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I tried running the analysis on Fritz 30 sec a move but got very little feedback except that 18 .. Be6 gets a question mark (?) , but nothing else . Maybe someone more experienced can give me feedback on the moves played . I was playing the white pieces . Thanks a lot .

1. f4 d5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. e3 c5 4. b3 e6 5. Bd3 Nc6 6. O-O Be7 7. Bb2 O-O 8. h3 Qc7 9. Nh2 Nb4 10. Ng4 Nxd3 11. Nxf6+ Bxf6 12. Bxf6 gxf6 13. cxd3 e5 14. Nc3 d4
15. Nd5 Qd6 16. e4 f5 17. fxe5 Qxe5 18. Qh5 Be6 19. Ne7+ Kh8 20. exf5 Bd5 21.
Rae1 Qd6 22. f6 Rg8 1-0

2007-10-02 02:52:35 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Games & Recreation Board Games

2 answers

With 9...e5 black could already break in the centre, taking advantage of the slow manouvering of the white KN. Also 10...Nxg4 would have given a clear plus for black. Basically the WB is misplaced on d3.
13...e5 is overly pushy, but after 15Nd5 black could have had about an equal game with 15...Qd8. Therefore 15Ne4 was to be preferred, when white is still better.
18...Be6 is not to be overly criticised, as black is already in some difficulty, and 18... Kh8 would have been better, but certainly 20...Bd5 is very poor. 20...Bd7 or 20...Qf6 would have allowed black to wriggle for a while longer, though white is clearly winning by this time

2007-10-03 05:23:35 · answer #1 · answered by netruden 2 · 1 0

The Nh2-g4 maneuvre was a bit long-winded--and I think Black could've gotten a good game by playing 10...Nxg4 11Qxg4 f6 followed by taking on d3 (with the 2 Bs and a flexible game). But by the 14th move it looks like you have the advantage (even if Black doesn't play 18...Be6 you have a lot of threats, like g4 or Qh6). An interesting position.

2007-10-03 02:42:41 · answer #2 · answered by Omar Cayenne 7 · 2 0

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