Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/29/06 at 07:03:08:
Oh boy.
I just took a closer look at the endgame. This looks very dire. I had accidentally placed the h5 pawn on h2 on my board. (Rather, I hadn't moved it.) I don't know now if it would have made a difference, but Black is in deep, deep kimchee.
Here's a line I saw. I don't think Black can avoid something like this without going into an even more hopeless endgame.
From the position in the last diagram:
1.Rc1 Kd7 2.Rxc8 Rxc8 3.f5! Rc4 4.Kd3 Ke7 5.Rf1! Rc6 (Black's stuck for a move.) 6.f6+ Kf8 7.Rf2 gxf6 8.exf6 Kg8 9.Rc2 Kf8 and White wins. This is gruesome!
HgMan,
I take back everything nice I said in the last post. You've got to do something about White's pawn storm and fast!
Well, I'm pretty sure I don't want to exchange rooks on c8, which is why I was looking at 24 ... Rc4. I don't think Willempie wants to trade off both rooks, but he does want to take one pair off, and if he wants to do that, then I want to undouble my pawns. What becomes interesting, then, is that White
can break through on the kingside, but only if he lets Black do the same on the queenside. But I think I want to play 24 ... Rc4, not 24 ... Kd7. I want to make the exchange of rooks more favorable.
Quote:White also can try 24...Rc4 25.Kd3 Kd7 26.b3 Rc6 27.Rxc6 bxc6 28.a4 bxa4 29.bxa4 but with c5 Black finally creates counterplay.
So I suppose 25.b3 Rc6 26.Rxc6 bxc6 27.Kc3 Kd7 28.Kb4 is better.
MNb: Yes, I think so. And 28 ... Kc7 29 Kb4 Kb6 30 Rc1 Ra8 neutralizes White's play here. The best I've seen (and like Smyslov_Fan, this is just pushing wood rather than necessarily best play) is 31 a4 bxa4 32 bxa4 Rb8 33 f5 Kc7+, which I think I can hold...