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16.Qc7 Nd7 17.Bxd5 Qxd5 18.Rad1 Qe6 19.Rxd7
Draw, because the variation 19...Qxe2 20.Rxe7 Qxa2 21.Qxb7 Rab8 22.Qxa7 Qxa7 23.Rxa7 Rxb3, leads to a complete elimination of the fighting forces.
Mateusz Bartel 2627
Pentala Harikrishna 2672
Germany Bundesliga 2011/12
White to move
17.Rd1!
It turns out that we can first attack the queen, creating in the process the deadly threat 18.Qxc4+. In the game, there followed 17.Qxf5 Qd5 18.Qf3 Qxf3 19.Nxf3 Bf6, with Black having sufficient compensation for the pawn. After:
17...Bd5 18.Qxf5
Thanks to the pin on the bishop, the c4-pawn is lost as well. White is winning.
Evgeny Bareev 2709
Joel Lautier 2658
Aix-les-Bains 2001
White to move
Unity Chess Club
Evgeny Bareev 2709 Joel Lautier 2658 Aix-les-Bains 2001 White to move
If we now simply take the bishop, then White’s advantage in the opposite-coloured bishops position will be minimal. Instead, White sees a tactical motif, connected with the unstable position of the black rook and the insufficiently protected black king on h8.
23.Nf6! Bxf6 24.Rxc7 Bxh4 25.Rgxg7!
Even more precise than 25.Rxb7 g6.
25...Qe4+ 26.Kg1
Black resigned.
Boris Spassky 2610
Robert Hübner 2600
Solingen 1977
White to move
Unity Chess Club
Boris Spassky 2610 Robert Hübner 2600 Solingen 1977 White to move
With his last move, Black exchanged the light-squared bishop on d3. Everything would be fine for him if White had to take back on d3, but there followed the zwischenzug:
24.Qh6! Rcc7?
Allowing a forcing finish.
Bad was 24...Qf8? 25.Bxg7 Rxg7 26.Rxg7+ Qxg7 27.Qxe6++–.
The most tenacious was 24...Qe7! 25.Bxg7 25...f4! 26.Rg4 Bf5 27.Bf6+ Bxg4 28.Bxe7 Rxe7, but here too, there follows 29.d5! (29.Qxf4 Rg7!) 29...Rf8 30.f3 Bf5 31.Qxf4+–.
25.Qxe6 Bc4 26.Rxg7+ Kf8 27.Bxc7 Qxc7 28.Rxf7+ Qxf7 29.Qd6+ Kg8 30.Qd8+ 1-0
Richard Teichmann
Jacques Mieses
Vienna 1903
Black to move