Fat Boy Sim by David Jenkins
Stratford Chess Club
Home BOARD ONE
Members White: GM Mikhael Tal
Fat Boy Sim Black: Colin Searle
Board 1 Simul
Board 2 C40 Latvian and Elephant Gambits
Board 3  
   
 

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 f5

Here we go again, the Latvian Gambit, familiar territory to visitors to this web site. Colin, playing his Latvian against the Latvian, earns his opponent's smile of recognition and is himself also a happy man. I don't know why C40 links together Latvians and elephants, but the association cannot be relevant in the present context so I will pass it by in silence.

3.Nxe5 Qf6 4.Nc4

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This immediate move of the knight without a preceding d4 enters the Leonhardt variation of the Latvian Gambit, which has a good reputation, especially for a player like Tal who was admired as a great improviser with a genius for attacking middle game play. GM Tony Kosten in The Latvian Gambit Lives! characterises the Leonhardt variation as leaving open the possibility of d3 to attack Black's e pawn, seeing it as favourable to tactical players who like rapid development and piece play. One can see how it suited Mikhael Tal. In passing, I must note how disconcerting it is for those of us who play the Latvian Gambit that Kosten put an exclamation mark in his title. It suggests amazement (as in Lazarus lives!) or nervous over-assertion

4....fxe4 5.Nc3 Qe7

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Sorry Colin, but 5....Qe7, although Fritz spared it an annotated question mark, is a weak move and the direct cause of much subsequent heartache, as your Queen picks up the kind of problems that today would fall under sexual harassment at work legislation. The proverbial "book" is undecided between the virtues of three queen moves. Possible is 5....Qg6 or 5....Qe6, although the best shot seems to be 5....Qf7! According to Kosten, no other move "comes anywhere near being satisfactory". With this strange and inexplicable fifth move Colin leaves the book, although it is fair to remind readers that this was his first serious game with the Latvian and he was still carrying metaphorical L plates. At least there was a first rate driving instructor on board!

6.Nd5 Qc5 7.Qh5+ Kd8 8.d4!

Even at this early stage Fritz awards Tal "the full point" for a clearly won position.

8....exd3 The en passant capture is forced.

9.Bxe3??

I think this is a tremendous move by Tal, sacking a knight into the attack. It was made instantly and seemingly without calculation. The double question mark is not mine but gratis Fritz. Perhaps it was less a matter of the notoriously materialistic Fritz not being able to calculate far enough ahead to "justify" the sac, than the machine seeing something better. Fritz comments in withdrawing the offer of the "full point" that Tal has "given away a clear win" [suggesting 9.Ne5 (threatening Nf7 mate) g6 10. Qh4+ Be7 Qe4 with a winning position]. Why settle for a clear win when you can have serious chess fun and the promise of an unclear win, but a win all the same? This is mischievous chess at its best, and completely fails to match Hooper and Whyld's image of the cautious GM playing soundly in the simul whilst awaiting opponents' errors.

9....Qxc4 with, according to the greedy Fritz, a slight advantage to Colin.

I doubt it.

10.Bxd3

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Underdeveloped or what? One amusing feature of this position is that all of Colin's pieces are on their original squares apart from his harassed Queen. The long-legged cranes are about to be heading home to roost.

It is obvious what will happen next: Colin's Queen will retreat to one
of the two available bad squares, either the peripheral a4 or c6,
blocking his Knight's natural development move, and Tal will castle
long, giving himself five developed pieces and joined rooks. the sheer
amusement of this position must be worth a Knight

10....Qc6 11.0-0-0 d6??

Fritz shows its legendary impartiality by annotating Colin's move with a double question mark, chiding Black for "throwing away a nice position" by making a pawn move when dangerously "behind in development" [preferring 11....Ne7 12.Bg5 Qc5+]

12.Bg5+ Putting GM Mikhael Tal even further ahead in development and threatening an imminent attack.

12....Be7 13.Nxe7 Nxe7 14.Bb5

This has now become a tremendously exciting tactical game with neither player either willing or able to make positional moves. The last and the next few moves by Tal are a master class in deploying the decoy theme in the context of a discovered attack. The bishop is poisoned because of 15.Bxe7+ and the discovered attack on the Black Queen

14....Qc5 15.Rd5

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The decoy theme again. The rook is untouchable for the same reason.

15....Qxf2

This is an interesting and brave move by Colin, and almost certainly the correct one. Worried about his harassed Queen coming to a sticky end, he opts to trade it in for a pawn and a Rook, a strategy that is not without merit since Tal has already sacked a knight into the attack.

16.Rf1+- Qxf1+ 17.Bxf1

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How would our club members adjudicate this position?

17....Nbc6 18.Bb5 Be6

19.Rd1 Ne5? [19....Kd7 might have been better.] 20.Bf4

20.Qh4 would perhaps have made it even easier for White: [20....Re8 21.Bxe8 Kxe8 22.Bxe7 Rc8]

20....Nf7 21.Re1 Ng6 22.Rxe6 Nxf4

Even at this stage 22....c6 might offer a small chance although 23.Bxc6! is the correct response. Theme: clearance for h5-a5 bxc6 24.Qa5 Kd7.

23.Qxf7 c6 24.Rxd6+ Kc8 Black resigns

Colin decides to meet fate at the door. Not only has his position become hopeless but there is a demonstrable mate in six. Nevertheless it takes two to make a good game and Colin found a number of resources that kept Tal striving for his win. Both players managed to bequeath us a game well worth studying.

For those hoping to play well against a GM in a simul, perhaps the lesson to learn here is that is the GM may not necessarily be interested in a hazard-free game and, given the right encouragement, might enter into the spirit of things and risk the danger of over-reaching.

But not, alas, on this occasion.

 
 
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