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sexta-feira, 7 de fevereiro de 2014

Ricardo x Argyle (844) resign / desisti

Partida de Xadrez / Chess Game

[Event "Chessmaster: Grandmaster Edition Rated Game"]
[Site ""]
[Date "2014.2.7"]
[Round ""]
[White "Ricardo"]
[Black "Argyle"]
[TimeControl "2400"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO " "]

1.e4 c5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.Nf3 g6 4.Bc4 e6 5.d4 Bd6 6.Bg5 Qa5 7.Qe2 cxd4 8.O-O-O Bc7 9.Nd2 dxc3 10.bxc3 Qxg5 11.g3 d6 12.f4 Qf6 13.f5
Qxc3 0-1



Black wins!
Defeats happen... This is the first time Argyle defeated you - why don't you try a rematch?
OK, resigning here seemed a logical choice.
Game type: Dominated by black
Domination percentage: 19%, starting from move 8
Opening used: Sicilian Defense / Nc6 Variation
Worst move: 9, Nd2, Decrease: 5.48
Suggested opponent: Teea (rating 723)
Your rating decreased by 16 points and is now 808.
Your Standard rating decreased by 16 point(s) and is now 808.





[Event "Chessmaster: Grandmaster Edition Rated Game"]
[Site ""]
[Date "2014.2.7"]
[Round ""]
[White "Ricardo"]
[Black "Argyle"]
[TimeControl "2400"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO " "]


{Annotations by Chessmaster: Grandmaster Edition Auto-Annotator. 3 seconds per move.

        White    Black
Book Move    3    3
Leave
Book    1    0
CMX Agrees    6    9
CMX Disagrees    4    1
Agreement Pct.    60%    90%
Total Error    9.78    2.04
Relevant Error    9.78    2.04
Missed
Mate    0    0
Moved Into Mate    0    0

}
1.e4
{B00 King's Pawn Opening. The King's Pawn opening move is both popular and logical. It controls the center, opens lines
for both the Queen and the Bishop, and usually leads to an open game in which tactics, rather than slow maneuvering,
predominates.}
1...c5
{B20 Sicilian Defense. The Sicilian Defense has an ancient lineage. It creates an unbalanced position in which both
sides have full rein for play, and allows Black to call the shots at least to some extent.}
2.Nc3
{B23 Sicilian Defense / Closed Variation. The Closed Variation looks toward the fianchetto of the King's Bishop,
restraining the Black d pawn in the meantime.}
2...Nc6
{B25 Sicilian Defense / Closed Variation 2.Nc3 Nc6. 95% of the time in the Sicilian, White puts his Knight on c3. White
may yet play the center break d4, but for the moment the question is yet to be answered. White's second move suggests the
possibility of NOT playing d4, and playing a closed type position instead of the slashing, attacking types of position more
common to the Sicilian.}
3.Nf3
{B30 Sicilian Defense / Nc6 Variation (transposed).}
3...g6
{B30 Sicilian Defense / Nc6 Variation.}
4.Bc4
{Out of Opening Book. d4 would have been in the Sicilian Defense / Nc6 Variation book opening. Blocks Black's pawn at c5
and enables the short castle.
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4...e6 5.d4 Bd6 6.Bg5
{Attacks Black's queen and blocks Black's pawn at g6.}
6...Qa5
{Moves it to safety and pins White's knight at c3.}
7.Qe2
{Leads to 7...cxd4 8.O-O-O dxc3 9.Rxd6 Ne5 10.Bf4 Qb4 11.Nxe5 Qxd6 12.Nxg6 cxb2+ 13.Kxb2, which wins a bishop, a knight,
and two pawns for a rook, a knight, and two pawns. Better is O-O, leading to 7...Nxd4 8.Nxd4 cxd4 9.Nb5 Be5 10.f4 Bg7 11.e5,
which wins a knight for a knight and a pawn.}
7...cxd4
{Attacks White's knight at c3. Black wins a pawn. Black is up a pawn in material.}
8.O-O-O
{Partially pins Black's pawn at d4 and frees the pin on White's knight at c3.}
8...Bc7
{Leads to 9.Nb5 a6 10.Nxc7+ Qxc7 11.Nxd4 Nxd4 12.Rxd4 h6 13.Bd2 b5 14.Bb3 Bb7, which wins two knights for a bishop, a
knight, and a pawn. Better is dxc3, leading to 9.Rxd6 Qb4 10.Qd3 Qxb2+ 11.Kd1 Nb4 12.Qe2 Qb1+ 13.Bc1 Nxa2 14.Bxa2 Qxa2 15.e5,
which wins a bishop, a knight, and two pawns for a bishop and a knight. This was black's only significant error, but the game
remained within reach of either player. White eventually
resigned.
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9.Nd2
{Ouch! Hangs the bishop at g5. Leads to 9...dxc3 10.Nf3 h6 11.Be3 Nf6 12.Qd3 cxb2+ 13.Kxb2 Ne5 14.Nxe5 Bxe5+ 15.Kb1,
which wins a knight and a pawn for two knights and a pawn. Much better is Nb5, leading to 9...a6 10.Nxc7+ Qxc7 11.Nxd4 Nxd4
12.Rxd4 h6 13.Bd2 b5 14.Bb3 Bb7, which wins a bishop, a knight, and a pawn for two knights. This was white's most critical
error. Even though the game was within reach here, white eventually
resigned.
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9...dxc3
{Attacks White's knight at d2.}
10.bxc3
{Isolates own pawn at c3, own pawn at a2, and own pawn at c2. Leads to 10...Qxg5 11.h4 Qa5 12.Qe3 Nf6 13.f4 Qa3+ 14.Kb1
Bb6 15.Qf3 O-O, which wins a pawn for a bishop. Better is Nf3, leading to 10...Ne5 11.Nxe5 cxb2+ 12.Kb1 Bxe5 13.f4 Bc3, which
wins a knight for a knight and a pawn.}
10...Qxg5
{Pins White's knight and attacks White's pawn at g2. Black wins a bishop and a knight for a pawn. Black is up a
bishop and a knight in material.}
11.g3
{Moves it out of immediate jeopardy.}
11...d6 12.f4
{Frees White's knight from the pin and threatens Black's queen.}
12...Qf6
{Moves it to safety and attacks White's pawn at c3.}
13.f5
{Slightly better is Kb2.}
13...Qxc3
{Blocks White's pawn at c2. Black wins a pawn. Black is ahead by a bishop, a knight, and a pawn in material. White
resigns.
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0-1

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