I have tried to significantly decrease the amount of correspondence games I play for awhile now but the amount of games in my case is more likely to increase than to decrease. I am going over 300 games any time now. The time needed for moving in all of the games takes as it is too long as I am not able to move in all of the games everyday, actually only at small part of the games I can actually make a move in any given day. I have not lost a single game on time in years, counting only corr games of course because blitz games I do lose on time every now and again. I like to play as well as I can possibly play which means that I may only make moves on games that have less than two days until I time out, there just does not seem to be enough time for other games. I have updated mate in ones, twos and threes with few more puzzles today. The game below is one of the rare examples when I have played the Caro-Kann with the black pieces and even rarer example of me actually winning a game with it.
The blog features analysed games of mine, consisting of chess, chess960 and 3 check. There are also puzzles that you can solve by moving the pieces on the board and the solution can be checked by using the engine provided by the ChessBase's publishing tool. All games and puzzles can be downloaded for free!
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20 Nov 2014
B12 Caro-Kann: Advance Variation (1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 Bf5 4.g4 Bg6)
[Event "Let's play chess"]
[Site "http://gameknot.com/chess.pl?"]
[Date "2014.09.23"]
[Round "?"]
[White "gwhg"]
[Black "Vierjoki, Timo"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "B12"]
[WhiteElo "1457"]
[BlackElo "1686"]
[Annotator "Tactical Analysis 2.10 (5s), TV"]
[PlyCount "76"]
[EventDate "2014.??.??"]
1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 Bf5 4. g4 {B12 Caro-Kann Defense: Advance Variation.
Bayonet Attack} Bg6 {B12 Caro-Kann: Advance Variation} 5. f3 $146 (5. e6 Nf6 6.
Nd2 fxe6 7. Be2 Nbd7 8. g5 Ne4 9. Nxe4 Bxe4 10. Bd3 Bf5 11. h4 g6 12. h5 Bg7
13. h6 Bf8 14. Bf4 c5 15. dxc5 Qa5+ 16. c3 Qxc5 17. Nf3 Bg4 18. Be3 Qd6 19.
Bxg6+ hxg6 {Levine,M-Santasiere,A New York 1922 0-1}) (5. Ne2 e6 6. Nf4 Ne7 (
6... Be4 7. Rg1 Nd7 8. Be3 Qb6 9. Nd2 O-O-O 10. Nb3 a5 11. Bd3 a4 12. Bxe4 axb3
13. Bd3 bxc2 14. Qxc2 g5 15. Ne2 h6 16. Nc3 Kb8 17. a4 Bb4 18. Ke2 f6 19. a5
Bxa5 20. Rgb1 fxe5 21. b4 {Rojahn,E-Diaz Perez,J Buenos Aires 1939 1-0}) (6...
Be7 7. Be3 Bg5 8. Nxg6 hxg6 9. f4 Bh4+ 10. Kd2 c5 11. c3 cxd4 12. cxd4 Nc6 13.
Nc3 Nge7 14. Rc1 g5 15. fxg5 Nxe5 16. Kc2 Nc4 17. Bxc4 dxc4 18. Qf3 Nd5 19.
Rcf1 Nxe3+ 20. Qxe3 Qxg5 21. Qf3 {Velimirovic,D-Hort,V Vinkovci 1970 0-1}) 7.
h4 h5 8. gxh5 Bf5 9. c3 c5 10. b4 cxd4 11. cxd4 Nbc6 12. a3 Qb6 13. Be3 Rc8 14.
Nd2 Nxd4 15. Nb3 Nc2+ 16. Qxc2 Qxe3+ 17. fxe3 Rxc2 18. Nd4 Rb2 19. Bd3 Bxd3 {
Lupu,S (2160)-Lobron,E (2545) Paris 1990 1/2-1/2 (45)}) (5. Nc3 h5 6. f3 hxg4
7. fxg4 e6 8. h4 Rxh4 9. Qf3 Be7 10. Bd3 Rxh1 11. Qxh1 Bxd3 12. cxd3 Bg5 13.
Qh8 Kf8 14. Nf3 Bxc1 15. Rxc1 Na6 16. a3 c5 17. Ne2 cxd4 18. Nf4 Nc7 19. Rc2
Ne8 {Sellmayer,J-Kosensky,M Germany 1993 1-0}) (5. Nh3 e6 {1-0 (29) Rojahn,
E-Diaz Perez,J Buenos Aires 1939}) 5... e6 6. h4 {-1.77/17} (6. Ne2 $17 {
-1.35/20}) 6... h5 $19 7. g5 {-2.06/20} (7. Nc3 $17 {-1.33/22}) 7... Nd7 {
-0.95/21} (7... c5 $19 {-2.06/20} 8. Bb5+ Nd7) 8. a3 {-1.86/19} (8. c3 $17 {
-0.95/21}) 8... c5 {-1.36/21} (8... Qb6 $19 {-1.86/19} 9. c3 Ne7) 9. Be3 {
-2.17/21} (9. Bd3 $17 {-1.36/21 was called for.}) 9... Qb6 10. b3 $2 {-3.15/19}
(10. Nc3 $17 {-1.49/22}) 10... cxd4 11. Bxd4 Qc7 $2 {-1.35/21} (11... Bc5 $19 {
-4.00/19 and Black stays clearly on top.} 12. Bxc5 Qxc5) 12. c3 $2 {-3.65/17} (
12. f4 $17 {-1.35/21}) 12... Nxe5 13. Qe2 {-5.22/18} (13. Bb5+ {-3.29/20 was
worth a try.} Nc6 14. Qe2) 13... Nc6 14. Nd2 {-5.97/20} (14. Qd2 {-3.84/21
might work better.}) 14... Nxd4 15. cxd4 Bd6 {[#] Hoping for ...Bg3+.} 16. Kd1
Rc8 {-8.44/24} (16... Qc2+ $142 {-17.64/20} 17. Ke1 Bg3+ 18. Qf2 Bxf2+ 19. Kxf2
Qxd2+ 20. Kg3 Ne7) 17. Qb5+ Kf8 18. Ne2 Ne7 19. Ke1 a6 20. Qa4 Bd3 21. Rc1 Bg3+
22. Kd1 Bxe2+ {-24.90/26} (22... Bc2+ $142 {-#2/27} 23. Rxc2 Qxc2#) 23. Kxe2
Qxc1 24. Bg2 Qc2 {[#] And now ...Ng6 would win.} 25. Bh3 Bf4 {-21.40/23} (25...
Ng6 $142 {-#12/25} 26. Qb4+ Ke8 27. Re1 Nf4+ 28. Kf1 Bxe1 29. Qa4+ Kf8 30. Qb4+
Ke8 31. Kxe1 Nd3+ 32. Ke2 Nxb4 33. axb4 Rc3 34. Bg2 Rd3 35. Kf2 Rxd2+ 36. Kg1
Rxg2+ 37. Kh1 Rh2+ 38. Kg1 Qg2#) 26. Rd1 Rc3 {( -> ...Re3+)} 27. Qd7 Re3+ 28.
Kf2 {Black is clearly winning.} Qc8 29. Qxc8+ Nxc8 30. a4 Ke7 31. Re1 Rd3 32.
Nf1 Rxb3 33. Re2 Nd6 34. Nd2 Rb2 35. Ke1 Rc8 36. Nf1 Rxe2+ 37. Kxe2 Rc4 38. Kd3
Rxa4 {Accuracy: White = 16%, Black = 34%.} 0-1
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