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Jimmy Doyle - WBuchanan - 24-03-2022 Re the sad passing of J Doyle - a game which shows how dangerous Jimmy could be, and which set me thinking about the role of chance in chess, at least amongst the lesser chess mortals. W Buchanan - Jimmy Doyle, Edinburgh Scottish, 2009 1. c4 e5 2. g3 h5 3. Nc3 h4 4. Bg2 hxg3 5. fxg3 Bc5 6. d3 Nf6 7. Bg5 Bf2+ 8. Kd2 Jimmy started to think intently. White has been a bit frisky on these black squares, and in allowing his K to be displaced. 8...Rh5 This is committal, but I didn't get what Black was up to. 9. Nf3 9. Bxf6 is safer, and better than it looks. 9....Rxg5 !? Unexpected, and deep. 10. Nxg5 Be3+! 11. Kxe3 Ng4+ 12. Kd2 This is forced. We later looked at 12 Kf3 Qxg5 and the WK was mated in two attempts - one on the h file and the other on the a file! However the engine complains that instead of capturing the N, 12 ...Qf6+! leads to a quick mate. 12...Qxg5+ 13. Ke1 There are various ways in which a few moves ago it would look like Black can at least regain the material. A shot like 13...Nxh2 would ordinarily be good, but Black now misses his h-pawn - he can't untangle on the open h-file after 14 Ne4; if the N moves, Rh8+ will be deadly. On the dangerous-looking 13...Qe3 White has Ne4 and if f5, Bf3 saves the piece. However Black's main intention I believe was the move played. 13...Ne3 This wins the B on g2; only temporarily however, as the N is trapped on g2 after the fortuitous 14 Qc1. 14 Qc1 Nxg2+ 15 Kf2. Surprisingly, even with the WK exposed after 15... Nf4 16 exf4, there isn't anything B can do to it. As Black's clever combination unfolded on me I thought the game would end in a perpetual after 15... Nf4 16 gxf4 Qh4+ , which would have been lucky enough for me. I imagine on move 8 or 9, Black thought this was the least he would have. Unfortunately for Black, it turns out there's not even a perpetual - as the WK escapes to the d-file after 17 Kg2, only going to f1 when B plays Qg4+, blocking the Black B from going to the h3 square after a ...d6. So Black was obliged to swap queens on move 15. Such finesses would be very hard to see on move 8 or 9. To borrow a snooker term, with the 'run of the pieces' in any of the variations around move 13-16 Black could have chalked up a brilliant and deserved victory. Perhaps in some dystopian future, a brain-intrusive program will rate your moves according to what you actually saw. That would have produced a very different outcome in this game to the actual result! |