2012).

Someone also made a video (moves only) of J Aagaard vs F Rhine, 2021, a 2-1 bullet game where I drew and should've beaten the grandmaster - if only I'd had time! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-O... Someone else (or perhaps two different people) did a video (moves only) of Tal vs F Rhine, 1988, my loss to the great Mikhail Tal in a simul. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfk... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3o... The latter refers to me as a "great grandmaster!" which isn't quite accurate . . .

User: JimmyVermeer discusses my games NN vs F Rhine, 2021, P Pantelidakis vs F Rhine, 1974, and P Napetschnig vs F Rhine, 1977 in his video "The 109 fastest checkmates in chess history, part 10 of 11." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GT... The sequel "The 109 fastest checkmates in chess history, part 11 of 11," contains a Fool's Mate I played, which I had mentioned in a comment on this site. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0Z... Napetschnig-Rhine is also mentioned in https://www.chess.com/terms/fools-m.... Rick Kennedy discusses my game F Rhine vs NN, 2018 on his Jerome Gambit blog. https://jeromegambit.blogspot.com/2... My game F Rhine vs NN, 2010 is mentioned in the "Checkmate Patterns Course" by Raf Mesotten and John Bartholomew on chessable.com.

I composed this study, which Pal Benko published in "Benko's Bafflers" in Chess Life, May 2006:

White to play and draw


click for larger view

The solution is here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stale... It is based on an earlier study of mine, also published in Benko's column. Both compositions also appear in Harold van der Heijden's endgame study database. https://www.chess.com/news/view/76-... The above study is also cited in "The Complete Chess Swindler" by David Smerdon and "Rewire Your Chess Brain: Endgame Studies and Mating Problems to Enhance Your Tactical Ability" by Cyrus Lakdawala.

I was once one of the world's best players at suicide chess (also known as "losing chess"), a chess variant where one wins by giving away all of one's pieces. http://perpetualcheck.com/antichess...

I have successfully submitted 240 puns for Game of the Day. Game Collection: Puns I submitted. User: johnlspouge has remarked, "As far as I can tell, <FSR> is churning out 'actual puns' almost as fast as I can [insert bodily function of choice]." K Tjolsen vs S Marder, 2010. The coveted 2013 Caissar for Best (Worst) Pun went to "Control-Ault-Delete," the pun I submitted for Fischer vs R Ault, 1959, the Game of the Day on December 19, 2012. I won the 2019 Caissar in the same category for my greatest pun ever (and IMO one of the greatest chessgames puns ever) "Late December Back in '63: What a Lady, What a Knight!," N Littlewood vs B Brinck-Claussen, 1963, the Game of the Day on December 30, 2019. Since Caissars are awarded in January, my wins may illustrate recency bias.

Nine of my games have been Game of the Day: NN vs F Rhine, 1977 ("Strangers on a Train"), F Rhine vs F Lasch, 1986 ("Lasch Call"), K Thompson vs F Rhine, 1992 ("Like a Rhinestone Cowboy"), R Delaune vs F Rhine, 1997 ("Red Red Rhine"), F Rhine vs D Burris, 1997 ("Fred Rhine Felled"), F Felecan vs F Rhine, 2019 ("Felecan Brief"), F Rhine vs D Sprenkle, 1981 ("Sparkling Rhine"), F Rhine vs A Boerkoel, 1996 ("Das Rhinegold"), and F Rhine vs NN, 2018 ("'Twas the Night Before Christmas"). Six wins, a draw, and two losses.

I am responsible for World Junior Championship (1957), Vidmar Memorial (1969), Carlsen - Anand World Championship Match (2014), Game Collection: Drawing lines, and 32nd Correspondence World Championship (2020), among others. Legendary chess journalist Leonard Barden recently told me in an email, "I follow your many thoughtful contributions to chessgames.com with interest."

I am a member of the ChessBookie Hall of Fame, having finished fourth in the Summer 2015 Leg, seventh in the Winter 2016 Championship Leg, ninth in the Winter 2017 Championship Leg, ninth in the Spring 2017 Leg, and seventh in the Summer 2017 Leg.

I am very active on Chessable, where my handle is "Krakatoa." https://www.chessable.com/profile/K... I am a "Legend" and have 134 badges, five shy of the world record held by Maestro. https://www.chessable.com/badges/Ma...

>> Click here to see FSR's game collections.

