CHESS Magazine 2016 July - zwiastun, wg DATY DODANIA

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//-->Few things in life are betterthan successfullyconducting a blistering attackon your opponent’s King!NEW!After the immense success of his award-winning classic Chess Strategyfor Club Players, IM Herman Grooten has now written an equallyaccessible follow-up primer on attacking chess. He concentrates ontraining the most valuable skills: visualizing, structuring, anticipating,calculating, memorizing and other mental aspects.This is not just another collection of useful thematic moves and motifsbut a complete and highly structured course of attacking techniques.And with fantastic new examples, clear explanations and lots ofinstructive exercises.paperback | 256 pages | £ 16.95 | available at the London Chess Centre - www.chess.co.uk/shopChessSubscription Rates:United Kingdom1 year (12 issues)2 year (24 issues)3 year (36 issues)Founding Editor: B.H. Wood, OBE. M.Sc †Executive Editor: Malcolm PeinEditors: Richard Palliser, Matt ReadAssociate Editor: John SaundersSubscriptions Manager: Paul HarringtonTwitter: @CHESS_MagazineTwitter: @TelegraphChess - Malcolm PeinWebsite: www.chess.co.ukContentsEditorial.................................................................................................................4Malcom Pein on the latest developments in the game60 Seconds with... John Saunders............................................................7The Shak Attack................................................................................................8Shakhriyar Mamedyarov came with a late charge in ShamkirViktor Korchnoi: 1931-2016..................................................................16Jonathan Speelman pays tribute to this lion of the game£49.95£89.95£125£60£112.50£165$90$170$250£72£130£180The Blindfold King vs The Machine........................................................20Timur Gareyev on his preparations for a notable world recordA Glut of Endgames......................................................................................23John Cox on some more enjoyable and instructive endingsFind the Winning Moves.............................................................................26The Indian Summers of Mir Sultan Khan.............................................30John Henderson remembers this enigmatic greatKey Strategic Principles: Part II..............................................................33Danny Gormally on opposite-coloured bishops in the middlegameOpening Trends...............................................................................................35A decent month for the Caro-Kann and NajdorfHow Good is Your Chess?..........................................................................36Daniel King reveals himself to be a fan of the IQPThe Foreplan....................................................................................................40Amatzia Avni shows how chess problems can help OTB-wiseSeven from Seven..........................................................................................43Keith Arkell reveals how he’s been spending his weekendsEurope1 year (12 issues)2 year (24 issues)3 year (36 issues)USA & Canada1 year (12 issues)2 year (24 issues)3 year (36 issues)Rest of World (Airmail)1 year (12 issues)2 year (24 issues)3 year (36 issues)Distributed by:Post Scriptum (UK only),Unit G, OYO Business Park, Hindmans Way,Dagenham, RM9 6LN - Tel: 020 8526 7779LMPI (North America)8155 Larrey Street, Montreal (Quebec),H1J 2L5, Canada - Tel: 514 355-5610Views expressed in this publication are notnecessarily those of the Editors. Contributions tothe magazine will be published at the Editors’discretion and may be shortened if space is limited.No parts of this publication may be reproducedwithout the prior express permission of the publishers.All rights reserved. © 2016Chess Magazine (ISSN 0964-6221) is published by:Chess & Bridge Ltd, 44 Baker St, London, W1U 7RTTel: 020 7288 1305 Fax: 020 7486 7015Email: info@chess.co.uk, Website: www.chess.co.ukFRONT COVER:Cover Design: Matt ReadCover Photography: CHESS Magazine ArchiveUS & Canadian Readers – You can contact us via ourAmerican branch – Chess4Less based in West PalmBeach, FL. Call toll-free on 1-877 89CHESS (24377).You can even order Subscriber Special Offers onlinevia www.chess4less.comMySystem: Chess Mnemonics................................................................44Derek Jones shares some