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Mystery Game #46: Slightly offbeat Caro line leaves White stumped for a good plan
Mystery Game #46: Slightly offbeat Caro line leaves White stumped for a good plan
Here is the text of an interesting game. You can discuss the game, players' strengths, era, time controls, setting, etc. I will provide all the data in a few days. Enjoy!!
Christopher Page (~1800) -- Jeff Towers (~1900), Kingston Summer Open #1 1995 (1). Played 1995-05-28. Time controls G/90'. TD: Frank Dixon.
This quiet line in the Caro-Kann has as its most famous game Robert Fischer -- Tigran V. Petrosian, Rest of World vs. USSR team match, Belgrade 1970 (1). Fischer won in highly impressive fashion. Black avoids the main lines starting with 4...Nc6, and simply develops quietly, with two early moves of his queen knight. This is possible since White is not really attempting anything threatening or active early on. Seems to be a perfectly reasonable way to play. It unfolds as a quiet maneuvering game, but Black does get the d5-square for operations after 14...dxc4, and this winds up being useful for him. White seems to be drifting, as he cannot find an active coordinated plan to generate any threats, and Black gradually gains the upper hand. With 28...Qb5!, Black develops queenside activity which White is unable to control, and he builds a material advantage which proves decisive.
Christopher Page was studying for, and eventually completed, his PhD in Political Science at Queen's University; he is originally from the Vancouver area, of a similar generation to IM Tom O'Donnell. Jeff is a Queen's engineering graduate, currently a stay-at-home father in Kingston, with his wife a medical doctor. Jeff became active in Kingston chess in 1993, and won the 1994 Kingston Whig-Standard Championship. Neither Chris nor Jeff has been active in tournament chess in recent years.
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