Chessgames.com Full Member

   FSR has kibitzed 30700 times to chessgames   [more...]
   Oct-03-25 Chessgames - Politics (replies)
 
FSR: As I said before, the Comey indictment, besides being garbage, may be invalid since Lindsey Halligan does not legally hold office: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/KeLF...
 
   Oct-03-25 Hans Fahrni
 
FSR: <perfidious> Thanks. I have added him to the roll.
 
   Oct-03-25 Leopold Trebitsch
 
FSR: Leopold Trebitsch died at the chessic age of 64, like Robert James Fischer, William Steinitz, Howard Staunton, Conel Hugh O'Donel Alexander, Vladimir Savon, Pedro Damiano, Albin Planinc, Vladimir Antoshin, Edmar Mednis, Hans Fahrni, Vitaly Halberstadt, Giulio Cesare Polerio, Karl-Heinz ...
 
   Oct-01-25 FSR chessforum
 
FSR: Submitted: [Event "2nd DSM 0-2750 F (BUL)"] [Site "ICCF"] [Date "2025.08.10"] [Round "-"] [White "Cronje, Hector Albert"] [Black "Rhine, Frederick"] [ECO "A20"] [Result "1/2-1/2"] [WhiteElo "2357"] [BlackElo "2349"] [Source " ...
 
   Sep-29-25 Denker vs J Silman, 1975
 
FSR: Silman obviously didn't see 12...Bc4? 13.e5! Simply 12...Nc4 13.Bxc4 Bxc4 would have left him a little better.
 
   Sep-29-25 A Dueckstein vs Geller, 1991
 
FSR: Geller's only loss in the tournament, as IM Dueckstein adds another superstar to his list of victims (including Euwe, Spassky, and Botvinnik). Two rounds later, Smyslov as Black handed Dueckstein his only lost in the event. Smyslov and Geller went on to tie for first in this first World
 
   Sep-29-25 Smyslov vs B Zueger, 1991
 
FSR: I'm surprised that Smyslov couldn't Beat Zueger .
 
   Sep-29-25 Geller vs Najdorf, 1953 (replies)
 
FSR: Geller really effed him up.
 
   Sep-29-25 chessgames.com chessforum (replies)
 
FSR: I received an email from IM William John Donaldson offering over 1200 games of his friend, the celebrated author IM Jeremy Silman , who died two years ago: <Dear Frederick, Attached are over 1200 games of Jeremy Silman for possible inclusion at chessgames.com which currently has 252
 
   Sep-28-25 Chessgames - Sports (replies)
 
FSR: You may know that Tip O'Neill was Speaker of the House from 1977 to 1987. But did you know that in 1887 he hit for the cycle twice, in two games just a week apart? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_... OK, technically Thomas Phillip O'Neill Jr. was nicknamed "Tip" after the Canadian ...
 
(replies) indicates a reply to the comment.

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 104 OF 156 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Oct-16-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <saffuna> Yeah, he might have carried the provocation a little too far.
Oct-16-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  saffuna: And, how strong are non-passed pawns on the seventh rank?
Oct-16-20  technical draw: <If that induces people to vote for the Democratic candidate, it will be <McChrystal Blue Persuasion>.

Very good FSR. This site is turning gloomy, good to see some jokes.

Oct-18-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <technical draw> Glad to be of service.
Oct-18-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <saffuna> You make a good point.
Oct-30-20  centralfiles: I just got a chance to play the f4! move in the c3 sicillian variation i posted about awhile back ill post the full game soon.
Oct-30-20  centralfiles: https://www.chess.com/a/SW28inwG6Y82
Nov-02-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: I won a nice game in a clock simul yesterday against GM Avetik Grigoryan. It was a 16-board simul that he gave for supporters of <The Perpetual Chess Podcast>. He had 120 minutes with a 10-second increment, while his opponents had 30 minutes with a 10-second increment. He ultimately finished with +13 =1 -2. You can play over my game at https://denverchess.com/games/view/....

A few comments:

I had never seen 6.b4!? It turns out that it has been played four times before, and is apparently recommended on Grigoryan's <ChessMood> site. I didn't try to refute it.

After 14...Qe5, I was reasonably content. My queen is nicely centralized, and if he tries some weird mating attack with h4, I always have Qa1+ forcing the trade of queens.

His 15.Qg3?? was a gross blunder, overlooking the queen check and dropping a rook.

17.c3! was a nice desperation move, threatening to trap my queen with Rb1. It's surprisingly hard to extricate it, e.g. 17...Qa1 18.Bb1! keeps it bottled up, or 17...Qc1 18.Qd6! (taking away the a3 square) again threatens Rb1.

