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SICILIAN
Leko,P (2725) - Van
Wely,L (2646) [B80]
Corus 2000 Wijk aan Zee (12), 29.01.2000
[Rohde]
| 1.e4
Leko's usual first move. 1...c5
Van Wely is a dedicated Najdorf
Sicilian advocate. 2.Nf3 d6
3.d4 Leko plays the Open
Sicilian. Earlier in this event, Leko
responded to Timman's 2 ... e6 in
the Sicilian with the King's Indian
Attack 3 d3. 3...cxd4 4.Nxd4
Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 Van Wely never
shies away from a theoretical confrontation.
6.f3 |
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| The English
Attack, named after the efforts of Nigel
Short and John Nunn. White builds the spike
g2-g4-g5 as if this was a Scheveningen.
6...e6 An interesting alternative
is 6 ... e5. But Van Wely sticks to the
most controversial line, which he also played
against Kasparov earlier in this event.
7.Be3 White's piece setup
is the same as in the Yugoslav Attack against
the Dragon. 7...b5 8.g4
In the Sicilian, there is often some kind
of race to see which pawn can push the opponent's
knight away from the center first.
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| But players
also have to be careful that they don't
send the knight to a better position. 8...h6
Stopping the cramping g4-g5 so
the other knight can develop to d7. It was
too early for 8 ... b4 9 Nce2 h6 10 Ng3
and White has a dangerous mass on the kingside.
9.Qd2 Nbd7 10.0-0-0 Leko
looks forward to an opposite-side-castling
situation as he has the better development.
10...Bb7 11.a3 Much more
common is the direct 11 h4 as in Kasparov
- Van Wely earlier in this event. The text
move adds a different flavor by stopping
the mad rush to attack. 11...Ne5
Van Wely aims to use the c4 square with
... Ra8- c8 on the way.
12.Rg1 g5
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| Van
Wely is quite fond of the idea ... g7-g5,
radically stopping White's advance, and
here it works well as White is not controlling
h4. In Kasparov - Van Wely, White had played
11 h4 Rc8 12 Bh3 and then Van Wely tried
12 ... b4 13 Na4 g5!? and got blown away.
13.Kb1 Leko's quiet treatment
of this position does not seem all that
impressive. 13...Rc8 Naturally,
Van Wely puts pressure on the c-file and
enable the positional continuation ... Ne5-c4.
14.Qe1 Ready to meet 14
... Nc4 with 15 Bc1 and also the move assists
the idea h2-h4.
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| However,
Black is fine here. 14...Be7
This is the most sensible now. If 14 ...
Nc4 15 Bc1 Be7 16 b3 and the knight maneuver
has only helped White reorganize.
15.Bc1 Leko retreats anyway! His
plan is to first make sure his own king
stays safe, and then hope Black's long-term
problem as to where to place his king becomes
the important factor. 15...Qb6
Taking what is being given. The White bishop
just deserted this diagonal. 16.Rg2
This makes the move Rg2-d2 possible, doubling
on the d-file. Still, Leko's counterplay
here is really stalling. 16...Nfd7
A good move to activate more pieces, for
example with ... Be7-f6 or ... Nd7-c5. After
that Black can play ... b5-b4, but now 16
... b4? would just lose a pawn to 17 Na4
followed by Qe1xb4. 17.b3
This move is primarily for defense with
the bishop going to b2. 17...Ng6
With White having spent so much time fortifying
his king, Black shifts to control of squares
on the other side as this knight heads to
f4 while space for the other knight is made
on e5. 18.Bb2 Nde5 Black
is better here because of his firm grip
on the dark squares, but not by that much
as both kings are safe and it will be difficult
to open up the position.
19.Rgd2 h5
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An important decision. Van Wely knows he
has to try to squeeze the max out of this
position. While he is willing to risk the
opening of the kingside on 20 gxh5, because
of his good square control, the ultimate
objective for Black may be, on 20 h3, just
to close things up with 20 ... h4!? and
then castle! 20.h3 Leko
plays the normal but passive move, as 20
gxh5 Rxh5 would leave his pawns potentially
weak. Now Van Wely might open the h-file
and then move his king from e8 ultimately
to g7. 20...Kf8 Uncompromising.
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| The king
walks over to g7 but Van Wely is determined
to keep his options open. 21.Qf2
To drive Black's queen away by threatening
Nd4xe6+. 21...Qc5 22.Nce2
The White knight on d4 is a tower of strength,
and this is what is making it difficult
for Black to make any real progress. 22...Kg8
Van Wely may still be looking to close things
up with ... h5-h4 and then hide his king
permanently on h7. 23.Ng3
So that on 23 ... h4 24 Nh5 the knight constitutes
a permanent annoyance. 23...hxg4
Exchanging to gain time to place
his own knight on f4 first. 24.hxg4
Nf4 It is not clear whether White
has time for maneuvers such as Qf2-g1 and
then Rd2-h2. 25.Nge2 Ng6
Better than exchanging knights, which would
only encourage White to look for ways to
break the kingside hammerlock. Ng3 This
move is an invitation to a repetition. Nf4
On other moves the White knight just cruises
in to h5. Nge2 Repeating the position again.
Leko is obviously satisfied with a draw
here. 25...Nfg6 Now Leko
can make it a three-time repetition with
28 Ng3.
26.Ng3 Nf4
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| A
justified and logical repetition. Neither
side could afford to let the other get their
knight set.
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| 1/2-1/2 |
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