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13th Monarch Assurance Isle of Man International
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Chandler-Zhang Zhong was a long attritional game in which the English GM won two pieces for a rook. He ground down the Chinese GM in a game that lasted a few minutes short of seven hours. So we have three leaders: Korchnoi, Nakamura and Chandler.
Baklan dealt very severely with Simon Williams, who is chasing his third GM norm in a matter of months.
1
e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 Nc3 Bb4 4 e5 Ne7 5 a3 Bxc3+ 6 bxc3 b6 7 Qg4 Ng6 [Williams
played 7 ..Nf5 earlier in the tournament.] 8 h4 h5 9 Qd1 Ba6 10 Bg5
f6 (A rather suspect move) 11 Bxa6 Nxa6 12 Qd3 (Neatly forking
two knights, though Black is not losing a piece) 12 ..Kf7 13 Nh3!?
[Previous games have featured 13 Rh3!? (as suggested by the Irish
player Moles many moons ago) and have resulted in a lot of wins for White.
This also looks very good.] 13 ..Nb8 [Definitely not 13 ..fxg5?
14 Nxg5+ Ke7 15 Qxg6 Qg8 16 Rh3 when White has a big attack, as well as
an extra pawn.] 14 0-0 c5 15 Rae1 c4 [Black should probably just
get on with his development and play something like 15 ..Nd7 ] 16 Qf3
Nf8 17 exf6 gxf6 18 Nf4
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There were some big surprises in this round. English amateur Paul Hutchinson beat Dutch GM Harmen Jonkman. He was worse earlier in the game but a well-timed queenside attack caught the Dutchman unawares.
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White
is a pawn down with a rotten position on the kingside. But there is just
a chance that a queenside thrust might pay off... 29 b5! axb5 30 Rb4
b6 [Perhaps Black could carry on with his kingside advance and play
30 ..h4 etc.] 31 Qe2 h4 32 gxh4 Nxh4 33 Nxh4 Qxh4? [A bad mistake.
33 ..Rxh4! 34 Qxb5 g3! and now if 35 Qc6 or 25 Qa6, Black has time for 35
..Rxe4 when Black wins easily.] 34 Qxb5 Qe1+? [It is not too late
to start defending with 34 ..Qd8 and perhaps Black can still entertain some
winning chances.] 35 Kb2 Qe3?? [After this Black is lost. 35 ..Rh1
draws.] 36 Ra4! [Move order is important. If 36 Qa6? Rh1! rescues
a draw.] 36 ..Qc5 [Now if 36 ..Rh1 37 Qe8+ Kb7 38 Qa8#; 36 ..Kc8
37 Ra8+ Kb7 38 Qc6#] 37 Qa6 Qa5 [37 ..c6 38 Qa8+ Kc7 39 Ra7#] 38
Rxa5 bxa5 39 Qb5+ Kc8 40 e5 dxe5 41 Rxe5 Rg6 42 Re8+ Rxe8 43 Qxe8+ Kb7 44
Qxf7 [44 Qxf7 Rg5 45 d6 wins.] 1-0
The young Irish player Karl McPhillips beat the Chinese woman GM Li Ruofan.
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McPhillips
has some pressure in this position but now the Chinese player goes to
pieces) 28 ..Qe4? [28 ..Rxd1+!? 29 Qxd1 Qe6 30 Qd6+ Qxd6 31 Nxd6
Ne5 32 f4 Ng4 33 e4 f6 34 Nf5 wins a pawn for White but perhaps Black
can mobilise her queenside pawns] 29 Rxd8+ Nxd8 30 Qd1 Qxf5 31 Qxd8+
Qc8 32 Qxh4 [32 Qxc8+? would lead to a king and pawn ending which
is better for Black.] 32 ..Qe6? (A surprising error. With the black
h4 pawn out of the way, the king and pawn ending is easily won for White)
33 Qd8+ Qc8 34 Qxc8+ Kxc8 35 c4 a6 36 a4 Kc7 37 g4 b5 38 cxb5 axb5
39 axb5 Kb6 40 Kf1 Kxb5 41 Ke2 Kb4 42 Kd2 Kb3 43 Kc1 Kc3 44 g5 Kd3 45
f4 1-0
Game of the day was Kulaots vs Conquest. The Hastings-born grandmaster is a witty and engaging character in real life and somehow manages to imbue his games with humour. This was typical of his surreal style.

