Dave Wedge vs. Alastair Wright was a battle between two previous winners |
Next door on board 2 Matthew conducted the black pieces against Robert Sutcliffe. On paper this looked to be an easier proposition than Dave’s but in the end Robert pushed Matthew very hard indeed and may very well have snatched a result on another occasion. Matthew missed a chance to get a clearly winning position in the middle game on move 35 and was forced to take a few risks in the endgame to try and provoke a mistake from Robert. Eventually the error came but Robert deserves great credit for his fighting display. The endgame was particularly hard to assess as the notes in the game below will hopefully demonstrate.
The fifth player on 2/2 after 2 rounds was Hebden Bridge’s Josh Blinkhorn. He had a very difficult task ahead of him as he played black against top seed Chris Booth. Chris took a half point bye in round 2 and that left him lurking dangerously behind the leaders. He played a very smooth positional win against Josh who simply didn’t seem to equalise at all in the game and was slowly crushed into submission.
No fewer than 9 players were sitting on 1½ out of 2. With his win Chris now moved to 2½. Surprisingly, only two of the others joined him. Fourth seed John Morgan of Courier won with White against Matthew Wedge-Roberts and Angel Gonzalez of Belgrave beat Barry Wadsworth of Halifax after the two were re-paired against each other when their opponents didn’t turn up to play and forfeited their games. The other 3 players on 1½ all drew. Scott Gornall and Nick Sykes with each other and Dave Sugden drew against Mike Barnett. Scott and Nick agreed their draw in a position that was apparently still full of play but computer analysis suggests that it was indeed about equal and clearly neither player wanted to risk pushing too hard for victory. You can assess it for yourself below.
Further down the board order there were several interesting games. Tom Webster gave Steven Priest a taste of his own medicine when he capitalised on a terrible error by the stronger player. In the previous round you may remember that Steven had done the same to Chris Edwards so perhaps good fortune does even itself up over time after all!
Also interesting was the game between Messrs Dawson and Whitehead who conducted a very sharp and complex battle which, though error strewn, was also very exciting. See if you can spot a missed opportunity from that game below. It’s Black to play. What’s the best move? (The answer can be seen in the full game commentary at the bottom of the post.)
Dawson vs. Whitehead: Position after 19.Qxc5 |
Some of the games further down the board order provided great entertainment |
Full results and standings can be found on the Calderdale Individual Championship 2010-11 page.
Finally, below is the full game from the little puzzle I set you above. See if you got the right answer.
3 comments:
What was Wrighty thinking of playing into the complications of the Max Lange!
Game lost purely on choice of opening there I think!!
Yes, I think 5...Nxe4 was the move, to get into the mainline. To be honest I'm not sure he had a clear idea of which opening he was going to play when he sat down.
Yeah well 5...Nxe4 can still be dangerous if you don't know your theory!
Not like Wrighty to bugger up so bad in the opening. Wonder why he ditched his pet 1...g6 that he has been playing all year? Or as you said he likes the Alekhine too?
Wrighty playing 1...e5 stuff is like me and you trying to play the Caro-Kann! :-)
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