Dissatisfied with the alternatives, I found the stunning 17...f5!!, which exploits the fact that the White queen has very few squares available from which it can keep the black queen trapped. White has to go ahead with 18.Rb1. Not 18.exf5?? Re8+ 19.Kf3 Qd1+ 20.Kf4 Qxd2+ 0-1.

The point is 18.Rb1 f4!, when the white queen has no way to keep its black counterpart locked in, and has nothing other than 19.Qh3 d5 20.Rxh1 Bxh3 21.gxh3, leaving Black up an exchange in a completely won ending. I played very exactly to end the game five moves later.

The video of the simul is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaN...

A few high points (by my reckoning at least):

59:45 - Avetik decides on Qg3??

1:03:35 - seeing Qa1+ on the board, he howls in agony. "Ben, look what I did!"

1:04:45 Ben observes, "Krakatoa, 2300 blitz, so it is a pretty strong player that you blundered against at least."

1:22:43 - "f4. So maybe he calculated this one, yeah?"

1:26:20 - "d5. That was great calculation by Krakatoa."

1:49:40 I play ...f4+!, winning a piece, and he resigns. "You converted the advantage very, very, very cool."

2:10:12 With 46 minutes on his clock, Avetik blunders a rook in the last game, turning a win into a draw.

Here is the PGN I submitted to chessgames.com:

[Event "Clock simultaneous"]
[Site "lichess"]
[Date "2020.11.01"]
[EventDate "2020.11.01"]
[Result "0-1"]
[White "Avetik Grigoryan"]
[Black "Frederick Rhine"]
[ECO "B25"]

1.e4 c5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nd4 4.Nf3 a6 5.Bd3 g6 6.b4 Nxf3+ 7.Qxf3 cxb4 8.Nd5 Bg7 9.Rb1 Nf6 10.Bb2 O-O 11.Bxf6 Bxf6 12.Nxf6+ exf6 13.Rxb4 Qa5 14.Rb3 Qe5 15.Qg3 Qa1+ 16.Ke2 Qxh1 17.c3 f5 18.Rb1 f4 19.Qh3 d5 20.Rxh1 Bxh3 21.gxh3 Rad8 22.Rb1 Rfe8 23.f3 dxe4 24.fxe4 f5 25.Rxb7 f3+ 26.Ke3 f4+ 0-1

Nov-02-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: Nice Queen escape. I suspect that people have passed on that check/Rook capture because they didn't see the escape pattern.

I've never seen a clock simul in real life or online. Can the GM replay an opponent's last move to know what it was?

Nov-02-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <OCF> It looks like the piece that made the most recent move is highlighted in a different color. https://lichess.org/simul/2bsxmEBP
Nov-02-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: I doubt many games in chess history have ended with Black's last 2 moves being f3+ and f4+.
Nov-03-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <OCF> No doubt you are right.
Nov-03-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Submitted:

[Event "Pula op 30th"]
[Site "Pula CRO"]
[Date "2016.09.17"]
[EventDate "2016.09.??"]
[Round "9"]
[Result "1-0"]
[White "Igor Mestek"]
[Black "Adriano Voscilla"]
[ECO "C73"]
[WhiteElo "2110"]
[BlackElo "2186"]
[PlyCount "41"]

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 d6 5.Bxc6+ bxc6 6.d4 f6 7.Be3 Ne7 8.Nc3 Rb8 9.dxe5 fxe5 10.Qd3 Rxb2 11.Nxe5 dxe5 12.Qxd8+ Kxd8 13.O-O-O+ Ke8 14.Kxb2 Be6 15.Na4 Nc8 16.Nc5 Bc4 17.Kc3 Nb6 18.Nb7 Bxa2 19.Rd8+ Kf7 20.Bxb6 cxb6 21.Ra1 1-0

You can play over the game at https://denverchess.com/games/view/.... Those who cannot learn from history (O Feuer vs O'Kelly, 1934) are doomed to repeat it.

Nov-12-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen:

Good Evening!

On this game here:

N S Nilsson vs He Pedersen, 1997

The code is not being read well by cg.com-

<SUMMARY OF CHANGES
EVENT CHANGED [Event "Kige op"] TID=100476
Old site = K�ge DEN
New site = Kige DEN
SITE CHANGED
Old date = 0000-00-00
New date = 1997-00-00
DATE CHANGED
Round unchanged.>

If "Kige" is wrong, then let me know how to spell the place but without using any foreign punctuation marks brah.