useful memory aidesNever Mind the Grandmasters.................................................................46Carl Portman met a player who expected too much, too soonOverseas News...............................................................................................48Ernesto Inarkiev was simply on fire in the European IndividualHome News.......................................................................................................52Richard Bates, as well as Keith Arkell, has been busy of lateForthcoming Events.....................................................................................53Where will you be or what will you be following this summer?Solutions............................................................................................................54New Books and Software...........................................................................55All the latest releases, and reviews of two new GingerGM DVDsSaunders on Chess........................................................................................58John, for one, enjoyed Viktor Korchnoi’s illegible handwritingPhoto credits:ajedrezneoclasico.es (p.50, lower), Chess.com (p.24), Chess Club & ScholasticCenter of St. Louis (pp.25; 48, 50, top), Marck Cobb (p.20), Calle Erlandsson (pp.10, 14, 49,lower), Eteri Kublashvili (p.49, top), Ray Morris-Hill (pp.11, 53), shamkirchess.az (pp.8-9; 12;14, lower), Jennifer Vallens (pp.21-22), World Senior Championships (p.43).Printed in the UK by The Magazine PrintingCompany using only paper from FSC/PEFCsuppliers www.magprint.co.ukwww.chess.co.uk3The Shak AttackA late charge from Shakhriyar Mamedyarov stunned Fabiano Caruanaand Anish Giri at the 3rd Vugar Gashimov Memorial in ShamkirF.Caruana-S.MamedyarovRound 8Either winning a pawn down the c-file orforcing a won queen endgame.32 cxd5Îxc333Îxc3 Îxc334Ëxc3 Ëxd5White is quite simply lost as there’s no gooddefence to the threat of ...Ëd1+ and ...Ëc2.35Ëb4h5Instead, 35...e4! would have blocked thecheck on g4 and after 36Ëxa4 Ëd1+37Êg2Ëf3+38Êg1e3 39 fxe3Ëxg3+40Êf1Ëf3+41Êg1 Ëxe3+42Êg2h5! the b2-pawn falls and with it the game.36Ëxa4 Ëd3?Allowing White to open some lines againstthe black king and so stay on the board. Onceagain, the right move was 36...e4!.37 g4!Ëb1+38Êg2 Ëxb239 gxh5Ëc2Shakhriyar MamedyarovSeeded 6th; Finished 1stRating: 2748; Performance: 2854Assessment: A+It was fitting that the 3rd Vugar GashimovMemorial, once again sponsored by theSynergy Group, was won by one of Gashimov’scountrymen, Magnus Carlsen havingtriumphed in both 2014 and 2015. However,with just three rounds to go in Shamkir, such anoutcome appeared most unlikely. FabianoCaruana led with a whopping 5/6, while thehighest-rated Azeri player, ShakhriyarMamedyarov, was languishing on just 50%.Mamedyarov’s Pirc had been comprehensivelysqueezed to death by Pentala Harikrishna inthe second round and while he had bouncedstraight back by outplaying in turn PavelEljanov, he had never really looked like winningany of his next three games, even when apawn up against Hou Yifan.He may no longer be a regular fixture inquite the very strongest tournaments, butone must never write off the man oftenknown as the ‘Shak Attack’, on account of hisaggressive and creative style which hasalways made Mamedyarov a match foranyone on his day. Indeed, an early mistakefrom Eltaj Safarli was brutally punished inround 7, but Mamedyarov can do much morethan just attack, as he was to demonstrate.The eighth round saw a key showdownbetween Caruana and Mamedyarov, in whichthe American superstar was perhaps guilty ofoverpressing against an opponent then apoint and a half behind him.8With the ...d5 break imminent, Black’s positionis fractionally the more pleasant, but one wouldstill imagine the game likely to end in a draw.Indeed, 29Îd1d5 30Ëg4+ Êf831Ëf3wouldhave held everything together, and if 31...a432 cxd5Îcxd533Îxd5 Ëxd534Ëxd5 Îxd535Îc4.However, Caruana preferred to align hisrooks in rather a curious fashion.29Îee3?a4 30Ëe2d5 31Ëf3Likewise, 31 cxd5Îdxd532Ëf3 Ëd7would have seen Black unpinning and sooninvading, such as after 33Îcd3 Îxd334Îxd3Îc1+35Êg2 Ëb5.31...Îdc8!40Ëg4+After seeing his lead evaporate in round 8, Fabiano Caruana (right) had to settle for a play-offagainst Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, in which the Azeri star rode his luck, but emerged victorious.July 2016 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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