1
e4 c6 2 d4 d5 3 Nc3 dxe4 4 Nxe4 Nd7 5 Ng5 Ndf6 6 Bc4 e6 7 Qe2 Bd6 8 Bd2
Qc7 9 0-0-0 a6 10 Kb1 h6 11 Ne4 Nxe4 12 Qxe4 Nf6 13 Qe2 b5 14 Bd3 Bb7
15 Nf3 c5 16 dxc5 Bxc5 17 Ne5 0-0 18 Rhe1 Rfd8 19 g4 (A very natural
attacking move against the Caro Kann) 19 ..Rd4!? (Stuart Conquest
happily embroils himself in some tactical complications.) 20 c3 Ra4
(If you or I played a move like that, our rook would soon drop off
the board. But Stuart is a law unto himself) 21 Bc2 [21 b3 Ra3
22 Bc1 looks tempting but Stuart was no doubt banking on 22 ..Nd5! which
looks quite handy for Black. One day Black's a3 rook might get to join
in an attack down the a-file.] 21 ..Be4 22 Nd3 Bxd3 23 Qxd3 Rxg4 24
Qf3 [Looking through this game with Andy Smith, I felt inspired to
try 24 Bxh6!? here. Amazingly, instead of awarding it the usual -15.00
that my moves are usually worth, Fritz quite likes this idea. 24 ..gxh6
25 Qf3 Rd8 26 Qxf6 is the idea, though after 26 ..Rxd1+ 27 Rxd1 Qxh2 Black
can defend the big threat: 28 Rd8+ Bf8 and Black is holding.] 24 ..Rb8
25 h3 [25 Bxh6 is still possible] 25 ..Rh4 26 Rg1 Be7 27 Rg3 (The
reason Kulaots probably didn't like the Bxh6 idea is that he has this
big attack down the g-file. But, cool as a cucumber, Black virtually ignores
it and takes material.) 27 ..Rd8 28 Rdg1 Rxd2! 29 Rxg7+ Kf8 30 Qg2
Bb4!
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Dutchman Bernard Bannink restored some national pride by beating IM Almira Skripchenko. Perhaps some of these foreign stars forgot to say "good morning, fairies" when they crossed Fairy Bridge on the coach trip this morning. They can't say I didn't warn them.
Finally,
Neville Twitchell, who works in the BCM shop, celebrated his 50th birthday
today (he reminded me of this by writing it on his scoresheet). What does
every chess player want for his/her birthday? A win, of course. Neville
got exactly that when Dave Collier gifted him a piece. But I'll spare
Dave's blushes and leave you to look at that one for yourself.
Round 6 Bd WHITE Result BLACK 1 GHAEM MAGHAMI,Eh 2552 (4) ½ - ½ KORCHNOI,Viktor 2568 (4½) 2 CHANDLER,Murray 2531 (4) 1 - 0 ZHONG,Zhang 2603 (4) 3 SPEELMAN,Jon 2555 (3½) 0 - 1 NAKAMURA,Hikaru 2601 (4) 4 MILOV,Vadim 2683 (3½) ½ - ½ SPRENGER,Jan Mic 2477 (3½) 5 ROGERS,Ian 2588 (3½) ½ - ½ SMIRIN,Ilya 2671 (3½) 6 GALLAGHER,Joseph 2541 (3½) 0 - 1 VOLKOV,Sergey 2625 (3½) 7 KOTRONIAS,Vassil 