01 March 2026

Annotated Game #337: Winning less ugly

One of the truths of chess - that we sometimes overlook - is that for us to win, our opponent has to make a mistake; winning is therefore not simply attributable to our brilliance. Normally both sides make significant mistakes, hence Lasker's published observation (also attributed to Tartakower) "The winner of a game of chess is he who makes the last mistake but one."

In this next tournament game, if the result is perhaps not due to brilliant thought, I can at least say that I won less ugly than in Annotated Game #336. I make the strategic error of exchanging queens in the early middlegame, which erased my small advantage, but shortly afterwards I was able to induce a blunder of a pawn by my opponent. For the rest of the game, although we both could have improved our play, there were no huge mistakes and I convert the endgame in a solid fashion.

When you know you have a winning advantage (but not yet a won game), whatever way you can find at the board to successfully realize it is the best path. Engines will of course point out other moves, which normally are considered "better" simply because they win faster. However, there are no bonus points for finishing earlier. Here I again follow NM Dan Heisman's excellent practical advice to "go to sleep" in the endgame when winning, which means taking care to cover your weaknesses and deny your opponent counterplay, only then focusing on calculating the necessary winning breakthrough. If your advantage is structural, then you can afford to do this, and not spend precious energy trying to calculate complex variations, which have the potential to go awry.

