[Event "GotM #39"]
[Site "Oberhausen"]
[Date "1961.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Albero, Roman Toran"]
[Black "Tal, Mikhail"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "A21"]
[Annotator "Connaughton, Ken"]
[PlyCount "50"]
[EventDate "1961.??.??"]
[EventCountry "GER"]
{[%evp 0,50,25,-27,-6,-2,25,-27,64,40,67,52,41,48,102,85,143,131,141,30,70,50,
94,32,39,39,0,12,41,18,87,0,0,-40,-40,-40,-56,0,0,0,0,0,-83,-83,46,-51,0,0,0,0,
0,-224,-224]} 1. c4 {English Opening} e5 {Reversed Sicilian} 2. Nc3 d6 3. g3 {
White gets ready to fianchetto on the long diagonal. The g2-Bishop is often
referred to the English Bishop.} f5 {Always a courageous idea for Black. ...f5
appears in a multitude of openings, always with attacking ideas for Black but
there are dangers that come with it. This move definitely weakens Black's
Kingside.} 4. d4 {Attacking the center.} e4 5. f3 Nf6 6. Bg2 exf3 7. Nxf3 g6 8.
O-O Bg7 9. e4 {[#] Going after the center again.} fxe4 10. Ng5 O-O 11. Ngxe4
Nxe4 12. Rxf8+ Qxf8 13. Nxe4 {As the dust settles it looks as though White has
a slight spatial advantage and his Queenside is slightly more developed.} Nc6
14. Be3 Bf5 {[%csl Re3,Re4] [#] White's pieces on the e-file provide an
opportunity for Black.} 15. Qd2 Re8 {[%CAl Rf5e4,Re8e4] Black has got his
pieces going and is now applying pressure down the e-file.} 16. Ng5 {The best.}
(16. Rf1 $11 {[%CAl Rf1f8]}) (16. Qc2 {[%CAl Gc2e4,Gg2e4]} Qe7 17. d5 Nb4 18.
Qd2 $19) 16... Rxe3 $1 {[#] White of course can't recapture.} 17. Bd5+ $1 {
But he finds a remarkable counterstroke that seems to earn him a perpetual
check and a draw.} (17. Qxe3 $2 Bxd4 {[%csl Re3][%CAl Rd4g1]}) 17... Kh8 18.
Nf7+ Qxf7 $3 {[#] But Tal isn't most people. No draw for him, he plays only to
win.} (18... Kg8 {Most people playing Black would probably sigh and accept a
draw with:} 19. Nh6+ Kh8 20. Nf7+ Kg8 21. Nh6+ $11) 19. Bxf7 {After the Queen
Sacrifice, Black goes straight on the offensive with a blistering attack.} Rd3
20. Qe2 Bxd4+ {Black's pieces are swarming into White's camp with tempo.} 21.
Kg2 Ne5 22. Rd1 {White tries to trade but Black always manages to keep a
plurality of threats going with his replies.} Re3 23. Qf1 Be4+ {[#] Black's
pieces are beautifully centralized in contrast with White's disparate,
ineffectual forces.} 24. Kh3 Rf3 25. Qe2 Bf5+ {[#] And White, with his King
rapidly running out of road, quits here.} (25... Bf5+ {White was losing
material quickly and/or gating mated:} 26. Kh4 Rf2 $19 {[%CAl Rf2e2,Rf2h2]} (
26... Re3 $19 {[%CAl Re5f3]})) 0-1