2608 (3½) ½ - ½ SCHNEIDER,Dmitry 2454 (3½) 8 BAKLAN,Vladimir 2595 (3½) 1 - 0 WILLIAMS,Simon K 2427 (3½) 9 KULAOTS,Kaido 2593 (3½) 0 - 1 CONQUEST,Stuart 2488 (3½) 10 PAVLOVIC,Milos 2498 (3½) 1 - 0 GREET,Andrew N 2310 (3½) 11 GRAFL,Florian 2411 (3) ½ - ½ WELLS,Peter 2494 (3½) 12 GOTTSCHLICH,Cars 2382 (3) 0 - 1 MOISEENKO,Alexan 2640 (3) 13 IORDACHESCU,Vior 2633 (3) 0 - 1 BOSBOOM-LANCHAVA 2370 (3) 14 AGREST,Evgenij 2602 (3) 1 - 0 PEEK,Marcel 2406 (3) 15 ROWSON,Jonathan 2558 (3) 1 - 0 AFEK,Yochanan 2325 (3) 16 ZAWADZKA,Jolanta 2272 (3) 0 - 1 KIRIAKOV,Petr 2555 (3) 17 RAMESH,Ramachadr 2484 (3) ½ - ½ COX,John 2314 (3) 18 HANDKE,Florian 2461 (3) 1 - 0 MANNION,Steve R. 2333 (3) 19 BANNINK,Bernard 2280 (3) 1 - 0 SKRIPCHENKO,Almi 2453 (3) 20 MCNAB,Colin 2427 (3) 1 - 0 RENDLE,Thomas 2258 (3) 21 PERT,Richard 2407 (3) ½ - ½ GORDON,Stephen 2338 (2½) 22 HOLZKE,Frank 2492 (2½) 1 - 0 GOODGER,Martyn 2136 (2½) 23 BERZINSH,Roland 2455 (2½) ½ - ½ GRANT,Alan 2193 (2½) 24 ARAKHAMIA-GRANT, 2446 (2½) 1 - 0 BIGG,Andrew J 2275 (2½) 25 KOLBUS,Dietmar 2303 (2½) 0 - 1 SARAKAUSKAS,Gedi 2442 (2½) 26 HUTCHINSON,Paul 2216 (2½) 1 - 0 JONKMAN,Harmen 2425 (2½) 27 MCPHILLIPS,Karl 2172 (2½) 1 - 0 RUOFAN,Li 2414 (2½) 28 ARMBRUSTER,Alexa 2351 (2½) ½ - ½ HAGESAETHER,Arne 2101 (2½) 29 HOWELL,David W 2334 (2½) 1 - 0 SPANTON,Tim 2004 (2½) 30 HOUSKA,Jovanka 2375 (2) 1 - 0 WERNER,Gert 2085 (2) 31 NOORDHOEK,Henk 2095 (2) 0 - 1 RAMASWAMY,Aarthi 2299 (2) 32 LUTTON,J Ezra 2134 (2) 0 - 1 ASHTON,Adam 2270 (2) 33 PLANT,Paul R 2107 (2) ½ - ½ GROFFEN,Hans 2244 (2) 34 VAN KEMENADE,Rud 2107 (2) 0 - 1 SPENCE,David 2236 (2) 35 HORTON,Justin 2091 (2) ½ - ½ WALTON,Alan J 2208 (2) 36 MILLIGAN,Helen 2077 (2) ½ - ½ SMITH,Andrew P 2205 (2) 37 DUNN,Andrew 2192 (2) ½ - ½ NICHOLSON,John 1834 (2) 38 MURTAGH,Dermot 1889 (2) 1 - 0 HUTCHINSON,Norma 2176 (2) 39 TWITCHELL,Nevill 2003 (2) 1 - 0 COLLIER,David O. 2168 (2) 40 ALMOND,Richard J 2158 (1½) ½ - ½ ADAMS,Phil 2124 (2) 41 ALLEN,Keith 2241 (1½) 1 - 0 TRUMAN,Richard G 2023 (1½) 42 FOX,Anthony 2123 (1½) 1 - 0 DOSSETT,Christop 1886 (1½) 43 WAUGH,Jonathan C 1885 (1½) ½ - ½ PIMMINGSTORFER,C 2116 (1½) 44 PYM,Thomas W 2059 (1½) 0 - 1 FRASER-MITCHELL, 2082 (1½) 45 GORKA,Carl 1882 (1½) 0 - 1 CANNON,Richard 2060 (1½) 46 WEBSTER,Richard 2008 (1) ½ - ½ FAIRBAIRN,Steve 2057 (1) 47 BENNION,David A. 2052 (1) 1 - 0 MARKS,Ian 1910 (1) 48 HENRICHSEN,Jens 2084 (1) 1 - 0 DE LAGONTRIE,Jea 1968 (½)