[Event "?"] [Site "?"] [Date "????.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "ChessAdmin"] [Black "Class B"] [Result "1-0"] [Annotator "ChessAdmin/Dragon 3.2"] [ECO "D04"] [WhiteFideId "-1"] [BlackFideId "-1"] [PlyCount "103"] [GameId "2271414718922552"] 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 d5 3. e3 Bf5 4. Nh4 Bg6 5. Nxg6 {this is the point of White's opening play, to exchange knight for bishop.} hxg6 6. c4 {challenging d5 while gaining space for White's now-unopposed light-square bishop.} e6 (6... c6 {is much more popular here, for whatever reason. The engine considers them equivalent.}) 7. g3 {the bishop is intended to eventually go to g2, so I decided to start the process early. This is fine, but since the queen could generate some early pressure from b3 in the absence of Black's light-square bishop, it might be best to see it develop there first, after exchanging pawns on d5.} (7. Nc3 {is the only move played in the small sample of database games.}) (7. cxd5 exd5 8. Qb3 Qc8 $14) 7... Be7 (7... c5 $11 {would be more challenging, taking advantage of White's slower approach.}) 8. Bg2 $14 c6 9. Qb3 Qb6 {the direct option. Black correctly is not concerned about doubled b-pawns after an exchange of queens, as this would give him the half-open a-file, along with contesting control of c5.} 10. Nc3 $11 {choosing to maintain the tension.} (10. Qc2 $5 $14 {also would avoid exchanging, while arguing that Black's queen is now doing less on b6 than White's queen on c2.}) 10... Nbd7 11. O-O O-O-O $6 {the Black king is certainly not safer on the queenside, so I expected my opponent did this based on a more aggressive desire to launch operations on the kingside.} 12. cxd5 $16 {thought for a while here, eventually deciding that opening up the c-file can't help but be good, given Black's king position.} exd5 13. Bd2 $6 (13. Qc2 $5 $16 {according to the engine, it is now best to preserve the queens; on general principle, this is best when looking to take advantage of an opponent's relatively weaker king position. The queen on c2 is certainly well-placed and Rb1 would be a strong follow-up.}) 13... Kb8 {my opponent also chooses to preserve the tension.} (13... Qxb3 14. axb3 a6 $11 {White, lacking a queen and with doubled b-pawns, is not going to be able to crack the Black defenses.}) 14. Qxb6 $6 {a strategic error, as noted above, although at least my pawn structure is preserved.} Nxb6 $11 15. b3 {most importantly, this covers c4 and prevents the Black knight from landing there.} Bd6 $6 {this seemed a bit of a waste of a tempo.} 16. a4 $14 {while the pawn advance gives up the b4 square, it is the most dynamic option on the queenside, and ends up provoking Black's next move.} a5 $2 {this natural-looking move to prevent a further White a-pawn advance is a critical error, blundering a pawn and fatally undermining the queenside. My opponent had not seen the idea of the backwards knight move} 17. Na2 Nbd7 18. Bxa5 $18 {White is now comfortably winning, with the two bishops and an extra pawn as the endgame approaches. Black has little counterplay, but there is a still a long way to go before I will have an actually won game.} b6 19. Bc3 (19. Bb4 {I also considered, but wanted to avoid} c5 {However, after} 20. Bc3 {White is doing quite well, as further exchanges on d4 or c5 will simplify the situation and enhance the structural advantage on the queenside.}) 19... Kb7 20. Rfc1 {activating the rook before commencing any other operations on the queenside.} Rde8 21. Be1 {I thought for a while here and found nothing better, although Bb4 was still an option. The idea is to get out of the way of the Rc1 and Na2, while maintaining the two bishops.} c5 $2 {as noted above, simplifications will only help White. I use a tempo to get my knight back into action.} 22. Nc3 {pressuring d5} Rh5 {I did not see this defensive move, but the rook is awkwardly placed. I also find the best follow-up with} 23. Nb5 {an excellent outpost square} Bb8 24. b4 {now a breakthrough of some sort is assured.} cxb4 (24... c4 $2 25. Rxc4 {exploiting the pin on the long diagonal.}) 25. Bxb4 Re6 {defending the key d6 square.} 26. Rc2 {looking to double rooks on either the c-file or a-file, staying flexible.} Rc6 27. Rxc6 {this gains a tempo, instead of continuing the doubling plan, as I would have expected Black was to take on c2.} Kxc6 28. Rc1+ Kb7 29. Nd6+ Bxd6 {otherwise the f7 pawn goes.} 30. Bxd6 {Black temporarily has prevented further material loss, but the two bishops will dominate Black's two knights in the endgame.} Ne8 31. Bb4 (31. g4 $5 {I did not consider here.} Rg5 32. Bg3 {and now the g4 pawn is poisoned after} Rxg4 $2 33. Bxd5+ Ka6 34. Rc8 {and Black loses material.}) (31. Bf4 {would be a more active retreat square, given that} g5 $2 {is met by} 32. Bxd5+) 31... Nef6 32. Bf1 {I decided it was time to redeploy the bishop, given that the d5 pawn was over-protected.} Rh8 33. Bb5 {the two bishops are cooperating well now. My opponent was down to just a few minutes on the clock before the time control by this point.} Nb8 34. Kg2 Nfd7 35. h4 {I decided to go with solid, consolidating moves rather than try for too much. This made it a bit easier for my opponent to make the time control, but I was confident I could win the resulting position.} Rc8 36. Rxc8 Kxc8 37. Kf3 {the idea is to get the king into the action and eventually pressure d5.} Kc7 38. g4 Nc6 39. Ba3 {I do not want to trade any pieces, given how well my two bishops work together.} f6 40. Kf4 (40. Bxc6 {the engine is happy to cash in the two bishops for an advantage in the center.} Kxc6 41. e4 $18 {and White will soon have a passed d-pawn.}) 40... Nd8 41. Kg3 (41. e4 {is already possible, but I continued to play solidly and keep my opponent away from any counterplay.} dxe4 42. Kxe4 $18) 41... Ne6 42. Bd3 {targeting the weak doubled pawns.} g5 43. hxg5 (43. h5 $5) 43... fxg5 44. Bf5 Ndf8 45. Kf3 (45. f4 $5 {I considered; it is objectively stronger, but I was focused on getting my king more centralized.}) 45... g6 46. Bb1 Kd7 47. Ke2 Kc6 48. Kd3 Nd7 49. f3 {still playing solidly to consolidate my position, before making a decisive break.} Ndf8 50. Kc3 {now the king is protecting the d4 pawn while opening the Bb1's main diagonal.} Kd7 51. Ba2 {Black cannot cover all of his weaknesses now.} Kc6 52. e4 {and my opponent resigned, as d5 falls.} 1-0

