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Rough and Tumble

Submitted by SonofPearl on Fri, 04/04/2008 at 2:51pm.

There's nothing quite like the excitement of a full-blooded tactical game of chess to get the pulse racing.  As the saying goes, chess is 99% tactics, so mastery of this aspect of the game pays dividends.  Or so I've heard.  If tactics sorts out the men from the boys (sorry ladies) then far too often I'm the little boy in the corner trying not to wet himself...Laughing.

 

The trouble is that it's so easy to go astray when the analysis tree grows like a thicket and even with the luxury of being to move the pieces in correspondence games, one slip can be fatal.

 

In a recent game of mine against a friend at Chess.com I won a pawn, but had to accept a cramped position with awkwardly placed pieces and some weak pawns.  In the ensuing complications I thought I had the upper hand but it slipped away to a loss.  Analysing the game with Fritz afterwards, my silicon friend found tactics we both missed at the board - at one point the evaluation of the position by Fritz was as high as +18 for me (i.e. the equivalent of 18 pawns ahead! Surprised) with equal material on the board. 

 

If only it were that simple!

 

 


 

Comments:

by oginschile - 3 months ago
Salt Lake City, UT United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 764

Nice game, definitely some neat tactics involved there.

I almost wet myself just playing through it. Cool


by Loomis - 3 months ago
Tallahassee, FL United States
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 1906

The King's Indian is rough and tumble territory. And it seems every variation is equally complex and often quite sharp. Even the crummy variation that I played against you is full of tough positions against both sides.  I can sympathize with missing the check that lost the d-pawn. Too often I've missed a defensive resource that was only possible with a check.


 

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