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Hendon Chess Club

Established 1947 - Middlesex League Champions 2009-2010 - City of London Rapidplay League Champions 2009

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West London 1 v Hendon 1 - 24 March 2010

Bd West London 1 Grade Result Hendon 1 Grade
1 Hayler, Andrew 180 0 - 1 Mures, Cristian 199
2 Burke, John S 172 0 - 1 Senior, Gary 199
3 Bass, John W 178 0 - 1 Eden, Tomer 195
4 Jezierski, Colum 171 0 - 1 Raoof, Adam N 185
5 Campbell, Russell 166 0 - 1 Ellis, Daniel 179
6 Kane, Robert 157 1 - 0 du Buf, Paul -
7 Bunn, Matthew 156 1 - 0 Pepe, Salvatore 159
8 Bote, Elena - ½ - ½ Limonov, Petr 144
  2½-5½  

Match report by Dan

The Lions are facing a tough test to prove their status as kings of the Middlesex League Division 1 jungle. Having dropped only half a match point so far in 9 matches, the good run needs to be continued until the end of the season if they are to be crowned champions. Last Wednesday, we faced a tough West London side at Chiswick town hall. The final scoreline 5½– 2½ as ever flatters the winning side in what was a tightly fought contest.

On board 1, after a quiet opening by his standards, Cristian pushed for an advantage with white with the move e5, which was unexpected by the W London captain. Although the pawn seemed to be a weakness, it served to displace the black minor pieces and enable Cristian to manoeuvre around, eventually catching the unfortunate black king on h6 with his queen.

               
     
         
             
           
       
           
           

After 31…Nd3 Cristian finished off with 32. Bxh6+ Kxh6 33. Qh4+, and black resigned as 34. Ng5! is decisive.

On board 2, Gary quickly achieved a large dominant mobile pawn centre with the black pieces. Despite pushing all the white pieces back to the first and second ranks, Gary was not able to achieve the final breakthrough that he searched for during the middlegame. White gave up his g-pawn for some activity against a castled black king and this proved sufficient for him to hold on until a time scramble ensued where Gary seemed to hold all the trumps. White’s flag fell just as one of the mighty black pawns was finally edging towards promotion.

On board 3 Tomer played true to his style, winning the game with a series of quiet but deadly dominating positional moves. Using a couple of advanced outposts for his minor pieces and an open c-file he eventually reached a position so quiet and so deadly that his opponent was forced to resign. The tide seemed to turn when his opponent was forced to retreat his queen back to a very passive position after a tasty zwischenzug by a white bishop (though Tomer has pointed out that …Qe6 would be good for Black after Bd4 – ed).

         
       
         
             
       
           
           
             

Tomer played the deadly 30.Bc5! and his opponent threw in the towel.

On board 4, Adam gradually squeezed his opponent onto the defensive despite having the black pieces. This was achieved with a series of impeccably timed counterpunches to white’s various attempts to assume the initiative. Eventually, having placed all his pieces on to their best available squares, Adam took the plunge with the brave Nxg2 (pawn), opening the way to the white king. Exploiting a pin from the bishop’s outpost on e4 to the king in the corner until the last possible moment, Adam was able to reach a king and pawn ending with an extra pawn and a decent king position. He handled the time pressure well and won the game, retaining his unbeaten record for the season.

       
     
         
           
             
           
         
           

Adam took the plunge with 37…Nxg2!! and after 38. Rxg2 Rxf3! 39. Nxf3 Rxf3! 40. Rff2 Rxf2 41. Qxf2 Kg8!, it was all over bar the clock-banging and swindling attempts, as Black exchanged off into a won pawn ending.

On board 5, I had the white pieces yet again. I had prepared to play another game of the ‘spanish torture’ variety but such hopes had to be thrown on the scrapheap when my opponent answered my opening move with the unexpected move 1…e6 ! I went into the advance variation of the French and seemed to catch my opponent napping when I kept the black king in the centre with f7+ after taking on f6. Continuing by opening the f-file and making a few unassuming developing moves, my opponent then blundered into a family fork when the hapless black king was trying to run for cover on the queenside.

       
   
         
       
             
         
   
     

Dan’s nifty 10. exf6 Nxg3 11. f7+! Kxf7 12. fxg3 left his opponent’s king to roam the board looking for safety.

On board 6, Paul (who did not complain about playing black for the 7th game in succession!) faced the wrath of a white attack after he captured on f6 with the g-pawn in a Trompowsky-type opening. His opponent played the attack in great style – at one stage with two pieces already en prise, he smashed through Paul’s defences with Qxd5! Paul had to resign just a few moves later.

On board 7, Salvatore was not able to contain his young and wily opponent or tame the Kings Indian setup which he faced. Black eventually won the pawn on a2 and had a mighty pawn on b2 that spelled the end for ‘mustang’ Salvatore, despite desperately searching for counterchances until the end.

On board 8, Petr found himself the exchange down after going in for some unclear tactical complications. However, his female Russian opponent could not rescue her rook which was under siege on the seventh rank and so was forced to repeat the position, and the game was drawn.

The Lions must now go on and face King’s Head away on Monday. Can they hold on and capture the championship for Hendon? Time will tell chess fans…

Division 1 Standings
1. Kings Head 1 – 9/10 (57.5)
2. Hendon 1 – 8.5/9 (52)
3. Muswell Hill 1 – 6.5/14 (50.5)
4. Ealing 1 – 6.5/9 (49.5)
5. Hackney 1 – 3.5/8 (29.5)
6. Hackney 2 – 3/12 (39)
7. Hammersmith 1 – 1.5/10 (21.5)
8. West London 1 – 1.5/8 (20.5)

Comments [3]

  1. on Mar 25, 05:48 PM #'Streetfighter'

    In Adam’s game, how does white defend after 31…Rf8?

  2. on Mar 25, 09:31 PM #Dark Horse
               
             
               
               
               
           
           
             

    I don’t have a chess engine to hand, but to me 31...Rf8 32.Bxd5 seems good, eg 32….Nxf3 33.Bxe4 Qxe4 34. Qxe4 Rxe4 35.Rf2 Re3 36.gxf3 Rexf3 (0.03) seems about level. Wish I had a chess engine to hand though – I’m sure it would find something interesting.


  3. on Mar 26, 04:56 PM #Adam Raoof

    Engine says 31…Rf8 32. Bxd5 is level, but suggests 31…Nxf3 32. gxf3 Qh3 33. Qf2 Rf7 with a clear advantage (and wins the queen) – but I was trying to maintain the tension, and stick a knight where it really hurts, perhaps f4.

    Actually in the game 40…Qf5 just wins a piece, but it was nice to play the game to a finish in the endgame ;-)

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