28 February 2026

Chess as part of lifetime cognitive enrichment

A recent study published in Neurology - read the abstract here - has been highlighted in the press, including in this Washington Post article. The general conclusion, from the abstract:

Lifetime exposure to cognitive enrichment was related to lower risk of AD dementia and a slower rate of cognitive decline, including after adjustment for common ADRD pathologies, indicating higher resilience provided by lifetime enrichment. Our results suggest that cognitive health in later life is in part the product of lifetime exposure to cognitive enrichment.

An excerpt from expert commentary in the WaPo article, which also cited some other recent studies in the area:

The findings nod to the concept of “cognitive reserve”— the idea, popularized by Columbia University neuropsychologist Yaakov Stern, that the brain can adapt to damage or aging by relying on alternative networks or strategies. The theory is that mentally demanding activities over a lifetime may strengthen neural connections, giving the brain more flexibility to compensate.

The Neurology study apparently cited chess as particularly impactful among older people, although practicing it as a complex skill - similar to playing a musical instrument or learning a foreign language - has value in exercising your cognitive functions at any stage of life. What all these practices have in common is the requirement for "effortful study" to both improve and maintain a higher level of performance.

While the intrinsic motivation to excel at something you enjoy doing is probably the most powerful impulse for chess improvement, it is certainly good to have more indications that positive brain health outcomes are also associated with it.

24 February 2026

Annotated Game #336: Breaking the streak

Winning ugly is better than not winning at all, as this round 2 tournament game shows. I hadn't won a game in a while, after a frankly miserable previous tournament, so I took what I could get here. The opening was a solid success, in response to my opponent's early deviation from theory. My Slav formation as Black was fine, but I missed opportunities for more active piece play, including misplaying things with my light-square bishop. My opponent got some pressure and both of us missed a winning "removal of the guard" tactic in the early endgame. However, after that I played much more actively and obtained successful counterplay - enough for equality. I could tell my opponent still wanted very much to win, however, and he ended up over-pressing and blundered while under major time pressure.

While my play had some holes, I'll give myself credit for mental toughness after blundering and almost losing, to then up my level of play and press back against my opponent in a correct assessment of the position. Had he accepted that it was a draw, he wouldn't have lost, but the over-pressing phenomenon is one way I've beaten a number of higher-rated players over the years.

