7/16/2023 – Simen Agdestein recently won the Norwegian Chess Championship for a ninth time in his career. The 56-year-old outscored the likes of Aryan Tari and Jon Ludvig Hammer, but did not have to beat national hero and former student Magnus Carlsen, who does not participate in his country’s championships. In his column this week, Jon Speelman analyses recent games by both the master and the student! | Photo: VG.no
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The Trompowsky is especially suited for faster time controls as you don‘t have to memorise endless lines of theory, and you push your opponent out of their comfort zone after your second move.
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Master and student
[Note that Jon Speelman also looks at the content of the article in video format, here embedded at the end of the article.]
Today I’m looking at a couple of recent games which have caught my eye and pivoting from the first of them to an old but relevant example.
Agdestein, as many readers will know, is a strong grandmaster who was Magnus Carlsen’s teacher when he was about eight or so. We used to play in the same Bundesliga team, and he would come and tell us about this kid who was simply different from anybody else he’d ever taught...
Agdestein comes from a superbly sporty family, and he also played football very seriously, appearing a number of times as a striker for the Norwegian national team and I believe scoring a goal against Czechoslovakia as it then was — while in club football he at one time played for Aberdeen.
The game Agdestein v Kaasen involves some really serious calculation, and both players used a lot of time at the critical phase. I’ve supplemented it with a famous game by the “Patriarch” Mikhail Botvinnik, which includes some of the same themes.
Classical chess is different from faster time limits and in many ways better, if much more stressful. Since his abdication as world champion, Carlsen has been enjoying himself at the faster time limits and, of course, on Saturday, July 8th he scored a miraculous and Fischeresque 9/9 against some of the world’s top blitz players.
Deciding which game to use for my newspaper column this week (in The Observer every Sunday) I was attracted to his game against Ian Nepomniachtchi, in which a fairly technical endgame finished in a snap checkmate. I had Stockfish on in the background and was surprised and intrigued to be told that at a critical moment Nepo could have drawn in a line which at first glance looked hopeless.
The important thing in such circumstances is to avoid being merely the engine’s follower, but to interrogate it to try to understand what's going on. In one position which it gave as winning, I wondered if it might be mutual zugzwang and indeed it was, which leads to a short but interesting tract of play.
Select an entry from the list to switch between games
Let us learn together how to find the best spot for the queen in the early middlegame, how to navigate this piece around the board, how to time the queen attack, how to decide whether to exchange it or not, and much more!
Jonathan SpeelmanJonathan Speelman, born in 1956, studied mathematics but became a professional chess player in 1977. He was a member of the English Olympic team from 1980–2006 and three times British Champion. He played twice in Candidates Tournaments, reaching the semi-final in 1989. He twice seconded a World Championship challenger: Nigel Short and then Viswanathan Anand against Garry Kasparov in London 1993 and New York 1995.
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The Queen’s Gambit Declined Exchange Variation with 5.Bf4 has a great balance between positional play and sharp pawn pushes; and will be a surprise for your opponents while being easy to learn for you, as the key patterns are familiar.
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