[Event "London Classic - FIDE Open"]
[Site "Olympia"]
[Date "2009.12.12"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Conquest, S."]
[Black "Piper, M."]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "E16"]
[WhiteElo "2563"]
[BlackElo "2304"]
[Annotator "Matt Piper"]
[PlyCount "84"]
[EventDate "2009.??.??"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2021.01.20"]
[SourceQuality "1"]
{[%evp 0,84,36,32,32,-10,3,-3,33,30,35,28,30,-10,-15,-31,-19,-24,-4,-21,-5,-14,
-5,3,14,-52,-30,-50,-47,-47,-3,-36,14,18,18,24,9,-4,-9,-14,-8,-33,-24,-62,-58,
-74,-82,-105,-105,-109,-85,-100,-40,-42,-50,-50,-55,-60,-57,-99,-71,-95,-57,
-63,-65,-113,-112,-113,-123,-143,-133,-135,-133,-133,-133,-188,-170,-271,-302,
-356,-370,-545,-217,-214,-406,-404,-402]} {Matt told me at the time of this
game that he had just got back into competitive chess after a big gap so
wanted to see if he still had it. Clearly he had by beating a GM who he had
lost to horribly the last time they met.} 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4.
Nbd2 O-O 5. a3 Be7 6. g3 {The main line goes} (6. e4 d5 7. cxd5 exd5 8. e5 Nfd7
9. Bd3 c5 {and is generally thought to be slightly better for White.}) 6... b6
7. Bg2 Bb7 8. Qc2 ({After} 8. O-O c5 9. b3 cxd4 {it seems to me that Black has
solved many of his opening problems. Swapping off the White squared bishops
neutralises much of White's space advantage while Nd2 is struggling to get
into the game. 8.Qc2 was an attempt to discourage 8...c5 because of 9.e4}) 8...
c5 9. dxc5 ({It turns out that} 9. e4 {is bad because of} cxd4 {(I was
planning 9...d5 with a complicated position in which Black is not worse)} 10.
e5 Ng4 11. Ng5 Bxg5 12. Bxb7 Nc6 13. Bxa8 Qxa8 {when Black has more than
enough compensation for the exchange.}) 9... bxc5 10. O-O Nc6 11. Rd1 Qb6 {
White has some difficulties developing his queenside. However, 12.b3 was
better with approximate equality.} 12. Nb3 a5 $1 {Fixing White's weak
queenside pawns with gain of tempo.} 13. Bf4 a4 14. Nbd2 d6 15. Bg5 {Diagram
[#]} (15. e4 e5 16. Bg5 Nd4 {is very strong for Black}) ({while after} 15. e3
h6 {White's black-squared bishop is running out of squares.}) 15... Nd4 $6 {
Very committal. Maybe Rfd8 was better.} 16. Nxd4 cxd4 17. Bxb7 (17. Ne4 Bxe4
18. Bxe4 Nxe4 19. Bxe7 {is dubious becuase of} Nxf2 20. Kxf2 (20. Bxf8 Nxd1 $19
) (20. c5 Qb7 {with the threat of Nh3+}) 20... Qa7 21. Qe4 Qxe7 22. Qxd4 {
when White's pawn are extremely weak.}) 17... Qxb7 18. Rab1 $2 (18. Bxf6 {
is far better, e.g.} Bxf6 19. Ne4 Be5 20. f4 d3 21. Qxd3 Bxb2 22. Rab1 Rab8 23.
Nxd6 Qa7+ 24. Kg2 Qa8+ 25. Kh3 {when Black has some compensation for the pawn.}
) 18... e5 {Now White's weaknesses on the queenside will begin to tell unless
he does something fast.} 19. Qf5 g6 20. Qh3 Nh5 21. Bxe7 Qxe7 22. Nf1 $2 {
A waste of time. 22.Qg2 was better.} Rfc8 23. Rdc1 Ng7 24. Nd2 e4 25. Qh6 Ra5 {
25...f5!?} 26. b4 axb3 27. Nxb3 Rh5 28. Qf4 Rf5 29. Qg4 $2 (29. Qd2 e3 30. fxe3
dxe3 31. Qd3 Rg5 {is clearly better for Black but at least the queen is in the
game. Both players were getting short of time at this point.}) 29... h5 30. Qh3
Qe5 31. Qg2 Ne6 32. Kh1 h4 33. Nd2 hxg3 34. fxg3 (34. hxg3 Rh5+ 35. Kg1 Ng5 {
is difficult to defend against, e.g.} 36. Re1 e3 37. Nf3 exf2+ 38. Qxf2 Qe4 39.
Kg2 Rxc4 $19) 34... Nc5 35. Rf1 e3 36. Nf3 Qe4 37. Rb6 $2 (37. Ng1 Rxf1 38.
Rxf1 Qe6 {is a more difficult win}) 37... d3 38. Rxd6 d2 39. g4 Rf4 40. Rd4 {
Diagram [#]} Qxd4 $1 {Matt told me that his GM opponent had seen this move
until it was too late} 41. Nxd4 Rxf1+ 42. Qxf1 Ne4 {The d-pawn is going to
cost White his queen.} 0-1