[Event "?"] [Site "?"] [Date "????.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Class A"] [Black "ChessAdmin"] [Result "0-1"] [Annotator "ChessAdmin/Dragon 3.2"] [ECO "A12"] [WhiteFideId "-1"] [BlackFideId "-1"] [PlyCount "82"] [GameId "2267422749081693"] 1. c4 c6 2. b3 {an independent way to proceed, for sure.} d5 3. Bb2 Nf6 {I certainly would not mind having the knight exchanged on f6, for White's excellent bishop.} 4. g3 Bf5 {Black now has a standard Slav setup and is equal.} 5. d3 e6 (5... d4 $5 {followed by ...e5 would more assertively claim the center.}) 6. Bg2 Be7 7. Nf3 Nbd7 (7... h6 $5 {immediately also looks good, preserving the bishop in the event of Nh4.}) 8. O-O O-O 9. Nbd2 h6 10. Re1 Qb6 {long think here about what to do. Black has nothing forcing and is in no hurry to resolve the central pawn tension. The text move gets the queen to a more active square and connects my rooks.} (10... a5 $5) (10... Bh7) 11. e4 $6 {this forces the issue in the center, but not to White's benefit.} dxe4 12. dxe4 Bg4 {this is OK for Black, but the pin is meaningless.} (12... Bh7 $5 $15 {would remove the bishop as a target and keep up the pressure on the h7-b1 diagonal.}) 13. e5 Nh7 {this is actually the best move, per the engine, although it looks like a passive retreat. The knight does not get in the way of my other pieces and can re-emerge relatively easily via g5 or potentially f8 after the rook moves.} 14. Ne4 Rad8 {activating the rook and lining up against the queen, threatening a discovered attack.} 15. Qc2 Bxf3 $6 {while the general idea of trading minor pieces is good, this is not the best choice. The bishop still has plenty of life in it, and the Nf3 was not a superior piece.} (15... Bf5 {moves the bishop to a more effective diagonal.} 16. Nh4 Bxh4 17. gxh4 Nc5 $11) (15... Nc5 16. Nd6 (16. Ned2 $2 Nd3 $19 (16... Bf5)) 16... Bxd6 17. exd6 Rxd6 {and White has compensation for the pawn, with open lines for the queen, bishop and rooks, but Black is fine.}) 16. Bxf3 c5 $2 {long think, wrong think. The c5 square is taken away from Black's pieces, with no real upside. Other moves would improve piece activity.} (16... Qc7 {dropping the queen back to pressure e5 looks simplest and best.}) (16... Nc5) (16... Ng5) 17. Rad1 $16 Nb8 {this is best, according to the engine, but still a significant plus for White. The knight has to get active via a roundabout route.} 18. Rxd8 Rxd8 19. Rd1 Qc7 $6 {this should have been played earlier; here it just wastes a tempo.} (19... Ng5 {reactivates the knight to good effect.} 20. Nxg5 (20. Rxd8+ Bxd8 $11) 20... Rxd1+ 21. Qxd1 hxg5 $11) 20. Rxd8+ Qxd8 $14 21. Qd1 b6 $6 {this lets White exchange and displace the bishop.} (21... Qxd1+ 22. Bxd1 Nc6 $14) 22. Qxd8+ Bxd8 23. Nd6 Bc7 $4 {both my opponent and I were in some time pressure already here, and I did not see the potential winning tactic for White yet.} (23... Nf8 {is better on principle in any case, getting the piece into the fight via g6 or d7 by targeting the e-pawn.}) 24. Nb5 $1 $18 Na6 25. Nxa7 $6 {my opponent misses the tactic as well, being fixated on the loose pawn.} (25. Bb7 $1 $18 {I spotted this "removal of the guard" themed tactic shortly after I moved.}) 25... Nb4 $1 {White still has an advantage, but finally I get some counterplay.} 26. Nb5 $16 Bb8 27. Be2 $6 {at this point my opponent was moving quickly, to gain clock time.} (27. a4 $16) 27... Nxa2 $11 {material and positional equality are now restored.} 28. f4 Nf8 {naturally I want to reactivate my knight, although other decent options are available.} (28... f6) (28... Nb4) 29. Kg2 Nd7 30. Kf3 Kf8 31. h4 {around here I got the impression my opponent was still very interested in trying to win, but the position does not support that.} Nb4 32. h5 Ke7 33. g4 f6 {this seemed the most straightforward way to defend, restraining g4-g5.} 34. Ke4 fxe5 35. g5 $6 {trying too hard to win.} Nc6 {the knight had been admirably restraining White's light-square bishop from going to d3 on its previous square, but I thought it could now be shifted to the central action on e5. I preferred that to snagging the f4 pawn, which would have resulted in more complications.} (35... exf4 $5 36. Bxg7 hxg5 37. h6 Nf6+ 38. Bxf6+ Kxf6 39. Bh5 Nc6 40. Nc3 $17 {is the engine line.}) 36. gxh6 gxh6 37. Bc1 $2 {my opponent was very low on time by this point.} (37. fxe5 Ncxe5 $11) 37... Nf6+ $17 38. Kd3 $2 (38. Kf3 Nxh5 $17) 38... exf4 $17 {now I am two pawns up and have a won endgame.} 39. Bf3 {this hastens the process.} Ne5+ 40. Ke2 Nxf3 41. Kxf3 Nxh5 $19 0-1

23 February 2026

Annotated Game #335: All rook endgames *should* be drawn

This first-round tournament game was a useful experience with the reverse London System formation, which my opponent plays into as Black. As White, I could have played a little more aggressively with 4. Qb3!? but had a normal and very equal position heading into the middlegame. My opponent does a very good job with the transitions from middlegame to multiple endgame phases, seizing the opportunity to punish poor endgame decisions on piece placement. That said, the rook endgame *should* have been drawn...

