SICILIAN
Rowson,J - Hodgson,J
[B76]
Rotherham ENG (03), 1997
[Rohde
| 1.e4
c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3
g6 |
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| The
Dragon Variation. Kasparov used this
risky Defense to great effect in his
1995 World Championship Match against
Anand. Hodgson is known for his dynamic
opening repertoire, so this choice
is not surprising. 6.Be3 Bg7
7.f3 The signal move of the
Yugoslav Attack, in which White castles
queenside, and throws his kingside
pawns forward. 7...0-0 8.Qd2
Nc6 9.0-0-0 Bd7
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popular is the gambit 9 ... d5 (allowing
10 exd5 Nxd5 11 Nxc6 bxc6 12 Nxd5
cxd5 13 Qxd5), and also possible is
9 ... Nxd4 (or the immediate 9 ...
Be6) 10 Bxd4 Be6. The reason 9 ...
Bd7, which is the normal move against
9 Bc4, is not favored against 9 O-O-O,
is that if Black follows up with the
maneuver ... Nc6-e5, ... Ra8-c8 and
... Ne5-c4, then White gets to save
2 tempi by playing Bf1xc4, as the
White bishop has not bothered with
the moves Bf1-c4 and Bc4-b3. 10.Kb1
In Huebner - Hort, Hamburg 1979,
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| White
was able to get an advantage with
10 g4 Rc8 11 h4 Qa5 12 Kb1 Rfd8? (better
was 12 ... Nxd4 13 Bxd4 Rfd8) 13 Nb3
Qc7 14 h5. 10...Rc8 11.h4
Ne5 A dangerous concept,
as White's d4 knight is left unchecked,
and as alluded to above, the trip
to c4 is unproductive. 12.Nd5? Also
bad is the direct 12 h5 Nxh5 13 g4
Ng3 14 Rh3 Nxf1 15 Rxf1 Nc4. However,
12 g4, eliminating the ... Nf6-h5-g3
idea, seems strong. 12...Nh5
13.Qe1 e6 14.Nc3 f5 This
safeguards the position of the knight
on h5. 15.Ka1?
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no kingside attack, Rowson has run
out of ideas. I would have tried to
introduce an element of confusion
into the situation with 15 exf5! gxf5
16 Be2, and if Black then tries to
gain space with 16 ... f4 17 Bf2 d5,
then 18 g4! is not bad for White.
15...f4 16.Bf2 a6
Now Black has a dominating position.
17.Nb1 b5 18.Qb4
A useful sortie, hassling the one
weak spot in Black's position - d6.
18...Rc5 19.Qb3 If
19 c3 with the idea of Nd4-b3, then
19 ... Qb8! 20 Nb3 Nc6 21 Qa3 b4 is
very strong for Black.
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| 19...Qf6
20.Nd2 Ng3 21.Bxg3 fxg3 22.c3
Rowson is playing carefully to neutralize
Hodgson's pressure on the long diagonal.
22...Rfc8 23.Be2 Nc6
It turns out that White's knight on
d4 is as well-placed as Black's was
on e5. 24.Nxc6 R8xc6 25.Nb1
Rh5 The h4 pawn is the first
concrete target that Hodgson has been
able to find. However, a more consistent
approach was 25 ... a5 looking to
break down the long diagonal with
... b5-b4. 26.Na3 Qf4
Unfortunately, the immediate 26 ...
Rxh4 is met by 27 e5! wrecking Black's
structure. 27.Nc2 Rhc5?!
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| A
change of heart. But here I think
Black may as well have grabbed the
h-pawn - after 27 ... Rxh4 28 Rxh4
Qxh4 29 Nb4 Rb6 White has no clear
followup. 28.Nd4 Bxd4 29.Rxd4
Rh5 It may have been better
to completely dispense with this and
cover the center with 29 ... Kf8.
30.Qd1 Kf8? It seems
that Black could have held equality
with 30 ... Rxh4 31 Rxh4 Qxh4 after
32 Rxd6 Rxd6 33 Qxd6 Qh1+, or 32 e5
Qh2. 31.e5! This
shot works because after 31 ... Qxe5
32 f4 wins as the bishop on e2 is
defended now.
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31...Qe3 32.f4 Rf5 33.Rxd6
Black's position is wrecked. 33...Rc7
34.Bg4 Rf7 35.Rd4! Closing
the door on Black's queen. 35...h5
36.Re1 Qf2 37.Re2 Wins the
queen, but stronger was 37 Bf3! and
the game is over after 37 ... Bc6
38 Bxc6 Rxc6 39 Re2. 37...hxg4
38.Rxf2 gxf2 39.g3 g5!!
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brilliant shot. Now if 40 hxg5 Bc6!!
and then 41 Qf1 Rh7, or 41 Rd2 Rfd7!
winning for Black! 40.Qf1
gxh4 41.Qxf2 h3 Hodgson has
forged a different, and protected,
passed pawn. 42.f5
To get some central play. 42 Qe2 Rg7
does not get anywhere. 42...Rxf5
43.Rf4 Rc4 44.Rxf5+ exf5 45.Qb6
Rowson hopes that his roaming queen
can do some damage, but one eye must
always be kept on the pawn on h3.
Meanwhile, Hodgson sets up a defensive
wall along the third rank.
45...Rc6 46.Qd8+ Be8
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47.Qg5
Bg6 Not 47 ... h2? 48 Qh4.
Black needs to try to create a bridge
for his rook to get to h6. 48.b3
Re6 49.Qh6+ Kg8 50.Kb2 Bf7 51.Qg5+
Bg6 52.Qh6 Bf7 53.Qg5+ Bg6 54.Qh6
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