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Boris Spassky-Sergey Avtonomov
Leningrad 1949
White to move
He actually broke through right away!
12…♘bxd5
12…♘fxd5 prevents the pin by ♗c1-g5, but allows 13.a3, and 12…♗xd5 13.♗g5 boils down to the same thing.
13.♗g5
‘Black’s position resembles a prisoner tied by his legs and arms’ – Krogius.
13…♗e7 14.♗xf6 gxf6 15.♘xd5 ♗xd5 16.♗xd5 exd5 17.♘d4 ♔f8 18.♘f5 h5 19.♖xd5 ♕xd5 20.♕xe7+ ♔g8 21.♕xf6 1-0
Anatoly Ufimtsev-Ilya Kan
Moscow 1945
The knight capture 14…♘xe4 fails to 15.♗xe4 ♗xe4 16.♘d2. What should Black play instead?
14…♗xe4 can be answered with 15.♘d2 as well, or with the simpler 15.♗e2. After the suggested continuation:
14…♘xe4 15.♗xe4 ♗xe4 16.♘d2
Black should just continue with:
16…♖xc3 17.bxc3 ♗xc2
when Kan concluded that Black is just fine with two pawns for the exchange, the pair of bishops and a superior pawn structure, and White should play accurately to maintain the balance. In the game, Ufimtsev was not up to the task, and Kan won, thus qualifying for the USSR Championship.
Oleg Korneev-Sergey Yudin
Khanty-Mansiysk 2013
White to move
And not 20.♕b7?? c6!, when the queen is caught!
20…♖xe5 21.♗d5! ♖b8 22.♕c4
Attacking both a6 and f7, and forcing the following exchange anyway.
22…♘xd5 23.♘xd5 c5 24.♕xa6 ♖xe4 25.♕d3 ♖e6 26.c3