[Event "?"] [Site "?"] [Date "????.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "ChessAdmin"] [Black "Class A"] [Result "0-1"] [Annotator "ChessAdmin/Dragon 3.2"] [ECO "D11"] [WhiteFideId "-1"] [BlackFideId "-1"] [PlyCount "120"] [GameId "2271414718922551"] 1. d4 d5 2. Nf3 Bf5 3. c4 {this both challenges d5 and opens up the d1-a4 diagonal for the queen.} e6 {consistent with a reverse London System approach.} 4. Nc3 {this is the most-played move in the database, also scoring the best.} (4. Qb3 $5 {immediately puts pressure on b7 and d5, also leaving the knight development options open.}) 4... c6 {reinforcing d5 with a pawn.} 5. Qb3 $14 {White enjoys a small advantage in development.} Qc8 $6 {my opponent thought for a while before playing this. It is a little passive, but avoids potentially exchanging queens after ...Qb6.} 6. Bf4 {this seemed like the obvious move at the time, developing and asserting control over the the h2-b8 diagonal.} (6. cxd5 $1 {although the square is well-defended, the exchange will benefit White by removing the presence of a Black pawn on either e6 or c6.} exd5 (6... cxd5 7. Bf4 $1 {this now hits harder than in the game, with Nb5 possible and the potential for Rc1 to be a threat. For example} Nc6 8. Nb5 Bb4+ 9. Kd1 Kf8 10. Rc1 $18) 7. e4 {this aggressive pawn sac did not occur to me.} dxe4 (7... Bxe4 $2 8. Nxe4 dxe4 9. Ne5 $1 $18) 8. Ng5 Bg6 9. Bc4 Nh6 10. h4 b5 11. Be2 $16) 6... Nf6 7. e3 Be7 8. Be2 Nbd7 9. O-O h6 10. Rac1 {so far, very normal development with White retaining a small edge in piece activity.} O-O 11. cxd5 $6 {this exchange now helps Black a bit, leading to a Carlsbad pawn structure.} (11. Nd2) (11. Rfe1) (11. h3) 11... exd5 $11 12. Nb5 {this superficially looks clever, taking advantage of the pin on the c-pawn, but leads nowhere.} Ne8 {looks passive, but defends everything; the Nb5 has nowhere to go and I will have to lose a tempo withdrawing it.} 13. Bd3 Bxd3 14. Qxd3 a6 15. Nc3 Nef6 16. h3 {the position is now extremely equal.} (16. Nh4 $5 {is possible, aiming to transfer the knight to f5, the tactical point being if} g5 17. Nf5 $1 {and Black does not have the time to take the Bf4.}) 16... Qd8 17. Ne5 Nxe5 18. Bxe5 (18. dxe5 $5 {I considered, but did not like the doubled e-pawns and Black's future potential to roll forward the c/d pawns. However, there are positive dynamic aspects:} Nd7 19. e4 dxe4 20. Nxe4 {un-doubling the pawns and placing the knight on an excellent square. Things are still only equal, however, after} Nxe5 21. Qxd8 Bxd8 22. Bxe5 Re8 23. f4 f6 24. Nxf6+ Bxf6 $11) 18... Re8 19. Bxf6 {a correct decision to exchange, according to the engine. I judged my knight would be a little more effective than Black's dark-square bishop, given the d4/e3/f2 pawn chain.} Bxf6 20. a3 {placing another pawn on a dark square and proactively protecting the a-pawn against a possible ...Qa5 sortie, which in fact happens.} (20. Na4 $5 {would more quickly mobilize the knight.} Qa5 {was the reason I did not play this, but White is actually winning after} 21. Nc5 Qxa2 $2 (21... Ra7 $11) 22. b4 $1 {and Black will have to lose material to get the queen out.}) 20... Qa5 21. Rc2 {this is not a bad move in itself, but my idea behind it - to double on the c-file - is mistaken.