English – Excalibur electronic 974 Manuel d'utilisation

Page 8

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the final position, it's hopeless for Black

because White will either promote his pawn

to a queen or capture whatever Black uses to

block on d8.

15. Robert Fischer vs. Reuben Fine,

New York, 1963

Nine years before winning the world cham-

pionship, Bobby Fischer played this Evan's

Gambit (a variation of the Giuoco Piano)

against his famous elder. Bobby sacrifices

two pawns in order to get his pieces out

quickly. Then he plays 14. h2-h4!, sacrific-

ing another pawn to force the Black queen

away from the g7-square. After that, Black's

king will be stuck in the center and in danger

of the h4-d8 diagonal. Bobby's final move,

17. Qg3!, forces Fine to resign, because he

must move his queen from the critical black

diagonal h4-d8. Even on 17. … Qxg3, White

ignores the capture of his own queen and

plays 18. Bf6 mate!

16. Lajos Portisch vs. Johannessen,

Havana, 1966

During the first half of this game, a Queen's

Gambit Slav, the great Hungarian grandmas-

ter Lajos Portisch locks up the center with a

d4-e5 structure by move 14. This gives him

a "beachhead" on e5 and makes it hard for

Black to counterattack in the center, which is

the standard antidote for an attack on the

wing. The next stage starts with 16. h4.

Portisch announces his intention to attack on

the kingside. He refrains from castling his

own king into safety because he knows it’s

safe enough in the center, at least for the time

it will take him to break through with his

attack. When Black tries to trade off pieces

with 17. … Bxf3, Portisch sacrifices a knight

for an unstoppable attack with 18. Bxh6 and

then calmly moves his king to the second

rank to bring his other rook into the game.

His Rxh4 was another brilliant sacrifice that

crushes any hope of defense. In the final

position, Black resigns because White will

simply play 26. Rxh6+, winning the Black

queen. If 26. … Qxh6, then White plays 27.

Qxh6+ and will mate on h7.

Using Setup Mode

At any time during a game when

it is your move, you may change the

position on the board by adding a

piece, removing a piece, or chang-

ing any of the pieces—for example,

from a queen to a knight.

Removing a Piece

Press the 2nd key, then the

SETUP key. Use the DIRECTION

keys to move the black shape over a

piece. Press GO to remove the

piece. Press CLEAR to continue

the game.

Adding or Changing a

Piece

Press the 2nd key, then repeated-

ly press the SETUP key to select

the correct piece. You will see the

piece flash on a square. Use the
DIRECTION

keys to move it to a

square. Then press GO to register

the piece. Press CLEAR to contin-

ue the game.

Setting Up Special

Positions

This is another terrific feature

that allows you to solve problems

that you see in magazines or news-

papers, or that you make up your-

self. It also allows you to enter

game positions you want to play, or

that you want Electronic Chess to

look at, perhaps using the Infinite

Search level.

15

ENGLISH

Another French Defense. In this one, the

great Latvian player and writer Nimzovich

(after whom the Nimzo-Indian Opening is

named—see page 6) plays an opponent who

wastes time stealing a pawn with 9. … Qxg2.

"Nimzo" plays a punishing 12. O-O-O!, sac-

rificing his knight. He finishes up with a

convincing queen sacrifice that forces

checkmate.

10. Jose Capablanca vs. Herman Steiner,

Los Angeles, 1933

The handsome Cuban World Champion Jose

Capablanca had a deceptively simple style.

Here we see him playing the old-fashioned

Four Knights' game and opening up his

opponent's kingside pawn protection by

move 11! His first rook sacrifice, 17. Rxf6!,

can't be refused and forces Black's king into

a deadly crossfire. With 23. Qxb7!, Capa

offers a second rook, which can't be taken

immediately because of 23. … Qxf6? 24.

Qb4 checkmate. But Black is forced to take

the rook a move later and mate follows on

the same square.

11. Mikhail Botvinnik vs. Paul Keres,

The Hague, 1948

Botvinnik won the world championship a

record three times. His opponent here is pos-

sibly the strongest 20th-century chess player

who did not become world champion. The

opening is a Nimzo-Indian. White's dou-
bled pawns

are potentially a long-term

weakness, but in the short term they control

a good many all-important central squares.

White plays cleverly to keep a grip on the

position and breaks through on the queen-

side with his pawn-push 17. c4-c5. This

gives him a chance to bring his queenside

rook into action. He swings it against the

kingside, sacrificing it on g7 to win. In the

final position, Black's king will be mated by

the White queen, supported by the bishop on

c1. Where did Black go wrong? Take a look

at his "unemployed" queen and rook on a8

and b8!

12. J. Banas vs. P. Lukacs, Trnava, 1986

In a Four Knights' Game, Black gets his king

into safety by castling and takes advantage

of White's awkward piece placement by sac-

rificing his knight with 9. … Nf3+. Then he

allows White to take his bishop on c5. But by

that time, White's king is surrounded. In the

final position, after 13. … Ng4, White's only

effective defender, his knight on e3, is forced

from its square, allowing … Qg2 mate.

13. Anatoly Karpov vs. Victor Kortchnoi,

Moscow, 1974

Twentieth-century chess perfected defense.

It is no longer typical to see top-level players

playing only for the attack. In fact,

Korchnoi at the time of this game was one of

the best in the world, and his forte was

defense. Many fine players would attack him

ingeniously, only to break up on his rock-

like fortifications. Still, World Champion

Karpov crushes him in only 27 moves with a

mating attack! In a classic manner against

Black's Sicilian Dragon defense (so named

probably because of the "tail" of control

Black's bishop makes from g7 to a1), Karpov

plays the St. George attack, castling queen-

side and prying open the h-file to slay the

dragon.

14. Boris Spassky vs. Tigran Petrosian,

Moscow, 1969

Spassky won the world championship from

Petrosian in the match that produced this

game. In this English Opening that becomes

a Queen's Gambit, you'll see that once again

White gets a strong center and quick
development

of his pieces. As early as 13.

Rd1, you can sense that Black is in danger.

His king has no piece defenders; his forces

seem passive while White's are aggressively

coordinated. As often happens in such situa-

tions, White breaks through with a pawn

push in the center, in this case 15. d4-d5!. It

clears the board for White's more active

forces. Petrosian, one of the best defenders

of all time, tries repeatedly to trade queens,

but White wisely rebuffs these offers, which

would take much of the power off the board.

White's d-pawn becomes a star, advancing

all the way to the 7th rank. Because of this

queening threat, White is able to sacrifice his

queen for one of Black's defending rooks. In

14

ENGLISH

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