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White has regained his material with simple moves. The bishop on f6 is not in any way worse than any of the black rooks and it will clearly support the advance of the passed h-pawn. White won shortly.
"Modern Chess is too much concerned with things like pawn structure. Forget it, checkmate ends the game!"
Nigel Short
With a kingside pawn structure characterized by the move h2-h3 ( ... h7-h6), you should beware of a quick opening of lines (for example, after opposite-side castling, by an advance of the opponent's g pawn) or certain straightforward tactical motifs. For now, we will look into another pattern: a long-term sac on h3 /h6!
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave -Richard Rapport
Biel 2013
Black to move
In this position Vachier-Lagrave was taken by surprise:
15...Bxh3 16.gxh3 Qc8!
You would expect such a bishop sac to be followed up with a rook check on the g-file or at least the queen sortie to h4. Neither is possible here, yet after this quiet queen move White is unable to defend h3 as 17.Kg2 is met by 17...Nf4+, while 17.Kh2 is illegal!
17.Nxd4
White wants his queen to join the defence.
17...Qxh3 18.Qf3 Bh2+ 19.Kh1 Bg3+
and a draw was agreed after some bishop checks by Black.
After the game, Vachier-Lagrave declared that he had seen the possibility of 15...Bxh3, but simply felt it could not be correct as White had so many options. So he underestimated his opponent's possibilities: but surely he was familiar with this kind of sacrifice?!
Mikhail Tal, the 8th World Champion (1960- 1961) was born on this day in 1936.
Do you know that the " Magician from Riga" held the record for the longest unbeaten streak in top-level chess history, with 95 games, until Ding Liren of 100 games in 2017?
It's true! in fact, Tal had broken this record twice, in 1973, having played 86 consecutive games without a loss (47 wins) and then again in 1974, with 95 (46 wins)!
Sometimes a knight is bluntly planted in the middle of the board, on the protected square d5 - an offer Black can't refuse. This is a familiar sight in several openings. notably the Sicilian.
Dmitry Kryakvin-Suri Vaibhav
New Delhi 2010
White to move
21.Nd5!
Here the knight is not attacking anything, but all white pieces are now set for the attack.
21...exd5
21...Re8 22.e5 Nf8 23.Nf6+
22.exd5 f5