Unity Chess Club
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Robert Kempinski - Dimitar Dochev
Achaea 2012
White to move
32.Qd3
32.Rxd6 is also winning, but White consistently goes about bringing his knight to f5, after which the black king is likely to succumb very quickly. In the meantime, the pawn on d6 will not run away.
32...Rf8 33.Ne3 Nf6 34.Nc3 Rd8 35.Nf5
Truly, a square with a view!
35...Qc5 36.Qd2 Bf8 37.Qg5+ Kf7 38.Rf1 Ke6 39.Ng7+ 1-0
A book cannot by itself teach how to play. It can only serve as a guide, and the rest must be learned by experience.” Jose Capablanca
The Beastly Bishop
A knight on a central outpost on the sixth (or third) rank - a.k.a. the octopus - is almost invariably a terrific force. A bishop on the same spot may very well paralyze the opponent's forces in a similar way.
Evgeny Postny - Alexander Delchev
Haguenau 2013
White to move
10.Bh5+ Kf8 11.Bf7! h6 12.Ne6+ Bxe6 13.Bxe6
The bishop on e6 ties up a lot of black pieces.
13...Nd7 14.Qh5 Qe8 15.Qh3 Nc5 16.Bxf5
White is winning.
Back inside the Chain

Developing your bishops outside the pawn chain is the natural thing to do. And often the right thing to do. But sometimes one has to retrace one's steps.
Vasily Smyslov - Klaus Darga
Amsterdam 1964
White to move
16.Bd2!
Not an obvious move, this deactivation of the bishop! The attempt to open up the position for the bishop pair with 16.e4 dxe4 17. Nxe4 can be met by 17...Nd5, so Smyslov decided to develop his light-squared bishop via square f1 after e2-e3.
16...Rd8 17.e3 Ne8?!
Intending to meet 18.Bf1 with 18...Nd6. Now that the knight has relinquished control over the dS-square, Smyslov immediately changes tack.
18.e4! dxe4 19.Bxe4