[Event "Tienkamp 5C"]
[Site "Wijk aan Zee"]
[Date "2020.01.25"]
[Round "8"]
[White "Gawne, Martin P"]
[Black "Swart, Dirk-Willem"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D04"]
[WhiteElo "1747"]
[BlackElo "1793"]
[Annotator "Llewellyn,Alan"]
[PlyCount "29"]
[EventDate "2020.??.??"]
{[%evp 0,29,16,28,29,27,32,5,38,-1,5,-5,39,34,34,33,63,71,104,87,156,160,130,
130,208,208,232,232,424,369,634,960]} 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 d5 3. e3 {this is the
colle system} Bf5 4. Nbd2 e6 5. Ne5 {breaking all the rules of opening theory
but i play similar moves myself in similar positions. What I mean is you
shouldnt ideally move a piece more than once during development.} Be7 {
lulled into a false sense of security, 5...Nbd7 was best challenging the
forward Knight.} 6. g4 {white now has an early attack going} Bg6 7. h4 {
the natural followup move threatening to trap the Bishop} h6 8. Nxg6 fxg6 9.
Bd3 Kf7 10. Qf3 g5 11. e4 dxe4 12. Nxe4 gxh4 {cracking under intense
pressure} 13. g5 Qxd4 (13... hxg5 14. Nxg5+ Kg8 15. Qxb7 Nbd7 16. Nxe6
Qb8 17. Qg2 Nh5 18. Nxg7 Nxg7 19. Qd5+ Kf8 20. Bg6 Qe8 21. Bxe8 {
utter carnage in this line}) 14. gxf6 gxf6 15. Qh5+ {the threat is after
something like 15...Kf8 then 16 Bxh6+ forces 16...Rxh6 or mate. What an
amazingly quick demolition of a strong amateur opponent.} 1-0