Nov-12-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <jfq> The game was played at this place in Denmark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%...
Nov-12-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <centralfiles> Nice game!
Nov-12-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen:

Thank you, my good man!

I changed it to "Koge" for now. This is the best we can do at the moment on the venue tag:

N S Nilsson vs He Pedersen, 1997

[Event "Koge op"]
[Site "Koge DEN"]
[Date "1997.??.??"]
[EventDate "1997.??.??"]
[Round "5"]
[Result "1-0"]
[White "Nils Specht Nilsson"]
[Black "He Pedersen"]
[ECO "B90"]
[WhiteElo "2225"]
[BlackElo "?"]
[PlyCount "33"]

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 Nc6 7.Be2 g6 8.f4 Bg7 9.Nxc6 bxc6 10.e5 dxe5 11.Qxd8+ Kxd8 12.Bb6+ Ke8 13.Bf3 Rb8 14.Bc7 Rxb2 15.O-O-O Nd5 16.Bxd5 cxd5 17.Rxd5 1-0

==========

That was an interesting raft of uploads you submitted, by the way- including

NN vs Howard Stern, 2008

Who knew?

Nov-13-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: <jfq> I agree that <Koge> is the way to go. Dunno if you listen to <The Perpetual Chess Podcast>. In one episode, Dan Heisman was the interviewee. He mentioned the Howard Stern game. Stern was his student. He said Stern was a great student, did everything he told him to do. A smart guy despite the "shock jock" persona. His intelligence is apparent in his suggestively titled book <Howard Stern Comes Again>.
Nov-13-20  centralfiles: <FSR: <centralfiles> Nice game!> Thanks.
Was a playchess.com tournament game against a guy who has been playing that ...g6 line for at least 10 years and playing it well, not quite Grigoryan though...
Nov-13-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen:

<FSR> Good anecdote and I'm not surprised either. I have not heard <The Perpetual Chess Podcast>, but I will be sure to check it out.

I have always regarded <Howard Stern> to be one of the best, and most hard hitting, radio/TV/internet journalists around.

He never flinches. He always says exactly what he's thinking, and this is often something well worth paying close attention to.

Nov-14-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Submitted:

[Event "Chicago Industrial Chess League playoffs"] [Site "Batavia, IL, USA"]
[Date "2017.05.13"]
[Round "2.2"]
[White "Brock, William"]
[Black "Diaz, Pablo"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "B28"]
[PlyCount "63"]
[EventDate "2017.05.13"]
[Source "https://www.chicagochessleague.org/..."]

1. d4 b5 2. e4 Bb7 3. Nd2 a6 4. Bd3 Nf6 5. Ngf3 e6 6. O-O c5 7. c3 d6 8. Re1 Nbd7 9. e5 dxe5 10. dxe5 Nd5 11. Ne4 Qc7 12. Ng3 h6 13. a4 c4 14. Bc2 Rd8 15. axb5 axb5 16. Nd4 Qb6 17. Qg4 Ra8 18. Rxa8+ Bxa8 19. Nh5 g5 20. h4 Be7 21. hxg5 hxg5 22. Ng7+ Kd8 23. Bxg5 Nf8 24. Bxe7+ Nxe7 25. Be4 Bd5 26. Qf3 Qb7 27. Qxf7 Bxe4 28. Qe8+ Kc7 29. Qxe7+ Nd7 30. Ngxe6+ Kb8 31. Rxe4 Qxe4 32. Qd6+ 1-0

Nov-17-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  Troller: I posted a correction to N S Nilsson vs He Pedersen, 1997. The venue is "Køge" which is probably not friendly towards the pgn upload.

http://danbase.skak.dk/turneringer....

Nov-17-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  jessicafischerqueen:

<Troller> I saw your correction on Henrik Dahl Pedersen earlier today- nice one.

If you read a few posts up on <FSR's> forum you can see that he originally uploaded the correct spelling of the venue. We had to change that because the pgn uploader/processor page cannot parse any foreign punctuation. It only works with letters from the Roman alphabet, none of which use punctuation marks.

Nov-18-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: Greatest tournament of my life! (Even if it was only blitz.) https://lichess.org/tournament/sugR...
Nov-18-20
Premium Chessgames Member
  FSR: This game stopped the tournament leader in his tracks. https://lichess1.org/game/export/gi...
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