} (21. Rfd1) (21. Rb1) 21... Rad8 22. Ne2 (22. b4 $5 {and the a-pawn is still tactically protected.}) 22... Qb5 23. Qxb5 {this is fine, but unnecessary, and it would have been easier to maintain the balance with queens on.} (23. Qd2 $11) 23... axb5 24. Nc1 Be7 25. Nd3 Bd6 26. Rfc1 $6 {this is unfortunately just a bad idea. Doubling rooks has no effect on the c-file, since I will never be able to get a pawn break on it.} f5 27. Nc5 Bxc5 28. dxc5 $2 {my first real mistake, as I underestimate the power of Black's subsequent central play.} (28. Rxc5 $11) 28... Re4 $1 $17 {the Black rook is strong on the 4th rank, able to support either the d- or f-pawn advances.} 29. Kf1 Rde8 30. b4 $6 (30. b3 $5 $17 {this would have at least taken a couple of squares away from Black's rook on the 4th rank.}) 30... Ra8 31. Rc3 {here I thought I could hold by defending on the 3rd rank.} Rae8 32. g3 Kf7 {bringing the king into the action.} 33. h4 Kf6 34. Kg2 $2 {this brings the king further away from the central action.} d4 $6 {this was premature.} (34... Rc4 $1 $19 {now an exchange would favor Black, with a protected passed pawn on c4, and the Rc3 is also pinned against the Rc1.}) 35. exd4 $1 {best, and essentially forced.} Rxd4 36. Kf3 $11 {now we should be back to equality.} (36. Rf3 $5 {I did not consider, but would be an effective way to dominate the 3rd rank after playing Rcc3.}) 36... g5 37. hxg5+ hxg5 38. R1c2 $4 {long think, wrong think here. My brain was rather fried by this point.} (38. Re3 g4+ 39. Ke2 $11 {for some reason I recall only looking at Kg2 here, which loses.}) 38... g4+ $19 39. Kg2 Re1 {Black now threatens mate by doubling rooks on the first rank, since the g4 pawn cuts off the king's escape.} 40. f3 Ke5 41. Kf2 Rdd1 {the only move that maintains Black's winning advantage, but not hard to find.} 42. Re3+ Rxe3 43. Kxe3 gxf3 44. Rc3 (44. Kxf3 Rd3+ 45. Kg2 Rxa3 $19) 44... Re1+ 45. Kf2 Re2+ $1 {Black correctly and forcibly transitions into a winning K+P endgame, although both sides will queen for another transition.} 46. Kxf3 Kd4 47. Kxe2 Kxc3 48. Ke3 Kb3 49. Kf4 Kxa3 50. Kxf5 Kxb4 51. g4 Kxc5 52. g5 b4 53. g6 b3 54. g7 b2 55. Kf6 {this avoids having Black queen with check, although of course my chances objectively are not improved.} (55. g8=Q b1=Q+ 56. Kf4 Qf1+ $19) 55... b1=Q 56. g8=Q Qe4 57. Qa8 b5 58. Qa7+ Kb4 {unfortunately, Black's two pawns and centralized queen mean that my queen cannot get any threats going.} 59. Qa2 Qd4+ 60. Kg5 $2 {I was losing anyway, so this was a quicker end after} Qd5+ {again forcing a winning K+P endgame, so I resigned.} 0-1

19 February 2026

Training quote of the day #59: Alysa Liu

...I wouldn't necessarily say I'm nervous, because one thing about me is I really don't have any anxiety. I have none in my normal life, on ice, nothing. I just don't have it. In order for me to be anxious about something like that, it would have to mean I'm really counting on it or depending on it. I'm not really depending on skating. Of course there's meaning, but I find the meaning in the art, and there's no way to go wrong with that. Even mistakes in art can still be beautiful.

2026 Olympic Gold medalist Alysa Liu