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17.b4, to drive the active bishop away, seems better.
17…exf4 18.Qxf4 Bg4 19.Rae1 g5 20.Qd2 Rad8
Now Black is clearly pressing – pair of bishops, centralized rooks, and the black queen dominatingly present on White’s weakened kingside.
Samvel Ter-Sahakyan-Samuel Sevian
Lake Sevan 2015
Black to move
The most elegant way to escape from under the pressure.
18.Bc4 Nxe4
The young American continues in style, but the simpler 18…Rd6 was also sufficient.
19.Rxe4 Rg6?
19…f5 should have been played.
20.Qf5 Bc8 21.Qxe5 Bd6 22.Qb5 c6 23.Qb6 Rxg5
Here material is also equal again, but Black’s pieces have lost their coordination. He still managed to draw though.
David Navara-Boris Avrukh
Croatia 2012
Black to move
A swinging queen’s rook. Suddenly the rook is participating!
19.Ne3 Qa8 20.Rad1 Nc5
Now the f6-knight is protected by the rook. The strong pressure against e4 forces White to exchange his h4-bishop.
21.Bxf6 Rxf6 22.Nf5 b4 23.Ng4 Rfe6
Black is perfectly fine, defending actively.
Marc Narciso Dublan-Evgeny Solozhenkin
France tt 2001
Does 12.Ng5 make sense here?