Joe Boden schrieb:
danke für den hinweis, kurt. man lernt immer dazu. allerdings ist bei dieser methode das nachspielbrett fehlend. könnte man das in das gleiche posting einbinden, indem man nochmals die normalen pgn-daten einfügt?
Hallo Joe
Das ist mit SCID innert 20 Sekunden erledigt. Kommentierte PGN
normal kopieren, hier einfügen. Kommentare/Varianten löschen
und als nachspielbare PGN hier einfügen.
Event:
Ort:
Datum:
Weiss:
Schwarz:
Ergebnis
Board
[Event "St Petersburg 1895/96"]
[Site "St Petersburg"]
[Date "1896.01.09"]
[Round "4.2"]
[White "Steinitz, William"]
[Black "Lasker, Emanuel"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D35"]
[EventDate "1895.12.13"]
[Annotator "Kasparov"]
[PlyCount "61"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "18"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[Source "ChessBase"]
[SourceDate "2004.03.11"]
{Steinitz had already lost his World Championship title to Emanuel Lasker,
who at the time was convincingly demonstrating his superiority to the
chess world. In a match-tournament of the four best players in the world
(Lasker, Steinitz, Pilsbury and Chigorin) the winner by a big margin was
Lasker. But in the following game the old champion showed his greatness
with a brilliant mixture of strategical and tactical skills.}
1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bf4 Be7
{Today playing 4.Bf4 before Ng1-f3 is considered an inaccuracy,
because of 4.. c5!}
5. e3 O-O 6. c5 $5
{Even the great Lasker underestimated the danger of White's clamp on
the queenside. Only 90 years later Black found the right way to create
counterchances, in the game Lerner-Geller: 6...b6 7.b4...}
6. ... Ne4
{Of course Lasker doesn't wait for the realisation of White's plan.
But his attempt to organize counterplay in the centre plays directly
into Steinitz' hand.}
( 6. ... b6 7. b4 a5 8. a3 axb4 9. axb4 Rxa1 10. Qxa1 Nc6 11. Qa4 bxc5
$3 12. Qxc6 cxd4 {with a dangerous initiative for the sacrificed
piece.} )
7. Nxe4 dxe4 8. Qc2 f5 9. Bc4 Nc6 10. a3
{preventing Nb4-d5, and also keeping the bishop on an important
diagonal after Na5, Ba2.}
10. ... Bf6 11. O-O-O $1
{A concrete decision: White's advance on the queenside will be met by
e6-e5, which is why Steinitz changes direction, preparing an attack
against the weakened black centre and potentially on the kingside.}
11. ... Kh8
( 11. ... b6 $2 12. d5 $1 {leads to a disaster.} )
12. f3 Qe7 $1 13. Bg3 $1
{refusing the pawn sacrifice that would give Black an initiative:}
( 13. fxe4 $2 e5 14. dxe5 Nxe5 )
13. ... f4 $6
{Very typical for Lasker - by complicating dubious positions he won
many great games. Now he hoped for 14.Bxf4... #}
14. Qxe4 $3
( 14. Bxf4 $2 e5 15. dxe5 Nxe5 16. Qxe4 Bf5 $1 17. Qxf5 Nxc4 {winning.
But on that day Steinitz was invincible!} )
14. ... fxg3 15. hxg3
{White has gained only two pawns for the piece, but his initiative
will encounter no more obstacles.}
15. ... g6
{Giving up the third pawn Lasker hopes to use the g-file for defence.
After the obvious}
( 15. ... g5 16. f4 g4 17. Ne2 Bd7
( 17. ... Rf7 18. Qc2 b6 19. e4 Bg7 20. e5 h6 21. Qg6 Qe8 22. Bd3
{Kasparov-Fritz} )
18. Qc2 {followed by e3-e4-e5 Black would die without a breath.} )
16. Qxg6 Bd7
( 16. ... Rg8 17. Qe4 Rxg3 {would bring the white knight into the
attack:} 18. Ne2 Rg7 19. Nf4 )
17. f4 Rf7 $2
{After this mistake Black's game is finally doomed.}
( 17. ... Rg8 {would offer solid resistance, although White's pressure
remains very unpleasant.} 18. Qe4 Rxg3 19. Ne2 Rg7 20. Rh6 {followed
by Rdh1.} )
18. g4 Rg7
{If}
( 18. ... Rg8 {then} 19. Qh5 {and g4-g5. Now 19.Qh5 allows Black to
defend with Bd7-e8-g6, but...} )
19. Qh6 $1 Rxg4 20. Bd3 Rg7
( 20. ... Rh4 21. Rxh4 Bxh4 22. Nf3 Bf2 23. Rh1 Bxe3+ 24. Kb1 {
winning.} )
21. Nf3 Qf7 22. g4 $1
{The White attack rolls by itself.}
22. ... Rag8 23. g5 Bd8 24. Rh2 $1
{The disaster on h7 is unavoidable. The rest is simply.}
24. ... Rg6 25. Qh5 $1 R6g7 26. Rdh1 $1 Qxh5 27. Rxh5 Rf8 28. Rxh7+ Rxh7
( 28. ... Kg8 29. Rxg7+ Kxg7 30. Rh7+ )
29. Rxh7+ Kg8 30. Rxd7 Rf7 31. Bc4
{At the end a little joke:}
( 31. Bc4 Rxd7 32. Bxe6+ Rf7 33. g6 {The mindpower and energy shown in
this game by the 59-year-old Steinitz deserves the greatest
admiration.} )
1-0