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Now, the black bishop will join in and White’s position is hardly defensible.
White resigned.
Alexander Khalifman 2655
Friso Nijboer 2605
Groningen 1997
White to move
Unity Chess Club
Alexander Khalifman 2655 Friso Nijboer 2605 Groningen 1997 White to move
If White plays 26.a3, Black gets control of the a-file, whilst after 26.b5, Black gets the c5-square. Exploiting the more active position of his pieces, White found a way to break up the black pawn chain:
26.c5! axb4 27.cxd6 c5
Even worse is 27...cxd6 28.Rc7 Rad8 29.Rxe6 Rxe6 30.Bd5 Kf7 31.Qe2+–.
28.Rxe6 Rxe6 29.Bd5 Rae8 30.Qb3 Kf7 31.Re1 Qa3
After 31...Nf8 32.d7 Nxd7 33.Rxe6 Rxe6 34.Bxe6+ Ke7 35.Bg8, Black loses his kingside pawns.
32.Rxe6 Qxb3 33.Re7+ Kf8 34.Rf7+ Kg8 35.Bxb3 b5 36.Rxd7+ c4 37.Re7 Kf8 38.Rxe8+ Kxe8 39.Bc2 Kd7 40.f3 Kxd6 41.Kf2
Black resigned.
Evgeny Bareev 2665
Peter Svidler 2640
Elista ch-RUS 1997
White to move
A technical decision. The position of the Bd4 is undermined, and the pawn on b7 becomes backward.
25...f5
Black’s only means of getting activity.
26.bxc5 dxc5 27.Nb6 Qb5
27...fxe4 28.Qxd4 Qxh3+ 29.gxh3 cxd4 30.d6!+– – the passed pawn marches to d7, whilst the black pawns, unsupported by pieces, are going nowhere.
28.Qxb5 axb5 29.e5 Kf7 30.g3 Ra8?
Losing at once. More tenacious was 30...b4, but after, for example, 31.Rf3±, White can put his rook on d3 and bring his king to f3, when, in time, the central passed pawns should decide the game in White’s favor.