Report on British Chess Championship 2010 –
A personal account by Ian Henderson
Introduction
Although I had a disappointing finish and didn’t quite make my target score
of 4.5/11, I still had a good time at the championship, didn’t disgrace myself,
and got an insight into some of the things I need to do to improve. Despite only scoring 4/11, I faced a tough
line-up, and nearly all the players I played finished above me (including the
two I beat!). This was the third
long-play tournament I’ve played after a 6-year break from tournament chess (I
qualified for the British at the Surrey Easter Congress this year), and there
were signs of rust in some of my games – particularly in the Scandinavian where
my opponents all somehow conspired to pick lines I haven’t faced in several
years! I stayed in
Round
by round summary:
Round
1 White v Alex Combie, Classical Kings Indian, 1-0 (see
game viewer at the end of this article)
A roller-coaster of a game to start with, lasting nearly 6 hours. After obtaining a strong position from the
opening, I went wrong on move 27 when I got a bit complacent and failed to foresee
a counter-strike against my centre. All
of a sudden a torrent of pawns was rushing at my king, and I felt like I was
rapidly losing control. With time short,
both players missed tactical shots.
After the time control my opponent over-pressed his attack, spurning
chances to bail out to a level ending, and I was able to consolidate and march
my centre pawns home. An exciting game,
and fairly high quality, but not as straightforward as it should have been!
Round 2 Black v IM Jovanka
Houska, Chigorin Defence, 1-0
Another long game - the last to finish, to a round
of (relieved?) applause - but rather more of a grind than the previous round. Jovanka comfortably
won the title of British Women’s Champion again this year, and is a former fellow
Round 3 White v Ian Snape,
Classical Kings Indian, 0.5-0.5
Fortunately, a much shorter game. Ian plays the Classical Kings Indian with
both colours, and chose what I consider to be one of the most dangerous
variations. I was well prepared for
this, and chose a slightly unusual line, 15.g4.
The idea is often seen at earlier junctures in the Kings Indian – White
wishes to blockade the kingside before getting on with his queenside attack. Ian responded well, and a very blocked
position soon resulted in a draw.
Round 4 Black v IM Chris Baker, Scandinavian
Defence, 1-0
A swift but eye-catching crushing, after I went badly wrong in the
opening. White played the unusual but
tricky 6.Nf3 in a 2…Nf6 3.Bb5+ Scandinavian, and although I’ve had this
position before and played the right move – the obvious 6…Nxd5 – I didn’t
remember that this was ok, re-analysed it, and thought I spied a trap (White
has ideas of Bxf7+ style combinations) but missed a detail at the end of my
analysis which would have completely reversed my assessment. Now I’m playing chess more regularly, I’m
coming across a surprising number of lines and ideas that I’d previously examined
up to a decade ago, but have since forgotten – my games against Simon
McCullough and Dave Ledger in later rounds are other
examples. Fortunately a lot of this rust
has been stripped away over the last season with the help of 40+ rapidplay games (a good arena for refining your openings) so
my opponents this year better watch out!
Anyway, instead of recapturing on d5 immediately, I took a slower route
and White exposed my lack of development with some precise moves. By move 17 it seemed that I was bust, with my
king on f8 and a pawn down for no real compensation. White then erred with 17.c4, but feeling my
position was hopeless, I missed the nice countershot 17…Nb4
which brings Black right back into the game.
I threw in the towel at move 25 in a hopeless position.
Round 5 White v Mark Josse,
Slav Defence, 0.5-0.5
A rather unambitious game on my part, and a
result we were probably both satisfied with.
I’ve often struggled against the Slav and Semi-Slav, and have been
reconsidering my approaches to these openings recently. I was hoping to test some stuff against the
Semi-Slav, but after 4…Bf5 the game settled into a solid but uninspiring Slav variation
where neither side has much to complain about.
Mark found a way to make it a bit more interesting by spurning a usual
knight exchange, and after committing an inaccuracy or two, I was unable to
stop his freeing c5 after which we traded down to an equal B+N ending and
agreed a draw. Mark was modestly aiming
for 5/11, but I thought he would do better than that and was really pleased to
see him make it into the top half of the finishers.
Round 6 Black v Simon McCullough, Scandinavian
Defence Portuguese variation, 0.5-0.5
Another short game, but quite eventful. I was not relishing the chance
to play Simon, as I’d beaten him with the same opening at the Surrey Easter
Congress in an attractive miniature, and knew he would be well prepared for
this encounter! Simon chose a more
aggressive variation this time, but it was not the most accurate of games.
Again I struggled to remember analysis of a sharp line I hadn’t played in some
years, as in the game against Chris Baker.
Fortunately I wasn’t punished this time though – perhaps my inferior
moves saved me from some home preparation?! – and an
interesting but flawed tactical exchange was agreed drawn after both sides had
had chances.
Round 7 White v Lateefa Messam-
A convincing
win decided by a nice exchange sacrifice.
