Britons at their Sunday best
Sunday's fourth round of the 2008 Staunton Memorial tournament saw the
British players put up one of their best efforts in the informal match contest
against the Dutch. Of the three decisive games, two saw Englishmen defeat their
Orange rivals, thereby levelling the overall match score. In the three years of
Jan Mol's sponsorship, I am not sure this has ever happened before.
Jon Speelman opened his winning account by ending Erwin's L'Ami's unbeaten
start. The latter's Slav Defence produced its customary solid, but passive
position, and L'Ami's attempts to free himself left White with heavy pressure
against the enemy hanging pawn couplet. One pawn soon dropped off, and although
a tactical trick at move 32 saw the Dutchman win the exchange, White had three
pawns and a winning endgame by way of compensation.
The other England-Holland encounter was the clash of the leaders, and produce
an interesting battle:
Adams,Michael - Timman,Jan H [C83]
Staunton Memorial (4), 10.08.2008
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0–0 Nxe4
The Open Spanish has long been a regular feature of Timman's
opening repertoire, which is only fitting; aside from Tarrasch himself, the man
who did most to put the line on the map at GM level was Jan's "great
predecessor" in Dutch chess, Max Euwe.
6.d4 b5 7.Bb3 d5 8.dxe5 Be6 9.Be3 Be7 10.c3 Nc5 11.Bc2 Nd7
12.Re1 Ndxe5
This looks a rather audacious pawn snatch, but in fact he
players were still following well-known theory.
13.Nxe5 Nxe5 14.Bd4 f6 15.a4 b4

16.f4
This is the first new move. A game Svidler-Carlsen, Melody
Amber 2007, saw White prefer 16.cxb4, but without any special success, the game
being drawn in 31 moves.
16...Bg4 17.Qd2 Nc6
Adams had expected 17...Nc4 18 Qd3, which the players later
concluded was unclear. However, there is probably nothing wrong with Timman's
choice.
18.Bf2 Bh5 19.c4 b3!
White's main point is that 19...dxc4 is strongly met by
20.Be4, so Black instead deflects the bishop from the e4-square.
20.Bxb3 d4 21.c5 Bf7 22.Bxf7+ Kxf7 23.Qd3

23...Qd7?
Probably the crucial turning point. The text results in the
rook being shut in on h8 after White's next move. Instead, Timman should have
played 23...Rhe8!, with a satisfactory position. Then 24.Qxh7 is well met by
24...Qd5, whilst playing along the same lines as the game by 24.Qc4+ Kf8 25.b4
can be answered by 25...Qb8, with excellent counterplay.
24.Qc4+ Kf8 25.b4
Now Black has serious problems, since he cannot create
counterplay on the queenside, his KR is out of play, and the pawn on d4 will
eventually come under pressure. Timman continues to fight hard, but Adams'
technique from here on is relentless.
25...a5 26.b5 Nb4 27.Nd2 Qd5 28.Qxd5 Nxd5 29.Nb3 Kf7
30.Rad1 Nb4 31.Bxd4 Rhd8 32.Rd2 Rd5 33.Red1 c6 34.b6 Na6 35.Be3 Nb4 36.Rxd5 Nxd5
37.Bd2
37.Rxd5 was the expectation of many spectators, and should
indeed win comfortably enough, but Adams sees no reason to take the slightest
risk.
37...Ke6 38.Kf2 Kd7 39.Kf3 f5 40.Rc1 Bf6 41.Ke2 Bb2 42.Rc4
Ba3 43.Nxa5 Bb2 44.Kd3 Bf6 45.g3 Re8 46.Rc1 Ra8 47.Rb1 Be7 48.Kc4 Bf6 49.Re1 Rb8
1–0
This is Mickey's third appearance in the Staunton Memorial,
and according to my calculations, this game brings his cumulative score with the
white pieces to 11.5 / 13!

The day's other winner was Alexander Cherniaev, who brought
himself back to 50% by defeating Bob Wade. The latter's Antoshin Philidor
yielded a satisfactory position from the opening, and only a serious tactical
blunder later on cost him the game. With an extra exchange and several ways to
win, and perhaps remembering that he was in the building where Anderssen played
his Immortal Game, Cherniaev chose the most attractive knockout, involving a
temporary queen sacrifice:

33.exf6 Rxe3 34.Rxe3 Qf8 35.Re7+ Kh8 36.Bf7 Bb5 37.Bxg6 1–0
Sokolov -Werle was a carefully-played draw, as was
Wells-Short, whilst van Wely and Smeets hard a rather harder fight, which also
ended peacefully. Incidentally, I must apologise to Peter Wells, for having
quite unjustly deprived him of a hard-earned half-point, in the round 3 scores
that I quoted in yesterday's report. With the draw against Nigel, he now has 2.5
/ 4.
So after four rounds, the scores are: Adams 3.5, Timman,
Wells and van Wely 2.5, Speelman, Cherniaev, Werle, Smeets and Short 2, Sokolov
and L'Ami 1.5, Wade 0.