SICILIAN
Polgar,J (2658) - Timman,J
(2655) [B57]
Corus 2000 Wijk aan Zee (7), 23.01.2000
[Rohde]
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1.e4 c5 Timman plays
the Sicilian Defense. 2.Nf3
d6 3.d4 The Open Sicilian.
Polgar is an attacking player who
does not shy away from theoretical
debates. 3...cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6
5.Nc3 Nc6 Timman plays the
Classical Sicilian with both knights
out. 6.Bc4 |
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| This
is the Sozin Variation, an old favorite
of Bobby Fischer's. 6...Qb6
A popular move which sidesteps some
of the main lines by interfering with
White's knight, although the queen
also loses time. 7.Nb3
The least controversial of White's
knight retreats. More tactical are
7 Ndb5 and 7 Nde2. 7...e6
8.Bf4 Polgar sticks to a
positional approach. More aggressive
is the idea of castling and playing
Kg1-h1 and f2-f4. 8...Ne5
9.Be2 Bd7 Timman wants to
place a rook on the c-file right away
to be ready to play ... Ne5-c4 if
necessary.
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10.0-0 Be7 11.a4
Looking for active play on the queenside.
There is no possibility of a kingside
attack right now. 11...0-0 Black would
have loved to get his f-rook to c8
before being hit by a4-a5, and thn
tuck his queen in with ... Qb6-d8.
12.a5 Naturally before
... Rf8-c8. 12...Qc7 13.a6 This maneuver
aims to provide squares such as b5
and a5 for White's knights to use.
13...Rfb8 Not 13
... b6 which would give White a permanent
positional advantage through use of
b5.
14.axb7
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| Otherwise,
sooner or later, Black would take
on a6. 14...Rxb7 15.Be3
Trying to make a weakness out of Black's
a-pawn. 15...Rb4
Pressure against e4. Black seems not
to have any major problems. 16.f3
a5 Black has the initiative
as this pawn makes its way to a4.
White has been pushed back on the
queenside and has nothing going on
in the other sectors. 17.Ra2
Defending b2. 17...a4
The pawn will be safe on this square.
18.Nd4 Polgar would
like to try to use the b5 square to
break up Black's grip on the queenside.
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18...Nc4 To gain
an edge on the light squares. 19.Bxc4
Qxc4 20.Qa1 Threatening b2-b3
as the move also protects c3. 20...Rc8
Stifling White attempts at freedom.
21.Rd1 e5
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| In
the Open Sicilian, it is always good
to eject the knight from d4 if Black
can establish sufficient control over
d5 afterwards. 22.Nde2 Bc6
A model Sicilian position for Black.
23.Nc1 Heading to
the good defensive square d3. This
will inhibit Black from expanding
with ... d5. 23...Bd7 Regrouping
by Timman. Clearly, one of his last
two moves was not correct as he is
losing time with this. 24.Nd3
Rbb8 25.Rd2 By protecting
c2, the pawn on a4 is threatened.
25...Ra8 26.Ra3 With
... d5 prevented due to Nd3xe5, Polgar
becomes a little bolder.
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Maybe she will be able to move the
c3 knight and swing the rook over
to c3. 26...h6 Unmoved, Timman takes
time out to both make luft and stop
the possibility of Be3-g5. 27.Ra2
Polgar is just marking time. 27...Bd8
28.Ra3 Asking Black whether
he can accomplish anything here. 28...Ba5
29.Rf2 Bd8 A new repetition
shuffle. 30.Rd2 Ba5 31.Rf2
Again Polgar offers a tacit draw through
repetition. 31...Bd8
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| Drawn
by repetition. Neither player felt
they could make real improvements
to their positions.
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1/2-1/2 |
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