My opponent hadn’t met 4.a3 (an aggressive attempt to refute the Nimzo-Indian) before; unsurprising, since it’s not very
sound. Black chose a playable line which,
although not the strongest in my opinion, would have given her a decent game
but for the questionable addition of an early h6. Play revolved around whether I could achieve
the freeing e4 break. Once this came,
White’s pieces sprung forward on the kingside and Black’s position quickly
collapsed. Despite the previous day
being the rest day (my partner Helen and I caught the bus down to Hythe to visit
the wonderful Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch miniature
steam railway), I’d had a disturbed night’s sleep beforehand – thanks in part
to another competitor who had managed to lock himself out of his room (at the
university hall of residence where I was staying) when he went outside to make
a late phone call. I was beginning to
get quite irritated with the loud conversation going on beneath my window, when
the tenor of the conversation changed abruptly, and I heard him “assuring” his
wife that it was a warm summer night and he would sleep out in the open if
necessary! At that point annoyance
turned to sympathy and I got up to let him in.
So I was therefore relieved to have a relatively easy game.
Round 8 Black v FM Dave
Ledger, Scandinavian Defence Portuguese variation, 1-0 (see
game viewer at the end of this article)
A loss in which I went down quickly, without doing
much obviously wrong. Dave had
done his preparation, and chose a slightly quieter variation against the
Portuguese after 3…Bg4 4.f3, but one which has more than a drop of poison. I rarely meet this sharp yet measured approach
– most players prefer either the harmless 4.Be2 or 4.Nf3, or make all-out
attempts to hang on to the d-pawn with c4.
A reasonable-looking bishop retreat to g6 was quickly punished, as Dave
advanced his f-pawn and opened the f-file, after which pressure on f7 became
critical.
Round 9 White v
Peter Shaw, Slav Defence, 0-1
I chose a quiet line again, as in my game against Mark, but Black
surprised me by playing e5 in a position where it didn’t look possible. I
failed to find the best response (winning a piece for two pawns but giving
Black counterplay), and was under pressure from then
on. Muddying matters with some speculative aggression against Black’s king, I managed
to reach a R+B ending with opposite coloured bishops
and decent drawing chances. My pawns were more vulnerable however and, short of
time, I failed to defend sufficiently accurately, resigning soon after the time
control.
Round 10 Black
v Jasper Tambini, Scandinavian Defence Portuguese variation,
0.5-0.5
An improvement on round 8. I had a
suspicion that my young opponent might try to repeat Dave Ledger’s straightforward
round 8 win, and was soon proved correct. The Scandinavian has surprise value,
and is good in league and rapidplay chess, but in
tournaments like the British, where opponents can prepare, it was beginning to
feel like a liability. Perhaps I should
have chosen a different variation of the Scandinavian, but I was interested to
see what Jasper would play and try my (admittedly unconvincing) improvement. White chose the same f-pawn attack idea as
Ledger, to which I responded with a horribly anti-positional-looking f5,
leaving my e6 pawn an appealing backward target on an
open file. Like the d6 pawn in many
variations of the Sicilian Najdorf, however, this
turned out to be harder for White to exploit than it looked and, all of a
sudden, White had some issues (a misplaced knight on g3 and a bishop on c1 that
lacked prospects). I followed up with
Kf7, and White was unable to find a way to take advantage of my unorthodox
setup (though doubtless it wasn’t sound, and I won’t be repeating it!). My bishops found good diagonals, and White
felt compelled to make exchanges on d5, allowing me to liquidate the e6
weakness, after which I stood slightly better. My opponent offered a draw soon after and,
not feeling that I had realistic winning chances, I accepted.
Round 11 White
v Martin Brown, Grunfeld Defence Exchange variation,
0-1
A calamitous note to end on, blundering away a
rook in my opponent’s time trouble. I had had trouble deciding what to play
against Martin’s Grunfeld, and my worries hadn’t been
conducive to a good night’s sleep (I think Mark Josse’s
insistence on taking only 1 hour to prepare would have been good advice here!). I’ve been trying early Bf4 lines recently,
but the resulting positions are easier for Black to play, and I’ve not done
particularly well out of them. So I
decided to return to playing the mainline. I played an unusual move (12.Bd5),
which set my opponent thinking for a long time. Unfortunately over the next few
moves my opponent’s evident concern over the position and usage of large
amounts of time tempted me to become over-optimistic about my chances, and I
went wrong on move 18, missing a simple tactic. After this I was under pressure
but, combined with my opponent’s handling of the clock, I was able to defend,
and reached a position where I could exchange queens to an easily drawn rook
ending. At this point in the last round,
tired after two weeks of chess, and with a possible result in sight, I allowed
my opponent’s time trouble to colour my thinking. I decided to keep queens on, “making my
opponent think”, and “punishing” him for his poor use of time (I rarely find
myself in a situation where my opponent is in time trouble, and reacted badly
to the situation in this instance). My junior opponent played very well despite
his lack of time and was clearly fresher than I was – in a Q+R ending I blundered
horribly (after several minutes thought no less), allowing my rook and king to
be simply forked, and had to resign immediately. Not a nice way to finish the
tournament, but hopefully there’s a lesson to be learnt somewhere there!
Games Annotated by Ian from Rounds 1, 7 and 8
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Game viewer by ChessTempo
See Mark Josse's account of the event
Ian Henderson
Surbiton Chess Club